[Federal Register: January 11, 1999 (Volume 64, Number 6)] [Notices] [Page 1638-1639] From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] [DOCID:fr11ja99-101] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management [WY-030-1320-00 [WYW139975]] Ark Land Company Coal Lease Application, Carbon County, WY AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice of Availability of Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS). ----------------------------------------------------------------------- SUMMARY: Pursuant to 40 CFR 1500-1508, the Bureau of Land Management announces the availability of the FEIS for Ark Land Company Coal Lease Application (WYW139975) in the Green River-Hams Fork Coal Production Region of Wyoming. DATES: Written comments on the FEIS will be accepted for thirty (30) days following the date the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) publishes their Notice of Availability in the Federal Register. We expect EPA will publish that notice on January 8, 1999. ADDRESSES: Please address questions, comments, or requests for copies of the FEIS to Field Manager, Rawlins Field Office, Bureau of Land Management, P.O. Box 2407, 1300 North Third Street, Rawlins, Wyoming 82301. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brenda Vosika Neuman, Project Team Leader, or John Spehar, Planning and Environmental Coordinator, at the above address or by telephone at 307-328-4200. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to 43 CFR 3425.1, Ark Land Company, St. Louis, Missouri (Ark), filed an application with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on September 20, 1996, to obtain a coal lease on 4145.15 acres of Federal coal lands located in Carbon County, Wyoming. The lease application area is located within the Carbon Basin Coal Project Area approximately 5 miles northwest of the town of Elk Mountain and 12 miles southeast of the town of Hanna. The Project Area encompasses 18,360 acres of intermingled Federal, State, and private lands. [[Page 1639]] Based upon BLM's recommendation, Ark amended their application to include an additional 1280 acres of Federal land containing approximately 59 million tons of in-place coal reserves and deleted 190 acres of Federal land which either contained no recoverable coal or were unsuitable for coal mining. These modifications to the lease tract were made to enable preparation of a reasonable underground mine plan with enough reserves for a new mine start. Ark's amended Federal coal lease application contains a total of 5235.15 acres and approximately 149.7 million tons of in-place coal. There are an estimated 235.9 million tons of private and State coal within the Project Area. Coal mining would be conducted by Arch of Wyoming, Inc. (Arch), an affiliate of Ark, if it is successful in obtaining a Federal coal lease in the proposed Project Area. Arch has operated coal mines in the Hanna Basin Region of Carbon County since 1972. The FEIS analyzes two alternatives in detail--the Proposed Action and a No Action Alternative. Under the Proposed Action, the preferred alternative, the BLM would hold a competitive lease sale for surface- minable and underground-minable Federal coal. The Proposed Action analyzes leasing Federal coal for both the Elk Mountain surface mining operation and the Saddleback Hills underground mining operation and examines 10 options for transporting coal to processing/loadout facilities. The No Action Alternative analyzes no leasing of any Federal coal in the Project Area. A ``no mining'' alternative (no mining of any Federal, State, or private coal in the Project Area) is not analyzed in detail. Seventy-nine percent of the surface-minable coal within the Project Area is privately owned and BLM believes that the private surface coal could be economically mined even if the Federal coal were not leased. If no Federal coal were leased, the non- Federal underground coal reserves would be uneconomical to mine because of the difficulty of mining small tracts of intermingled private and State coal. The United States Department of Interior, Office of Surface Mining (OSM) is a cooperating agency in the preparation of the EIS. OSM is the Federal agency that administers surface coal mining under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977. The Draft Environmental Impact Statement was made available to the public on August 7, 1998. Thirteen written comment letters were received on the draft document. They are included, with the responses, in Chapter 8.0 of the FEIS. FREEDOM OF INFORMATION: Comments, including names and street addresses of respondents, will be available for public review at the address listed above during regular business hours (7:45 a.m.--4:30 p.m.), Monday through Friday, except holidays. Individual respondents may request confidentiality. If you wish to withhold your name or street address from public review or from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, you must state this prominently at the beginning of your written comment. Such requests will be honored to the extent allowed by law. All submissions from organizations or businesses, and from individuals identifying themselves as representatives or officials of organizations or businesses, will be made available for public inspection in their entirety. Dated: December 31, 1998. Alan R. Pierson, State Director. [FR Doc. 99-489 Filed 1-8-99; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4310-22-U