81_FR_80167 81 FR 79948 - Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights

81 FR 79948 - Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 219 (November 14, 2016)

Page Range79948-79981
FR Document2016-27218

We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), are finalizing regulations governing the exercise of non-Federal oil and gas rights outside of Alaska in order to improve our ability to protect refuge resources, visitors, and the general public's health and safety from potential impacts associated with non-Federal oil and gas operations located within refuges. The exercise of non-Federal oil and gas rights refers to oil and gas activities associated with any private, State, or tribally owned mineral interest where the surface estate above such rights is administered by the Service as part of the Refuge System. The existing non-Federal oil and gas regulations have remained unchanged for more than 50 years and provide only vague guidance to staff and operators. This rule will make the regulations more consistent with existing laws, policies, and industry practices. It is designed to provide regulatory clarity and guidance to oil and gas operators and refuge staff, provide a simple process for compliance, incorporate technological improvements in exploration and drilling technology, and ensure that non-Federal oil and gas operations are conducted in a manner that avoids or minimizes impacts to refuge resources.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 219 (Monday, November 14, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 219 (Monday, November 14, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 79948-79981]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-27218]



[[Page 79947]]

Vol. 81

Monday,

No. 219

November 14, 2016

Part IV





Department of the Interior





-----------------------------------------------------------------------





Fish and Wildlife Service





-----------------------------------------------------------------------





50 CFR Parts 28 and 29





Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / 
Rules and Regulations

[[Page 79948]]


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

50 CFR Parts 28 and 29

[Docket No. FWS-HQ-NWRS-2012-0086; FXRS12610900000-156-FF09R24000]
RIN 1018-AX36


Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.

ACTION: Final rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), are 
finalizing regulations governing the exercise of non-Federal oil and 
gas rights outside of Alaska in order to improve our ability to protect 
refuge resources, visitors, and the general public's health and safety 
from potential impacts associated with non-Federal oil and gas 
operations located within refuges. The exercise of non-Federal oil and 
gas rights refers to oil and gas activities associated with any 
private, State, or tribally owned mineral interest where the surface 
estate above such rights is administered by the Service as part of the 
Refuge System. The existing non-Federal oil and gas regulations have 
remained unchanged for more than 50 years and provide only vague 
guidance to staff and operators. This rule will make the regulations 
more consistent with existing laws, policies, and industry practices. 
It is designed to provide regulatory clarity and guidance to oil and 
gas operators and refuge staff, provide a simple process for 
compliance, incorporate technological improvements in exploration and 
drilling technology, and ensure that non-Federal oil and gas operations 
are conducted in a manner that avoids or minimizes impacts to refuge 
resources.

DATES: This rule is effective December 14, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Supplementary documents prepared in conjunction with 
preparation of this rule, including an economic analysis and an 
environmental impact statement, and the public comments received on the 
proposed rule are available at www.regulations.gov at Docket No. FWS-
HQ-NWRS-2012-0086.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott Covington, U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service, Division of Natural Resources and Planning, MS: NWRS, 
5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041; telephone 703-358-2427.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Executive Summary

    This rule revises the existing regulations at subpart C, part 29, 
of title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and adds new 
regulations at subpart D of 50 CFR part 29 to govern the exercise of 
non-Federal oil and gas rights within refuges outside of Alaska. This 
revision improves the effectiveness of the Service to protect refuge 
resources and uses from avoidable, unnecessary impacts by non-Federal 
oil and gas operations. It will also bring consistency and clarity for 
both operators and the Service as to the process by which operators may 
access non-Federal oil and gas on the National Wildlife Refuge System 
(NWRS). The Service defines the National Wildlife Refuge System to 
consist of all lands, waters, and interests therein that it administers 
(25 CFR 25.12) and does not apply its regulations to the non-Federal 
lands found within refuge boundaries (i.e., inholdings).
    The Service promulgated the current regulations at 50 CFR 29.32 to 
govern the exercise of non-Federal mineral rights on the NWRS more than 
50 years ago, and they have not been updated since. The current 
regulations outline a general policy to minimize impacts to refuge 
resources to the extent practicable from all activities associated with 
non-Federal mineral exploration and development where access is on, 
across, or through federally owned or controlled lands or waters of the 
NWRS. However, they have been ineffective at protecting refuge 
resources because they do not provide operators or refuge staff with an 
explicit process or requirements for operating on refuge lands, 
resulting in inconsistency in protections for refuge resources and 
uses.
    Therefore, updating these regulations is a necessary exercise of 
the Service's authority to ensure that we are meeting our 
responsibilities under the National Wildlife Refuge System 
Administration Act (NWRSAA), as amended by the National Wildlife Refuge 
System Improvement Act (NWRSIA) (16 U.S.C. 668dd et seq.), to protect 
refuge resources and uses while ensuring that mineral rights holders 
have reasonable access to develop their non-Federal oil and gas.
    Key components of the rule include:
     A permitting process for new operations;
     A permitting process for well-plugging and reclamation for 
all operations;
     Information requirements for particular types of 
operations;
     Operating standards so that both the Service and the 
operator can readily identify what standards apply to particular 
operations;
     Fees for new access beyond that held as part of the 
operator's oil and gas right;
     Financial assurance (bonding);
     Penalty provisions;
     Exemption of refuges in Alaska from these requirements;
     Codification of some existing Service policies and 
practices.

Background

Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Proposed Rule, and Public 
Comment Period

    This rulemaking effort began on February 24, 2014, when we issued 
an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) (79 FR 10080) to assist 
us in developing the proposed rule. The ANPR had a 60-day comment 
period, ending April 25, 2014. On June 9, 2014, we reopened the comment 
period for another 30 days, ending July 9, 2014 (79 FR 32903). We 
received comments from unaffiliated private citizens (36), conservation 
organizations (14), State agencies (8), counties (2), Alaska Native 
Corporations (2), a tribal agency, oil and gas owners and operators 
(6), business associations (5), and a Federal agency, along with almost 
80,000 form letter comments from members of two environmental 
organizations. The majority of commenters were in favor of 
strengthening and expanding the regulations to better protect refuge 
resources and values. Some commenters requested that we not revise the 
existing regulations, while others questioned whether the Service had 
the statutory authority to regulate non-Federal oil and gas operations 
on refuges.
    We utilized these comments to prepare the proposed rule, which we 
published on December 11, 2015 (80 FR 77200), and opened, with the 
associated draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), a 60-day comment 
period. During this comment period we received approximately 39,600 
responses (mostly form letters) indicating general support regulating 
oil and gas activities on refuges and our proposed rule. However, many 
commented that the proposed rule did not go far enough in regulating 
these activities, with some requesting a ban on any oil and gas 
activity, or at least hydraulic fracturing, in refuges. We also 
received 12 letters from State agencies, oil and gas associations, oil 
companies, and an individual opposing the rulemaking. Primary reasons 
for opposition are that these entities believe that the Service lacks 
authority to regulate private oil and gas and existing State and 
Federal regulations are sufficient to protect refuges. More information 
on the ANPR,

[[Page 79949]]

proposed rule, and public comments is available at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html and also at www.regulations.gov at 
Docket No. FWS-HQ-NWRS-2012-0086.
    A detailed discussion of all changes made after consideration of 
comments on the proposed rule is contained in the Summary of and 
Response to Public Comments section below.

Non-Federal Oil and Gas on the NWRS

    Non-Federal oil and gas rights exist within the NWRS in situations 
where the oil and gas interest has been severed from the estate 
acquired by the United States, either because:
     The United States acquired property from a grantor that 
did not own the oil and gas interest; or
     The United States acquired the property from a grantor 
that reserved the oil and gas interest from the conveyance.
    Non-Federal oil and gas interests can be held by individuals, 
partnerships, for-profit corporations, nonprofit organizations, tribes, 
or States and their political subdivisions. We recognize that interests 
in non-Federal oil and gas are property rights that may be taken for 
public use only with payment of just compensation in accordance with 
the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Application of this rule 
is not intended to result in the taking of a property interest, but 
rather to impose reasonable regulations on activities that involve or 
affect federally owned lands and resources of the NWRS to avoid or 
minimize impacts from such activities to the maximum extent 
practicable.
    These regulations do not apply to the development of the Federal 
mineral estate, including Federal oil and gas, which are administered 
by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), under the Mineral Leasing Act 
and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act. In areas where oil and 
gas rights are owned by the United States, and leasing is authorized, 
the applicable regulations are found at 43 CFR part 3100 et seq. There 
is a general prohibition to leasing Federal oil and gas on refuge lands 
(43 CFR 3101.5-1). These regulations do not apply to refuges located in 
Alaska.
    Examples of non-Federal oil and gas operations conducted on refuges 
include: Geophysical (seismic) exploration; exploratory well drilling; 
field development well drilling; oil and gas well production 
operations, including installation and operation of well flowlines and 
gathering lines; enhanced recovery operations; well plugging and 
abandonment; and site reclamation.

Impacts of Oil and Gas Activities on Refuge Resources and Uses

    Oil and gas activities have the potential to adversely impact 
refuge resources and uses in some or all of the following manners:
     Surface water quality degradation from spills, storm water 
runoff, erosion, and sedimentation;
     Soil and groundwater contamination from existing drilling 
mud pits, poorly constructed wells, improperly conducted enhanced 
recovery techniques, spills, and leaks;
     Air quality degradation from dust, natural gas flaring, 
hydrogen sulfide gas, and emissions from production operations and 
vehicles;
     Increased noise from seismic operations, blasting, 
construction, oil and gas drilling and production operations;
     Reduction of roadless areas on refuges;
     Noise and human presence effects on wildlife behavior, 
breeding, and habitat use;
     Disruption of wildlife migration routes;
     Adverse effects on sensitive and endangered species;
     Viewshed (an area of land, water, or other environmental 
element that is visible to the human eye from a fixed vantage point) 
intrusion by roads, traffic, drilling equipment, production equipment, 
pipelines, etc.;
     Night sky intrusion from artificial lighting and gas 
flares;
     Disturbance to archaeological and cultural resources 
associated with seismic exploration and road/site preparation, 
associated with maintenance activities, or by spills;
     Visitor safety hazards from equipment, pressurized vessels 
and lines, presence of hydrogen sulfide gas, and leaking oil and gas 
that can create explosion and fire hazards;
     Wildlife mortality from oil spills or entrapment in open-
topped tanks or pits, poaching, and vehicle collisions;
     Fish kills from oil and oilfield brine spills; and
     Vegetation mortality from oilfield brine spills.

Service Authority To Regulate Non-Federal Oil and Gas Activities

    As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, one of the principal 
recommendations of the 2003 Government Accountability Office report to 
Congress was for the Service to clarify its regulatory authority with 
respect to the exercise of non-Federal oil and gas rights within the 
Refuge System. We provided in the preamble to the proposed rule an 
explanation of the basis for the Service's authority. As further 
discussed below, the Service received opposing public comments on its 
analysis. While some commenters asserted that the Service lacked the 
authority to regulate such private property rights, others agreed that 
we do have this regulatory authority.
    After carefully considering the public comments, as well as 
engaging in further discussions with the Office of the Solicitor of the 
Department of the Interior, the Service concludes that the National 
Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act, as amended in 1997 by the 
National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act (NWRSAA) (16 U.S.C. 
668dd et seq.), provides us the statutory authority to promulgate these 
regulations. In turn, Congress's authority to enact the NWRSAA is the 
Property Clause of the United States Constitution, which provides it 
the power ``to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations 
respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United 
States.'' U.S. Const. art IV, sec. 3, cl. 2.
    In 1997, Congress declared the Service's mission to be: ``to 
administer a national network of lands and waters for the conservation, 
management, and where appropriate, restoration of the fish, wildlife, 
and plant resources and their habitats within the United States for the 
benefit of present and future generations of Americans.'' (16 U.S.C. 
668dd(a)(2)). The NWRSAA further directs the Secretary of the Interior, 
in administering the System, to:
     Provide for the conservation of fish, wildlife, and 
plants, and their habitats within the NWRS;
     Ensure that the biological integrity, diversity, and 
environmental health of the NWRS are maintained for the benefit of 
present and future generations of Americans;
     Ensure that the mission of the NWRS and the purposes of 
each refuge are carried out;
     Ensure effective coordination, interaction, and 
cooperation with owners of land adjoining refuges and the fish and 
wildlife agency of the States in which the units of the NWRS are 
located;
     Assist in the maintenance of adequate water quantity and 
water quality to fulfill the mission of the NWRS and the purposes of 
each refuge;
     Recognize compatible wildlife-dependent recreational uses 
as the priority general public uses of the NWRS through which the 
American public can develop an appreciation for fish and wildlife;

[[Page 79950]]

     Ensure that opportunities are provided within the NWRS for 
compatible wildlife-dependent recreational uses; and
     Monitor the status and trends of fish, wildlife, and 
plants in each refuge.
    To carry out its mission and these statutory directives to 
administer the Refuge System, Congress provided the Service the 
authority to issue regulations to carry out the NWRSAA (16 U.S.C. 
668dd(b)(5)), as well as to prescribe regulations to ``permit the use 
of any areas within the System for any purpose. . . .'' (16 U.S.C. 
668dd(d)(1)(A)). In this regard, the statutory authority of the Service 
is substantially similar to that of the National Park Service (NPS), 
which since 1979 has regulated the exercise of non-federal oil and gas 
rights within the Park System on the basis of its authority to issue 
regulations ``necessary or proper for the use and management of System 
units'' (54 U.S.C. 100751).
    The rule ``applies to all operators conducting non-Federal oil and 
gas operations outside of Alaska on Service-administered surface 
estates held in fee or less-than fee (excluding coordination areas) or 
Service-administered waters within the boundaries of the refuge to the 
extent necessary to protect those property interests.'' Thus, the 
regulation directly relates to the Service mission ``to administer a 
national network of lands and waters for the conservation, management, 
and where appropriate, restoration of the fish, wildlife, and plant 
resources and their habitats . . .'' and various statutory directives, 
including the conservation of fish and wildlife within the NWRS and 
ensuring their biological integrity. The rule, therefore, falls within 
the Service's authority to issue regulations to carry out the NWRSAA 
(16 U.S.C. 668dd(b)(5)). Regulating the use of Service-administered 
surface estates and waters also falls within the Service's statutory 
authority to issue regulations to ``permit the use of any areas within 
the System for any purpose. . . .''
    Several relatively recent appellate court decisions support our 
interpretation of the NWRSAA. In Burlison v. United States (533 F.3d 
419 (6th Cir. 2008)), the appeals court held that the Service's 
authority to permit the use of roads on refuge lands included the power 
to reasonably regulate a reserved easement within a refuge:

    We do conclude, however, that the Fish and Wildlife Service may 
legitimately exercise the sovereign police power of the Federal 
Government in regulating the easement. Section 668dd(d)(1)(B) 
delegates the power to the Secretary of the Interior (and the Fish 
and Wildlife Service) ``under such regulations as he may 
prescribe,'' to ``permit the use of . . . any areas within the 
System for purposes such as . . . roads.''

Id. at 438. Burlison also relied on the decision of the U.S. Court of 
Appeals Eighth Circuit in Duncan Energy Co. v. United States Forest 
Service, 50 F.3d 584 (8th Cir. 1995), which upheld the Forest Service's 
authority to regulate non-Federal oil and gas rights on the basis of 
statutory authority that is also very similar to that of the NWRSAA:

    Under the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, Congress directed the 
Secretary of Agriculture ``to develop a program of land conservation 
and land utilization.'' 7 U.S.C. Sec. 1010 (1988). The Act directs 
the Secretary to make rules as necessary to ``regulate the use and 
occupancy'' of acquired lands and ``to conserve and utilize'' such 
lands. 7 U.S.C. Sec. 1011(f) (Supp.V.1993). The Forest Service, 
acting under the Secretary's direction, manages the surface lands 
here as part of the National Grasslands, which are part of the 
National Forest System. See 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1609(a) (1988). Congress 
has given the Forest Service broad power to regulate Forest System 
land. See, e.g., 7 U.S.C. Sec. 1011 (1988 & Supp.V.1993); 16 U.S.C. 
Sec. 551 (Supp.V.1993).

Id. at 589. Similarly, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 
has interpreted the NWRSAA to authorize the Service to regulate access 
and use of refuge lands by holders of valid interests in land. School 
Board of Avoyelles Parish v. United States Department of the Interior 
(647 F.3d 570 (5th Cir. 2011)). The School Board administered an 
enclosed estate within the refuge and under Louisiana property law was 
entitled to a right of passage over neighboring property to the nearest 
public road. The Service did not dispute that a right to cross refuge 
lands existed, but asserted it could condition such use, and imposed 
permit limits on the times of day and types of vehicles that could use 
the right-of-way to access the enclosed estate. Reversing the district 
court, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the authority under the NWRSAA and 
Service regulations to require a permit and to impose reasonable 
conditions for ``any person entering a national wildlife refuge'' even 
where that person held property rights afforded under the laws of 
Louisiana. Citing Burlison and a series of Supreme Court and circuit 
court cases interpreting the Property Clause, the Fifth Circuit held 
that requiring a permit for entry and use, and imposing reasonable 
restrictions on the exercise of the non-Federal property rights, was 
well within Federal authority under the Property Clause.
    The primary arguments that the Service lacks the necessary 
regulatory authority are based on the analysis contained in a 1986 
memorandum from the Associate Solicitor, Division of Conservation and 
Wildlife (``1986 Opinion'') that concluded the Service then lacked the 
authority from Congress to adopt regulations requiring permits for 
access by holders of mineral interests, unless the authority was 
provided for in the deed by which the United States acquired title to 
the surface estate. That opinion relied in part on Caire v. Fulton, 
1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31049 (W.D. La. 1986), an unpublished district 
court decision, where the United States had explicitly agreed during 
eminent domain proceedings to delete from the proposed deed a provision 
authorizing Service regulation of the oil and gas interests not being 
acquired.
    The 1986 Opinion was also premised on a provision of the Migratory 
Bird Conservation Act (MBCA), originally enacted in 1929 and amended in 
1935, that now provides:

    The Secretary of the Interior may do all things and make all 
expenditures necessary to secure the safe title in the United States 
to the areas which may be acquired under this subchapter, but no 
payment shall be made for any such areas until the title thereto 
shall be satisfactory to the Attorney General or his designee, but 
the acquisition of such areas by the United States shall in no case 
be defeated because of rights-of-way, easements, and reservations 
which from their nature will in the opinion of the Secretary of the 
Interior in no manner interfere with the use of the areas so 
encumbered for the purposes of this subchapter, but such rights-of-
way, easements, and reservations retained by the grantor or lessor 
from whom the United States receives title under this subchapter or 
any other Act for the acquisition by the Secretary of the Interior 
of areas for wildlife refuges shall be subject to rules and 
regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for the 
occupation, use, operation, protection, and administration of such 
areas as inviolate sanctuaries for migratory birds or as refuges for 
wildlife; and it shall be expressed in the deed or lease that the 
use, occupation, and operation of such rights-of-way, easements, and 
reservations shall be subordinate to and subject to such rules and 
regulations as are set out in such deed or lease or, if deemed 
necessary by the Secretary of the Interior, to such rules and 
regulations as may be prescribed by him from time to time. (16 
U.S.C. 715e)

The Service broadly construes its statutory authority to issue 
regulations ``to permit the use of any area within the System for any 
purpose'' and that the NWRSAA, not the MBCA, is therefore the 
controlling authority with respect to regulating non-federal oil and 
gas rights. While the specific facts of the unreported decision in 
Caire have always suggested that it was of limited precedential value, 
the Fifth Circuit's

[[Page 79951]]

decision in Avoyelles Parish is the controlling juridical authority to 
apply in that circuit. Moreover, even if the MBCA provisions were 
construed to limit the applicability of the NWRSAA authority, which 
clearly it does not, those limits would apply only to lands acquired 
under that Act. As of the end of Fiscal Year 2015, approximately 31.3 
percent of the total 8,100,204.93 acres of Federal lands and interests 
in lands in 252 of the Nation's approximately 560 National Wildlife 
Refuges have been purchased under authority of the MBCA.
    In our review of various deeds used by the Service over the years 
to acquire lands and interests in lands that make up the NWRS, we find 
many variations were used and that it is not possible to review or 
summarize here all such provisions, or ensure that we are familiar with 
the circumstances surrounding each acquisition of NWRS lands that did 
not include oil and gas rights. As part of the pre-application meeting 
with the Service (see Sec.  29.91), and/or the submission of a permit 
application (see Sec.  29.94), we will provide the opportunity to 
receive copies of any deeds and other relevant information that the 
applicant believes would control or otherwise limit the applicability 
of any provision of this rule to the particular applicant's operations. 
We intend this process to ensure on a case-by-case basis that the 
Service fully considers all relevant information concerning the 
particular acquisitions before imposing specific requirements on the 
applicant's operations. The Service will respect applicable deed 
conditions; however, the rule requirements will apply to the extent 
that they do not conflict with such deed conditions, which we believe 
will be the situation in most cases. The Solicitor's Office has 
withdrawn the 1986 Opinion on the basis that the opinion is out of date 
and does not reflect the current state of law with regard to the 
Service's full authorities to manage lands within units of the NWRS. 
The Solicitor will be issuing a new opinion in the near future that 
sets out the supporting legal analysis of the underlying authorities 
upon which the Service is adopting this rule.

Final Rule

Summary of Final Rule

    The rule generally requires that operators receive permits for new 
non-Federal oil and gas activities on the NWRS; provide a regulatory 
framework to achieve the necessary protections for refuge resources; 
and improve regulatory consistency to the benefit of both refuge 
resources and oil and gas operators. The rule contains performance-
based standards that provide flexibility to resource managers and 
operators to use evolving technologies within different environments to 
achieve the standards. It establishes standards for surface use and 
site management, specific resource protections, spill prevention and 
response, waste management, and reclamation. Additionally, the rule 
contains procedures for permit applications and Service review and 
approval. Finally, there are provisions for financial assurance 
(bonding), access fees, mitigation, change of operator, permit 
modification, and prohibitions and penalties. We incorporated public 
input received during the rulemaking process to shape the rule.

Permitting Approach

    The permitting process allows the Service to ensure that refuge 
resources, as well as public health and safety, are protected to the 
greatest extent practicable. Under the rule, the Service requires the 
following:
    a. New operations are by permit only. Operators conducting new 
operations must obtain an operations permit before commencing new or 
modified operations within a refuge (Sec.  29.42). This requirement 
addresses exploration, drilling, production, enhanced recovery 
operations, transportation, plugging, and reclamation operations. We 
encourage operators to contact the Service early in the process so that 
the Service can provide suggestions to improve the application. 
Additionally, an operator will be authorized to begin operations only 
after the operator has received all other required State and Federal 
permits.
    b. Operations under an existing Service permit may continue under 
the terms of that permit, but must comply with existing Federal, State, 
and local laws and regulations and the applicable general terms and 
conditions of this rule (Sec.  29.43). Operators are required to obtain 
a new permit or amend their existing permit if they propose to conduct 
new operations or modify their existing operations (i.e., proposed 
activities outside the scope of their existing approval that will have 
impacts on refuge resources as determined by the Service). At the time 
of reclamation, the Service will review existing permits and modify 
them as necessary to ensure compliance with all Service reclamation 
standards.
    c. Operators with operations not under a Service permit being 
conducted prior to the effective date of this rule, or prior to a 
boundary change or establishment of a new refuge, are considered ``pre-
existing operators'' and may continue to operate as they have been, but 
they must comply with existing Federal, State, and local laws and 
regulations and the applicable general terms and conditions of this 
rule (Sec.  29.44). Additionally, these operators are required to 
obtain an operations permit for any new operations or for any 
modification to their existing operation. Finally, once production 
operations cease, the operator must obtain an operations permit for 
plugging and reclamation, or to maintain their well(s) in extended 
shut-in status.
    d. All operators must have a permit for plugging and reclamation 
and comply with all Service reclamation standards.
    e. When pre-existing operations are transferred, the new operator 
must obtain an operations permit.
    f. Wells drilled from outside refuges or on non-Federal inholdings 
to access non-Federal minerals are exempt from these regulations.
    g. Operations on refuges in Alaska are exempt from these 
regulations. However, the performance-based standards of this rule may 
be used, as appropriate, as guidance in determining how an operator 
would meet the various requirements of ANILCA and ANCSA to protect 
refuge resources and uses.
    The Service finds that this permitting process is the best way to 
manage oil and gas operations and protect refuge resources on the NWRS 
and using time, place, and manner stipulations are the most effective 
way for the Service to avoid or minimize impacts. The ``place'' factor 
in the ``time, place, and manner'' equation is often most important in 
terms of ability to protect an environmental resource. The risks 
created by a poorly selected location cannot easily be overcome with 
even the best operational methods. Conversely, proper site selection 
can do much to mitigate the effects of accidents or environmentally 
unsound practices. The ``time'' factor restricts the timing of 
operations to remove or minimize impacts on resources that are only 
seasonally present. The ``manner'' factor is the method in which oil 
and gas activities are conducted, using best management practices. 
Therefore, requiring a permit that contains such stipulations is the 
most effective way to avoid or minimize impacts of new operations.
    Proper site planning, timing restrictions, and best management 
practices established through the permit process for new operations 
will accomplish great improvements in resource protection. Because 
existing

[[Page 79952]]

operations with a special use permit already have stipulations in those 
permits that have been implemented to protect refuge resources and 
uses, they are allowed to continue their operations under the terms of 
that permit. Furthermore, the Service is not requiring a permit for 
operators with existing operations not currently under a permit (pre-
existing operations) because a majority of the impacts avoided or 
mitigated under the permit have already occurred, and the permit 
process can result in substantial administrative and operational costs 
on both the Service and the operator. These costs (similar to those of 
permitting new operations) could be disproportional to the 
environmental benefits gained where the operator's well has already 
been drilled and the area of operations (access route, well site, 
production facilities, and routes for gathering lines) has already been 
established.
    Our analysis found that the Service could eliminate many of the 
ongoing, unnecessary impacts to refuge resources and uses resulting 
from the production phase of pre-existing operations by enforcing State 
laws and regulations on Service-administered lands and waters. Making 
violation of applicable State laws related to oil and gas a prohibited 
act under the rule allows the Service to enforce these requirements as 
Federal requirements, and so gives us greater enforcement capabilities 
in ensuring that unnecessary impacts from these operations, such as 
leaks and spills, are avoided or minimized. This approach to permitting 
allows the Service to focus its limited time and resources on those new 
operations that create the highest level of incremental impacts. Also, 
by requiring all operators, pre-existing, existing with a Service-
issued permit, and new, to have a permit for plugging and reclamation, 
we can ensure rehabilitation of impacted habitat.
    When a well is drilled on inholdings or non-Federal adjacent lands, 
impacts to refuge resources are avoided or minimized to a great extent. 
Therefore, the Service's approach of exempting downhole aspects of 
these operations that occur within a refuge from the regulations is 
intended to provide an incentive for operators to use drilling from a 
surface location not administered by the Service in order to reach 
their oil and gas rights under the refuge-administered surface estate. 
However, anytime an operator needs to physically cross Service land for 
access, including access to a non-Federal surface location, such as an 
inholding, to conduct operations, then the operator must comply with 
the applicable provisions of this subpart for obtaining approval from 
the Service for such access, including obtaining an operations permit 
covering the new access or modification to the existing access.

Operating Standards

    The Service developed this rule using a suite of performance-based 
standards that establish goals and define a desired level of protection 
for refuge resources and uses. This approach provides flexibility to 
resource managers and operators to best protect refuge resources and 
uses over time and across various environments by uses of varied 
technologies and methods. Resource managers and operators will identify 
and develop specific actions and best management practices that are 
then incorporated into operations permits. In contrast, prescriptive 
regulations define specific requirements of time, place, and manner and 
may not fully consider how these measures achieve the desired level of 
resource protection or how they may apply in different environments. 
The Service examined other Federal and State oil and gas regulations 
and determined that the performance-based standards approach provided 
the most efficient means of successfully avoiding or minimizing the 
effects of oil and gas operations on refuge resources and visitor uses. 
A one-size-fits-all (i.e., prescriptive) approach does not work due to 
the widely differing environments found at the various refuges with 
non-Federal oil and gas rights across the country. A performance-based 
standards model has been successfully used by NPS for more than 35 
years and applied in the context of a permit that contains specific 
actions an operator must take to meet the regulatory standards.
    In developing and analyzing the rule and alternatives, the Service 
found that the preponderance of impacts and risks of impacts to refuge 
resources associated with exploration and development of oil and gas 
emanate from surface activities. However, mishaps below the surface can 
adversely affect the surficial groundwater systems that are important 
to the success of many national wildlife refuges. This finding holds 
true for operations that include the use of hydraulic fracturing. The 
Service found that well drilling and production operations that include 
the use of hydraulic fracturing have similar types of surface 
activities (e.g., road and pad construction, tractor-trailer truck 
traffic, use of water, use of chemicals, use of large diesel-powered 
engines, generation of waste) as operations that do not include 
hydraulic fracturing. Hydraulic fracturing operations, particularly 
those used in combination with horizontal drilling techniques to access 
oil or gas in shale or other ``tight'' formations, usually increase the 
scope, intensity, and duration of activities commonly associated with 
oil and gas well drilling and completion, as well as the pressures to 
which the well casings are subjected.
    In the context of this rule, the term ``hydraulic fracturing'' 
means those operations conducted in an individual wellbore designed to 
increase the flow of hydrocarbons from the rock formation to the 
wellbore through modifying the permeability of reservoir rock by 
applying fluids under pressure to fracture it. It does not include the 
comprehensive list of all oil and gas activities associated with 
development that happens to include hydraulic fracturing. While the 
rule's operating standards are not specific to hydraulic fracturing 
operations, they were developed with the expectation that hydraulic 
fracturing will occur on refuge lands and give the Service the ability 
to effectively manage the additional impacts that hydraulic fracturing 
may have on refuge resources and uses.
    The Service notes that BLM has recently promulgated regulations 
addressing hydraulic fracturing on Federal and Indian lands at 43 CFR 
part 3160 (80 FR 16128, March 26, 2015). We carefully considered the 
recently promulgated BLM oil and gas regulations on hydraulic 
fracturing. (The Service also notes that those regulations have been 
set aside by the U.S. District Court in Wyoming, and that decision is 
on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.) 
The Service and BLM take different approaches to operating standards 
because of our differing statutory bases for regulating the exercise of 
oil and gas rights. Specifically, the BLM has regulatory authority over 
the development of the Federal mineral estate, including Federal oil 
and gas resources under Federal and Indian lands. Instead, these 
Service regulations address private property rights within refuges and 
are based on the authorities and directives of the NWRSAA, including 
``to administer a national network of lands and waters for the 
conservation, management, and where appropriate, restoration of the 
fish, wildlife, and plant resources and their habitats within the 
United States for the benefit of present and future generations of 
Americans.'' Therefore, the Service's regulations are focused on 
avoiding or minimizing impacts to federally owned and administered 
lands and resources of the NWRS to the maximum extent

[[Page 79953]]

practicable by using the most technologically feasible, least damaging 
oil and gas development methods to protect refuge resources and uses.
    The rule maintains the non-prescriptive operating standards from 
the proposed rule, which are similar to the existing NPS regulations in 
36 CFR, subpart B (the ``9B'' regulations), and provide operators 
flexibility to design operations while protecting refuge resources, 
uses, and visitor health and safety. The Service's approach is to 
review an operator's submissions to determine if they are avoiding or 
minimizing impacts to the maximum extent practicable, and if not, to 
include in the operating permits the terms and conditions that will 
ensure that they do so.

State Regulations

    The Service's goal in this rule is to provide a regulatory regime 
that complements State regulatory programs to the benefit of the 
surface estate and the resources for which we are entrusted, while not 
compromising the ability of operators to develop their resource. The 
Service and State oil and gas agencies have fundamentally different 
missions. The Service's legal mandate is to conserve fish, wildlife, 
and plant resources and their habitats for the benefit of present and 
future generations. In contrast, State oil and gas regulations 
typically focus on the protection of mineral rights and 
``conservation'' of the oil and gas resources (i.e., minimizing waste 
of oil and gas resources). From a regulatory perspective, management of 
oil and gas operations is necessary in order for the Service to protect 
its surface resources and meet its congressionally mandated mission.
    The Service's intention is to avoid or minimize potential 
procedural and operational duplication of State programs, while working 
cooperatively to achieve common objectives between the Service, States, 
and operators. The Service received several comments from the public on 
the effectiveness of State regulations in protecting refuge resources 
and uses, and that issue is discussed further below in our response to 
comments.
    In the context of enforcing State oil and gas regulations, the 
Service focus is on noncompliance issues that have the potential to 
adversely affect refuge resources and visitor uses. Making violation of 
non-conflicting provisions of State oil and gas law and regulations a 
prohibited act under the rule allows us to enforce on refuges as a 
matter of Federal law, the same requirements already imposed on 
operators by a State. States may not have enough inspectors to ensure 
companies are meeting State standards. Louisiana, the State with the 
most non-Federal oil and gas production on refuge lands, recently 
reported that it lacks an adequate number of inspectors and its 
inspection rate is too low. Under this rule, Refuge Law Enforcement 
will work cooperatively with States to ensure that operators on refuges 
are meeting Service and State regulatory requirements with a minimum of 
duplication.

Summary of and Response to Public Comments

    A summary of substantive comments and Service responses is provided 
below followed by a table that sets out changes we have made to the 
proposed rule based on the analysis of the comments and other 
considerations.

Authority

    1. Comment: We received comments both in opposition to and in 
support of our general authority to manage oil and gas operations on 
Refuge lands. Commenters opposing our authority generally noted that 
they believe the Service has limited authority to regulate oil and gas 
operations based on the authority by which the Service acquired the 
land and specific deed language in the Migratory Bird Conservation Act 
(MBCA; 16 U.S.C. 715e) and the Supreme Court decision in United States 
v. Little Lake Misere Land Co. (412 U.S. 580,597-98 (1973)), which 
interpreted the MBCA to require the Service to express in the deed 
language that non-Federal mineral rights will be subject to regulation. 
Commenters also cited subsequent case law and the legislative history 
of both the National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act, as 
amended by the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act (16 
U.S.C. 668dd) (NWRSAA and NWRSIA), to contend that the Service has not 
since been granted specific authority to regulate non-Federal mineral 
rights and so, absent specific deed language, the Service is limited to 
common law in protecting refuge resources and uses from impacts 
associated with oil and gas operations.
    Other commenters expressed support for our general authority and 
responsibility to promulgate regulations to manage non-Federal oil and 
gas based on the Property Clause of the Constitution (U.S. Const.) and 
the NWRSIA, as well as subsequent case law that has held that the 
Service does have the authority to reasonably regulate access to 
private rights on the NWRS (see Sch. Bd. of Avoyelles Par. v. U.S. 
Dep't of Interior, 647 F.3d 570, 581, 581 n.4 (5th Cir. 2011); Burlison 
v. United States, 533 F.3d 419, 434-35 (6th Cir. 2008)).
    Service Response: We have carefully considered all the comments, 
and the Service concludes that the NWRSAA, as amended by the NWRSIA, 
provides us the statutory authority pursuant to Congress' Property 
Clause powers to promulgate and implement these regulations as further 
explained in the preamble to the proposed rule. Furthermore, we 
conclude these regulations are also consistent with common law 
principles that a mineral rights holder's access to their minerals 
cannot unreasonably impact the surface estate. These regulations 
respect an operator's right to use the surface estate on refuges while 
protecting and minimizing impacts to refuge resources and uses to 
comply with the unique mission of these public lands ``for the 
conservation, management, and where appropriate, restoration of the 
fish, wildlife, and plant resources and their habitats within the 
United States for the benefit of present and future generations of 
Americans.'' (16 U.S.C. 668dd(a)(2)). For additional information on our 
authorities, see the section on Service Authority to Regulate Non-
Federal Oil and Gas Activities. With regard to the comment citing the 
Supreme Court Case U.S. v. Little Lake Misere Land Co., as we state in 
the Service Authority to Regulate Non-Federal Oil and Gas Activities 
section, the Service will respect applicable deed conditions, however, 
the rule requirements will apply to the extent that they do not 
conflict with such deed conditions.

Acquisition of Minerals Under the NWRS

    2. Comment: The Service received several comments suggesting that 
the Service consider buying all non-Federal mineral rights to ensure 
complete protection of refuge resources and uses from these activities.
    Service Response: The Service has determined that acquisition of 
all mineral rights in refuges is financially infeasible and unnecessary 
to protect refuge resources and uses. While the Service did not 
undertake a costly and time-intensive evaluation of the fair market 
value of the non-Federal oil and gas rights within the NWRS, in the EIS 
associated with this rulemaking we did consider full acquisition of 
such oil and gas rights, but this alternative was dismissed from 
further consideration because it was financially infeasible and 
unnecessary. Relying on our general knowledge of what acquiring a 
mineral right can cost in areas where there is potential for oil and 
gas development,

[[Page 79954]]

we conclude that it would be too costly for the Service to acquire all 
mineral rights that exist within the NWRS.
    Additionally, the Service concludes that it can sufficiently 
protect refuge resources and uses as required by the NWRSAA and provide 
access to operators for developing their non-Federal oil and gas rights 
under this rule, and so acquisition of all mineral rights is 
unnecessary. Under the rule, the Service will determine on a case-by-
case basis, and in collaboration with prospective operators, whether a 
proposed operation meets the operating standards and approval standards 
contained in this rule. If the proposed operation cannot meet Service 
standards for protecting refuge resources and uses, the Service has 
general statutory authority to acquire the mineral right from a willing 
seller in those instances.

Rule's Function With State and Federal Regulations

    3. Comment: Several comments stated that State regulations fully 
accomplish all the necessary protections of NWRS resources and uses, 
and, therefore, the proposed rule is duplicative and unnecessary. 
Commenters contended that many of the operational restrictions of the 
proposed rule were duplicative or in conflict with State regulations, 
although no specific examples were provided. The Service also received 
comments that supported the Service's analysis that State regulations 
are not uniformly designed or intended to fully protect the surface 
owner's interests or, as in this case, mandates of the Service to 
protect NWRS resources and uses.
    Service Response: While developing the proposed rule, the Service 
reviewed the oil and gas regulations of 43 States. Because of the 
differences between the objectives of State regulation and the rule, we 
found that State regulations do not fully address necessary protections 
for the conservation of fish and wildlife resources and public use on 
refuges. The Service's legal mandate is to conserve fish, wildlife, and 
plant resources and their habitats for the benefit of present and 
future generations. In contrast, State oil and gas regulations 
typically focus on the protection of mineral rights and conservation of 
oil and gas resources (i.e., minimizing waste). States do provide for 
protection of surface and groundwater via well design requirements, 
setbacks, and oil pollution control measures. However, State programs 
vary in these areas, and also in regard to protection of many other 
surface resources and surface use conflicts.
    Most States are consistent in deferring to landowners and operators 
to work out many of the details of surface uses, and formal surface use 
agreements between landowner and operator are common. In some States, 
like Oklahoma and New Mexico, oil and gas companies are required by 
statute to enter into these agreements before production begins. A 
surface use agreement may direct the specific locations of access 
routes, drilling sites, and flowlines that are placed on the property. 
Timing considerations may be critical for protections of wildlife that 
may be present only seasonally. The final regulations provide a 
consistent set of procedures and operational standards which when 
incorporated into an operations permit are the functional equivalent of 
a ``surface use agreement'' between the Service and operator.
    Furthermore, the Service has carefully designed this rule to work 
in concert with the State oil and gas regulatory processes. The Service 
has analyzed which aspects of State oil and gas regulatory regimes are 
generally sufficient for protecting refuge resources and uses and which 
are not, and have sought to regulate in this rule only those activities 
where State regulatory regimes are not generally sufficient. Our 
analysis found the preponderance of impacts to refuge resources and 
uses associated with oil and gas activities emanate from surface uses, 
not the downhole aspects of an operation. Our analysis also found that 
there is a possibility of impacts to groundwater from downhole 
operations, so the rule provides the Service with the ability to go 
further than State regulations when necessary to protect groundwater.
    Accordingly, the rule does not regulate most downhole activities 
related to an operation, including well construction and blowout 
prevention. The regulation does include a downhole operating standard 
to prevent the escape of fluids to the surface and for isolation and 
protection of usable water zones throughout the life of a well. 
Otherwise, the Service finds that State regulations are sufficient to 
ensuring that downhole operations are protective of refuge resources 
and uses, as well as public safety. As this example shows, the Service 
regulations avoid unnecessary procedural and operational duplication 
with State programs, and reflect the Service's intention to work 
cooperatively with States and operators to achieve common objectives.
    4. Comment: Additionally, the Service received comments that 
recommended the Service not rely on State regulations to protect refuge 
resources and uses from the impacts associated with pre-existing 
operations, believing that the Service has been somewhat contradictory 
in its analysis that State regulations are not sufficient, but then 
relying on State regulations to protect refuge resources and uses from 
pre-existing operations in the proposed rule.
    Service Response: The Service has considered these comments and 
would like to clarify its prior explanation why relying on existing 
Federal and State regulatory regimes is sufficiently protective. As 
required by Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, the Service analyzed the 
costs and benefits of each regulatory requirement being considered. 
This analysis found that new operations create the greatest additional 
impacts on refuges and that proper site planning, timing restrictions, 
and best management practices (BMPs) through a permit system accomplish 
the greatest improvement in resource protection. The permit process 
focuses on the full suite of time, place, and manner considerations on 
those new operations that create the highest level of incremental 
impacts. By applying a reclamation standard for all operations on 
refuges, including pre-existing operations, the rule also ensures long-
term rehabilitation of habitat damaged by all operations.
    While applying the full regulatory requirements to pre-existing 
operations may provide some incremental protection for refuge resources 
and uses, it would not retroactively eliminate a majority of the 
impacts to refuge resources and uses that have already taken place as a 
result of pre-existing operations. For example, pre-existing wells have 
already been drilled, the area of operations (access route, well site, 
production facilities, and routes for gathering lines) established, and 
impacts to refuge resources, such as to geology and soils, wetlands, 
and wildlife-dependent recreation, have all occurred prior to this rule 
being effective.
    In terms of ongoing impacts from production, our analysis indicates 
that an operator's compliance with State laws will serve to improve 
protection of refuge resources and uses from ongoing impacts from these 
operations, in areas such as removal of waste, storage of chemicals, 
and leak and spill prevention. Where individual States' regulations do 
not specifically address an issue, the Service will continue to work 
cooperatively with operators to reduce impacts, or risks of impacts, to 
refuge resources and uses. This approach enables managers to focus 
limited resources on those operations with the greatest possible 
impacts to refuge resources and uses rather than an

[[Page 79955]]

indiscriminate administration of permits for the approximately 4,000 
pre-existing operations. A general permit requirement would necessitate 
the Service to roughly double its oil and gas management resources from 
current levels, while the administrative costs to operators of pre-
existing wells would be approximated to be initially $1,800 per well 
annually. Our analysis indicates these costs, in general, would be 
inefficiently applied and disproportionately high in general relative 
to the benefits to refuge resources and uses.

Scope: Inholdings

    5. Comment: The Service received comments both expressing a lack of 
authority for the Service in regulating inholdings as well as comments 
asserting that the Service has both the authority and the 
responsibility to regulate operations on private lands, including 
inholdings, under the Property Clause and the NWRSIA, which commenters 
contend granted the Service the authority to regulate outside the 
boundaries of the Refuge to the extent that such activities interfere 
with the designated purpose of Federal lands (citing Minnesota v. 
Block, 660 F.2d 1240, 1249 (8th Cir.1981)). Some commenters also noted 
that the Service has taken a different approach from the NPS and 
suggested the Service adopt the NPS approach to inholdings.
    Service Response: The Service has carefully considered these 
comments; however, the Service has concluded that no change should be 
made in the rule, which appropriately balances refuge protection, 
private property rights, and feasibility of administration. As 
discussed in the Final EIS, there are some potential cross-boundary 
impacts from oil and gas development on refuge resources and uses, such 
as spills or leaks migrating into refuge lands or waters or noise 
disturbance on wildlife and visitor experience. The Service has always 
worked, and will continue to work, with operators on inholdings and 
adjacent lands to mitigate or avoid any potential cross-boundary 
impacts, particularly those that may impact species protected under the 
Endangered Species Act. For instance if an operator were proposing to 
site an operation close to a refuge boundary, we might ask them to set 
the operation back, ensure they have proper spill or leak protection 
methods, and site the operation away from any waterways that flow into 
a refuge. Furthermore, even when exempted from these regulations, 
operators do not have a right to cause unreasonable damage to refuge 
resources and uses and are responsible for any damage done from their 
operations (e.g., leaks or spills). Existing Federal and/or State laws 
provide enforcement remedies for activities on non-Federal lands that 
damage Refuge resources and uses. Additionally, by not imposing 
regulations on inholdings or non-Federal adjacent lands, the Service is 
incentivizing operators to locate such operations off refuges.
    As to the differences between the proposed revisions to the NPS 9B 
regulations (80 FR 65572; October 26, 2015) and this rule, an operator 
working on both NWRS and NPS lands will experience little difference in 
regulatory resource and use protections, regulatory structure based on 
performance standards, operations permit processes and requirements, 
monitoring and compliance, and other terms and conditions. However, 
there are some variations between the two proposed rules necessitated 
by differing authorities and missions and the scope and resources of 
the two agencies' non-Federal oil and gas programs. The existing and 
future potential for operations on inholdings within the NPS is much 
smaller than that of the NWRS, and, therefore, the administrative 
burden is more manageable for NPS's oil and gas program to regulate 
activities on inholdings to the extent necessary to protect park 
resources and uses.
    In designing this rule, the Service has carefully considered the 
environmental benefits of these regulations in light of the Service's 
mission and limited resources and has chosen to prioritize regulation 
of activities on Service lands. As noted above, the Service defines the 
National Wildlife Refuge System to consist of all lands, waters, and 
interests therein that it administers (25 CFR 25.12) and does not apply 
its regulations to the non-Federal lands found within refuge boundaries 
(i.e., inholdings). Furthermore, the Service has concluded that it can 
manage the cross-boundary impacts from inholdings and non-Federal 
adjacent lands through cooperation with operators instead of through 
direct regulation, which places a heavy administrative burden on the 
Service and operators.

Scope: Operations on Non-Federal Land

    6. Comment: The Service received similar comments regarding 
directional drilling operations on non-Federal land as it did for 
inholdings, recommending that the Service extend regulations beyond the 
NWRS to operations on private lands as described in the Modified 
Proposed Rule alternative of the DEIS. We also received comments from 
others that the Service has no authority to do so. Some commenters also 
noted that the Service has taken a different approach from the NPS and 
suggested the Service adopt the NPS approach to directional drilling 
operations.
    Service Response: The Service has considered these comments; 
however, we have not extended the rule to operations on inholdings and 
non-Federal adjacent lands from which there is directional drilling 
under Service-administered surface estate. The Service has a clear 
legal and policy directive to protect refuge lands and resources, and 
having oil and gas operations sited off refuge property is preferable 
to having impacts occur on refuge lands. Our analysis shows avoiding 
the cost and time delay of Service regulation provides an incentive for 
operators to drill from a non-Federal surface location to reach their 
oil and gas rights within a refuge. Exempting downhole operations that 
occur inside a refuge from these regulations will result in fewer wells 
drilled on refuge-administered lands and waters resulting in an overall 
benefit to refuge resources and uses (avoidance or minimization of 
direct impacts).
    If the Service extended its regulation beyond the NWRS as evaluated 
in Alternative C of the EIS, the Service could require actions, such as 
noise abatement or visual screening, which serve to reduce cross-
boundary effects on Service resources and uses. However, these benefits 
to resources and uses could evaporate, and many adverse consequences 
could occur, if just a small percentage of wells that otherwise would 
have been located outside a refuge are drilled in a refuge. Gains in 
resource protection under Alternative C would likely be lost due to 
loss of the incentive to locate operations outside the refuge. Locating 
all operations (surface and downhole) inside the boundary of a refuge 
would subject refuge resources and values to the long-term impacts of 
surface occupancy within the park--impacts that would last years, if 
not decades. Therefore, the Service concludes the best course of action 
is to maintain the incentive in the proposed rule to encourage 
operators to locate operations outside a refuge.
    The Service will continue to work with operators, landowners, and 
other permitting agencies to address issues that may arise from 
operations on non-Federal adjacent lands. For example, the Service 
could advocate for setbacks from the refuge boundary or waterways and 
strong spill control and response measures to reduce the risk of damage 
to refuge resources from accidents. As mentioned above, even where 
exempt

[[Page 79956]]

from these regulations, operators do not have a right to cause 
unreasonable damage to refuge resources and uses and are responsible 
for any damage done from these operations (e.g., leaks or spills).
    Additionally, based on the comments the Service received, it 
appears that some commenters misunderstood the NPS rule as related to 
operations on non-Federal lands outside the park boundary from which 
there is directional drilling underneath a park unit. NPS's regulatory 
authority over directional drilling operations begins at the subsurface 
point where the proposed operations (borehole) cross the park boundary 
and enter federally owned or administered lands or water, and applies 
to all infrastructure and activities within a park unit. Additionally 
the NPS provides an exemption to the operations permit requirement for 
these in-park operations if it determines they ``pose no significant 
threat of damage to park resources.'' In the many decades that the NPS 
has had this exemption in place, it has not made a single finding that 
such operations pose a significant threat. In only a few instances has 
NPS included in its determination suggestions to the operator to modify 
its planned operations in any way.
    The Service has concluded that the risk of any impacts to refuge 
resources by the Service not regulating the portion of a wellbore 
beneath a refuge is exceedingly low. The Service has carefully designed 
this rule to ensure that it is prioritizing its limited resources on 
those oil and gas activities that have the greatest impact to refuge 
resources and uses. Commenters from both industry and non-governmental 
organizations have asked the Service to ensure it has the resources to 
effectively implement this rule. The Service has carefully analyzed its 
resources and capabilities and has specifically tailored this rule to 
ensure maximum refuge protection within the constraints of its 
management capabilities. The Service agrees with commenters that it 
must ensure that it has sufficient resources to implement the rule in 
order for it to be successful. Balancing the low risk of impacts from 
the downhole aspects of these directional-drilling operations on refuge 
resources and uses with the high administrative costs of regulating all 
of these operations, the Service has exempted these operations in the 
rule.

