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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JULY 7,1999 PSA#2382Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Procurement
Operations Branch, MS2500, 381 Elden Street, Herndon, Virginia
20170-4817 B -- ESTIMATION OF OIL SPILL RISK FROM ALASKA NORTH SLOPE,
TRANS-ALASKA PIPELINE, AND ARCTIC CANADA SPILL DATA SETS SOL RFQ-16128
DUE 072099 POC Wallace O. Adcox, Contracting Officer, (703) 787-1362
E-MAIL: Contracting Officer's E-mail Address, wallace.adcox@mms.gov.
THIS IS AN AMENDMENT TO THE ORIGINAL CBD ANNOUNCEMENT THAT AP-PEARED ON
JUNE 25, 1999. THE SIC CODE FOR THIS PROCUREMENT IS 8731. THIS
RE-QUIREMENT IS NOW OPEN TO ALL RESPONSIBLE BIDDERS REGARDLESS OF SIZE.
PREFERENCE WILL BE GIVEN TO SMALL BUSINESSES. THE DUE DATE FOR RECEIPT
OF WRITTEN MATERIAL IS NOW EXTENDED TO JULY 20, 1999. THE FOLLOWING IS
A REPOST OF THE ORGININAL CBD NOTICE: This is a request for quotation
under FAR part 13. No separate RFQ will be issued. All information is
contained in this CBD announcement. This re-quirement is 100% set-aside
for small business. The Department of the Interior, Minerals
Manage-ment Service (MMS), intends to competitively award a contract to
conduct a study entitled "Esti-mation of OCS Oil Spill Risk from the
Alaska North Slope, Trans-Alaska Pipeline, and Arctic-Canada Spill Data
Sets". This study will provide oil spill risk occurrence estimator(s)
for OCS Beaufort Sea exploration and development, based data on oil
industry spills of crude and diesel. The study will inventory oil
industry spills of > 100 bbl, including verification of data for the
subset of spills of > 500 bbl for Alaska North Slope, Trans-Alaska
Pipeline (TAP), and Arctic Canada ar-eas. The study will evaluate the
reliability of the data sets, and estimate draft spill rate(s), along
with evaluation of appropriateness and statistical robustness of the
spill rate(s). ESTIMATED LEVEL OF EFFORT: The government estimates a
period of performance for this contract of four (4) months and a price
of $50,000 to $100,000. BACKGROUND: In Alaska environmental
as-sessments and environmental impact statements, the MMS uses national
OCS statistics to estimate the likelihood of large spills (>1,000
bbl) occurring. The frequency of large spills per unit volume of oil
produced on or transported from the OCS follows a Poisson distribution:
indicating that indi-vidual spills can be treated as rare and random
events, independent of spill cause. The spill rate (number of spills
per volume of oil) is statistically adjusted to correct for historical
trends in spill-age. Both the statistical methodology and results are
generally accepted and are published in the peer-reviewed literature
[see Task 5 citations]. The mean number of large spills and, using the
Pois-son distribution, the probability of one or more and the most
likely number of such spills are calculated from the historical spill
record and estimated amount of oil produced and/or transported. The
historical record for OCS platform and pipeline spills used to
calculate the national OCS oil spill rates is mostly from the Gulf of
Mexico. This spill record does not include pipeline spills inshore of
the OCS, in State waters or on land. The MMS Alaska OCS Region intends
to cal-culate spill frequency based on the Alaska North Slope and the
Canadian Arctic rather than the Gulf of Mexico experience, and to
include all major pipeline spills, both onshore and offshore, in
envi-ronmental impact assessment. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: Obtain and
collate all available data on oil industry spills for Alaska North
Slope, Trans-Alaska Pipeline (TAP), and Arctic Canada ar-eas; Review
the reliability and completeness of these data; Obtain and collate data
on crude production, and crude and diesel pipeline mileage and
throughput by year for Alaska North Slope, TAP, and Arctic Canada
areas; Evaluate the appropriateness and statistical robustness of these
data for estimating onshore and offshore oil spill risk from Beaufort
Sea oil development; and, Estimate draft onshore and offshore spill
rate(s) using the optimum data set(s). SCOPE OF WORK: TASK 1.
