99-2785. Issuance of an Emergency Ocean Dumping Permit to the National Science Foundation for Disposal of an Ice Pier From Its Base at McMurdo Station, Antarctica  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 24 (Friday, February 5, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 5790-5793]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-2785]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    [FRL-6231-4]
    
    
    Issuance of an Emergency Ocean Dumping Permit to the National 
    Science Foundation for Disposal of an Ice Pier From Its Base at McMurdo 
    Station, Antarctica
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Notice of permit issuance.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: On February 1, 1999, EPA issued an emergency ocean dumping 
    permit to the National Science Foundation (NSF) to transport an 
    existing ice pier from its base at McMurdo Station, Antarctica, and 
    dispose of it in the waters of McMurdo Sound. The emergency permit was 
    issued to allow NSF to remove the existing pier and to build a new one. 
    The existing pier poses a substantial and unacceptable safety hazard to 
    human life. Minimal adverse environmental impact from the disposal of 
    the ice pier is expected. EPA is publishing the emergency permit for 
    the public's information.
    
    DATES: The permit was effective on February 1, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written correspondence may be sent to: Dave Redford, Acting 
    Chief, Marine Pollution Control Branch, Oceans and Coastal Protection 
    Division, (4504F), Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M Street SW, 
    Washington, D.C. 20460.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dave Redford, Acting Chief, Marine 
    Pollution Control Branch, 202/260-9179.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The EPA issued the emergency permit pursuant 
    to its authority under the Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries 
    Act of 1972. The terms and conditions of the emergency permit follow.
    
        Dated: February 1, 1999.
    J. Charles Fox,
    Assistant Administrator for Water.
    
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Marine Protection, Research, 
    and Sanctuaries ACT (Ocean Dumping) Permit
    
        Permit Type: Emergency.
    
        Effective Date: February 1, 1999.
        Expiration Date: March 1, 2000.
        Applicant: National Science Foundation.
        Transporter: U.S. Coast Guard.
    
    I. Action
    
        This is an emergency ocean dumping permit that allows the National 
    Science Foundation (NSF) to transport an existing ice pier from its 
    base at McMurdo Station, Antarctica, and dispose of it in the waters of 
    McMurdo Sound. The pier poses a substantial and unacceptable safety 
    hazard to human life. Minimal adverse environmental impacts from the 
    disposal of this ice pier are expected.
    
    II. Background
    
        The National Science Foundation currently operates three major 
    bases in Antarctica: McMurdo Station on Ross Island, adjacent to 
    McMurdo Sound; Palmer Station, near the western terminus of the 
    Antarctic Peninsula; and Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, at the 
    geographic South Pole. McMurdo Station is the largest of the three 
    stations, and is the primary logistics base for the United States 
    Antarctic Program (USAP). To permit vessels to dock and unload at 
    McMurdo Station, construction and use of an ice pier is necessary. This 
    ice pier, which is approximately 800 feet long, 300 feet wide, and 22 
    feet thick, is constructed during the winter season by freezing 
    successive layers of ice until the required thickness is achieved. 
    Several times in the process long lengths of steel cable are frozen in 
    the pier to provide torsional stability. Short lengths of steel pipe 
    are implanted in the ice layers to allow the lengths of cable to be 
    wrapped around the pipes. In the final stage of the process, lengths of 
    wooden poles are implanted in the ice to provide support for lighting, 
    power, and telephone service to buildings on the pier. When the 
    construction of the ice segment of the pier is completed, a 6-
    8 layer of pumice is applied to the pier, to provide a non-
    slip surface.
        In summary, the following types and approximate quantities of 
    materials would normally be used in the construction of an ice pier at 
    McMurdo Station:
    
    1'' steel cable: 21,000 feet
    2'' steel pipe: 650 feet
    Wooden utility poles: Up to 6
    Pumice: 5,000 cubic yards
    
        At the end of each austral summer season, the ice pier is 
    inspected, and as much as possible of the pumice surface is removed and 
    stored for use the following season; small amounts of pumice surface 
    will remain frozen in the pier and cannot be removed. If the pier has 
    deteriorated to the point that it is not capable of being used the 
    following season, the wooden poles are cut off just above the surface 
    of the ice, the pumice is scraped off, all equipment, materials, and 
    debris are removed, and the pier is physically
    