Hydraulic Fracturing and Regulation of Downhole Activities

    7. Comment: Several commenters requested that the Service ban 
hydraulic fracturing completely from the NWRS.
    Service Response: The Service considered these comments, as well as 
other information and studies provided by commenters regarding 
hydraulic fracturing, and we have concluded that the additional 
information provided did not justify a change from the proposed rule's 
approach to hydraulic fracturing. Comments requesting the ban on 
hydraulic fracturing used the term to encompass all the activities and 
impacts that are associated with oil and gas development that happens 
to use hydraulic fracturing. These comments did not provide new 
information to the Service.
    The information provided by commenters was available and considered 
by the Service in developing the proposed rule. The Service has 
determined that the actual process of hydraulic fracturing does not 
create impacts or risks of impacts that are so elevated above those of 
conventional oil and gas operations in general that a hydraulic 
fracturing ban is justified. It is the Service's policy that 
``scientific and scholarly information that we consider in our 
decision-making must be robust, of the highest quality, and the result 
of the most rigorous scientific and scholarly processes as can be 
achieved'' (212 FW 7).
    As the Service has noted in the EIS accompanying the rule, studies 
show that oil and gas operations that include hydraulic fracturing 
stimulation methods can negatively affect surrounding resources and the 
environment and can increase the risks of such impacts where 
appropriate measures are not taken before, during, and after hydraulic 
fracturing operations (e.g., improper cementing of casing and well 
integrity issues or surface mismanagement of fracking and flowback 
fluids). However, studies also show that proper implementation of such 
measures can substantially reduce--to a level close to that of 
conventional well operations--the risks to the surrounding environment 
from hydraulic fracturing operations.
    Based on the Service's review of studies provided during the public 
comment period, we do not find that a ban on hydraulic fracturing 
completion methods in refuges is necessary or appropriate at this time. 
The Service will continue to revisit and update its policy as more 
information on hydraulic fracturing completion methods becomes 
available. Further, the Service notes that well completion programs 
using hydraulic fracturing were not given approval under the proposed 
rule. The rule also does not give such approval, and includes operating 
and approval standards developed with the knowledge that hydraulic 
fracturing operations will likely be proposed by operators and were 
designed to ensure that operators employ technologically feasible 
least-damaging methods that will not impact refuge resources and uses. 
The Service will consider hydraulic fracturing operations on a case-by-
case basis and analyze potential impacts on refuge resources and uses 
under the regulations' approval standards.
    8. Comment: The Service was asked to clarify how the rule would, or 
would not, be impacted by BLM's impending fracking rule and associated 
litigation.
    Service Response: As explained in the proposed rule, we have taken 
different approaches to regulating hydraulic fracturing activities 
based on our different statutory authorities and the specific needs of 
the NWRS. The Service has concluded that our rule is consistent with 
our statutory authorities and, therefore, should not be affected by the 
pending litigation.
    9. Comment: The Service received several comments recommending that 
the Service extend its regulations to more comprehensively cover all 
aspects of downhole operations, particularly with regard to wellbore 
construction standards for operations that include use of hydraulic 
fracturing. Commenters also requested that the Service require baseline 
flowback requirements. On the other hand, the Service received comments 
that that Service regulation will only duplicate existing State and 
Federal requirements that fully address these downhole issues.
    Service Response: The Service analyzed both the costs and benefits 
of further regulating downhole operations on the NWRS through this 
rulemaking and found the increased costs necessary to hire and maintain 
engineering staff to oversee our own separate downhole requirements and 
standards would not likely provide a comparable benefit in reduction of 
impacts or risks of impacts to surface resources. The Service reviewed 
and considered the comments and studies provided by the public on this 
issue, but found they did not change the Service's analysis of the 
benefits. On the other hand, the Service did identify additional costs 
for both the Service and industry if the Service were to regulate 
downhole operations. The Service would need additional specialized 
technical staff to evaluate proposals and subsequently monitor and 
inspect downhole operations for compliance. Industry costs would 
involve providing downhole well construction information such as 
drilling, mud, casing, cementing, and stimulation programs. This 
information

[[Page 79957]]

is developed as a matter of course by industry, so there would be some 
minimal costs to provide copies of these programs.
    Recognizing the public concern regarding impact to water resources 
from these activities and the Service's responsibility to ensure that 
it protects these resources, the rule does include standards for well 
control and isolation and protection of usable water (Sec.  
29.119(a)(3) and (4)). The standard serves to inform the public and the 
operators that the Service retains regulatory control for management 
and protection of all its resources including groundwater. However, as 
discussed above, the Service would have to substantially augment its 
engineering capacity to review, approve, and monitor downhole well 
construction. Comprehensive Service regulation of downhole wellbore 
construction and maintenance for the isolation and protection of usable 
water would duplicate state programs in many areas, and thus provide a 
diminished return in terms of reduction of risks to groundwater. 
Additionally, the rule includes provisions (information requirements, 
operating standards, and reporting requirements) that address the 
management of wastes including flowback fluids. Under the rule, all new 
hydraulic fracturing operations will be conducted under new operations 
permits or modifications to existing Service-approved permits. Thus, 
new operations under the rule are required to provide for management of 
flowback fluids, including tanks to capture and temporarily store 
flowback fluids, no use of earthen pits, and prompt removal of wastes 
from the refuge.

Easements

    10. Comment: Some commenters requested clarity on the applicability 
of these regulations to easements.
    Service Response: The definition of the National Wildlife Refuge 
System includes less than fee interests in land such as easements (50 
CFR 25.12). Therefore, the exercise of non-federally owned oil and gas 
rights underneath the Service's easement estate are subject to these 
regulations to the extent necessary to protect the interests held by 
the United States under the easement (see Sec.  29.40(b)). The Service 
holds many unique and varied easement interests throughout the United 
States. For this reason, it is difficult to generalize how the rule 
applies to any particular easement. To determine the applicability of 
these regulations, the Service will review the terms of the legal 
instrument by which the United States acquired or reserved its easement 
interest to determine what regulation is appropriate in relation to 
that interest. Oil and gas operations will be subject to some and not 
necessarily all, of the requirements and standards of this subpart. 
Depending on the easement interest acquired, the Service may require an 
operator to obtain a permit from the Service to ensure that operations 
minimize the destruction of vegetative cover, control spread of 
invasive species, and/or avoid ecologically sensitive habitats by using 
technologically feasible, least-damaging methods. On the other hand, if 
an operator avoids burning, draining, filling, or dredging wetlands on 
one of the Service's conservation easements acquired for the purpose of 
protecting wetlands, the operator is likely exempt from these 
regulations.
    Ultimately, the Service wants to ensure it is notified of 
operations that may affect the Service's less-than-fee interests and 
work cooperatively with the landholder and mineral rights holder, if 
different, to minimize or avoid impacts to our conservation interest in 
the land. However, the Service will continue to provide reasonable 
access to mineral rights holders for the development of their mineral 
rights, as we do on fee-title lands of the NWRS. The Service will work 
with operators and landowners in determining what is reasonable to 
protecting the Service's property interests under the easement.

Oil and Gas Operations in Alaska

    11. Comment: The Service received several comments on how the 
proposed rule would affect oil and gas operations on refuges in Alaska 
and asking for clarification from the Service on how the rule would 
work in conjunction with the Alaska National Interest Lands 
Conservation Act (94 Stat. 2371; Pub. L. 96-487) and implementing 
regulations (43 CFR part 36). The Service got several comments 
recommending that the Service should clarify and revise the rule to 
fully recognize the controlling role of ANILCA and its implementing 
regulations in Alaska, and to address other issues. For instance, the 
Service received a comment to specifically replace the multiple 
references to ANILCA with the following blanket provision stating that 
ANILCA and implementing regulations at 43 CFR part 36 govern access, 
including but not limited to access to inholdings in Alaska, in lieu of 
the provisions of the non-Federal oil and gas regulations in subpart D: 
``In lieu of the provisions of this subpart, authorization and 
management of access in Alaska, including but not limited to access to 
inholdings, shall be governed by the applicable provisions in 43 CFR 
part 36.'' Additionally, it was recommended that the final regulations 
should clarify that the only operations permit that would be required 
with regard to access across the NWRS associated with oil and gas 
development activities on private inholdings in Alaska would be a 
right-of-way issued pursuant to title XI of ANILCA and the regulations 
at 43 CFR part 36.
    Service Response: We agree with the many comments we received that 
our rule was unclear about how this rule applies to operations in 
Alaska. After careful consideration of comments received on this issue, 
the Service has concluded that the rule does not need to include 
operations in refuges in Alaska as the existing Departmental 
regulations implementing section 1110(a) of ANILCA, access to 
inholdings, provide sufficient protection of refuge resources and use. 
The Service has revised Sec.  29.41 ``When does this subpart apply to 
me?'' to clarify that the rule does not apply to operators in Alaska. 
In addition to this revision, the Service has removed any reference to 
ANILCA in other provisions of this rule. The specific references in 
various parts of the proposed rule were more confusing than helpful.
    Refuges in Alaska will continue to be governed by title XI of the 
Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA; 16 U.S.C. 
410hh-410hh-5, 16 U.S.C. 3101 et seq., 43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.), and the 
Department's implementing regulations and standards found at 43 CFR 
part 36. Additionally, section 22(g) of the Alaska Native Claims 
Settlement Act of 1971 (ANCSA) (43 U.S.C. 1601-1624) and its 
implementing regulations found at 50 CFR 25.21 will continue to apply 
to lands conveyed to Alaska Native Corporations that are within the 
boundaries of a National Wildlife Refuge in existence on the date of 
enactment of ANCSA. However, the performance-based standards outlined 
in this rule may be used, as appropriate, as guidance in determining 
how an operator would meet the various requirements of ANILCA and ANCSA 
to protect refuge resources and uses. ANILCA provides the Service with 
the authority to ensure that operators accessing non-Federal mineral 
rights underneath refuges in Alaska must work cooperatively with the 
Service through a permitting process outlined in section 1110 and 43 
CFR part 36 to avoid or minimize impacts from these operations to 
refuge resources and uses. For example, under the ANILCA regulations, 
the Service may require an operator to: Obtain a permit for

[[Page 79958]]

operations on federally owned surface estate; provide the Service with 
financial assurance; restrict the time, place, and manner of activities 
as necessary to protect refuge resources and uses; and ensure the 
operation is properly plugged and reclaimed after production operations 
are complete.
    12. Comment: The Service also received comments asking to further 
clarify that this rule would not be used to regulate activities 
conducted on Alaska Native Corporation (ANC)-owned or other non-Federal 
lands in Alaska.
    Service Response: The scope of this rule is limited to activities 
on Federal lands within the National Wildlife Refuge System. In the 
case of refuges in Alaska, it does not apply to inholdings or non-
Federal adjacent lands. Commenters generally seemed to be clear about 
the scope of this rule on this point, and, therefore, the Service 
concludes it does not need to clarify this further in the final rule. 
As discussed above, access through refuges to ANC-owned or other non-
Federal lands in Alaska will continue to be governed by ANILCA, ANCSA, 
and their implementing regulations.
    13. Comment: The Service also received comments recommending that 
the Service clarify further how the operations standards outlined in 
the proposed rule would apply to operations under an ANILCA permit. 
Based on concern about how some of the standards would further limit 
landowners' ability to specify route or method of access and, 
therefore, diminish their rights to adequate and feasible access to 
inholdings as authorized under ANILCA, these commenters asked that the 
Service not apply these operation standards to operations in Alaska. On 
the other hand, the Service also received comments asking that the 
final rule avoid citing specific sections of the operating standards 
that may apply to operations under an ANILCA permit, because doing so 
would raise doubts about the application of the rest of the rule to 
these operations (see 80 FR 77206; December 11, 2015).
    Service Response: As discussed above, this rule does not apply to 
oil and gas operations in Alaska. However, the Service has developed 
these operating standards through a thorough analysis of what is needed 
to properly protect refuge resources and uses. Therefore, to the extent 
consistent with these existing ANCSA and ANILCA regulations, the 
Service may use these standards as guidance in approving operations and 
issuing permits under existing regulations applicable to Alaska. The 
standards that will be applicable will be determined on a case-by-case 
basis and will only be used if consistent with the standards outlined 
in ANILCA and its implementing regulations.
    14. Comment: Other commenters recommended that the Service apply 
the rule more comprehensively to operations in Alaska, believing that 
ANILCA is not sufficient at protecting NWRS resources and uses from 
impacts of oil and gas operations.
    Service Response: The Service has concluded that ANILCA provides 
sufficient regulation of oil and gas operations in Alaska where the 
Service has been able to effectively work with operators to minimize or 
avoid impacts to refuge resources and uses while providing operators 
access to their minerals under the existing regulations. As discussed 
above, implementation of the existing ANILCA regulations provides 
stringent protection of refuge resources and uses and provides the 
Service the appropriate tools for regulating non-Federal oil and gas 
operations on refuge-administered surface estate. As one commenter 
suggested, if the Service does, in the future, decide we need different 
tools to effectively manage oil and gas resources in Alaska, we can 
propose revisions to the ANILCA implementing regulations.
    15. Comment: The Service received a comment highlighting the fact 
that the statutory authority and obligation to review and approve 
geological and geophysical exploration plans per section 1002 of ANILCA 
(16 U.S.C. 3142) (and associated regulations at 50 CFR part 37) has 
expired (see Memorandum Decision and Order, U.S. District Court for the 
District of Alaska (State of Alaska v. Jewell, et al. Case No. 
3:14[hyphen]cv-00048-SLG)), and recommending that the final rule should 
clarify that the Service cannot accept further applications for 
geological or geophysical exploration for oil and gas in the coastal 
plain of the Arctic Refuge. The comment also recommended that the final 
rule should also explicitly mention prohibitions on oil and gas 
leasing, development, and production in the Arctic National Wildlife 
Refuge (16 U.S.C. 3143).
    Service Response: The Service agrees that we cannot accept any 
further application for geological or geophysical exploration in the 
coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and that oil and 
gas leasing is prohibited in the refuge for the reasons stated in the 
comment; however, the recommended revisions are not necessary in the 
final rule because they are outside the scope of this rulemaking.

Existing Production Operations Under a Service Permit

    16. Comment: The Service received comments that the proposed rule 
was unclear as to which provisions of this subpart applied to existing 
operators under a Service-issued permit.
    Service Response: The Service agrees with the commenter that the 
proposed rule was not clear as to which provisions of the rule applied 
to existing operators with a Service-issued permit. For operations 
being conducted under Sec.  29.43, all administrative or operational 
requirements that are specific to obtaining or operating under an 
operations permit issued under this subpart do not apply. The operator 
with an existing permit may continue to operate under the terms and 
conditions of that Service-issued permit, unless the operator proposes 
to modify its operations or propose new operations not covered by the 
existing Service-issued permit, such as plugging and reclamation. If an 
operator wishes to modify their operations or proposes new operations 
outside the scope of their existing Service-issued permit, the permit 
will need to be amended such that any modification or new operation 
meets applicable operating standards of the rule. We have revised Sec.  
29.43 accordingly.
    17. Comment: Several commenters recommended that operators 
conducting production operations under a currently approved special use 
permit should be required to obtain a new permit under the proposed 
rule, as the Service considered in Alternative C of the DEIS, to ensure 
that they are following certain performance-based standards regarding 
waste management and disposal, leaks, spills, and pits.
    Service Response: The Service has been very successful at working 
with operators through these Special Use Permits (SUP) to ensure that 
impacts to refuge resources and uses are avoided and minimized. As 
explained above, the Service has concluded that a new permit 
requirement for these existing operations would bring little to no 
beneficial impacts to refuge resources and uses, and would impose an 
unnecessary administrative burden on the Service and operators by 
requiring a new permit to replace the existing permit. In issuing 
permits to existing operators, the Service considered and included many 
provisions to protect refuge resources and uses, such as waste 
management and disposal, spill prevention, and spill response. Some 
SUPs have authorized the creation of reserve pits, while others have 
prohibited them. Such inconsistency in

[[Page 79959]]

the future has been addressed and eliminated by this rule. The Service 
has decided that requiring these operators to get a new permit is not 
reasonable or appropriate, considering that these operators have been 
cooperative in working with the Service to protect refuge resources and 
uses and have reasonable expectations from their work with us that the 
operations permitted by the Service in their SUP are sufficient. 
However, as discussed above, any modifications to their operations or 
proposals for new operations not covered by the original permit are 
subject to all applicable requirements of part 29.
    Also, the Service has further clarified in Sec.  29.43, as 
discussed above, that an existing operator must comply with the 
Service's plugging provisions at Sec. Sec.  29.180 and 29.181. Some 
commenters stated there should be a clear requirement for operators 
with an approved SUP to provide financial assurance prior to proceeding 
with plugging and reclamation. The Service's intent under Sec.  29.43 
is to allow operators who have cooperated with the Service in 
conducting activities under a Service-issued permit to continue under 
the terms and conditions that have been agreed upon. While financial 
assurance would provide the benefit of ensuring the public does not 
become responsible for plugging and reclamation costs should an 
operator default or abandon their operation, based on the knowledge and 
experiences of current and past refuge managers engaged in oil and gas 
oversight, we were not able to identify any well becoming orphaned by 
an operator within the past 20 years. Therefore, the Service declines 
to add a financial assurance provision at great cost to these operators 
with little benefit to refuge resources and uses. However, if an 
operator's original permit did not include authorization to conduct 
plugging and reclamation, the operator would be required to amend their 
Service-issued permit or obtain a new operations permit, either of 
which requires compliance with the plugging and reclamation provisions 
of this rule, including providing financial assurance.

Pre-Existing Operations

    18. Comment: The Service received several comments suggesting the 
Service clarify how pre-existing operations would be subject to 
provisions of the rule absent a new permit requirement. One commenter 
expressed concern that the proposed rule did not include a mechanism 
for ensuring pre-existing operations are following the requirements of 
the rule. Additionally, commenters wanted more clarity as to what 
general terms and conditions apply to pre-existing operations.
    Service Response: The Service agrees that the rule should further 
clarify which provisions of the subpart would apply to these classes of 
operations. For operations being conducted under Sec.  29.44, all 
administrative or operational requirements that are specific to 
obtaining or operating under an operations permit issued under this 
subpart do not apply unless the operator chooses to obtain a new 
operations permit instead of amending their existing permits under the 
terms and conditions of that permit. We have made this clarification in 
the rule at Sec.  29.44. Additionally, we agree the language needs to 
be clearer as to the plugging and reclamation responsibilities of a 
pre-existing operator. After production operations have been completed, 
a pre-existing operator must obtain an Operations Permit from the 
Service, either to maintain the well in shut-in status or to plug and 
reclaim operations in compliance with this subpart. The Service has 
made this clarification in Sec.  29.63. Finally, the Service has made 
specific revisions to the rule at Sec.  29.64 that identify the 
specific ``General Terms and Conditions'' applicable to pre-existing 
operations.
    The Service has concluded it does not need to impose a permit 
requirement on pre-existing operators in order to notify them of the 
applicable requirements of the rule or to ensure they are in compliance 
with its requirements. The Service has a duty to ensure that all pre-
existing and existing operators are notified of the requirements of the 
rule. The Service is working on guidance documents for all classes of 
operators, including pre-existing operators. Additionally, the Service 
has already developed relationships with many of the pre-existing 
operators. The Service will be in contact with operators to ensure they 
are informed about the requirements of the rule.
    19. Comment: Some commenters agree with the Service's proposed 
approach not to require operations permits for pre-existing operations 
during the production phase. Other commenters believe that pre-existing 
operations should be subject to the same requirements as new operations 
under the rule (as the Service considered in Alternative C of the 
DEIS), specifically requiring a new permit for pre-existing operators 
that would ensure that they are following the applicable performance-
based standards of the proposed rule, including waste management and 
disposal, spill prevention and response, and the general prohibition on 
the use of pits, for example; and/or obtaining financial assurance for 
the full cost of plugging and reclamation during the production phase.
    Service Response: After weighing the comments on both sides of the 
issue, the Service has decided to continue the approach outlined in the 
proposed rule that a pre-existing operator not be required to get a 
permit or post financial assurance during the production phase of its 
operation. In the cost-benefit analysis and environmental impact 
statement, the Service evaluated the range of alternatives related to 
the management of pre-existing operations from no additional regulatory 
oversight to full regulatory oversight. The Service did identify 
unnecessary impacts to refuge resources and uses related to the ongoing 
production phase of pre-existing operations, but also recognized the 
potential to apply a different, more efficient approach to address many 
of the refuge resource and use issues for this class of operation.
    The primary issue with pre-existing operations, as identified by 
refuge managers, is that reclamation has not been typically or 
consistently performed in a way that restores disturbed areas to 
productive habitat. This issue is addressed by the rule. First, in 
accordance with Sec.  29.63 (which has been revised to clarify), after 
production operations have been completed, a pre-existing operator must 
obtain an Operations Permit from the Service, either to maintain the 
well in shut-in status or to plug and reclaim operations in compliance 
with this subpart, including the requirement that an operator obtain 
financial assurance at this time. Second, a pre-existing operator is 
subject to the reclamation standards of Sec.  29.117(d), which provides 
for removing all above-ground structures, equipment, roads, well pads, 
and contaminating substances, reestablishing native vegetation, 
restoring conditions to pre-disturbance hydrologic functions, and 
restoring disturbed areas to productive habitat.
    Our analysis found that the Service could eliminate many of the 
ongoing, unnecessary impacts to refuge resources and uses resulting 
from the production phase of pre-existing operations by making 
violation of non-conflicting State laws and regulations relating to oil 
and gas operations a prohibited act in the rule. Though not required to 
obtain a Service operations permit during production, the Service would 
have greater authority to ensure these operations are in compliance 
with applicable laws because Refuge Law Enforcement would be able to 
enforce

[[Page 79960]]

State law on the NWRS. Any violation of State laws on the NWRS would 
constitute a violation of the law under the rule, and all applicable 
penalties and prohibitions would apply.
    State laws usually address ongoing impacts from these pre-existing 
operations, such as waste disposal and prevention and cleanup of leaks 
and spills. Where an individual State's regulations do not specifically 
address an issue, the Service would continue to work cooperatively with 
State agencies and operators to reduce impacts or risks to refuge 
resources and uses. For example, in an assessment of State regulations 
conducted by the Ground Water Protection Council (GWPC) for the U.S. 
Department of Energy (DOE), the GWPC found that 23 of 27 oil-producing 
States assessed required oil production site storage tanks to have 
secondary containment dikes to contain leaks and spills (GWPC 2014). 
Additionally, the GWPC (2014) reported that 23 of the 27 States require 
reporting and remediation of spills and 13 of the 27 States specify 
cleanup standards for spills. Some States also have siting or setback 
requirements for pits (production skim pits and reserve pits) with some 
States prohibiting the use of pits in 100-year floodplains or in areas 
with shallow aquifers (GWPC 2014). An operator's compliance with these 
types of laws and the Service's ability to assist in the enforcement of 
these laws would provide additional protection to refuge resources and 
uses.
    While full regulation of pre-existing operations during their 
production phase would provide some additional protection to refuge 
resources and uses, it would not be able to remedy a majority of the 
impacts to refuge resources and uses caused when the operators chose 
the time, place, and manner of these pre-existing operations. For 
example, on existing operations, the operator's well has already been 
drilled and the area of operations (access route, well site, production 
facilities, and routes for gathering lines) were established, and 
impacts to refuge resources, such as geology and soils, wetlands, and 
wildlife-dependent recreation, occurred prior to the acquisition of a 
refuge. The Service could require actions not addressed by applicable 
State rules--site maintenance for erosion control, vegetation 
management, noise abatement, housekeeping, for examples--by imposing a 
permit requirement and undergoing the associated administrative 
processes and costs. Our analysis estimated that approximately 4,000 
wells operated by perhaps 400 different operators would fall under the 
operations permit requirement. Many wells could be grouped under a 
single operations permit by an operator, but the volume of operations 
permit applications required would likely exceed 1,000. The Service 
would need to roughly double its oil and gas management resources from 
current levels, while the administrative costs to operators of pre-
existing wells is estimated to be approximately $1,800 per well.
    Based on our analysis, we determined enforcing a pre-existing 
operator's compliance with State laws and regulations best meets the 
purposes and needs of revising the existing rule and will provide the 
maximum protection of refuge resources when balanced with the cost to 
operators and to the Service for administration. This approach enables 
managers to focus limited resources on those operations with the 
greatest possible impacts to refuge resources and uses rather than an 
indiscriminate administration of permits for the approximately 4,000 
pre-existing operations. Comments from the public have not provided us 
with substantial new information that would change our analysis or 
conclusion.
    20. Comment: The Service received a comment requesting that we 
revise the definition of ``modification,'' so that a pre-existing 
operation must obtain a permit when they transfer operators.
    Service Response: After considering this comment, the Service 
agrees that a change in operator should trigger the requirement that 
the new operator obtain an Operations Permit from the Service. However, 
revising the definition of modification is not the best way to 
accomplish this objective. Instead, the Service has revised the rule 
language to replace ``operation'' with ``operator'' in Sec.  29.44 to 
clarify that the exempt status follows an operator not an operation. 
Also, in Sec.  29.171, we have included language that would allow an 
operator to continue operations for 90 days while the operator files 
the permit application and posts bond to ensure continuity of new 
operations. The new operator would need to obtain an Operations Permit 
that meets operating standards and general terms and conditions of the 
rule, including posting of financial assurance. The Service will not 
require a change in the time or place of these operations, but rather 
will ensure that any ongoing unnecessary impacts from these operations 
are avoided or minimized by requiring the new operator to employ 
``technologically feasible, least damaging methods'' moving forward. 
This change in what constitutes loss of pre-existing status ensures 
that more operations on the NWRS will be operating under Service 
standards sooner, and provides greater protection of refuge resources 
and uses from the ongoing unnecessary impacts of pre-existing 
operations.
    21. Comment: We received comments from the public requesting that 
the rule require more than just basic information from pre-existing 
operators on refuge lands (e.g., mitigation, spill control, emergency 
preparedness plans). Commenters stated that the Service should require 
other important information necessary for the proper management and 
conservation of refuge resources from these pre-existing operators. For 
instance, one comment suggested that the Service's requirement in 
proposed Sec.  29.61 for a scaled map that delineates only an ``area of 
operation'' may not be sufficiently detailed to provide refuge managers 
with baseline information to monitor operations, changes in operations, 
and violations, and that the Service should require a scaled map, as 
well as detailed schematics of existing wells and infrastructure.
    Service Response: After further considering these comments, the 
Service has concluded that some additional, basic information from pre-
existing operators would enhance the protection of refuge resources 
through better documentation of the equipment, materials, and 
operational practices being used on location. Additional operational 
information will also help to establish an operator's reclamation 
responsibilities as well as a baseline for determining whether future 
actions constitute a modification as defined under Sec.  29.50. 
Therefore, the Service has amended the rule at Sec.  29.61 to require 
pre-existing operators to also submit to the Service: a brief 
description of the current operations and any anticipated changes to 
the current operations, including documentation of the current 
operating methods, surface equipment, and materials produced or used.
    22. Comment: Some commenters requested that the Service delete the 
phrases ``subject to the provisions of this subpart'' and ``subject to 
applicable requirements of this subpart'' from proposed Sec. Sec.  
29.43 and 29.44, believing that subjecting pre-existing operations and 
existing operations currently under a Service permit retroactively was 
inappropriate.
    Service Response: In developing the rule, the Service identified 
several key objectives that needed to be addressed in considering the 
extent to which to regulate pre-existing operations and operations 
already being conducted

[[Page 79961]]

under Service authorization. These objectives included that: (1) These 
operations not create additional unnecessary impacts on refuge 
resources and uses; and (2) all operations within refuges are 
eventually plugged and reclaimed to Service standards. Pre-existing 
operations and existing operations are subject to specific provisions 
of this rule that ensure that these objectives are met and that future 
activities of these operators do not result in additional, unnecessary 
impacts. Therefore, subjecting these operations to these provisions is 
not inappropriate, as the commenter suggested, because the provisions 
are not focused on retroactively regulating past activities and impacts 
of these operations (i.e., time, place, or manner of operations) but 
rather on regulating new or modified activities and impacts of these 
operations.

Financial Assurance

    23. Comment: Some commenters expressed the desire that the Service 
go beyond what was in the proposed rule and periodically review 
reclamation costs and corresponding requirements for financial 
assurance, and update these estimates as necessary to accurately 
reflect the cost of reclamation upon the decommission of the well.
    Service Response: The concern that financial assurance amounts will 
become outdated and insufficient to ensure reclamation was already 
addressed in proposed Sec.  29.152, which we, therefore, have not 
revised. The Service may require, or the operator may request, an 
adjustment to the financial assurance amount because of any 
circumstance that increases or decreases the estimated costs of 
plugging and reclamation. Cost changes due to inflation would be a 
circumstance that would allow the Service to require an adjustment in 
the amount of financial assurance.
    24. Comment: The Service also received comments that requiring 
financial assurance above and beyond financial assurance already 
required by the State is not necessary because the State bonds are 
sufficient. Commenters stated that this additional financial assurance 
requirement was ``unfair and unreasonable,'' and should only be done on 
a case-by-case basis as necessary to supplement bonds already lodged 
with the State.
    Service Response: The Service's rule does not rely on State bonds 
to ensure timely well plugging and site reclamation to Service 
standards for two primary reasons: (1) Bonds furnished to operators by 
the State are not usually directly available to the Service to plug and 
reclaim that particular site; and (2) State bonding programs do not 
typically require well plugging and reclamation to Service standards. 
State bond amounts are generally insufficient in themselves to cover 
the actual costs of plugging and reclamation. However, States 
administer well plugging funds with money derived from sources other 
than forfeited bonds, e.g., permitting fees, taxes on production, or 
penalties. Most States with regulations overseeing oil and gas 
activities have developed programs for plugging and reclaiming orphaned 
wells, and, theoretically, the State may have sufficient funds to plug 
and reclaim orphaned wells on the NWRS. However, many State programs 
remain backlogged with a number of orphaned wells that need to be 
plugged or reclaimed.
    Orphaned wells on Federally managed lands do not usually rank as 
top priorities on State lists for plugging. (Office of Inspector 
General, Report No. CR-EV-FWS-002-2014: Oil and Gas Development on U.S. 
Fish and Wildlife Service Refuges). So the bond that an operator 
furnishes to the State is often not available to ensure that wells are 
plugged and areas of operation reclaimed in the event of operator 
default or abandonment of the operation. Even where a State may 
expeditiously address plugging of an orphaned well on a refuge, State 
plugging programs typically do not require restoration of a site in a 
manner that meets Service standards in the rule (Sec.  29.117(d)). For 
these reasons, State bonds are typically not sufficient to ensure 
protection of refuge resources in the event that an operator defaults 
or abandons his or her operation.
    However, in the event that a State and the Service were in formal 
agreement that State plugging funds would be used to plug a well 
directly upon its becoming orphaned as well as to conduct site 
reclamation, the Service would consider this to be a condition under 
Sec.  29.152 that would justify reducing the financial assurance 
required by the Service.

Modification of Operations and Permits

    25. Comment: The Service received several comments requesting 
clarity of the proposed rule's definition of ``modification'' (proposed 
Sec.  29.50). Some commenters wanted the Service to clarify the 
definition to ensure it includes certain changes. Specifically, one 
commenter suggested the Service amend the definition to read: 
``Examples of a modification could include, but are not limited to, 
drilling additional wells from the same pad, conducting hydraulic 
fracturing or other well stimulation activities, creating additional 
surface disturbance (expanding the footprint of a well pad, realigning 
a road, constructing new pipelines or gathering lines), or converting a 
natural gas well into a wastewater disposal well so that the resulting 
modification has notable impacts to the refuge resource.''
    Service Response: The Service agrees that many of the examples 
listed by the commenters require a pre-existing operator to obtain a 
new permit or an operator under an existing Service-issued permit to 
obtain an amendment to its permit, including drilling additional wells 
from the same pad, conducting hydraulic fracturing or other well 
stimulation activities, creating additional surface disturbance 
(expanding the footprint of a well pad, realigning a road, constructing 
new pipelines or gathering lines), or converting a natural gas well 
into a wastewater disposal well, will also likely be considered 
``modifying'' an operation. The Service had identified several examples 
in the preamble of the proposed rule, and examples of a modification 
include drilling additional wells from the same pad, creating 
additional surface disturbance (e.g., expanding the footprint of a well 
pad, realigning a road), or converting a natural gas well into a 
wastewater disposal well, as these modifications will have impacts 
beyond the scope, intensity, and/or duration of existing impacts. This 
provision was not intended to apply to minor actions, such as 
repositioning of surface facilities within the current footprint of 
pre-existing operations, minor changes in color schemes, or minor, non-
routine maintenance actions.
    The Service has decided it is not necessary to revise the 
definition of ``modification'' in the rule to include these specific 
examples. Instead, these examples and others the Service develops in 
the future will be included in guidance documents provided to pre-
existing operators and holders of existing Service authorizations as 
well as Service staff who will administer the rule.
    26. Comment: Another commenter recommended two changes to the 
regulations addressing modification of existing operations. First, the 
commenter asked the Service to add the word ``significant'' before 
``additional impacts'' in the definition for ``modifying.'' This change 
would clarify that modified permits are not (and should not be) 
required for minor modifications to operations that do not result in 
significant changes in effects to the environment. Second, proposed

[[Page 79962]]

Sec.  29.160 should be modified to clarify that the Service may amend a 
permit only when there is a ``significant'' or ``substantial'' 
modification to the permitted operation.
    Service Response: The Service considered the addition of the word 
``significant,'' as well as other adjectives to provide more clarity 
for what the Service would consider to be a ``modification.'' However, 
we decided that adding any such language was not useful, because such 
terms themselves remained subject to various interpretations. For 
instance, an operator, the Service, or a non-governmental organization 
or individual may have very different beliefs as to what constitutes a 
``significant'' impact to refuge resources and uses. Therefore, we have 
provided several examples of what would likely constitute a 
modification (see above) to provide some clarification to our 
intentions in regulating modifications, and as previously stated we 
will provide further guidance documents for this purpose. However, 
determining whether a change is a ``modification'' of the operation 
must be done on a case-by-case basis because the details of when, 
where, and how such changes are accomplished will determine whether 
such a change is ``beyond the scope, intensity, and/or duration of 
existing impacts.'' Therefore, the Service did not revise the rule as 
suggested by this comment.

Performance-Based Standards

    27. Comment: The Service received conflicting comments regarding 
our proposed approach of regulating oil and gas operations based on 
performance-based standards. Some commenters requested that the Service 
require prescriptive actions, at least in some instances. For example, 
one commenter suggested the general reclamation standard to ``remove or 
neutralize contaminating substance'' (Sec.  29.117(d)(3)) be modified 
to include a strict prohibition of onsite remediation of contaminants. 
Also, the Service received comments that these performance-based 
standards leave too much discretion to the Service to either be too 
lenient with operators or too strict.
    Service Response: Pursuant to Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735), 
``[e]ach agency shall identify and assess alternative forms of 
regulation and shall, to the extent feasible, specify performance 
objectives, rather than specifying the behavior or manner of compliance 
that regulated entities must adopt'' (E.O. 12866(b)(8)). Consistent 
with the direction provided in E.O. 12866, and as stated in the 
proposed rule, the rule is based on performance-based standards rather 
than prescriptive operating standards. A prescriptive standard may seem 
stricter because it ensures that an operator follows a certain practice 
that seems like it would protect refuge resources and uses and allows 
the operator no flexibility to use a less-protective standard. However, 
in implementation, these standards can, in some instances, have the 
unintended consequence of actually being more harmful to refuge 
resources and uses. For example, onsite remediation of a hydrocarbon 
spill may result in less overall impacts or risks of impacts by 
reducing heavy truck traffic than a prescriptive standard of requiring 
offsite removal of soils, which also increases the potential for 
introduction of invasive plant species associated with import of new 
fill material. The flexibility for refuge managers and operators to 
accomplish a desired end allows site-by-site evaluation of alternatives 
that are least damaging overall. Additionally, science and technology 
are constantly advancing, and new methodologies used today are much 
more environmentally protective than those available only a few years 
before. If these trends continue in the future, the performance-based 
standards in the rule easily adapt to those changing methodologies and 
will be at least as effective in the future as they are today.
    In response to comments that using performance-based standards 
leaves too much discretion to the Service, this rule will be 
accompanied by detailed guidance for both operators and Service staff 
on what are current best management practices for meeting these 
standards. This guidance will provide consistency of interpretation and 
application of the standards across the NWRS and decrease the 
possibility that the discretion afforded refuge managers will be 
misapplied. Furthermore, through compliance with the National 
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process at the site-specific permit 
level, the public will have the opportunity to review and comment on 
Service proposals.
    28. Comment: Other commenters were generally supportive of the more 
flexible approach, but recommend that the Service remove what they saw 
as more prescriptive standards in the rule in favor of more general 
goals to be achieved. For example, a commenter recommended removing the 
proposed regulations requiring the installation and maintenance of 
secondary containment, applying seasonal restrictions, and specifying 
the location, type, and design of facilities (proposed Sec. Sec.  
29.111-29.119) as unreasonable, burdensome, and unlawfully diminishing 
the value of the mineral estate. The commenter suggested that the 
Service replace these standards with more general goals to be achieved 
to ``the extent technologically and economically feasible, and a 
requirement to use best management practices.''
    Service Response: The Service recognizes that some arguably 
prescriptive management practices are included in the suite of 
performance-based standards. The observation that an operator must 
install and maintain secondary containment is a good example (Sec.  
29.111(b)). In part, the provision is prescriptive, but acknowledges 
the widespread use of the best management practice of secondary 
containment by industry and regulatory agencies to capture spills, 
prevent their spread, and facilitate their cleanup. In this instance, 
the Service does not envision any alternatives that would exclude the 
use of secondary containment and still meet the ``technologically 
feasible, least damaging method'' standard, and so the provision serves 
to inform operators and the public of an aspect of the rule's approach 
to managing contaminating substances. Additionally, the requirement 
still leaves flexibility for the refuge manager and operators to decide 
on the design and operation of the secondary containment system. 
Similarly, in a few other instances the Service has included practices 
that we find to be more informative but which may be seen as somewhat 
prescriptive; however, we have maintained flexibility for site-specific 
implementation. The rule includes the necessary general goals applied 
with the overall standard of technologically feasible, least damaging 
methods. The rule will result in best management practices being 
identified and included in the site-specific operations permit.
    29. Comment: One commenter asked whether what is practical for a 
particular operator would be a consideration in what is 
``technologically feasible, least damaging methods.''
    Service Response: While we do consider economics in determining 
appropriate methods, we look at what is feasible in terms of industry-
wide practice, not what is affordable for a specific operator. The 
Service does not intend to allow operators to use methods that 
unreasonably harm refuge resources and uses just because the operators 
don't have the adequate financial resources to employ

[[Page 79963]]

technologically feasible, least damaging methods.
    30. Comment: The Service also received a comment that it does not 
have the authority to permit only the ``least damaging'' operational 
methods and that the Service's use of the term ``technologically 
feasible, least damaging methods'' is not appropriate and should be 
replaced with ``feasible methods'' that are technologically and 
economically feasible, as determined by the best industry practices 
available. This commenter contended that the Service may only 
recommend, not require, the ``least damaging'' methods, stating that 
the mineral interest owner is not required to conduct its operations in 
a manner that is not economically or technologically feasible in order 
to access its mineral rights.
    Service Response: The Service has considered this comment and does 
not agree. First, we note that NPS has in fact used this standard for 
new operations since January 1979. This term, defined at Sec.  29.50, 
ensures that the Service does not go beyond what is technologically 
feasible in the methods required of an operator and considers the 
industry-wide economics of those methods in making those decisions. It 
also ensures that an operator uses those methods that are least 
damaging of refuge resources and uses, which is a responsibility of the 
Service to maintain under the NWRSAA. Therefore, the Service concludes 
that requiring ``technologically feasible, least damaging methods'' is 
well within the authority of the Service.
    31. Comment: The Service received several comments recommending 
that the Service remove any ambiguous language contained in the 
proposed rule, including the term ``greatest extent practicable'' found 
at proposed Sec.  29.32. Commenters were concerned that such language 
would allow the operators the unnecessary ability to pressure the 
Service into allowing methods that are based more on economic factors 
rather than NWRS resource and use protection.
    Service Response: In response to these comments, the Service went 
back to the regulations to review for any ambiguous language. The 
Service did use these terms quite frequently in the preamble to the 
proposed rule where it outlined the Service's general intent regarding 
the proposed rule. The Service has avoided using such ambiguous terms 
in the preamble to the final rule. When the Service reviewed the 
proposed rule text in consideration of this comment, we found that the 
term ``greatest extent practicable'' only appeared at Sec.  29.32, 
which is a revised version of a general policy statement of the Service 
related to managing all non-Federal mineral rights. This language 
remains from the previous regulations found at Sec.  29.32 and pertains 
to rights other than oil and gas rights, so the Service decided not to 
revise this language at this time. Other than this section, the Service 
found one other instance of ambiguous language in the proposed rule 
(see in proposed Sec.  29.111(g) ``to the extent reasonably 
practicable'') and has removed such language.

Timeline for Approval

    32. Comment: The Service sought comment on whether the 180-day 
timeline for final action is reasonable. The Service received some 
comments stating that this timeline was too long for operators to wait 
to get authorization on their permits. Other commenters suggested that 
this timeline was too short and would hinder the Service's ability to 
fully comply with NEPA requirements.
    Service Response: The Service has considered these comments, but 
has determined that the timeline from the proposed rule should be 
maintained in the final rule. The timeline does provide for hard 
deadlines and limits the Service's discretion to delay the processing 
of Operations Permit applications. For instance, under the rule, the 
Service has 30 days to conduct its ``initial review'' to determine 
whether an operator's application is complete, request more information 
from the operator, or inform the operator that more time is necessary 
and provide written justification for the delay. Once the application 
is deemed complete, the Service must generally take final action within 
180 days. Any additional time after the 180 days may be taken only if 
the operator agrees to additional time, or that time is necessary for 
the Service to comply with applicable laws and regulations. The 
Service's purpose in using the 180-day timeframe is to provide 
operators with greater certainty regarding the permitting process. 
While the Service cannot always guarantee meeting this deadline and 
has, therefore, provided an extension provision in the rule, it is the 
Service's intention to process these permits as quickly as possible and 
not unreasonably impede a private mineral rights owner's right to 
access those minerals.
    33. Comment: One commenter recommended that the Service add a 
provision to the regulations that would provide a Categorical Exclusion 
under NEPA for permits issued under this subpart and additionally 
include a provision that compliance with the terms of the permit is 
``deemed to be not likely to adversely affect any species listed under 
the federal Endangered Species Act.''
    Service Response: The Service declines to adopt the commenter's 
recommendation because it is beyond the scope of this rulemaking and we 
do not currently have the record that we would need to demonstrate to 
the Council on Environmental Quality to establish a new categorical 
exclusion. As the Service gains experience in implementing the rule, we 
may find that it is appropriate to pursue adoption of a new categorical 
exclusion. Similarly, with respect to the inclusion in the rule of a 
provision regarding compliance with the Endangered Species Act (ESA), 
we are unable to accept the recommendation because such determinations 
must be made on a case-by-case basis in compliance with section 7 of 
the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).

Information Requirements and Public Access to Information

    34. Comment: The Service received some comments that the proposed 
information requirements for permit applications (50 CFR 29.94-29.97) 
were extraordinarily extensive and unduly burdensome. These commenters 
believed that these sections, as well as Sec.  29.121(f), also 
unlawfully require the disclosure of confidential and/or proprietary 
information and requested that any provisions requiring the disclosure 
of such information be removed. These commenters also requested that 
the Service scale down information requirements to only the basic 
information needed for the Service to assess the location and type of 
operations that will be undertaken.
    Service Response: The Service carefully considered what information 
was necessary from operators so that the agency could properly 
administer non-Federal oil and gas activities on the NWRS and ensure 
that operators avoid or minimize impacts to refuge resources and uses. 
We analyzed each of the information requirements in compliance with the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act to ensure that the benefit of these 
information requirements to NWRS resources and uses were appropriate 
based on the administrative costs to the operator and the Service, and 
we concluded that all information requirements in the rule are 
appropriate. Furthermore, we understand that information requirements 
can be burdensome on operators, so in instances where the Service needs 
information gathered in compliance with other Federal or State laws 
under this rule, the Service does not require an

[[Page 79964]]

operator to duplicate that information but rather provide the Service 
copies (see, e.g., Sec. Sec.  29.61(d), 29.121(g)).
    35. Comment: Commenters suggested that the Service information 
requirements are inadequate because they do not require full disclosure 
of chemicals used for hydraulic fracturing prior to obtaining a permit. 
They questioned how the Service could do a full analysis of the 
environmental risks of a hydraulic fracturing operation if they did not 
have all of the information regarding chemical uses by the operator. 
Commenters also stated that proposed Sec.  29.210 would allow operators 
to avoid any obligations to disclose the identity of fracking chemicals 
used simply by submitting nothing more than an affidavit in support of 
their claim that the information is confidential and the Service would 
have no power to disclose the information to the public if the operator 
were to provide it.
    Service Response: While an operator will be able to provide an 
affidavit to support the protection of proprietary or confidential 
information, an operator still must provide the Service any information 
the agency needs to fully assess the environmental impacts of an 
operator's activities, including all chemical uses in the operation. 
Information requirements included under Sec.  29.95(p) include 
identification of contaminating or toxic substances used or expected to 
be encountered during operations, including material safety sheets. In 
the rule, the Service also used the ``including, but not limited to'' 
term in the list of information requirements to reserve the ability to 
require additional information (see Sec.  29.96) if necessary.
    The information requirements of Sec.  29.95(p) provide the Service 
with the necessary information upfront to sufficiently analyze the 
environmental risks of a hydraulic fracturing operation and to ensure 
that operators are following best management practices for storing and 
removing these chemicals. The post-operational chemical disclosure 
information that operators commonly provide via FracFocus is for the 
different purpose of identifying specific sources of contamination and 
responsible parties should contamination occur.
    36. Comment: One commenter requested the Service provide an easy 
way for the public to access information about proposed operations and 
report perceived violations, including the option for anonymity to 
encourage workers and others with sensitive positions to report 
problems.
    Service Response: The Service's approval of any proposed operations 
on the NWRS will be done in compliance with NEPA, and the Service will 
provide the public with information about proposed operations and the 
opportunity to participate as afforded by that Act. As for reporting 
perceived violations, contact information for each refuge is readily 
available and is the fastest and most efficient way of notifying the 
Refuge of any perceived violations. We encourage the public and workers 
to contact that refuge with any concerns they may have regarding 
perceived violations by these operators. Such information can be 
provided to the refuge anonymously through letters, phone calls, or any 
other means that will allow an individual to feel comfortable doing so.

Penalty and Enforcement Provisions

    37. Comment: The Service received several comments recommending 
that the final rule provide for robust enforcement of rule requirements 
and include specific penalties for non-compliance. For instance, 
commenters requested specific provisions regarding notifying and 
working with operators to bring them into immediate compliance; issuing 
formal written notices of non-compliance; specific penalties for non-
compliance; seeking civil penalties for failure to comply with a notice 
of non-compliance; and for more egregious cases, filing a civil action 
in Federal court seeking an injunction or restraining order to stop 
damaging operations. One commenter also suggested that the Service 
adopt NPS current regulations for approval of an operations permit (50 
CFR 9.37(a)) believing that the language contained in that section, if 
adopted by the Service, would provide the Service the ability to deny a 
permit if it is not protective enough of a refuge.
    Service Response: The Service considered these comments, but 
concluded that modifying our enforcement provisions as the commenter 
suggested is not warranted. In speaking with Refuge law enforcement, 
the Department of Justice, and the Solicitor's Office, the Service 
finds these provisions provide sufficient tools for the Service to 
ensure compliance with this subpart on penalty and enforcement. 
Administrative corrective actions are not normally contained within the 
prohibited acts sections of regulations. The Service would adopt the 
recommended progressive enforcement action suggested by the comment 
through Service policy.
    Furthermore, the rule provides the Service the ability to deny a 
permit if the operator does not meet several requirements (Sec.  
29.103). The Service finds that these requirements are both more 
specific and clearer than the language suggested by the commenter. 
These requirements have been carefully crafted to ensure that the 
Service's approval (or denial) process for an Operations Permit meets 
the objectives of the rulemaking to ensure operations avoid or minimize 
impacts to refuge resources and uses.
    38. Comment: Additionally, a commenter requested that the Service 
provide further clarity on how prohibited acts and penalties apply to 
pre-existing operations and recommended that violation of the 
informational requirements, modifications, reclamation, general terms 
and conditions, and other operational requirements in Sec. Sec.  29.60-
29.64 be added to prohibited acts and penalties for pre-existing 
operations at Sec.  29.190.
    Service Response: The Service agrees with the commenter that the 
proposed rule could have been clearer as to which provisions apply to 
pre-existing requirements or not and has revised the rule accordingly 
at Sec.  29.60 through Sec.  29.64 and Sec.  29.190. A violation by a 
pre-existing operator of informational requirements, modifications 
requirements, reclamation requirements, and applicable general terms 
and conditions is considered a prohibited act and subject to applicable 
penalties.

Appeals

    39. Comment: The Service received comments that the two-tiered 
appeals process proposed in the regulations is unreasonable and unduly 
burdensome. There should be a single, expedited administrative appeal 
available for challenges to actions taken by the Service under the 
proposed regulations. This administrative decision should be directly 
appealable in Federal court.
    Service Response: The appeals process outlined at Sec.  25.45 is 
the process by which the Service currently reviews all appeals of the 
Service's permit decisions for public uses on refuge lands. The Service 
will not provide a different appeals process under this subpart, 
because we find that the current process works well and that the 
changes requested would lead to less consistency and efficiency for the 
administration of permits by the Service. The two-tiered appeals 
process provides additional opportunities to resolve disagreements, 
while preserving opportunities for judicial review of final agency 
action under the Administrative Procedure Act. As to the other concern 
raised by the commenter, we revised Sec.  29.200 to clarify that the 
decision of

[[Page 79965]]

the Regional Director will constitute the Service's final agency 
action.
    Finally, in reviewing the appeals process under the proposed rule 
as it would relate to pre-existing operations, the Service realized 
that it needed to revise this section to provide an operator the 
opportunity to appeal decisions made by the Service that do not apply 
to a permit granted by the Service and so has added the following 
provision to Sec.  29.200: ``The process set forth in Sec.  25.45 is to 
be used for any written decision concerning approval, denial, or 
modification of an operation made by the Service under this subpart.''

Access

    40. Comment: The Service received comments requesting the final 
rule contain a provision stating that the Service cannot place 
conditions on operations in a permit that only allows an operator to 
access and traverse Federal lands (i.e., in order to access operations 
on non-Federal lands).
    Service Response: In administering access across Federal lands, the 
Service is required by law to analyze the impacts of authorizing that 
access under NEPA. Through that analysis, the Service may find impacts 
to refuge resources and uses resulting from operations on non-Federal 
land resulting from the authorization of that access. In those cases, 
the Service will work with those requesting access across Federal lands 
to minimize or avoid those impacts, and, if agreeable to both the 
Service and the operator, those avoidance or mitigation measures may be 
included in the access permit. However, as stated in the proposed rule 
and maintained in the rule, the Service has made clear that we are 
permitting the access and not regulating the operations on non-Federal 
land. Accordingly, no change in the regulatory text is required.

Fees

    41. Comment: Some commenters suggested that the Service ensure that 
they are assessing the appropriate and/or additional fees of operators 
in order to ensure that the Service has adequate funding to administer 
these operations. Additionally, the Service received comments stating 
that the agency should have full authority to charge fees to cover 
annual inspections as well as any more frequent inspections needed 
during construction and pre-production activities, as well as for 
repeat violators or higher risk operations. Commenters recommended that 
the Service replace ``may'' with ``will'' at Sec.  29.120(c), not 
understanding why the Service would not charge for the costs of 
processing and administering temporary access permits and operations 
permits, particularly in an era of limited agency budgets. Other 
commenters stated that fees cannot be required for access or 
administering operating permits that are already within the scope of 
the operator's oil and gas right or other right provided by law and 
that there should be no fees for emergency access. Additionally, they 
stated that if an access fee can be applied, then it must be reasonable 
and cannot burden the underlying oil and gas right or otherwise 
diminish the value of the mineral estate.
    Service Response: After considering these comments, the Service did 
not revise the rule with respect to fees charged by the Service for 
either access or administering operations permits. Related to access 
fees, the Service is not charging for access that is pursuant to a 
deeded or statutory right to use the refuge-administered lands without 
payment, but only for access that is granted as a privilege ``outside 
the scope of an operator's oil and gas right'' for which the fees are 
subject to the provisions of the Refuge Revenue Sharing Act (16 U.S.C. 
715s). Such access is a special benefit that warrants a user charge 
commensurate with fees and charges for similar privileges and products 
made by private land owners in the vicinity or in accordance with local 
value (see 50 CFR 29.5). In terms of recovery costs of permit 
administration and operations monitoring allowed under Sec.  29.120(c), 
the Service uses ``may'' instead of ``will'' to provide flexibility to 
refuge managers and foster cooperation with operators. In some 
instances, operators may choose to share the costs with the Service in 
administering permits in order to expedite the process. For example, an 
operator may provide funding for a third-party contractor to prepare an 
environmental assessment for the Service during the permitting process. 
Periodic and annual inspections are aspects of administering a permit, 
and charging fees for such activities fall under that section. With 
flexibility in charging fees, operators and refuge managers may develop 
a mix of self-reporting and refuge monitoring that reduces 
administrative requirements on both parties.

Implementation

    42. Comment: The Service got one comment suggesting that the 
Service have refuge-specific management plans.
    Service Response: The Service appreciated this comment and will 
further consider it in implementing the rule. The Service already has 
developed refuge-specific oil and gas management plans through 
Comprehensive Conservation Plans, Habitat Management Plans, or other 
planning documents created to manage specific refuges. On refuges where 
there is the potential of oil and gas development, they include 
management strategies for these operations. The Service will continue 
to develop and update these plans as necessary to ensure they are 
consistent with this rule.
    43. Comment: Several commenters from industry and non-governmental 
organizations expressed concern that the Service does not have adequate 
staffing to properly implement the rule. In particular, some commenters 
expressed the need to ensure that, along with this rule, the Service 
has the necessary level of funding, staffing, and training to properly 
implement the rule, as highlighted by the 2007 Government 
Accountability Office (GAO) report that assessed the status of oil and 
gas operations on the National Wildlife Refuge System in 2007. Their 
report highlighted the inadequacy of the Service's current regulations 
and, in part, led to the promulgation of these proposed revisions. The 
GAO stated that ``[w]e recommend[ ] that FWS determine the level of 
staffing necessary to adequately oversee oil and gas operations and 
seek the necessary funding to meet those needs through appropriations, 
the authority to assess fees, or other means.'' The report further 
stated, ``we recommend that FWS ensure that staff are adequately 
trained to oversee oil and gas activities'' (GAO-07-829R). One comment 
requested the Service scale back the rule based on its limited 
resources. Another comment suggested that this rule may require 
assessing additional fees on operations, periodically ensuring that 
fees are adequate to cover the costs of monitoring and enforcement.
    Service Response: In crafting the proposed and final rules, the 
Service carefully considered the administrative burden the rule placed 
on operators and Service staff and on the resources required by the 
Service to successfully implement the rule. Therefore, the Service has 
weighed the cost of administration versus the resource benefits gained 
from regulation and decided on several occasions that were discussed in 
the responses to several comments above that the cost-benefit analysis 
did not support a more stringent regulatory regime. As promulgated, the 
rule prioritizes and regulates those activities with the largest 
potential impacts on refuge resources and uses. As discussed above, 
this is

[[Page 79966]]

one of the main reasons the Service for the most part has declined to 
regulate downhole activities associated with operations and to exempt 
inholdings and non-Federal adjacent lands from the rule.
    The Service currently has dedicated staff that manages oil and gas 
development on National Wildlife Refuge System lands. This rule brings 
more consistency and guidance to staff already dedicated to these 
issues. While there are additional responsibilities involved in 
processing operations permit applications and monitoring operations, 
the Service has determined this increase in need can be effectively met 
with the reallocation of refuge staff and resources. Additionally, the 
rule contains cost recovery or cost-sharing provisions that help ensure 
the Service has the necessary resources to implement the rule 
effectively and efficiently.