POST-AWARD TELECONFERENCE WITH MMS. Within two weeks of contract award,
hold a post-award teleconference with the Alaska OCS Region and Herndon
MMS staff to insure a clear understanding by all of study objectives,
concerns, and timelines. The Offeror shall: Provide draft agenda to
participants prior to the meeting, Provide Meeting Summary to
par-ticipants within one week of meeting, List any changes needed to
planned work as a result of the meeting. TASK 2. OBTAIN AND COLLATE
DATA ON OIL INDUSTRY SPILLS OF > 100 bbl FOR ALASKA NORTH SLOPE,
TRANS-ALASKA PIPELINE (TAP), AND ARCTIC CANADA AREAS: Include spills
> 100 bbl of diesel and crude related to oil and gas exploration,
construction development, production, transport, and storage on
facilities. Identify sources for spill data from the following study
areas and obtain these data: U.S. Beaufort Sea, Canadian Beaufort Sea,
Onshore Alaska North Slope to the east of the National Petroleum
Reserve-Alaska (NPRA), TAP, not in-cluding the Valdez Terminal, Onshore
McKenzie River delta area, NPRA, Norman Wells, Cana-dian High Arctic
Islands. Obtain relevant supporting data, if available (e.g.; facility
type, date, company, spill name, oil type, location descriptor,
latitude and longitude, cause of spill, spill vol-ume, how spill volume
was obtained, whether on water or land, spiller). Identify any
intentional spills (sabotage or otherwise). Compare different data sets
for the same area to enhance comprehensiveness of the data. Some
sources for Alaska data include: ADEC 1995-1998 Alaska North Slope
Crude and Refined Oil Spills Database*, ADEC Southern District (south
of Tok) oil spill files, ADEC Northern District (Tok north) oil spill
files, Joint Pipeline Office Database of TAP Spills from 1970-1994*,
Alyeska Pipeline Company, Crude Oil Spill Data >1,000 bbl
1977-1980*, Crude Oil Spill Data 1989-April 1999*, ADEC Contaminated
Sites Database, Oil Spill In-telligence Report*, MMS can provide the
data sets marked with an asterisk and can provide con-tacts and phone
numbers for the other data sets on this list. Provide the collated Oil
Spill Data Set to MMS in Microsoft Office 97 Access. The data should
be sortable by the individual study areas (e.g.; U.S. Beaufort Sea,
etc). Maximize interconvertability between this Access database and the
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC) 1995-1998 spill
data set in Excel. TASK 3. REVIEW THE RELIABILITY AND COMPLETENESS OF
THE DATA: Provide reporting criteria that were in effect for reporting
older and new data in the data examined in Task 2. Data sets having a
legal requirement for spill reporting, where the company is subject to
legal penalties if they fail to report the spill, may be more
reliable. Validate these data with the authority to which the companies
are required to report. The Offeror shall describe the overall
comprehensiveness and completeness of the compiled Task 2 data set.
Evaluate the reliability of the reported spill volumes for the subset
of spills >500 bbl, based on how the volume was deter-mined and
supporting documentation. TASK 4. OBTAIN AND COLLATE CRUDE PRODUC-TION,
PIPELINE THROUGHPUT, AND PIPELINE MILEAGE DATA BY YEAR FOR ALASKA NORTH
SLOPE, TRANS-ALASKA PIPELINE, AND ARCTIC CANADA AREAS. Obtain and
collate any crude production and piped crude and diesel volumes by year
for each Task 2 Study area. Small volumes of crude have been tankard
from the Canadian Beaufort and the Canadian High Arctic Islands; these
transport volumes should be also be included, but clearly be separable
from piped volumes. Also collate operational pipeline mileage in place
each year for each Task 2 study area. Collate and provide the data to
MMS in Microsoft Office 97 Access. TASK 5. EVALUATE THE
APPROPRIATENESS AND STATISTICAL ROBUSTNESS OF THESE DATA FOR ESTIMATING
ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE OIL SPILL RISK FROM BEAUFORT SEA OIL DEVELOPMENT.