    [[Page 5791]]
    
    removed from McMurdo Station. NSF seeks authorization to tow the ice 
    pier out to McMurdo Sound to float free amidst the ice pack, where it 
    will mix with the sea ice, and eventually melt naturally. 
    Transportation of the ice pier for ocean disposal in McMurdo Sound is 
    dumping subject to the Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act 
    (MPRSA). MPRSA Sec. 101(a), 33 U.S.C. 1411(a).
        Of potential environmental concern are any operational discharges, 
    leaks, or spills that may have contaminated the surface of the pier 
    over its lifetime. Examples of possible releases include aircraft fuel, 
    gasoline, engine lubricating oils, hydraulic fluids, or ethylene glycol 
    (antifreeze). Such releases could result in contamination of portions 
    of the pier with compounds of concern to the marine environment. To 
    assess this potential, the NSF has analyzed ice samples taken from the 
    ice pier. Tests were done in two successive years for ethylene glycol, 
    total extractable hydrocarbons, and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH). 
    In over 40 analyses, there were only two cases where any contaminants 
    were detected. In the first case, the sample collected beneath a 55-
    gallon fuel drum revealed leakage from the drum; in the second case, a 
    single detection of TPH of unknown origin occurred. Subsequently, the 
    NSF issued a directive that all locations where fuel drums were used or 
    stored shall be underlain with a containment measure, such as large 
    metal pans or impermeable liners, beneath the potential contaminant 
    source. Drip pans were installed under all fuel drums providing heat to 
    structures on the pier.
        The NSF has a Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasures Plan 
    for all the stations and bases under its jurisdiction in Antarctica. 
    The Plan includes a specific section for McMurdo Station that addresses 
    fuel storage and transfer systems, the annual unloading of drummed 
    lubricants, solvents, and hazardous materials, and the loading of 
    contaminated solvents and materials for removal from Antarctica. For 
    example, if NSF personnel observe discoloration of the pumice layer, or 
    a spill or leak, the affected pumice is removed along with any 
    contaminated ice, and stored off the pier. In addition, there is 
    considerable vehicular traffic on the ice pier during vessel offload 
    operations, and the possibility of leaks from engine blocks cannot be 
    totally excluded. However, the NSF has informed EPA that the vehicles 
    are parked on the pier for only brief periods of time, ranging from 
    minutes to less than an hour, and that no vehicles are ever parked on 
    the pier overnight.
        As a result of the analyses described above and the protective 
    measures that have been instituted by the NSF, EPA has concluded that 
    no contaminants of concern in greater than trace amounts will be 
    contained in the pier when it is disposed, and further, that the 
    release of the ice pier into McMurdo Sound would cause only minimal 
    adverse environmental impacts. The long lengths of cable and the 
    shorter lengths of steel pipe will sink to the ocean floor during the 
    melting process, and the short lengths of wooden poles will float in 
    the ocean for several months before becoming waterlogged and eventually 
    sinking to the ocean floor.
        Although precise information is not available on the time required 
    for melting and disintegration of an ice pier, NSF scientists have 
    estimated that such processes will take place over several years. NSF 
    believes that the ice pier will drift from the release point in McMurdo 
    Sound, into the Antarctic Sea, and eventually into the Southern Ocean, 
    where it will be subject to the currents of the Southern Ocean. 
    However, since it is not known how long the ice pier will float before 
    its eventual disintegration and melting, EPA believes it is important 
    to know the direction of the pier's path, prior to its final 
    disintegration. Satellite tracking of large, slowly moving, objects is 
    a well-established technology, especially since estimates of course, 
    speed, and location need only be made several times a month.
        As a result, the NSF is directed, as a condition of this permit, to 
    utilize a methodology to track the ice pier for a period of one year 
    from the date of release of the pier. Such methodologies may include 
    the use of satellite-tracked pingers placed on the ice pier, or any 
    other methodology that will allow data to be collected on the course, 
    speed, and location of the ice pier. The results of these tracking 
    efforts are to be included in the reports that the NSF is required to 
    submit to EPA. The NSF has informed EPA that disposal of the ice pier 
    is expected to be completed by March 1, 1999; however, the term of the 
    permit extends to March 1, 2000, because of the tracking and reporting 
    requirements stipulated in this permit.
    