Section-by-Section Recommendations

    The Service received several other recommendations on specific 
section revisions to the proposed rule. The Service has considered all 
of these recommendations and has made changes, as appropriate, to 
provisions of the rule as discussed below and/or outlined in the table 
in the section Changes from the Proposed Rule.
    44. Comment: The Service received comments requesting that the 
definition of ``access'' (proposed Sec.  29.50) be revised so that 
``access'' does not include use of an aircraft when the aircraft 
doesn't take off of or land on Service-administered lands or waters. On 
the other hand, the Service received other comments recommending that 
the Service carry over the definition of ``access'' to the final rule, 
at least subjecting aircrafts landing on non-Federal lands to timing 
limitations to avoid disturbing wildlife.
    Service Response: The Service has considered these comments and has 
revised Sec.  29.50 to clarify that access does not include aircrafts 
that both take off from and land on inholdings or non-Federal adjacent 
lands, because the Service does not have the authority to condition 
aircraft landings outside of the NWRS.
    45. Comment: The Service received a comment asking that the Service 
further clarify the process for authorizing use of water outside of a 
State right and that it should be done in line with a compatibility 
determination.
    Service Response: The Service has concluded that determining 
sources of water for use in operations is best evaluated using the 
procedures and performance standards of the rule. Absent a 
demonstration by the operator that they have a right to use the water 
(e.g., State-held water right, specific deed language), water use, 
transportation, and storage on a refuge would be evaluated for the 
technologically feasible, least damaging method. Considerations would 
include, among other things, the volume of water needed, capacity of 
water sources to meet those needs and resulting consequences on aquatic 
resources, and transportation and storage methods.
    46. Comment: The Service received a comment suggesting the 
definition for ``usable water'' includes water for wildlife purposes so 
that shallow-water aquifers, seeps, and springs will be protected for 
wildlife on the NWRS.
    Service Response: The definition for usable water does not need to 
be changed in the rule in order for the Service to protect water for 
wildlife purposes. The rule includes hydrologic standards (Sec.  
29.113) and fish and wildlife protection standards (Sec.  29.112), as 
well as other standards, that serve to maintain water quality and 
quantity for use by wildlife. The term ``usable water'' is a specific 
term and definition that has been developed and used by other Federal 
agencies (i.e., the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and BLM) to 
ensure protection of specific resources that may be impacted by oil and 
gas operations or other activities. So the Service did not revise this 
definition.
    47. Comment: The Service received a comment requesting that the 
Service remove fuel drums, pipes, oil, contaminated soil, etc., with 
any residue of oil or hazardous chemicals from the definition of 
``waste,'' because they include ``contaminating substances'' and should 
be defined and treated as such.
    Service Response: The Service intends that these terms are not 
mutually exclusive, and something may be both ``waste'' and a 
``contaminating substance.'' An operator must comply with the 
applicable rule requirements for dealing with each.
    48. Comment: We received comments requesting that the Service 
increase the distance an operator is required to place operations away 
from surface waters from 500 feet to 2 miles based on BLM's 
determination that ``surface and groundwater contamination, due to oil 
and gas development . . . occurred between 1,000 to 1,800 feet from . . 
. drilling'' in Colorado (BLM Grand Junction Resource Management Plan 
FEIS at 6[hyphen]271).
    Service Response: The Service is aware of this BLM finding, but has 
concluded that a revision of the rule is not necessary to protect 
surface and groundwater resources from contamination. The establishment 
of setbacks of operations from sensitive resources such as surface 
waters or wetlands is based on common knowledge that providing time and 
space to react to incidents such as spills or poor operating practices 
is key to minimizing risks. However, there is no single setback 
distance that is appropriate for all conditions of proposed activities 
and environmental conditions. Environmental conditions may provide 
natural or human-made barriers that would justify a reduced setback. On 
the other hand, site conditions such as steep slopes or annually high 
precipitation can enhance pathways between the activity and resource, 
and thus justify greater setbacks.
    Regulatory establishment of a ``good offset'' that considers both 
the activities and the average environmental conditions provides a 
beginning point for site location considerations. Additionally, having 
a regulatory process for adjusting site-specific setbacks--either lower 
or higher--based on project and environmental conditions is the key to 
successful use of setbacks. Through the Service's own analysis in the 
associated EIS, we continue to believe that 500 feet provides the 
necessary time and space in the majority of circumstances. However, the 
rule (Sec.  29.113) appropriately gives the ability to the Service to 
require an even greater setback if conditions, such as those 
highlighted by the comment, would justify a greater setback distance. 
We also recognize that exceptions to the setback are sometimes 
essential to balancing overall impacts of an operation. A prime example 
occurs in coastal environments where the practice of locating drilling 
operations in open water has been demonstrated to be least damaging by 
avoiding the impacts of cutting and dredging drilling slips and canals 
into sensitive marshland. Therefore, the Service believes that 
flexibility in this standard is appropriate and gives the Service the 
ability not only to ensure the least damaging methods to refuge 
resources and uses, but also to ensure that an operator has reasonable 
access to their minerals based on a case-by-case determination.
    49. Comment: The Service received comments recommending that we 
include provisions in the final rule that require an operator to 
collect additional information, such as water and soil samples and 
wildlife surveys, prior to beginning operations.

[[Page 79967]]

    Service Response: In response to these comments, it is our 
intention that reconnaissance surveys will be used to collect this type 
of information and any other necessary natural and cultural resource 
conditions the Service deems necessary to ensure protection of refuge 
resources and uses. We acknowledged above that proposed Sec.  29.94 was 
not clear, and we have revised the rule to clarify that reconnaissance 
surveys will be used to collect this type of baseline information.
    50. Comment: The Service received comments stating that the Service 
does not have the authority to require mitigation for impacts by 
mandating that operators provide for ``habitat creation, habitat 
restoration, land purchase, or other compensation'' and recommending 
that proposed Sec.  29.120(g) be eliminated from the regulations as it 
amounts to an access fee that unreasonably and unlawfully restricts 
access to mineral rights.
    Service Response: After considering these comments, the Service has 
revised proposed Sec.  29.120(g), redesignated as Sec.  29.120(f) in 
the final rule, to clarify that mitigation tools must be mutually 
agreed upon by the Service and the operator. The Service believes this 
provision is within the scope of the Service's authority under the 
NWRSAA to protect refuge resources and uses, and may in some 
circumstances be appropriately used by an operator to offset impacts to 
refuge resources and lost use.
    51. Comment: The Service received comments recommending that the 
Service expand the monitoring and reporting requirements. For instance, 
some commenters recommended that the Service decrease the reporting 
time from 90 days to 30 days and include explanations of what happened, 
why it happened, who was involved, the results, and how the company 
intends to prevent similar incidents in the future.
    Service Response: The Service finds that these recommendations are 
not warranted. This provision in the rule is intended to provide the 
Service with information about occurrences on the NWRS. Due to the 
nature of accident investigations and the time it may take to get the 
official report, we concluded that 90 days is an appropriate timeframe. 
There are also existing State and Federal laws governing various 
accident occurrences, and we have determined that additional regulatory 
provisions are not needed at this time to better enable the Service to 
protect Refuge resources and uses.

Changes From the Proposed Rule

    After taking the public comments into consideration and after 
additional review, the Service made the following substantive changes 
in the rule:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec.   29.40..........................  Revised to clarify the scope of
                                         this rule as related to Alaska
                                         inholdings and waters within
                                         NWRS boundaries.
Sec.   29.41..........................  Revised to clarify that this
                                         rule does not apply to
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.42..........................  Revised to remove provisions
                                         related to operations in
                                         Alaska.
Sec.   29.43..........................  Revised to clarify which
                                         provisions of the rule apply to
                                         existing operators with a
                                         Service-issued permit and to
                                         clarify requirements in regards
                                         to plugging and reclamation.
Sec.   29.44..........................  Revised to clarify requirements
                                         for pre-existing operators in
                                         regard to plugging and
                                         reclamation. Also, replaced
                                         ``operation'' with ``operator''
                                         to clarify that exemption from
                                         a permit requirement applies to
                                         a pre-existing operator, not
                                         the operation.
Sec.   29.50..........................  Revised to: (1) clarify that
                                         access does not include
                                         aircrafts that both take off
                                         from and land on inholdings or
                                         non-Federal adjacent lands; (2)
                                         clarify that the term ``area of
                                         operations'' can include pre-
                                         existing, proposed, and
                                         approved areas; (3) clarify
                                         that ``modifying'' applies to a
                                         changes in existing operations;
                                         (4) remove the definition of
                                         right-of-way (ROW) permits as
                                         it was only applicable to
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.61..........................  Revised to require additional
                                         information from pre-existing
                                         operators, including a brief
                                         description of the current
                                         operations and any anticipated
                                         changes to the current
                                         operations; and documentation
                                         of the current operating
                                         methods, surface equipment, and
                                         materials produced or used.
Sec.   29.62..........................  Revised to clarify that the
                                         requirement to obtain an
                                         operations permit for a new
                                         operation or a modification
                                         will be limited to that new
                                         operation or modification, not
                                         the entire existing operation.
Sec.   29.63..........................  Revised to clarify that pre-
                                         existing operators must plug
                                         and reclaim their operations in
                                         compliance with this rule.
Sec.   29.64..........................  Revised to clarify which
                                         additional provisions of the
                                         rule would apply to the various
                                         classes of operations.
Sec.   29.70..........................  Removed language regarding
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.90..........................  Removed language regarding
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.92..........................  Revised to clarify that if an
                                         operator is using previously
                                         submitted information, they
                                         should reference it in the
                                         permit application.
Sec.   29.94..........................  Revised to remove language
                                         regarding an unnecessary ROW
                                         form; also revised to clarify
                                         the Service's authority to
                                         require an operator to collect
                                         certain natural and cultural
                                         resource information if
                                         necessary and other minor
                                         changes to and deletions of
                                         unnecessary language for
                                         clarity.
Sec.   29.101.........................  Removed language regarding
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.111.........................  Revised to remove ambiguous and
                                         repetitive language and be
                                         consistent with the NPS 9B
                                         regulations; also added
                                         paragraph (h) related to
                                         operation setbacks from surface
                                         water locations previously
                                         found in the hydrological
                                         standards section.
Sec.   29.112.........................  Revised to clarify our standards
                                         for protecting wildlife.
Sec.   29.113(a)......................  Combined the provision related
                                         to operation setbacks from
                                         surface water locations with
                                         the general facility design and
                                         management standard for
                                         setbacks from refuge structures
                                         or facilities in Sec.
                                         29.111(h).
Sec.   29.117(d)(5)...................  Revised to clarify the objective
                                         of grading requirements during
                                         reclamation.
Sec.   29.118.........................  Deleted provisions related to
                                         geophysical operations in
                                         Alaska; and revised paragraph
                                         (d)(3) to clarify that an
                                         operator must not leave a site
                                         in a condition that poses
                                         hazards to wildlife.
Sec.   29.119(b)(5)...................  Revised to clarify that an
                                         operator must not leave a site
                                         in a condition that poses
                                         hazards to wildlife.
Sec.   29.120(d)......................  Revised to clarify that any use
                                         of Federal water on the NWRS
                                         absent a demonstrated right
                                         must be approved by the Service
                                         as the technologically
                                         feasible, least damaging
                                         method.
Sec.   29.120(e)......................  Moved to Sec.   29.103(b)(3) to
                                         clarify that providing a
                                         statement under penalty of
                                         perjury that an operator is in
                                         compliance with applicable
                                         State and Federal laws is part
                                         of the permit approval process.
Sec.   29.120(g)......................  Revised to clarify that
                                         mitigation must be mutually
                                         agreed upon and that it may be
                                         required to offset impacts to
                                         refuge resources or lost uses.
                                         Redesignated as Sec.
                                         29.120(f).
Sec.   29.121(e)......................  Revised to clarify that an
                                         operator would need to provide
                                         the Service with information
                                         only to the extent necessary to
                                         demonstrate compliance with a
                                         Service-issued permit.
Sec.   29.140.........................  Removed language regarding
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.141.........................  Removed (c) as the Service does
                                         not currently have the
                                         authority to accept in-kind
                                         services to offset fees.

[[Page 79968]]

 
Sec.   29.151.........................  Revised to clarify that operator
                                         is responsible for reclaiming
                                         any disturbances inside or
                                         outside of their area of
                                         operation and that an operator
                                         is liable for the full cost of
                                         reclamation.
Sec.   29.160.........................  Revised to clarify that an
                                         operator will be given a chance
                                         to respond to the Service's
                                         notice of a proposed
                                         modification to their
                                         operations.
Sec.   29.171.........................  Revised to include the
                                         requirement that, when a pre-
                                         existing operator transfers
                                         operations, the new operator
                                         must obtain an Operations
                                         Permit from the Service. Also
                                         revised to allow continuity of
                                         operations while they file the
                                         permit application.
Sec.   29.180.........................  Revised to clarify that this
                                         section applies to any Service-
                                         issued permit (i.e., existing
                                         operators under a Service-
                                         issued permit) not just an
                                         Operations Permit granted under
                                         this rule for new operations;
                                         and revised language from
                                         ``continuously inactive for a
                                         period of 1 year'' to ``has no
                                         measurable production
                                         quantities for 12 consecutive
                                         months'' to provide further
                                         clarity on when an operator
                                         must plug a well.
Sec.   29.190.........................  Deleted provisions related to
                                         operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.190(e)......................  Revised to separate violations
                                         of Federal and State law into
                                         two different prohibited acts,
                                         (e) and (f), and to make
                                         wording consistent with other
                                         Service regulations.
Sec.   29.192.........................  Revised to clarify that a
                                         violation will not affect your
                                         ability to get a permit for
                                         plugging and reclamation.
Sec.   29.200.........................  Revised to clarify that an
                                         operator must administratively
                                         appeal under Sec.   25.45
                                         before going to Federal court.
                                         Also, revised to clarify that
                                         this process would be used to
                                         appeal all written decisions
                                         made under this subpart, not
                                         just those made under a permit.
                                         Finally, removed language
                                         regarding operations in Alaska.
Sec.   29.210(g)......................  Revised to clarify that for
                                         information provided under both
                                         Sec.   29.210(d) and Sec.
                                         29.210(e), after reviewing an
                                         operator's affidavit or a third
                                         party's affidavit claiming
                                         exemption from public
                                         disclosure, the Service may
                                         find that information is not
                                         exempt from public disclosure
                                         and make that information
                                         available 10 business days
                                         after providing notice.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Compliance With Other Laws, Executive Orders, and Department Policies

Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)

    Executive Order 12866 provides that the Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of Management and Budget will 
review all significant rules. OIRA has determined that this rule is 
significant, because it may raise novel legal or policy issues arising 
out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles 
set forth in the executive order.
    Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of Executive Order 
12866 while calling for improvements in the nation's regulatory system 
to promote predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, 
most innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory 
ends. The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory 
approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of 
choice for the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, 
and consistent with regulatory objectives. Executive Order 13563 
emphasizes further that regulations must be based on the best available 
science and that the rulemaking process must allow for public 
participation and an open exchange of ideas. This rule is consistent 
with these requirements.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as amended by the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), 5 U.S.C. 
601 et seq., whenever an agency is required to publish a notice of 
rulemaking for any proposed or final rule, it must prepare and make 
available for public comment a regulatory flexibility analysis that 
describes the effects of the rule on small entities (i.e., small 
businesses, small organizations, and small government jurisdictions). 
However, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required if the head of 
the agency certifies the rule will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities. The SBREFA amended 
the RFA to require Federal agencies to provide a statement of the 
factual basis for certifying that the rule will not have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    We certify that this rule would not have a significant economic 
effect on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA (5 
U.S.C. 601 et seq.). This certification is based on the cost-benefit 
and regulatory flexibility analysis found in the report entitled Non-
Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking Economic Analysis, which can be viewed 
at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html, by clicking 
on the link entitled Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking Economic 
Analysis or at www.regulations.gov in Docket No. FWS-HQ-NWRS-2012-0086.

Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)

    This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule:
    (a) Would not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more;
    (b) Would not cause a major increase in costs or prices for 
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government 
agencies, or geographic regions; and
    (c) Would not have significant adverse effects on competition, 
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of 
U.S.-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises.
    These conclusions are based on the cost-benefit and regulatory 
flexibility analysis found in the report entitled Non-Federal Oil and 
Gas Rulemaking Economic Analysis, which can be viewed at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html, by clicking on the 
link entitled Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking Economic Analysis or 
at www.regulations.gov in Docket No. FWS-HQ-NWRS-2012-0086.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This rule would not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or 
tribal governments or the private sector of more than $100 million per 
year. The rule would not have a significant or unique effect on State, 
local, or tribal governments or the private sector. It addresses use of 
refuge lands, and would impose no requirements on other agencies or 
governments. A statement containing the information required by the 
UMRA (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.

Takings (Executive Order 12630)

    This rule is not intended to result in the taking of private 
property or otherwise have takings implications under Executive Order 
12630. The provisions of this rule would afford access to operators 
exercising non-Federal mineral rights under reasonable regulation. No 
other private property is affected. A takings implication assessment is 
not required.

Federalism (Executive Order 13132)

    Under the criteria in section 1 of Executive Order 13132, the rule 
does not have sufficient Federalism

[[Page 79969]]

implications to warrant the preparation of a federalism summary impact 
statement. It addresses use of refuge lands, and would impose no 
requirements on other agencies or governments. A federalism summary 
impact statement is not required.

Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order 12988)

    This rule complies with the requirements of Executive Order 12988. 
Specifically, this rule:
    (a) Meets the criteria of section 3(a) requiring that all 
regulations be reviewed to eliminate errors and ambiguity and be 
written to minimize litigation; and
    (b) Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2) requiring that all 
regulations be written in clear language and contain clear legal 
standards.

Consultation With Indian Tribes (Executive Order 13175 and Department 
Policy)

    The Department of the Interior strives to strengthen its 
government-to-government relationship with Indian tribes through a 
commitment to consultation with Indian tribes and recognition of their 
right to self-governance and tribal sovereignty. We have evaluated this 
rule under the Department's consultation policy and under the criteria 
in Executive Order 13175 and have determined that it has no substantial 
direct effects on federally recognized Indian tribes, but we offered 
consultation under the Department's tribal consultation policy with all 
interested tribes. On January 25, 2016, during the public comment 
period, we consulted with Doyon Limited, an Alaska Native Corporation, 
at their request.

Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)

    This rule contains a collection of information that we have 
submitted to OMB for approval under the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). 
We may not conduct or sponsor and you are not required to respond to a 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.
    As part of our continuing efforts to reduce paperwork and 
respondent burdens, we invited the public and other Federal agencies to 
comment on any aspect of the reporting burden associated with this 
information collection. While we received no comments that were 
specific to the information collection portion of the rule, we did 
receive several comments that relate to the information collection 
portion of the rule. These comments and our responses can be found in 
Information Requirements and Public Access to Information in the 
Summary of and Response to Public Comments portion of the preamble. We 
made no changes to the information collection portion of the rule based 
on these comments. However, we have made two changes to the rule that 
impact information collection.
    The first change expands the information an operator of pre-
existing wells is required to submit to the refuge manager. In addition 
to requiring operators of pre-existing wells to submit right-to-operate 
documentation, company contact information, a plat of existing area of 
operations, and copies of plans and permits required by local, State, 
and Federal agencies, operators must also submit to the Service: A 
brief description of the current operations and any anticipated changes 
to the current operations; as well as documentation of the current 
operating methods, surface equipment, and materials produced or used. 
These new information collection requirements are, as follows: Pre-
existing Operations (Sec.  29.61). Within 90 days after the effective 
date of these regulations, or after a boundary change or establishment 
of a new refuge, pre-existing operators without a Service-issued permit 
must submit:
     Documentation of the right to operate within the refuge.
     Contact information (names, phone numbers, and addresses) 
of the primary company representative; the representative responsible 
for field supervision; and the representative responsible for emergency 
response.
     A brief description of the current operations, and any 
anticipated changes to the current operations.
     Scaled map clearly delineating the existing area of 
operations.
     Documentation of the current operating methods, surface 
equipment, materials produced or used, and monitoring methods.
     Copies of all plans and permits required by local, State, 
and Federal agencies.
    The second change to the final rule that impacts information 
collection is that if an operator transfers their operations to another 
operator this results in the loss of pre-existing status for that 
operation, and the new operator will need to obtain an Operations 
Permit. As a result, this operator must provide all applicable 
information required by this rule for obtaining an Operations Permit. 
These new information collection requirements are as follows:

Change of Operator (Sec.  29.171)

    Section 29.171(a). When operations conducted under Sec.  29.44 are 
transferred, the transferee must apply for an operations permit and 
include the information requested in FWS Form 3-2469 within 90 days of 
the transfer. The new operator may continue operating, but must provide 
to the Service within 30 calendar days from the date of the transfer:
     Documentation demonstrating that the operator holds the 
right to operate within the refuge.
     Names, phone numbers, and addresses of the primary company 
representative, the representative responsible for field supervision, 
and the representative responsible for emergency response.
    Section 29.171(b). If operations conducted under Sec.  29.43 or an 
operations permit are transferred, the transferee must provide the 
following within 30 days of commencing operations:
     Right-to-operate and contact information required under 
Sec.  29.171(a).
     Written agreement to conduct operations in accordance with 
all terms and conditions of the previous operator's permit.
     Financial assurance that is acceptable to the Service and 
made payable to the Service.
    For further information on these changes, see the ``Response to 
Comments'' section.
    Below is a summary of the information collection associated with 
non-Federal oil and gas operations on National Wildlife Refuge System 
lands. Operators do not need to resubmit information that is already on 
file with the Service, provided the information is still current and 
accurate. Documents and materials submitted to other Federal and State 
agencies may be submitted, if they meet the specific requirements of 
the Service.
    OMB Control No: 1018-0162.
    Title: Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights on National 
Wildlife Refuge System Lands, 50 CFR part 29, subpart D.
    Service Form Number(s): 3-2469.
    Description of Respondents: Businesses that conduct oil and gas 
exploration on national wildlife refuges.
    Respondent's Obligation: Required to obtain or retain a benefit.
    Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
    Total Annual Nonhour Cost Burden: None.

[[Page 79970]]



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Estimated      Completion
                                                                     number of       time per        Estimated
                      Activity/requirement                            annual         response      total annual
                                                                     responses        (hours)      burden hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preexisting Operations (Sec.   29.61)...........................              40              50           2,000
Temporary Access Permit Application (Sec.   29.71)..............              35              17             595
Accessing Oil and Gas Rights from Non-Federal Surface Location                 5               1               5
 (Sec.   29.80).................................................
Pre-application Meeting for Operations Permit (Sec.   29.91)....              45               2              90
Operations Permit Application (Sec.  Sec.   29.94-29.97)........              45             140           6,300
Financial Assurance (Sec.  Sec.   29.103(b), 29.150)............              45               1              45
Identification of Wells and Related Facilities (Sec.                          45               2              90
 29.119(b)).....................................................
Reporting (Sec.   29.121):
    Third-Party Monitor Report (Sec.   29.121(b))...............             300              17           5,100
    Notification--Injuries/Mortality to Fish and Wildlife and                 20               1              20
     Threatened/Endangered Plants (Sec.   29.121(c))............
    Notification--Accidents involving Serious Injuries/Death and              20               1              20
     Fires/Spills (Sec.   29.121(d))............................
    Written Report--Accidents Involving Serious Injuries/Deaths               20              16             320
     and Fires/Spills (Sec.   29.121(d))........................
    Report--Verify Compliance with Permits (Sec.   29.121(e))...             240               4             960
    Notification--Chemical Disclosure of Hydraulic Fracturing                  5               1               5
     Fluids uploaded to FracFocus (Sec.   29.121(f))............
    Permit Modifications (Sec.   29.160(a)).....................              10              16             160
Change of Operator:
    Transferring Operator Notification (Sec.   29.170)..........              20               8             160
    Acquiring Operator's Requirements for Wells Not Under a                   19              40             760
     Service Permit (Sec.   29.171(a))..........................
    Acquiring Operator's Acceptance of an Existing Permit (Sec.                1               8               8
      29.171(b))................................................
Extension to Well Plugging (Sec.   29.181(a)):
    Application for Permit......................................              10             140           1,400
    Modification................................................               5              16              80
Public Information (Sec.   29.210):
    Affidavit in Support of Claim of Confidentiality (Sec.                     1               1               1
     29.210(c) and (d)).........................................
    Confidential Information (Sec.   29.210(e) and (f)).........               1               1               1
    Maintenance of Confidential Information (Sec.   29.210(h))..               1               1               1
    Generic Chemical Name Disclosure (Sec.   29.210(i)).........               1               1               1
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
        Total...................................................             934  ..............          18,122
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)

    This rule constitutes a major Federal action with the potential to 
significantly affect the quality of the human environment. We have 
prepared the final environmental impact statement (FEIS) under the 
requirements of the NEPA of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). The FEIS is 
available at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html, by 
clicking on the link entitled ``Non-Federal Oil and Gas FEIS'' and at 
www.regulations.gov at Docket No. FWS-HQ-NWRS-2012-0086.
    In addition, EPA published a notice announcing the final EIS, as 
required under section 309 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et 
seq.), on August 19, 2016, at 81 FR 55456. The EPA is charged under 
section 309 of the Clean Air Act to review all Federal agencies' 
environmental impact statements (EISs) and to comment on the adequacy 
and the acceptability of the environmental impacts of proposed actions 
in the EISs. On February 9, 2016, the Service received a ``no 
objection'' finding from the EPA that concluded that the draft EIS did 
not identify any potential environmental impacts requiring substantive 
changes to the proposal. Elsewhere in today's Federal Register is a 
notice announcing the availability of the record of decision.

Effects on the Energy Supply (Executive Order 13211)

    This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition 
in Executive Order 13211. A statement of Energy Effects is not 
required.

Drafting Information

    This final rule reflects the collective efforts of Service staff in 
the NWRS, Division of Natural Resource and Conservation Planning, 
Branch of Wildlife Resources, refuges, and field offices, with 
assistance from the Department of the Interior, Office of the 
Solicitor.

List of Subjects

50 CFR Part 28

    Law enforcement, Penalties, Wildlife refuges.

50 CFR Part 29

    Oil and gas exploration, Public lands--mineral resources, Public 
lands--rights-of-way, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
Wildlife refuges.

Final Regulation Promulgation

    In consideration of the foregoing, the Service amends 50 CFR parts 
28 and 29 as follows:

PART 28--ENFORCEMENT, PENALTY, AND PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS FOR 
VIOLATIONS OF SUBCHAPTER C

0
1. The authority citation for part 28 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k, 664, 668dd, 685, 690d, 
715i, 725; 43 U.S.C. 315a.


0
2. Revise the heading of part 28 to read as set forth above.


0
3. Revise Sec.  28.11 to read as follows:


Sec.  28.11  Purpose of regulations.

    The regulations in this part govern enforcement, penalty, and 
procedural requirements for violations of subchapter C of this chapter.

PART 29--LAND USE MANAGEMENT

0
4. The authority citation for part 29 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k, 664, 668dd, 685, 690d, 
715i, 725, 3161; 30 U.S.C. 185; 31 U.S.C. 3711, 9701; 40 U.S.C. 319; 
43 U.S.C. 315a; 113 Stat. 1501A-140.

[[Page 79971]]

Subpart C--Mineral Operations

0
5. Revise Sec.  29.32 to read as follows:


Sec.  29.32  Non-Federal mineral rights.

    (a) Non-Federal mineral rights owners within the National Wildlife 
Refuge System, not including coordination areas, must, to the greatest 
extent practicable, conduct all exploration, development, and 
production operations in such a manner as to prevent damage, erosion, 
pollution, or contamination to Service-administered lands, waters, 
facilities, and to wildlife thereon. So far as is practicable, such 
operations must also be conducted without interference to the operation 
of the refuge and disturbance to the wildlife thereon.
    (1) Physical occupancy must be kept to the minimum space necessary 
to conduct efficient mineral operations.
    (2) Persons conducting mineral operations on Service-administered 
lands and waters must comply with all applicable Federal and State laws 
and regulations for the protection of wildlife and the administration 
of the area.
    (3) All waste and contaminating substances must be kept in the 
smallest practicable area, confined so as to prevent escape as a result 
of rains and high water or otherwise, and removed from Service-
administered lands and waters as quickly as practicable in such a 
manner as to prevent contamination, pollution, damage, or injury to 
Service-administered lands, waters, or facilities, or to wildlife 
thereon.
    (4) Structures and equipment must be removed when the need for them 
has ended, and, upon the cessation of operations, the habitat in the 
area of operations must be restored to the extent possible to pre-
operation conditions.
    (b) Nothing in this section will be applied so as to contravene or 
nullify rights vested in holders of mineral interests on refuge lands.

0
6. Add subpart D to read as set forth below:
Subpart D--Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights

Purpose and Scope

Sec.
29.40 What are the purpose and scope of the regulations in this 
subpart?
29.41 When does this subpart apply to me?
29.42 What authorization do I need to conduct operations?
29.43 If I am already operating under Service authorization, what do 
I need to do?
29.44 If I am operating without prior Service authorization, what do 
I need to do?

Definitions

29.50 What do the terms used in this subpart mean?

Pre-Existing Operations

29.60 Do I need an operations permit for my pre-existing operation?
29.61 What information must I provide to the Service?
29.62 What if I intend to conduct new operations or modify my pre-
existing operations?
29.63 What plugging and reclamation requirements apply to my pre-
existing operations?
29.64 What other provisions apply to my operations?

Temporary Access Permits

29.70 When do I need a temporary access permit?
29.71 How do I apply for a temporary access permit?
29.72 When will the Service grant a temporary access permit?
29.73 How much time will I have to conduct my reconnaissance 
surveys?

Accessing Oil and Gas Rights From a Non-Federal Surface Location

29.80 Do I need a permit for accessing oil and gas rights from a 
non-Federal location?

Operations Permit: Application

29.90 Who must apply for an operations permit?
29.91 What should I do before filing an application?
29.92 May I use previously submitted information?
29.93 Do I need to submit information for all possible future 
operations?
29.94 What information must be included in all applications?
29.95 What additional information must be included if I am proposing 
geophysical exploration?
29.96 What additional information must be included if I am proposing 
drilling operations?
29.97 What additional information must be included if I am proposing 
production operations?

Operations Permit: Application Review and Approval

29.100 How will the Service process my application?
29.101 How will the Service conduct an initial review?
29.102 How will the Service conduct a formal review?
29.103 What standards must be met to approve my application?
29.104 What actions may the Service take on my operations permit 
application?

Operating Standards

29.110 What are the purposes of the Service's operating standards?
29.111 What general facility design and management standards must I 
meet?
29.112 What fish and wildlife protection standards must I meet?
29.113 What hydrologic standards must I meet?
29.114 What safety standards must I meet?
29.115 What lighting and visual standards must I meet?
29.116 What noise reduction standards must I meet?
29.117 What reclamation and protection standards must I meet?
29.118 What additional operating standards apply to geophysical 
operations?
29.119 What additional operating standards apply to drilling and 
production operations?

General Terms and Conditions

29.120 What terms and conditions apply to all operators?
29.121 What monitoring and reporting is required for all operators?
29.122 For how long is my operations permit valid?

Access Fees

29.140 May I cross Federal property to reach the boundary of my oil 
and gas right?
29.141 Will the Service charge me a fee for access?
29.142 Will I be charged a fee for emergency access to my 
operations?

Financial Assurance

29.150 When do I have to provide financial assurance to the Service?
29.151 How does the Service establish the amount of financial 
assurance?
29.152 Will the Service adjust the amount required for my financial 
assurance?
29.153 When will the Service release my financial assurance?
29.154 Under what circumstances will I forfeit my financial 
assurance?

Modification to an Operation

29.160 Can I modify operations under an approved permit?

Change of Operator

29.170 What are my responsibilities if I transfer my right to 
operate?
29.171 What must I do if operations are transferred to me?

Well Plugging

29.180 When must I plug my well?
29.181 Can I get an extension to the well plugging requirement?

Prohibited Acts and Penalties

29.190 What acts are prohibited under this subpart?
29.191 What enforcement actions can the Service take?
29.192 How do violations affect my ability to obtain a permit?

Appeals

29.200 Can I, as operator, appeal Service decisions?

Public Information

29.210 How can the public learn about oil and gas activities on 
refuge lands?

Information Collection

29.220 Has the Office of Management and Budget approved the 
collection of information?

[[Page 79972]]

Subpart D--Management of Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rights

Purpose and Scope


Sec.  29.40  What are the purpose and scope of the regulations in this 
subpart?

    (a) The purpose of this subpart is to ensure that operators 
exercising non-Federal oil and gas rights within the National Wildlife 
Refuge System (NWRS) outside of Alaska use technologically feasible, 
least damaging methods to:
    (1) Protect Service-administered lands and waters, and resources of 
refuges;
    (2) Protect refuge wildlife-dependent recreational uses and 
experiences and visitor or employee health and safety; and
    (3) Conserve refuges for the benefit of present and future 
generations of Americans.
    (b) This subpart applies to all operators conducting non-Federal 
oil and gas operations outside of Alaska on Service-administered lands 
held in fee or less-than fee (excluding coordination areas) or Service-
administered waters to the extent necessary to protect those property 
interests. These regulations do not apply to non-Federal surface 
locations within the boundaries of a refuge (i.e., inholdings), except 
to the extent that activities associated with those operations, 
including access to an inholding, occur on Service-administered lands 
or waters.
    (c) This subpart is not intended to result in a taking of any 
property interest. The purpose of this subpart is to reasonably 
regulate operations to protect Service-administered lands and waters, 
resources of refuges, visitor uses and experiences, and visitor or 
employee health and safety.


Sec.  29.41  When does this subpart apply to me?

    This subpart applies to you if you are an operator who conducts or 
proposes to conduct non-Federal oil or gas operations on Service-
administered lands or waters outside of Alaska.


Sec.  29.42  What authorization do I need to conduct operations?

    (a) You must demonstrate to the Service that you have the right to 
operate in order to conduct operations on Service-administered lands or 
waters.
    (b) Except as provided in Sec. Sec.  29.43 or 29.44, before 
starting operations, you must obtain a temporary access permit under 
Sec. Sec.  29.70 through 29.73 for reconnaissance surveys and/or an 
operations permit under Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97.


Sec.  29.43  If I am already operating under Service authorization, 
what do I need to do?

    If you already have a Service-issued permit, you may continue to 
operate according to the terms and conditions of that approval, subject 
to the provisions of this subpart. If you propose to conduct new 
operations, modify your existing operations, conduct well plugging or 
reclamation operations, or obtain an extension of the well plugging 
requirement to maintain your well in shut-in status, you must either 
amend your current authorization or obtain an operations permit in 
accordance with Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97, Operations Permit: 
Application, and such new operations or modifications will be subject 
to the applicable provisions of this subpart. Additionally, your 
existing operations are subject to the following regulations:
    (a) Sec.  29.120(b) and (d)-(g) and Sec.  29.121(a) and (c)-(f);
    (b) Sec.  29.170(a);
    (c) Sec. Sec.  29.180 and 29.181;
    (d) Sec.  29.190; and
    (e) Sec.  29.200.


Sec.  29.44  If I am operating without prior Service authorization, 
what do I need to do?

    Any operator that has commenced operations prior to December 14, 
2016 in accordance with applicable local, State, and Federal laws and 
regulations may continue without an operations permit. However, your 
operation is subject to the requirements of Sec. Sec.  29.60 through 
29.64, Pre-Existing Operations, and the requirements that when you 
propose to conduct new operations, modify your pre-existing operations, 
conduct well plugging and reclamation operations, or obtain an 
extension of the well plugging requirement to maintain your well in 
shut-in status, you must obtain an operations permit in accordance with 
Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97, Operations Permit: Application, and all 
applicable requirements of this subpart.

Definitions


Sec.  29.50  What do the terms used in this subpart mean?

    In addition to the definitions in Sec. Sec.  25.12, 29.21, and 36.2 
of this subchapter, the following definitions apply to this subpart:
    Access means any method of entering or traversing on or across 
Service-administered lands or waters, including but not limited to: 
Vehicle, watercraft, fixed-wing aircraft, helicopter, unmanned aerial 
vehicle, off-road vehicle, mobile heavy equipment, snowmobile, pack 
animal, and foot. Access does not include the use of aircraft, 
including, but not limited to, airplanes, helicopters, and unmanned 
aircraft vehicles, that do not land on, or are not launched from, 
Service-administered lands or waters.
    Area of operations means the area of Service-administered lands or 
waters on which operations are carried out, including roads or other 
areas that you are authorized to use related to the exercise of your 
oil and gas rights.
    Contaminating substance means any toxic or hazardous substance that 
is used in or results from the conduct of operations and is listed 
under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), Clean Water Act 
regulations at 40 CFR parts 112 and 116, the Resource Conservation and 
Recovery Act regulations at 40 CFR part 261, or the Hazardous Materials 
Transportation Act regulations at 49 CFR part 172. This includes, but 
is not limited to, explosives, radioactive materials, brine waters, 
formation waters, petroleum products, petroleum byproducts, and 
chemical compounds used for drilling, production, processing, well 
testing, well completion, and well servicing.
    Gas means any fluid, either combustible or noncombustible, that is 
produced in a natural state from the earth and that maintains a gaseous 
or rarefied state at ordinary temperature and pressure conditions.
    Oil means any viscous combustible liquid hydrocarbon or solid 
hydrocarbon substance that occurs naturally in the earth and is easily 
liquefiable on warming.
    Modifying means changing operations in a manner that will result in 
additional impacts on refuge resources, visitor uses, refuge 
administration, or human health and safety beyond the scope, intensity, 
and/or duration of existing impacts. In order to determine if 
activities would have additional impacts, you must consult with the 
Service.
    Operations means all existing and proposed functions, work, and 
activities in connection with the exercise of oil or gas rights not 
owned by the United States and located on Service-administered lands or 
waters.
    (1) Operations include, but are not limited to: Access by any means 
to or from an area of operations; construction; geological and 
geophysical exploration; drilling, well servicing, workover, or 
recompletion; production; hydraulic fracturing, well simulation, and 
injection wells; gathering (including installation and maintenance of 
flowlines and gathering lines); storage, transport, or processing of 
petroleum products; earth moving; excavation; hauling; disposal; 
surveillance, inspection, monitoring, or maintenance of wells, 
facilities, and equipment;

[[Page 79973]]

reclamation; road and pad building or improvement; shot hole and well 
plugging and abandonment, and reclamation; and all other activities 
incident to any of the foregoing.
    (2) Operations do not include reconnaissance surveys as defined in 
this subpart or oil and gas pipelines that are located within a refuge 
under authority of a deeded or other right-of-way.
    Operations permit means a permit issued by the Service under this 
subpart authorizing an operator to conduct operations on Service-
administered lands or waters.
    Operator means any person or entity, agent, assignee, designee, 
lessee, or representative thereof exercising or proposing to exercise 
non-Federal oil and gas rights on Service-administered lands or waters.
    Reconnaissance survey means an inspection or survey conducted by 
qualified specialists for the purpose of preparing a permit 
application. A reconnaissance survey:
    (1) Includes identification of the area of operations and 
collection of natural and cultural resource information within and 
adjacent to the proposed area of operations.
    (2) Does not include surface disturbance activities except for 
minimal disturbance necessary to perform cultural resource surveys, 
natural resource surveys, and location surveys required under this 
subpart.
    Right to operate means a deed, lease, memorandum of lease, 
designation of operator, assignment of right, or other documentation 
demonstrating that you hold a legal right to conduct the operations you 
are proposing on Service-administered lands or waters.
    Service, we, us and our means the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
    Technologically feasible, least damaging methods are those that we 
determine, on a case-by-case basis, to be most protective of refuge 
resources and uses while ensuring human health and safety, taking into 
consideration all relevant factors, including environmental, economic, 
and technological factors and the requirements of applicable law.
    Temporary access permit means a permit issued by the Service 
authorizing an operator to access that operator's proposed area of 
operations to conduct reconnaissance surveys to collect basic 
information necessary to prepare an operations permit application.
    Third-party monitor means a qualified specialist, who is not an 
employee, agent, or representative of the operator, nor has any 
conflicts of interest that could preclude objectivity in monitoring an 
operator's compliance, and who has the relevant expertise to monitor 
operations for compliance with applicable laws, regulations, and permit 
requirements.
    Usable water means an aquifer or its portion that:
    (1)(i) Supplies any public water system; or
    (ii) Contains a sufficient quantity of ground water to supply a 
public water system and either:
    (A) Currently supplies drinking water for human consumption; or
    (B) Contains fewer than 10,000 mg/l total dissolved solids; and
    (2) Is not an exempted aquifer.
    Waste means any material that is discarded. It includes, but is not 
limited to: Drilling fluids and cuttings; produced fluids not under 
regulation as a toxic or hazardous substance; human waste; garbage; 
fuel drums; pipes; oil; refined oil and other hydrocarbons; 
contaminated soil; synthetic materials; manmade structures or 
equipment; or native and nonnative materials.
    You means the operator, unless otherwise specified or indicated by 
the context.

Pre-Existing Operations


Sec.  29.60  Do I need an operations permit for my pre-existing 
operation?

    No. Pre-existing operations are those conducted as of December 14, 
2016 without an approved permit from the Service or prior to a boundary 
change or establishment of a new refuge. Your pre-existing operations 
may be continued without an operations permit, but you are required to 
operate in accordance with applicable local, State, and Federal laws 
and regulations, and are subject to applicable provisions of this 
subpart, including requirements for a permit when you propose to 
conduct new operations or to modify pre-existing operations.


Sec.  29.61  What information must I provide to the Service?

    You must submit the following information to the Service where your 
pre-existing operation is occurring by February 13, 2017 or 90 days 
after a boundary change or establishment of a new refuge:
    (a) Documentation demonstrating that you hold the right to operate 
on Service-administered lands or waters.
    (b) The names, phone numbers, and addresses of your:
    (1) Primary company representative;
    (2) Representative responsible for field supervision; and
    (3) Representative responsible for emergency response.
    (c) A brief description of your current operations, and any 
anticipated changes to current operations, including:
    (1) A scaled map clearly delineating your existing area of 
operations;
    (2) Documentation of the current operating methods, surface 
equipment, materials produced or used, and monitoring methods; and
    (3) Copies of all plans and permits required by local, State, and 
Federal agencies, including a Spill Prevention Control and 
Countermeasure Plan if required by Environmental Protection Agency 
regulations at 40 CFR part 112.


Sec.  29.62  What if I intend to conduct new operations or modify my 
pre-existing operations?

    (a) You must obtain an operations permit before conducting 
operations that are begun after December 14, 2016 for those new 
operations in accordance with Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97, 
Operations Permit: Application, and all applicable requirements of this 
subpart.
    (b) You must obtain an operations permit prior to modifying your 
pre-existing operations for that modification in accordance with 
Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97, Operations Permit: Application, and all 
applicable requirements of this subpart.


Sec.  29.63  What plugging and reclamation requirements apply to my 
pre-existing operations?

    Upon completion of your production operation, you are subject to 
the reclamation standards in Sec.  29.117(d). You must obtain an 
operations permit in accordance with Sec. Sec.  29.90 through 29.97, 
Operations Permit: Application, and all applicable requirements of this 
subpart, prior to plugging your well and conducting site reclamation.


Sec.  29.64  What other provisions apply to my operations?

    Your pre-existing operations are also subject to the following 
regulations in this part 29:
    (a) Sec.  29.120(b), (d), (f), and (g) and Sec.  29.121(a) and (c)-
(f);
    (b) Sec.  29.170(a);
    (c) Sec. Sec.  29.180 and 29.181;
    (d) Sec.  29.190; and
    (e) Sec.  29.200.

Temporary Access Permits


Sec.  29.70  When do I need a temporary access permit?

    You must apply to the Service and obtain a temporary access permit 
to access your proposed area of operations in order to conduct 
reconnaissance surveys within a refuge. This permit will describe the 
means, routes, timing, and other terms and conditions of your access 
determined by the Service to

[[Page 79974]]

result in only the minimum disturbance necessary to perform surveys.


Sec.  29.71  How do I apply for a temporary access permit?

    You must submit the information requested in FWS Form 3-2469 (Oil 
and Gas Operations Special Use Permit Application) to the refuge in 
which you propose to conduct operations. Information includes, but is 
not limited to:
    (a) The name, legal address, and telephone number of the operator, 
employee, agent, or contractor responsible for overall management of 
the proposed operations;
    (b) Documentation demonstrating that you hold the right to operate 
on Service-administered lands or waters;
    (c) The name, legal address, telephone number, and qualifications 
of all specialists responsible for conducting the reconnaissance 
surveys (only required if the assistants/subcontractors/subpermittees 
will be operating on Service-administered lands or waters without the 
permittee being present);
    (d) A brief description of the intended operation so that we can 
determine reconnaissance survey needs;
    (e) A description of the survey methods you intend to use to 
identify the natural and cultural resources;
    (f) A map (to-scale and determined by us to be acceptable) 
delineating the proposed reconnaissance survey area in relation to the 
refuge boundary and the proposed area of operations; and
    (g) A description of proposed means of access and routes for 
conducting the reconnaissance surveys.


Sec.  29.72  When will the Service grant a temporary access permit?

    Within 30 calendar days of receipt of the application for a 
reconnaissance survey, we will advise you whether the application 
fulfills the requirements of Sec. Sec.  29.70 through 29.71 and issue 
you a temporary access permit or provide you with a statement of 
additional information that is needed for us to conduct review of your 
application.


Sec.  29.73  How much time will I have to conduct my reconnaissance 
surveys?

    Your temporary access permit will be in effect for a maximum of 60 
calendar days from the date of issuance, unless a longer term is 
approved in the permit. We may extend the term of the permit for a 
reasonable period of time, based upon your written request that 
explains why an extension is necessary.

Accessing Oil and Gas Rights From a Non-Federal Surface Location


Sec.  29.80  Do I need a permit for accessing oil and gas rights from a 
non-Federal location?

    No. Using directional drilling from a non-Federal surface location 
to reach your oil and gas rights within a refuge is exempt from these 
regulations. However, you are encouraged to provide the Service the 
names, phone numbers, and addresses of your primary company 
representative, representative responsible for field supervision, and 
representative responsible for emergency response at least 60 calendar 
days prior to conducting your operation. If you require access across 
Service-administered lands or waters, that access is subject to 
applicable provisions of this subpart, including obtaining an 
operations permit for any new access or modification of existing 
access.

Operations Permit: Application


Sec.  29.90  Who must apply for an operations permit?

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. Sec.  29.43, 29.44, 29.70, and 
29.80, if you are proposing to conduct operations on Service-
administered lands or waters outside of Alaska, you must submit an 
application (FWS Form 3-2469) for an operations permit to the Service.


Sec.  29.91  What should I do before filing an application?

    You should participate in a pre-application meeting with the 
Service to allow for an early exchange of information between you and 
the Service with the intent of avoiding delays in your application 
process.
    (a) For the meeting, you should provide:
    (1) Documentation demonstrating that you hold the legal right to 
operate on Service-administered lands or waters; and
    (2) An overview of your proposed operation and timing.
    (b) The Service will provide guidance on the permitting process and 
information on available resource data, and identify additional data 
needs.


Sec.  29.92  May I use previously submitted information?

    Yes.
    (a) You do not need to resubmit information that is already on file 
with the Service, provided that such information is still current and 
accurate. You should reference this information in your oil and gas 
operations permit application.
    (b) You may submit documents and materials submitted to other 
Federal and State agencies noting how the information meets the 
specific requirements of Sec. Sec.  29.93 through 29.97.


Sec.  29.93  Do I need to submit information for all possible future 
operations?

    No. You need only provide information for those operations for 
which you are seeking immediate approval. Approval of activities beyond 
the scope of your application may be subject to a new application and 
approval process.


Sec.  29.94  What information must be included in all applications?

    All applications must include the information requested on FWS Form 
3-2469, including, but not limited to:
    (a) The name, legal address, and telephone number of the operator, 
employee, agent, or contractor responsible for overall management of 
the proposed operations.
    (b) Documentation demonstrating that you hold the legal right to 
operate within the refuge.
    (c) A description of the natural features of your proposed area of 
operations, such as: Streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands, estimated depths 
to the top and bottom of zones of usable water and topographic relief.
    (d) The location of existing roads, trails, railroad tracks, 
pipeline rights-of-way, pads, and other disturbed areas.
    (e) The location of existing structures that your operations could 
affect, including buildings, pipelines, oil and gas wells including 
both producing and plugged and abandoned wells, injection wells, 
freshwater wells, underground and overhead electrical lines, and other 
utility lines.
    (f) Descriptions of the natural and cultural resource conditions 
from your reconnaissance survey reports or other sources collected for 
your proposed area of operations, including any baseline testing of 
soils and surface and near-surface ground waters within your area of 
operations that reasonably may be impacted by your surface operations.
    (g) Locations map(s) (to-scale and determined by us to be 
acceptable) that clearly identifies:
    (1) Proposed area of operations, existing conditions, and proposed 
new surface uses, including the boundaries of each of your oil and gas 
tracts in relation to your proposed operations and the relevant refuge 
boundary.
    (2) Proposed access routes of new surface disturbances as 
determined by a location survey.
    (3) Proposed location of all support facilities, including those 
for transportation (e.g., vehicle parking areas, helicopter pads, 
etc.), sanitation,

[[Page 79975]]

occupation, staging areas, fuel storage areas, refueling areas, loading 
docks, water supplies, and disposal facilities.
    (h) The method and diagrams, including cross-sections, of any 
proposed pad construction, road construction, cut-and-fill areas, and 
surface maintenance, including erosion control.
    (i) The number and types of equipment and vehicles, including an 
estimate of vehicular round trips associated with your operation.
    (j) An estimated timetable for the proposed operations, including 
any operational timing constraints.
    (k) The type and extent of security measures proposed at your area 
of operations.
    (l) The power sources and their transmission systems for the 
proposed operations.
    (m) The types and quantities of all solid and liquid waste 
generated and the proposed methods of storage, handling, and disposal.
    (n) The source, quantity, access route, and transportation/
conveyance method for all water to be used in operations, including 
hydraulic fracturing, and estimations of any anticipated wastewater 
volumes generated, including flowback fluids from hydraulic fracturing, 
and the proposed methods of storage, handling, and recycling or 
disposal.
    (o) The following information regarding mitigation actions and 
alternatives considered:
    (1) A description of the steps you propose to take to mitigate 
anticipated adverse environmental impacts on refuge resources and uses, 
including, but not limited to, the refuge's land features, land uses, 
fish and wildlife, vegetation, soils, surface and subsurface water 
resources, air quality, noise, lightscapes, viewsheds, cultural 
resources, and economic environment.
    (2) A description of any anticipated impacts that you cannot 
mitigate.
    (3) A description of alternatives considered that meet the criteria 
of technologically feasible, least damaging methods of operations, as 
well as the costs and environmental effects of such alternatives.
    (p) You must submit the following information about your spill 
control and emergency preparedness plan. You may use a spill prevention 
control and countermeasure plan prepared under 40 CFR part 112 if the 
plan includes all of the information required by this section. You must 
submit:
    (1) The names, addresses, and telephone numbers of the people whom 
the Service can contact in the event of a spill, fire, or accident, 
including the order in which the individuals should be contacted.
    (2) The notification procedures and steps taken to minimize damage 
in the event of a spill, fire, or accident.
    (3) Identification of contaminating substances used within your 
area of operations or expected to be encountered during operations.
    (4) Trajectory analysis for potential spills that are not contained 
on location.
    (5) Identification of abnormal pressure, temperature, toxic gases 
or substances, or other hazardous conditions at your area of operations 
or expected to be encountered during operations.
    (6) Measures (e.g., procedures, facility design, equipment) to 
minimize risks to human health and safety, and the environment.
    (7) Steps to prevent accumulations of oil or other materials deemed 
to be fire hazards from occurring in the vicinity of well locations and 
lease tanks.
    (8) The equipment and methods for containment and cleanup of 
contaminating substances, including a description of the equipment 
available at your area of operations and equipment available from local 
contractors.
    (9) A stormwater drainage plan and actions intended to mitigate 
stormwater runoff.
    (10) Material safety data sheets for each material you will use or 
encounter during operations, including expected quantities maintained 
at your area of operations.
    (11) A description of the emergency actions you will take in the 
event of injury or death to fish and wildlife or vegetation.
    (12) A description of the emergency actions you will take in the 
event of accidents causing human injury.
    (13) Contingency plans for conditions and emergencies other than 
spills, such as if your area of operations is located in areas prone to 
hurricanes, flooding, tornadoes, fires, or earthquakes.
    (q) A description of the specific equipment, materials, methods, 
and schedule that will be used to meet the operating standards for 
reclamation at Sec.  29.117.
    (r) An itemized list of the estimated costs that a third party 
would charge to complete reclamation.