Estimate draft onshore and offshore spill rate(s) using the optimum
data set(s). Based on the information collected in Tasks 2-4, Determine
optimum data sets and estimate draft onshore and offshore spill
rate(s). First, examine the appropriateness of us-ing these data to
evaluate oil spill risk from Beaufort Sea OCS development. Part of this
evaluation shall be in the context of prior MMS use and statistical
evaluation of spill rates for OCS use. The Offeror is referred to the
following citations for this context: Anderson, C. M. and LaBelle, R.
P. 1994. Comparative Occurrence Rates for Offshore Oil Spills. Spill
Science and Technology Bulle-tin 1(2):131-141. Anderson, C. M. and
LaBelle, R. P. 1990. Estimated Occurrence Rates for Analy-sis of
Accidental Oil Spills on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf. Oil and
Chemical Pollution (21):21-35. Lanfear, K. J. and Amstutz, D. E. 1983.
A Reexamination of Occurrence Rates for Ac-cidental Oil Spills on the
U.S. Outer Continental Shelf. In Proceedings 1983 Oil Spill Conference
(Prevention, Behavior, Control, Cleanup). Held February 28-March 3,
1983, San Antonio, TX. Washington, DC: USCG, API, EPA, pp. 355-365.
Nakassis, A. 1982. Has Offshore Oil Production Become Safer? Menlo
Park, CA: USDOI, USGS. Open-File Report 82-232. 26 pp. Second,
con-sider the statistical robustness and validity of potential
estimators, including: Effect of one more spill on the estimators, Data
set size for spills > 100 bbl, > 500 bbl, or > 1000 bbl,
Rationale for in-cluding/excluding intentional spills (sabotage or
otherwise), Effect of incomplete pipeline life cycle in data set,
Correlation of pipeline mileage and/or oil volume with spillage,
Differences in the size of onshore and offshore data subsets, Magnitude
of the record (number of spills, oil volume) used to calculate
estimators versus that for Anderson and LaBelle (1994) Postulated
differences (or lack thereof) in onshore and /offshore oil spill risk
factors. Third, calculate appropriate draft spill rate(s). The
calculation should include correction for time trends in spill rates
[see Anderson and LaBelle 1994], if statistically appropriate. TASK 6.
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT: A. Program Manage-ment Plan: Operate under the
program-management plan described in the proposal. A data man-agement
plan shall be incorporated in the program management plan. B. Interim
Progress Report: Submit interim progress (letter) report to the
Contracting Officer's Technical Representative (COTR). The progress
reports shall include: A brief summary of all preceding work and
overall progress made against the schedule, A brief summary of
significant technical, schedule, or cost problems encountered,
including an assessment of their probable effects on meeting contract
provi-sions, A brief summary of any resolutions agreed to between
Contractor and MMS regarding these problems, A list of all significant
meetings held or other contacts made in connection with the contract,
including a brief summary of the participants and subject, date,
location, and outcome of each such contact or meeting. TASK 7. FINAL
REPORT AND TECHNICAL SUMMARY: A. SYNTHESIS and INTERPRETATION: Perform
synthesis and interpretation necessary to accom-plish Tasks 2 through
5. B. DRAFT FINAL REPORT and DRAFT TECHNICAL SUMMARY: Complete and
submit draft final report and Technical Summary to MMS for scientific
and editorial review. The report should summarize results of Tasks 2
and 4 and provide more detailed discussion of Tasks 3 and 5. The report
should cite the Oil Spill and Supporting Data Sets (Tasks 2 and 4) as
separate appendices available from MMS. The Technical Summary should
cover all technical Tasks. A copy of the standard MMS formatting
requirements for technical summaries and cover/title page
specifications for the report will be provided by MMS after contract
award. A digital copy of the draft Oil Spill and Supporting Data Sets
should be provided to MMS with the draft Final Report. C. REVISED,
FINAL REPORT and TECHNICAL SUMMARY: Revise the final report and
Technical Summary and complete as per review comments. Provide the
rationale in a letter accompanying the final report for any review
comments not accommodated. Copies of the report, a high-quality master
copy, and a PC-compatible digital copy shall be provided to MMS. Text
and tables of the digital copy of the report should in Microsoft
Office 97 Word or newer. Bib-liographic citations for the final report
shall be provided to MMS also in ProCite 4 or newer (or as a file
directly importable into ProCite). A digital copy of the Final Oil
Spill and Supporting Data Sets should be provided to MMS with the Final
Report. A final Technical Summary, revised from the draft as per review
comments and a PC-compatible digital copy in Microsoft Office 97 Word
or newer, shall be provided to MMS. Interested firms may request a copy
of the deliverables schedule by emailing to POC. The schedule will be
released electronically. HOW TO RESPOND: In order to compete for this
contract, a firm must demonstrate that they are qualified to perform
the work by providing, by 4:00 P.M., July 20, 1999, a Capabilities
Statement and Technical and Business Pro-posal less than 25 pages in
length. The Capability Statement must describe accurately: (1) your key
personnel (those who would have primary responsibility for performing
and/or managing the study) with their qualifications and specific
experience; and (2) your organizations experience with this type of
work and a description of your facilities. You must provide information
that your organi-zation and personnel on this project have the
experience and expertise to successfully perform the work. You must
provide information on which task(s) each key personnel will perform
and the ra-tionale for that assignment. (3) Past Performance: Submit
period of performance, dollar amount, client name and telephone number,
for previous work of this nature that your personnel or organi-zation
is currently performing or has completed within the last two years.