    III. Justification for the Emergency Permit
    
        The NSF initially raised the matter of a permit for the disposal of 
    ice piers from McMurdo Station with EPA in late 1992. At that time, it 
    was not clear that immediate action to issue the permit was necessary, 
    and EPA's preferred approach was to amend the ocean dumping regulations 
    to add a new general permit at 40 CFR Part 229, authorizing the dumping 
    of ice piers from the NSF base at McMurdo Station on a cycle of up to 
    seven years. Work on the regulation had proceeded to the point that a 
    general permit had been drafted in November 1998, and the internal 
    Agency review process had begun. However, in late December 1998, the 
    NSF determined that the pier had become unsafe for future operations, 
    and that the unloading of vessels and deposition of heavy materials on 
    the pier would pose a substantial and unacceptable hazard to human 
    life. The pier has eroded from underneath, and has developed internal 
    cracks that cannot be repaired. The NSF informed EPA that a permit to 
    allow the dumping of the existing ice pier would be required by early 
    February 1999.
        At that point, completion of the process to grant a general permit 
    to the NSF through rulemaking by early February was impossible, due to 
    the time required for Agency review and approval of the proposed 
    regulation, publication in the Federal Register, a public comment 
    period, drafting of a final rule that takes into account the public 
    comments, Agency review and approval, and publication of the final rule 
    in the Federal Register. Issuance of this emergency permit allows for 
    immediate disposal of the current deteriorating ice pier; work on the 
    rule providing for a general permit for the NSF will continue.
        Emergency permits are addressed in the ocean dumping regulations at 
    40 CFR 220.3(c), which provides:
        1. A permit may be issued to dump materials where substances 
    prohibited as other than trace contaminants are present in greater than 
    trace amounts,
        (a) After consultation with the Department of State, to determine 
    if any of the signatories to the Convention on the Prevention of Marine 
    Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter (the London Convention 
    of 1972) are likely to be affected by the emergency dumping; and
        (b) When an emergency has been demonstrated to exist that requires 
    such dumping. The emergency must pose an unacceptable risk relating to 
    human health, and admit of no other feasible solution. As used in 40 
    CFR 220.3(c), ``emergency'' refers to situations requiring action with 
    a marked degree of urgency, but is not limited to circumstances that 
    require immediate action.
        2. Emergency permits may be issued for other materials, except 
    those prohibited by 40 CFR 227.5, without
    
    [[Page 5792]]
    
    consultation with the Department of State, when EPA determines that 
    there exists an emergency requiring the dumping of such materials, 
    which poses an unacceptable risk to human health and admits of no other 
    feasible solution.
        EPA has determined that continued use of the existing ice pier 
    would pose an unacceptable risk to human health, and that disposal of 
    the pier admits of no other feasible solution. To continue operations 
    in Antarctica, the NSF must have a permit that will allow removal of 
    the existing ice pier and its subsequent disposal at sea. NSF must have 
    this permit by early February 1999, so that the U.S. Coast Guard 
    icebreaker (the transporter) can tow the deteriorating pier out to 
    McMurdo Sound before the harbor and the Sound freeze solid. There are 
    no other disposal options, and there is no other method, other than 
    towing by the icebreaker, to remove the pier from McMurdo Station. 
    Failure to remove the existing pier and construct a new one presents a 
    serious risk to human health and safety, and will jeopardize the USAP's 
    ability to continue its research mission. Without a safe platform for 
    offloading vessels, materials cannot be delivered to resupply the 
    station; without the resupply of McMurdo Station, activities in 
    Antarctica would have to be halted, resulting in a severe impact to 
    NSF's scientific objectives, including a significant environmental 
    research program.
        Further, there are no materials present on, or in, the ice pier 
    that are prohibited by either 40 CFR 227.5 or 40 CFR 227.6. Thus, the 
    Agency has determined that all necessary conditions for issuance of an 
    emergency permit, pursuant to 40 CFR 220.3(c), have been met, and 
    further, EPA has concluded that this emergency dumping action will have 
    minimal adverse environmental effects. EPA also believes that, because 
    of the urgency of the situation, and the risk to human health discussed 
    above, notice and public comment on this emergency permit are 
    impracticable, unnecessary, and not in the public interest. Further, 
    EPA believes that the public interest requires the issuance of an 
    emergency permit as soon as possible.
        With regard to notification of the State Department, 40 CFR 
    220.3(c) implements the provisions of Article V(2) of the London 
    Convention 1972 (LC 72). That article allows the issuance of emergency 
    permits as an exception to LC 72 Article IV(1)(a) and Annex I 
    prohibitions against the dumping of certain substances. Consistent with 
    LC 72 Article V(2), 40 CFR 220.3(c) is intended to assure that 
    necessary consultation with the International Maritime Organization and 
    potentially affected states take place if the material to be dumped 
    contains greater than trace contaminants of LC 72 Annex I substances. 
    Because the ice pier to be dumped does not contain such materials, the 
    consultation provisions of 40 CFR 220.3(c) are not relevant.
    