Sec.  29.95  What additional information must be included if I am 
proposing geophysical exploration?

    If you propose to conduct geophysical exploration, you must submit 
the information requested on FWS Form 3-2469, including, but not 
limited to:
    (a) A map showing the positions of each survey line including all 
source and receiver locations as determined by a locational survey, and 
including shot point offset distances from wells, buildings, other 
infrastructure, cultural resources, and environmentally sensitive 
areas;
    (b) The number of crews and numbers of workers in each crew;
    (c) A description of the acquisition methods, including the 
procedures and specific equipment you will use, and energy sources 
(e.g., explosives, vibroseis trucks);
    (d) A description of the methods of access along each survey line 
for personnel, materials, and equipment; and
    (e) A list of all explosives, blasting equipment, chemicals, and 
fuels you will use in the proposed operations, including a description 
of proposed disposal methods, transportation methods, safety measures, 
and storage facilities.


Sec.  29.96  What additional information must be included if I am 
proposing drilling operations?

    If you are proposing to drill a well, you must submit the 
information requested on FWS Form 3-2469, including, but not limited 
to:
    (a) A description of the well pad construction, including 
dimensions and cross sections of cut-and-fill areas and excavations for 
ditches, sumps, and spill control equipment or structures, including 
lined areas;
    (b) A description of the drill rig and equipment layout, including 
rig components, fuel tanks, testing equipment, support facilities, 
storage areas, and all other well-site equipment and facilities;
    (c) A description of the type and characteristics of the proposed 
drilling mud systems; and
    (d) A description of the equipment, materials, and methods of 
surface operations associated with your drilling, well casing and 
cementing, well control, well evaluation and testing, well completion, 
hydraulic fracturing or other well stimulation, and well plugging 
programs.


Sec.  29.97  What additional information must be included if I am 
proposing production operations?

    If you are proposing to produce a well, you must submit the 
information requested on FWS Form 3-2469, including, but not limited 
to:
    (a) The dimensions and the to-scale layout of the well pad, clearly 
identifying well locations, noting partial reclamation areas; 
gathering, separation, metering, and storage equipment; electrical 
lines; fences; spill control

[[Page 79976]]

equipment or structures, including lined areas, artificial lift 
equipment, tank batteries, treating and separating vessels, secondary 
or enhanced recovery facilities, water disposal facilities, gas 
compression and/or injection facilities; metering points; sales point 
(if on lease); tanker pickup points; gas compressor, including size and 
type (if applicable); and any other well site equipment.
    (b) A general description of anticipated stimulations, servicing, 
and workovers.
    (c) A description of the procedures and equipment used to maintain 
well control.
    (d) A description of the method and means used to transport 
produced oil and gas, including vehicular transport; flowline and 
gathering line construction and operation, pipe size, and operating 
pressure; cathodic protection methods; surface equipment use; surface 
equipment location; maintenance procedures; maintenance schedules; 
pressure detection methods; and shutdown procedures.
    (e) A road and well pad maintenance plan, including equipment and 
materials to maintain the road surface and control erosion.
    (f) A vegetation management plan on well sites, roads, pipeline 
corridors, and other disturbed surface areas, including control of 
noxious and invasive species.
    (g) A stormwater management plan on the well site.
    (h) A produced water storage and disposal plan.
    (i) A description of the equipment, materials, and procedures 
proposed for well plugging.

Operations Permit: Application Review and Approval


Sec.  29.100  How will the Service process my application?

    We will conduct initial review of your application to determine if 
all information is complete. Once your information is complete, we will 
begin formal review.


Sec.  29.101  How will the Service conduct an initial review?

    (a) Within 30 calendar days of receipt of your application, the 
Service will notify you in writing that one of the following situations 
exists:
    (1) Your application is complete, and the Service will begin formal 
review;
    (2) Your application does not meet the information requirements, in 
which case we will identify the additional information required to be 
submitted before the Service will be able to conduct formal review of 
your application; or
    (3) More time is necessary to complete the review, in which case 
the Service will provide the amount of additional time reasonably 
needed along with a justification.
    (b) If you submit additional information as requested under 
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, and the Service determines that you 
have met all applicable information requirements, the Service will 
notify you within 30 calendar days from receipt of the additional 
information that either:
    (1) Your application is complete, and the Service will begin formal 
review; or
    (2) More time is necessary to complete the initial review, in which 
case the Service will provide the amount of additional time reasonably 
needed along with a justification.


Sec.  29.102  How will the Service conduct a formal review?

    For those applications for which the Service determines that the 
applicant holds a valid property right, the Service will conduct a 
formal review of your application by:
    (a) Evaluating the potential impacts of your proposal on Service-
administered lands and waters, or resources of refuges; visitor uses or 
experiences; or visitor or employee health and safety in compliance 
with applicable Federal laws; and
    (b) Identifying any additional operating conditions that would 
apply to your approved application.


Sec.  29.103  What standards must be met to approve my application?

    (a) In order to approve your operations permit application, the 
Service must determine that your operations will:
    (1) Use technologically feasible, least damaging methods; and
    (2) Meet all applicable operating standards.
    (b) Before operations begin, you must submit to the Service:
    (1) Financial assurance in the amount specified by the Service and 
in accordance with the requirements of Sec. Sec.  29.150 through 
29.154, Financial Assurance;
    (2) Proof of liability insurance with limits sufficient to cover 
injuries to persons or property caused by your operations; and
    (3) A statement under penalty of perjury, signed by an official who 
is authorized to legally bind the company, stating that proposed 
operations are in compliance with any applicable Federal law or 
regulation or any applicable State law or regulation related to non-
Federal oil and gas operations and that all information submitted to 
the Service is true and correct.


Sec.  29.104  What actions may the Service take on my operations permit 
application?

    (a) We will make a decision on your application within 180 days 
from the date we deem your application complete unless:
    (1) We and you agree that such decision will occur within a shorter 
or longer period of time; or
    (2) We determine that an additional period of time is required to 
ensure that we have, in reviewing the permit application, complied with 
all applicable legal requirements.
    (b) We will notify you in writing that your permit application is:
    (1) Approved, with or without operating conditions; or
    (2) Denied, and provide justification for the denial. Any such 
denial must be consistent with Sec.  29.40(c).

Operating Standards


Sec.  29.110  What are the purposes of the Service's operating 
standards?

    The purposes are to:
    (a) Protect Service-administered lands and waters, and refuge 
resources; wildlife-dependent visitor uses and experiences; and visitor 
and employee health and safety; and
    (b) Ensure use of technologically feasible, least damaging methods. 
The operating standards give us and the operator flexibility to 
consider using alternative methods, equipment, materials design, and 
conduct of operations.


Sec.  29.111  What general facility design and management standards 
must I meet?

    As a permittee, you must:
    (a) Design, construct, operate, and maintain access to your 
operational site to cause the minimum amount of surface disturbance 
needed to safely conduct operations and to avoid areas we have 
identified as containing sensitive resources.
    (b) Install and maintain secondary containment materials and 
structures for all equipment and facilities using or storing 
contaminating substances. The containment system must be sufficiently 
impervious to prevent discharge and must have sufficient storage 
capacity to contain, at a minimum, the largest potential spill 
incident.
    (c) Keep temporarily stored waste in the smallest area feasible, 
and confine the waste to prevent escape as a result of percolation, 
rain, high water, or other causes. You must regularly remove waste from 
the refuge and lawfully dispose of the waste in a direct and workable 
timeframe. You may not establish a solid waste disposal site on a 
refuge.

[[Page 79977]]

    (d) Use engines that adhere to applicable Federal and State 
emission standards.
    (e) Construct, maintain, and use roads in a manner to minimize 
fugitive dust emissions.
    (f) Design, operate, and maintain your operations and equipment in 
a manner consistent with good air pollution control practices so as to 
minimize emissions and leaks of air pollutants and hydrocarbons, 
including intentional releases or flaring of gases.
    (g) Control the invasion of noxious and invasive plant and animal 
species in your area of operations from the beginning through final 
reclamation.
    (h) Avoid conducting ground-disturbing operations within 500 feet 
of any surface water, including an intermittent or ephemeral 
watercourse, or wetland, or any refuge structure or facility used by 
refuges for interpretation, public recreation, or administration. We 
may increase or decrease this distance consistent with the need to 
protect Service-administered structures or facilities, visitor uses or 
experiences, or visitor or employee health and safety; or to ensure 
that you have reasonable access to your non-Federal oil and gas. 
Measurements for purposes of this paragraph are by map distance.


Sec.  29.112  What fish and wildlife protection standards must I meet?

    To protect fish and wildlife resources on the refuge, you must:
    (a) Along with your employees and contractors, adhere to all refuge 
regulations for the protection of fish, wildlife, and plants;
    (b) Ensure that you, your employees, and contractors have been 
informed and educated by the refuge staff on the appropriate protection 
practices for wildlife conservation;
    (c) Conduct operations in a manner that does not create an unsafe 
environment for fish and wildlife by avoiding or minimizing exposure to 
physical and chemical hazards; and
    (d) Conduct operations in a manner that avoids or minimizes impacts 
to sensitive wildlife, including timing and location of operations.


Sec.  29.113  What hydrologic standards must I meet?

    You must:
    (a) Construct facilities in a manner that maintains hydrologic 
movement and function.
    (b) Not cause measurable degradation of surface water or 
groundwater beyond that of existing conditions.
    (c) Conduct operations in a manner that maintains natural processes 
of erosion and sedimentation.


Sec.  29.114  What safety standards must I meet?

    To ensure the safety of your operations, you must:
    (a) Maintain your area of operations in a manner that avoids or 
minimizes the cause or spread of fire and does not intensify fire 
originating outside your operations area;
    (b) Maintain structures, facilities, improvements, and equipment in 
a safe and professional manner in order not to create an unsafe 
environment for refuge resources, visitors, and employees, by avoiding 
or minimizing exposure to physical and chemical hazards; and
    (c) Provide site-security measures to protect visitors from 
hazardous conditions resulting from your operations.


Sec.  29.115  What lighting and visual standards must I meet?

    (a) You must design, shield, and focus lighting to minimize the 
effects of spill light on the night sky or adjacent areas; and
    (b) You must reduce visual contrast in the landscape in selecting 
the area of operations, avoiding unnecessary disturbance, choosing 
appropriate colors and materials for roads and permanent structures, 
and other means.


Sec.  29.116  What noise reduction standards must I meet?

    You must prevent or minimize all noise that:
    (a) Adversely affects refuge resources or uses, taking into account 
frequency, magnitude, or duration; or
    (b) Exceeds levels that have been identified through monitoring as 
being acceptable to or appropriate for uses at the sites being 
monitored.


Sec.  29.117  What reclamation and protection standards must I meet?

    (a) You must promptly clean up and remove from the refuge any 
released contaminating substances in accordance with all applicable 
Federal, State, and local laws.
    (b) You must perform partial reclamation of areas that are no 
longer necessary to conduct operations. You must begin final 
reclamation within 6 months after you complete your authorized 
operations unless we authorize a different reclamation period in 
writing.
    (c) You must protect all survey markers (e.g., monuments, witness 
corners, reference monuments, and bearing trees) against destruction, 
obliteration, or damage from operations. You are responsible for 
reestablishment, restoration, and referencing of any monuments, 
corners, and bearing trees that are destroyed, obliterated, or damaged 
by your operations.
    (d) You must complete reclamation by:
    (1) Plugging all wells;
    (2) Removing all above-ground structures, equipment, roads, and all 
other manmade material and debris resulting from operations;
    (3) Removing or neutralizing any contaminating substances;
    (4) Reestablishing native vegetative communities, or providing for 
conditions where ecological processes typical of the ecological zone 
(e.g., plant or wildlife succession) will reestablish themselves;
    (5) Grading to conform the contours to pre-existing elevations as 
necessary to maximize ecological function;
    (6) Restoring conditions to pre-disturbance hydrologic movement and 
functionality;
    (7) Restoring natural systems using native soil material that is 
similar in character to the adjacent undisturbed soil profiles;
    (8) Ensuring that reclamation does not interfere with visitor use 
or with administration of the refuge;
    (9) Attaining conditions that are consistent with the management 
objectives of the refuge, designed to meet the purposes for which the 
refuge was established; and
    (10) Coordinating with us or with other operators who may be using 
a portion of your area of operations to ensure proper and equitable 
apportionment of reclamation responsibilities.


Sec.  29.118  What additional operating standards apply to geophysical 
operations?

    If you conduct geophysical operations, you must do all of the 
following:
    (a) Use surveying methods that minimize the need for vegetative 
trimming and removal.
    (b) Locate source points using industry-accepted minimum safe-
offset distances from pipelines, telephone lines, railroad tracks, 
roads, power lines, water wells, oil and gas wells, oil- and gas-
production facilities, and buildings.
    (c) Use equipment and methods that, based upon the specific 
environment, will minimize impacts to Service-administered lands and 
waters, and resources of refuges; visitor uses and experiences; and 
visitor and employee health and safety.
    (d) If you use shot holes, you must:
    (1) Use biodegradable charges;
    (2) Plug all shot holes to prevent a pathway for migration for 
fluids along any portion of the bore; and
    (3) Leave the site in a clean and safe condition that will not 
impede surface

[[Page 79978]]

reclamation or pose a hazard to wildlife or human health and safety.


Sec.  29.119  What additional operating standards apply to drilling and 
production operations?

    If you conduct drilling and production operations, you must meet 
all of the following standards:
    (a) To conduct drilling operations, you must:
    (1) Use containerized mud circulation systems for operations;
    (2) Not create or use earthen pits;
    (3) Take all necessary precautions to keep your wells under control 
at all times, using only employees, contractors, or subcontractors 
trained and competent in well control procedures and equipment 
operation, and using industry-accepted well control equipment and 
practices; and
    (4) Design, implement, and maintain integrated casing, cementing, 
drilling fluid, completion, stimulation, and blowout prevention 
programs to prevent escape of fluids to the surface and to isolate and 
protect usable water zones throughout the life of the well, taking into 
account all relevant geologic and engineering factors.
    (b) To conduct production operations, in addition to meeting the 
standards of paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this section, you must 
do all of the following:
    (1) Monitor producing conditions for early indications that could 
lead to loss of mechanical integrity of producing equipment.
    (2) Maintain all surface equipment and the wellhead to prevent 
leaks or releases of any fluids or air pollutants.
    (3) Identify wells and related facilities with appropriate signage. 
Signs must remain in place until the well is plugged and abandoned and 
the related facilities are removed. Signs must be of durable 
construction, and the lettering must be legible and large enough to be 
read under normal conditions at a distance of at least 50 feet. Each 
sign must show the name of the well, name of the operator, and the 
emergency contact phone number.
    (4) Remove all equipment and materials when not needed for the 
current phase of your operation.
    (5) Plug all wells, leaving the surface in a clean and safe 
condition that will not impede surface reclamation or pose a hazard to 
wildlife or human health and safety, in accordance with Sec.  29.117.

General Terms and Conditions


Sec.  29.120  What terms and conditions apply to all operators?

    The following terms and conditions apply to all operators, 
regardless of whether these terms and conditions are expressly included 
in the permit:
    (a) You must comply with all applicable operating standards in 
Sec. Sec.  29.111 through 29.119; these operating standards will be 
incorporated in the terms and conditions of your operations permit. 
Violation of these operating standards, unless otherwise provided in 
your operations permit, will subject you to the Prohibited Acts and 
Penalties provisions of Sec. Sec.  29.190 through 29.192.
    (b) You are responsible for ensuring that all of your employees, 
agents, contractors, and subcontractors comply fully with the 
requirements of this subpart.
    (c) You may be required to reimburse the Service for the costs of 
processing and administering temporary access permits and operations 
permits.
    (d) You may not use any surface water or groundwater from a source 
located on a refuge unless you have demonstrated a right to use that 
water or the use has been approved by the Service as the 
technologically feasible, least damaging method.
    (e) You agree to indemnify and hold harmless the United States and 
its officers and employees from and against any and all liability of 
any kind whatsoever arising out of or resulting from the acts or 
omissions of you and your employees, agents, representatives, 
contractors, and subcontractors in the conduct of activities under a 
Service-issued permit.
    (f) You will be required to take all reasonable precautions to 
avoid, minimize, rectify, or reduce the overall impacts of your 
proposed oil and gas activities to the refuge. You may be required to 
mitigate for impacts to refuge resources and lost uses. Mutually agreed 
to mitigation tools for this purpose may include providing alternative 
habitat creation or restoration, land purchase, or other resource 
compensation.
    (g) You are responsible for unanticipated and unauthorized damages 
as a direct or indirect result of your operations. You will be 
responsible for the actions and consequences of your employees and 
subcontractors. You will also be responsible for any reclamation of 
damages to refuge resources directly or indirectly caused by your 
operations through the occurrence of severe weather, fire, earthquakes, 
or the like thereof.


Sec.  29.121  What monitoring and reporting is required for all 
operators?

    (a) The Service may access your area of operations at any time to 
monitor the effects of your operations to ensure compliance with the 
regulations in this subpart.
    (b) The Service may determine that third-party monitors are 
necessary to ensure compliance with your operations permit and to 
protect Service-administered lands and waters, or the resources of 
refuges, visitor uses and experiences, and visitor or employee health 
and safety.
    (1) The Service's determination will be based on the scope and 
complexity of the proposed operation, reports that you are required to 
submit under paragraph (e) of this section, and whether the refuge has 
the staff and technical ability to ensure compliance with the 
operations permit and any provision of this subpart.
    (2) A third-party monitor will report directly to the Service at 
intervals determined by the Service. We will make the information 
reported available to you upon your request.
    (3) You will be responsible for the cost of the third-party 
monitor.
    (c) You must notify the Service within 24 hours of any injuries to 
or mortality of fish, wildlife, or endangered or threatened plants 
resulting from your operations.
    (d) You must notify the Service of any accidents involving serious 
personal injury or death and of any fires or spills on the site 
immediately after the accident occurs. You must submit a full written 
report on the accident to the Service within 90 days after the accident 
occurs.
    (e) Upon our request, you must submit reports or other information 
necessary to verify compliance with your permit or with any provision 
of this subpart. To fulfill this request, you may submit to us reports 
that you have submitted to the State under State regulations, or that 
you have submitted to any other Federal agency to the extent they are 
sufficient to verify compliance with permits or this subpart.
    (f) If your operations include hydraulic fracturing, you must 
provide the Service with a report including the true vertical depth of 
the well, total water volume used, and a description of the base fluid 
and each additive in the hydraulic fracturing fluid, including the 
trade name, supplier, purpose, ingredients, Chemical Abstract Service 
Number (CAS), maximum ingredient concentration in additive (percent by 
mass), and maximum ingredient concentration in hydraulic fracturing 
fluid (percent by mass). The report must be either submitted through 
FracFocus or another Service-designated database.

[[Page 79979]]

Sec.  29.122  For how long is my operations permit valid?

    Operations permits remain valid for the duration of the operation. 
Provisions of Sec.  29.160 apply.

Access Fees


Sec.  29.140  May I cross Federal property to reach the boundary of my 
oil and gas right?

    The Service may grant you the privilege of access on, across, or 
through Service-administered lands or waters to reach the boundary of 
your oil and gas right. You should contact the Service to determine if 
additional permits are necessary for access.


Sec.  29.141  Will the Service charge me a fee for access?

    (a) The Service will charge you a fee if you require use of 
Service-administered lands or waters outside the boundary or scope of 
your oil and gas right:
    (1) If you require new use of Service-administered lands or waters, 
we will charge you a fee based on the fair market value of that use.
    (2) Fees under this section will not be charged for access within 
the scope of your oil and gas right or access to your right that is 
otherwise provided for by law.
    (b) If access to your oil and gas right is across an existing 
refuge road, we may charge a fee according to a posted fee schedule.


Sec.  29.142  Will I be charged a fee for emergency access to my 
operations?

    No.
    (a) The Service will not charge a fee for access across Service-
administered lands or waters beyond the scope of your oil and gas right 
as necessary to respond to an emergency situation at your area of 
operations if we determine after the fact that the circumstances 
required an immediate response to either:
    (1) Prevent or minimize injury to refuge resources; or
    (2) Ensure public health and safety.
    (b) You will remain liable for any damage caused to refuge 
resources as a result of such emergency access.

Financial Assurance


Sec.  29.150  When do I have to provide financial assurance to the 
Service?

    You will need to provide financial assurance as a condition of 
approval for your operations permit when you submit your application. 
You must file financial assurance with us in a form acceptable to the 
Service and payable upon demand. This financial assurance is in 
addition to any financial assurance required by any other Federal or 
State regulatory authority.


Sec.  29.151  How does the Service establish the amount of financial 
assurance?

    (a) You are responsible for completing reclamation of your 
disturbances, whether within or outside your permit area, in accordance 
with this subpart and the terms of your permit. If you fail to properly 
complete reclamation, you will be liable for the full costs of 
completing the reclamation. We will base the financial assurance amount 
upon the estimated cost that a third-party contractor would charge to 
complete reclamation in accordance with this subpart. If the cost of 
reclamation exceeds the amount of your financial assurance, you will 
remain liable for all costs of reclamation in excess of the financial 
assurance.
    (b) The Service will reduce the required amount of your financial 
assurance during the pendency of operations by the amount we determine 
is represented by in-kind reclamation you complete during your 
operations.


Sec.  29.152  Will the Service adjust the amount required for my 
financial assurance?

    The Service may require, or you may request, an adjustment to the 
financial assurance amount because of any circumstances that increase 
or decrease the estimated costs established under Sec.  29.151.


Sec.  29.153  When will the Service release my financial assurance?

    (a) Your responsibility under the financial assurance will continue 
until either:
    (1) The Service determines that you have met all applicable 
reclamation operating standards and any additional reclamation 
requirements that may be included in your operations permit; or
    (2) A new operator assumes your operations, as provided in Sec.  
29.170(b).
    (b) You will be notified by the Service within 30 calendar days of 
our determination that your financial assurance has been released.


Sec.  29.154  Under what circumstances will I forfeit my financial 
assurance?

    (a) You may forfeit all or part of your financial assurance if we 
cannot secure your compliance with the provisions of your operations 
permit or a provision of this subpart. The part of your financial 
assurance forfeited is based on costs to the Service to remedy your 
noncompliance.
    (b) In addition to forfeited financial assurance, we may 
temporarily:
    (1) Prohibit you from removing all structures, equipment, or other 
materials from your area of operations;
    (2) Require you to secure the operations site and take any 
necessary actions to protect Service-administered lands and waters, and 
resources of the refuge; visitor uses; and visitor or employee health 
and safety; and
    (3) Suspend review of any permit applications you have submitted 
until we determine that all violations of permit provisions or of any 
provision of this subpart are resolved.
    (4) Seek recovery as provided in Sec.  29.151 for all costs of 
reclamation in excess of the posted financial assurance.

Modification to an Operation


Sec.  29.160  Can I modify operations under an approved permit?

    The Service may amend an approved temporary access permit or an 
operations permit to adjust to changed conditions or to address 
unanticipated conditions, either upon our own action or at your 
request.
    (a) To request a modification to your operation, you must provide, 
in writing, to the Service, your assigned permit number, a description 
of the proposed modification, and an explanation of why the 
modification is needed. We will review your request for modification 
under the approval standards at Sec. Sec.  29.72 or 29.103. You may not 
implement any modification until you have received the Service's 
written approval.
    (b) If the Service needs to amend your temporary access permit or 
operations permit, you will receive a written notice that:
    (1) Describes the modification required and justification;
    (2) Specifies the time within which you must notify the Service 
that you either accept the modifications to your permit or explain any 
concerns you may have; and
    (3) Absent any concerns, specifies the time within which you must 
incorporate the modification into your operations.

Change of Operator


Sec.  29.170  What are my responsibilities if I transfer my right to 
operate?

    (a) If your operations are being conducted under Sec.  29.44, you 
must notify the Service in writing within 30 calendar days from the 
date the new operator acquires the rights to conduct operations. Your 
written notification must include:
    (1) The names and addresses of the person or entity conveying the 
right and of the person or entity acquiring the right;

[[Page 79980]]

    (2) The effective date of transfer;
    (3) The description of the rights, assets, and liabilities being 
transferred and which ones, if any, are being reserved by the previous 
operator; and
    (4) A written acknowledgement from the new operator that the 
contents of the notification are true and correct.
    (b) If your operations are being conducted under Sec.  29.43 or an 
operations permit:
    (1) You must provide notice under paragraph (a) of this section.
    (2) You remain responsible for compliance with your operations 
permit, and we will retain your financial assurance until the new 
operator:
    (i) Adopts and agrees in writing to conduct operations in 
accordance with all terms and conditions of your operations permit;
    (ii) Provides financial assurance with us that is acceptable to the 
Service and made payable to the Service; and
    (iii) Receives written notification from the Service that transfer 
of the operations permit has been approved.


Sec.  29.171  What must I do if operations are transferred to me?

    (a) If another operator transfers operations conducted under Sec.  
29.44, as the transferee you may continue operating under the 
requirements of that section, but:
    (1) Within 30 calendar days from the date of the transfer, you must 
provide to the Service:
    (i) Documentation demonstrating that you hold the right to operate; 
and
    (ii) The names, phone numbers, and addresses of your:
    (A) Primary company representative;
    (B) Representative responsible for field supervision; and
    (C) Representative responsible for emergency response.
    (2) Within 90 days, or as otherwise agreed to by the Service, 
submit an operations permit application in compliance with Sec. Sec.  
29.90-29.97, Operations Permit: Application, that must be approved in 
compliance with applicable provisions of this subpart and under the 
timelines outlined in Sec. Sec.  29.100-29.103, Operations Permit: 
Application Review and Approval.
    (b) If another operator transfers operations conducted under Sec.  
29.43 or an operations permit, you must within 30 days of commencing 
transferred operations:
    (1) Provide documentation demonstrating that you hold the right to 
operate.
    (2) Provide the names, phone numbers, and addresses of your:
    (i) Primary company representative;
    (ii) Representative responsible for field supervision; and
    (iii) Representative responsible for emergency response.
    (3) Agree in writing to conduct operations in accordance with all 
terms and conditions of the previous operator's permit.
    (4) File financial assurance with us that is acceptable to the 
Service and made payable to the Service.
    (5) Receive written approval from the Service for the transfer of 
the operation's permit.
    (c) You may modify operations transferred to you in accordance with 
Sec.  29.160.

Well Plugging


Sec.  29.180  When must I plug my well?

    Except as provided in Sec.  29.181, you must plug your well, in 
accordance with the standards and procedures outlined in this subpart, 
when any of the following occurs:
    (a) Your drilling operations have ended and you have taken no 
further action on your well within 60 calendar days;
    (b) Your well, which has been completed for production operations, 
has no measurable production quantities for 12 consecutive months; or
    (c) The period approved in your permit to maintain your well in 
shut-in status has expired.


Sec.  29.181  Can I get an extension to the well plugging requirement?

    (a) You may apply for either an operations permit or a modification 
to your approved operations permit to maintain your well in a shut-in 
status for up to 5 years. Provide the information requested on FWS Form 
3-2469, including, but not limited to:
    (1) An explanation of why the well is shut-in or temporarily 
abandoned and your future plans for utilization;
    (2) A demonstration of the mechanical integrity of the well; and
    (3) A description of the manner in which your well, equipment, and 
area of operations will be maintained in accordance with the standards 
in the subpart.
    (b) Based on the information provided under this section, we may 
approve your application to maintain your well in shut-in status for a 
period up to 5 years. We may condition an extension on an adjustment of 
your financial assurance.
    (c) You may apply for additional extensions by submitting a new 
application under paragraph (a) of this section.

Prohibited Acts and Penalties


Sec.  29.190  What acts are prohibited under this subpart?

    The following acts are prohibited:
    (a) Operating in violation of the terms or conditions of a 
temporary access permit, an operations permit, a permit under Sec.  
29.43, or any applicable provision of this subpart, including 
Sec. Sec.  29.60-29.64 for pre-existing operations.
    (b) Damaging Service-administered lands or waters, or resources of 
a refuge, as a result of failure to comply with the terms or conditions 
of a temporary access permit, an operations permit, operations being 
conducted under Sec. Sec.  29.43 or 29.44, or any provision of this 
subpart.
    (c) Conducting operations without a temporary access permit or an 
operations permit, unless conducting operations under Sec. Sec.  29.43 
or 29.44.
    (d) Failure to comply with any suspension or revocation order 
issued under this subpart.
    (e) Failure to comply with the applicable provisions of Federal law 
or regulation including this subchapter.
    (f) Failure to comply with the applicable provisions of the laws 
and regulations of the State wherein any operation is located unless 
further restricted by Federal law or regulation including this 
subchapter.


Sec.  29.191  What enforcement actions can the Service take?

    If you engage in a prohibited act:
    (a) The Service may suspend and/or revoke your approved operations 
permit and your authorization for operations as set forth at Sec.  
29.43 and Sec.  29.44; and/or
    (b) All prohibited acts are subject to the penalty provisions set 
forth at Sec.  28.31 of this subchapter.


Sec.  29.192  How do violations affect my ability to obtain a permit?

    Until you comply with the regulations in this subpart, we will not 
consider a request to conduct any new operations, except plugging and 
reclamation operations, on Service-administered lands or waters.

Appeals


Sec.  29.200  Can I, as operator, appeal Service decisions?

    Yes. If you disagree with a decision made by the Service under this 
subpart, you may use the appeals process in Sec.  25.45 of this 
subchapter. The process set forth in Sec.  25.45 will be used for 
appeal of any written decision concerning approval, denial, or 
modification of an operation made by the Service under this subpart. No

[[Page 79981]]

Service decision under this subpart that is subject to appeal to the 
Regional Director or the Director shall be considered final agency 
action subject to judicial review under 5 U.S.C. 704 until the Regional 
Director has rendered his or her decision on the matter. The decision 
of the Regional Director will constitute the Service's final agency 
action, and no further appeal will lie in the Department from that 
decision.

Public Information


Sec.  29.210  How can the public learn about oil and gas activities on 
refuge lands?

    (a) Interested parties may view publicly available documents at the 
refuge's office during normal business hours or by other means 
prescribed by the refuge. The availability for public inspection of 
information about the nature, location, character, or ownership of 
refuge resources will conform to all applicable laws and implementing 
regulations, standards, and guidelines.
    (b) The refuge will make available for public inspection any 
documents that an operator submits to the Service under this subpart 
except those that the operator has identified as proprietary or 
confidential.
    (c) For the information required in Sec.  29.121(f), the operator 
and the owner of the information will be deemed to have waived any 
right to protect from public disclosure information submitted through 
FracFocus or another Service-designated database.
    (d) For information required under this subpart that the owner of 
the information claims to be exempt from public disclosure and is 
withheld from the Service, a corporate officer, managing partner, or 
sole proprietor of the operator must sign and the operator must submit 
to the authorized officer an affidavit that:
    (1) Identifies the owner of the withheld information and provides 
the name, address, and contact information for a corporate officer, 
managing partner, or sole proprietor of the owner of the information;
    (2) Identifies the Federal statute or regulation that would 
prohibit the Service from publicly disclosing the information if it 
were in the Service's possession;
    (3) Affirms that the operator has been provided the withheld 
information from the owner of the information and is maintaining 
records of the withheld information, or that the operator has access 
and will maintain access to the withheld information held by the owner 
of the information;
    (4) Affirms that the information is not publicly available;
    (5) Affirms that the information is not required to be publicly 
disclosed under any applicable local, State, tribal, or Federal law;
    (6) Affirms that the owner of the information is in actual 
competition and identifies competitors or others that could use the 
withheld information to cause the owner of the information substantial 
competitive harm;
    (7) Affirms that the release of the information would likely cause 
substantial competitive harm to the owner of the information and 
provides the factual basis for that affirmation; and
    (8) Affirms that the information is not readily apparent through 
reverse engineering with publicly available information.
    (e) If the operator relies upon information from third parties, 
such as the owner of the withheld information, to make the affirmations 
in paragraphs (d)(6) through (d)(8) of this section, the operator must 
provide a written affidavit from the third party that sets forth the 
relied-upon information.
    (f) The Service may require any operator to submit to the Service 
any withheld information, and any information relevant to a claim that 
withheld information is exempt from public disclosure.
    (g) If the Service determines that the information submitted under 
paragraphs (d) or (e) of this section is not exempt from disclosure, 
the Service will make the information available to the public after 
providing the operator and owner of the information with no fewer than 
10 business days' notice of the Service's determination.
    (h) The operator must maintain records of the withheld information 
until the later of the Service's release of the operator's financial 
assurance or 7 years after completion of operations on refuge lands. 
Any subsequent operator will be responsible for maintaining access to 
records required by this paragraph during its operation of the well. 
The operator will be deemed to be maintaining the records if it can 
promptly provide the complete and accurate information to the Service, 
even if the information is in the custody of its owner.
    (i) If any of the chemical identity information required in this 
subpart is withheld, the operator must provide the generic chemical 
name in the submission required. The generic chemical name must be only 
as nonspecific as is necessary to protect the confidential chemical 
identity, and should be the same as or no less descriptive than the 
generic chemical name provided to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Information Collection


Sec.  29.220  Has the Office of Management and Budget approved the 
collection of information?

    The Office of Management and Budget reviewed and approved the 
information collection requirements contained in this subpart and 
assigned OMB Control No. 1018-0162. We use the information collected 
under this subpart to manage non-Federal oil and gas operations on 
Service-administered lands or waters for the purpose of protecting 
wildlife and habitat, water quality and quantity, wildlife-dependent 
recreational opportunities, and the health and safety of employees and 
visitors on the NWRS. We may not conduct or sponsor and you are not 
required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a 
currently valid OMB control number.

Karen Hyun,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2016-27218 Filed 11-10-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4333-15-P



                                                 79948            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR                              Executive Summary                                        • Fees for new access beyond that
                                                                                                            This rule revises the existing                     held as part of the operator’s oil and gas
                                                 Fish and Wildlife Service                               regulations at subpart C, part 29, of title           right;
                                                                                                         50 of the Code of Federal Regulations                    • Financial assurance (bonding);
                                                 50 CFR Parts 28 and 29                                  (CFR) and adds new regulations at                        • Penalty provisions;
                                                                                                         subpart D of 50 CFR part 29 to govern                    • Exemption of refuges in Alaska
                                                 [Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–0086;                                                                            from these requirements;
                                                 FXRS12610900000–156–FF09R24000]                         the exercise of non-Federal oil and gas
                                                                                                         rights within refuges outside of Alaska.                 • Codification of some existing
                                                 RIN 1018–AX36                                           This revision improves the effectiveness              Service policies and practices.
                                                                                                         of the Service to protect refuge resources            Background
                                                 Management of Non-Federal Oil and                       and uses from avoidable, unnecessary
                                                 Gas Rights                                              impacts by non-Federal oil and gas                    Advance Notice of Proposed
                                                                                                         operations. It will also bring consistency            Rulemaking, Proposed Rule, and Public
                                                 AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,                                                                          Comment Period
                                                 Interior.                                               and clarity for both operators and the
                                                                                                         Service as to the process by which                       This rulemaking effort began on
                                                 ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                         operators may access non-Federal oil                  February 24, 2014, when we issued an
                                                 SUMMARY:   We, the U.S. Fish and                        and gas on the National Wildlife Refuge               advance notice of proposed rulemaking
                                                 Wildlife Service (Service), are finalizing              System (NWRS). The Service defines the                (ANPR) (79 FR 10080) to assist us in
                                                 regulations governing the exercise of                   National Wildlife Refuge System to                    developing the proposed rule. The
                                                 non-Federal oil and gas rights outside of               consist of all lands, waters, and interests           ANPR had a 60-day comment period,
                                                 Alaska in order to improve our ability                  therein that it administers (25 CFR                   ending April 25, 2014. On June 9, 2014,
                                                 to protect refuge resources, visitors, and              25.12) and does not apply its regulations             we reopened the comment period for
                                                 the general public’s health and safety                  to the non-Federal lands found within                 another 30 days, ending July 9, 2014 (79
                                                 from potential impacts associated with                  refuge boundaries (i.e., inholdings).                 FR 32903). We received comments from
                                                 non-Federal oil and gas operations                         The Service promulgated the current                unaffiliated private citizens (36),
                                                 located within refuges. The exercise of                 regulations at 50 CFR 29.32 to govern                 conservation organizations (14), State
                                                 non-Federal oil and gas rights refers to                the exercise of non-Federal mineral                   agencies (8), counties (2), Alaska Native
                                                 oil and gas activities associated with                  rights on the NWRS more than 50 years                 Corporations (2), a tribal agency, oil and
                                                 any private, State, or tribally owned                   ago, and they have not been updated                   gas owners and operators (6), business
                                                 mineral interest where the surface estate               since. The current regulations outline a              associations (5), and a Federal agency,
                                                 above such rights is administered by the                general policy to minimize impacts to                 along with almost 80,000 form letter
                                                 Service as part of the Refuge System.                   refuge resources to the extent                        comments from members of two
                                                                                                         practicable from all activities associated            environmental organizations. The
                                                 The existing non-Federal oil and gas
                                                                                                         with non-Federal mineral exploration                  majority of commenters were in favor of
                                                 regulations have remained unchanged
                                                                                                         and development where access is on,                   strengthening and expanding the
                                                 for more than 50 years and provide only
                                                                                                         across, or through federally owned or                 regulations to better protect refuge
                                                 vague guidance to staff and operators.
                                                                                                         controlled lands or waters of the NWRS.               resources and values. Some commenters
                                                 This rule will make the regulations
                                                                                                         However, they have been ineffective at                requested that we not revise the existing
                                                 more consistent with existing laws,
                                                                                                         protecting refuge resources because they              regulations, while others questioned
                                                 policies, and industry practices. It is
                                                                                                         do not provide operators or refuge staff              whether the Service had the statutory
                                                 designed to provide regulatory clarity
                                                                                                         with an explicit process or requirements              authority to regulate non-Federal oil and
                                                 and guidance to oil and gas operators
                                                                                                         for operating on refuge lands, resulting              gas operations on refuges.
                                                 and refuge staff, provide a simple                      in inconsistency in protections for
                                                 process for compliance, incorporate                                                                              We utilized these comments to
                                                                                                         refuge resources and uses.                            prepare the proposed rule, which we
                                                 technological improvements in                              Therefore, updating these regulations
                                                 exploration and drilling technology, and                                                                      published on December 11, 2015 (80 FR
                                                                                                         is a necessary exercise of the Service’s
                                                 ensure that non-Federal oil and gas                                                                           77200), and opened, with the associated
                                                                                                         authority to ensure that we are meeting
                                                 operations are conducted in a manner                                                                          draft Environmental Impact Statement
                                                                                                         our responsibilities under the National
                                                 that avoids or minimizes impacts to                                                                           (EIS), a 60-day comment period. During
                                                                                                         Wildlife Refuge System Administration
                                                 refuge resources.                                                                                             this comment period we received
                                                                                                         Act (NWRSAA), as amended by the
                                                 DATES: This rule is effective December
                                                                                                                                                               approximately 39,600 responses (mostly
                                                                                                         National Wildlife Refuge System
                                                 14, 2016.                                                                                                     form letters) indicating general support
                                                                                                         Improvement Act (NWRSIA) (16 U.S.C.
                                                                                                                                                               regulating oil and gas activities on
                                                 ADDRESSES: Supplementary documents                      668dd et seq.), to protect refuge
                                                                                                                                                               refuges and our proposed rule.
                                                 prepared in conjunction with                            resources and uses while ensuring that
                                                                                                                                                               However, many commented that the
                                                 preparation of this rule, including an                  mineral rights holders have reasonable
                                                                                                         access to develop their non-Federal oil               proposed rule did not go far enough in
                                                 economic analysis and an                                                                                      regulating these activities, with some
                                                 environmental impact statement, and                     and gas.
                                                                                                            Key components of the rule include:                requesting a ban on any oil and gas
                                                 the public comments received on the                                                                           activity, or at least hydraulic fracturing,
                                                 proposed rule are available at                             • A permitting process for new
                                                                                                         operations;                                           in refuges. We also received 12 letters
                                                 www.regulations.gov at Docket No.
                                                 FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–0086.                                     • A permitting process for well-                   from State agencies, oil and gas
                                                                                                         plugging and reclamation for all                      associations, oil companies, and an
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        operations;                                           individual opposing the rulemaking.
                                                 Scott Covington, U.S. Fish and Wildlife                    • Information requirements for                     Primary reasons for opposition are that
                                                 Service, Division of Natural Resources                  particular types of operations;                       these entities believe that the Service
                                                 and Planning, MS: NWRS, 5275                               • Operating standards so that both the             lacks authority to regulate private oil
                                                 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041;                  Service and the operator can readily                  and gas and existing State and Federal
                                                 telephone 703–358–2427.                                 identify what standards apply to                      regulations are sufficient to protect
                                                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              particular operations;                                refuges. More information on the ANPR,


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          79949

                                                 proposed rule, and public comments is                   Impacts of Oil and Gas Activities on                  proposed rule an explanation of the
                                                 available at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/                Refuge Resources and Uses                             basis for the Service’s authority. As
                                                 oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html and also at                    Oil and gas activities have the                    further discussed below, the Service
                                                 www.regulations.gov at Docket No.                       potential to adversely impact refuge                  received opposing public comments on
                                                 FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–0086.                                  resources and uses in some or all of the              its analysis. While some commenters
                                                   A detailed discussion of all changes                  following manners:                                    asserted that the Service lacked the
                                                 made after consideration of comments                       • Surface water quality degradation                authority to regulate such private
                                                 on the proposed rule is contained in the                from spills, storm water runoff, erosion,             property rights, others agreed that we do
                                                 Summary of and Response to Public                       and sedimentation;                                    have this regulatory authority.
                                                 Comments section below.                                    • Soil and groundwater                                After carefully considering the public
                                                                                                         contamination from existing drilling                  comments, as well as engaging in
                                                 Non-Federal Oil and Gas on the NWRS
                                                                                                         mud pits, poorly constructed wells,                   further discussions with the Office of
                                                    Non-Federal oil and gas rights exist                 improperly conducted enhanced                         the Solicitor of the Department of the
                                                 within the NWRS in situations where                     recovery techniques, spills, and leaks;               Interior, the Service concludes that the
                                                 the oil and gas interest has been severed                  • Air quality degradation from dust,               National Wildlife Refuge System
                                                 from the estate acquired by the United                  natural gas flaring, hydrogen sulfide gas,            Administration Act, as amended in 1997
                                                 States, either because:                                 and emissions from production                         by the National Wildlife Refuge System
                                                    • The United States acquired                         operations and vehicles;                              Improvement Act (NWRSAA) (16 U.S.C.
                                                 property from a grantor that did not own                   • Increased noise from seismic                     668dd et seq.), provides us the statutory
                                                 the oil and gas interest; or                            operations, blasting, construction, oil               authority to promulgate these
                                                    • The United States acquired the                     and gas drilling and production                       regulations. In turn, Congress’s
                                                 property from a grantor that reserved the               operations;                                           authority to enact the NWRSAA is the
                                                 oil and gas interest from the                              • Reduction of roadless areas on                   Property Clause of the United States
                                                 conveyance.                                             refuges;                                              Constitution, which provides it the
                                                    Non-Federal oil and gas interests can                   • Noise and human presence effects                 power ‘‘to dispose of and make all
                                                 be held by individuals, partnerships,                   on wildlife behavior, breeding, and                   needful Rules and Regulations
                                                 for-profit corporations, nonprofit                      habitat use;                                          respecting the Territory or other
                                                 organizations, tribes, or States and their                 • Disruption of wildlife migration                 Property belonging to the United
                                                 political subdivisions. We recognize                    routes;                                               States.’’ U.S. Const. art IV, sec. 3, cl. 2.
                                                 that interests in non-Federal oil and gas                  • Adverse effects on sensitive and                    In 1997, Congress declared the
                                                 are property rights that may be taken for               endangered species;                                   Service’s mission to be: ‘‘to administer
                                                 public use only with payment of just                       • Viewshed (an area of land, water, or             a national network of lands and waters
                                                 compensation in accordance with the                     other environmental element that is                   for the conservation, management, and
                                                 Fifth Amendment of the U.S.                             visible to the human eye from a fixed                 where appropriate, restoration of the
                                                 Constitution. Application of this rule is               vantage point) intrusion by roads,                    fish, wildlife, and plant resources and
                                                 not intended to result in the taking of a               traffic, drilling equipment, production               their habitats within the United States
                                                 property interest, but rather to impose                 equipment, pipelines, etc.;                           for the benefit of present and future
                                                 reasonable regulations on activities that                  • Night sky intrusion from artificial              generations of Americans.’’ (16 U.S.C.
                                                 involve or affect federally owned lands                 lighting and gas flares;                              668dd(a)(2)). The NWRSAA further
                                                 and resources of the NWRS to avoid or                      • Disturbance to archaeological and                directs the Secretary of the Interior, in
                                                 minimize impacts from such activities                   cultural resources associated with                    administering the System, to:
                                                 to the maximum extent practicable.                      seismic exploration and road/site                        • Provide for the conservation of fish,
                                                    These regulations do not apply to the                preparation, associated with                          wildlife, and plants, and their habitats
                                                 development of the Federal mineral                      maintenance activities, or by spills;                 within the NWRS;
                                                 estate, including Federal oil and gas,                     • Visitor safety hazards from                         • Ensure that the biological integrity,
                                                 which are administered by the Bureau                    equipment, pressurized vessels and                    diversity, and environmental health of
                                                 of Land Management (BLM), under the                     lines, presence of hydrogen sulfide gas,              the NWRS are maintained for the benefit
                                                 Mineral Leasing Act and the Federal                     and leaking oil and gas that can create               of present and future generations of
                                                 Land Policy and Management Act. In                      explosion and fire hazards;                           Americans;
                                                 areas where oil and gas rights are owned                   • Wildlife mortality from oil spills or               • Ensure that the mission of the
                                                 by the United States, and leasing is                    entrapment in open-topped tanks or                    NWRS and the purposes of each refuge
                                                 authorized, the applicable regulations                  pits, poaching, and vehicle collisions;               are carried out;
                                                 are found at 43 CFR part 3100 et seq.                      • Fish kills from oil and oilfield brine              • Ensure effective coordination,
                                                 There is a general prohibition to leasing               spills; and                                           interaction, and cooperation with
                                                 Federal oil and gas on refuge lands (43                    • Vegetation mortality from oilfield               owners of land adjoining refuges and
                                                 CFR 3101.5–1). These regulations do not                 brine spills.                                         the fish and wildlife agency of the States
                                                 apply to refuges located in Alaska.                                                                           in which the units of the NWRS are
                                                    Examples of non-Federal oil and gas                  Service Authority To Regulate Non-                    located;
                                                 operations conducted on refuges                         Federal Oil and Gas Activities                           • Assist in the maintenance of
                                                 include: Geophysical (seismic)                            As noted in the preamble to the                     adequate water quantity and water
                                                 exploration; exploratory well drilling;                 proposed rule, one of the principal                   quality to fulfill the mission of the
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 field development well drilling; oil and                recommendations of the 2003                           NWRS and the purposes of each refuge;
                                                 gas well production operations,                         Government Accountability Office                         • Recognize compatible wildlife-
                                                 including installation and operation of                 report to Congress was for the Service to             dependent recreational uses as the
                                                 well flowlines and gathering lines;                     clarify its regulatory authority with                 priority general public uses of the
                                                 enhanced recovery operations; well                      respect to the exercise of non-Federal oil            NWRS through which the American
                                                 plugging and abandonment; and site                      and gas rights within the Refuge System.              public can develop an appreciation for
                                                 reclamation.                                            We provided in the preamble to the                    fish and wildlife;


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00003   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79950            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                    • Ensure that opportunities are                      regulations as he may prescribe,’’ to ‘‘permit        the Associate Solicitor, Division of
                                                 provided within the NWRS for                            the use of . . . any areas within the System          Conservation and Wildlife (‘‘1986
                                                 compatible wildlife-dependent                           for purposes such as . . . roads.’’                   Opinion’’) that concluded the Service
                                                 recreational uses; and                                  Id. at 438. Burlison also relied on the               then lacked the authority from Congress
                                                    • Monitor the status and trends of                   decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals                 to adopt regulations requiring permits
                                                 fish, wildlife, and plants in each refuge.              Eighth Circuit in Duncan Energy Co. v.                for access by holders of mineral
                                                    To carry out its mission and these                   United States Forest Service, 50 F.3d                 interests, unless the authority was
                                                 statutory directives to administer the                  584 (8th Cir. 1995), which upheld the                 provided for in the deed by which the
                                                 Refuge System, Congress provided the                    Forest Service’s authority to regulate                United States acquired title to the
                                                 Service the authority to issue                          non-Federal oil and gas rights on the                 surface estate. That opinion relied in
                                                 regulations to carry out the NWRSAA                     basis of statutory authority that is also             part on Caire v. Fulton, 1986 U.S. Dist.
                                                 (16 U.S.C. 668dd(b)(5)), as well as to                  very similar to that of the NWRSAA:                   LEXIS 31049 (W.D. La. 1986), an
                                                 prescribe regulations to ‘‘permit the use                  Under the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant               unpublished district court decision,
                                                 of any areas within the System for any                  Act, Congress directed the Secretary of               where the United States had explicitly
                                                 purpose. . . .’’ (16 U.S.C.                             Agriculture ‘‘to develop a program of land            agreed during eminent domain
                                                 668dd(d)(1)(A)). In this regard, the                    conservation and land utilization.’’ 7 U.S.C.         proceedings to delete from the proposed
                                                 statutory authority of the Service is                   Sec. 1010 (1988). The Act directs the                 deed a provision authorizing Service
                                                 substantially similar to that of the                    Secretary to make rules as necessary to
                                                                                                                                                               regulation of the oil and gas interests
                                                 National Park Service (NPS), which                      ‘‘regulate the use and occupancy’’ of acquired
                                                                                                         lands and ‘‘to conserve and utilize’’ such            not being acquired.
                                                 since 1979 has regulated the exercise of                lands. 7 U.S.C. Sec. 1011(f) (Supp.V.1993).             The 1986 Opinion was also premised
                                                 non-federal oil and gas rights within the               The Forest Service, acting under the                  on a provision of the Migratory Bird
                                                 Park System on the basis of its authority               Secretary’s direction, manages the surface            Conservation Act (MBCA), originally
                                                 to issue regulations ‘‘necessary or                     lands here as part of the National Grasslands,        enacted in 1929 and amended in 1935,
                                                 proper for the use and management of                    which are part of the National Forest System.         that now provides:
                                                 System units’’ (54 U.S.C. 100751).                      See 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1609(a) (1988). Congress
                                                                                                         has given the Forest Service broad power to             The Secretary of the Interior may do all
                                                    The rule ‘‘applies to all operators
                                                                                                         regulate Forest System land. See, e.g., 7             things and make all expenditures necessary
                                                 conducting non-Federal oil and gas                                                                            to secure the safe title in the United States
                                                                                                         U.S.C. Sec. 1011 (1988 & Supp.V.1993); 16
                                                 operations outside of Alaska on Service-                U.S.C. Sec. 551 (Supp.V.1993).                        to the areas which may be acquired under
                                                 administered surface estates held in fee                                                                      this subchapter, but no payment shall be
                                                 or less-than fee (excluding coordination                Id. at 589. Similarly, the U.S. Court of              made for any such areas until the title thereto
                                                 areas) or Service-administered waters                   Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has                     shall be satisfactory to the Attorney General
                                                 within the boundaries of the refuge to                  interpreted the NWRSAA to authorize                   or his designee, but the acquisition of such
                                                 the extent necessary to protect those                   the Service to regulate access and use of             areas by the United States shall in no case
                                                 property interests.’’ Thus, the regulation              refuge lands by holders of valid interests            be defeated because of rights-of-way,
                                                                                                         in land. School Board of Avoyelles                    easements, and reservations which from their
                                                 directly relates to the Service mission
                                                                                                         Parish v. United States Department of                 nature will in the opinion of the Secretary of
                                                 ‘‘to administer a national network of                                                                         the Interior in no manner interfere with the
                                                 lands and waters for the conservation,                  the Interior (647 F.3d 570 (5th Cir.
                                                                                                         2011)). The School Board administered                 use of the areas so encumbered for the
                                                 management, and where appropriate,                                                                            purposes of this subchapter, but such rights-
                                                 restoration of the fish, wildlife, and                  an enclosed estate within the refuge and              of-way, easements, and reservations retained
                                                 plant resources and their habitats . . .’’              under Louisiana property law was                      by the grantor or lessor from whom the
                                                 and various statutory directives,                       entitled to a right of passage over                   United States receives title under this
                                                 including the conservation of fish and                  neighboring property to the nearest                   subchapter or any other Act for the
                                                 wildlife within the NWRS and ensuring                   public road. The Service did not dispute              acquisition by the Secretary of the Interior of
                                                 their biological integrity. The rule,                   that a right to cross refuge lands existed,           areas for wildlife refuges shall be subject to
                                                                                                         but asserted it could condition such use,             rules and regulations prescribed by the
                                                 therefore, falls within the Service’s                                                                         Secretary of the Interior for the occupation,
                                                 authority to issue regulations to carry                 and imposed permit limits on the times
                                                                                                         of day and types of vehicles that could               use, operation, protection, and
                                                 out the NWRSAA (16 U.S.C.                                                                                     administration of such areas as inviolate
                                                 668dd(b)(5)). Regulating the use of                     use the right-of-way to access the
                                                                                                                                                               sanctuaries for migratory birds or as refuges
                                                 Service-administered surface estates and                enclosed estate. Reversing the district               for wildlife; and it shall be expressed in the
                                                 waters also falls within the Service’s                  court, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the                 deed or lease that the use, occupation, and
                                                 statutory authority to issue regulations                authority under the NWRSAA and                        operation of such rights-of-way, easements,
                                                 to ‘‘permit the use of any areas within                 Service regulations to require a permit               and reservations shall be subordinate to and
                                                 the System for any purpose. . . .’’                     and to impose reasonable conditions for               subject to such rules and regulations as are
                                                                                                         ‘‘any person entering a national wildlife             set out in such deed or lease or, if deemed
                                                    Several relatively recent appellate
                                                                                                         refuge’’ even where that person held                  necessary by the Secretary of the Interior, to
                                                 court decisions support our                                                                                   such rules and regulations as may be
                                                 interpretation of the NWRSAA. In                        property rights afforded under the laws
                                                                                                         of Louisiana. Citing Burlison and a                   prescribed by him from time to time. (16
                                                 Burlison v. United States (533 F.3d 419                                                                       U.S.C. 715e)
                                                 (6th Cir. 2008)), the appeals court held                series of Supreme Court and circuit
                                                 that the Service’s authority to permit the              court cases interpreting the Property                 The Service broadly construes its
                                                 use of roads on refuge lands included                   Clause, the Fifth Circuit held that                   statutory authority to issue regulations
                                                 the power to reasonably regulate a                      requiring a permit for entry and use, and             ‘‘to permit the use of any area within the
                                                                                                         imposing reasonable restrictions on the               System for any purpose’’ and that the
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 reserved easement within a refuge:
                                                                                                         exercise of the non-Federal property                  NWRSAA, not the MBCA, is therefore
                                                   We do conclude, however, that the Fish                rights, was well within Federal                       the controlling authority with respect to
                                                 and Wildlife Service may legitimately                                                                         regulating non-federal oil and gas rights.
                                                 exercise the sovereign police power of the
                                                                                                         authority under the Property Clause.
                                                 Federal Government in regulating the                       The primary arguments that the                     While the specific facts of the
                                                 easement. Section 668dd(d)(1)(B) delegates              Service lacks the necessary regulatory                unreported decision in Caire have
                                                 the power to the Secretary of the Interior (and         authority are based on the analysis                   always suggested that it was of limited
                                                 the Fish and Wildlife Service) ‘‘under such             contained in a 1986 memorandum from                   precedential value, the Fifth Circuit’s


