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Layer: EE_Permitting (ID: 0)

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Name: EE_Permitting

Display Field: company_name

Type: Feature Layer

Geometry Type: esriGeometryPoint

Description: <span style="font-size:15px;">The U.S. Department of the Interior will implement emergency permitting procedures to accelerate the development of domestic energy resources and critical minerals. These measures are designed to expedite the review and approval, if appropriate, of projects related to the identification, leasing, siting, production, transportation, refining, or generation of energy within the United States. The new permitting procedures will take a multi-year process down to just 28 days at most. The procedures apply to actions relating to a wide range of energy sources, including: Crude oil, Natural gas, Lease condensates, Natural gas liquids, Refined petroleum products, Uranium, Coal, Biofuels, Geothermal energy, Kinetic hydropower, Critical minerals.  The procedures, outlined below, will significantly enable faster permitting timelines—reducing processes that typically take several months or years to just weeks. National Environmental Policy Act: The Department will be adopting an alternative National Environmental Policy Act compliance process to allow for more concise documents and a compressed timeline. Projects analyzed in an environmental assessment, normally taking up to one year, will now be reviewed within approximately 14 days. Projects requiring a full environmental impact statement, typically a two-year process, will be reviewed in roughly 28 days. Endangered Species Act: An expedited Section 7 consultation process will be implemented, which involves the appropriate bureau notifying the Fish and Wildlife Service that it is using emergency consultation procedures. Following such notification, the appropriate bureau can then proceed with deciding whether to approve the action. National Historic Preservation Act: Bureaus will follow alternative procedures for compliance with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act for proposed undertakings responding to the energy emergency, which include notifying the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, State and Tribal Historic Preservation Officers, and any Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization that may attach religious and cultural significance to historic properties likely to be affected by a proposed undertaking and affording them an opportunity to comment within seven days of the notification. Following that notification and comment period, the appropriate bureau will take into account any comments received and then decide whether to approve the proposed undertaking. This application shows the general locations of projects that have submitted applications for the emergency energy permits. These locations are general and not intended to show the actual locations</span>

Service Item Id: e8316a0943d8482b814a622bdc5e6dab

Copyright Text: No warranty is made by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) for the use of the data for purposes not intended by the BIA. This GIS Dataset may contain errors. There is no impact on the legal status of the land areas depicted herein and no impact on land ownership. No legal inference can or should be made from the information in this GIS Dataset. The GIS Dataset is prepared strictly for illustrative and reference purposes only and should not be used, and is not intended for legal, survey, engineering or navigation purposes. These data have been developed from the best available sources. Although efforts have been made to ensure that the data are accurate and reliable, errors and variable conditions originating from source documents and/or the translation of information from source documents to the systems of record continue to exist. Users must be aware of these conditions and bear responsibility for the appropriate use of the information with respect to possible errors, scale, resolution, rectification, positional accuracy, development methodology, time period, environmental and climatic conditions and other circumstances specific to these data. The user is responsible for understanding the accuracy limitations of the data provided herein. The burden for determining fitness for use lies entirely with the user. The user should refer to the accompanying metadata notes for a description of the data and data development procedures.

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