    IV. Terms and Conditions of Permit
    
        1. This permit authorizes the transportation and dumping into ocean 
    waters of an ice pier, pursuant to the Marine Protection, Research, and 
    Sanctuaries Act of 1972, as amended, 33 U.S.C. 1401 et seq., 
    (``MPRSA''), subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein. All 
    transportation and dumping authorized herein shall at all times be 
    undertaken in a manner consistent with this permit.
        2. The applicant designated above is the permittee, and is 
    responsible for compliance with this permit.
        3. The permittee and the U.S. Coast Guard are authorized to 
    transport the following ice pier for ocean disposal and to dump it into 
    ocean waters, by releasing it into McMurdo Sound:
        The ice pier is currently attached to the National Science 
    Foundation base at McMurdo Station, Antarctica. This ice pier is 
    approximately 800 feet long, 300 feet wide, and 22 feet thick, and is 
    composed of frozen seawater. Enclosed in the pier are approximately: 
    21,000 feet of one-inch steel cable in several layers used for 
    torsional stability of the pier; 650 feet of two-inch steel pipe used 
    for securing the cable; and 6 stump ends of wooden poles, each 
    approximately four feet long, used for light, power, and telephone 
    connections to structures that have been removed from the pier.
        4. The ice pier shall not be altered in its content from the above 
    description by the addition of wastes from any other sources. The layer 
    of pumice shall be removed from the surface of the pier to the extent 
    feasible.
        5. A methodology to track the ice pier released from McMurdo 
    Station shall be established and utilized for a period of one year from 
    the date of release of the ice pier. The permittee shall submit a full 
    report on the tracking efforts required by this permit and the results 
    of such tracking to the Oceans and Coastal Protection Division (OCPD), 
    in the Office of Water in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 
    (address below), within 30 days following the termination of the permit 
    on March 1, 2000.
        6. Transportation to, and dumping at, any location other than that 
    authorized by this permit shall constitute a violation of the MPRSA and 
    of this permit.
        7. Transportation and dumping of any materials not specifically 
    identified, or in excess of that identified, in this permit shall 
    constitute a violation of the MPRSA and this permit.
        8. If any dumping or transporting is performed by an entity other 
    than the identified applicant or transporter, all reports required 
    hereunder shall be jointly executed by both the permittee and an 
    officer of that entity.
        9. Any dumping or transporting authorized by this permit by any 
    entity other than the identified applicant or transporter shall not 
    relieve the identified applicant from full responsibility for 
    compliance with the terms of this permit, or the MPRSA, or both; nor 
    shall the issuance of this permit relieve any other applicant or 
    transporter from responsibility for compliance with the terms of this 
    permit, or the MPRSA, or both.
        10. The permittee shall submit a full report on the dumping 
    activities authorized by this permit to OCPD within 30 days after the 
    dumping. This report shall include:
        A. A description (by latitude and longitude) of the precise 
    location where the ice pier was released;
        B. The name and title of the person in charge of the vessel that 
    transported the ice pier and conducted the operation;
        C. The time of the dumping activities, including departure from 
    McMurdo Station, and release time and date.
        11. The permittee shall immediately notify OCPD of any violation of 
    any condition of this permit.
        12. All reports and notifications to OCPD required under this 
    permit shall be submitted to: Suzanne Schwartz, Acting Director, Oceans 
    and Coastal Protection Division (4504F), U.S. Environmental Protection 
    Agency, 401 M Street, S.W., Washington, DC 20460.
        13. The reporting requirements contained in this permit are in 
    addition to any reporting requirements imposed by any other agency.
        14. The transporter shall place a copy of this permit in a 
    conspicuous place in the vessel used for the transportation and dumping 
    operations authorized herein.
        15. The terms used in this permit which are defined in Section 3 of 
    the MPRSA shall have the same meaning herein.
        16. This permit may be modified or revoked, in whole or in part, 
    for causes including, but not limited to, the following:
        A. Violation of any term or condition of the permit;
    
    [[Page 5793]]
    
        B. Misrepresentation, inaccuracy, or failure by the applicant to 
    disclose all relevant facts;
        C. A change in any condition or material fact upon which this 
    permit is based that requires either a temporary or permanent reduction 
    or elimination of the authorized transportation or dumping including, 
    but not limited to, newly discovered scientific data relative to the 
    granting of this permit;
        D. A determination by EPA that the dumping has resulted, is 
    resulting, or may result, in imminent and substantial harm to human 
    health or welfare, or to the marine environment; and
        E. Failure to notify appropriate EPA officials of dumping 
    activities.
    
    Signed by J. Charles Fox.
    
    January 29, 1999.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-2785 Filed 2-4-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/1/1999
Published:
02/05/1999
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of permit issuance.
Document Number:
99-2785
Dates:
The permit was effective on February 1, 1999.
Pages:
5790-5793 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-6231-4
PDF File:
99-2785.pdf