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00004   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         79951

                                                 decision in Avoyelles Parish is the                     both refuge resources and oil and gas                 establishment of a new refuge, are
                                                 controlling juridical authority to apply                operators. The rule contains                          considered ‘‘pre-existing operators’’ and
                                                 in that circuit. Moreover, even if the                  performance-based standards that                      may continue to operate as they have
                                                 MBCA provisions were construed to                       provide flexibility to resource managers              been, but they must comply with
                                                 limit the applicability of the NWRSAA                   and operators to use evolving                         existing Federal, State, and local laws
                                                 authority, which clearly it does not,                   technologies within different                         and regulations and the applicable
                                                 those limits would apply only to lands                  environments to achieve the standards.                general terms and conditions of this rule
                                                 acquired under that Act. As of the end                  It establishes standards for surface use              (§ 29.44). Additionally, these operators
                                                 of Fiscal Year 2015, approximately 31.3                 and site management, specific resource                are required to obtain an operations
                                                 percent of the total 8,100,204.93 acres of              protections, spill prevention and                     permit for any new operations or for any
                                                 Federal lands and interests in lands in                 response, waste management, and                       modification to their existing operation.
                                                 252 of the Nation’s approximately 560                   reclamation. Additionally, the rule                   Finally, once production operations
                                                 National Wildlife Refuges have been                     contains procedures for permit                        cease, the operator must obtain an
                                                 purchased under authority of the                        applications and Service review and                   operations permit for plugging and
                                                 MBCA.                                                   approval. Finally, there are provisions               reclamation, or to maintain their well(s)
                                                    In our review of various deeds used                  for financial assurance (bonding), access             in extended shut-in status.
                                                 by the Service over the years to acquire                fees, mitigation, change of operator,                    d. All operators must have a permit
                                                 lands and interests in lands that make                  permit modification, and prohibitions                 for plugging and reclamation and
                                                 up the NWRS, we find many variations                    and penalties. We incorporated public                 comply with all Service reclamation
                                                 were used and that it is not possible to                input received during the rulemaking                  standards.
                                                 review or summarize here all such                       process to shape the rule.                               e. When pre-existing operations are
                                                 provisions, or ensure that we are                                                                             transferred, the new operator must
                                                                                                         Permitting Approach                                   obtain an operations permit.
                                                 familiar with the circumstances
                                                 surrounding each acquisition of NWRS                       The permitting process allows the                     f. Wells drilled from outside refuges or
                                                 lands that did not include oil and gas                  Service to ensure that refuge resources,              on non-Federal inholdings to access
                                                 rights. As part of the pre-application                  as well as public health and safety, are              non-Federal minerals are exempt from
                                                 meeting with the Service (see § 29.91),                 protected to the greatest extent                      these regulations.
                                                                                                         practicable. Under the rule, the Service                 g. Operations on refuges in Alaska are
                                                 and/or the submission of a permit
                                                                                                         requires the following:                               exempt from these regulations.
                                                 application (see § 29.94), we will
                                                                                                            a. New operations are by permit only.              However, the performance-based
                                                 provide the opportunity to receive
                                                                                                         Operators conducting new operations                   standards of this rule may be used, as
                                                 copies of any deeds and other relevant
                                                                                                         must obtain an operations permit before               appropriate, as guidance in determining
                                                 information that the applicant believes
                                                                                                         commencing new or modified                            how an operator would meet the various
                                                 would control or otherwise limit the
                                                                                                         operations within a refuge (§ 29.42).                 requirements of ANILCA and ANCSA to
                                                 applicability of any provision of this
                                                                                                         This requirement addresses exploration,               protect refuge resources and uses.
                                                 rule to the particular applicant’s                                                                               The Service finds that this permitting
                                                                                                         drilling, production, enhanced recovery
                                                 operations. We intend this process to                                                                         process is the best way to manage oil
                                                                                                         operations, transportation, plugging,
                                                 ensure on a case-by-case basis that the                                                                       and gas operations and protect refuge
                                                                                                         and reclamation operations. We
                                                 Service fully considers all relevant                                                                          resources on the NWRS and using time,
                                                                                                         encourage operators to contact the
                                                 information concerning the particular                   Service early in the process so that the              place, and manner stipulations are the
                                                 acquisitions before imposing specific                   Service can provide suggestions to                    most effective way for the Service to
                                                 requirements on the applicant’s                         improve the application. Additionally,                avoid or minimize impacts. The ‘‘place’’
                                                 operations. The Service will respect                    an operator will be authorized to begin               factor in the ‘‘time, place, and manner’’
                                                 applicable deed conditions; however,                    operations only after the operator has                equation is often most important in
                                                 the rule requirements will apply to the                 received all other required State and                 terms of ability to protect an
                                                 extent that they do not conflict with                   Federal permits.                                      environmental resource. The risks
                                                 such deed conditions, which we believe                     b. Operations under an existing                    created by a poorly selected location
                                                 will be the situation in most cases. The                Service permit may continue under the                 cannot easily be overcome with even the
                                                 Solicitor’s Office has withdrawn the                    terms of that permit, but must comply                 best operational methods. Conversely,
                                                 1986 Opinion on the basis that the                      with existing Federal, State, and local               proper site selection can do much to
                                                 opinion is out of date and does not                     laws and regulations and the applicable               mitigate the effects of accidents or
                                                 reflect the current state of law with                   general terms and conditions of this rule             environmentally unsound practices. The
                                                 regard to the Service’s full authorities to             (§ 29.43). Operators are required to                  ‘‘time’’ factor restricts the timing of
                                                 manage lands within units of the                        obtain a new permit or amend their                    operations to remove or minimize
                                                 NWRS. The Solicitor will be issuing a                   existing permit if they propose to                    impacts on resources that are only
                                                 new opinion in the near future that sets                conduct new operations or modify their                seasonally present. The ‘‘manner’’ factor
                                                 out the supporting legal analysis of the                existing operations (i.e., proposed                   is the method in which oil and gas
                                                 underlying authorities upon which the                   activities outside the scope of their                 activities are conducted, using best
                                                 Service is adopting this rule.                          existing approval that will have impacts              management practices. Therefore,
                                                 Final Rule                                              on refuge resources as determined by                  requiring a permit that contains such
                                                                                                         the Service). At the time of reclamation,             stipulations is the most effective way to
                                                 Summary of Final Rule                                   the Service will review existing permits              avoid or minimize impacts of new
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                   The rule generally requires that                      and modify them as necessary to ensure                operations.
                                                 operators receive permits for new non-                  compliance with all Service reclamation                  Proper site planning, timing
                                                 Federal oil and gas activities on the                   standards.                                            restrictions, and best management
                                                 NWRS; provide a regulatory framework                       c. Operators with operations not                   practices established through the permit
                                                 to achieve the necessary protections for                under a Service permit being conducted                process for new operations will
                                                 refuge resources; and improve                           prior to the effective date of this rule, or          accomplish great improvements in
                                                 regulatory consistency to the benefit of                prior to a boundary change or                         resource protection. Because existing


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00005   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79952            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 operations with a special use permit                    from the Service for such access,                     with horizontal drilling techniques to
                                                 already have stipulations in those                      including obtaining an operations                     access oil or gas in shale or other ‘‘tight’’
                                                 permits that have been implemented to                   permit covering the new access or                     formations, usually increase the scope,
                                                 protect refuge resources and uses, they                 modification to the existing access.                  intensity, and duration of activities
                                                 are allowed to continue their operations                                                                      commonly associated with oil and gas
                                                                                                         Operating Standards
                                                 under the terms of that permit.                                                                               well drilling and completion, as well as
                                                 Furthermore, the Service is not                            The Service developed this rule using              the pressures to which the well casings
                                                 requiring a permit for operators with                   a suite of performance-based standards                are subjected.
                                                 existing operations not currently under                 that establish goals and define a desired                In the context of this rule, the term
                                                 a permit (pre-existing operations)                      level of protection for refuge resources              ‘‘hydraulic fracturing’’ means those
                                                 because a majority of the impacts                       and uses. This approach provides                      operations conducted in an individual
                                                 avoided or mitigated under the permit                   flexibility to resource managers and                  wellbore designed to increase the flow
                                                 have already occurred, and the permit                   operators to best protect refuge                      of hydrocarbons from the rock formation
                                                 process can result in substantial                       resources and uses over time and across               to the wellbore through modifying the
                                                 administrative and operational costs on                 various environments by uses of varied                permeability of reservoir rock by
                                                 both the Service and the operator. These                technologies and methods. Resource                    applying fluids under pressure to
                                                 costs (similar to those of permitting new               managers and operators will identify                  fracture it. It does not include the
                                                 operations) could be disproportional to                 and develop specific actions and best                 comprehensive list of all oil and gas
                                                 the environmental benefits gained                       management practices that are then                    activities associated with development
                                                 where the operator’s well has already                   incorporated into operations permits. In              that happens to include hydraulic
                                                 been drilled and the area of operations                 contrast, prescriptive regulations define             fracturing. While the rule’s operating
                                                 (access route, well site, production                    specific requirements of time, place, and             standards are not specific to hydraulic
                                                 facilities, and routes for gathering lines)             manner and may not fully consider how                 fracturing operations, they were
                                                 has already been established.                           these measures achieve the desired level              developed with the expectation that
                                                    Our analysis found that the Service                  of resource protection or how they may                hydraulic fracturing will occur on
                                                 could eliminate many of the ongoing,                    apply in different environments. The                  refuge lands and give the Service the
                                                 unnecessary impacts to refuge resources                 Service examined other Federal and                    ability to effectively manage the
                                                 and uses resulting from the production                  State oil and gas regulations and                     additional impacts that hydraulic
                                                 phase of pre-existing operations by                     determined that the performance-based                 fracturing may have on refuge resources
                                                 enforcing State laws and regulations on                 standards approach provided the most                  and uses.
                                                 Service-administered lands and waters.                  efficient means of successfully avoiding                 The Service notes that BLM has
                                                 Making violation of applicable State                    or minimizing the effects of oil and gas              recently promulgated regulations
                                                 laws related to oil and gas a prohibited                operations on refuge resources and                    addressing hydraulic fracturing on
                                                 act under the rule allows the Service to                visitor uses. A one-size-fits-all (i.e.,              Federal and Indian lands at 43 CFR part
                                                 enforce these requirements as Federal                   prescriptive) approach does not work                  3160 (80 FR 16128, March 26, 2015). We
                                                 requirements, and so gives us greater                   due to the widely differing                           carefully considered the recently
                                                 enforcement capabilities in ensuring                    environments found at the various                     promulgated BLM oil and gas
                                                 that unnecessary impacts from these                     refuges with non-Federal oil and gas                  regulations on hydraulic fracturing.
                                                 operations, such as leaks and spills, are               rights across the country. A                          (The Service also notes that those
                                                 avoided or minimized. This approach to                  performance-based standards model has                 regulations have been set aside by the
                                                 permitting allows the Service to focus                  been successfully used by NPS for more                U.S. District Court in Wyoming, and
                                                 its limited time and resources on those                 than 35 years and applied in the context              that decision is on appeal to the United
                                                 new operations that create the highest                  of a permit that contains specific actions            States Court of Appeals for the Tenth
                                                 level of incremental impacts. Also, by                  an operator must take to meet the                     Circuit.) The Service and BLM take
                                                 requiring all operators, pre-existing,                  regulatory standards.                                 different approaches to operating
                                                 existing with a Service-issued permit,                     In developing and analyzing the rule               standards because of our differing
                                                 and new, to have a permit for plugging                  and alternatives, the Service found that              statutory bases for regulating the
                                                 and reclamation, we can ensure                          the preponderance of impacts and risks                exercise of oil and gas rights.
                                                 rehabilitation of impacted habitat.                     of impacts to refuge resources associated             Specifically, the BLM has regulatory
                                                    When a well is drilled on inholdings                 with exploration and development of oil               authority over the development of the
                                                 or non-Federal adjacent lands, impacts                  and gas emanate from surface activities.              Federal mineral estate, including
                                                 to refuge resources are avoided or                      However, mishaps below the surface                    Federal oil and gas resources under
                                                 minimized to a great extent. Therefore,                 can adversely affect the surficial                    Federal and Indian lands. Instead, these
                                                 the Service’s approach of exempting                     groundwater systems that are important                Service regulations address private
                                                 downhole aspects of these operations                    to the success of many national wildlife              property rights within refuges and are
                                                 that occur within a refuge from the                     refuges. This finding holds true for                  based on the authorities and directives
                                                 regulations is intended to provide an                   operations that include the use of                    of the NWRSAA, including ‘‘to
                                                 incentive for operators to use drilling                 hydraulic fracturing. The Service found               administer a national network of lands
                                                 from a surface location not administered                that well drilling and production                     and waters for the conservation,
                                                 by the Service in order to reach their oil              operations that include the use of                    management, and where appropriate,
                                                 and gas rights under the refuge-                        hydraulic fracturing have similar types               restoration of the fish, wildlife, and
                                                 administered surface estate. However,                   of surface activities (e.g., road and pad             plant resources and their habitats within
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 anytime an operator needs to physically                 construction, tractor-trailer truck traffic,          the United States for the benefit of
                                                 cross Service land for access, including                use of water, use of chemicals, use of                present and future generations of
                                                 access to a non-Federal surface location,               large diesel-powered engines,                         Americans.’’ Therefore, the Service’s
                                                 such as an inholding, to conduct                        generation of waste) as operations that               regulations are focused on avoiding or
                                                 operations, then the operator must                      do not include hydraulic fracturing.                  minimizing impacts to federally owned
                                                 comply with the applicable provisions                   Hydraulic fracturing operations,                      and administered lands and resources of
                                                 of this subpart for obtaining approval                  particularly those used in combination                the NWRS to the maximum extent


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00006   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79953

                                                 practicable by using the most                           States may not have enough inspectors                 581 n.4 (5th Cir. 2011); Burlison v.
                                                 technologically feasible, least damaging                to ensure companies are meeting State                 United States, 533 F.3d 419, 434–35
                                                 oil and gas development methods to                      standards. Louisiana, the State with the              (6th Cir. 2008)).
                                                 protect refuge resources and uses.                      most non-Federal oil and gas production                  Service Response: We have carefully
                                                   The rule maintains the non-                           on refuge lands, recently reported that it            considered all the comments, and the
                                                 prescriptive operating standards from                   lacks an adequate number of inspectors                Service concludes that the NWRSAA, as
                                                 the proposed rule, which are similar to                 and its inspection rate is too low. Under             amended by the NWRSIA, provides us
                                                 the existing NPS regulations in 36 CFR,                 this rule, Refuge Law Enforcement will                the statutory authority pursuant to
                                                 subpart B (the ‘‘9B’’ regulations), and                 work cooperatively with States to                     Congress’ Property Clause powers to
                                                 provide operators flexibility to design                 ensure that operators on refuges are                  promulgate and implement these
                                                 operations while protecting refuge                      meeting Service and State regulatory                  regulations as further explained in the
                                                 resources, uses, and visitor health and                 requirements with a minimum of                        preamble to the proposed rule.
                                                 safety. The Service’s approach is to                    duplication.                                          Furthermore, we conclude these
                                                 review an operator’s submissions to                                                                           regulations are also consistent with
                                                 determine if they are avoiding or                       Summary of and Response to Public                     common law principles that a mineral
                                                 minimizing impacts to the maximum                       Comments                                              rights holder’s access to their minerals
                                                 extent practicable, and if not, to include                A summary of substantive comments                   cannot unreasonably impact the surface
                                                 in the operating permits the terms and                  and Service responses is provided                     estate. These regulations respect an
                                                 conditions that will ensure that they do                below followed by a table that sets out               operator’s right to use the surface estate
                                                 so.                                                     changes we have made to the proposed                  on refuges while protecting and
                                                                                                         rule based on the analysis of the                     minimizing impacts to refuge resources
                                                 State Regulations                                       comments and other considerations.                    and uses to comply with the unique
                                                    The Service’s goal in this rule is to                                                                      mission of these public lands ‘‘for the
                                                 provide a regulatory regime that                        Authority
                                                                                                                                                               conservation, management, and where
                                                 complements State regulatory programs                     1. Comment: We received comments                    appropriate, restoration of the fish,
                                                 to the benefit of the surface estate and                both in opposition to and in support of               wildlife, and plant resources and their
                                                 the resources for which we are                          our general authority to manage oil and               habitats within the United States for the
                                                 entrusted, while not compromising the                   gas operations on Refuge lands.                       benefit of present and future generations
                                                 ability of operators to develop their                   Commenters opposing our authority                     of Americans.’’ (16 U.S.C. 668dd(a)(2)).
                                                 resource. The Service and State oil and                 generally noted that they believe the                 For additional information on our
                                                 gas agencies have fundamentally                         Service has limited authority to regulate             authorities, see the section on Service
                                                 different missions. The Service’s legal                 oil and gas operations based on the                   Authority to Regulate Non-Federal Oil
                                                 mandate is to conserve fish, wildlife,                  authority by which the Service acquired               and Gas Activities. With regard to the
                                                 and plant resources and their habitats                  the land and specific deed language in                comment citing the Supreme Court Case
                                                 for the benefit of present and future                   the Migratory Bird Conservation Act                   U.S. v. Little Lake Misere Land Co., as
                                                 generations. In contrast, State oil and                 (MBCA; 16 U.S.C. 715e) and the                        we state in the Service Authority to
                                                 gas regulations typically focus on the                  Supreme Court decision in United                      Regulate Non-Federal Oil and Gas
                                                 protection of mineral rights and                        States v. Little Lake Misere Land Co.                 Activities section, the Service will
                                                 ‘‘conservation’’ of the oil and gas                     (412 U.S. 580,597–98 (1973)), which                   respect applicable deed conditions,
                                                 resources (i.e., minimizing waste of oil                interpreted the MBCA to require the                   however, the rule requirements will
                                                 and gas resources). From a regulatory                   Service to express in the deed language               apply to the extent that they do not
                                                 perspective, management of oil and gas                  that non-Federal mineral rights will be               conflict with such deed conditions.
                                                 operations is necessary in order for the                subject to regulation. Commenters also
                                                 Service to protect its surface resources                cited subsequent case law and the                     Acquisition of Minerals Under the
                                                 and meet its congressionally mandated                   legislative history of both the National              NWRS
                                                 mission.                                                Wildlife Refuge System Administration                    2. Comment: The Service received
                                                    The Service’s intention is to avoid or               Act, as amended by the National                       several comments suggesting that the
                                                 minimize potential procedural and                       Wildlife Refuge System Improvement                    Service consider buying all non-Federal
                                                 operational duplication of State                        Act (16 U.S.C. 668dd) (NWRSAA and                     mineral rights to ensure complete
                                                 programs, while working cooperatively                   NWRSIA), to contend that the Service                  protection of refuge resources and uses
                                                 to achieve common objectives between                    has not since been granted specific                   from these activities.
                                                 the Service, States, and operators. The                 authority to regulate non-Federal                        Service Response: The Service has
                                                 Service received several comments from                  mineral rights and so, absent specific                determined that acquisition of all
                                                 the public on the effectiveness of State                deed language, the Service is limited to              mineral rights in refuges is financially
                                                 regulations in protecting refuge                        common law in protecting refuge                       infeasible and unnecessary to protect
                                                 resources and uses, and that issue is                   resources and uses from impacts                       refuge resources and uses. While the
                                                 discussed further below in our response                 associated with oil and gas operations.               Service did not undertake a costly and
                                                 to comments.                                               Other commenters expressed support                 time-intensive evaluation of the fair
                                                    In the context of enforcing State oil                for our general authority and                         market value of the non-Federal oil and
                                                 and gas regulations, the Service focus is               responsibility to promulgate regulations              gas rights within the NWRS, in the EIS
                                                 on noncompliance issues that have the                   to manage non-Federal oil and gas based               associated with this rulemaking we did
                                                 potential to adversely affect refuge                    on the Property Clause of the                         consider full acquisition of such oil and
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 resources and visitor uses. Making                      Constitution (U.S. Const.) and the                    gas rights, but this alternative was
                                                 violation of non-conflicting provisions                 NWRSIA, as well as subsequent case                    dismissed from further consideration
                                                 of State oil and gas law and regulations                law that has held that the Service does               because it was financially infeasible and
                                                 a prohibited act under the rule allows us               have the authority to reasonably                      unnecessary. Relying on our general
                                                 to enforce on refuges as a matter of                    regulate access to private rights on the              knowledge of what acquiring a mineral
                                                 Federal law, the same requirements                      NWRS (see Sch. Bd. of Avoyelles Par. v.               right can cost in areas where there is
                                                 already imposed on operators by a State.                U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 647 F.3d 570, 581,            potential for oil and gas development,


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00007   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79954            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 we conclude that it would be too costly                   Most States are consistent in deferring             existing operations, believing that the
                                                 for the Service to acquire all mineral                  to landowners and operators to work out               Service has been somewhat
                                                 rights that exist within the NWRS.                      many of the details of surface uses, and              contradictory in its analysis that State
                                                    Additionally, the Service concludes                  formal surface use agreements between                 regulations are not sufficient, but then
                                                 that it can sufficiently protect refuge                 landowner and operator are common. In                 relying on State regulations to protect
                                                 resources and uses as required by the                   some States, like Oklahoma and New                    refuge resources and uses from pre-
                                                 NWRSAA and provide access to                            Mexico, oil and gas companies are                     existing operations in the proposed rule.
                                                 operators for developing their non-                     required by statute to enter into these                  Service Response: The Service has
                                                 Federal oil and gas rights under this                   agreements before production begins. A                considered these comments and would
                                                 rule, and so acquisition of all mineral                 surface use agreement may direct the                  like to clarify its prior explanation why
                                                 rights is unnecessary. Under the rule,                  specific locations of access routes,                  relying on existing Federal and State
                                                 the Service will determine on a case-by-                drilling sites, and flowlines that are                regulatory regimes is sufficiently
                                                 case basis, and in collaboration with                   placed on the property. Timing                        protective. As required by Executive
                                                 prospective operators, whether a                        considerations may be critical for                    Order (E.O.) 12866, the Service analyzed
                                                 proposed operation meets the operating                  protections of wildlife that may be                   the costs and benefits of each regulatory
                                                 standards and approval standards                        present only seasonally. The final                    requirement being considered. This
                                                 contained in this rule. If the proposed                 regulations provide a consistent set of               analysis found that new operations
                                                 operation cannot meet Service standards                 procedures and operational standards                  create the greatest additional impacts on
                                                 for protecting refuge resources and uses,               which when incorporated into an                       refuges and that proper site planning,
                                                 the Service has general statutory                       operations permit are the functional                  timing restrictions, and best
                                                 authority to acquire the mineral right                  equivalent of a ‘‘surface use agreement’’             management practices (BMPs) through a
                                                 from a willing seller in those instances.               between the Service and operator.                     permit system accomplish the greatest
                                                                                                           Furthermore, the Service has carefully              improvement in resource protection.
                                                 Rule’s Function With State and Federal                  designed this rule to work in concert                 The permit process focuses on the full
                                                 Regulations                                             with the State oil and gas regulatory                 suite of time, place, and manner
                                                    3. Comment: Several comments stated                  processes. The Service has analyzed                   considerations on those new operations
                                                 that State regulations fully accomplish                 which aspects of State oil and gas                    that create the highest level of
                                                 all the necessary protections of NWRS                   regulatory regimes are generally                      incremental impacts. By applying a
                                                                                                         sufficient for protecting refuge resources            reclamation standard for all operations
                                                 resources and uses, and, therefore, the
                                                                                                         and uses and which are not, and have                  on refuges, including pre-existing
                                                 proposed rule is duplicative and
                                                                                                         sought to regulate in this rule only those            operations, the rule also ensures long-
                                                 unnecessary. Commenters contended
                                                                                                         activities where State regulatory regimes             term rehabilitation of habitat damaged
                                                 that many of the operational restrictions
                                                                                                         are not generally sufficient. Our analysis            by all operations.
                                                 of the proposed rule were duplicative or                                                                         While applying the full regulatory
                                                                                                         found the preponderance of impacts to
                                                 in conflict with State regulations,                                                                           requirements to pre-existing operations
                                                                                                         refuge resources and uses associated
                                                 although no specific examples were                                                                            may provide some incremental
                                                                                                         with oil and gas activities emanate from
                                                 provided. The Service also received                                                                           protection for refuge resources and uses,
                                                                                                         surface uses, not the downhole aspects
                                                 comments that supported the Service’s                                                                         it would not retroactively eliminate a
                                                                                                         of an operation. Our analysis also found
                                                 analysis that State regulations are not                 that there is a possibility of impacts to             majority of the impacts to refuge
                                                 uniformly designed or intended to fully                 groundwater from downhole operations,                 resources and uses that have already
                                                 protect the surface owner’s interests or,               so the rule provides the Service with the             taken place as a result of pre-existing
                                                 as in this case, mandates of the Service                ability to go further than State                      operations. For example, pre-existing
                                                 to protect NWRS resources and uses.                     regulations when necessary to protect                 wells have already been drilled, the area
                                                    Service Response: While developing                   groundwater.                                          of operations (access route, well site,
                                                 the proposed rule, the Service reviewed                   Accordingly, the rule does not                      production facilities, and routes for
                                                 the oil and gas regulations of 43 States.               regulate most downhole activities                     gathering lines) established, and
                                                 Because of the differences between the                  related to an operation, including well               impacts to refuge resources, such as to
                                                 objectives of State regulation and the                  construction and blowout prevention.                  geology and soils, wetlands, and
                                                 rule, we found that State regulations do                The regulation does include a downhole                wildlife-dependent recreation, have all
                                                 not fully address necessary protections                 operating standard to prevent the escape              occurred prior to this rule being
                                                 for the conservation of fish and wildlife               of fluids to the surface and for isolation            effective.
                                                 resources and public use on refuges.                    and protection of usable water zones                     In terms of ongoing impacts from
                                                 The Service’s legal mandate is to                       throughout the life of a well. Otherwise,             production, our analysis indicates that
                                                 conserve fish, wildlife, and plant                      the Service finds that State regulations              an operator’s compliance with State
                                                 resources and their habitats for the                    are sufficient to ensuring that downhole              laws will serve to improve protection of
                                                 benefit of present and future                           operations are protective of refuge                   refuge resources and uses from ongoing
                                                 generations. In contrast, State oil and                 resources and uses, as well as public                 impacts from these operations, in areas
                                                 gas regulations typically focus on the                  safety. As this example shows, the                    such as removal of waste, storage of
                                                 protection of mineral rights and                        Service regulations avoid unnecessary                 chemicals, and leak and spill
                                                 conservation of oil and gas resources                   procedural and operational duplication                prevention. Where individual States’
                                                 (i.e., minimizing waste). States do                     with State programs, and reflect the                  regulations do not specifically address
                                                 provide for protection of surface and                   Service’s intention to work                           an issue, the Service will continue to
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 groundwater via well design                             cooperatively with States and operators               work cooperatively with operators to
                                                 requirements, setbacks, and oil                         to achieve common objectives.                         reduce impacts, or risks of impacts, to
                                                 pollution control measures. However,                      4. Comment: Additionally, the Service               refuge resources and uses. This
                                                 State programs vary in these areas, and                 received comments that recommended                    approach enables managers to focus
                                                 also in regard to protection of many                    the Service not rely on State regulations             limited resources on those operations
                                                 other surface resources and surface use                 to protect refuge resources and uses                  with the greatest possible impacts to
                                                 conflicts.                                              from the impacts associated with pre-                 refuge resources and uses rather than an


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00008   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79955

                                                 indiscriminate administration of                        for any damage done from their                        authority to do so. Some commenters
                                                 permits for the approximately 4,000 pre-                operations (e.g., leaks or spills). Existing          also noted that the Service has taken a
                                                 existing operations. A general permit                   Federal and/or State laws provide                     different approach from the NPS and
                                                 requirement would necessitate the                       enforcement remedies for activities on                suggested the Service adopt the NPS
                                                 Service to roughly double its oil and gas               non-Federal lands that damage Refuge                  approach to directional drilling
                                                 management resources from current                       resources and uses. Additionally, by not              operations.
                                                 levels, while the administrative costs to               imposing regulations on inholdings or                    Service Response: The Service has
                                                 operators of pre-existing wells would be                non-Federal adjacent lands, the Service               considered these comments; however,
                                                 approximated to be initially $1,800 per                 is incentivizing operators to locate such             we have not extended the rule to
                                                 well annually. Our analysis indicates                   operations off refuges.                               operations on inholdings and non-
                                                 these costs, in general, would be                          As to the differences between the                  Federal adjacent lands from which there
                                                 inefficiently applied and                               proposed revisions to the NPS 9B                      is directional drilling under Service-
                                                 disproportionately high in general                      regulations (80 FR 65572; October 26,                 administered surface estate. The Service
                                                 relative to the benefits to refuge                      2015) and this rule, an operator working              has a clear legal and policy directive to
                                                 resources and uses.                                     on both NWRS and NPS lands will                       protect refuge lands and resources, and
                                                                                                         experience little difference in regulatory            having oil and gas operations sited off
                                                 Scope: Inholdings                                       resource and use protections, regulatory              refuge property is preferable to having
                                                   5. Comment: The Service received                      structure based on performance                        impacts occur on refuge lands. Our
                                                 comments both expressing a lack of                      standards, operations permit processes                analysis shows avoiding the cost and
                                                 authority for the Service in regulating                 and requirements, monitoring and                      time delay of Service regulation
                                                 inholdings as well as comments                          compliance, and other terms and                       provides an incentive for operators to
                                                 asserting that the Service has both the                 conditions. However, there are some                   drill from a non-Federal surface location
                                                 authority and the responsibility to                     variations between the two proposed                   to reach their oil and gas rights within
                                                 regulate operations on private lands,                   rules necessitated by differing                       a refuge. Exempting downhole
                                                 including inholdings, under the                         authorities and missions and the scope                operations that occur inside a refuge
                                                 Property Clause and the NWRSIA,                         and resources of the two agencies’ non-               from these regulations will result in
                                                 which commenters contend granted the                    Federal oil and gas programs. The                     fewer wells drilled on refuge-
                                                 Service the authority to regulate outside               existing and future potential for                     administered lands and waters resulting
                                                 the boundaries of the Refuge to the                     operations on inholdings within the                   in an overall benefit to refuge resources
                                                 extent that such activities interfere with              NPS is much smaller than that of the                  and uses (avoidance or minimization of
                                                 the designated purpose of Federal lands                 NWRS, and, therefore, the                             direct impacts).
                                                 (citing Minnesota v. Block, 660 F.2d                    administrative burden is more                            If the Service extended its regulation
                                                 1240, 1249 (8th Cir.1981)). Some                        manageable for NPS’s oil and gas                      beyond the NWRS as evaluated in
                                                 commenters also noted that the Service                  program to regulate activities on                     Alternative C of the EIS, the Service
                                                 has taken a different approach from the                 inholdings to the extent necessary to                 could require actions, such as noise
                                                 NPS and suggested the Service adopt                     protect park resources and uses.                      abatement or visual screening, which
                                                 the NPS approach to inholdings.                            In designing this rule, the Service has            serve to reduce cross-boundary effects
                                                    Service Response: The Service has                    carefully considered the environmental                on Service resources and uses. However,
                                                 carefully considered these comments;                    benefits of these regulations in light of             these benefits to resources and uses
                                                 however, the Service has concluded that                 the Service’s mission and limited                     could evaporate, and many adverse
                                                 no change should be made in the rule,                   resources and has chosen to prioritize                consequences could occur, if just a
                                                 which appropriately balances refuge                     regulation of activities on Service lands.            small percentage of wells that otherwise
                                                 protection, private property rights, and                As noted above, the Service defines the               would have been located outside a
                                                 feasibility of administration. As                       National Wildlife Refuge System to                    refuge are drilled in a refuge. Gains in
                                                 discussed in the Final EIS, there are                   consist of all lands, waters, and interests           resource protection under Alternative C
                                                 some potential cross-boundary impacts                   therein that it administers (25 CFR                   would likely be lost due to loss of the
                                                 from oil and gas development on refuge                  25.12) and does not apply its regulations             incentive to locate operations outside
                                                 resources and uses, such as spills or                   to the non-Federal lands found within                 the refuge. Locating all operations
                                                 leaks migrating into refuge lands or                    refuge boundaries (i.e., inholdings).                 (surface and downhole) inside the
                                                 waters or noise disturbance on wildlife                 Furthermore, the Service has concluded                boundary of a refuge would subject
                                                 and visitor experience. The Service has                 that it can manage the cross-boundary                 refuge resources and values to the long-
                                                 always worked, and will continue to                     impacts from inholdings and non-                      term impacts of surface occupancy
                                                 work, with operators on inholdings and                  Federal adjacent lands through                        within the park—impacts that would
                                                 adjacent lands to mitigate or avoid any                 cooperation with operators instead of                 last years, if not decades. Therefore, the
                                                 potential cross-boundary impacts,                       through direct regulation, which places               Service concludes the best course of
                                                 particularly those that may impact                      a heavy administrative burden on the                  action is to maintain the incentive in the
                                                 species protected under the Endangered                  Service and operators.                                proposed rule to encourage operators to
                                                 Species Act. For instance if an operator                                                                      locate operations outside a refuge.
                                                 were proposing to site an operation                     Scope: Operations on Non-Federal Land                    The Service will continue to work
                                                 close to a refuge boundary, we might ask                  6. Comment: The Service received                    with operators, landowners, and other
                                                 them to set the operation back, ensure                  similar comments regarding directional                permitting agencies to address issues
                                                 they have proper spill or leak protection               drilling operations on non-Federal land               that may arise from operations on non-
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 methods, and site the operation away                    as it did for inholdings, recommending                Federal adjacent lands. For example, the
                                                 from any waterways that flow into a                     that the Service extend regulations                   Service could advocate for setbacks
                                                 refuge. Furthermore, even when                          beyond the NWRS to operations on                      from the refuge boundary or waterways
                                                 exempted from these regulations,                        private lands as described in the                     and strong spill control and response
                                                 operators do not have a right to cause                  Modified Proposed Rule alternative of                 measures to reduce the risk of damage
                                                 unreasonable damage to refuge                           the DEIS. We also received comments                   to refuge resources from accidents. As
                                                 resources and uses and are responsible                  from others that the Service has no                   mentioned above, even where exempt


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00009   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79956            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 from these regulations, operators do not                   Service Response: The Service                      knowledge that hydraulic fracturing
                                                 have a right to cause unreasonable                      considered these comments, as well as                 operations will likely be proposed by
                                                 damage to refuge resources and uses and                 other information and studies provided                operators and were designed to ensure
                                                 are responsible for any damage done                     by commenters regarding hydraulic                     that operators employ technologically
                                                 from these operations (e.g., leaks or                   fracturing, and we have concluded that                feasible least-damaging methods that
                                                 spills).                                                the additional information provided did               will not impact refuge resources and
                                                    Additionally, based on the comments                  not justify a change from the proposed                uses. The Service will consider
                                                 the Service received, it appears that                   rule’s approach to hydraulic fracturing.              hydraulic fracturing operations on a
                                                 some commenters misunderstood the                       Comments requesting the ban on                        case-by-case basis and analyze potential
                                                 NPS rule as related to operations on                    hydraulic fracturing used the term to                 impacts on refuge resources and uses
                                                 non-Federal lands outside the park                      encompass all the activities and impacts              under the regulations’ approval
                                                 boundary from which there is                            that are associated with oil and gas                  standards.
                                                 directional drilling underneath a park                  development that happens to use                          8. Comment: The Service was asked to
                                                 unit. NPS’s regulatory authority over                   hydraulic fracturing. These comments                  clarify how the rule would, or would
                                                 directional drilling operations begins at               did not provide new information to the                not, be impacted by BLM’s impending
                                                 the subsurface point where the                          Service.                                              fracking rule and associated litigation.
                                                 proposed operations (borehole) cross the                   The information provided by                           Service Response: As explained in the
                                                 park boundary and enter federally                       commenters was available and                          proposed rule, we have taken different
                                                 owned or administered lands or water,                   considered by the Service in developing               approaches to regulating hydraulic
                                                 and applies to all infrastructure and                   the proposed rule. The Service has                    fracturing activities based on our
                                                 activities within a park unit.                          determined that the actual process of                 different statutory authorities and the
                                                 Additionally the NPS provides an                        hydraulic fracturing does not create                  specific needs of the NWRS. The
                                                 exemption to the operations permit                      impacts or risks of impacts that are so               Service has concluded that our rule is
                                                 requirement for these in-park operations                elevated above those of conventional oil              consistent with our statutory authorities
                                                 if it determines they ‘‘pose no                         and gas operations in general that a                  and, therefore, should not be affected by
                                                 significant threat of damage to park                    hydraulic fracturing ban is justified. It is          the pending litigation.
                                                 resources.’’ In the many decades that the               the Service’s policy that ‘‘scientific and               9. Comment: The Service received
                                                 NPS has had this exemption in place, it                 scholarly information that we consider                several comments recommending that
                                                 has not made a single finding that such                 in our decision-making must be robust,                the Service extend its regulations to
                                                 operations pose a significant threat. In                of the highest quality, and the result of             more comprehensively cover all aspects
                                                 only a few instances has NPS included                   the most rigorous scientific and                      of downhole operations, particularly
                                                 in its determination suggestions to the                 scholarly processes as can be achieved’’              with regard to wellbore construction
                                                 operator to modify its planned                          (212 FW 7).                                           standards for operations that include
                                                 operations in any way.                                     As the Service has noted in the EIS                use of hydraulic fracturing. Commenters
                                                    The Service has concluded that the                   accompanying the rule, studies show                   also requested that the Service require
                                                 risk of any impacts to refuge resources                 that oil and gas operations that include              baseline flowback requirements. On the
                                                 by the Service not regulating the portion               hydraulic fracturing stimulation                      other hand, the Service received
                                                 of a wellbore beneath a refuge is                       methods can negatively affect                         comments that that Service regulation
                                                 exceedingly low. The Service has                        surrounding resources and the                         will only duplicate existing State and
                                                 carefully designed this rule to ensure                  environment and can increase the risks                Federal requirements that fully address
                                                 that it is prioritizing its limited                     of such impacts where appropriate                     these downhole issues.
                                                 resources on those oil and gas activities               measures are not taken before, during,                   Service Response: The Service
                                                 that have the greatest impact to refuge                 and after hydraulic fracturing operations             analyzed both the costs and benefits of
                                                 resources and uses. Commenters from                     (e.g., improper cementing of casing and               further regulating downhole operations
                                                 both industry and non-governmental                      well integrity issues or surface                      on the NWRS through this rulemaking
                                                 organizations have asked the Service to                 mismanagement of fracking and                         and found the increased costs necessary
                                                 ensure it has the resources to effectively              flowback fluids). However, studies also               to hire and maintain engineering staff to
                                                 implement this rule. The Service has                    show that proper implementation of                    oversee our own separate downhole
                                                 carefully analyzed its resources and                    such measures can substantially                       requirements and standards would not
                                                 capabilities and has specifically tailored              reduce—to a level close to that of                    likely provide a comparable benefit in
                                                 this rule to ensure maximum refuge                      conventional well operations—the risks                reduction of impacts or risks of impacts
                                                 protection within the constraints of its                to the surrounding environment from                   to surface resources. The Service
                                                 management capabilities. The Service                    hydraulic fracturing operations.                      reviewed and considered the comments
                                                 agrees with commenters that it must                        Based on the Service’s review of                   and studies provided by the public on
                                                 ensure that it has sufficient resources to              studies provided during the public                    this issue, but found they did not
                                                 implement the rule in order for it to be                comment period, we do not find that a                 change the Service’s analysis of the
                                                 successful. Balancing the low risk of                   ban on hydraulic fracturing completion                benefits. On the other hand, the Service
                                                 impacts from the downhole aspects of                    methods in refuges is necessary or                    did identify additional costs for both the
                                                 these directional-drilling operations on                appropriate at this time. The Service                 Service and industry if the Service were
                                                 refuge resources and uses with the high                 will continue to revisit and update its               to regulate downhole operations. The
                                                 administrative costs of regulating all of               policy as more information on hydraulic               Service would need additional
                                                 these operations, the Service has                       fracturing completion methods becomes                 specialized technical staff to evaluate
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 exempted these operations in the rule.                  available. Further, the Service notes that            proposals and subsequently monitor
                                                                                                         well completion programs using                        and inspect downhole operations for
                                                 Hydraulic Fracturing and Regulation of                  hydraulic fracturing were not given                   compliance. Industry costs would
                                                 Downhole Activities                                     approval under the proposed rule. The                 involve providing downhole well
                                                    7. Comment: Several commenters                       rule also does not give such approval,                construction information such as
                                                 requested that the Service ban hydraulic                and includes operating and approval                   drilling, mud, casing, cementing, and
                                                 fracturing completely from the NWRS.                    standards developed with the                          stimulation programs. This information


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00010   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79957

                                                 is developed as a matter of course by                   interest to determine what regulation is              applicable provisions in 43 CFR part
                                                 industry, so there would be some                        appropriate in relation to that interest.             36.’’ Additionally, it was recommended
                                                 minimal costs to provide copies of these                Oil and gas operations will be subject to             that the final regulations should clarify
                                                 programs.                                               some and not necessarily all, of the                  that the only operations permit that
                                                    Recognizing the public concern                       requirements and standards of this                    would be required with regard to access
                                                 regarding impact to water resources                     subpart. Depending on the easement                    across the NWRS associated with oil
                                                 from these activities and the Service’s                 interest acquired, the Service may                    and gas development activities on
                                                 responsibility to ensure that it protects               require an operator to obtain a permit                private inholdings in Alaska would be
                                                 these resources, the rule does include                  from the Service to ensure that                       a right-of-way issued pursuant to title XI
                                                 standards for well control and isolation                operations minimize the destruction of                of ANILCA and the regulations at 43
                                                 and protection of usable water                          vegetative cover, control spread of                   CFR part 36.
                                                 (§ 29.119(a)(3) and (4)). The standard                  invasive species, and/or avoid                           Service Response: We agree with the
                                                 serves to inform the public and the                     ecologically sensitive habitats by using              many comments we received that our
                                                 operators that the Service retains                      technologically feasible, least-damaging              rule was unclear about how this rule
                                                 regulatory control for management and                   methods. On the other hand, if an                     applies to operations in Alaska. After
                                                 protection of all its resources including               operator avoids burning, draining,                    careful consideration of comments
                                                 groundwater. However, as discussed                      filling, or dredging wetlands on one of               received on this issue, the Service has
                                                 above, the Service would have to                        the Service’s conservation easements                  concluded that the rule does not need
                                                 substantially augment its engineering                   acquired for the purpose of protecting                to include operations in refuges in
                                                 capacity to review, approve, and                        wetlands, the operator is likely exempt               Alaska as the existing Departmental
                                                 monitor downhole well construction.                     from these regulations.                               regulations implementing section
                                                 Comprehensive Service regulation of                        Ultimately, the Service wants to                   1110(a) of ANILCA, access to
                                                 downhole wellbore construction and                      ensure it is notified of operations that              inholdings, provide sufficient protection
                                                 maintenance for the isolation and                       may affect the Service’s less-than-fee                of refuge resources and use. The Service
                                                 protection of usable water would                        interests and work cooperatively with                 has revised § 29.41 ‘‘When does this
                                                 duplicate state programs in many areas,                 the landholder and mineral rights                     subpart apply to me?’’ to clarify that the
                                                 and thus provide a diminished return in                 holder, if different, to minimize or avoid            rule does not apply to operators in
                                                 terms of reduction of risks to                          impacts to our conservation interest in               Alaska. In addition to this revision, the
                                                 groundwater. Additionally, the rule                     the land. However, the Service will                   Service has removed any reference to
                                                 includes provisions (information                        continue to provide reasonable access to              ANILCA in other provisions of this rule.
                                                 requirements, operating standards, and                  mineral rights holders for the                        The specific references in various parts
                                                 reporting requirements) that address the                development of their mineral rights, as               of the proposed rule were more
                                                 management of wastes including                          we do on fee-title lands of the NWRS.                 confusing than helpful.
                                                 flowback fluids. Under the rule, all new                The Service will work with operators                     Refuges in Alaska will continue to be
                                                 hydraulic fracturing operations will be                 and landowners in determining what is                 governed by title XI of the Alaska
                                                 conducted under new operations                          reasonable to protecting the Service’s                National Interest Lands Conservation
                                                 permits or modifications to existing                    property interests under the easement.                Act (ANILCA; 16 U.S.C. 410hh–410hh–
                                                 Service-approved permits. Thus, new                                                                           5, 16 U.S.C. 3101 et seq., 43 U.S.C. 1601
                                                                                                         Oil and Gas Operations in Alaska                      et seq.), and the Department’s
                                                 operations under the rule are required to
                                                 provide for management of flowback                        11. Comment: The Service received                   implementing regulations and standards
                                                 fluids, including tanks to capture and                  several comments on how the proposed                  found at 43 CFR part 36. Additionally,
                                                 temporarily store flowback fluids, no                   rule would affect oil and gas operations              section 22(g) of the Alaska Native
                                                 use of earthen pits, and prompt removal                 on refuges in Alaska and asking for                   Claims Settlement Act of 1971 (ANCSA)
                                                 of wastes from the refuge.                              clarification from the Service on how                 (43 U.S.C. 1601–1624) and its
                                                                                                         the rule would work in conjunction                    implementing regulations found at 50
                                                 Easements                                               with the Alaska National Interest Lands               CFR 25.21 will continue to apply to
                                                   10. Comment: Some commenters                          Conservation Act (94 Stat. 2371; Pub. L.              lands conveyed to Alaska Native
                                                 requested clarity on the applicability of               96–487) and implementing regulations                  Corporations that are within the
                                                 these regulations to easements.                         (43 CFR part 36). The Service got several             boundaries of a National Wildlife
                                                   Service Response: The definition of                   comments recommending that the                        Refuge in existence on the date of
                                                 the National Wildlife Refuge System                     Service should clarify and revise the                 enactment of ANCSA. However, the
                                                 includes less than fee interests in land                rule to fully recognize the controlling               performance-based standards outlined
                                                 such as easements (50 CFR 25.12).                       role of ANILCA and its implementing                   in this rule may be used, as appropriate,
                                                 Therefore, the exercise of non-federally                regulations in Alaska, and to address                 as guidance in determining how an
                                                 owned oil and gas rights underneath the                 other issues. For instance, the Service               operator would meet the various
                                                 Service’s easement estate are subject to                received a comment to specifically                    requirements of ANILCA and ANCSA to
                                                 these regulations to the extent necessary               replace the multiple references to                    protect refuge resources and uses.
                                                 to protect the interests held by the                    ANILCA with the following blanket                     ANILCA provides the Service with the
                                                 United States under the easement (see                   provision stating that ANILCA and                     authority to ensure that operators
                                                 § 29.40(b)). The Service holds many                     implementing regulations at 43 CFR part               accessing non-Federal mineral rights
                                                 unique and varied easement interests                    36 govern access, including but not                   underneath refuges in Alaska must work
                                                 throughout the United States. For this                  limited to access to inholdings in                    cooperatively with the Service through
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 reason, it is difficult to generalize how               Alaska, in lieu of the provisions of the              a permitting process outlined in section
                                                 the rule applies to any particular                      non-Federal oil and gas regulations in                1110 and 43 CFR part 36 to avoid or
                                                 easement. To determine the                              subpart D: ‘‘In lieu of the provisions of             minimize impacts from these operations
                                                 applicability of these regulations, the                 this subpart, authorization and                       to refuge resources and uses. For
                                                 Service will review the terms of the                    management of access in Alaska,                       example, under the ANILCA
                                                 legal instrument by which the United                    including but not limited to access to                regulations, the Service may require an
                                                 States acquired or reserved its easement                inholdings, shall be governed by the                  operator to: Obtain a permit for


