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Environmental
Monitoring Protective
Measures In 1978, the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ) defined mitigation as a 5-step process.
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Avoidance—The avoidance
of an impact altogether by not taking a certain action or part of an
action.
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Minimization—The
minimizing of impacts by limiting the degree or magnitude of the
action and its implementation.
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Restoration—The
rectifying of the impact by repairing, rehabilitation, or restoring
the affected environment.
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Maintenance—The reducing
or eliminating of the impact over time by preservation and maintenance
operations during the life of the action.
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Compensation—The
compensation for the impact by replacing or providing substitute
resources or environments. |
Two separate methods are routinely used to ensure
compliance with federal regulations of the OCS; Lease Stipulations, and
site-specific mitigations that are attached during project reviews by
BOEMRE.
Mitigation measures in the form of lease stipulations
are added to the lease terms and are therefore enforceable as part of the
lease. Lease stipulations have been used that include the Topographic
Features Stipulation, the Live Bottom (Pinnacle Trend) Stipulation, and
the Military Areas Stipulation. In addition, each exploration and
development plan, as well as any pipeline applications that may result
from a lease sale, will undergo a NEPA review, and additional
project-specific mitigations may be applied as conditions of plan
approval. The BOEMRE has the authority to monitor and enforce these
conditions, and under 30 CFR 250 Subpart N, may seek remedies and
penalties from any operator that fails to comply with the conditions of
permit approvals, including stipulations and other mitigating measures.
Many of these mitigating measures have been adopted and
incorporated into regulations and/or guidelines governing OCS exploration,
development, and production activities. All plans for OCS activities go
through BOEMRE review and approval to ensure compliance with established laws
and regulations. Mitigating measures must be incorporated and documented
in plans submitted to BOEMRE. Operational compliance is enforced through the
BOEMRE on-site inspection program.
Sample mitigating measures that are a standard part of
the BOEMRE program limit the size of charges used for explosive platform
removal; require placing explosive charges at least 5 m below the mudline;
ensure site clearance procedures to eliminate potential snags to
commercial fishing nets; and require surveys to detect and avoid
archaeological sites and biologically-sensitive areas such as pinnacles,
low-relief live bottoms, and chemosynthetic communities.
Some BOEMRE-identified mitigating measures are incorporated
into OCS operations through cooperative agreements or efforts with
industry and various State and Federal agencies. These include NOAA Fisheries’s Observer Program to protect marine mammals and sea turtles
during explosive removals, regulations on minimum helicopter altitudes to
prevent disturbance of wildlife, labeling operational supplies to track
possible sources of accidental debris loss, development of methods of
pipeline landfall to eliminate impacts to barrier beaches, and semiannual
beach cleanup events.
Notices to Lessees and Operators (NTL's) are formal
documents that provide clarification, description, or interpretation of a
regulation or OCS standard; provide guidelines on the implementation of a
special lease stipulation or regional requirement; provide a better
understanding of the scope and meaning of a regulation by explaining
BOEMRE
interpretation of a requirement; or transmit administrative information
such as current telephone listings and a change in BOEMRE personnel or office
address.
A complete list of active mitigations routinely used
offshore can be found
here.
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