References will be checked. Your Capabilities Statement will be
evaluated based on (1) the currency, quality and dept of experience of
individual personnel in working on similar projects. "Similar Project"
is meant to convey similarity in topic, methodologies, dollar value,
duration and complexity; (2) quality and depth of education; experience
on other projects which may not be similar enough to include in
re-sponse to (1), but may be relevant; and publication history; (3)
organization's history of successful completion of projects; history of
producing high quality reports and other deliverables; history of
staying on schedule and within budget. People's skills and experience
will be evaluated in light of the tasks they will be performing. Total
length of capability Statement, Technical and Business Proposal must
not exceed 25 pages. Firms shall submit their Capabilities Statement
and Technical and Business Proposal in original and two (2) copies to
Wallace Adcox, Contracting Officer, Min-erals Management Service, 381
Elden Street, MS-2500, Herndon, VA 20170-4817. Three (3) addi-tional
copies shall be sent to Richard Prentki, PH.D., Minerals Manaement
Service, Alaska OCS Region, 949 E. 36 Street, Anchorage, AK 99508. Each
Firm must also provide a brief Technical Business proposal consisting
of a short written technical proposal describing the work that will be
performed, brief project plan and cost/business proposal. The
government will evaluate each writ-ten Technical proposal to determine
the most effective firm, including schedule, coordination, and
methodology to complete the work. The evaluation criteria are equal in
value and a best value analysis will determine which firm will receive
the award. Price to perform the basic work will be evaluated along with
other factors. The government may not conduct negotiations so submit
your best offer. The government may request an oral presentation of the
most qualified firm to ensure agreement with the project scope.
Questions should be faxed or E-mailed as soon as possible to: Fax (703)
787-1087 or E-mail to Wallace.Adcox@mms.gov. Please include your full
name, the RFQ number (16128) and title, your organization, complete
address, and phone and fax numbers. TELEPHONIC QUESTIONS OR REQUESTS
WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) Regulatory
Change Notice: The Federal Acquisition Regulation authorizes the use of
price and evaluation credits in industries where SDB prime contractors
and subcontractors have been underutilized. We ask that you inform
your SDB subcontractors that they should contact SBA's Office of
Certification and Eligibility at 800-558-0884 to obtain an application,
or to log on to SBA/s Website (www.sba.gov.sdb). If you are an SDB
prime contractor who is not SBA-certified, we also ask that you apply
for certification. Effective October 1, 1998, certified SDB prime
contractors were eligible for a price credit when bidding on Federal
prime contracts. Effec-tive January 1, 1999, prime contractors who
subcontract with SBA-certified or self-certified SDBs are eligible for
evaluation credits. Please note that prime contractors may continue to
rely on self-certification of their SDB subcontractors through June 30,
1999. For solicitations issued on or after July 1, 1999, prime
contractors must use SDB-certified SDB subcontractors in order to be
eligible for evaluation credits. Posted 07/02/99 (W-SN350089). (0183) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0015 19990707\B-0006.SOL)
B - Special Studies and Analyses - Not R&D Index Page
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