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00011   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79958            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 operations on federally owned surface                   Alaska. The standards that will be                    Existing Production Operations Under a
                                                 estate; provide the Service with                        applicable will be determined on a case-              Service Permit
                                                 financial assurance; restrict the time,                 by-case basis and will only be used if                   16. Comment: The Service received
                                                 place, and manner of activities as                      consistent with the standards outlined                comments that the proposed rule was
                                                 necessary to protect refuge resources                   in ANILCA and its implementing                        unclear as to which provisions of this
                                                 and uses; and ensure the operation is                   regulations.                                          subpart applied to existing operators
                                                 properly plugged and reclaimed after                      14. Comment: Other commenters
                                                                                                                                                               under a Service-issued permit.
                                                 production operations are complete.                     recommended that the Service apply the                   Service Response: The Service agrees
                                                    12. Comment: The Service also                        rule more comprehensively to                          with the commenter that the proposed
                                                 received comments asking to further                     operations in Alaska, believing that
                                                                                                                                                               rule was not clear as to which
                                                 clarify that this rule would not be used                ANILCA is not sufficient at protecting
                                                                                                                                                               provisions of the rule applied to existing
                                                 to regulate activities conducted on                     NWRS resources and uses from impacts
                                                                                                                                                               operators with a Service-issued permit.
                                                 Alaska Native Corporation (ANC)-                        of oil and gas operations.
                                                                                                            Service Response: The Service has                  For operations being conducted under
                                                 owned or other non-Federal lands in
                                                                                                         concluded that ANILCA provides                        § 29.43, all administrative or operational
                                                 Alaska.
                                                    Service Response: The scope of this                  sufficient regulation of oil and gas                  requirements that are specific to
                                                 rule is limited to activities on Federal                operations in Alaska where the Service                obtaining or operating under an
                                                 lands within the National Wildlife                      has been able to effectively work with                operations permit issued under this
                                                 Refuge System. In the case of refuges in                operators to minimize or avoid impacts                subpart do not apply. The operator with
                                                 Alaska, it does not apply to inholdings                 to refuge resources and uses while                    an existing permit may continue to
                                                 or non-Federal adjacent lands.                          providing operators access to their                   operate under the terms and conditions
                                                 Commenters generally seemed to be                       minerals under the existing regulations.              of that Service-issued permit, unless the
                                                 clear about the scope of this rule on this              As discussed above, implementation of                 operator proposes to modify its
                                                 point, and, therefore, the Service                      the existing ANILCA regulations                       operations or propose new operations
                                                 concludes it does not need to clarify this              provides stringent protection of refuge               not covered by the existing Service-
                                                 further in the final rule. As discussed                 resources and uses and provides the                   issued permit, such as plugging and
                                                 above, access through refuges to ANC-                   Service the appropriate tools for                     reclamation. If an operator wishes to
                                                 owned or other non-Federal lands in                     regulating non-Federal oil and gas                    modify their operations or proposes new
                                                 Alaska will continue to be governed by                  operations on refuge-administered                     operations outside the scope of their
                                                 ANILCA, ANCSA, and their                                surface estate. As one commenter                      existing Service-issued permit, the
                                                 implementing regulations.                               suggested, if the Service does, in the                permit will need to be amended such
                                                    13. Comment: The Service also                        future, decide we need different tools to             that any modification or new operation
                                                 received comments recommending that                     effectively manage oil and gas resources              meets applicable operating standards of
                                                 the Service clarify further how the                     in Alaska, we can propose revisions to                the rule. We have revised § 29.43
                                                 operations standards outlined in the                    the ANILCA implementing regulations.                  accordingly.
                                                 proposed rule would apply to                               15. Comment: The Service received a                   17. Comment: Several commenters
                                                 operations under an ANILCA permit.                      comment highlighting the fact that the                recommended that operators conducting
                                                 Based on concern about how some of                      statutory authority and obligation to                 production operations under a currently
                                                 the standards would further limit                       review and approve geological and                     approved special use permit should be
                                                 landowners’ ability to specify route or                 geophysical exploration plans per                     required to obtain a new permit under
                                                 method of access and, therefore,                        section 1002 of ANILCA (16 U.S.C.                     the proposed rule, as the Service
                                                 diminish their rights to adequate and                   3142) (and associated regulations at 50               considered in Alternative C of the DEIS,
                                                 feasible access to inholdings as                        CFR part 37) has expired (see                         to ensure that they are following certain
                                                 authorized under ANILCA, these                          Memorandum Decision and Order, U.S.                   performance-based standards regarding
                                                 commenters asked that the Service not                   District Court for the District of Alaska             waste management and disposal, leaks,
                                                 apply these operation standards to                      (State of Alaska v. Jewell, et al. Case No.           spills, and pits.
                                                 operations in Alaska. On the other hand,                3:14-cv–00048–SLG)), and                                 Service Response: The Service has
                                                 the Service also received comments                      recommending that the final rule should               been very successful at working with
                                                 asking that the final rule avoid citing                 clarify that the Service cannot accept                operators through these Special Use
                                                 specific sections of the operating                      further applications for geological or                Permits (SUP) to ensure that impacts to
                                                 standards that may apply to operations                  geophysical exploration for oil and gas               refuge resources and uses are avoided
                                                 under an ANILCA permit, because                         in the coastal plain of the Arctic Refuge.            and minimized. As explained above, the
                                                 doing so would raise doubts about the                   The comment also recommended that                     Service has concluded that a new
                                                 application of the rest of the rule to                  the final rule should also explicitly                 permit requirement for these existing
                                                 these operations (see 80 FR 77206;                      mention prohibitions on oil and gas                   operations would bring little to no
                                                 December 11, 2015).                                     leasing, development, and production in               beneficial impacts to refuge resources
                                                    Service Response: As discussed                       the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (16               and uses, and would impose an
                                                 above, this rule does not apply to oil                  U.S.C. 3143).                                         unnecessary administrative burden on
                                                 and gas operations in Alaska. However,                     Service Response: The Service agrees               the Service and operators by requiring a
                                                 the Service has developed these                         that we cannot accept any further                     new permit to replace the existing
                                                 operating standards through a thorough                  application for geological or geophysical             permit. In issuing permits to existing
                                                 analysis of what is needed to properly                  exploration in the coastal plain of the               operators, the Service considered and
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 protect refuge resources and uses.                      Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and that              included many provisions to protect
                                                 Therefore, to the extent consistent with                oil and gas leasing is prohibited in the              refuge resources and uses, such as waste
                                                 these existing ANCSA and ANILCA                         refuge for the reasons stated in the                  management and disposal, spill
                                                 regulations, the Service may use these                  comment; however, the recommended                     prevention, and spill response. Some
                                                 standards as guidance in approving                      revisions are not necessary in the final              SUPs have authorized the creation of
                                                 operations and issuing permits under                    rule because they are outside the scope               reserve pits, while others have
                                                 existing regulations applicable to                      of this rulemaking.                                   prohibited them. Such inconsistency in


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00012   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79959

                                                 the future has been addressed and                       what general terms and conditions                     general prohibition on the use of pits,
                                                 eliminated by this rule. The Service has                apply to pre-existing operations.                     for example; and/or obtaining financial
                                                 decided that requiring these operators to                 Service Response: The Service agrees                assurance for the full cost of plugging
                                                 get a new permit is not reasonable or                   that the rule should further clarify                  and reclamation during the production
                                                 appropriate, considering that these                     which provisions of the subpart would                 phase.
                                                 operators have been cooperative in                      apply to these classes of operations. For                Service Response: After weighing the
                                                 working with the Service to protect                     operations being conducted under                      comments on both sides of the issue, the
                                                 refuge resources and uses and have                      § 29.44, all administrative or operational            Service has decided to continue the
                                                 reasonable expectations from their work                 requirements that are specific to                     approach outlined in the proposed rule
                                                 with us that the operations permitted by                obtaining or operating under an                       that a pre-existing operator not be
                                                 the Service in their SUP are sufficient.                operations permit issued under this                   required to get a permit or post financial
                                                 However, as discussed above, any                        subpart do not apply unless the operator              assurance during the production phase
                                                 modifications to their operations or                    chooses to obtain a new operations                    of its operation. In the cost-benefit
                                                 proposals for new operations not                        permit instead of amending their                      analysis and environmental impact
                                                 covered by the original permit are                      existing permits under the terms and                  statement, the Service evaluated the
                                                 subject to all applicable requirements of               conditions of that permit. We have                    range of alternatives related to the
                                                 part 29.                                                made this clarification in the rule at                management of pre-existing operations
                                                    Also, the Service has further clarified              § 29.44. Additionally, we agree the                   from no additional regulatory oversight
                                                 in § 29.43, as discussed above, that an                 language needs to be clearer as to the                to full regulatory oversight. The Service
                                                 existing operator must comply with the                  plugging and reclamation                              did identify unnecessary impacts to
                                                 Service’s plugging provisions at                        responsibilities of a pre-existing                    refuge resources and uses related to the
                                                 §§ 29.180 and 29.181. Some commenters                   operator. After production operations                 ongoing production phase of pre-
                                                 stated there should be a clear                          have been completed, a pre-existing                   existing operations, but also recognized
                                                 requirement for operators with an                       operator must obtain an Operations                    the potential to apply a different, more
                                                 approved SUP to provide financial                       Permit from the Service, either to                    efficient approach to address many of
                                                 assurance prior to proceeding with                      maintain the well in shut-in status or to             the refuge resource and use issues for
                                                 plugging and reclamation. The Service’s                 plug and reclaim operations in                        this class of operation.
                                                 intent under § 29.43 is to allow                        compliance with this subpart. The                        The primary issue with pre-existing
                                                 operators who have cooperated with the                  Service has made this clarification in                operations, as identified by refuge
                                                 Service in conducting activities under a                § 29.63. Finally, the Service has made                managers, is that reclamation has not
                                                 Service-issued permit to continue under                 specific revisions to the rule at § 29.64             been typically or consistently performed
                                                 the terms and conditions that have been                 that identify the specific ‘‘General                  in a way that restores disturbed areas to
                                                 agreed upon. While financial assurance                  Terms and Conditions’’ applicable to                  productive habitat. This issue is
                                                 would provide the benefit of ensuring                   pre-existing operations.                              addressed by the rule. First, in
                                                 the public does not become responsible                    The Service has concluded it does not               accordance with § 29.63 (which has
                                                 for plugging and reclamation costs                      need to impose a permit requirement on                been revised to clarify), after production
                                                 should an operator default or abandon                   pre-existing operators in order to notify             operations have been completed, a pre-
                                                 their operation, based on the knowledge                 them of the applicable requirements of                existing operator must obtain an
                                                 and experiences of current and past                     the rule or to ensure they are in                     Operations Permit from the Service,
                                                 refuge managers engaged in oil and gas                  compliance with its requirements. The                 either to maintain the well in shut-in
                                                 oversight, we were not able to identify                 Service has a duty to ensure that all pre-            status or to plug and reclaim operations
                                                 any well becoming orphaned by an                        existing and existing operators are                   in compliance with this subpart,
                                                 operator within the past 20 years.                      notified of the requirements of the rule.             including the requirement that an
                                                 Therefore, the Service declines to add a                The Service is working on guidance                    operator obtain financial assurance at
                                                 financial assurance provision at great                  documents for all classes of operators,               this time. Second, a pre-existing
                                                 cost to these operators with little benefit             including pre-existing operators.                     operator is subject to the reclamation
                                                 to refuge resources and uses. However,                  Additionally, the Service has already                 standards of § 29.117(d), which provides
                                                 if an operator’s original permit did not                developed relationships with many of                  for removing all above-ground
                                                 include authorization to conduct                        the pre-existing operators. The Service               structures, equipment, roads, well pads,
                                                 plugging and reclamation, the operator                  will be in contact with operators to                  and contaminating substances,
                                                 would be required to amend their                        ensure they are informed about the                    reestablishing native vegetation,
                                                 Service-issued permit or obtain a new                   requirements of the rule.                             restoring conditions to pre-disturbance
                                                 operations permit, either of which                        19. Comment: Some commenters                        hydrologic functions, and restoring
                                                 requires compliance with the plugging                   agree with the Service’s proposed                     disturbed areas to productive habitat.
                                                 and reclamation provisions of this rule,                approach not to require operations                       Our analysis found that the Service
                                                 including providing financial assurance.                permits for pre-existing operations                   could eliminate many of the ongoing,
                                                                                                         during the production phase. Other                    unnecessary impacts to refuge resources
                                                 Pre-Existing Operations                                 commenters believe that pre-existing                  and uses resulting from the production
                                                   18. Comment: The Service received                     operations should be subject to the same              phase of pre-existing operations by
                                                 several comments suggesting the Service                 requirements as new operations under                  making violation of non-conflicting
                                                 clarify how pre-existing operations                     the rule (as the Service considered in                State laws and regulations relating to oil
                                                 would be subject to provisions of the                   Alternative C of the DEIS), specifically              and gas operations a prohibited act in
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 rule absent a new permit requirement.                   requiring a new permit for pre-existing               the rule. Though not required to obtain
                                                 One commenter expressed concern that                    operators that would ensure that they                 a Service operations permit during
                                                 the proposed rule did not include a                     are following the applicable                          production, the Service would have
                                                 mechanism for ensuring pre-existing                     performance-based standards of the                    greater authority to ensure these
                                                 operations are following the                            proposed rule, including waste                        operations are in compliance with
                                                 requirements of the rule. Additionally,                 management and disposal, spill                        applicable laws because Refuge Law
                                                 commenters wanted more clarity as to                    prevention and response, and the                      Enforcement would be able to enforce


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00013   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79960            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 State law on the NWRS. Any violation                    operations permit requirement. Many                   operations on the NWRS will be
                                                 of State laws on the NWRS would                         wells could be grouped under a single                 operating under Service standards
                                                 constitute a violation of the law under                 operations permit by an operator, but                 sooner, and provides greater protection
                                                 the rule, and all applicable penalties                  the volume of operations permit                       of refuge resources and uses from the
                                                 and prohibitions would apply.                           applications required would likely                    ongoing unnecessary impacts of pre-
                                                    State laws usually address ongoing                   exceed 1,000. The Service would need                  existing operations.
                                                 impacts from these pre-existing                         to roughly double its oil and gas                       21. Comment: We received comments
                                                 operations, such as waste disposal and                  management resources from current                     from the public requesting that the rule
                                                 prevention and cleanup of leaks and                     levels, while the administrative costs to             require more than just basic information
                                                 spills. Where an individual State’s                     operators of pre-existing wells is                    from pre-existing operators on refuge
                                                 regulations do not specifically address                 estimated to be approximately $1,800                  lands (e.g., mitigation, spill control,
                                                 an issue, the Service would continue to                 per well.                                             emergency preparedness plans).
                                                 work cooperatively with State agencies                     Based on our analysis, we determined               Commenters stated that the Service
                                                 and operators to reduce impacts or risks                enforcing a pre-existing operator’s                   should require other important
                                                 to refuge resources and uses. For                       compliance with State laws and                        information necessary for the proper
                                                 example, in an assessment of State                      regulations best meets the purposes and               management and conservation of refuge
                                                 regulations conducted by the Ground                     needs of revising the existing rule and               resources from these pre-existing
                                                 Water Protection Council (GWPC) for                     will provide the maximum protection of                operators. For instance, one comment
                                                 the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE),                    refuge resources when balanced with                   suggested that the Service’s requirement
                                                 the GWPC found that 23 of 27 oil-                       the cost to operators and to the Service              in proposed § 29.61 for a scaled map
                                                 producing States assessed required oil                  for administration. This approach                     that delineates only an ‘‘area of
                                                 production site storage tanks to have                   enables managers to focus limited                     operation’’ may not be sufficiently
                                                 secondary containment dikes to contain                  resources on those operations with the                detailed to provide refuge managers
                                                 leaks and spills (GWPC 2014).                           greatest possible impacts to refuge                   with baseline information to monitor
                                                 Additionally, the GWPC (2014) reported                  resources and uses rather than an                     operations, changes in operations, and
                                                 that 23 of the 27 States require reporting              indiscriminate administration of                      violations, and that the Service should
                                                 and remediation of spills and 13 of the                 permits for the approximately 4,000 pre-              require a scaled map, as well as detailed
                                                 27 States specify cleanup standards for                 existing operations. Comments from the                schematics of existing wells and
                                                 spills. Some States also have siting or                 public have not provided us with                      infrastructure.
                                                 setback requirements for pits                           substantial new information that would                   Service Response: After further
                                                 (production skim pits and reserve pits)                 change our analysis or conclusion.                    considering these comments, the
                                                 with some States prohibiting the use of                    20. Comment: The Service received a                Service has concluded that some
                                                 pits in 100-year floodplains or in areas                comment requesting that we revise the                 additional, basic information from pre-
                                                 with shallow aquifers (GWPC 2014). An                   definition of ‘‘modification,’’ so that a             existing operators would enhance the
                                                 operator’s compliance with these types                  pre-existing operation must obtain a                  protection of refuge resources through
                                                 of laws and the Service’s ability to assist             permit when they transfer operators.                  better documentation of the equipment,
                                                 in the enforcement of these laws would                     Service Response: After considering                materials, and operational practices
                                                 provide additional protection to refuge                 this comment, the Service agrees that a               being used on location. Additional
                                                 resources and uses.                                     change in operator should trigger the                 operational information will also help to
                                                    While full regulation of pre-existing                requirement that the new operator                     establish an operator’s reclamation
                                                 operations during their production                      obtain an Operations Permit from the                  responsibilities as well as a baseline for
                                                 phase would provide some additional                     Service. However, revising the                        determining whether future actions
                                                 protection to refuge resources and uses,                definition of modification is not the best            constitute a modification as defined
                                                 it would not be able to remedy a                        way to accomplish this objective.                     under § 29.50. Therefore, the Service
                                                 majority of the impacts to refuge                       Instead, the Service has revised the rule             has amended the rule at § 29.61 to
                                                 resources and uses caused when the                      language to replace ‘‘operation’’ with                require pre-existing operators to also
                                                 operators chose the time, place, and                    ‘‘operator’’ in § 29.44 to clarify that the           submit to the Service: a brief description
                                                 manner of these pre-existing operations.                exempt status follows an operator not an              of the current operations and any
                                                 For example, on existing operations, the                operation. Also, in § 29.171, we have                 anticipated changes to the current
                                                 operator’s well has already been drilled                included language that would allow an                 operations, including documentation of
                                                 and the area of operations (access route,               operator to continue operations for 90                the current operating methods, surface
                                                 well site, production facilities, and                   days while the operator files the permit              equipment, and materials produced or
                                                 routes for gathering lines) were                        application and posts bond to ensure                  used.
                                                 established, and impacts to refuge                      continuity of new operations. The new                    22. Comment: Some commenters
                                                 resources, such as geology and soils,                   operator would need to obtain an                      requested that the Service delete the
                                                 wetlands, and wildlife-dependent                        Operations Permit that meets operating                phrases ‘‘subject to the provisions of
                                                 recreation, occurred prior to the                       standards and general terms and                       this subpart’’ and ‘‘subject to applicable
                                                 acquisition of a refuge. The Service                    conditions of the rule, including posting             requirements of this subpart’’ from
                                                 could require actions not addressed by                  of financial assurance. The Service will              proposed §§ 29.43 and 29.44, believing
                                                 applicable State rules—site maintenance                 not require a change in the time or place             that subjecting pre-existing operations
                                                 for erosion control, vegetation                         of these operations, but rather will                  and existing operations currently under
                                                 management, noise abatement,                            ensure that any ongoing unnecessary                   a Service permit retroactively was
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 housekeeping, for examples—by                           impacts from these operations are                     inappropriate.
                                                 imposing a permit requirement and                       avoided or minimized by requiring the                    Service Response: In developing the
                                                 undergoing the associated                               new operator to employ                                rule, the Service identified several key
                                                 administrative processes and costs. Our                 ‘‘technologically feasible, least                     objectives that needed to be addressed
                                                 analysis estimated that approximately                   damaging methods’’ moving forward.                    in considering the extent to which to
                                                 4,000 wells operated by perhaps 400                     This change in what constitutes loss of               regulate pre-existing operations and
                                                 different operators would fall under the                pre-existing status ensures that more                 operations already being conducted


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00014   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         79961

                                                 under Service authorization. These                      and reclaim that particular site; and (2)             stimulation activities, creating
                                                 objectives included that: (1) These                     State bonding programs do not typically               additional surface disturbance
                                                 operations not create additional                        require well plugging and reclamation                 (expanding the footprint of a well pad,
                                                 unnecessary impacts on refuge                           to Service standards. State bond                      realigning a road, constructing new
                                                 resources and uses; and (2) all                         amounts are generally insufficient in                 pipelines or gathering lines), or
                                                 operations within refuges are eventually                themselves to cover the actual costs of               converting a natural gas well into a
                                                 plugged and reclaimed to Service                        plugging and reclamation. However,                    wastewater disposal well so that the
                                                 standards. Pre-existing operations and                  States administer well plugging funds                 resulting modification has notable
                                                 existing operations are subject to                      with money derived from sources other                 impacts to the refuge resource.’’
                                                 specific provisions of this rule that                   than forfeited bonds, e.g., permitting                   Service Response: The Service agrees
                                                 ensure that these objectives are met and                fees, taxes on production, or penalties.              that many of the examples listed by the
                                                 that future activities of these operators               Most States with regulations overseeing               commenters require a pre-existing
                                                 do not result in additional, unnecessary                oil and gas activities have developed                 operator to obtain a new permit or an
                                                 impacts. Therefore, subjecting these                    programs for plugging and reclaiming                  operator under an existing Service-
                                                 operations to these provisions is not                   orphaned wells, and, theoretically, the               issued permit to obtain an amendment
                                                 inappropriate, as the commenter                         State may have sufficient funds to plug               to its permit, including drilling
                                                 suggested, because the provisions are                   and reclaim orphaned wells on the                     additional wells from the same pad,
                                                 not focused on retroactively regulating                 NWRS. However, many State programs                    conducting hydraulic fracturing or other
                                                 past activities and impacts of these                    remain backlogged with a number of                    well stimulation activities, creating
                                                 operations (i.e., time, place, or manner                orphaned wells that need to be plugged                additional surface disturbance
                                                 of operations) but rather on regulating                 or reclaimed.                                         (expanding the footprint of a well pad,
                                                 new or modified activities and impacts                     Orphaned wells on Federally                        realigning a road, constructing new
                                                 of these operations.                                    managed lands do not usually rank as                  pipelines or gathering lines), or
                                                                                                         top priorities on State lists for plugging.           converting a natural gas well into a
                                                 Financial Assurance                                     (Office of Inspector General, Report No.              wastewater disposal well, will also
                                                    23. Comment: Some commenters                         CR–EV–FWS–002–2014: Oil and Gas                       likely be considered ‘‘modifying’’ an
                                                 expressed the desire that the Service go                Development on U.S. Fish and Wildlife                 operation. The Service had identified
                                                 beyond what was in the proposed rule                    Service Refuges). So the bond that an                 several examples in the preamble of the
                                                 and periodically review reclamation                     operator furnishes to the State is often              proposed rule, and examples of a
                                                 costs and corresponding requirements                    not available to ensure that wells are                modification include drilling additional
                                                 for financial assurance, and update                     plugged and areas of operation                        wells from the same pad, creating
                                                 these estimates as necessary to                         reclaimed in the event of operator                    additional surface disturbance (e.g.,
                                                 accurately reflect the cost of reclamation              default or abandonment of the                         expanding the footprint of a well pad,
                                                 upon the decommission of the well.                      operation. Even where a State may                     realigning a road), or converting a
                                                    Service Response: The concern that                   expeditiously address plugging of an                  natural gas well into a wastewater
                                                 financial assurance amounts will                        orphaned well on a refuge, State                      disposal well, as these modifications
                                                 become outdated and insufficient to                     plugging programs typically do not                    will have impacts beyond the scope,
                                                 ensure reclamation was already                          require restoration of a site in a manner             intensity, and/or duration of existing
                                                 addressed in proposed § 29.152, which                   that meets Service standards in the rule              impacts. This provision was not
                                                 we, therefore, have not revised. The                    (§ 29.117(d)). For these reasons, State               intended to apply to minor actions, such
                                                 Service may require, or the operator                    bonds are typically not sufficient to                 as repositioning of surface facilities
                                                 may request, an adjustment to the                       ensure protection of refuge resources in              within the current footprint of pre-
                                                 financial assurance amount because of                   the event that an operator defaults or                existing operations, minor changes in
                                                 any circumstance that increases or                      abandons his or her operation.                        color schemes, or minor, non-routine
                                                 decreases the estimated costs of                           However, in the event that a State and             maintenance actions.
                                                 plugging and reclamation. Cost changes                  the Service were in formal agreement                     The Service has decided it is not
                                                 due to inflation would be a                             that State plugging funds would be used               necessary to revise the definition of
                                                 circumstance that would allow the                       to plug a well directly upon its                      ‘‘modification’’ in the rule to include
                                                 Service to require an adjustment in the                 becoming orphaned as well as to                       these specific examples. Instead, these
                                                 amount of financial assurance.                          conduct site reclamation, the Service                 examples and others the Service
                                                    24. Comment: The Service also                        would consider this to be a condition                 develops in the future will be included
                                                 received comments that requiring                        under § 29.152 that would justify                     in guidance documents provided to pre-
                                                 financial assurance above and beyond                    reducing the financial assurance                      existing operators and holders of
                                                 financial assurance already required by                 required by the Service.                              existing Service authorizations as well
                                                 the State is not necessary because the                                                                        as Service staff who will administer the
                                                 State bonds are sufficient. Commenters                  Modification of Operations and Permits                rule.
                                                 stated that this additional financial                     25. Comment: The Service received                      26. Comment: Another commenter
                                                 assurance requirement was ‘‘unfair and                  several comments requesting clarity of                recommended two changes to the
                                                 unreasonable,’’ and should only be done                 the proposed rule’s definition of                     regulations addressing modification of
                                                 on a case-by-case basis as necessary to                 ‘‘modification’’ (proposed § 29.50).                  existing operations. First, the
                                                 supplement bonds already lodged with                    Some commenters wanted the Service to                 commenter asked the Service to add the
                                                 the State.                                              clarify the definition to ensure it                   word ‘‘significant’’ before ‘‘additional
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                    Service Response: The Service’s rule                 includes certain changes. Specifically,               impacts’’ in the definition for
                                                 does not rely on State bonds to ensure                  one commenter suggested the Service                   ‘‘modifying.’’ This change would clarify
                                                 timely well plugging and site                           amend the definition to read: ‘‘Examples              that modified permits are not (and
                                                 reclamation to Service standards for two                of a modification could include, but are              should not be) required for minor
                                                 primary reasons: (1) Bonds furnished to                 not limited to, drilling additional wells             modifications to operations that do not
                                                 operators by the State are not usually                  from the same pad, conducting                         result in significant changes in effects to
                                                 directly available to the Service to plug               hydraulic fracturing or other well                    the environment. Second, proposed


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00015   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79962            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 § 29.160 should be modified to clarify                  12866, and as stated in the proposed                  type, and design of facilities (proposed
                                                 that the Service may amend a permit                     rule, the rule is based on performance-               §§ 29.111–29.119) as unreasonable,
                                                 only when there is a ‘‘significant’’ or                 based standards rather than prescriptive              burdensome, and unlawfully
                                                 ‘‘substantial’’ modification to the                     operating standards. A prescriptive                   diminishing the value of the mineral
                                                 permitted operation.                                    standard may seem stricter because it                 estate. The commenter suggested that
                                                    Service Response: The Service                        ensures that an operator follows a                    the Service replace these standards with
                                                 considered the addition of the word                     certain practice that seems like it would             more general goals to be achieved to
                                                 ‘‘significant,’’ as well as other adjectives            protect refuge resources and uses and                 ‘‘the extent technologically and
                                                 to provide more clarity for what the                    allows the operator no flexibility to use             economically feasible, and a
                                                 Service would consider to be a                          a less-protective standard. However, in               requirement to use best management
                                                 ‘‘modification.’’ However, we decided                   implementation, these standards can, in               practices.’’
                                                 that adding any such language was not                   some instances, have the unintended                      Service Response: The Service
                                                 useful, because such terms themselves                   consequence of actually being more                    recognizes that some arguably
                                                 remained subject to various                             harmful to refuge resources and uses.                 prescriptive management practices are
                                                 interpretations. For instance, an                       For example, onsite remediation of a                  included in the suite of performance-
                                                 operator, the Service, or a non-                        hydrocarbon spill may result in less                  based standards. The observation that
                                                 governmental organization or individual                 overall impacts or risks of impacts by                an operator must install and maintain
                                                 may have very different beliefs as to                   reducing heavy truck traffic than a                   secondary containment is a good
                                                 what constitutes a ‘‘significant’’ impact               prescriptive standard of requiring offsite            example (§ 29.111(b)). In part, the
                                                 to refuge resources and uses. Therefore,                removal of soils, which also increases                provision is prescriptive, but
                                                 we have provided several examples of                    the potential for introduction of                     acknowledges the widespread use of the
                                                 what would likely constitute a                          invasive plant species associated with                best management practice of secondary
                                                 modification (see above) to provide                     import of new fill material. The                      containment by industry and regulatory
                                                 some clarification to our intentions in                 flexibility for refuge managers and                   agencies to capture spills, prevent their
                                                 regulating modifications, and as                        operators to accomplish a desired end                 spread, and facilitate their cleanup. In
                                                 previously stated we will provide                       allows site-by-site evaluation of                     this instance, the Service does not
                                                 further guidance documents for this                     alternatives that are least damaging                  envision any alternatives that would
                                                 purpose. However, determining whether                   overall. Additionally, science and                    exclude the use of secondary
                                                 a change is a ‘‘modification’’ of the                   technology are constantly advancing,                  containment and still meet the
                                                 operation must be done on a case-by-                    and new methodologies used today are                  ‘‘technologically feasible, least
                                                 case basis because the details of when,                 much more environmentally protective                  damaging method’’ standard, and so the
                                                 where, and how such changes are                         than those available only a few years                 provision serves to inform operators and
                                                 accomplished will determine whether                     before. If these trends continue in the               the public of an aspect of the rule’s
                                                 such a change is ‘‘beyond the scope,                    future, the performance-based standards               approach to managing contaminating
                                                 intensity, and/or duration of existing                  in the rule easily adapt to those                     substances. Additionally, the
                                                 impacts.’’ Therefore, the Service did not               changing methodologies and will be at                 requirement still leaves flexibility for
                                                 revise the rule as suggested by this                    least as effective in the future as they are          the refuge manager and operators to
                                                 comment.                                                today.                                                decide on the design and operation of
                                                                                                            In response to comments that using                 the secondary containment system.
                                                 Performance-Based Standards
                                                                                                         performance-based standards leaves too                Similarly, in a few other instances the
                                                    27. Comment: The Service received                    much discretion to the Service, this rule             Service has included practices that we
                                                 conflicting comments regarding our                      will be accompanied by detailed                       find to be more informative but which
                                                 proposed approach of regulating oil and                 guidance for both operators and Service               may be seen as somewhat prescriptive;
                                                 gas operations based on performance-                    staff on what are current best                        however, we have maintained flexibility
                                                 based standards. Some commenters                        management practices for meeting these                for site-specific implementation. The
                                                 requested that the Service require                      standards. This guidance will provide                 rule includes the necessary general
                                                 prescriptive actions, at least in some                  consistency of interpretation and                     goals applied with the overall standard
                                                 instances. For example, one commenter                   application of the standards across the               of technologically feasible, least
                                                 suggested the general reclamation                       NWRS and decrease the possibility that                damaging methods. The rule will result
                                                 standard to ‘‘remove or neutralize                      the discretion afforded refuge managers               in best management practices being
                                                 contaminating substance’’                               will be misapplied. Furthermore,                      identified and included in the site-
                                                 (§ 29.117(d)(3)) be modified to include a               through compliance with the National                  specific operations permit.
                                                 strict prohibition of onsite remediation                Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)                          29. Comment: One commenter asked
                                                 of contaminants. Also, the Service                      process at the site-specific permit level,            whether what is practical for a
                                                 received comments that these                            the public will have the opportunity to               particular operator would be a
                                                 performance-based standards leave too                   review and comment on Service                         consideration in what is
                                                 much discretion to the Service to either                proposals.                                            ‘‘technologically feasible, least
                                                 be too lenient with operators or too                       28. Comment: Other commenters were                 damaging methods.’’
                                                 strict.                                                 generally supportive of the more flexible                Service Response: While we do
                                                    Service Response: Pursuant to                        approach, but recommend that the                      consider economics in determining
                                                 Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735),                    Service remove what they saw as more                  appropriate methods, we look at what is
                                                 ‘‘[e]ach agency shall identify and assess               prescriptive standards in the rule in                 feasible in terms of industry-wide
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 alternative forms of regulation and shall,              favor of more general goals to be                     practice, not what is affordable for a
                                                 to the extent feasible, specify                         achieved. For example, a commenter                    specific operator. The Service does not
                                                 performance objectives, rather than                     recommended removing the proposed                     intend to allow operators to use
                                                 specifying the behavior or manner of                    regulations requiring the installation                methods that unreasonably harm refuge
                                                 compliance that regulated entities must                 and maintenance of secondary                          resources and uses just because the
                                                 adopt’’ (E.O. 12866(b)(8)). Consistent                  containment, applying seasonal                        operators don’t have the adequate
                                                 with the direction provided in E.O.                     restrictions, and specifying the location,            financial resources to employ


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00016   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79963

                                                 technologically feasible, least damaging                to managing all non-Federal mineral                   likely to adversely affect any species
                                                 methods.                                                rights. This language remains from the                listed under the federal Endangered
                                                    30. Comment: The Service also                        previous regulations found at § 29.32                 Species Act.’’
                                                 received a comment that it does not                     and pertains to rights other than oil and                Service Response: The Service
                                                 have the authority to permit only the                   gas rights, so the Service decided not to             declines to adopt the commenter’s
                                                 ‘‘least damaging’’ operational methods                  revise this language at this time. Other              recommendation because it is beyond
                                                 and that the Service’s use of the term                  than this section, the Service found one              the scope of this rulemaking and we do
                                                 ‘‘technologically feasible, least                       other instance of ambiguous language in               not currently have the record that we
                                                 damaging methods’’ is not appropriate                   the proposed rule (see in proposed                    would need to demonstrate to the
                                                 and should be replaced with ‘‘feasible                  § 29.111(g) ‘‘to the extent reasonably                Council on Environmental Quality to
                                                 methods’’ that are technologically and                  practicable’’) and has removed such                   establish a new categorical exclusion.
                                                 economically feasible, as determined by                 language.                                             As the Service gains experience in
                                                 the best industry practices available.                                                                        implementing the rule, we may find that
                                                 This commenter contended that the                       Timeline for Approval                                 it is appropriate to pursue adoption of
                                                 Service may only recommend, not                            32. Comment: The Service sought                    a new categorical exclusion. Similarly,
                                                 require, the ‘‘least damaging’’ methods,                comment on whether the 180-day                        with respect to the inclusion in the rule
                                                 stating that the mineral interest owner is              timeline for final action is reasonable.              of a provision regarding compliance
                                                 not required to conduct its operations in               The Service received some comments                    with the Endangered Species Act (ESA),
                                                 a manner that is not economically or                    stating that this timeline was too long               we are unable to accept the
                                                 technologically feasible in order to                    for operators to wait to get authorization            recommendation because such
                                                 access its mineral rights.                              on their permits. Other commenters                    determinations must be made on a case-
                                                    Service Response: The Service has                    suggested that this timeline was too                  by-case basis in compliance with
                                                 considered this comment and does not                    short and would hinder the Service’s                  section 7 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
                                                 agree. First, we note that NPS has in fact              ability to fully comply with NEPA                     seq.).
                                                 used this standard for new operations                   requirements.
                                                 since January 1979. This term, defined                     Service Response: The Service has                  Information Requirements and Public
                                                 at § 29.50, ensures that the Service does               considered these comments, but has                    Access to Information
                                                 not go beyond what is technologically                   determined that the timeline from the                   34. Comment: The Service received
                                                 feasible in the methods required of an                  proposed rule should be maintained in                 some comments that the proposed
                                                 operator and considers the industry-                    the final rule. The timeline does provide             information requirements for permit
                                                 wide economics of those methods in                      for hard deadlines and limits the                     applications (50 CFR 29.94–29.97) were
                                                 making those decisions. It also ensures                 Service’s discretion to delay the                     extraordinarily extensive and unduly
                                                 that an operator uses those methods that                processing of Operations Permit                       burdensome. These commenters
                                                 are least damaging of refuge resources                  applications. For instance, under the                 believed that these sections, as well as
                                                 and uses, which is a responsibility of                  rule, the Service has 30 days to conduct              § 29.121(f), also unlawfully require the
                                                 the Service to maintain under the                       its ‘‘initial review’’ to determine                   disclosure of confidential and/or
                                                 NWRSAA. Therefore, the Service                          whether an operator’s application is                  proprietary information and requested
                                                 concludes that requiring                                complete, request more information                    that any provisions requiring the
                                                 ‘‘technologically feasible, least                       from the operator, or inform the                      disclosure of such information be
                                                 damaging methods’’ is well within the                   operator that more time is necessary and              removed. These commenters also
                                                 authority of the Service.                               provide written justification for the                 requested that the Service scale down
                                                    31. Comment: The Service received                    delay. Once the application is deemed                 information requirements to only the
                                                 several comments recommending that                      complete, the Service must generally                  basic information needed for the Service
                                                 the Service remove any ambiguous                        take final action within 180 days. Any                to assess the location and type of
                                                 language contained in the proposed                      additional time after the 180 days may                operations that will be undertaken.
                                                 rule, including the term ‘‘greatest extent              be taken only if the operator agrees to                 Service Response: The Service
                                                 practicable’’ found at proposed § 29.32.                additional time, or that time is                      carefully considered what information
                                                 Commenters were concerned that such                     necessary for the Service to comply with              was necessary from operators so that the
                                                 language would allow the operators the                  applicable laws and regulations. The                  agency could properly administer non-
                                                 unnecessary ability to pressure the                     Service’s purpose in using the 180-day                Federal oil and gas activities on the
                                                 Service into allowing methods that are                  timeframe is to provide operators with                NWRS and ensure that operators avoid
                                                 based more on economic factors rather                   greater certainty regarding the                       or minimize impacts to refuge resources
                                                 than NWRS resource and use protection.                  permitting process. While the Service                 and uses. We analyzed each of the
                                                    Service Response: In response to these               cannot always guarantee meeting this                  information requirements in compliance
                                                 comments, the Service went back to the                  deadline and has, therefore, provided an              with the Regulatory Flexibility Act to
                                                 regulations to review for any ambiguous                 extension provision in the rule, it is the            ensure that the benefit of these
                                                 language. The Service did use these                     Service’s intention to process these                  information requirements to NWRS
                                                 terms quite frequently in the preamble                  permits as quickly as possible and not                resources and uses were appropriate
                                                 to the proposed rule where it outlined                  unreasonably impede a private mineral                 based on the administrative costs to the
                                                 the Service’s general intent regarding                  rights owner’s right to access those                  operator and the Service, and we
                                                 the proposed rule. The Service has                      minerals.                                             concluded that all information
                                                 avoided using such ambiguous terms in                      33. Comment: One commenter                         requirements in the rule are appropriate.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 the preamble to the final rule. When the                recommended that the Service add a                    Furthermore, we understand that
                                                 Service reviewed the proposed rule text                 provision to the regulations that would               information requirements can be
                                                 in consideration of this comment, we                    provide a Categorical Exclusion under                 burdensome on operators, so in
                                                 found that the term ‘‘greatest extent                   NEPA for permits issued under this                    instances where the Service needs
                                                 practicable’’ only appeared at § 29.32,                 subpart and additionally include a                    information gathered in compliance
                                                 which is a revised version of a general                 provision that compliance with the                    with other Federal or State laws under
                                                 policy statement of the Service related                 terms of the permit is ‘‘deemed to be not             this rule, the Service does not require an


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00017   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79964            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 operator to duplicate that information                  the NWRS will be done in compliance                   requirements (§ 29.103). The Service
                                                 but rather provide the Service copies                   with NEPA, and the Service will                       finds that these requirements are both
                                                 (see, e.g., §§ 29.61(d), 29.121(g)).                    provide the public with information                   more specific and clearer than the
                                                    35. Comment: Commenters suggested                    about proposed operations and the                     language suggested by the commenter.
                                                 that the Service information                            opportunity to participate as afforded by             These requirements have been carefully
                                                 requirements are inadequate because                     that Act. As for reporting perceived                  crafted to ensure that the Service’s
                                                 they do not require full disclosure of                  violations, contact information for each              approval (or denial) process for an
                                                 chemicals used for hydraulic fracturing                 refuge is readily available and is the                Operations Permit meets the objectives
                                                 prior to obtaining a permit. They                       fastest and most efficient way of                     of the rulemaking to ensure operations
                                                 questioned how the Service could do a                   notifying the Refuge of any perceived                 avoid or minimize impacts to refuge
                                                 full analysis of the environmental risks                violations. We encourage the public and               resources and uses.
                                                 of a hydraulic fracturing operation if                  workers to contact that refuge with any                  38. Comment: Additionally, a
                                                 they did not have all of the information                concerns they may have regarding                      commenter requested that the Service
                                                 regarding chemical uses by the operator.                perceived violations by these operators.              provide further clarity on how
                                                 Commenters also stated that proposed                    Such information can be provided to the               prohibited acts and penalties apply to
                                                 § 29.210 would allow operators to avoid                 refuge anonymously through letters,                   pre-existing operations and
                                                 any obligations to disclose the identity                phone calls, or any other means that                  recommended that violation of the
                                                 of fracking chemicals used simply by                    will allow an individual to feel                      informational requirements,
                                                 submitting nothing more than an                         comfortable doing so.                                 modifications, reclamation, general
                                                 affidavit in support of their claim that                                                                      terms and conditions, and other
                                                 the information is confidential and the                 Penalty and Enforcement Provisions                    operational requirements in §§ 29.60–
                                                 Service would have no power to                             37. Comment: The Service received                  29.64 be added to prohibited acts and
                                                 disclose the information to the public if               several comments recommending that                    penalties for pre-existing operations at
                                                 the operator were to provide it.                        the final rule provide for robust                     § 29.190.
                                                    Service Response: While an operator                  enforcement of rule requirements and                     Service Response: The Service agrees
                                                 will be able to provide an affidavit to                 include specific penalties for non-                   with the commenter that the proposed
                                                 support the protection of proprietary or                compliance. For instance, commenters                  rule could have been clearer as to which
                                                 confidential information, an operator                   requested specific provisions regarding               provisions apply to pre-existing
                                                 still must provide the Service any                      notifying and working with operators to               requirements or not and has revised the
                                                 information the agency needs to fully                   bring them into immediate compliance;                 rule accordingly at § 29.60 through
                                                 assess the environmental impacts of an                  issuing formal written notices of non-                § 29.64 and § 29.190. A violation by a
                                                 operator’s activities, including all                    compliance; specific penalties for non-               pre-existing operator of informational
                                                 chemical uses in the operation.                         compliance; seeking civil penalties for               requirements, modifications
                                                 Information requirements included                       failure to comply with a notice of non-               requirements, reclamation requirements,
                                                 under § 29.95(p) include identification                 compliance; and for more egregious                    and applicable general terms and
                                                 of contaminating or toxic substances                    cases, filing a civil action in Federal               conditions is considered a prohibited
                                                 used or expected to be encountered                      court seeking an injunction or                        act and subject to applicable penalties.
                                                 during operations, including material                   restraining order to stop damaging
                                                                                                                                                               Appeals
                                                 safety sheets. In the rule, the Service                 operations. One commenter also
                                                 also used the ‘‘including, but not                      suggested that the Service adopt NPS                    39. Comment: The Service received
                                                 limited to’’ term in the list of                        current regulations for approval of an                comments that the two-tiered appeals
                                                 information requirements to reserve the                 operations permit (50 CFR 9.37(a))                    process proposed in the regulations is
                                                 ability to require additional information               believing that the language contained in              unreasonable and unduly burdensome.
                                                 (see § 29.96) if necessary.                             that section, if adopted by the Service,              There should be a single, expedited
                                                    The information requirements of                      would provide the Service the ability to              administrative appeal available for
                                                 § 29.95(p) provide the Service with the                 deny a permit if it is not protective                 challenges to actions taken by the
                                                 necessary information upfront to                        enough of a refuge.                                   Service under the proposed regulations.
                                                 sufficiently analyze the environmental                     Service Response: The Service                      This administrative decision should be
                                                 risks of a hydraulic fracturing operation               considered these comments, but                        directly appealable in Federal court.
                                                 and to ensure that operators are                        concluded that modifying our                            Service Response: The appeals
                                                 following best management practices for                 enforcement provisions as the                         process outlined at § 25.45 is the
                                                 storing and removing these chemicals.                   commenter suggested is not warranted.                 process by which the Service currently
                                                 The post-operational chemical                           In speaking with Refuge law                           reviews all appeals of the Service’s
                                                 disclosure information that operators                   enforcement, the Department of Justice,               permit decisions for public uses on
                                                 commonly provide via FracFocus is for                   and the Solicitor’s Office, the Service               refuge lands. The Service will not
                                                 the different purpose of identifying                    finds these provisions provide sufficient             provide a different appeals process
                                                 specific sources of contamination and                   tools for the Service to ensure                       under this subpart, because we find that
                                                 responsible parties should                              compliance with this subpart on penalty               the current process works well and that
                                                 contamination occur.                                    and enforcement. Administrative                       the changes requested would lead to
                                                    36. Comment: One commenter                           corrective actions are not normally                   less consistency and efficiency for the
                                                 requested the Service provide an easy                   contained within the prohibited acts                  administration of permits by the
                                                 way for the public to access information                sections of regulations. The Service                  Service. The two-tiered appeals process
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 about proposed operations and report                    would adopt the recommended                           provides additional opportunities to
                                                 perceived violations, including the                     progressive enforcement action                        resolve disagreements, while preserving
                                                 option for anonymity to encourage                       suggested by the comment through                      opportunities for judicial review of final
                                                 workers and others with sensitive                       Service policy.                                       agency action under the Administrative
                                                 positions to report problems.                              Furthermore, the rule provides the                 Procedure Act. As to the other concern
                                                    Service Response: The Service’s                      Service the ability to deny a permit if               raised by the commenter, we revised
                                                 approval of any proposed operations on                  the operator does not meet several                    § 29.200 to clarify that the decision of


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00018   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         79965

                                                 the Regional Director will constitute the               not charge for the costs of processing                rule. The Service already has developed
                                                 Service’s final agency action.                          and administering temporary access                    refuge-specific oil and gas management
                                                   Finally, in reviewing the appeals                     permits and operations permits,                       plans through Comprehensive
                                                 process under the proposed rule as it                   particularly in an era of limited agency              Conservation Plans, Habitat
                                                 would relate to pre-existing operations,                budgets. Other commenters stated that                 Management Plans, or other planning
                                                 the Service realized that it needed to                  fees cannot be required for access or                 documents created to manage specific
                                                 revise this section to provide an                       administering operating permits that are              refuges. On refuges where there is the
                                                 operator the opportunity to appeal                      already within the scope of the                       potential of oil and gas development,
                                                 decisions made by the Service that do                   operator’s oil and gas right or other right           they include management strategies for
                                                 not apply to a permit granted by the                    provided by law and that there should                 these operations. The Service will
                                                 Service and so has added the following                  be no fees for emergency access.                      continue to develop and update these
                                                 provision to § 29.200: ‘‘The process set                Additionally, they stated that if an                  plans as necessary to ensure they are
                                                 forth in § 25.45 is to be used for any                  access fee can be applied, then it must               consistent with this rule.
                                                 written decision concerning approval,                   be reasonable and cannot burden the                      43. Comment: Several commenters
                                                 denial, or modification of an operation                 underlying oil and gas right or                       from industry and non-governmental
                                                 made by the Service under this                          otherwise diminish the value of the                   organizations expressed concern that
                                                 subpart.’’                                              mineral estate.                                       the Service does not have adequate
                                                                                                            Service Response: After considering                staffing to properly implement the rule.
                                                 Access
                                                                                                         these comments, the Service did not                   In particular, some commenters
                                                    40. Comment: The Service received                    revise the rule with respect to fees                  expressed the need to ensure that, along
                                                 comments requesting the final rule                      charged by the Service for either access              with this rule, the Service has the
                                                 contain a provision stating that the                    or administering operations permits.                  necessary level of funding, staffing, and
                                                 Service cannot place conditions on                      Related to access fees, the Service is not            training to properly implement the rule,
                                                 operations in a permit that only allows                 charging for access that is pursuant to a             as highlighted by the 2007 Government
                                                 an operator to access and traverse                      deeded or statutory right to use the                  Accountability Office (GAO) report that
                                                 Federal lands (i.e., in order to access                 refuge-administered lands without                     assessed the status of oil and gas
                                                 operations on non-Federal lands).                       payment, but only for access that is                  operations on the National Wildlife
                                                    Service Response: In administering                   granted as a privilege ‘‘outside the scope            Refuge System in 2007. Their report
                                                 access across Federal lands, the Service                of an operator’s oil and gas right’’ for              highlighted the inadequacy of the
                                                 is required by law to analyze the                       which the fees are subject to the                     Service’s current regulations and, in
                                                 impacts of authorizing that access under                provisions of the Refuge Revenue                      part, led to the promulgation of these
                                                 NEPA. Through that analysis, the                        Sharing Act (16 U.S.C. 715s). Such                    proposed revisions. The GAO stated that
                                                 Service may find impacts to refuge                      access is a special benefit that warrants             ‘‘[w]e recommend[ ] that FWS determine
                                                 resources and uses resulting from                       a user charge commensurate with fees                  the level of staffing necessary to
                                                 operations on non-Federal land                          and charges for similar privileges and                adequately oversee oil and gas
                                                 resulting from the authorization of that                products made by private land owners                  operations and seek the necessary
                                                 access. In those cases, the Service will                in the vicinity or in accordance with                 funding to meet those needs through
                                                 work with those requesting access                       local value (see 50 CFR 29.5). In terms               appropriations, the authority to assess
                                                 across Federal lands to minimize or                     of recovery costs of permit                           fees, or other means.’’ The report further
                                                 avoid those impacts, and, if agreeable to               administration and operations                         stated, ‘‘we recommend that FWS
                                                 both the Service and the operator, those                monitoring allowed under § 29.120(c),                 ensure that staff are adequately trained
                                                 avoidance or mitigation measures may                    the Service uses ‘‘may’’ instead of                   to oversee oil and gas activities’’ (GAO–
                                                 be included in the access permit.                       ‘‘will’’ to provide flexibility to refuge             07–829R). One comment requested the
                                                 However, as stated in the proposed rule                 managers and foster cooperation with                  Service scale back the rule based on its
                                                 and maintained in the rule, the Service                 operators. In some instances, operators               limited resources. Another comment
                                                 has made clear that we are permitting                   may choose to share the costs with the                suggested that this rule may require
                                                 the access and not regulating the                       Service in administering permits in                   assessing additional fees on operations,
                                                 operations on non-Federal land.                         order to expedite the process. For                    periodically ensuring that fees are
                                                 Accordingly, no change in the                           example, an operator may provide                      adequate to cover the costs of
                                                 regulatory text is required.                            funding for a third-party contractor to               monitoring and enforcement.
                                                                                                         prepare an environmental assessment                      Service Response: In crafting the
                                                 Fees
                                                                                                         for the Service during the permitting                 proposed and final rules, the Service
                                                   41. Comment: Some commenters                          process. Periodic and annual                          carefully considered the administrative
                                                 suggested that the Service ensure that                  inspections are aspects of administering              burden the rule placed on operators and
                                                 they are assessing the appropriate and/                 a permit, and charging fees for such                  Service staff and on the resources
                                                 or additional fees of operators in order                activities fall under that section. With              required by the Service to successfully
                                                 to ensure that the Service has adequate                 flexibility in charging fees, operators               implement the rule. Therefore, the
                                                 funding to administer these operations.                 and refuge managers may develop a mix                 Service has weighed the cost of
                                                 Additionally, the Service received                      of self-reporting and refuge monitoring               administration versus the resource
                                                 comments stating that the agency                        that reduces administrative                           benefits gained from regulation and
                                                 should have full authority to charge fees               requirements on both parties.                         decided on several occasions that were
                                                 to cover annual inspections as well as                                                                        discussed in the responses to several
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 any more frequent inspections needed                    Implementation                                        comments above that the cost-benefit
                                                 during construction and pre-production                    42. Comment: The Service got one                    analysis did not support a more
                                                 activities, as well as for repeat violators             comment suggesting that the Service                   stringent regulatory regime. As
                                                 or higher risk operations. Commenters                   have refuge-specific management plans.                promulgated, the rule prioritizes and
                                                 recommended that the Service replace                      Service Response: The Service                       regulates those activities with the largest
                                                 ‘‘may’’ with ‘‘will’’ at § 29.120(c), not               appreciated this comment and will                     potential impacts on refuge resources
                                                 understanding why the Service would                     further consider it in implementing the               and uses. As discussed above, this is


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00019   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79966            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 one of the main reasons the Service for                 Absent a demonstration by the operator                not necessary to protect surface and
                                                 the most part has declined to regulate                  that they have a right to use the water               groundwater resources from
                                                 downhole activities associated with                     (e.g., State-held water right, specific               contamination. The establishment of
                                                 operations and to exempt inholdings                     deed language), water use,                            setbacks of operations from sensitive
                                                 and non-Federal adjacent lands from the                 transportation, and storage on a refuge               resources such as surface waters or
                                                 rule.                                                   would be evaluated for the                            wetlands is based on common
                                                    The Service currently has dedicated                  technologically feasible, least damaging              knowledge that providing time and
                                                 staff that manages oil and gas                          method. Considerations would include,                 space to react to incidents such as spills
                                                 development on National Wildlife                        among other things, the volume of water               or poor operating practices is key to
                                                 Refuge System lands. This rule brings                   needed, capacity of water sources to                  minimizing risks. However, there is no
                                                 more consistency and guidance to staff                  meet those needs and resulting                        single setback distance that is
                                                 already dedicated to these issues. While                consequences on aquatic resources, and                appropriate for all conditions of
                                                 there are additional responsibilities                   transportation and storage methods.                   proposed activities and environmental
                                                 involved in processing operations                          46. Comment: The Service received a                conditions. Environmental conditions
                                                 permit applications and monitoring                      comment suggesting the definition for                 may provide natural or human-made
                                                 operations, the Service has determined                  ‘‘usable water’’ includes water for                   barriers that would justify a reduced
                                                 this increase in need can be effectively                wildlife purposes so that shallow-water               setback. On the other hand, site
                                                 met with the reallocation of refuge staff               aquifers, seeps, and springs will be                  conditions such as steep slopes or
                                                 and resources. Additionally, the rule                   protected for wildlife on the NWRS.                   annually high precipitation can enhance
                                                 contains cost recovery or cost-sharing                     Service Response: The definition for               pathways between the activity and
                                                 provisions that help ensure the Service                 usable water does not need to be                      resource, and thus justify greater
                                                 has the necessary resources to                          changed in the rule in order for the                  setbacks.
                                                 implement the rule effectively and                      Service to protect water for wildlife
                                                                                                                                                                  Regulatory establishment of a ‘‘good
                                                 efficiently.                                            purposes. The rule includes hydrologic
                                                                                                                                                               offset’’ that considers both the activities
                                                                                                         standards (§ 29.113) and fish and
                                                 Section-by-Section Recommendations                                                                            and the average environmental
                                                                                                         wildlife protection standards (§ 29.112),
                                                    The Service received several other                                                                         conditions provides a beginning point
                                                                                                         as well as other standards, that serve to
                                                 recommendations on specific section                                                                           for site location considerations.
                                                                                                         maintain water quality and quantity for
                                                 revisions to the proposed rule. The                                                                           Additionally, having a regulatory
                                                                                                         use by wildlife. The term ‘‘usable
                                                 Service has considered all of these                                                                           process for adjusting site-specific
                                                                                                         water’’ is a specific term and definition
                                                 recommendations and has made                                                                                  setbacks—either lower or higher—based
                                                                                                         that has been developed and used by
                                                 changes, as appropriate, to provisions of                                                                     on project and environmental
                                                                                                         other Federal agencies (i.e., the
                                                 the rule as discussed below and/or                      Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)                 conditions is the key to successful use
                                                 outlined in the table in the section                    and BLM) to ensure protection of                      of setbacks. Through the Service’s own
                                                 Changes from the Proposed Rule.                         specific resources that may be impacted               analysis in the associated EIS, we
                                                    44. Comment: The Service received                    by oil and gas operations or other                    continue to believe that 500 feet
                                                 comments requesting that the definition                 activities. So the Service did not revise             provides the necessary time and space
                                                 of ‘‘access’’ (proposed § 29.50) be                     this definition.                                      in the majority of circumstances.
                                                 revised so that ‘‘access’’ does not                        47. Comment: The Service received a                However, the rule (§ 29.113)
                                                 include use of an aircraft when the                     comment requesting that the Service                   appropriately gives the ability to the
                                                 aircraft doesn’t take off of or land on                 remove fuel drums, pipes, oil,                        Service to require an even greater
                                                 Service-administered lands or waters.                   contaminated soil, etc., with any residue             setback if conditions, such as those
                                                 On the other hand, the Service received                 of oil or hazardous chemicals from the                highlighted by the comment, would
                                                 other comments recommending that the                    definition of ‘‘waste,’’ because they                 justify a greater setback distance. We
                                                 Service carry over the definition of                    include ‘‘contaminating substances’’                  also recognize that exceptions to the
                                                 ‘‘access’’ to the final rule, at least                  and should be defined and treated as                  setback are sometimes essential to
                                                 subjecting aircrafts landing on non-                    such.                                                 balancing overall impacts of an
                                                 Federal lands to timing limitations to                     Service Response: The Service intends              operation. A prime example occurs in
                                                 avoid disturbing wildlife.                              that these terms are not mutually                     coastal environments where the practice
                                                    Service Response: The Service has                    exclusive, and something may be both                  of locating drilling operations in open
                                                 considered these comments and has                       ‘‘waste’’ and a ‘‘contaminating                       water has been demonstrated to be least
                                                 revised § 29.50 to clarify that access                  substance.’’ An operator must comply                  damaging by avoiding the impacts of
                                                 does not include aircrafts that both take               with the applicable rule requirements                 cutting and dredging drilling slips and
                                                 off from and land on inholdings or non-                 for dealing with each.                                canals into sensitive marshland.
                                                 Federal adjacent lands, because the                        48. Comment: We received comments                  Therefore, the Service believes that
                                                 Service does not have the authority to                  requesting that the Service increase the              flexibility in this standard is appropriate
                                                 condition aircraft landings outside of                  distance an operator is required to place             and gives the Service the ability not
                                                 the NWRS.                                               operations away from surface waters                   only to ensure the least damaging
                                                    45. Comment: The Service received a                  from 500 feet to 2 miles based on BLM’s               methods to refuge resources and uses,
                                                 comment asking that the Service further                 determination that ‘‘surface and                      but also to ensure that an operator has
                                                 clarify the process for authorizing use of              groundwater contamination, due to oil                 reasonable access to their minerals
                                                 water outside of a State right and that                 and gas development . . . occurred                    based on a case-by-case determination.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 it should be done in line with a                        between 1,000 to 1,800 feet from . . .                   49. Comment: The Service received
                                                 compatibility determination.                            drilling’’ in Colorado (BLM Grand                     comments recommending that we
                                                    Service Response: The Service has                    Junction Resource Management Plan                     include provisions in the final rule that
                                                 concluded that determining sources of                   FEIS at 6-271).                                       require an operator to collect additional
                                                 water for use in operations is best                        Service Response: The Service is                   information, such as water and soil
                                                 evaluated using the procedures and                      aware of this BLM finding, but has                    samples and wildlife surveys, prior to
                                                 performance standards of the rule.                      concluded that a revision of the rule is              beginning operations.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00020   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                              79967

                                                   Service Response: In response to these                         Service Response: After considering                 to prevent similar incidents in the
                                                 comments, it is our intention that                             these comments, the Service has revised               future.
                                                 reconnaissance surveys will be used to                         proposed § 29.120(g), redesignated as                   Service Response: The Service finds
                                                 collect this type of information and any                       § 29.120(f) in the final rule, to clarify             that these recommendations are not
                                                 other necessary natural and cultural                           that mitigation tools must be mutually                warranted. This provision in the rule is
                                                 resource conditions the Service deems                          agreed upon by the Service and the                    intended to provide the Service with
                                                 necessary to ensure protection of refuge                       operator. The Service believes this                   information about occurrences on the
                                                 resources and uses. We acknowledged                            provision is within the scope of the                  NWRS. Due to the nature of accident
                                                 above that proposed § 29.94 was not                            Service’s authority under the NWRSAA                  investigations and the time it may take
                                                 clear, and we have revised the rule to                         to protect refuge resources and uses, and             to get the official report, we concluded
                                                 clarify that reconnaissance surveys will                       may in some circumstances be                          that 90 days is an appropriate
                                                 be used to collect this type of baseline                       appropriately used by an operator to                  timeframe. There are also existing State
                                                 information.                                                   offset impacts to refuge resources and
                                                   50. Comment: The Service received                                                                                  and Federal laws governing various
                                                                                                                lost use.                                             accident occurrences, and we have
                                                 comments stating that the Service does
                                                 not have the authority to require                                51. Comment: The Service received                   determined that additional regulatory
                                                 mitigation for impacts by mandating                            comments recommending that the                        provisions are not needed at this time to
                                                 that operators provide for ‘‘habitat                           Service expand the monitoring and                     better enable the Service to protect
                                                 creation, habitat restoration, land                            reporting requirements. For instance,                 Refuge resources and uses.
                                                 purchase, or other compensation’’ and                          some commenters recommended that                      Changes From the Proposed Rule
                                                 recommending that proposed                                     the Service decrease the reporting time
                                                 § 29.120(g) be eliminated from the                             from 90 days to 30 days and include                     After taking the public comments into
                                                 regulations as it amounts to an access                         explanations of what happened, why it                 consideration and after additional
                                                 fee that unreasonably and unlawfully                           happened, who was involved, the                       review, the Service made the following
                                                 restricts access to mineral rights.                            results, and how the company intends                  substantive changes in the rule:

                                                 § 29.40    .......................   Revised to clarify the scope of this rule as related to Alaska inholdings and waters within NWRS boundaries.
                                                 § 29.41    .......................   Revised to clarify that this rule does not apply to operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.42    .......................   Revised to remove provisions related to operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.43    .......................   Revised to clarify which provisions of the rule apply to existing operators with a Service-issued permit and to clarify re-
                                                                                       quirements in regards to plugging and reclamation.
                                                 § 29.44 .......................      Revised to clarify requirements for pre-existing operators in regard to plugging and reclamation. Also, replaced ‘‘oper-
                                                                                       ation’’ with ‘‘operator’’ to clarify that exemption from a permit requirement applies to a pre-existing operator, not the
                                                                                       operation.
                                                 § 29.50 .......................      Revised to: (1) clarify that access does not include aircrafts that both take off from and land on inholdings or non-Fed-
                                                                                       eral adjacent lands; (2) clarify that the term ‘‘area of operations’’ can include pre-existing, proposed, and approved
                                                                                       areas; (3) clarify that ‘‘modifying’’ applies to a changes in existing operations; (4) remove the definition of right-of-way
                                                                                       (ROW) permits as it was only applicable to operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.61 .......................      Revised to require additional information from pre-existing operators, including a brief description of the current oper-
                                                                                       ations and any anticipated changes to the current operations; and documentation of the current operating methods,
                                                                                       surface equipment, and materials produced or used.
                                                 § 29.62 .......................      Revised to clarify that the requirement to obtain an operations permit for a new operation or a modification will be lim-
                                                                                       ited to that new operation or modification, not the entire existing operation.
                                                 § 29.63    .......................   Revised to clarify that pre-existing operators must plug and reclaim their operations in compliance with this rule.
                                                 § 29.64    .......................   Revised to clarify which additional provisions of the rule would apply to the various classes of operations.
                                                 § 29.70    .......................   Removed language regarding operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.90    .......................   Removed language regarding operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.92    .......................   Revised to clarify that if an operator is using previously submitted information, they should reference it in the permit ap-
                                                                                       plication.
                                                 § 29.94 .......................      Revised to remove language regarding an unnecessary ROW form; also revised to clarify the Service’s authority to re-
                                                                                       quire an operator to collect certain natural and cultural resource information if necessary and other minor changes to
                                                                                       and deletions of unnecessary language for clarity.
                                                 § 29.101 .....................       Removed language regarding operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.111 .....................       Revised to remove ambiguous and repetitive language and be consistent with the NPS 9B regulations; also added para-
                                                                                       graph (h) related to operation setbacks from surface water locations previously found in the hydrological standards
                                                                                       section.
                                                 § 29.112 .....................       Revised to clarify our standards for protecting wildlife.
                                                 § 29.113(a) .................        Combined the provision related to operation setbacks from surface water locations with the general facility design and
                                                                                       management standard for setbacks from refuge structures or facilities in § 29.111(h).
                                                 § 29.117(d)(5) ............          Revised to clarify the objective of grading requirements during reclamation.
                                                 § 29.118 .....................       Deleted provisions related to geophysical operations in Alaska; and revised paragraph (d)(3) to clarify that an operator
                                                                                       must not leave a site in a condition that poses hazards to wildlife.
                                                 § 29.119(b)(5) ............          Revised to clarify that an operator must not leave a site in a condition that poses hazards to wildlife.
                                                 § 29.120(d) .................        Revised to clarify that any use of Federal water on the NWRS absent a demonstrated right must be approved by the
                                                                                       Service as the technologically feasible, least damaging method.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 § 29.120(e) .................        Moved to § 29.103(b)(3) to clarify that providing a statement under penalty of perjury that an operator is in compliance
                                                                                       with applicable State and Federal laws is part of the permit approval process.
                                                 § 29.120(g) .................        Revised to clarify that mitigation must be mutually agreed upon and that it may be required to offset impacts to refuge
                                                                                       resources or lost uses. Redesignated as § 29.120(f).
                                                 § 29.121(e) .................        Revised to clarify that an operator would need to provide the Service with information only to the extent necessary to
                                                                                       demonstrate compliance with a Service-issued permit.
                                                 § 29.140 .....................       Removed language regarding operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.141 .....................       Removed (c) as the Service does not currently have the authority to accept in-kind services to offset fees.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014        20:33 Nov 10, 2016     Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00021   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79968              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 § 29.151 .....................   Revised to clarify that operator is responsible for reclaiming any disturbances inside or outside of their area of operation
                                                                                   and that an operator is liable for the full cost of reclamation.
                                                 § 29.160 .....................   Revised to clarify that an operator will be given a chance to respond to the Service’s notice of a proposed modification
                                                                                   to their operations.
                                                 § 29.171 .....................   Revised to include the requirement that, when a pre-existing operator transfers operations, the new operator must ob-
                                                                                   tain an Operations Permit from the Service. Also revised to allow continuity of operations while they file the permit ap-
                                                                                   plication.
                                                 § 29.180 .....................   Revised to clarify that this section applies to any Service-issued permit (i.e., existing operators under a Service-issued
                                                                                   permit) not just an Operations Permit granted under this rule for new operations; and revised language from ‘‘continu-
                                                                                   ously inactive for a period of 1 year’’ to ‘‘has no measurable production quantities for 12 consecutive months’’ to pro-
                                                                                   vide further clarity on when an operator must plug a well.
                                                 § 29.190 .....................   Deleted provisions related to operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.190(e) .................    Revised to separate violations of Federal and State law into two different prohibited acts, (e) and (f), and to make word-
                                                                                   ing consistent with other Service regulations.
                                                 § 29.192 .....................   Revised to clarify that a violation will not affect your ability to get a permit for plugging and reclamation.
                                                 § 29.200 .....................   Revised to clarify that an operator must administratively appeal under § 25.45 before going to Federal court. Also, re-
                                                                                   vised to clarify that this process would be used to appeal all written decisions made under this subpart, not just those
                                                                                   made under a permit. Finally, removed language regarding operations in Alaska.
                                                 § 29.210(g) .................    Revised to clarify that for information provided under both § 29.210(d) and § 29.210(e), after reviewing an operator’s affi-
                                                                                   davit or a third party’s affidavit claiming exemption from public disclosure, the Service may find that information is not
                                                                                   exempt from public disclosure and make that information available 10 business days after providing notice.



                                                 Compliance With Other Laws,                                for public comment a regulatory                       investment, productivity, innovation, or
                                                 Executive Orders, and Department                           flexibility analysis that describes the               the ability of U.S.-based enterprises to
                                                 Policies                                                   effects of the rule on small entities (i.e.,          compete with foreign-based enterprises.
                                                                                                            small businesses, small organizations,                   These conclusions are based on the
                                                 Regulatory Planning and Review                                                                                   cost-benefit and regulatory flexibility
                                                                                                            and small government jurisdictions).
                                                 (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)                                                                               analysis found in the report entitled
                                                                                                            However, no regulatory flexibility
                                                   Executive Order 12866 provides that                      analysis is required if the head of the               Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking
                                                 the Office of Information and Regulatory                   agency certifies the rule will not have a             Economic Analysis, which can be
                                                 Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of                            significant economic impact on a                      viewed at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/
                                                 Management and Budget will review all                      substantial number of small entities.                 oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html, by
                                                 significant rules. OIRA has determined                     The SBREFA amended the RFA to                         clicking on the link entitled Non-
                                                 that this rule is significant, because it                  require Federal agencies to provide a                 Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking
                                                 may raise novel legal or policy issues                     statement of the factual basis for                    Economic Analysis or at
                                                 arising out of legal mandates, the                         certifying that the rule will not have a              www.regulations.gov in Docket No.
                                                 President’s priorities, or the principles                  significant economic impact on a                      FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–0086.
                                                 set forth in the executive order.                          substantial number of small entities.                 Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                   Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the                         We certify that this rule would not                (UMRA)
                                                 principles of Executive Order 12866                        have a significant economic effect on a
                                                                                                            substantial number of small entities                     This rule would not impose an
                                                 while calling for improvements in the
                                                                                                                                                                  unfunded mandate on State, local, or
                                                 nation’s regulatory system to promote                      under the RFA (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
                                                                                                                                                                  tribal governments or the private sector
                                                 predictability, to reduce uncertainty,                     This certification is based on the cost-
                                                                                                                                                                  of more than $100 million per year. The
                                                 and to use the best, most innovative,                      benefit and regulatory flexibility
                                                                                                                                                                  rule would not have a significant or
                                                 and least burdensome tools for                             analysis found in the report entitled
                                                                                                                                                                  unique effect on State, local, or tribal
                                                 achieving regulatory ends. The                             Non-Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking
                                                                                                                                                                  governments or the private sector. It
                                                 executive order directs agencies to                        Economic Analysis, which can be
                                                                                                                                                                  addresses use of refuge lands, and
                                                 consider regulatory approaches that                        viewed at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/
                                                                                                                                                                  would impose no requirements on other
                                                 reduce burdens and maintain flexibility                    oil-and-gas/rulemaking.html, by
                                                                                                                                                                  agencies or governments. A statement
                                                 and freedom of choice for the public                       clicking on the link entitled Non-
                                                                                                                                                                  containing the information required by
                                                 where these approaches are relevant,                       Federal Oil and Gas Rulemaking                        the UMRA (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not
                                                 feasible, and consistent with regulatory                   Economic Analysis or at                               required.
                                                 objectives. Executive Order 13563                          www.regulations.gov in Docket No.
                                                 emphasizes further that regulations                        FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–0086.                                Takings (Executive Order 12630)
                                                 must be based on the best available                                                                                 This rule is not intended to result in
                                                                                                            Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                                 science and that the rulemaking process                                                                          the taking of private property or
                                                                                                            Fairness Act (SBREFA)
                                                 must allow for public participation and                                                                          otherwise have takings implications
                                                 an open exchange of ideas. This rule is                       This rule is not a major rule under 5              under Executive Order 12630. The
                                                 consistent with these requirements.                        U.S.C. 804(2). This rule:                             provisions of this rule would afford
                                                                                                               (a) Would not have an annual effect                access to operators exercising non-
                                                 Regulatory Flexibility Act                                 on the economy of $100 million or                     Federal mineral rights under reasonable
                                                   Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act                     more;                                                 regulation. No other private property is
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 (RFA), as amended by the Small                                (b) Would not cause a major increase               affected. A takings implication
                                                 Business Regulatory Enforcement                            in costs or prices for consumers,                     assessment is not required.
                                                 Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), 5 U.S.C.                    individual industries, Federal, State, or
                                                 601 et seq., whenever an agency is                         local government agencies, or                         Federalism (Executive Order 13132)
                                                 required to publish a notice of                            geographic regions; and                                 Under the criteria in section 1 of
                                                 rulemaking for any proposed or final                          (c) Would not have significant adverse             Executive Order 13132, the rule does
                                                 rule, it must prepare and make available                   effects on competition, employment,                   not have sufficient Federalism


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014      20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00022   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       79969

                                                 implications to warrant the preparation                 our responses can be found in                         Change of Operator (§ 29.171)
                                                 of a federalism summary impact                          Information Requirements and Public
                                                 statement. It addresses use of refuge                   Access to Information in the Summary                     Section 29.171(a). When operations
                                                 lands, and would impose no                              of and Response to Public Comments                    conducted under § 29.44 are transferred,
                                                 requirements on other agencies or                       portion of the preamble. We made no                   the transferee must apply for an
                                                 governments. A federalism summary                       changes to the information collection                 operations permit and include the
                                                 impact statement is not required.                       portion of the rule based on these                    information requested in FWS Form 3–
                                                                                                         comments. However, we have made two                   2469 within 90 days of the transfer. The
                                                 Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order                                                                         new operator may continue operating,
                                                                                                         changes to the rule that impact
                                                 12988)                                                                                                        but must provide to the Service within
                                                                                                         information collection.
                                                    This rule complies with the                             The first change expands the                       30 calendar days from the date of the
                                                 requirements of Executive Order 12988.                  information an operator of pre-existing               transfer:
                                                 Specifically, this rule:                                wells is required to submit to the refuge                • Documentation demonstrating that
                                                    (a) Meets the criteria of section 3(a)               manager. In addition to requiring                     the operator holds the right to operate
                                                 requiring that all regulations be                       operators of pre-existing wells to submit             within the refuge.
                                                 reviewed to eliminate errors and                        right-to-operate documentation,                          • Names, phone numbers, and
                                                 ambiguity and be written to minimize                    company contact information, a plat of                addresses of the primary company
                                                 litigation; and                                         existing area of operations, and copies               representative, the representative
                                                    (b) Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2)            of plans and permits required by local,               responsible for field supervision, and
                                                 requiring that all regulations be written               State, and Federal agencies, operators                the representative responsible for
                                                 in clear language and contain clear legal               must also submit to the Service: A brief              emergency response.
                                                 standards.                                              description of the current operations                    Section 29.171(b). If operations
                                                 Consultation With Indian Tribes                         and any anticipated changes to the                    conducted under § 29.43 or an
                                                 (Executive Order 13175 and Department                   current operations; as well as                        operations permit are transferred, the
                                                 Policy)                                                 documentation of the current operating                transferee must provide the following
                                                                                                         methods, surface equipment, and                       within 30 days of commencing
                                                    The Department of the Interior strives               materials produced or used. These new
                                                 to strengthen its government-to-                                                                              operations:
                                                                                                         information collection requirements are,
                                                 government relationship with Indian                                                                              • Right-to-operate and contact
                                                                                                         as follows: Pre-existing Operations
                                                 tribes through a commitment to                                                                                information required under § 29.171(a).
                                                                                                         (§ 29.61). Within 90 days after the
                                                 consultation with Indian tribes and                     effective date of these regulations, or                  • Written agreement to conduct
                                                 recognition of their right to self-                     after a boundary change or                            operations in accordance with all terms
                                                 governance and tribal sovereignty. We                   establishment of a new refuge, pre-                   and conditions of the previous
                                                 have evaluated this rule under the                      existing operators without a Service-                 operator’s permit.
                                                 Department’s consultation policy and                    issued permit must submit:                               • Financial assurance that is
                                                 under the criteria in Executive Order                      • Documentation of the right to                    acceptable to the Service and made
                                                 13175 and have determined that it has                   operate within the refuge.                            payable to the Service.
                                                 no substantial direct effects on federally                 • Contact information (names, phone                   For further information on these
                                                 recognized Indian tribes, but we offered                numbers, and addresses) of the primary                changes, see the ‘‘Response to
                                                 consultation under the Department’s                     company representative; the                           Comments’’ section.
                                                 tribal consultation policy with all                     representative responsible for field
                                                 interested tribes. On January 25, 2016,                                                                          Below is a summary of the
                                                                                                         supervision; and the representative                   information collection associated with
                                                 during the public comment period, we                    responsible for emergency response.                   non-Federal oil and gas operations on
                                                 consulted with Doyon Limited, an                           • A brief description of the current
                                                 Alaska Native Corporation, at their                                                                           National Wildlife Refuge System lands.
                                                                                                         operations, and any anticipated changes
                                                 request.                                                                                                      Operators do not need to resubmit
                                                                                                         to the current operations.
                                                                                                            • Scaled map clearly delineating the               information that is already on file with
                                                 Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)                                                                         the Service, provided the information is
                                                                                                         existing area of operations.
                                                   This rule contains a collection of                       • Documentation of the current                     still current and accurate. Documents
                                                 information that we have submitted to                   operating methods, surface equipment,                 and materials submitted to other Federal
                                                 OMB for approval under the PRA (44                      materials produced or used, and                       and State agencies may be submitted, if
                                                 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). We may not                        monitoring methods.                                   they meet the specific requirements of
                                                 conduct or sponsor and you are not                         • Copies of all plans and permits                  the Service.
                                                 required to respond to a collection of                  required by local, State, and Federal                    OMB Control No: 1018–0162.
                                                 information unless it displays a                        agencies.                                                Title: Management of Non-Federal Oil
                                                 currently valid OMB control number.                        The second change to the final rule                and Gas Rights on National Wildlife
                                                   As part of our continuing efforts to                  that impacts information collection is                Refuge System Lands, 50 CFR part 29,
                                                 reduce paperwork and respondent                         that if an operator transfers their                   subpart D.
                                                 burdens, we invited the public and                      operations to another operator this                      Service Form Number(s): 3–2469.
                                                 other Federal agencies to comment on                    results in the loss of pre-existing status
                                                                                                                                                                  Description of Respondents:
                                                 any aspect of the reporting burden                      for that operation, and the new operator
                                                                                                                                                               Businesses that conduct oil and gas
                                                 associated with this information                        will need to obtain an Operations
                                                                                                                                                               exploration on national wildlife refuges.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 collection. While we received no                        Permit. As a result, this operator must
                                                 comments that were specific to the                      provide all applicable information                       Respondent’s Obligation: Required to
                                                 information collection portion of the                   required by this rule for obtaining an                obtain or retain a benefit.
                                                 rule, we did receive several comments                   Operations Permit. These new                             Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
                                                 that relate to the information collection               information collection requirements are                  Total Annual Nonhour Cost Burden:
                                                 portion of the rule. These comments and                 as follows:                                           None.




                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00023   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79970                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                                                                                                                                      Estimated          Completion                Estimated
                                                                                                                                                                                                      number of            time per
                                                                                                          Activity/requirement                                                                                                                    total annual
                                                                                                                                                                                                        annual            response               burden hours
                                                                                                                                                                                                      responses             (hours)

                                                 Preexisting Operations (§ 29.61) .................................................................................................                              40                      50              2,000
                                                 Temporary Access Permit Application (§ 29.71) .........................................................................                                         35                      17                595
                                                 Accessing Oil and Gas Rights from Non-Federal Surface Location (§ 29.80) ...........................                                                             5                       1                  5
                                                 Pre-application Meeting for Operations Permit (§ 29.91) ............................................................                                            45                       2                 90
                                                 Operations Permit Application (§§ 29.94–29.97) .........................................................................                                        45                     140              6,300
                                                 Financial Assurance (§§ 29.103(b), 29.150) ................................................................................                                     45                       1                 45
                                                 Identification of Wells and Related Facilities (§ 29.119(b)) .........................................................                                          45                       2                 90
                                                 Reporting (§ 29.121):
                                                     Third-Party Monitor Report (§ 29.121(b)) .............................................................................                                     300                       17             5,100
                                                     Notification—Injuries/Mortality to Fish and Wildlife and Threatened/Endangered Plants
                                                         (§ 29.121(c)) ......................................................................................................................                    20                        1                20
                                                     Notification—Accidents involving Serious Injuries/Death and Fires/Spills (§ 29.121(d)) .....                                                                20                        1                20
                                                     Written Report—Accidents Involving Serious Injuries/Deaths and Fires/Spills
                                                         (§ 29.121(d)) ......................................................................................................................                    20                       16               320
                                                     Report—Verify Compliance with Permits (§ 29.121(e)) .......................................................                                                240                        4               960
                                                     Notification—Chemical Disclosure of Hydraulic Fracturing Fluids uploaded to FracFocus
                                                         (§ 29.121(f)) .......................................................................................................................                    5                        1                 5
                                                     Permit Modifications (§ 29.160(a)) ........................................................................................                                 10                       16               160
                                                 Change of Operator:
                                                     Transferring Operator Notification (§ 29.170) .......................................................................                                       20                        8               160
                                                     Acquiring Operator’s Requirements for Wells Not Under a Service Permit (§ 29.171(a)) ...                                                                    19                       40               760
                                                     Acquiring Operator’s Acceptance of an Existing Permit (§ 29.171(b)) ................................                                                         1                        8                 8
                                                 Extension to Well Plugging (§ 29.181(a)):
                                                     Application for Permit ...........................................................................................................                          10                     140              1,400
                                                     Modification ...........................................................................................................................                     5                      16                 80
                                                 Public Information (§ 29.210):
                                                     Affidavit in Support of Claim of Confidentiality (§ 29.210(c) and (d)) ..................................                                                    1                        1                 1
                                                     Confidential Information (§ 29.210(e) and (f)) ......................................................................                                        1                        1                 1
                                                     Maintenance of Confidential Information (§ 29.210(h)) ........................................................                                               1                        1                 1
                                                     Generic Chemical Name Disclosure (§ 29.210(i)) ................................................................                                              1                        1                 1

                                                              Total ...............................................................................................................................             934   ........................          18,122



                                                 National Environmental Policy Act                                           substantive changes to the proposal.                                     Final Regulation Promulgation
                                                 (NEPA)                                                                      Elsewhere in today’s Federal Register is
                                                                                                                                                                                                        In consideration of the foregoing, the
                                                                                                                             a notice announcing the availability of
                                                    This rule constitutes a major Federal                                                                                                             Service amends 50 CFR parts 28 and 29
                                                                                                                             the record of decision.
                                                 action with the potential to significantly                                                                                                           as follows:
                                                 affect the quality of the human                                             Effects on the Energy Supply (Executive
                                                 environment. We have prepared the                                           Order 13211)                                                             PART 28—ENFORCEMENT, PENALTY,
                                                 final environmental impact statement                                                                                                                 AND PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS
                                                                                                                               This rule is not a significant energy
                                                 (FEIS) under the requirements of the                                                                                                                 FOR VIOLATIONS OF SUBCHAPTER C
                                                                                                                             action under the definition in Executive
                                                 NEPA of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).                                      Order 13211. A statement of Energy
                                                 The FEIS is available at http://                                                                                                                     ■ 1. The authority citation for part 28 is
                                                                                                                             Effects is not required.                                                 revised to read as follows:
                                                 www.fws.gov/refuges/oil-and-gas/
                                                 rulemaking.html, by clicking on the link                                    Drafting Information                                                       Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k,
                                                 entitled ‘‘Non-Federal Oil and Gas                                             This final rule reflects the collective                               664, 668dd, 685, 690d, 715i, 725; 43 U.S.C.
                                                 FEIS’’ and at www.regulations.gov at                                        efforts of Service staff in the NWRS,                                    315a.
                                                 Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2012–                                                Division of Natural Resource and                                         ■ 2. Revise the heading of part 28 to
                                                 0086.                                                                       Conservation Planning, Branch of                                         read as set forth above.
                                                    In addition, EPA published a notice                                      Wildlife Resources, refuges, and field
                                                                                                                             offices, with assistance from the                                        ■   3. Revise § 28.11 to read as follows:
                                                 announcing the final EIS, as required
                                                 under section 309 of the Clean Air Act                                      Department of the Interior, Office of the                                § 28.11    Purpose of regulations.
                                                 (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), on August 19,                                     Solicitor.
                                                                                                                                                                                                        The regulations in this part govern
                                                 2016, at 81 FR 55456. The EPA is                                            List of Subjects                                                         enforcement, penalty, and procedural
                                                 charged under section 309 of the Clean                                                                                                               requirements for violations of
                                                 Air Act to review all Federal agencies’                                     50 CFR Part 28
                                                                                                                                                                                                      subchapter C of this chapter.
                                                 environmental impact statements (EISs)                                        Law enforcement, Penalties, Wildlife
                                                 and to comment on the adequacy and                                          refuges.                                                                 PART 29—LAND USE MANAGEMENT
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 the acceptability of the environmental
                                                 impacts of proposed actions in the EISs.                                    50 CFR Part 29                                                           ■ 4. The authority citation for part 29 is
                                                 On February 9, 2016, the Service                                              Oil and gas exploration, Public                                        revised to read as follows:
                                                 received a ‘‘no objection’’ finding from                                    lands—mineral resources, Public                                            Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k,
                                                 the EPA that concluded that the draft                                       lands—rights-of-way, Reporting and                                       664, 668dd, 685, 690d, 715i, 725, 3161; 30
                                                 EIS did not identify any potential                                          recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife                                     U.S.C. 185; 31 U.S.C. 3711, 9701; 40 U.S.C.
                                                 environmental impacts requiring                                             refuges.                                                                 319; 43 U.S.C. 315a; 113 Stat. 1501A–140.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014         20:33 Nov 10, 2016          Jkt 214001       PO 00000       Frm 00024        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4700        E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM        14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          79971

                                                 Subpart C—Mineral Operations                            Definitions                                           29.114 What safety standards must I meet?
                                                                                                         29.50 What do the terms used in this                  29.115 What lighting and visual standards
                                                 ■   5. Revise § 29.32 to read as follows:                   subpart mean?                                         must I meet?
                                                                                                                                                               29.116 What noise reduction standards
                                                 § 29.32   Non-Federal mineral rights.                   Pre-Existing Operations                                   must I meet?
                                                                                                         29.60 Do I need an operations permit for my           29.117 What reclamation and protection
                                                    (a) Non-Federal mineral rights owners                                                                          standards must I meet?
                                                                                                             pre-existing operation?
                                                 within the National Wildlife Refuge                     29.61 What information must I provide to              29.118 What additional operating standards
                                                 System, not including coordination                          the Service?                                          apply to geophysical operations?
                                                 areas, must, to the greatest extent                     29.62 What if I intend to conduct new                 29.119 What additional operating standards
                                                 practicable, conduct all exploration,                       operations or modify my pre-existing                  apply to drilling and production
                                                 development, and production                                 operations?                                           operations?
                                                 operations in such a manner as to                       29.63 What plugging and reclamation                   General Terms and Conditions
                                                 prevent damage, erosion, pollution, or                      requirements apply to my pre-existing
                                                                                                             operations?                                       29.120 What terms and conditions apply to
                                                 contamination to Service-administered                                                                             all operators?
                                                                                                         29.64 What other provisions apply to my
                                                 lands, waters, facilities, and to wildlife                  operations?                                       29.121 What monitoring and reporting is
                                                 thereon. So far as is practicable, such                                                                           required for all operators?
                                                 operations must also be conducted                       Temporary Access Permits                              29.122 For how long is my operations
                                                 without interference to the operation of                29.70 When do I need a temporary access                   permit valid?
                                                 the refuge and disturbance to the                           permit?
                                                                                                                                                               Access Fees
                                                 wildlife thereon.                                       29.71 How do I apply for a temporary
                                                                                                             access permit?                                    29.140 May I cross Federal property to
                                                    (1) Physical occupancy must be kept                                                                            reach the boundary of my oil and gas
                                                                                                         29.72 When will the Service grant a
                                                 to the minimum space necessary to                           temporary access permit?                              right?
                                                 conduct efficient mineral operations.                   29.73 How much time will I have to                    29.141 Will the Service charge me a fee for
                                                    (2) Persons conducting mineral                           conduct my reconnaissance surveys?                    access?
                                                 operations on Service-administered                                                                            29.142 Will I be charged a fee for
                                                                                                         Accessing Oil and Gas Rights From a Non-                  emergency access to my operations?
                                                 lands and waters must comply with all                   Federal Surface Location
                                                 applicable Federal and State laws and                                                                         Financial Assurance
                                                                                                         29.80 Do I need a permit for accessing oil
                                                 regulations for the protection of wildlife                  and gas rights from a non-Federal                 29.150 When do I have to provide financial
                                                 and the administration of the area.                         location?                                             assurance to the Service?
                                                    (3) All waste and contaminating                                                                            29.151 How does the Service establish the
                                                 substances must be kept in the smallest                 Operations Permit: Application
                                                                                                                                                                   amount of financial assurance?
                                                 practicable area, confined so as to                     29.90 Who must apply for an operations                29.152 Will the Service adjust the amount
                                                 prevent escape as a result of rains and                     permit?                                               required for my financial assurance?
                                                 high water or otherwise, and removed                    29.91 What should I do before filing an               29.153 When will the Service release my
                                                                                                             application?                                          financial assurance?
                                                 from Service-administered lands and                     29.92 May I use previously submitted                  29.154 Under what circumstances will I
                                                 waters as quickly as practicable in such                    information?                                          forfeit my financial assurance?
                                                 a manner as to prevent contamination,                   29.93 Do I need to submit information for
                                                 pollution, damage, or injury to Service-                    all possible future operations?                   Modification to an Operation
                                                 administered lands, waters, or facilities,              29.94 What information must be included               29.160 Can I modify operations under an
                                                 or to wildlife thereon.                                     in all applications?                                  approved permit?
                                                    (4) Structures and equipment must be                 29.95 What additional information must be
                                                                                                             included if I am proposing geophysical            Change of Operator
                                                 removed when the need for them has
                                                                                                             exploration?                                      29.170 What are my responsibilities if I
                                                 ended, and, upon the cessation of                       29.96 What additional information must be                 transfer my right to operate?
                                                 operations, the habitat in the area of                      included if I am proposing drilling               29.171 What must I do if operations are
                                                 operations must be restored to the                          operations?                                           transferred to me?
                                                 extent possible to pre-operation                        29.97 What additional information must be
                                                 conditions.                                                 included if I am proposing production             Well Plugging
                                                    (b) Nothing in this section will be                      operations?                                       29.180 When must I plug my well?
                                                 applied so as to contravene or nullify                                                                        29.181 Can I get an extension to the well
                                                                                                         Operations Permit: Application Review and
                                                                                                                                                                   plugging requirement?
                                                 rights vested in holders of mineral                     Approval
                                                 interests on refuge lands.                              29.100 How will the Service process my                Prohibited Acts and Penalties
                                                 ■ 6. Add subpart D to read as set forth                     application?                                      29.190 What acts are prohibited under this
                                                 below:                                                  29.101 How will the Service conduct an                    subpart?
                                                                                                             initial review?                                   29.191 What enforcement actions can the
                                                 Subpart D—Management of Non-Federal Oil                 29.102 How will the Service conduct a                     Service take?
                                                 and Gas Rights                                              formal review?                                    29.192 How do violations affect my ability
                                                 Purpose and Scope                                       29.103 What standards must be met to                      to obtain a permit?
                                                                                                             approve my application?
                                                 Sec.                                                    29.104 What actions may the Service take              Appeals
                                                 29.40 What are the purpose and scope of                     on my operations permit application?              29.200 Can I, as operator, appeal Service
                                                      the regulations in this subpart?                                                                             decisions?
                                                 29.41 When does this subpart apply to me?               Operating Standards
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 29.42 What authorization do I need to                   29.110 What are the purposes of the                   Public Information
                                                      conduct operations?                                    Service’s operating standards?                    29.210 How can the public learn about oil
                                                 29.43 If I am already operating under                   29.111 What general facility design and                   and gas activities on refuge lands?
                                                      Service authorization, what do I need to               management standards must I meet?
                                                      do?                                                29.112 What fish and wildlife protection              Information Collection
                                                 29.44 If I am operating without prior                       standards must I meet?                            29.220 Has the Office of Management and
                                                      Service authorization, what do I need to           29.113 What hydrologic standards must I                   Budget approved the collection of
                                                      do?                                                    meet?                                                 information?



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00025   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79972            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 Subpart D—Management of Non-                            § 29.43 If I am already operating under               aircraft vehicles, that do not land on, or
                                                 Federal Oil and Gas Rights                              Service authorization, what do I need to do?          are not launched from, Service-
                                                                                                           If you already have a Service-issued                administered lands or waters.
                                                 Purpose and Scope                                       permit, you may continue to operate                      Area of operations means the area of
                                                 § 29.40 What are the purpose and scope of               according to the terms and conditions of              Service-administered lands or waters on
                                                 the regulations in this subpart?                        that approval, subject to the provisions              which operations are carried out,
                                                                                                         of this subpart. If you propose to                    including roads or other areas that you
                                                   (a) The purpose of this subpart is to                                                                       are authorized to use related to the
                                                                                                         conduct new operations, modify your
                                                 ensure that operators exercising non-                                                                         exercise of your oil and gas rights.
                                                                                                         existing operations, conduct well
                                                 Federal oil and gas rights within the                                                                            Contaminating substance means any
                                                                                                         plugging or reclamation operations, or
                                                 National Wildlife Refuge System                                                                               toxic or hazardous substance that is
                                                                                                         obtain an extension of the well plugging
                                                 (NWRS) outside of Alaska use                                                                                  used in or results from the conduct of
                                                                                                         requirement to maintain your well in
                                                 technologically feasible, least damaging                                                                      operations and is listed under the Clean
                                                                                                         shut-in status, you must either amend
                                                 methods to:                                                                                                   Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), Clean
                                                                                                         your current authorization or obtain an
                                                   (1) Protect Service-administered lands                operations permit in accordance with                  Water Act regulations at 40 CFR parts
                                                 and waters, and resources of refuges;                   §§ 29.90 through 29.97, Operations                    112 and 116, the Resource Conservation
                                                   (2) Protect refuge wildlife-dependent                 Permit: Application, and such new                     and Recovery Act regulations at 40 CFR
                                                 recreational uses and experiences and                   operations or modifications will be                   part 261, or the Hazardous Materials
                                                 visitor or employee health and safety;                  subject to the applicable provisions of               Transportation Act regulations at 49
                                                 and                                                     this subpart. Additionally, your existing             CFR part 172. This includes, but is not
                                                   (3) Conserve refuges for the benefit of               operations are subject to the following               limited to, explosives, radioactive
                                                 present and future generations of                       regulations:                                          materials, brine waters, formation
                                                 Americans.                                                (a) § 29.120(b) and (d)–(g) and                     waters, petroleum products, petroleum
                                                   (b) This subpart applies to all                       § 29.121(a) and (c)–(f);                              byproducts, and chemical compounds
                                                 operators conducting non-Federal oil                      (b) § 29.170(a);                                    used for drilling, production,
                                                 and gas operations outside of Alaska on                   (c) §§ 29.180 and 29.181;                           processing, well testing, well
                                                 Service-administered lands held in fee                    (d) § 29.190; and                                   completion, and well servicing.
                                                 or less-than fee (excluding coordination                  (e) § 29.200.                                          Gas means any fluid, either
                                                 areas) or Service-administered waters to                                                                      combustible or noncombustible, that is
                                                                                                         § 29.44 If I am operating without prior               produced in a natural state from the
                                                 the extent necessary to protect those                   Service authorization, what do I need to do?
                                                 property interests. These regulations do                                                                      earth and that maintains a gaseous or
                                                                                                           Any operator that has commenced                     rarefied state at ordinary temperature
                                                 not apply to non-Federal surface
                                                                                                         operations prior to December 14, 2016                 and pressure conditions.
                                                 locations within the boundaries of a
                                                                                                         in accordance with applicable local,                     Oil means any viscous combustible
                                                 refuge (i.e., inholdings), except to the
                                                                                                         State, and Federal laws and regulations               liquid hydrocarbon or solid
                                                 extent that activities associated with
                                                                                                         may continue without an operations                    hydrocarbon substance that occurs
                                                 those operations, including access to an
                                                                                                         permit. However, your operation is                    naturally in the earth and is easily
                                                 inholding, occur on Service-
                                                                                                         subject to the requirements of §§ 29.60               liquefiable on warming.
                                                 administered lands or waters.
                                                                                                         through 29.64, Pre-Existing Operations,                  Modifying means changing operations
                                                   (c) This subpart is not intended to
                                                                                                         and the requirements that when you                    in a manner that will result in
                                                 result in a taking of any property
                                                                                                         propose to conduct new operations,                    additional impacts on refuge resources,
                                                 interest. The purpose of this subpart is
                                                                                                         modify your pre-existing operations,                  visitor uses, refuge administration, or
                                                 to reasonably regulate operations to
                                                                                                         conduct well plugging and reclamation                 human health and safety beyond the
                                                 protect Service-administered lands and
                                                                                                         operations, or obtain an extension of the             scope, intensity, and/or duration of
                                                 waters, resources of refuges, visitor uses
                                                                                                         well plugging requirement to maintain                 existing impacts. In order to determine
                                                 and experiences, and visitor or
                                                                                                         your well in shut-in status, you must                 if activities would have additional
                                                 employee health and safety.
                                                                                                         obtain an operations permit in                        impacts, you must consult with the
                                                 § 29.41   When does this subpart apply to               accordance with §§ 29.90 through 29.97,               Service.
                                                 me?                                                     Operations Permit: Application, and all                  Operations means all existing and
                                                   This subpart applies to you if you are                applicable requirements of this subpart.              proposed functions, work, and activities
                                                 an operator who conducts or proposes                    Definitions                                           in connection with the exercise of oil or
                                                 to conduct non-Federal oil or gas                                                                             gas rights not owned by the United
                                                 operations on Service-administered                      § 29.50 What do the terms used in this                States and located on Service-
                                                 lands or waters outside of Alaska.                      subpart mean?                                         administered lands or waters.
                                                                                                            In addition to the definitions in                     (1) Operations include, but are not
                                                 § 29.42 What authorization do I need to                 §§ 25.12, 29.21, and 36.2 of this                     limited to: Access by any means to or
                                                 conduct operations?                                     subchapter, the following definitions                 from an area of operations; construction;
                                                   (a) You must demonstrate to the                       apply to this subpart:                                geological and geophysical exploration;
                                                 Service that you have the right to                         Access means any method of entering                drilling, well servicing, workover, or
                                                 operate in order to conduct operations                  or traversing on or across Service-                   recompletion; production; hydraulic
                                                 on Service-administered lands or                        administered lands or waters, including               fracturing, well simulation, and
                                                 waters.                                                 but not limited to: Vehicle, watercraft,              injection wells; gathering (including
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                   (b) Except as provided in §§ 29.43 or                 fixed-wing aircraft, helicopter,                      installation and maintenance of
                                                 29.44, before starting operations, you                  unmanned aerial vehicle, off-road                     flowlines and gathering lines); storage,
                                                 must obtain a temporary access permit                   vehicle, mobile heavy equipment,                      transport, or processing of petroleum
                                                 under §§ 29.70 through 29.73 for                        snowmobile, pack animal, and foot.                    products; earth moving; excavation;
                                                 reconnaissance surveys and/or an                        Access does not include the use of                    hauling; disposal; surveillance,
                                                 operations permit under §§ 29.90                        aircraft, including, but not limited to,              inspection, monitoring, or maintenance
                                                 through 29.97.                                          airplanes, helicopters, and unmanned                  of wells, facilities, and equipment;


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00026   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         79973

                                                 reclamation; road and pad building or                   an operator’s compliance, and who has                   (c) A brief description of your current
                                                 improvement; shot hole and well                         the relevant expertise to monitor                     operations, and any anticipated changes
                                                 plugging and abandonment, and                           operations for compliance with                        to current operations, including:
                                                 reclamation; and all other activities                   applicable laws, regulations, and permit                (1) A scaled map clearly delineating
                                                 incident to any of the foregoing.                       requirements.                                         your existing area of operations;
                                                    (2) Operations do not include                           Usable water means an aquifer or its                 (2) Documentation of the current
                                                 reconnaissance surveys as defined in                    portion that:                                         operating methods, surface equipment,
                                                 this subpart or oil and gas pipelines that                 (1)(i) Supplies any public water                   materials produced or used, and
                                                 are located within a refuge under                       system; or                                            monitoring methods; and
                                                 authority of a deeded or other right-of-                   (ii) Contains a sufficient quantity of               (3) Copies of all plans and permits
                                                 way.                                                    ground water to supply a public water                 required by local, State, and Federal
                                                    Operations permit means a permit                     system and either:                                    agencies, including a Spill Prevention
                                                 issued by the Service under this subpart                   (A) Currently supplies drinking water              Control and Countermeasure Plan if
                                                 authorizing an operator to conduct                      for human consumption; or                             required by Environmental Protection
                                                 operations on Service-administered                         (B) Contains fewer than 10,000 mg/l                Agency regulations at 40 CFR part 112.
                                                 lands or waters.                                        total dissolved solids; and
                                                    Operator means any person or entity,                                                                       § 29.62 What if I intend to conduct new
                                                                                                            (2) Is not an exempted aquifer.                    operations or modify my pre-existing
                                                 agent, assignee, designee, lessee, or                      Waste means any material that is                   operations?
                                                 representative thereof exercising or                    discarded. It includes, but is not limited
                                                 proposing to exercise non-Federal oil                                                                           (a) You must obtain an operations
                                                                                                         to: Drilling fluids and cuttings;                     permit before conducting operations
                                                 and gas rights on Service-administered                  produced fluids not under regulation as
                                                 lands or waters.                                                                                              that are begun after December 14, 2016
                                                                                                         a toxic or hazardous substance; human                 for those new operations in accordance
                                                    Reconnaissance survey means an                       waste; garbage; fuel drums; pipes; oil;
                                                 inspection or survey conducted by                                                                             with §§ 29.90 through 29.97, Operations
                                                                                                         refined oil and other hydrocarbons;                   Permit: Application, and all applicable
                                                 qualified specialists for the purpose of                contaminated soil; synthetic materials;
                                                 preparing a permit application. A                                                                             requirements of this subpart.
                                                                                                         manmade structures or equipment; or                     (b) You must obtain an operations
                                                 reconnaissance survey:                                  native and nonnative materials.
                                                    (1) Includes identification of the area                                                                    permit prior to modifying your pre-
                                                                                                            You means the operator, unless                     existing operations for that modification
                                                 of operations and collection of natural
                                                                                                         otherwise specified or indicated by the               in accordance with §§ 29.90 through
                                                 and cultural resource information
                                                                                                         context.                                              29.97, Operations Permit: Application,
                                                 within and adjacent to the proposed
                                                 area of operations.                                     Pre-Existing Operations                               and all applicable requirements of this
                                                    (2) Does not include surface                                                                               subpart.
                                                 disturbance activities except for                       § 29.60 Do I need an operations permit for
                                                                                                         my pre-existing operation?                            § 29.63 What plugging and reclamation
                                                 minimal disturbance necessary to                                                                              requirements apply to my pre-existing
                                                 perform cultural resource surveys,                        No. Pre-existing operations are those               operations?
                                                 natural resource surveys, and location                  conducted as of December 14, 2016                       Upon completion of your production
                                                 surveys required under this subpart.                    without an approved permit from the                   operation, you are subject to the
                                                    Right to operate means a deed, lease,                Service or prior to a boundary change or              reclamation standards in § 29.117(d).
                                                 memorandum of lease, designation of                     establishment of a new refuge. Your pre-              You must obtain an operations permit in
                                                 operator, assignment of right, or other                 existing operations may be continued                  accordance with §§ 29.90 through 29.97,
                                                 documentation demonstrating that you                    without an operations permit, but you                 Operations Permit: Application, and all
                                                 hold a legal right to conduct the                       are required to operate in accordance                 applicable requirements of this subpart,
                                                 operations you are proposing on                         with applicable local, State, and Federal             prior to plugging your well and
                                                 Service-administered lands or waters.                   laws and regulations, and are subject to              conducting site reclamation.
                                                    Service, we, us and our means the                    applicable provisions of this subpart,
                                                 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.                         including requirements for a permit                   § 29.64 What other provisions apply to my
                                                    Technologically feasible, least                      when you propose to conduct new                       operations?
                                                 damaging methods are those that we                      operations or to modify pre-existing                    Your pre-existing operations are also
                                                 determine, on a case-by-case basis, to be               operations.                                           subject to the following regulations in
                                                 most protective of refuge resources and                                                                       this part 29:
                                                 uses while ensuring human health and                    § 29.61 What information must I provide to              (a) § 29.120(b), (d), (f), and (g) and
                                                                                                         the Service?
                                                 safety, taking into consideration all                                                                         § 29.121(a) and (c)–(f);
                                                 relevant factors, including                                You must submit the following                        (b) § 29.170(a);
                                                 environmental, economic, and                            information to the Service where your                   (c) §§ 29.180 and 29.181;
                                                 technological factors and the                           pre-existing operation is occurring by                  (d) § 29.190; and
                                                 requirements of applicable law.                         February 13, 2017 or 90 days after a                    (e) § 29.200.
                                                    Temporary access permit means a                      boundary change or establishment of a
                                                                                                                                                               Temporary Access Permits
                                                 permit issued by the Service authorizing                new refuge:
                                                 an operator to access that operator’s                      (a) Documentation demonstrating that               § 29.70 When do I need a temporary
                                                 proposed area of operations to conduct                  you hold the right to operate on Service-             access permit?
                                                 reconnaissance surveys to collect basic                 administered lands or waters.                           You must apply to the Service and
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 information necessary to prepare an                        (b) The names, phone numbers, and                  obtain a temporary access permit to
                                                 operations permit application.                          addresses of your:                                    access your proposed area of operations
                                                    Third-party monitor means a qualified                   (1) Primary company representative;                in order to conduct reconnaissance
                                                 specialist, who is not an employee,                        (2) Representative responsible for                 surveys within a refuge. This permit
                                                 agent, or representative of the operator,               field supervision; and                                will describe the means, routes, timing,
                                                 nor has any conflicts of interest that                     (3) Representative responsible for                 and other terms and conditions of your
                                                 could preclude objectivity in monitoring                emergency response.                                   access determined by the Service to


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00027   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79974            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 result in only the minimum disturbance                  Accessing Oil and Gas Rights From a                   State agencies noting how the
                                                 necessary to perform surveys.                           Non-Federal Surface Location                          information meets the specific
                                                                                                                                                               requirements of §§ 29.93 through 29.97.
                                                 § 29.71 How do I apply for a temporary                  § 29.80 Do I need a permit for accessing
                                                 access permit?                                          oil and gas rights from a non-Federal                 § 29.93 Do I need to submit information for
                                                                                                         location?                                             all possible future operations?
                                                    You must submit the information
                                                                                                            No. Using directional drilling from a                No. You need only provide
                                                 requested in FWS Form 3–2469 (Oil and
                                                                                                         non-Federal surface location to reach                 information for those operations for
                                                 Gas Operations Special Use Permit                       your oil and gas rights within a refuge
                                                 Application) to the refuge in which you                                                                       which you are seeking immediate
                                                                                                         is exempt from these regulations.                     approval. Approval of activities beyond
                                                 propose to conduct operations.                          However, you are encouraged to provide
                                                 Information includes, but is not limited                                                                      the scope of your application may be
                                                                                                         the Service the names, phone numbers,                 subject to a new application and
                                                 to:                                                     and addresses of your primary company                 approval process.
                                                    (a) The name, legal address, and                     representative, representative
                                                 telephone number of the operator,                       responsible for field supervision, and                § 29.94 What information must be included
                                                 employee, agent, or contractor                          representative responsible for                        in all applications?
                                                 responsible for overall management of                   emergency response at least 60 calendar                  All applications must include the
                                                 the proposed operations;                                days prior to conducting your operation.              information requested on FWS Form 3–
                                                    (b) Documentation demonstrating that                 If you require access across Service-                 2469, including, but not limited to:
                                                 you hold the right to operate on Service-               administered lands or waters, that                       (a) The name, legal address, and
                                                 administered lands or waters;                           access is subject to applicable                       telephone number of the operator,
                                                                                                         provisions of this subpart, including                 employee, agent, or contractor
                                                    (c) The name, legal address, telephone                                                                     responsible for overall management of
                                                                                                         obtaining an operations permit for any
                                                 number, and qualifications of all                                                                             the proposed operations.
                                                                                                         new access or modification of existing
                                                 specialists responsible for conducting                                                                           (b) Documentation demonstrating that
                                                                                                         access.
                                                 the reconnaissance surveys (only                                                                              you hold the legal right to operate
                                                 required if the assistants/                             Operations Permit: Application                        within the refuge.
                                                 subcontractors/subpermittees will be                                                                             (c) A description of the natural
                                                                                                         § 29.90 Who must apply for an operations
                                                 operating on Service-administered lands                 permit?                                               features of your proposed area of
                                                 or waters without the permittee being                                                                         operations, such as: Streams, lakes,
                                                                                                           Except as otherwise provided in
                                                 present);                                                                                                     ponds, wetlands, estimated depths to
                                                                                                         §§ 29.43, 29.44, 29.70, and 29.80, if you
                                                    (d) A brief description of the intended              are proposing to conduct operations on                the top and bottom of zones of usable
                                                 operation so that we can determine                      Service-administered lands or waters                  water and topographic relief.
                                                 reconnaissance survey needs;                            outside of Alaska, you must submit an                    (d) The location of existing roads,
                                                    (e) A description of the survey                      application (FWS Form 3–2469) for an                  trails, railroad tracks, pipeline rights-of-
                                                 methods you intend to use to identify                   operations permit to the Service.                     way, pads, and other disturbed areas.
                                                 the natural and cultural resources;                                                                              (e) The location of existing structures
                                                                                                         § 29.91 What should I do before filing an             that your operations could affect,
                                                    (f) A map (to-scale and determined by                application?                                          including buildings, pipelines, oil and
                                                 us to be acceptable) delineating the                       You should participate in a pre-                   gas wells including both producing and
                                                 proposed reconnaissance survey area in                  application meeting with the Service to               plugged and abandoned wells, injection
                                                 relation to the refuge boundary and the                 allow for an early exchange of                        wells, freshwater wells, underground
                                                 proposed area of operations; and                        information between you and the                       and overhead electrical lines, and other
                                                    (g) A description of proposed means                  Service with the intent of avoiding                   utility lines.
                                                 of access and routes for conducting the                 delays in your application process.                      (f) Descriptions of the natural and
                                                 reconnaissance surveys.                                    (a) For the meeting, you should                    cultural resource conditions from your
                                                                                                         provide:                                              reconnaissance survey reports or other
                                                 § 29.72 When will the Service grant a                      (1) Documentation demonstrating that
                                                 temporary access permit?
                                                                                                                                                               sources collected for your proposed area
                                                                                                         you hold the legal right to operate on                of operations, including any baseline
                                                   Within 30 calendar days of receipt of                 Service-administered lands or waters;                 testing of soils and surface and near-
                                                 the application for a reconnaissance                    and                                                   surface ground waters within your area
                                                 survey, we will advise you whether the                     (2) An overview of your proposed                   of operations that reasonably may be
                                                 application fulfills the requirements of                operation and timing.                                 impacted by your surface operations.
                                                 §§ 29.70 through 29.71 and issue you a                     (b) The Service will provide guidance
                                                                                                                                                                  (g) Locations map(s) (to-scale and
                                                 temporary access permit or provide you                  on the permitting process and
                                                                                                                                                               determined by us to be acceptable) that
                                                 with a statement of additional                          information on available resource data,
                                                                                                                                                               clearly identifies:
                                                 information that is needed for us to                    and identify additional data needs.
                                                                                                                                                                  (1) Proposed area of operations,
                                                 conduct review of your application.                     § 29.92 May I use previously submitted                existing conditions, and proposed new
                                                                                                         information?                                          surface uses, including the boundaries
                                                 § 29.73 How much time will I have to
                                                                                                           Yes.                                                of each of your oil and gas tracts in
                                                 conduct my reconnaissance surveys?
                                                                                                           (a) You do not need to resubmit                     relation to your proposed operations
                                                    Your temporary access permit will be                 information that is already on file with              and the relevant refuge boundary.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 in effect for a maximum of 60 calendar                  the Service, provided that such                          (2) Proposed access routes of new
                                                 days from the date of issuance, unless                  information is still current and accurate.            surface disturbances as determined by a
                                                 a longer term is approved in the permit.                You should reference this information                 location survey.
                                                 We may extend the term of the permit                    in your oil and gas operations permit                    (3) Proposed location of all support
                                                 for a reasonable period of time, based                  application.                                          facilities, including those for
                                                 upon your written request that explains                   (b) You may submit documents and                    transportation (e.g., vehicle parking
                                                 why an extension is necessary.                          materials submitted to other Federal and              areas, helicopter pads, etc.), sanitation,


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00028   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        79975

                                                 occupation, staging areas, fuel storage                 order in which the individuals should                 and receiver locations as determined by
                                                 areas, refueling areas, loading docks,                  be contacted.                                         a locational survey, and including shot
                                                 water supplies, and disposal facilities.                   (2) The notification procedures and                point offset distances from wells,
                                                    (h) The method and diagrams,                         steps taken to minimize damage in the                 buildings, other infrastructure, cultural
                                                 including cross-sections, of any                        event of a spill, fire, or accident.                  resources, and environmentally
                                                 proposed pad construction, road                            (3) Identification of contaminating                sensitive areas;
                                                 construction, cut-and-fill areas, and                   substances used within your area of                      (b) The number of crews and numbers
                                                 surface maintenance, including erosion                  operations or expected to be                          of workers in each crew;
                                                 control.                                                encountered during operations.                           (c) A description of the acquisition
                                                    (i) The number and types of                             (4) Trajectory analysis for potential              methods, including the procedures and
                                                 equipment and vehicles, including an                    spills that are not contained on location.            specific equipment you will use, and
                                                 estimate of vehicular round trips                          (5) Identification of abnormal                     energy sources (e.g., explosives,
                                                 associated with your operation.                         pressure, temperature, toxic gases or                 vibroseis trucks);
                                                    (j) An estimated timetable for the                   substances, or other hazardous                           (d) A description of the methods of
                                                 proposed operations, including any                      conditions at your area of operations or              access along each survey line for
                                                 operational timing constraints.                         expected to be encountered during                     personnel, materials, and equipment;
                                                    (k) The type and extent of security                  operations.                                           and
                                                 measures proposed at your area of                          (6) Measures (e.g., procedures, facility
                                                                                                                                                                  (e) A list of all explosives, blasting
                                                 operations.                                             design, equipment) to minimize risks to
                                                                                                                                                               equipment, chemicals, and fuels you
                                                    (l) The power sources and their                      human health and safety, and the
                                                                                                                                                               will use in the proposed operations,
                                                 transmission systems for the proposed                   environment.
                                                                                                            (7) Steps to prevent accumulations of              including a description of proposed
                                                 operations.                                                                                                   disposal methods, transportation
                                                    (m) The types and quantities of all                  oil or other materials deemed to be fire
                                                                                                         hazards from occurring in the vicinity of             methods, safety measures, and storage
                                                 solid and liquid waste generated and the                                                                      facilities.
                                                 proposed methods of storage, handling,                  well locations and lease tanks.
                                                 and disposal.                                              (8) The equipment and methods for                  § 29.96 What additional information must
                                                    (n) The source, quantity, access route,              containment and cleanup of                            be included if I am proposing drilling
                                                 and transportation/conveyance method                    contaminating substances, including a                 operations?
                                                 for all water to be used in operations,                 description of the equipment available                  If you are proposing to drill a well,
                                                 including hydraulic fracturing, and                     at your area of operations and                        you must submit the information
                                                 estimations of any anticipated                          equipment available from local                        requested on FWS Form 3–2469,
                                                 wastewater volumes generated,                           contractors.                                          including, but not limited to:
                                                 including flowback fluids from                             (9) A stormwater drainage plan and                   (a) A description of the well pad
                                                 hydraulic fracturing, and the proposed                  actions intended to mitigate stormwater               construction, including dimensions and
                                                 methods of storage, handling, and                       runoff.                                               cross sections of cut-and-fill areas and
                                                 recycling or disposal.                                     (10) Material safety data sheets for               excavations for ditches, sumps, and
                                                    (o) The following information                        each material you will use or encounter               spill control equipment or structures,
                                                 regarding mitigation actions and                        during operations, including expected                 including lined areas;
                                                 alternatives considered:                                quantities maintained at your area of                   (b) A description of the drill rig and
                                                    (1) A description of the steps you                   operations.                                           equipment layout, including rig
                                                 propose to take to mitigate anticipated                    (11) A description of the emergency
                                                                                                                                                               components, fuel tanks, testing
                                                 adverse environmental impacts on                        actions you will take in the event of
                                                                                                                                                               equipment, support facilities, storage
                                                 refuge resources and uses, including,                   injury or death to fish and wildlife or
                                                                                                                                                               areas, and all other well-site equipment
                                                 but not limited to, the refuge’s land                   vegetation.
                                                                                                            (12) A description of the emergency                and facilities;
                                                 features, land uses, fish and wildlife,                                                                         (c) A description of the type and
                                                 vegetation, soils, surface and subsurface               actions you will take in the event of
                                                                                                         accidents causing human injury.                       characteristics of the proposed drilling
                                                 water resources, air quality, noise,                                                                          mud systems; and
                                                                                                            (13) Contingency plans for conditions
                                                 lightscapes, viewsheds, cultural                                                                                (d) A description of the equipment,
                                                                                                         and emergencies other than spills, such
                                                 resources, and economic environment.                                                                          materials, and methods of surface
                                                    (2) A description of any anticipated                 as if your area of operations is located
                                                                                                         in areas prone to hurricanes, flooding,               operations associated with your drilling,
                                                 impacts that you cannot mitigate.                                                                             well casing and cementing, well control,
                                                    (3) A description of alternatives                    tornadoes, fires, or earthquakes.
                                                                                                            (q) A description of the specific                  well evaluation and testing, well
                                                 considered that meet the criteria of                                                                          completion, hydraulic fracturing or
                                                                                                         equipment, materials, methods, and
                                                 technologically feasible, least damaging                                                                      other well stimulation, and well
                                                                                                         schedule that will be used to meet the
                                                 methods of operations, as well as the                                                                         plugging programs.
                                                                                                         operating standards for reclamation at
                                                 costs and environmental effects of such
                                                                                                         § 29.117.                                             § 29.97 What additional information must
                                                 alternatives.
                                                                                                            (r) An itemized list of the estimated              be included if I am proposing production
                                                    (p) You must submit the following
                                                                                                         costs that a third party would charge to              operations?
                                                 information about your spill control and
                                                                                                         complete reclamation.                                   If you are proposing to produce a
                                                 emergency preparedness plan. You may
                                                 use a spill prevention control and                      § 29.95 What additional information must              well, you must submit the information
                                                 countermeasure plan prepared under 40                   be included if I am proposing geophysical             requested on FWS Form 3–2469,
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 CFR part 112 if the plan includes all of                exploration?                                          including, but not limited to:
                                                 the information required by this section.                 If you propose to conduct geophysical                 (a) The dimensions and the to-scale
                                                 You must submit:                                        exploration, you must submit the                      layout of the well pad, clearly
                                                    (1) The names, addresses, and                        information requested on FWS Form 3–                  identifying well locations, noting partial
                                                 telephone numbers of the people whom                    2469, including, but not limited to:                  reclamation areas; gathering, separation,
                                                 the Service can contact in the event of                   (a) A map showing the positions of                  metering, and storage equipment;
                                                 a spill, fire, or accident, including the               each survey line including all source                 electrical lines; fences; spill control


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79976            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 equipment or structures, including lined                   (3) More time is necessary to complete             § 29.104 What actions may the Service
                                                 areas, artificial lift equipment, tank                  the review, in which case the Service                 take on my operations permit application?
                                                 batteries, treating and separating                      will provide the amount of additional                   (a) We will make a decision on your
                                                 vessels, secondary or enhanced recovery                 time reasonably needed along with a                   application within 180 days from the
                                                 facilities, water disposal facilities, gas              justification.                                        date we deem your application
                                                 compression and/or injection facilities;                   (b) If you submit additional                       complete unless:
                                                 metering points; sales point (if on lease);             information as requested under                          (1) We and you agree that such
                                                 tanker pickup points; gas compressor,                   paragraph (a)(2) of this section, and the             decision will occur within a shorter or
                                                 including size and type (if applicable);                Service determines that you have met                  longer period of time; or
                                                 and any other well site equipment.                      all applicable information requirements,                (2) We determine that an additional
                                                    (b) A general description of                         the Service will notify you within 30                 period of time is required to ensure that
                                                 anticipated stimulations, servicing, and                calendar days from receipt of the                     we have, in reviewing the permit
                                                 workovers.                                              additional information that either:                   application, complied with all
                                                    (c) A description of the procedures                     (1) Your application is complete, and              applicable legal requirements.
                                                 and equipment used to maintain well                     the Service will begin formal review; or                (b) We will notify you in writing that
                                                 control.                                                   (2) More time is necessary to complete
                                                                                                                                                               your permit application is:
                                                                                                         the initial review, in which case the
                                                    (d) A description of the method and                                                                          (1) Approved, with or without
                                                                                                         Service will provide the amount of
                                                 means used to transport produced oil                                                                          operating conditions; or
                                                                                                         additional time reasonably needed along
                                                 and gas, including vehicular transport;                                                                         (2) Denied, and provide justification
                                                                                                         with a justification.
                                                 flowline and gathering line construction                                                                      for the denial. Any such denial must be
                                                 and operation, pipe size, and operating                 § 29.102 How will the Service conduct a               consistent with § 29.40(c).
                                                 pressure; cathodic protection methods;                  formal review?
                                                 surface equipment use; surface                                                                                Operating Standards
                                                                                                           For those applications for which the
                                                 equipment location; maintenance                         Service determines that the applicant                 § 29.110 What are the purposes of the
                                                 procedures; maintenance schedules;                      holds a valid property right, the Service             Service’s operating standards?
                                                 pressure detection methods; and                         will conduct a formal review of your                     The purposes are to:
                                                 shutdown procedures.                                    application by:                                          (a) Protect Service-administered lands
                                                    (e) A road and well pad maintenance                    (a) Evaluating the potential impacts of             and waters, and refuge resources;
                                                 plan, including equipment and                           your proposal on Service-administered                 wildlife-dependent visitor uses and
                                                 materials to maintain the road surface                  lands and waters, or resources of                     experiences; and visitor and employee
                                                 and control erosion.                                    refuges; visitor uses or experiences; or              health and safety; and
                                                    (f) A vegetation management plan on                  visitor or employee health and safety in                 (b) Ensure use of technologically
                                                 well sites, roads, pipeline corridors, and              compliance with applicable Federal                    feasible, least damaging methods. The
                                                 other disturbed surface areas, including                laws; and                                             operating standards give us and the
                                                 control of noxious and invasive species.                  (b) Identifying any additional                      operator flexibility to consider using
                                                    (g) A stormwater management plan on                  operating conditions that would apply                 alternative methods, equipment,
                                                 the well site.                                          to your approved application.                         materials design, and conduct of
                                                    (h) A produced water storage and                                                                           operations.
                                                                                                         § 29.103 What standards must be met to
                                                 disposal plan.                                          approve my application?
                                                    (i) A description of the equipment,                                                                        § 29.111 What general facility design and
                                                                                                           (a) In order to approve your                        management standards must I meet?
                                                 materials, and procedures proposed for
                                                                                                         operations permit application, the
                                                 well plugging.                                                                                                   As a permittee, you must:
                                                                                                         Service must determine that your
                                                                                                                                                                  (a) Design, construct, operate, and
                                                 Operations Permit: Application Review                   operations will:
                                                                                                           (1) Use technologically feasible, least             maintain access to your operational site
                                                 and Approval                                                                                                  to cause the minimum amount of
                                                                                                         damaging methods; and
                                                 § 29.100 How will the Service process my                  (2) Meet all applicable operating                   surface disturbance needed to safely
                                                 application?                                            standards.                                            conduct operations and to avoid areas
                                                   We will conduct initial review of your                  (b) Before operations begin, you must               we have identified as containing
                                                 application to determine if all                         submit to the Service:                                sensitive resources.
                                                 information is complete. Once your                        (1) Financial assurance in the amount                  (b) Install and maintain secondary
                                                 information is complete, we will begin                  specified by the Service and in                       containment materials and structures for
                                                 formal review.                                          accordance with the requirements of                   all equipment and facilities using or
                                                                                                         §§ 29.150 through 29.154, Financial                   storing contaminating substances. The
                                                 § 29.101 How will the Service conduct an                Assurance;                                            containment system must be sufficiently
                                                 initial review?                                           (2) Proof of liability insurance with               impervious to prevent discharge and
                                                   (a) Within 30 calendar days of receipt                limits sufficient to cover injuries to                must have sufficient storage capacity to
                                                 of your application, the Service will                   persons or property caused by your                    contain, at a minimum, the largest
                                                 notify you in writing that one of the                   operations; and                                       potential spill incident.
                                                 following situations exists:                              (3) A statement under penalty of                       (c) Keep temporarily stored waste in
                                                   (1) Your application is complete, and                 perjury, signed by an official who is                 the smallest area feasible, and confine
                                                 the Service will begin formal review;                   authorized to legally bind the company,               the waste to prevent escape as a result
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                   (2) Your application does not meet the                stating that proposed operations are in               of percolation, rain, high water, or other
                                                 information requirements, in which case                 compliance with any applicable Federal                causes. You must regularly remove
                                                 we will identify the additional                         law or regulation or any applicable State             waste from the refuge and lawfully
                                                 information required to be submitted                    law or regulation related to non-Federal              dispose of the waste in a direct and
                                                 before the Service will be able to                      oil and gas operations and that all                   workable timeframe. You may not
                                                 conduct formal review of your                           information submitted to the Service is               establish a solid waste disposal site on
                                                 application; or                                         true and correct.                                     a refuge.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         79977

                                                    (d) Use engines that adhere to                       § 29.114    What safety standards must I              that are destroyed, obliterated, or
                                                 applicable Federal and State emission                   meet?                                                 damaged by your operations.
                                                 standards.                                                To ensure the safety of your                           (d) You must complete reclamation
                                                    (e) Construct, maintain, and use roads               operations, you must:                                 by:
                                                 in a manner to minimize fugitive dust                     (a) Maintain your area of operations in                (1) Plugging all wells;
                                                 emissions.                                              a manner that avoids or minimizes the                    (2) Removing all above-ground
                                                    (f) Design, operate, and maintain your               cause or spread of fire and does not                  structures, equipment, roads, and all
                                                 operations and equipment in a manner                    intensify fire originating outside your               other manmade material and debris
                                                 consistent with good air pollution                      operations area;                                      resulting from operations;
                                                 control practices so as to minimize                       (b) Maintain structures, facilities,                   (3) Removing or neutralizing any
                                                 emissions and leaks of air pollutants                   improvements, and equipment in a safe                 contaminating substances;
                                                 and hydrocarbons, including intentional                 and professional manner in order not to                  (4) Reestablishing native vegetative
                                                 releases or flaring of gases.                           create an unsafe environment for refuge               communities, or providing for
                                                    (g) Control the invasion of noxious                  resources, visitors, and employees, by                conditions where ecological processes
                                                 and invasive plant and animal species                   avoiding or minimizing exposure to                    typical of the ecological zone (e.g., plant
                                                 in your area of operations from the                     physical and chemical hazards; and                    or wildlife succession) will reestablish
                                                 beginning through final reclamation.                      (c) Provide site-security measures to               themselves;
                                                    (h) Avoid conducting ground-                                                                                  (5) Grading to conform the contours to
                                                                                                         protect visitors from hazardous
                                                 disturbing operations within 500 feet of                                                                      pre-existing elevations as necessary to
                                                                                                         conditions resulting from your
                                                 any surface water, including an                                                                               maximize ecological function;
                                                                                                         operations.                                              (6) Restoring conditions to pre-
                                                 intermittent or ephemeral watercourse,
                                                 or wetland, or any refuge structure or                  § 29.115 What lighting and visual                     disturbance hydrologic movement and
                                                 facility used by refuges for                            standards must I meet?                                functionality;
                                                 interpretation, public recreation, or                      (a) You must design, shield, and focus                (7) Restoring natural systems using
                                                 administration. We may increase or                      lighting to minimize the effects of spill             native soil material that is similar in
                                                 decrease this distance consistent with                  light on the night sky or adjacent areas;             character to the adjacent undisturbed
                                                 the need to protect Service-administered                and                                                   soil profiles;
                                                 structures or facilities, visitor uses or                                                                        (8) Ensuring that reclamation does not
                                                                                                            (b) You must reduce visual contrast in
                                                 experiences, or visitor or employee                                                                           interfere with visitor use or with
                                                                                                         the landscape in selecting the area of
                                                 health and safety; or to ensure that you                                                                      administration of the refuge;
                                                                                                         operations, avoiding unnecessary                         (9) Attaining conditions that are
                                                 have reasonable access to your non-                     disturbance, choosing appropriate
                                                 Federal oil and gas. Measurements for                                                                         consistent with the management
                                                                                                         colors and materials for roads and                    objectives of the refuge, designed to
                                                 purposes of this paragraph are by map                   permanent structures, and other means.
                                                 distance.                                                                                                     meet the purposes for which the refuge
                                                                                                         § 29.116 What noise reduction standards               was established; and
                                                 § 29.112 What fish and wildlife protection              must I meet?                                             (10) Coordinating with us or with
                                                 standards must I meet?
                                                                                                           You must prevent or minimize all                    other operators who may be using a
                                                   To protect fish and wildlife resources                noise that:                                           portion of your area of operations to
                                                 on the refuge, you must:                                  (a) Adversely affects refuge resources              ensure proper and equitable
                                                   (a) Along with your employees and                     or uses, taking into account frequency,               apportionment of reclamation
                                                 contractors, adhere to all refuge                       magnitude, or duration; or                            responsibilities.
                                                 regulations for the protection of fish,                   (b) Exceeds levels that have been
                                                 wildlife, and plants;                                                                                         § 29.118 What additional operating
                                                                                                         identified through monitoring as being                standards apply to geophysical operations?
                                                   (b) Ensure that you, your employees,
                                                                                                         acceptable to or appropriate for uses at                 If you conduct geophysical
                                                 and contractors have been informed and
                                                                                                         the sites being monitored.                            operations, you must do all of the
                                                 educated by the refuge staff on the
                                                 appropriate protection practices for                    § 29.117 What reclamation and protection              following:
                                                 wildlife conservation;                                  standards must I meet?                                   (a) Use surveying methods that
                                                   (c) Conduct operations in a manner                                                                          minimize the need for vegetative
                                                                                                           (a) You must promptly clean up and
                                                 that does not create an unsafe                                                                                trimming and removal.
                                                                                                         remove from the refuge any released                      (b) Locate source points using
                                                 environment for fish and wildlife by                    contaminating substances in accordance
                                                 avoiding or minimizing exposure to                                                                            industry-accepted minimum safe-offset
                                                                                                         with all applicable Federal, State, and               distances from pipelines, telephone
                                                 physical and chemical hazards; and                      local laws.
                                                   (d) Conduct operations in a manner                                                                          lines, railroad tracks, roads, power lines,
                                                                                                           (b) You must perform partial                        water wells, oil and gas wells, oil- and
                                                 that avoids or minimizes impacts to                     reclamation of areas that are no longer
                                                 sensitive wildlife, including timing and                                                                      gas-production facilities, and buildings.
                                                                                                         necessary to conduct operations. You                     (c) Use equipment and methods that,
                                                 location of operations.                                 must begin final reclamation within 6                 based upon the specific environment,
                                                 § 29.113   What hydrologic standards must I             months after you complete your                        will minimize impacts to Service-
                                                 meet?                                                   authorized operations unless we                       administered lands and waters, and
                                                   You must:                                             authorize a different reclamation period              resources of refuges; visitor uses and
                                                   (a) Construct facilities in a manner                  in writing.                                           experiences; and visitor and employee
                                                 that maintains hydrologic movement                        (c) You must protect all survey                     health and safety.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 and function.                                           markers (e.g., monuments, witness                        (d) If you use shot holes, you must:
                                                   (b) Not cause measurable degradation                  corners, reference monuments, and                        (1) Use biodegradable charges;
                                                 of surface water or groundwater beyond                  bearing trees) against destruction,                      (2) Plug all shot holes to prevent a
                                                 that of existing conditions.                            obliteration, or damage from operations.              pathway for migration for fluids along
                                                   (c) Conduct operations in a manner                    You are responsible for reestablishment,              any portion of the bore; and
                                                 that maintains natural processes of                     restoration, and referencing of any                      (3) Leave the site in a clean and safe
                                                 erosion and sedimentation.                              monuments, corners, and bearing trees                 condition that will not impede surface


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00031   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79978            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 reclamation or pose a hazard to wildlife                whether these terms and conditions are                compliance with the regulations in this
                                                 or human health and safety.                             expressly included in the permit:                     subpart.
                                                                                                            (a) You must comply with all                          (b) The Service may determine that
                                                 § 29.119 What additional operating                      applicable operating standards in
                                                 standards apply to drilling and production                                                                    third-party monitors are necessary to
                                                                                                         §§ 29.111 through 29.119; these                       ensure compliance with your operations
                                                 operations?
                                                                                                         operating standards will be incorporated              permit and to protect Service-
                                                    If you conduct drilling and                          in the terms and conditions of your
                                                 production operations, you must meet                                                                          administered lands and waters, or the
                                                                                                         operations permit. Violation of these                 resources of refuges, visitor uses and
                                                 all of the following standards:                         operating standards, unless otherwise
                                                    (a) To conduct drilling operations,                                                                        experiences, and visitor or employee
                                                                                                         provided in your operations permit, will              health and safety.
                                                 you must:                                               subject you to the Prohibited Acts and
                                                    (1) Use containerized mud circulation                                                                         (1) The Service’s determination will
                                                                                                         Penalties provisions of §§ 29.190
                                                 systems for operations;                                                                                       be based on the scope and complexity
                                                                                                         through 29.192.
                                                    (2) Not create or use earthen pits;                                                                        of the proposed operation, reports that
                                                                                                            (b) You are responsible for ensuring
                                                    (3) Take all necessary precautions to                                                                      you are required to submit under
                                                                                                         that all of your employees, agents,
                                                 keep your wells under control at all                                                                          paragraph (e) of this section, and
                                                                                                         contractors, and subcontractors comply
                                                 times, using only employees,                                                                                  whether the refuge has the staff and
                                                                                                         fully with the requirements of this
                                                 contractors, or subcontractors trained                                                                        technical ability to ensure compliance
                                                                                                         subpart.
                                                 and competent in well control                              (c) You may be required to reimburse               with the operations permit and any
                                                 procedures and equipment operation,                     the Service for the costs of processing               provision of this subpart.
                                                 and using industry-accepted well                        and administering temporary access                       (2) A third-party monitor will report
                                                 control equipment and practices; and                    permits and operations permits.                       directly to the Service at intervals
                                                    (4) Design, implement, and maintain                     (d) You may not use any surface water              determined by the Service. We will
                                                 integrated casing, cementing, drilling                  or groundwater from a source located on               make the information reported available
                                                 fluid, completion, stimulation, and                     a refuge unless you have demonstrated                 to you upon your request.
                                                 blowout prevention programs to prevent                  a right to use that water or the use has
                                                 escape of fluids to the surface and to                                                                           (3) You will be responsible for the
                                                                                                         been approved by the Service as the                   cost of the third-party monitor.
                                                 isolate and protect usable water zones                  technologically feasible, least damaging
                                                 throughout the life of the well, taking                 method.                                                  (c) You must notify the Service within
                                                 into account all relevant geologic and                     (e) You agree to indemnify and hold                24 hours of any injuries to or mortality
                                                 engineering factors.                                    harmless the United States and its                    of fish, wildlife, or endangered or
                                                    (b) To conduct production operations,                officers and employees from and against               threatened plants resulting from your
                                                 in addition to meeting the standards of                 any and all liability of any kind                     operations.
                                                 paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this                whatsoever arising out of or resulting                   (d) You must notify the Service of any
                                                 section, you must do all of the                         from the acts or omissions of you and                 accidents involving serious personal
                                                 following:                                              your employees, agents, representatives,              injury or death and of any fires or spills
                                                    (1) Monitor producing conditions for
                                                                                                         contractors, and subcontractors in the                on the site immediately after the
                                                 early indications that could lead to loss
                                                                                                         conduct of activities under a Service-                accident occurs. You must submit a full
                                                 of mechanical integrity of producing
                                                                                                         issued permit.                                        written report on the accident to the
                                                 equipment.                                                 (f) You will be required to take all               Service within 90 days after the
                                                    (2) Maintain all surface equipment
                                                                                                         reasonable precautions to avoid,                      accident occurs.
                                                 and the wellhead to prevent leaks or
                                                                                                         minimize, rectify, or reduce the overall                 (e) Upon our request, you must
                                                 releases of any fluids or air pollutants.
                                                                                                         impacts of your proposed oil and gas                  submit reports or other information
                                                    (3) Identify wells and related facilities
                                                                                                         activities to the refuge. You may be                  necessary to verify compliance with
                                                 with appropriate signage. Signs must
                                                                                                         required to mitigate for impacts to                   your permit or with any provision of
                                                 remain in place until the well is plugged
                                                                                                         refuge resources and lost uses. Mutually              this subpart. To fulfill this request, you
                                                 and abandoned and the related facilities
                                                                                                         agreed to mitigation tools for this                   may submit to us reports that you have
                                                 are removed. Signs must be of durable
                                                                                                         purpose may include providing                         submitted to the State under State
                                                 construction, and the lettering must be
                                                                                                         alternative habitat creation or                       regulations, or that you have submitted
                                                 legible and large enough to be read
                                                                                                         restoration, land purchase, or other                  to any other Federal agency to the extent
                                                 under normal conditions at a distance of
                                                                                                         resource compensation.                                they are sufficient to verify compliance
                                                 at least 50 feet. Each sign must show the                  (g) You are responsible for
                                                 name of the well, name of the operator,                                                                       with permits or this subpart.
                                                                                                         unanticipated and unauthorized
                                                 and the emergency contact phone                         damages as a direct or indirect result of                (f) If your operations include
                                                 number.                                                 your operations. You will be responsible              hydraulic fracturing, you must provide
                                                    (4) Remove all equipment and                                                                               the Service with a report including the
                                                                                                         for the actions and consequences of
                                                 materials when not needed for the                                                                             true vertical depth of the well, total
                                                                                                         your employees and subcontractors.
                                                 current phase of your operation.                                                                              water volume used, and a description of
                                                                                                         You will also be responsible for any
                                                    (5) Plug all wells, leaving the surface                                                                    the base fluid and each additive in the
                                                                                                         reclamation of damages to refuge
                                                 in a clean and safe condition that will                                                                       hydraulic fracturing fluid, including the
                                                                                                         resources directly or indirectly caused
                                                 not impede surface reclamation or pose                                                                        trade name, supplier, purpose,
                                                                                                         by your operations through the
                                                 a hazard to wildlife or human health                                                                          ingredients, Chemical Abstract Service
                                                                                                         occurrence of severe weather, fire,
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 and safety, in accordance with § 29.117.                                                                      Number (CAS), maximum ingredient
                                                                                                         earthquakes, or the like thereof.
                                                 General Terms and Conditions                                                                                  concentration in additive (percent by
                                                                                                         § 29.121 What monitoring and reporting is             mass), and maximum ingredient
                                                 § 29.120 What terms and conditions apply                required for all operators?                           concentration in hydraulic fracturing
                                                 to all operators?                                          (a) The Service may access your area               fluid (percent by mass). The report must
                                                   The following terms and conditions                    of operations at any time to monitor the              be either submitted through FracFocus
                                                 apply to all operators, regardless of                   effects of your operations to ensure                  or another Service-designated database.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00032   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          79979

                                                 § 29.122 For how long is my operations                  required by any other Federal or State                   (1) Prohibit you from removing all
                                                 permit valid?                                           regulatory authority.                                 structures, equipment, or other
                                                   Operations permits remain valid for                                                                         materials from your area of operations;
                                                                                                         § 29.151 How does the Service establish                  (2) Require you to secure the
                                                 the duration of the operation. Provisions
                                                                                                         the amount of financial assurance?
                                                 of § 29.160 apply.                                                                                            operations site and take any necessary
                                                                                                            (a) You are responsible for completing             actions to protect Service-administered
                                                 Access Fees                                             reclamation of your disturbances,                     lands and waters, and resources of the
                                                 § 29.140 May I cross Federal property to                whether within or outside your permit                 refuge; visitor uses; and visitor or
                                                 reach the boundary of my oil and gas right?             area, in accordance with this subpart                 employee health and safety; and
                                                    The Service may grant you the                        and the terms of your permit. If you fail                (3) Suspend review of any permit
                                                 privilege of access on, across, or through              to properly complete reclamation, you                 applications you have submitted until
                                                 Service-administered lands or waters to                 will be liable for the full costs of                  we determine that all violations of
                                                 reach the boundary of your oil and gas                  completing the reclamation. We will                   permit provisions or of any provision of
                                                 right. You should contact the Service to                base the financial assurance amount                   this subpart are resolved.
                                                 determine if additional permits are                     upon the estimated cost that a third-                    (4) Seek recovery as provided in
                                                 necessary for access.                                   party contractor would charge to                      § 29.151 for all costs of reclamation in
                                                                                                         complete reclamation in accordance                    excess of the posted financial assurance.
                                                 § 29.141 Will the Service charge me a fee               with this subpart. If the cost of
                                                 for access?                                             reclamation exceeds the amount of your                Modification to an Operation
                                                    (a) The Service will charge you a fee                financial assurance, you will remain                  § 29.160 Can I modify operations under an
                                                 if you require use of Service-                          liable for all costs of reclamation in                approved permit?
                                                 administered lands or waters outside                    excess of the financial assurance.                       The Service may amend an approved
                                                 the boundary or scope of your oil and                      (b) The Service will reduce the                    temporary access permit or an
                                                 gas right:                                              required amount of your financial                     operations permit to adjust to changed
                                                    (1) If you require new use of Service-               assurance during the pendency of                      conditions or to address unanticipated
                                                 administered lands or waters, we will                   operations by the amount we determine                 conditions, either upon our own action
                                                 charge you a fee based on the fair                      is represented by in-kind reclamation                 or at your request.
                                                 market value of that use.                               you complete during your operations.                     (a) To request a modification to your
                                                    (2) Fees under this section will not be                                                                    operation, you must provide, in writing,
                                                                                                         § 29.152 Will the Service adjust the
                                                 charged for access within the scope of                                                                        to the Service, your assigned permit
                                                                                                         amount required for my financial
                                                 your oil and gas right or access to your                assurance?                                            number, a description of the proposed
                                                 right that is otherwise provided for by                                                                       modification, and an explanation of
                                                 law.                                                      The Service may require, or you may                 why the modification is needed. We
                                                    (b) If access to your oil and gas right              request, an adjustment to the financial               will review your request for
                                                 is across an existing refuge road, we                   assurance amount because of any                       modification under the approval
                                                 may charge a fee according to a posted                  circumstances that increase or decrease               standards at §§ 29.72 or 29.103. You
                                                 fee schedule.                                           the estimated costs established under                 may not implement any modification
                                                                                                         § 29.151.                                             until you have received the Service’s
                                                 § 29.142 Will I be charged a fee for                                                                          written approval.
                                                 emergency access to my operations?                      § 29.153 When will the Service release my
                                                                                                         financial assurance?                                     (b) If the Service needs to amend your
                                                    No.                                                                                                        temporary access permit or operations
                                                    (a) The Service will not charge a fee                   (a) Your responsibility under the                  permit, you will receive a written notice
                                                 for access across Service-administered                  financial assurance will continue until               that:
                                                 lands or waters beyond the scope of                     either:                                                  (1) Describes the modification
                                                 your oil and gas right as necessary to                     (1) The Service determines that you                required and justification;
                                                 respond to an emergency situation at                    have met all applicable reclamation                      (2) Specifies the time within which
                                                 your area of operations if we determine                 operating standards and any additional                you must notify the Service that you
                                                 after the fact that the circumstances                   reclamation requirements that may be                  either accept the modifications to your
                                                 required an immediate response to                       included in your operations permit; or                permit or explain any concerns you may
                                                 either:                                                    (2) A new operator assumes your                    have; and
                                                    (1) Prevent or minimize injury to                    operations, as provided in § 29.170(b).                  (3) Absent any concerns, specifies the
                                                 refuge resources; or                                       (b) You will be notified by the Service            time within which you must incorporate
                                                    (2) Ensure public health and safety.                 within 30 calendar days of our                        the modification into your operations.
                                                    (b) You will remain liable for any                   determination that your financial
                                                 damage caused to refuge resources as a                                                                        Change of Operator
                                                                                                         assurance has been released.
                                                 result of such emergency access.                                                                              § 29.170 What are my responsibilities if I
                                                                                                         § 29.154 Under what circumstances will I              transfer my right to operate?
                                                 Financial Assurance                                     forfeit my financial assurance?
                                                                                                                                                                  (a) If your operations are being
                                                 § 29.150 When do I have to provide                         (a) You may forfeit all or part of your            conducted under § 29.44, you must
                                                 financial assurance to the Service?                     financial assurance if we cannot secure               notify the Service in writing within 30
                                                    You will need to provide financial                   your compliance with the provisions of                calendar days from the date the new
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 assurance as a condition of approval for                your operations permit or a provision of              operator acquires the rights to conduct
                                                 your operations permit when you                         this subpart. The part of your financial              operations. Your written notification
                                                 submit your application. You must file                  assurance forfeited is based on costs to              must include:
                                                 financial assurance with us in a form                   the Service to remedy your                               (1) The names and addresses of the
                                                 acceptable to the Service and payable                   noncompliance.                                        person or entity conveying the right and
                                                 upon demand. This financial assurance                      (b) In addition to forfeited financial             of the person or entity acquiring the
                                                 is in addition to any financial assurance               assurance, we may temporarily:                        right;


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00033   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                 79980            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                    (2) The effective date of transfer;                     (ii) Representative responsible for                Prohibited Acts and Penalties
                                                    (3) The description of the rights,                   field supervision; and
                                                 assets, and liabilities being transferred                                                                     § 29.190 What acts are prohibited under
                                                                                                            (iii) Representative responsible for               this subpart?
                                                 and which ones, if any, are being                       emergency response.
                                                 reserved by the previous operator; and                                                                          The following acts are prohibited:
                                                                                                            (3) Agree in writing to conduct
                                                    (4) A written acknowledgement from                                                                           (a) Operating in violation of the terms
                                                                                                         operations in accordance with all terms
                                                 the new operator that the contents of the                                                                     or conditions of a temporary access
                                                                                                         and conditions of the previous
                                                 notification are true and correct.                                                                            permit, an operations permit, a permit
                                                                                                         operator’s permit.
                                                    (b) If your operations are being                                                                           under § 29.43, or any applicable
                                                                                                            (4) File financial assurance with us               provision of this subpart, including
                                                 conducted under § 29.43 or an                           that is acceptable to the Service and
                                                 operations permit:                                                                                            §§ 29.60–29.64 for pre-existing
                                                                                                         made payable to the Service.                          operations.
                                                    (1) You must provide notice under                       (5) Receive written approval from the
                                                 paragraph (a) of this section.                                                                                  (b) Damaging Service-administered
                                                                                                         Service for the transfer of the                       lands or waters, or resources of a refuge,
                                                    (2) You remain responsible for
                                                                                                         operation’s permit.                                   as a result of failure to comply with the
                                                 compliance with your operations
                                                                                                            (c) You may modify operations                      terms or conditions of a temporary
                                                 permit, and we will retain your
                                                                                                         transferred to you in accordance with                 access permit, an operations permit,
                                                 financial assurance until the new
                                                                                                         § 29.160.                                             operations being conducted under
                                                 operator:
                                                    (i) Adopts and agrees in writing to                  Well Plugging                                         §§ 29.43 or 29.44, or any provision of
                                                 conduct operations in accordance with                                                                         this subpart.
                                                 all terms and conditions of your                        § 29.180    When must I plug my well?                   (c) Conducting operations without a
                                                 operations permit;                                        Except as provided in § 29.181, you                 temporary access permit or an
                                                    (ii) Provides financial assurance with               must plug your well, in accordance with               operations permit, unless conducting
                                                 us that is acceptable to the Service and                the standards and procedures outlined                 operations under §§ 29.43 or 29.44.
                                                 made payable to the Service; and                        in this subpart, when any of the                        (d) Failure to comply with any
                                                    (iii) Receives written notification from             following occurs:                                     suspension or revocation order issued
                                                 the Service that transfer of the                          (a) Your drilling operations have                   under this subpart.
                                                 operations permit has been approved.                    ended and you have taken no further                     (e) Failure to comply with the
                                                                                                         action on your well within 60 calendar                applicable provisions of Federal law or
                                                 § 29.171 What must I do if operations are                                                                     regulation including this subchapter.
                                                 transferred to me?
                                                                                                         days;
                                                                                                           (b) Your well, which has been                         (f) Failure to comply with the
                                                    (a) If another operator transfers                                                                          applicable provisions of the laws and
                                                                                                         completed for production operations,
                                                 operations conducted under § 29.44, as                                                                        regulations of the State wherein any
                                                                                                         has no measurable production
                                                 the transferee you may continue                                                                               operation is located unless further
                                                                                                         quantities for 12 consecutive months; or
                                                 operating under the requirements of that                                                                      restricted by Federal law or regulation
                                                 section, but:                                             (c) The period approved in your
                                                                                                         permit to maintain your well in shut-in               including this subchapter.
                                                    (1) Within 30 calendar days from the
                                                 date of the transfer, you must provide to               status has expired.                                   § 29.191 What enforcement actions can
                                                 the Service:                                                                                                  the Service take?
                                                                                                         § 29.181 Can I get an extension to the well
                                                    (i) Documentation demonstrating that                 plugging requirement?                                   If you engage in a prohibited act:
                                                 you hold the right to operate; and                                                                              (a) The Service may suspend and/or
                                                                                                           (a) You may apply for either an
                                                    (ii) The names, phone numbers, and                                                                         revoke your approved operations permit
                                                                                                         operations permit or a modification to
                                                 addresses of your:                                                                                            and your authorization for operations as
                                                                                                         your approved operations permit to
                                                    (A) Primary company representative;                                                                        set forth at § 29.43 and § 29.44; and/or
                                                                                                         maintain your well in a shut-in status
                                                    (B) Representative responsible for                                                                           (b) All prohibited acts are subject to
                                                                                                         for up to 5 years. Provide the
                                                 field supervision; and                                                                                        the penalty provisions set forth at
                                                                                                         information requested on FWS Form 3–
                                                    (C) Representative responsible for                                                                         § 28.31 of this subchapter.
                                                                                                         2469, including, but not limited to:
                                                 emergency response.
                                                    (2) Within 90 days, or as otherwise                    (1) An explanation of why the well is               § 29.192 How do violations affect my
                                                 agreed to by the Service, submit an                     shut-in or temporarily abandoned and                  ability to obtain a permit?
                                                 operations permit application in                        your future plans for utilization;                      Until you comply with the regulations
                                                 compliance with §§ 29.90–29.97,                           (2) A demonstration of the mechanical               in this subpart, we will not consider a
                                                 Operations Permit: Application, that                    integrity of the well; and                            request to conduct any new operations,
                                                 must be approved in compliance with                       (3) A description of the manner in                  except plugging and reclamation
                                                 applicable provisions of this subpart                   which your well, equipment, and area of               operations, on Service-administered
                                                 and under the timelines outlined in                     operations will be maintained in                      lands or waters.
                                                 §§ 29.100–29.103, Operations Permit:                    accordance with the standards in the
                                                                                                                                                               Appeals
                                                 Application Review and Approval.                        subpart.
                                                    (b) If another operator transfers                      (b) Based on the information provided               § 29.200 Can I, as operator, appeal Service
                                                 operations conducted under § 29.43 or                   under this section, we may approve                    decisions?
                                                 an operations permit, you must within                   your application to maintain your well                  Yes. If you disagree with a decision
                                                 30 days of commencing transferred                       in shut-in status for a period up to 5                made by the Service under this subpart,
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                                 operations:                                             years. We may condition an extension                  you may use the appeals process in
                                                    (1) Provide documentation                            on an adjustment of your financial                    § 25.45 of this subchapter. The process
                                                 demonstrating that you hold the right to                assurance.                                            set forth in § 25.45 will be used for
                                                 operate.                                                  (c) You may apply for additional                    appeal of any written decision
                                                    (2) Provide the names, phone                         extensions by submitting a new                        concerning approval, denial, or
                                                 numbers, and addresses of your:                         application under paragraph (a) of this               modification of an operation made by
                                                    (i) Primary company representative;                  section.                                              the Service under this subpart. No


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00034   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4


                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                             79981

                                                 Service decision under this subpart that                information if it were in the Service’s               until the later of the Service’s release of
                                                 is subject to appeal to the Regional                    possession;                                           the operator’s financial assurance or 7
                                                 Director or the Director shall be                          (3) Affirms that the operator has been             years after completion of operations on
                                                 considered final agency action subject to               provided the withheld information from                refuge lands. Any subsequent operator
                                                 judicial review under 5 U.S.C. 704 until                the owner of the information and is                   will be responsible for maintaining
                                                 the Regional Director has rendered his                  maintaining records of the withheld                   access to records required by this
                                                 or her decision on the matter. The                      information, or that the operator has                 paragraph during its operation of the
                                                 decision of the Regional Director will                  access and will maintain access to the                well. The operator will be deemed to be
                                                 constitute the Service’s final agency                   withheld information held by the owner                maintaining the records if it can
                                                 action, and no further appeal will lie in               of the information;                                   promptly provide the complete and
                                                 the Department from that decision.                         (4) Affirms that the information is not            accurate information to the Service,
                                                                                                         publicly available;                                   even if the information is in the custody
                                                 Public Information                                         (5) Affirms that the information is not            of its owner.
                                                 § 29.210 How can the public learn about oil             required to be publicly disclosed under
                                                 and gas activities on refuge lands?                     any applicable local, State, tribal, or                 (i) If any of the chemical identity
                                                                                                         Federal law;                                          information required in this subpart is
                                                    (a) Interested parties may view
                                                                                                            (6) Affirms that the owner of the                  withheld, the operator must provide the
                                                 publicly available documents at the
                                                                                                         information is in actual competition and              generic chemical name in the
                                                 refuge’s office during normal business
                                                                                                         identifies competitors or others that                 submission required. The generic
                                                 hours or by other means prescribed by
                                                                                                         could use the withheld information to                 chemical name must be only as
                                                 the refuge. The availability for public
                                                 inspection of information about the                     cause the owner of the information                    nonspecific as is necessary to protect
                                                 nature, location, character, or ownership               substantial competitive harm;                         the confidential chemical identity, and
                                                 of refuge resources will conform to all                    (7) Affirms that the release of the                should be the same as or no less
                                                 applicable laws and implementing                        information would likely cause                        descriptive than the generic chemical
                                                 regulations, standards, and guidelines.                 substantial competitive harm to the                   name provided to the Environmental
                                                    (b) The refuge will make available for               owner of the information and provides                 Protection Agency.
                                                 public inspection any documents that                    the factual basis for that affirmation; and
                                                                                                            (8) Affirms that the information is not            Information Collection
                                                 an operator submits to the Service under
                                                 this subpart except those that the                      readily apparent through reverse                      § 29.220 Has the Office of Management
                                                 operator has identified as proprietary or               engineering with publicly available                   and Budget approved the collection of
                                                 confidential.                                           information.                                          information?
                                                    (c) For the information required in                     (e) If the operator relies upon
                                                                                                         information from third parties, such as                 The Office of Management and Budget
                                                 § 29.121(f), the operator and the owner
                                                                                                         the owner of the withheld information,                reviewed and approved the information
                                                 of the information will be deemed to
                                                                                                         to make the affirmations in paragraphs                collection requirements contained in
                                                 have waived any right to protect from
                                                                                                         (d)(6) through (d)(8) of this section, the            this subpart and assigned OMB Control
                                                 public disclosure information submitted
                                                 through FracFocus or another Service-                   operator must provide a written                       No. 1018–0162. We use the information
                                                 designated database.                                    affidavit from the third party that sets              collected under this subpart to manage
                                                    (d) For information required under                   forth the relied-upon information.                    non-Federal oil and gas operations on
                                                 this subpart that the owner of the                         (f) The Service may require any                    Service-administered lands or waters for
                                                 information claims to be exempt from                    operator to submit to the Service any                 the purpose of protecting wildlife and
                                                 public disclosure and is withheld from                  withheld information, and any                         habitat, water quality and quantity,
                                                 the Service, a corporate officer,                       information relevant to a claim that                  wildlife-dependent recreational
                                                 managing partner, or sole proprietor of                 withheld information is exempt from                   opportunities, and the health and safety
                                                 the operator must sign and the operator                 public disclosure.                                    of employees and visitors on the NWRS.
                                                 must submit to the authorized officer an                   (g) If the Service determines that the             We may not conduct or sponsor and you
                                                 affidavit that:                                         information submitted under paragraphs                are not required to respond to a
                                                    (1) Identifies the owner of the                      (d) or (e) of this section is not exempt              collection of information unless it
                                                 withheld information and provides the                   from disclosure, the Service will make                displays a currently valid OMB control
                                                 name, address, and contact information                  the information available to the public               number.
                                                 for a corporate officer, managing                       after providing the operator and owner
                                                                                                                                                               Karen Hyun,
                                                 partner, or sole proprietor of the owner                of the information with no fewer than
                                                 of the information;                                     10 business days’ notice of the Service’s             Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and
                                                    (2) Identifies the Federal statute or                determination.                                        Wildlife and Parks.
                                                 regulation that would prohibit the                         (h) The operator must maintain                     [FR Doc. 2016–27218 Filed 11–10–16; 8:45 am]
                                                 Service from publicly disclosing the                    records of the withheld information                   BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES4




                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:33 Nov 10, 2016   Jkt 214001   PO 00000   Frm 00035   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\14NOR4.SGM   14NOR4



Document Created: 2018-10-24 10:49:13
Document Modified: 2018-10-24 10:49:13
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective December 14, 2016.
ContactScott Covington, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Natural Resources and Planning, MS: NWRS, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041; telephone 703-358-2427.
FR Citation81 FR 79948 
RIN Number1018-AX36
CFR Citation50 CFR 28
50 CFR 29
CFR AssociatedLaw Enforcement; Penalties; Wildlife Refuges; Oil and Gas Exploration; Public Lands-Mineral Resources; Public Lands-Rights-of-Way and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR