Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia; Post 1996 and Post 1999 Rate-of-Progress Plans, Contingency Measures, Transportation Control Measures, VMT Offset, and 1990 Base Year Inventory, 2085-2101 [05-617]
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Judicial review.
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may be subject to judicial review
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 701 et seq.
Dated: January 6, 2005.
Henrietta Holsman Fore,
Director, United States Mint.
[FR Doc. 05–543 Filed 1–11–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–37–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[RME No. R03–OAR–2004–DC–0009; FRL–
7861–2]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; District
of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia; Post
1996 and Post 1999 Rate-of-Progress
Plans, Contingency Measures,
Transportation Control Measures, VMT
Offset, and 1990 Base Year Inventory
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revisions submitted by the State of
Maryland, Commonwealth of Virginia
and the District of Columbia for the
Metropolitan Washington, DC severe 1hour ozone nonattainment area (the
Washington area). These revisions
include the post 1996–1999 and post
1999–2005 rate-of-progress (ROP) plans,
changes to the 1990 base year inventory,
a contingency measures plan, certain
transportation control measures (TCMs),
and a demonstration that each SIP
contains sufficient transportation
control measures to offset growth in
vehicle miles traveled (VMT) as
necessary to demonstrate ROP and
attainment of the 1-hour national
ambient air quality standard (NAAQS)
for ozone. The intended effect of this
action is to propose approval of
revisions submitted to satisfy the SIP
requirements of 1-hour ozone
nonattainment areas classified as severe.
These revisions are being proposed for
approval in accordance with the Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act).
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before February 11, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Regional Material in
EDocket (RME) ID Number R03–OAR–
2004–DC–0009 by one of the following
methods:
A. Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
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on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
B. Agency Web site: https://
www.docket.epa.gov/rmepub/ RME,
EPA’s electronic public docket and
comment system, is EPA’s preferred
method for receiving comments. Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
C. E-mail: morris.makeba@epa.gov.
D. Mail: R03–OAR–2004–DC–0009,
Makeba Morris, Chief, Air Quality
Planning Branch, Mailcode 3AP21, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region III, 1650 Arch Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.
E. Hand Delivery: At the previouslylisted EPA Region III address. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Docket’s normal hours of operation, and
special arrangements should be made
for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
RME ID No. R03–OAR–2004–DC–0009.
EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change, and may be
made available online at https://
www.docket.epa.gov/rmepub/,
including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes
information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Do not submit
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected through RME,
regulations.gov or e-mail. The EPA RME
and the Federal regulations.gov Web
sites are an ‘‘anonymous access’’
system, which means EPA will not
know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send an
e-mail comment directly to EPA without
going through RME or regulations.gov,
your e-mail address will be
automatically captured and included as
part of the comment that is placed in the
public docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD–ROM
you submit. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form
of encryption, and be free of any defects
or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the
electronic docket are listed in the RME
index at https://www.docket.epa.gov/
rmepub/. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, i.e., CBI or other information
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whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically in RME or
in hard copy during normal business
hours at the Air Protection Division,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region III, 1650 Arch Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.
Copies of the State submittal are
available at the District of Columbia
Department of Public Health, Air
Quality Division, 51 N Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20002; Maryland
Department of the Environment, 1800
Washington Boulevard, Suite 705,
Baltimore, Maryland, 21230, Baltimore,
Maryland 21224; and the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality,
629 East Main Street, Richmond,
Virginia 23219.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christopher Cripps, (215) 814–2179, or
by e-mail at cripps.christopher@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The use of
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ in this document
refers to EPA. The use of ‘‘States’’ in this
document refers to the State of
Maryland, the Commonwealth of
Virginia and the District of Columbia.
Outline
I. The Action EPA is Proposing Today
II. Background
A. What is the Washington D.C. 1–Hour
Ozone Nonattainment Area (the
Washington area)?
B. What Previous Action Has EPA Taken
on the Post 1996–1999 ROP Plans?
C. What Is the Purpose of the Action EPA
Is Taking Today?
III. Amendments to the 1990 Base Year
Emissions Inventory
IV. Post 1996–1999 and Post 1999–2005 ROP
Plans
A. What Agencies/ and Organizations
Developed the Post 1996–1999 and Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area?
B. What ROP Requirements are Applicable
to the Washington Area after 1996?
C. What Are the Basic Components of a
ROP Plan?
D. EPA’s Evaluation of the Post 1996–1999
ROP Plans for the Washington Area
E. EPA’s Evaluation of the Post 1999–2005
ROP Plans for the Washington Area
F. Do the Post 1996–1999 and Post 1999–
2005 ROP Plans for the Washington Area
Meet the Requirements for NOX
Substitution?
V. Contingency Measures Plans
A. What are the Contingency Measures
Implemented to Address the Failure to
Attain by November 15, 1999 and for the
Post 1996–1999 ROP Plans?
B. What Are the Contingency Measures and
Plan for Post-1999 ROP Plans and for
Failure to Attain by November 15, 2005?
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VI. Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) Offset SIP
and Transportation Control Measures
(TCMs)
A. What Is a VMT Offset SIP?
B. EPA’s Analysis of VMT Offset SIP in the
2004 SIP Revisions?
C. What TCMs Are Part of the SIP?
VII. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
A. Background for Transportation
Conformity
B. What Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
Currently Apply in the Washington Area
C. Effect of This Action on the Motor
Vehicle Emissions Budgets for the
Washington Area
D. Review of the Motor Vehicle Emissions
Budgets in the Post 1996–1999 ROP and
Post 1999–2005 ROP Plans
E. What Are the Motor Vehicle Emissions
Budgets in the ROP Plans?
VIII. Prerequisites for Approval for the Post
1996–1999 and Post 1999–2005 ROP
Plans
IX. Proposed Actions
X. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. The Action EPA Is Proposing Today
The EPA is proposing approval of the
post 1996–1999 ROP plans, the post
1999–2005 ROP plans and the
contingency measure plans for both
ROP and attainment submitted by the
District of Columbia, Maryland and
Virginia (‘‘the States’’) for the
Washington area. In addition, EPA is
also proposing approval of the States’
revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventory, TCMs, and a
demonstration that the SIP for each
State contains sufficient TCMs to offset
growth in VMT as necessary to achieve
ROP and to attain the ozone NAAQS
(commonly referred to as the VMT
Offset SIP). Tables 1 and 2 identify the
initial submittal dates and the dates on
which the States’ submitted
amendments for these plans and
measures:
TABLE 1.—POST 1996–1999 ROP PLANS FROM THE STATES
DC
Initial submittal dates .....................
Amended submittal dates ..............
1 Maryland
MD 1
November 10, 1997 ......................
May 25, 1999 ................................
December 24, 1997 ......................
May 20, 1999 ................................
VA
December 19, 1997.
May 25, 1999.
SIP revision submittals labeled as 97–04 and 99–12.
The post 1996–1999 ROP Plan SIP
revisions also include certain TCMs,
specifically those TCMs identified in
Appendix H of the States’ submittals.
TABLE 2.—1999–2005 ROP PLANS, CONTINGENCY MEASURES PLAN, AMENDMENTS TO THE 1990 BASE YEAR
INVENTORY, AND VMT OFFSET PLANS
DC
Initial submittal dates .....................
Amended submittal dates ..............
2 Maryland
MD 2
September 5, 2003 .......................
February 25, 2004 ........................
September 2, 2003 .......................
February 24, 2004 ........................
August 19, 2003.
February 25, 2004.
SIP revision submittals labeled as 03–05 and 04–01.
Hereafter, the SIP revisions listed in
Table 2 of this document will be called
the ‘‘2004 SIP revisions.’’ The States’
2004 SIP revisions include the post
1999–2005 ROP plans, the VMT Offset
SIPs, revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventory, and the
contingency measures plans for ROP
and attainment for the Washington area.
The 2004 SIP revisions also include
certain TCMs, namely those TCMs
identified in Appendix J of the SIP
revision submittals. The 2004 SIP
revisions also include the States’
attainment demonstration plans for the
Washington area. Those attainment
demonstration plans are the subject of a
separate rulemaking action.
II. Background
A. What Is the Washington DC 1–Hour
Ozone Nonattainment Area?
The Washington area is comprised of
the entire District of Columbia (the
District), a portion of Maryland (Calvert,
Charles, Frederick, Montgomery, and
Prince George’s Counties), and a portion
of Virginia (Alexandria, Arlington
County, Fairfax, Fairfax County, Falls
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Church, Manassas, Manassas Park,
Prince William County, and Stafford
County).
B. What Previous Action Has EPA
Taken on the Post 1996–1999 ROP
Plans?
On January 3, 2001 (66 FR 586), the
EPA approved the States’ post 1996–
1999 ROP plans, attainment
demonstration plans (those submitted
during 1998 and 2000) and an
attainment date extension for the
Washington area. A petition for review
of that final rule was filed. On July 2,
2002, the United States Courts of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit (the court) ruled on the petition
and vacated our January 3, 2001
approval of the States’ attainment
demonstrations, their 1996–1999 ROP
plans and the attainment date extension.
(See Sierra Club v. Whitman, 294 F.3d
155, 163 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (‘‘Sierra Club
I’’). Among other things, the court said
that the EPA was without authority to
extend the Washington area’s
attainment deadline unless it also
ordered the area to be reclassified as a
‘‘severe’’ area. The court also found that
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the attainment demonstration and ROP
plans were deficient because neither
contained approved contingency
measures as required by sections
172(c)(9) and 182(c)(9) of the Clean Air
Act (CAA or the Act). Id. at 164.
Furthermore, the court determined that
in addition to a 9 percent reduction in
baseline emissions from 1996 to 1999,
an area with an attainment date in 2005
must have an approved ROP plan that
demonstrates ROP to 2005. Id. at 163.
The Washington area’s post 1996–1999
ROP plan, that had been submitted by
each of the States, demonstrated ROP
only through 1999.
On January 24, 2003 (68 FR 3410),
EPA published a final rule determining
that the Washington area failed to attain
the November 15, 1999 ozone
attainment deadline for serious areas
and reclassifying the Washington area
from serious to severe ozone
nonattainment. That final rule also
specified the additional SIP elements
mandated by the CAA for that severe
area, that would have to be adopted and
submitted as SIP revisions by the States
for the Washington area as a result of its
reclassification to severe.
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On April 17, 2003 (68 FR 19106), EPA
conditionally approved the States’ post
1996–1999 ROP plans and those
versions of the attainment
demonstration plans submitted during
1998 and 2000, contingent upon the
States fulfilling commitments they made
to submit the additional elements
required of SIPs for a severe area within
one year. The Sierra Club filed a
petition for review of that final rule
alleging, among other things, that EPA
could not lawfully conditionally
approve these SIP revisions due to a
lack of specificity in the States’
commitment letters, and that EPA
should require the post 1996–1999 ROP
plans be revised to use the latest mobile
sources emission factor model.
On February 3, 2004, the court ruled
on that petition and issued its opinion
vacating our April 17, 2003 rule. The
court granted the petition solely on the
issue that use of a conditional approval
was not appropriate nor available to
EPA on these SIPs. The court denied the
petition for review in all other respects.
(See Sierra Club v. EPA, 356 F.3d at
301–04 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (‘‘Sierra Club
II’’).3 On April 23, 2004, the court
issued its mandate, thereby
relinquishing jurisdiction over the post
1996–1999 ROP plans and the
attainment demonstration SIP revisions
and remanding them back to EPA.
C. What Is the Purpose of the Action
EPA Is Taking Today?
Given that the States have now
adopted and submitted contingency
measures plans and ROP plans through
to the 2005 attainment year, EPA is
proposing to approve the post 1996–
1999 ROP plans that applied to the
Washington area pursuant to the area’s
initial classification as a serious ozone
nonattainment area. In addition, EPA is
proposing approval of the States’
revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventory. EPA is also
proposing to approve the 2004 SIP
revisions listed in Table 2 of this
document, namely the post 1999–2005
ROP plans, contingency measures plans,
and VMT offset plans that apply to the
Washington area as a result of its
reclassification to severe 1-hour ozone
nonattainment. The contingency
measure plans identify those measures
that were implemented as a
consequence of the failure of the
Washington area to meet its original
3 On April 16, 2004, the court issued an order
revising the February 3, 2004 opinion to address a
petition for rehearing and leaving its decision to
vacate and remand the conditional approval to EPA
intact. Sierra Club v. EPA, 356 F.3d 296, 301–304
(D.C. Cir.) 2004), amended by No. 03–1084, 2004
WL 877850 (D.C. Cir. Apr. 16, 2004).
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November 15, 1999 serious area
attainment date, and also identify those
adopted measures that will be
implemented should the now
reclassified Washington area fail to
attain the1-hour ozone NAAQS by the
severe area deadline date of November
15, 2005 or if the area fails to make
reasonable further progress (RFP) or
meet a ROP milestone. In addition, EPA
is proposing to approve certain TCMs
which were made part of the States’ post
1996–1999 ROP plans as well as part of
the 2004 SIP revisions. These SIP
revisions and our rationale for
proposing to approve them are
discussed in more detail in the
subsequent sections of this document.
III. Amendments to the 1990 Base Year
Emissions Inventory
EPA mandated the use of the
MOBILE6 model for the post-1999 ROP
plan development and also required
associated revisions to the 1990 base
year inventory. (See 68 FR at 3418,
January 24, 2003; and the joint
memorandum issued by EPA’s Office of
Air Quality Planning & Standards and
Office of Transportation & Air Quality,
January 18, 2002) 4 As we explained in
our January 24, 2003 final rule,
requiring the use of MOBILE6 to
calculate the 2002 and 2005 ROP target
levels will ‘‘necessitate a revision to the
1990 base year inventory which is,
among other things, the planning base
line from which the 2002 and 2005 ROP
targets are calculated.’’ In their 2004 SIP
revisions, the States updated the 1990
base year inventory to reflect the use of
MOBILE6. This affected the base year
on-road mobile source inventory as well
as the emissions resulting from vehicle
refueling and the benefits of stage II
vapor recovery and of reformulated
gasoline (RFG). The States also made
other changes as a result of new
inventory methods and information.
The States added several new sources
to the point source inventory, that is,
large stationary sources of VOC and
nitrogen oxides (NOX) emissions, as
result of the area’s January 24, 2003
reclassification to severe ozone
nonattainment. This reclassification
lowered the threshold of what is
considered a major stationary source to
25 tons per year (TPY) from 50 TPY.
This resulted in additional sources
being added to the point source
inventory for NOX emissions. The
threshold for inclusion in the point
4 Joint Memorandum dated January 18, 2002,
From John S. Seitz, Director, Office of Air Quality
Planning & Standards, and Margo Tsirigotis Oge,
Director of Office of Transportation and Air Quality,
‘‘Policy Guidance for the Use of MOBILE6 in SIP
Development and Transportation Conformity’’.
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2087
source inventory for VOC emissions had
already been 10 TPY of VOC emissions
and remains at this level.
The States also updated the area and
nonroad portion of the inventory for
aircraft emissions and ground support
equipment at commercial airports using
the Emissions Dispersion Modeling
System (EDMS) to recompute the 1990
base year emissions. The Federal
Aviation Administration requires EDMS
as the methodology for performing air
quality emissions and air quality
analyses modeling for aviation sources.
It further requires airport sponsors to
use the most recent EDMS model to
calculate all emissions at airports to
satisfy the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), the CAA’s general
conformity requirements, and other
statutorily mandated analyses. EPA has
endorsed the use of EDMS.
The prior methodology used by the
States for the 1990 inventory, as
compared to EDMS, resulted in higher
base year NOX emissions and provided
for higher allowable levels of NOX
emissions for these source categories.
Therefore, the prior methodology would
have set a higher NOX emissions budget
against which general conformity would
be determined in future years’ analyses.
However, as previously noted, EDMS is
the required methodology for
performing the future years’ general
conformity analyses, themselves. The
States’ revisions to update and
recompute the SIPs’ 1990 base year area
and nonroad inventory for aircraft
emissions and ground support
equipment at commercial airports using
EDMS provide for consistency between
the methodologies used to establish the
SIPs’ allowable NOX growth budget and
for performing future year’s general
conformity analyses. The States have
also based the 2002 and 2005 year area
aircraft emissions and ground support
equipment at commercial airports
portions of the area and nonroad portion
of the inventory upon EDMS
projections. EPA is proposing to
approve the changes to the 1990 base
year inventories.
IV. Post 1996–1999 and Post 1999–2005
ROP Plans
A. What Agencies and Organizations
Developed the Post 1996–1999 and Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area?
The District, Virginia and Maryland
must demonstrate reasonable further
progress (RFP) for the Washington area.
These jurisdictions, under the auspices
of the Metropolitan Washington Air
Quality Committee (MWAQC), with the
assistance of the Metropolitan
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Washington Council of Governments
(COG), collaborated on a coordinated
post 1996–1999 ROP plan and later a
coordinated post 1999–2005 ROP plan
for the Washington area. The MWAQC
includes state and local elected officials
and representatives of the District’s
Department of Health (DoH), the
Maryland Department of the
Environment (MDE), the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality
(VADEQ) and the National Capital
Region Transportation Planning Board
(TPB). The CAA provides for such
interstate coordination for multi-state
nonattainment areas. Because control
strategy SIPs, such as the ROP plans,
must establish and identify motor
vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs) for
use in conformity determinations of
transportation improvement plans,
municipal planning organizations have
historically been involved in air quality
planning in the Washington area. The
MWAQC ensures consultation with the
TPB during the development of the
Washington area ROP plans and their
associated MVEBs. The post 1996–1999
ROP plan and the post 1999–2005 ROP
plan each include the emission target
levels that demonstrate ROP for the
milestone year(s), the projections of
growth and the total amount of
creditable reductions required for the
entire Washington area. The District,
Maryland and Virginia agreed to
apportion this total amount of required
creditable reductions among
themselves. Although both the ROP
plans were developed on an area-wide
basis, each State met the CAA
requirements by submitting the post
1996–1999 ROP plan and the post 1999–
2005 ROP plan to the EPA as revisions
to its SIP.
B. What ROP Requirements Are
Applicable to the Washington Area
After 1996?
The CAA requires that serious and
above ozone nonattainment areas
develop plans to reduce area-wide VOC
base line emissions after 1996 by 3
percent per year (averaged over
consecutive 3-year periods) until the
year of the attainment date required for
that classification of nonattainment
area. The Washington area was initially
classified as a serious ozone
nonattainment area with an attainment
date of November 15, 1999. As such, the
Washington area States had and
continue to have a requirement that a
post 1996–1999 ROP plan be SIPapproved which demonstrates a 9
percent reduction in baseline emissions
by 1999.
As previously noted, EPA published a
final rule reclassifying the Washington
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area to severe ozone nonattainment on
January 24, 2003, effective March 25,
2003. The statutory attainment date for
severe areas is November 15, 2005. The
final rule reclassifying the Washington
area to severe ozone nonattainment
imposed additional requirements on the
Washington area including, among other
things, a post 1999–2005 ROP plan to
achieve an additional 9 percent
reduction in base line emissions
between 1999 and 2002, and, a further
9 percent reduction between 2002 and
2005. This 9 percent reduction
requirement is a continuation of the
ROP requirement for a 15 percent
reduction in VOC post 1990–1996. For
post 1996 and post 1999 ROP plans, the
Act allows the substitution of NOX
emissions reductions for VOC emission
reductions where equivalent air quality
benefits are achieved as determined
using the applicable EPA guidance.
C. What Are the Basic Components of a
ROP Plan?
1. An Overview—A ROP plan consists
of a plan to achieve a target level of
emissions by each of the milestone years
covered by the plan. There are several
important emission inventories and
calculations associated with the plan
including the base year emissions
inventory, future year projection
inventories, and target level
calculations. After accounting for
growth in emissions after 1990, the plan
must also demonstrate that future year
emissions with be held to levels by the
creditable control programs’ emissions
reductions to an amount that is less than
or equal to the applicable target level.
One method for demonstrating this is to
determine how many emission
reductions are required by subtracting
the target level from the future year
uncontrolled emissions.
2. How is the Target Level
Determined?—EPA has issued guidance
on how to calculate the target levels.
This guidance outlines a process for
calculating a target level. In summary,
the State first calculates the 1996 VOC
target level that corresponds to the 15
percent reduction in VOC baseline
emissions (the 15 percent plan) required
under section 182(b)(1) of the Act. The
target level starts with the 1990 ROP
VOC inventory of VOC. The 1996 VOC
target level equals the 1990 ROP VOC
inventory minus:
(a) The ‘‘noncreditable reductions’’
due to the Federal Motor Vehicle
Control Program (FMVCP) promulgated
by January 1, 1990, (‘‘FMVCP Tier 0’’)
and Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP)
regulations required under section
211(h) of the Act (Phase 2 RVP),
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(b) Any noncreditable reasonably
available control technology (RACT)
rule correction reductions required by
section 182(a)(2)(A) of the Act,5 and,
(c) An amount equal to the required
15 percent reduction in baseline VOC
emissions.
The required 15 percent reduction in
baseline VOC emissions is not
computed as 15 percent of the 1990 ROP
VOC emissions inventory. Because
section 182(b)(1)(C) defines ‘‘base line
emissions’’ as the 1990 ROP inventory
less those 1990 calendar year emissions
that would be eliminated by the FMVCP
Tier 0 and Phase 2 RVP programs by the
milestone year, an ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990 base
year inventory must be computed to
reduce the 1990 ROP inventory by the
amount of emissions that would be
eliminated by implementation of the
FMVCP Tier 0 and Phase 2 RVP
programs. The required 15 percent
reduction in baseline VOC emissions is,
therefore, 15 percent of the ‘‘adjusted’’
1990 base year inventory for 1996.
For subsequent milestone years, a
similar process is used to compute the
target level of emissions. For each three
year period after 1996, the ‘‘fleet
turnover correction’’ (FTC) (that amount
of base line emission eliminated by
FMVCP Tier 0 and Phase 2 RVP
programs during that three year period)
is computed and the ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990
base year inventory is computed (which
is the ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990 base year
inventory for the prior milestone year
minus the relevant FTC). The target
level for a milestone year is the target
level for the prior milestone year minus
the FTC for the three-year period minus
the required ROP reductions.6 In the
absence of NOX substitution, the
required post-1996 ROP reduction is 9
percent of the adjusted 1990 VOC base
year inventory for the milestone year in
question. With NOX substitution, the
required post-1996 ROP VOC reductions
can be an amount less than 9 percent as
long as the percentage of NOX
substituted plus the VOC ROP
percentage equals or exceeds 9 and as
long as the amount of NOX substituted
5 Any reductions in 1990 baseline emissions due
to the corrections in vehicle inspection and
maintenance programs under section 182(a)(2)(B)
are also treated excluded from counting towards the
required 15 percent reduction (see CAA section
182(b)(1)(D)(iv)). There were no required
corrections in vehicle inspection and maintenance
programs in the Washington area and this provision
will not be discussed further in this document.
6 With the exception of 1999 when NO
X
substitution is used. In that case, for the 1999 VOC
target level, the starting point is the 1996 VOC
target level from the 15 percent plan, but for the
1999 NOX target level the 1990 ROP NOX inventory
is used in lieu of a 1996 target level because the
15 percent plan does not set a NOX target level for
1996.
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meets EPA’s December 1993 NOX
Substitution Guidance. With NOX
substitution, a NOX target is also
calculated along the same lines as for a
VOC target.
2089
Table 3 summarizes the process for
computing ROP target levels continued
through the 2005 milestone year:
TABLE 3.—GENERAL PROCESS FOR COMPUTING ROP TARGET LEVELS
Row
Description
How computed
1 ..............
1990 ROP Inventory ......................................................................
2 ..............
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 1996 ...............................
3 ..............
4 ..............
Emissions eliminated through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2
RVP Programs.
Reductions from RACT Rule Corrections .....................................
1990 base year inventory less biogenic emissions and sources
outside the nonattainment area.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 1996 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 1 minus Row 2 (see Note 1).
5 ..............
6 ..............
7 ..............
Required 15 Percent Reduction ....................................................
1996 Target Level .........................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 1999 ...............................
8 ..............
9 ..............
10 ............
11 ............
Fleet Turnover Correction (FTC) for 1999 ....................................
Required ROP Reduction for 1999 ...............................................
1999 Target Level .........................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 2002 ...............................
12
13
14
15
............
............
............
............
FTC for 2002 .................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 2002 ...............................................
2002 Target Level .........................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 2005 ...............................
16 ............
17 ............
18 ............
FTC for 2005 .................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 2005 ...............................................
2005 Target Level .........................................................................
Amount 1990 base year emissions reduced by required RACT
rule corrections (see Note 1).
0.15 times Row 2.
Row 1 minus Rows 3, 4 and 5.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 1999 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 2 minus Row 7 (see Note 2).
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 7 (see Note 3).
Row 6 minus Rows 8 and 9 (See Note 4).
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2002 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 7 minus Row 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 11 (see Note 2).
Row 10 minus Rows 12 and 13.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2005 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 15 minus Row 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 15 (see Note 2).
Row 14 minus Rows 16 and 17 (see Note 3).
Note 1. With NOX substitution this need not be computed for any 1999 or later NOX target levels. Also, because RACT was not required on
sources of NOX prior to 1990, there were no RACT rule corrections that might reduce 1990 base line NOX emissions and thus this need not be
computed for any 1999 or later NOX target levels.
Note 2. Formula shown for 1999 applies to VOC. When using NOX substitution the FTC for 1999 is Row 1 minus Row 7.
Note 3. For any three-year, post-1999 period, States are free to choose the amount of NOX substituted as long as the percentage of VOC plus
the percentage of NOX reduction equals 9 percent (0.09), and, as long as the plan adheres to the other restraints on the amount of NOX substituted found in EPA’s December 1993 NOX Substitution Guidance.
Note 4. When NOX substitution is used, the 1999 target level starts with the 1990 ROP inventory, not a 1996 target level, and hence would be
Row 1 minus Rows 8 and 9. Row 4 is not relevant when computing NOX targets.
D. EPA’s Evaluation of the Post 1996–
1999 ROP Plans for the Washington
Area
1. How Were the 3 Percent per Year
Reduction Needs for the Post-1996–1999
ROP Plans Calculated?
A post 1996–1999 ROP plan consists
of a plan to achieve a target level of
emissions by November 15, 1999. As
previously stated, there are emission
inventories and calculations associated
with the plan including the base year
emission inventory, future year
projection inventories, and target level
calculations. The post 1996–1999 ROP
plan also identifies the amount of
creditable emission reductions that each
state must achieve for the
nonattainment area-wide plan to get a 9
percent reduction accounting for any
growth in emissions from 1990 to 1999.
The EPA addressed the sufficiency of
the Washington area’s post 1996–1999
ROP plan base year emission inventory,
future year projection inventories, and
target level calculations in its previous
notices regarding the Washington area
attainment demonstration. (See 65 FR
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58243 September 28, 2000, 65 FR 62658,
October 19, 2000, 68 FR 5246, February
3, 2004, and 68 FR 19106, April 17,
2004.)
Although EPA requires that states use
the latest mobile source emissions factor
model available at the time a plan is
developed, our policy is not to require
states that have already submitted SIPs
or that submitted SIPs shortly after
MOBILE6’s release to revise these SIPs
simply because the new motor vehicle
emissions model becomes available.
(See 68 FR at 19120, April 17, 2003 and
Memorandum from EPA Office of Air
Quality Planning & Standards, January
18, 2002.7) In the case of the
Washington area’s post 1996–1999 ROP
plans, the States’ SIP revisions were
submitted in 1999 more than 3 years
prior to the release of the MOBILE6
model.
7 Joint Memorandum dated January 18, 2002,
from John S. Seitz, Director, Office of Air Quality
Planning & Standards, and Margo Tsirigotis Oge,
Director of Office of Transportation and Air Quality,
‘‘Policy Guidance for the Use of MOBILE6 in SIP
Development and Transportation Conformity’’.
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As stated previously, EPA
promulgated a final action on January 3,
2001 (66 FR 586) fully approving and a
final action on April 17, 2003 (68 FR
19106) conditionally approving these
1996–1999 ROP plan SIP revisions
which the court vacated. It is important
to note that although the Sierra Club’s
petition for review of our April 17, 2003
final rule claimed, among other things,
that the approval of the States’ 1996–
1999 ROP plans was arbitrary and
capricious because those plans relied on
an outdated emissions model and that
EPA should require that the post 1996–
1999 ROP plans be revised using
MOBILE6, in its February 3, 2004 ruling
on the petition, the court denied the
petition for review on this claim. (See
Sierra Club II, 356 F.3d 296, 307–308
(D.C. Cir. 2004). The court upheld EPA’s
decision not to require the Washington
area States to revise their post 1996–
1999 ROP plans to reflect MOBILE6.
Therefore, EPA believes that the ROP
target levels of the post 1996–1999 ROP
plans are approvable.
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2. What Control Strategies Are the
District, Maryland and Virginia
Including in the Post 1996–1999 ROP
Plan?
The post 1996–1999 ROP plan
describes the emission reduction credits
that the Washington area jurisdictions
are claiming toward their 9 percent
reduction requirement. We can credit
reductions for the ROP requirement for
rules promulgated by EPA and for state
measures we have approved as SIP
revisions. The post 1996–1999 ROP plan
control measures for the Washington
area are listed in Tables 4 and 5 of this
document and described in more detail
in the Technical Support Document
(TSD) for this rulemaking.
3. What Are the Total Reductions in the
1996–1999 ROP Plan?
Table 6 summarizes the VOC and
NOX creditable measures in Maryland’s,
Virginia’s and the District’s 1996–1999
ROP plan for the Washington area.
TABLE 4.—CREDITABLE VOC EMISSION REDUCTIONS IN THE POST 1996–1999 ROP PLAN FOR THE WASHINGTON AREA
[Tons/day]
Measure
DC
MD
VA
Tier 1 FMVCP ..................................................................................................................................................................
RFG Refueling Benefits ...................................................................................................................................................
National low emission vehicle (NLEV) ............................................................................................................................
Reformulated Gasoline (on/off road) ...............................................................................................................................
Surface Cleaning/Degreasing ..........................................................................................................................................
Autobody Refinishing .......................................................................................................................................................
AIM ...................................................................................................................................................................................
Consumer Products .........................................................................................................................................................
Seasonal Open Burning Ban ...........................................................................................................................................
Graphic Arts .....................................................................................................................................................................
Landfill Regulations .........................................................................................................................................................
Non-CTG RACT to 50 TPY .............................................................................................................................................
RACT on Additional Sources >25 TPY and <50 TPY ....................................................................................................
Stage II Vapor Recovery .................................................................................................................................................
Stage I Enhancement (excluding Loudoun County, VA) ................................................................................................
Federal Non-road Gasoline Engine Standards ...............................................................................................................
TCMs ...............................................................................................................................................................................
Enhanced I/M ...................................................................................................................................................................
1.4
0.0
0.2
2.2
0.0
0.5
1.6
0.6
0.0
0.9
0.0
0.0
N/A
0.0
0.0
0.9
0.0
3.9
5.5
0.9
0.6
7.9
2.9
3.8
6.6
2.2
3.7
1.0
0.0
0.4
0.3
8.9
0.9
6.3
0.1
18.0
5.9
0.7
1.3
8.0
0.0
2.7
5.6
1.9
2.6
1.5
0.3
0.4
0.0
7.9
0.3
6.8
0.1
17.9
Total Creditable Reductions .....................................................................................................................................
11.8
70.0
63.9
TABLE 5.—CREDITABLE NOX EMISSION REDUCTIONS IN THE POST 1996–1999 ROP PLAN FOR THE WASHINGTON AREA
[Tons/day]
Measure
DC
MD
VA
Enhanced I/M ...................................................................................................................................................................
Tier 1 ................................................................................................................................................................................
NLEV ................................................................................................................................................................................
Reformulated Gasoline (on-road) ....................................................................................................................................
Federal Non-road Gasoline Engine Standards ...............................................................................................................
Federal Non-road Diesel Engine Standards ...................................................................................................................
State NOX RACT/beyond NOX RACT rules ....................................................................................................................
Open Burning Ban ...........................................................................................................................................................
TCMs ...............................................................................................................................................................................
2.4
2.5
.2
0.0
¥0.1
0.4
2.1
0
0
14.8
13.7
0.3
0.1
¥0.4
3.7
67.9
0.8
0.2
16.9
14.7
1.5
0.1
¥0.5
3.2
12.0
0.6
0.2
Total Creditable Reductions .....................................................................................................................................
7.5
101.1
48.7
TABLE 6.—CREDITABLE EMISSION REDUCTIONS COMPARED TO THE EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS NEEDED FOR THE POST
1996–1999 ROP PLAN FOR THE WASHINGTON AREA
[Tons/day]
DC
VOC Reductions in Plan ..................................................................................................................................
Area-wide Reduction Needs ............................................................................................................................
Surplus .............................................................................................................................................................
NOX Reductions in Plan ..................................................................................................................................
Area-wide Reduction Needs ............................................................................................................................
Surplus .............................................................................................................................................................
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MD
VA
11.8
............
............
7.5
............
............
70.0
............
............
101.1
............
............
63.9
............
............
48.7
............
............
12JAP1
Areawide
total
145.7
131.5
14.2
157.3
150.6
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 12, 2005 / Proposed Rules
E. EPA’s Evaluation of the of the Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area
1. What Effect Do the Amendments to
the 1990 Base Year Have on the Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans
Unlike the post 1996–1999 ROP plan,
EPA explicitly requires that the States
develop the post 1999–2005 ROP plan
using the updated MOBILE6 emission
factor model because the requirement
for such a plan came due for the
Washington area after the release of
MOBILE6. (See 68 FR 3410 at 3420,
January 24, 2003.) The 1990 ROP and
‘‘adjusted’’ 1990 base year inventories,
as discussed in section IV. C. this
document, are significantly dependent
upon the mobile source emission factor
model. The mobile source emission
factor model is the tool used to
determine the amount of 1990 baseline
emissions that would be eliminated by
the pertinent milestone year due to the
Tier 0 FMVCP and Phase 2 RVP
programs, and, thus, is a fundamental
aspect of the development of the FTC
and ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990 base year
inventories. In the guidance that we
provided for the post 1999–2005 ROP
plan under the reclassification of the
Washington area to severe, we
recognized that the 1990 ROP and
adjusted 1990 base year inventories and
the 1996 and 1999 target levels would
have to be re-computed in order to
determine the target levels for the post
1999 ROP requirements. We had
identified that in addition to motor
vehicle emissions budgets for the 2002
and 2005 milestone years, development
of the required post 1999 ROP plan
would also require the development of
revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventories and development
of up to seven 1990 adjusted inventories
(VOC for 1996, VOC and NOX for 1999,
VOC and NOX for 2002, plus VOC and
NOX for 2005). See 67 FR 68805 at
68811, November 13, 2003.
As shown in Table 3 of this
document, the 1999 target level is the
1996 target level minus a percentage of
the adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory
for 1999 and the FTC for 1999; and the
1996 target level is the 1990 ROP
2091
Inventory minus the following three
amounts:
(a) 15 percent of the ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990
base year inventory for 1996;
(b) Reductions from RACT rule
corrections; and
(c) Emissions eliminated through
1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
programs.
Therefore, the 1999 target level is just
the 1990 ROP inventory minus the
following five amounts:
(1) 15 percent of the ‘‘adjusted’’ 1990
base year inventory for 1996;
(2) Reductions from RACT rule
corrections;
(3) Emissions eliminated through
1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
programs;
(4) A percentage of the ‘‘adjusted’’
1990 Base Year Inventory for 1999; and
(5) The FTC for 1999.
To continue this process for 2002 and
2005, the steps outlined in Table 3 of
this document entitled, ‘‘General
Process for Computing ROP Target
Levels’’ are used for the 2002 and 2005
milestone targets as shown in Tables 7a
and 7b.8
TABLE 7A.—GENERAL PROCESS FOR COMPUTING 2002 AND 2005 ROP VOC TARGET LEVELS
Row
Description
How computed
1 ..............
1990 VOC ROP Inventory .............................................................
2 ..............
Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC Inventory for 1996 ......................
3 ..............
4 ..............
VOC Emissions eliminated through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/
Phase 2 RVP Programs.
VOC Reductions from RACT Rule Corrections ............................
1990 base year inventory less biogenic emissions and sources
outside the nonattainment area.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 1996 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 1 minus Row 2.
5 ..............
7 ..............
Required 15 Percent VOC Reduction ...........................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC Inventory for 1999 ......................
8 ..............
9 ..............
11 ............
Fleet Turnover Correction (FTC) for 1999 ....................................
Required ROP VOC Reduction for 1999 ......................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 2002 ...............................
12
13
14
15
............
............
............
............
FTC for 2002 .................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 2002 ...............................................
2002 VOC Target Level ................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC Inventory for 2005 ......................
16 ............
17 ............
18 ............
FTC for 2005 .................................................................................
Required ROP VOC Reduction for 2005 ......................................
2005 VOC Target Level ................................................................
Amount 1990 base year emissions reduced by required RACT
rule corrections.
0.15 times Row 2.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 1999 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 2 minus Row 7.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 7.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2002 by
Tier 0 FM VCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 7 minus Row 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 11.
Row 1 minus Rows 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 12 and 13.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2005 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 15 minus Row 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Row 15.
Row 14 minus Rows 16 and 17.
TABLE 7B.—GENERAL PROCESS FOR COMPUTING 2002 AND 2005 TOP NOX TARGET LEVELS
Row
Description
How computed
1 ..............
1990 NOX ROP Inventory .............................................................
7 ..............
Adjusted 1990 Base Year NOX Inventory for 1999 ......................
8 ..............
9 ..............
Fleet Turnover Correction (FTC) for 1999 ....................................
Required ROP NOX Reduction for 1999 .......................................
1990 base year inventory less biogenic emissions and sources
outside the nonattainment area.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 1999 by
Tier 0 FMCVP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 1 minus Row 7.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.09) times Tow 7.
8 To facilitate comparison by the reader of Tables
7a and 7b with Table 3, the rows identifiers in the
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following two tables remain the same as those for
the corresponding item in Table 3.
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TABLE 7B.—GENERAL PROCESS FOR COMPUTING 2002 AND 2005 TOP NOX TARGET LEVELS—Continued
Row
Description
How computed
11 ............
Adjusted 1990 Base Year NOX Inventory for 2002 ......................
12
13
14
15
............
............
............
............
FTC for 2002 .................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 2002 ...............................................
2002 NOX Target Level .................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 2005 ...............................
16 ............
17 ............
18 ............
FTC for 2005 .................................................................................
Required ROP NOX Reduction for 2005 .......................................
2005 NOX Target Level .................................................................
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2002 by
Tier 0 FMCVP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 7 minus Row 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.9) times Tow 11.
Row 1 minus Rows 8, 9, 12 and 13.
1990 ROP inventory less emissions eliminated through 2005 by
Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
Row 15 minus Tow 11.
ROP Percentage (0.0 to 0.9) times Row 15.
Row 14 minus Rows 16 and 17.
2. How Were the 3 Percent per Year
Reductions for the Post 1999–2005 ROP
Plan Calculated?
TABLE 8.—2002 AND 2005 ROP TARGET LEVELS
VOC
tons/
day
Row
Description
1 .............
2 .............
3 .............
4 .............
5 .............
7 .............
8 .............
9 .............
11 ...........
12 ...........
13 ...........
14 ...........
15 ...........
16 ...........
17 ...........
18 ...........
1990 VOC ROP Inventory ..........................................................................................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC Inventory for 1996 ...................................................................................................
VOC Emissions eliminated through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP Programs .............................................
VOC Reductions from RACT Rule Corrections ..........................................................................................................
Required 15 Percent VOC Reduction ........................................................................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 1999 ............................................................................................................
Fleet Turnover Correction (FTC) for 1999 ..................................................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 1999—1% VOC & 8% NOX ........................................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year Inventory for 2002 ............................................................................................................
FTC for 2002 ...............................................................................................................................................................
Required ROP Reduction for 2002—0 % VOC and 9 % NOX ..................................................................................
2002 Target Level .......................................................................................................................................................
Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC Inventory for 2005 ...................................................................................................
FTC for 2005 ...............................................................................................................................................................
Required ROP VOC Reduction for 2005—0% VOC & 9 % NOX ..............................................................................
2005 Target Level .......................................................................................................................................................
* N/R
NOX
tons/
day
578.7
455.5
123.2
0.1
68.3
433.7
21.8
4.3
420.5
13.2
0.0
347.7
412.1
8.4
0.0
339.3
869.3
N/R *
N/R
N/A *
N/R
778.5
90.8
62.3
756.7
21.8
68.1
626.3
735.6
21.1
66.2
539.0
means not required, and N/A means not applicable.
3. What Control Strategies Are the
District, Maryland and Virginia
Including in the Post 1999–2005 ROP
Plan?
The post 1999–2005 ROP plan
describes the emission reduction credits
that the Washington area jurisdictions
are claiming toward their 9 percent
reduction requirements. We can credit
reductions for the ROP requirement for
rules promulgated by the EPA and for
state measures we have approved as SIP
revisions. The control measures used in
the post 1999–2005 ROP plan for the
Washington area are listed in Tables 9
and 10 of this document and described
in more detail in the TSD for this
rulemaking. The control measures
include all those in the post 1996–1999
portion of the plan, plus additional
measures. Table 9 lists those measures
credited in the 1996–1999 ROP that
continue to produce benefits in the post1999 period. There are several reasons
why a post 1996–1999 measure can also
be credited in the post-1999 period.
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First, the uncontrolled baseline is
computed from the1990 levels, not the
1999 levels. Thus, if a source category
emits at a rate of one ton of pollutant
per 10 units of activity (e.g., VMT or
millions of British Thermal Units heat
input) and had a 1990 activity level of
100 units, the source would have
baseline emissions of 10 tons. If the
source categories activity level was
projected to grow to 130 units by 1999
and 140 units by 2002, the projected
uncontrolled emissions would be 13
tons in 1999 and 14 tons in 2002. If this
source category was controlled at a 50
percent control, that is, required to emit
at a rate of a half ton per unit of activity
by some date before 1999, then the
projected, controlled emissions would
be 6.5 tons in 1999 and 7 tons in 2002.
The reductions would be the projected
uncontrolled emissions minus the
controlled emissions. The reductions
would be 6.5 tons for 1999 and 7 tons
for 2002.
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Another way a measure included in
the post 1996–1999 ROP plan can
produce additional emission reduction
benefits after 1999 is when increasing
portions of the source category are
subject to more stringent standards over
time. This is true of mobile source
controls under the FMVCP and NLEV
programs and for EPA’s nonroad mobile
source standards. As time passes, more
and more of the source category is made
of newer vehicles or engines that were
manufactured to meet the most recent
emission standards. For instance, in the
case of on-road mobile sources, the
emission factor computed using the
MOBILE emission factor model declines
for future years. Once again, reductions
are computed by subtracting a future
controlled projected emissions from
uncontrolled emissions. The future year
uncontrolled emissions assume only the
FMVCP in place as of 1990 (termed
‘‘Tier 0 FMVCP’’), the ‘‘Phase 2 RVP’’
standards issued mandated for 1992,
and other programs in place in 1990.
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The future year controlled programs
include all the creditable programs
issued or adopted since 1990 such as
the Tier 1 and 2 FMVCP standards,9
federal heavy duty on-road diesel
engine standards, reformulated gasoline,
the enhanced inspection maintenance
programs, and the National Low
Emission Vehicle program. Because the
same future year VMT is used for both
the projected uncontrolled and
controlled cases, the reductions are net
of growth in VMT.
TABLE 9.—VOC AND NOX EMISSION REDUCTIONS ELIGIBLE FOR CREDIT IN THE POST 1999–2005 ROP PLAN FROM
MEASURES IN THE 1996–1999 ROP PLAN FOR THE WASHINGTON AREA
[Tons/day]
2002 reductions
2005 reductions
VOC
NOX
VOC
Tiers 1 & 2 FMVCP, Reformulated Gasoline (On-road), Federal Heavy Duty Diesel Engines
rule, NLEV & Enhanced Inspection and Maintenance ................................................................
Reformulated Gasoline (Nonroad/Off-road) ....................................................................................
Surface Cleaning/Decreasing ..........................................................................................................
Autobody Refinishing .......................................................................................................................
AIM ...................................................................................................................................................
Consumer Products .........................................................................................................................
Seasonal Open Burning Ban ...........................................................................................................
Graphic Arts .....................................................................................................................................
Landfill Regulations .........................................................................................................................
Non-CTG RACT to 50 TPD—MD/VA/DC ........................................................................................
Stage I Enhancement ......................................................................................................................
Expanded State Point Source Regulation to 25 TPD .....................................................................
Stage II Vapor Recovery Nozzles ...................................................................................................
RFG refueling benefits .....................................................................................................................
Non-road Gasoline Engines Rule ....................................................................................................
Non-road Diesel Engines .................................................................................................................
State NOX RACT/beyond RACT .....................................................................................................
56.0
2.7
4.1
9.3
16.7
4.1
7.4
3.8
2.4
1.5
1.5
2.4
15.1
2.6
22.2
................
................
44.9
................
................
................
................
................
1.6
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
14.9
203.8
80.5
2.9
4.4
9.8
17.5
4.3
7.4
4.0
2.5
1.5
1.6
2.5
15.1
2.3
26.6
................
................
22.1
279.4
Total Creditable Reductions .....................................................................................................
151.8
265.2
182.9
388.9
Measure
The post 1999–2005 ROP plan for the
Washington area also includes
additional emission reduction measures
beyond those included in the post
1996–1999 ROP plan. All the States
have adopted limits on certain
architectural and industrial
maintenance (AIM) coatings that are
more stringent than the limits required
under the Federal regulations for AIM
coatings. The post 1999–2005 ROP plan
also includes Virginia’s rule for solvent
cleaning operations which is based on
the Federal maximum achievable
control technology (MACT) standard for
chlorinated solvent vapor degreasers.
The States each have issued rules that
regulate VOC emissions from portable
fuel containers by setting standards for
the design and construction of these
containers.
The post 1999–2005 ROP plan also
relies upon VOC emission reductions
from emissions standards promulgated
by EPA for several categories of nonroad
mobile sources. These categories are:
(a) Spark ignition outboard, personal
water craft and jetboat engines (OB/
PWC) and stern drive and inboard
engines;
(b) Large spark-ignition engines such
as those used in forklifts and airport
ground-service equipment;
(c) Recreational vehicles using sparkignition engines such as off-highway
motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, and
snowmobiles; and
(d) Recreational marine diesel
engines.
The 1999–2005 ROP plan also relies
upon additional TCMs which are
strategies to both reduce VMT and
decrease the amount of emissions per
VMT, and are considered an essential
element of control strategies for
nonattainment areas.
9 The MOBILE model automatically keeps track of
when which program is required and thus does not
compute any credit for Tier 2 for the 2002 year but
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NOX
85.8
1.6
The post 1999–2005 ROP plan also
relies upon certain voluntary nonregulatory measures as an alternative to
traditional ‘‘command and control’’
regulatory approaches. Voluntary
emission reduction program measures
have the potential to encourage new,
untried and cost-effective approaches to
reduce emissions. Under EPA’s
guidance, voluntary emission reduction
program measures can be approved if
the State retains enforceable
responsibility for the amount of
emission reductions associated with the
voluntary measures and meets certain
other obligations.
The post 1999–2005 ROP plan’s
control measures for the Washington
area are listed in Table 10 of this
document and described in more detail
in the TSD for this rulemaking.
will for a 2005 year which is after the 2004 model
year.
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TABLE 10.—VOC AND NOX EMISSION REDUCTIONS FROM MEASURES IN THE 1999–2005 ROP PLAN FOR THE
WASHINGTON AREA
[Tons/day]
2002 Reductions
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
2005 Reductions
VOC
Line #
NOX
VOC
Measure
NOX
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
Measures in 1996–1999 ROP plan (from Table 9) ....................................................
State Portable Fuel Container Rules—MD/VA ...........................................................
State Solvent Cleaning Rules .....................................................................................
EPA’s Non-road Engines and vehicles rule—Large Spark Ignition Engine Rule .......
EPA’s Non-road Engines and vehicles rule—Spark Ignition Marine Engines ............
TCMs in 2004 SIP Revisions ......................................................................................
State AIM Rules ..........................................................................................................
Voluntary Measures ....................................................................................................
State Portable Fuel Container Rules—DC .................................................................
151.8
0.9
................
................
1.3
0.3
................
................
................
265.2
................
................
0.6
................
0.5
................
................
................
182.9
2.4
9.0
................
3.1
0.3
12.3
3.19
0.2
388.9
Total
Reductions ...................................................................................................................
154.3
266.3
213.39
390.29
4. What Are the Creditable Reductions
in the Post 1999–2005 ROP Plan?
EPA can only credit reductions in a
ROP plan required by section 182(c)(2)
if those reductions meet the creditability
requirements of sections 182(b)(1)(C)
and (D) of the Act. One restriction for
creditability is that the reduction has to
result from a rule promulgated by EPA,
from a permit issued pursuant to Title
V of the Act, or from a rule that EPA has
approved into the applicable SIP(s) (See
302(q) of the Act).
All of the reductions from national
rules (all those in Table 9 as well as
those listed on lines 4 and 5 of Table 10)
for which the States seek credit in their
post 1996–1999 and post 1999-2005
ROP plans have been promulgated by
EPA. All of the reductions from State
rules included in Table 9 and in lines
2 and 3 of Table 10 for which the States
seek credit in their post 1996–1999 and
post 1999–2005 ROP plans have been
approved into the applicable SIP.
As for the rest of the State measures,
EPA can only credit the ROP plan with
reductions from a measure approved
into the applicable SIP, and, hence, can
only issue a final rule approving the
ROP plan after or concurrently with our
approval of state measures projected to
generate sufficient reductions to
demonstrate ROP. However, EPA can
propose approval of an ROP plan if we
0.5
0.7
.19
have proposed approval of enough
measures to generate the reductions
needed to demonstrate ROP. EPA has
already proposed approval for all the
measures listed in Table 10. The TCMs
in the 1996–1999 ROP plan and the
2004 SIP revisions are being proposed
for approval in this notice of proposed
rulemaking. The status of each of the
remaining items is as follows:
EPA proposed approval of the
Maryland and Virginia State AIM rules
on May 25, 2004 (69 FR 29674) and June
7, 2004 (69 FR 31780), respectively. For
the measures listed in Table 11, a notice
of proposed rulemaking (NPR) has been
published in the Federal Register.
TABLE 11.—NPR SIGNATURE DATES
Line number in
table 9
Measure
Date/Citation of NPR
7
8
9
12/27/04 (69 FR 77149).
12/23/04 (69 FR 76889).
12/29/04 (69 FR 77970).
State AIM Rule—DC ...........................................................................................................................
Voluntary Measures ............................................................................................................................
State Portable Fuel Container Rules—DC .........................................................................................
5. How Does the Post 1999–2005 ROP
Plan Demonstrate ROP?
The post 1999–2005 plan
demonstrates that the Washington area
meets the post 1999–2005 ROP
requirement of the Act by showing that
the ROP plan will generate sufficient
emission reductions to reduce the
projected uncontrolled 2002 or 2005
emissions to less than or equal to a
target level of emissions for that year
which represents a 9 percent reduction
in baseline emissions. The 2002 and
2005 NOX target levels are 626.3 and
539.0 tons/day of NOX, respectively.
(See Table 8 of this document.) These
target levels each represent a 9 percent
reduction in baseline NOX emissions.
The 2002 and 2005 uncontrolled NOX
emissions are 880.1 and 880.8 tons/day,
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respectively. Thus, the required NOX
reductions for 2002 are 880.1 minus the
target level of 626.3, that is, 253.8 tons/
day of NOX emissions. The required
NOX reductions for 2005 are 880.8
minus the target level of 539.0, that is,
341.8 tons/day of NOX emissions. The
measures listed in Table 9 achieve
sufficient reductions to enable the area
to achieve the 2002 and 2005 NOX target
levels. As discussed in section IV. E. of
this document, these measures are fully
creditable towards ROP.
While not a factor in our evaluation
for approval, EPA notes that the post
1999–2005 ROP plan also demonstrates
reasonable further progress for VOC
emissions for 2002 and 2005 in a more
generic manner pursuant to section
172(c)(2) of the Act. This is evidenced
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by the numerous VOC reduction
measures in the plan. With the
exception of the voluntary measures
(the approval of which has been
proposed in a separate proposed
rulemaking) and the TCMs (the approval
of which is also proposed in this
document), the bulk of these measures
are part of the measures identified in the
contingency plan to address the failure
to attain by November 15, 1999. As will
be discussed in succeeding sections of
this document, the approval of the
contingency measure plan and the ROP
demonstration required by section
182(c)(2) is contingent upon approval of
these measures. The attainment
demonstration relies on VOC as well as
NOX emission reductions in both the
photochemical modeling and weight of
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evidence portions of the demonstration.
Therefore, reductions in VOC emissions
constitute progress towards attainment.
However, EPA believes that the average
3 percent per year ROP requirement of
section 182(c)(2) has been demonstrated
by NOX reductions alone.
EPA has approved ROP plans under
section 182(c)(2) that relied solely upon
NOX reductions without regard to VOC
reductions. See 69 FR 42880, July 19,
2004 (proposed at 69 FR 25348, May 6,
2004) and 64 FR 13348, March 18, 1999
(proposed by 63 FR 45172, August 25,
1998).
EPA concludes that the post 1999–
2005 ROP plan in the 2004 SIP revisions
does demonstrate ROP of at least a nine
(9) percent reduction in NOX baseline
emissions in the Washington area for
each of the 1999–2002 and 2002–2005
periods. Therefore, EPA believes that we
can approve the post 1999–2005 ROP
plans submitted by the States for the
Washington area on the basis of the NOX
reductions alone.
F. Do the Post 1996–1999 and Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area Meet the
Requirements for NOX Substitution?
1. Relationship to the Attainment
Demonstration
In order to determine whether the
post 1996–1999 and post 1999–2005
ROP plans satisfy EPA’s guidance and
the Act regarding NOX substitution, we
had to examine and evaluate certain
aspects of the attainment demonstration
plan that the States have also submitted
for the Washington area. For purposes of
proposing approval of the post 1996–
1999 and post 1999–2005 ROP plans,
EPA’s review of the attainment
demonstration was limited to whether
the photochemical grid modeling
showed that NOX reductions are useful
in reducing ozone concentrations, that
the ROP plan substitutes no more NOX
reductions than assumed in the
attainment demonstration, and whether
the attainment demonstration attained
within time periods mandated by the
Act. EPA also examined the attainment
demonstration to ensure that the
attainment demonstration did not rely
upon the measures identified in the
contingency plan in the event the
Washington area fails to attain by
November 15, 2005 or fails to achieve
post 1996 ROP or a post 1996 ROP
milestone. As discussed in Section V. of
this document, the continency plan
relies upon early implementation of
contingency measures. EPA had to
ensure that the attainment
demonstration did not rely upon these
measures in order to propose approval
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of the contingency plan for failure to
attain by November 15, 2005. The
attainment demonstration SIPs
submitted by the States for the
Washington area are the subject of a
separate rulemaking that does address
all of the required elements.
EPA concludes that the 2004 SIP
revisions demonstrate that the relative
reduction in ozone precursor emissions
from the entire inventory is greater than
that used in the photochemical grid
modeling for the Washington area and
that the weight of evidence shows that
the measures creditable towards the
2005 milestone year will result in
attainment by no later than November
15, 2005. Furthermore, we have
determined that this demonstration does
not depend upon any measures in the
contingency measure plan, and that the
States have used the latest planning
assumptions for emissions estimates for
all source categories. EPA also
concludes that the attainment
demonstration modeling shows that
NOX reductions are beneficial towards
reducing ozone in the Washington area
and that with all the measures in the
ROP plan the Washington area will
attain by November 15, 2005. EPA
further finds that the post 1996–1999
and post 1999–2005 ROP plans
substitute fewer NOX reductions than
those needed for attainment by
November 15, 2005. EPA, therefore,
concludes that the post 1996–1999 and
post 1999–2005 ROP plans for the
Washington area meet EPA’s guidance
and the Act for NOX substitution, and
can be approved. A detailed description
of our analysis of the local modeling
and weight of evidence and its
relationship to NOX substitution is
provided in the TSD prepared in
support of this rulemaking action. That
TSD also includes our detailed
evaluation of how the post 1996–1999
and post 1999–2005 ROP plans satisfy
the Act’s and our guidance for NOX
substitution. A copy of the TSD is
available in the E-Docket for this
rulemaking and upon request from the
EPA Regional Office listed in the
Addresses section of this document.
V. Contingency Measure Plan
Sections 172(c)(9) and 182(c)(9) of the
Act require that SIPs contain additional
contingency measures that will take
effect without further action by the state
or EPA if an area fails to attain the
standard by the applicable date, or fails
to meet ROP deadlines. The Act does
not specify how many contingency
measures are needed or the magnitude
of emissions reductions that must be
provided by these measures. However,
EPA provided our initial guidance
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2095
interpreting the contingency measure
requirements of 172(c)(9) and 182(c)(9)
in the April 16, 1992, General Preamble
for Implementation of the Act (See 57
FR 13498 at 13510, April 16, 1992). Our
interpretation is based upon the
language in sections 1872(c)(9) and
1829(c)(9) in conjunction with the
control measures requirements of
sections 172(c), 182(b) and 182(c)(2)(B),
the reclassification and failure to attain
provisions of section 181(b) and other
provisions. In the April 16, 1992 initial
guidance EPA indicated that states with
moderate and above ozone
nonattainment areas should include
sufficient contingency measures so that,
upon implementation of such measures,
additional emission reductions of up to
3 percent of the emissions in the
adjusted base year inventory (or such
lesser percentage that will cure the
identified failure) would be achieved in
the year following the year in which the
failure has been identified. The State
must show that the contingency
measures can be implemented with
minimal further action on their part and
with no additional rulemaking actions.
In subsequent guidance, EPA opined
that contingency measures could be
implemented early, that is, be
implemented prior to the milestone or
attainment date.10
A. What Are the Contingency Measures
Implemented To Address the Failure To
Attain by November 15, 1999 and for
the 1996–1999 ROP Plan?
The 2004 SIP revisions identify two
groups of measures that have been
implemented since November 15, 1999.
The first of these measures is phase 2 of
the RFG program. By opting into the
reformulated gasoline program, the
States ensured that the further benefits
of the program would be implemented
on January 1, 2000. Such
implementation would be earlier than
what would have occurred had RFG
been implemented in the area due to
reclassification. Under section 181 of
the Act, EPA has no enforceable duty to
reclassify an area sooner than 6 months
after the attainment date.
EPA bases the determination of failure
to attain upon air quality monitoring
data and thus must have ozone season
data for the attainment year in hand.
States are required to report air quality
data at least quarterly and each report is
due no later than 90 days after the end
of the quarterly reporting period (40
10 See Memorandum dated August 13, 1993, From
G.T. Helms, Chief, Ozone/Carbon Monoxide
Programs Branch, to Air Branch Chief, Regions I–
X, entitled ‘‘Early Implementation of Contingency
Measures for Ozone and Carbon Monoxide (CO)
Nonattainment Areas.’’
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CFR 58.35). Thus the earliest EPA
would be assured to have data for the
first portion (April–June) of the
Washington Area’s April to October
ozone season would have been
September 1999. Under section 211(k)
of the Act, the RFG program becomes
effective in an area one year after the
effective date of the reclassification to
severe. At the earliest, the RFG program
would have been required in the fall of
2000, and at the latest spring of 2001. By
opting into the RFG program, the
Washington Area States assured that the
additional benefits of the second phase
of the RFP program would be
implemented without any further action
by the States or EPA on January 1, 2000.
EPA believes it is illogical to penalize
nonattainment areas that are taking
extra steps, such as implementing
contingency measures prior to a
deadline, to comport with the CAA’s
mandate that such states achieve
NAAQS compliance as ‘‘expeditiously
as practicable.’’ EPA has applied this
guideline to situations where the
reductions occurred prior to the
attainment deadline. See, e.g., 67 FR
61786, October 2, 2002.
The second phase of the RFG program
was implemented prior to EPA’s January
24, 2003 rule which determined that the
Washington area failed to attain the 1hour ozone NAAQS by November 15,
1999 and which reclassified it to severe
nonattainment. EPA believes, however,
the fact that the measure was
implemented prior to the effective date
of the reclassification should not render
it ineligible for use as a contingency
measure. After all, if a measure
implemented prior to the attainment
date can count towards the failure-toattain contingency requirement, then
surely this measure, which was
implemented shortly after the
attainment deadline, can count towards
the failure-to-attain by November 15,
1999 contingency requirement.
The second group of measures are
additional measures implemented after
November 15, 1999, but before
November 15, 2005. These additional
measures are the States AIM coatings,
portable fuel container (PFC) and
solvent cleaning rules discussed in
Section IV. E. of this document. A
summary of the expected benefits from
these measures is presented in Table 12.
TABLE 12.—CONTINGENCY MEASURES
VOC
reductions
(tons/day)
Measure
Solvent Cleaning Operations—VA .................................................................................................
Portable fuel containers rule—MD .................................................................................................
Portable fuel containers rule—VA ..................................................................................................
AIM coatings rule—DC ...................................................................................................................
AIM coatings rule—MD ..................................................................................................................
AIM coatings rule—VA ...................................................................................................................
9.0
1.7
0.7
1.1
6.2
5.0
Total ........................................................................................................................................
23.7
3 percent of 1999 baseline emissions ...........................................................................................
13.0
Implementation date
While these additional measures were
not adopted as contingency measures
before the Washington area was
reclassified to severe nonattainment (or
before November 15, 1999) and then
implemented to take effect without any
further action by the States or EPA after
the area failed to attain, EPA believes
that the adoption of these additional
measures also fulfill the contingency
measure requirement for a serious area.
The SIPs applicable to the Washington
area did not identify contingency
measures prior to the reclassification,
and, the ultimate remedy for such a
defect would be to implement
additional measures over and above
those in the applicable SIP. These
measures were adopted and made
enforceable after the March 1, 2003
effective date that of EPA final rule
reclassifying the Washington area to
severe nonattainment for failing to
attain the ozone NAAQS. (See, 68 FR
3410, January 24, 2003.) The adopted
rules implementing the measures
require compliance before the severe
area attainment date of November 15,
2005.
In the General Preamble (57 FR 13498
at 13510, April 16, 1992), we stated that
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the contingency measure would need to
achieve reductions in the year following
the year in which the failure has been
identified. In the January 24, 2003 final
rule, EPA issued the determination that
the Washington area had failed to attain
by November 15, 1999. Thus, under the
guidance in the General Preamble the
measures should have been
implemented no later than one year
from March 1, 2003, the effective date
of the January 24, 2003 final rule.
However, the States have adopted the
additional rules to fulfill the
contingency measure requirement, these
measures have been implemented on
the dates shown in Table 12, and the
measures have been submitted as SIP
revisions. EPA believes that it would
serve no purpose to disapprove the
contingency measure plan simply
because the measures were not
implemented by March 1, 2004, since
the remedy would require yet another
rule adoption process which cannot
cure the problem of having missed a
deadline that is nearly two years in the
past.
As discussed in Section IV. E. of this
document, EPA has not yet approved all
these contingency measures. The States
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January
January
January
January
January
January
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
2005.
2004.
2005.
2005.
2005.
2005.
3 percent of 433.7 TPD VOC.
have calculated the amount of VOC or
NOX reductions that are required to
meet the 3 percent contingency
requirement relative to the 1999
adjusted base year inventory. The
amount of VOC reduction needed is
13.0 tons per day (433.7 x 0.03). EPA
has already approved the first three
measures listed in Table 12 into the
Maryland or Virginia SIP. The
reductions from these three measures
total 11.4 of the needed 13 tons per day.
However, we can propose approval of
the contingency plan if EPA has
proposed approval of the measures in
that plan. As indicated in Section IV. E.
of this document, EPA has already
proposed approval of all these
measures.
EPA is proposing to approve the
contingency plan as containing adopted
and implemented measures to address
the Washington area’s failure to attain
by November 15, 1999 and for the 1996–
1999 ROP plan. Any final action to
approve the contingency plan can only
occur concurrently with or after
approval of all the measures as SIP
revisions.
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B. What Measures Are in the
Contingency Measures Plan for the Post
1999–2005 ROP Plans and for Failure
To Attain by November 15, 2005?
1. Measures in the Plan
The States have identified a number
of fully adopted measures which can be
implemented with minimal further
action on their part and with no
additional rulemaking actions to fill the
contingency plan in the event the
Washington area has a failure to make
ROP or fails to attain by November 15,
2005. These measures include:
(a) The District’s rule for solvent
cleaning operations rules which are
based on the Federal maximum
achievable control technology (MACT)
standard for chlorinated solvent vapor
degreasers and thus require higher
levels of technology than required
previous District requirements;
(b) The District’s and Maryland’s rules
for consumer products that set more
stringent limits than the otherwise
applicable Federal rules;
(c) The District’s and Virginia’s rules
covering refinishing operations of motor
vehicles. These rules set more stringent
VOC control standards for these
operations than otherwise applicable
Federal regulations. The main difference
in the state rules versus the federal rule
is that the federal rule regulates only the
VOC content of the repair coatings
whereas the state rules also require the
use of high transfer-efficiency painting
methods (e.g., high volume low pressure
spray guns), and controls on emissions
from equipment (e.g., spray gun)
cleaning, housekeeping activities (e.g.,
use of sealed containers for clean-up
rags), and operator training; and
(d) Post 2005 reductions from the
portable fuel containers rules in all
three States. The reductions from
Virginia’s, Maryland’s and the District’s
rules are credited towards the ROP and
attainment plans only to the extent the
measure produces benefits by January 1,
2005 and November 15, 2005. The
measure will accrue additional benefits
after November 15, 2005 as additional
old containers are replaced by ones
meeting the new requirements. These
additional benefits are credited towards
the contingency plan.
2. Early Implementation Schedule
The measures in the contingency
measure plan will be implemented upon
a fixed schedule whether or not EPA
issued a finding of failure that the
Washington area failed achieve a post
1999 ROP milestone or fails to attain by
November 15, 2005. All of the rules
except Maryland’s portable fuel
containers regulation will take effect
January 1, 2005. Maryland’s portable
fuel containers regulation took effect
January 1, 2003. Thus, all of the rules
can be implemented without further
action by the State or EPA.
2097
In guidance issued in 1993, we allow
the use of surplus reductions that have
already been achieved before the failure
has been identified to serve as
contingency measures in the year after
the failure for attainment and ROP
plans. If an area then fails to meet a
milestone which triggers the
implementation of contingency
measures, the state would have one year
to backfill the contingency measure.
(See 57 FR 13498, 13511, April 16,
1992).
The States have not used the VOC
reductions on which the contingency
measure plan relies in either the
attainment demonstration or post 1996–
1999 and post 1999–2005 ROP plans.
The attainment demonstration relies
upon a total of over 210 TPD reduction
in VOC emissions. Given that the
contingency measures are about 6
percent of the total number of
reductions and given that the
implementation date of January 1, 2005,
EPA believes that these contingency
measures are not reasonably available
control measures (RACM) because they
would not advance the attainment date
from the 2005 ozone season to the 2004
ozone season. Therefore, the early
implemented contingency measures are
surplus to the attainment
demonstration. A summary of the
expected benefits from these measures
is presented in Table 13.
TABLE 13.—CONTINGENCY MEASURES
VOC
Reductions
(tons/day)
Measure
Solvent Cleaning Operations—DC .................................................................................................
Motor Vehicle Refinishing—DC ......................................................................................................
Motor Vehicle Refinishing—VA ......................................................................................................
Consumer Products—MD ..............................................................................................................
Consumer Products—DC ...............................................................................................................
Portable fuel containers rule—DC .................................................................................................
Portable fuel containers rule—MD .................................................................................................
Portable fuel containers rule—VA ..................................................................................................
2.7
0.6
2.0
2.9
1.1
0.3
1.5
1.7
Total .................................................................................................................................
12.8
3 percent of 2002 baseline emissions ...........................................................................................
12.6
Implementation date/remark
3. Approval Status
EPA can only approve the
contingency plan after or concurrently
with EPA’s approval of any State
contingency measures rules into the
applicable SIP. However, we can
propose approval of the contingency
measure plan once EPA has proposed
approval of the state contingency
measures into the applicable SIP.
EPA has already published final or
proposed rules in the Federal Register
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Approved—12/09/03, 68 FR 68523.
Approved—07/08/04, 69 FR 31893.
Sfmt 4702
3 percent of 420.5 TPD VOC
to approve all of the measures in the
contingency plan for the Washington
area. The status of each measure in the
contingency plan is briefly described in
the following table.
TABLE 14.—CONTINGENCY MEASURE APPROVAL STATUS
Measures Approved into SIPs:
Consumer Products—MD .................................................................
State Portable Fuel Containers—VA ................................................
January 1, 2005.
January 1, 2005.
January 1, 2005.
January 1, 2005.
January 1, 2005.
Post 2005 benefits only.
Post 2005 benefits only.
Post 2005 benefits only.
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TABLE 14.—CONTINGENCY MEASURE APPROVAL STATUS—Continued
State Portable Fuel Containers—MD ................................................
Motor Vehicle Refinishing—VA .........................................................
Measures Proposed for Approval into SIPs:
Motor Vehicle Refinishing—DC .........................................................
Solvent Cleaning—DC ......................................................................
Consumer Products—DC ..................................................................
State Portable Fuel Container Rules—DC .......................................
4. Conclusion
EPA is proposing to approve the
contingency plan as containing adopted
and implemented measures to address
the contingency measure requirements
in the event the Washington area fails to
attain the 1-hour ozone NAAQS by
November 15, 2005 and for any future
failures to achieve ROP or a ROP
milestone. Any final approval is
contingent upon approval of sufficient
State measures to achieve the 3 percent
of baseline emission requirement. To
have sufficient measures to achieve the
3 percent of baseline emission
requirement, EPA will have promulgate
final rules approving all of the measures
listed in Tables 12 and 13.
VI. Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT)
Offset SIP and Transportation Control
Measures (TCMs)
A. What Is a VMT Offset SIP?
Section 182(d)(1)(A) of the Act
requires states containing ozone
nonattainment areas classified as severe,
pursuant to section 181(a) of the Act, to
adopt transportation control strategies
and TCMs to offset increases in
emissions resulting from growth in VMT
or numbers of vehicle trips and to
obtain reductions in motor vehicle
emissions as necessary (in combination
with other emission reduction
requirements) to comply with the Act’s
ROP milestones and attainment
demonstration requirements. Our
interpretation of section 182(d)(1)(A) is
discussed in the April 16, 1992, General
Preamble (57 FR 13498). Section
182(d)(1)(A) of the Act specifies
submission of the VMT Offset SIP by
November 15, 1992, for any severe and
above ozone nonattainment area.
However, EPA has concluded that
section 182(i) of the Act authorizes EPA
to adjust applicable deadlines (other
than attainment dates) to the extent
such adjustment is necessary or
appropriate to assure consistency among
the required submissions of new
requirements applicable to an area
which has been reclassified. In the final
rule reclassifying the Washington area
to severe nonattainment, EPA
established the submission deadline of
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Approved—06/29/04, 69 FR 38848.
Approved—06/24/04, 69 FR 35253.
12/23/04,
12/29/04,
12/28/04,
12/29/04,
69
69
69
69
FR
FR
FR
FR
77688.
77971.
77688.
77970.
March 1, 2004 for the section 182(d)(1)
SIP revision as EPA set for all the other
new SIP revision elements applicable to
reclassified area. See 68 FR 3410 at
3422, January 24, 2004.
B. EPA’s Analysis of VMT Offset SIP in
the 2004 SIP Revisions
In the ‘‘General Preamble’’ EPA
explained how States are to demonstrate
that the VMT requirement is satisfied.
Sufficient measures must be adopted so
projected motor vehicle VOC emissions
will stay beneath a ‘‘ceiling level’’
established through modeling of
mandated transportation-related
controls. When growth in VMT and
vehicle trips would otherwise cause a
motor vehicle emissions upturn, this
upturn must be prevented, or offset, by
TCMs. If projected total motor vehicle
emissions during the ozone season in
one year are not higher than during the
previous ozone season due to the
control measures in the SIP, the VMT
Offset requirement is satisfied. In order
to make these projections, a curve of
vehicle emissions is modeled to
represent the effects of required
reductions from the following
mandatory programs: an enhanced
performance standard vehicle I/M
program, Phase 2 RVP, RFG, and the
FMVCP. (See 57 FR 13498 at 13521–
13523, April 16, 1992.) As described in
the General Preamble, the purpose of
section 182(d)(1)(A) of the Act is to
prevent growth in motor vehicle
emissions from negating the emissions
reduction benefits of the federally
mandated programs in the Act. EPA
believes it is appropriate to interpret the
VMT Offset SIP provisions of the Act to
account for how States can practicably
comply with each of the provision’s
elements.
A detailed description of the States’
VMT offset SIPs for the Washington area
and our evaluation of how those SIPs
satisfy the applicable requirements of
the Act and EPA’s guidance is provided
in the TSD prepared in support of this
rulemaking. That TSD is available in the
E-Docket of this rulemaking and from
the EPA Regional Office listed in
Addresses section of this document.
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The States’ plans show, and EPA’s
evaluation confirms, that the modeled
curve for the Washington area does not
turn upward (indicating the control
programs are offsetting increases in
emission from growth in VMT).
Therefore, no TCMs would be necessary
to offset emissions from growth in VMT
under section 182(d)(1)(A). However,
the District, Maryland and Virginia have
chosen to include certain TCMs as
measures to help meet the ROP and
attainment requirements.
C. What TCMs Are Part of the SIP?
Typical TCMs included in the plans
are bicycle racks on buses and at transit
stations, park-and-ride lots, additional
bus shelters, additional bicycle lanes,
purchase of compressed natural gas
buses to replace diesel fueled buses, and
additional/improved side walks to
encourage walking. The TCMs also
include outfitting 866 buses with
continuously regenerating filters and the
use of ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel. The
TCMs are described in more detail in
Appendix H of the revised plan
document, entitled, ‘‘Revised State
Implementation Plan (SIP) Revision,
Phase I Attainment Plan for the
Washington DC-MD-VA Nonattainment
Area’’ dated April 16, 1999 (‘‘April 1999
Post-1996 Plan’’). This plan was
submitted as a SIP revision on May 25,
1999, May 20, 1999, and on May 25,
1999 by the District, Maryland and
Virginia, respectively. Further TCMs in
the February 19, 2004 plan, are
described in section 7.5 and Appendix
G of that document. The February 19,
2004 plan was submitted as a SIP
revision on February 24, 2004 by
Maryland, and on February 25, 2004 by
the District and Virginia.
EPA concludes that the States have
submitted sufficient TCMs to meet the
requirement of section 182(d)(1)(A) of
the Act. EPA is proposing to approve
the VMT Offset SIP submitted by the
States on the dates listed in Table 2 of
this document.
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VII. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
A. Background on Transportation
Conformity
1. What Is Transportation Conformity?
Transportation conformity is a CAA
requirement for metropolitan planning
organizations and the U.S. Department
of Transportation to ensure that
federally supported highway and transit
activities are consistent with (‘‘conform
to’’) the SIP. Conformity to a SIP means
that an action will not cause or
contribute to new violations; worsen
existing violations; or delay timely
attainment. The conformity
requirements are established by CAA
section 176(c). We issued the
transportation conformity rule (40 CFR
part 93) to implement this CAA
requirement.
2. What Are Motor Vehicle Emissions
Budgets?
As described in the CAA and our
conformity rule, control strategy SIPs
such as ROP plans and attainment
demonstrations, and maintenance plan
SIPs, must establish and identify
MVEBs to ensure areas continue to
demonstrate ROP and reach attainment.
These MVEBs are ‘‘ceilings’’ for
emissions from motor vehicles, and are
used in conformity analyses to
determine whether transportation plans
and projects conform to the attainment,
ROP, and maintenance SIPs. In order for
transportation plans and projects to
conform, estimated emissions from
transportation plans and projects must
not exceed the applicable MVEBs
contained in attainment demonstration,
ROP or maintenance plans.
3. Which Motor Vehicle Emissions
Budgets Usually Apply?
According to the transportation
conformity rule, MVEBs in a submitted
SIP may apply for conformity purposes
even before we have approved the SIP,
under certain circumstances. The
MVEBs in a submitted SIP cannot be
used before we have approved the SIP
or until and unless we have found the
MVEBs of the submitted SIP adequate
for conformity purposes. Our process for
determining adequacy is explained at 40
CFR 93.118(e) and the EPA’s May 14,
1999 memo entitled, ‘‘Conformity
Guidance on Implementation of March
2, 1999 Conformity Court Decision’’ as
amended by 69 FR 40004, July 1, 2004.
(See 61 FR 36117, July 9, 1996; 62 FR
at 43783–43784, August 15, 1997; and
69 FR 40004 at 400038, July 1, 2004 for
more details about the applicability of
submitted and approved budgets.)
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B. What Motor Vehicle Emissions
Budgets Currently Apply in the
Washington Area?
As stated elsewhere in this document,
EPA’s approvals of the 1996–1999 ROP
plan and the earlier versions (those
submitted during 1998 and 2000) of the
attainment demonstration SIP revisions
were vacated by the court. Therefore,
the MVEBs in these SIP revisions are
not currently in the approved SIP. EPA
had issued adequacy findings for the
MVEBs in the post 1996–1999 ROP plan
and the earlier versions of the
attainment demonstration SIP revisions
(those submitted during 1998 and 2000)
prior to our January 3, 2001 final
approval (66 FR 586) of those SIPs. (See
64 FR 43698, August 11, 1999, and 65
FR 36439, June 8, 2000.) Even though
EPA issued findings of adequacy on
these budgets, EPA has always
interpreted the transportation
conformity rule such that a final
rulemaking action approving a control
strategy or maintenance plan SIP
renders any prior adequacy
determination made for budgets related
to that particular control strategy or
maintenance plan SIP of no further force
or effect. Instead, the final rulemaking
on the SIPs governs which budgets
apply for conformity purposes. We also
interpret our transportation conformity
rule to mean that once a SIP approval
is vacated the prior adequacy
determination on the vacated budgets is
not resurrected.
Therefore, the only MVEBs in the
approved SIPs for the Washington area
are those for VOC in the approved 15%
ROP plan for 1996. (See 64 FR 42629,
August 5, 1999; 65 FR 44686, July 19,
2000; and 65 FR 59727, October 6,
2000.) However, on December 16, 2003
(68 FR 70012), EPA made a finding of
adequacy for the 2005 ROP motor
vehicle emission budgets in the SIP
revisions submitted by Virginia,
Maryland and the District of Columbia
on August 19, 2003, September 2, 2003,
and September 5, 2003, respectively (the
December 16, 2003 finding of
adequacy). In accordance with the
transportation conformity rule, once
found adequate, these 2005 MVEBs
superseded the motor vehicle emissions
budgets in the 15 percent ROP plan
because these 2005 budgets cover a later
year and are more stringent. (See 40 CFR
93.118)
C. What Effect Will This Action Have on
Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets for the
Washington Area?
This action proposes to approve the
post 1996–1999 ROP plan for the
Washington area and its 1999 MVEBs
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2099
into the District of Columbia, Maryland
and Virginia SIPs. This action also
proposes to approve the 1999–2005 ROP
plan and its 2002 and 2005 MVEBs as
revisions to the District of Columbia,
Maryland and Virginia SIPs. A
subsequent final action to approve of
the 2005 budgets in the 1999–2005 ROP
plan will supersede the December 16,
2003 finding of adequacy.
Likewise, by this proposed
rulemaking, EPA is also initiating the
adequacy process under 40 CFR
93.118(f) for the 2005 budgets in the
1999–2005 ROP plan submitted by
Maryland on February 24, 2004 and by
the District and Virginia on February 25,
2004. Should EPA make a final
adequacy finding on these 2005 ROP
budgets, prior to taking a final action to
approve them as SIP revisions, that
adequacy finding would supersede the
December 16, 2003 adequacy finding,
and thus make the 2005 budgets in the
1999–2005 ROP plans submitted by
Maryland on February 24, 2004 and by
the District and Virginia on February 25,
2004 the applicable 2005 ROP budgets.
D. What Are the NVEBs Identified in the
ROP Plan for the Washington Area?
The motor vehicle emissions budgets
for 1999 in the 1996–1999 ROP plan are
128.5 tons per day of VOC and 196.4
tons per day of NOX. The motor vehicle
emissions budgets in the 1999–2005
ROP plan are:
(1) For 2002, 125.2 tons per day for
VOC and 290.3 tons per day of NOX;
and
(2) For 2005, 97.4 tons per day for
VOC and 234.7 tons per day of NOX.
VIII. Prerequisites for Approval of the
Post 1996–1999 and Post 1999–2005
ROP Plans
Approval of the ROP plans for the
Washington area also requires approval
of the associated contingency plans.
Therefore, EPA is proposing to approve
the post 1996–1999 ROP plans, the post
1999–2005 ROP plans and the
contingency measures plans submitted
by the District, Maryland and Virginia
for the Washington area. Approval of
the ROP plans requires previous or
concurrent SIP-approval of all the
emission reduction measures upon
which the ROP demonstrations rely.
Likewise, approval of the contingency
measure plans requires prior or
concurrent SIP approval of the measures
in those plans. With respect to other
ROP plans, all of the measures are either
Federal measures that have been
promulgated by EPA or state measures
that have been approved by EPA as SIP
revisions into the District’s, Maryland’s
and Virginia’s SIPs. However, as
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discussed in section V. of this
document, not all of the contingency
measures have been finally approved at
this time. EPA has, however, at least
proposed approval of all of these
measures. Final approval of the post
1996–1999 ROP plans, the post 1999–
2005 ROP plans and the contingency
measures plan cannot be granted unless
and until EPA has fully approved these
contingency measures into the
applicable SIPs.
IX. Proposed Actions
A. The District of Columbia—Post 1996–
1999 Rate-of-Progress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of the
District of Columbia’s 1996–1999 ROP
plan SIP revision for the Washington
area which was submitted on November
3, 1997, as supplemented on May 25,
1999, and the TCMs in Appendix H of
the May 25, 1999 submittal. Final
approval is contingent upon final
approval of the contingency measure
plan in the 2004 SIP revisions.
B. The District of Columbia—1990 Base
Year Inventory Revisions
EPA is proposing approval of the
revision to the 1990 Base Year
Emissions Inventory submitted by the
District of Columbia on September 5,
2003 as supplemented on February 25,
2004.
C. The District of Columbia—Post 1999–
2005 Rate-of-Progress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of the
District of Columbia’s post 1999–2005
ROP plan SIP revision for the
Washington area which was submitted
on September 5, 2003 as supplemented
on February 25, 2004 and the TCMs in
Appendix J of the February 25, 2004
submittal. Final approval is contingent
upon final approval of the contingency
measure plan in the 2004 SIP revisions.
D. The District of Columbia—VMT
Offset SIP
EPA is proposing to determine that
the District of Columbia has adopted
sufficient TCMs to address growth in
VMT and number of vehicle trips as
required under section 182(d)(1)(A).
E. The District of Columbia—
Contingency Measure Plan
EPA is proposing approval of the
District of Columbia’s contingency
measure plan SIP revision for the
Washington area which was submitted
on September 5, 2003, as supplemented
on February 25, 2004. Final approval is
contingent upon final approval of
enough measures in the contingency
measure plan to represent a 3 percent
reduction of the 2002 baseline
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emissions and final approval of the
following measures identified by the
District of Columbia as measures in the
plan: The District’s rules for consumer
products, motor vehicle refinishing,
AIM, solvent cleaning and portable fuel
containers.
F. Maryland—Post 1996–1999 Rate-ofProgress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of
Maryland’s post 1996–1999 ROP plan
SIP revision for the Washington area
which was submitted on December 24,
1997, as supplemented on May 20,
1999, and the TCMs in Appendix H of
the May 20, 1999 submittal. Final
approval is contingent upon final
approval of the contingency measure
plan in the 2004 SIP revision.
G. Maryland—1990 Base Year Inventory
Revisions
EPA is proposing approval of the
revision to the 1990 Base Year
Emissions Inventory submitted by
Maryland on September 2, 2003 as
supplemented on February 24, 2004.
H. Maryland—Post 1999–2005 Rate-ofProgress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of
Maryland’s post 1999–2005 ROP plan
SIP revision for the Washington area
which was submitted on September 2,
2003 as supplemented on February 24,
2004 and the TCMs in Appendix J of the
February 24, 2004 submittal. Final
approval is contingent upon final
approval of the contingency measure
plan in the 2004 SIP revisions.
I. Maryland—VMT Offset SIP
EPA is proposing to determine that
Maryland has adopted sufficient TCMs
to address growth in VMT and number
of vehicle trips as required under
section 182(d)(1)(A).
J. Maryland—Contingency Measure Plan
EPA is proposing approval of
Maryland’s contingency measure plan
SIP revision for the Washington area
which was submitted on September 3,
2003, as supplemented on February 24,
2004. Final approval is contingent upon
final approval of enough measures in
the contingency measure plan to
represent the 3 percent reduction of the
2002 baseline emissions and of the
following measures identified by
Maryland as measures in the plan:
Maryland’s rules for consumer products,
AIM, and portable fuel containers.
K. Virginia—Post 1996–1999 Rate-ofProgress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of
Virginia’s post 1996–1999 ROP plan SIP
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revision for the Washington area which
was submitted on December 29, 1997, as
supplemented on May 25, 1999, and the
TCMs in Appendix H of the May 25,
1999 submittal. Final approval is
contingent upon final approval of the
contingency measure plan in the 2004
SIP revisions.
L. Virginia—1990 Base Year Inventory
Revisions
EPA is proposing approval of the
revision to the 1990 Base Year
Emissions Inventory submitted by
Virginia on August 19, 2003 as
supplemented on February 25, 2004.
M. Virginia—Post 1999–2005 Rate-ofProgress Plan and TCMs
EPA is proposing approval of
Virginia’s post 1999–2005 ROP plan SIP
revision for the Washington area which
was submitted on August 19, 2003 as
supplemented on February 25, 2004 and
the TCMs in Appendix J of the February
25, 2004 submittal. Final approval is
contingent upon final approval of the
contingency measure plan in the 2004
SIP revisions.
N. Virginia—VMT Offset SIP
EPA is proposing to determine that
Virginia has adopted sufficient
transportation control measures
necessary to address growth in VMT
and number of vehicle trips as required
under section 182(d)(1)(A).
O. Virginia—Contingency Measure Plan
EPA is proposing approval of
Virginia’s contingency measure plan SIP
revision for the Washington area which
was submitted on August 19, 2003, as
supplemented on February 25, 2004.
Final approval is contingent upon final
approval of enough measures in the
contingency measure plan to represent
the 3 percent reduction of the 2002
baseline emissions and of the following
measures identified by Virginia as
measures in the plan: Virginia’s rules for
motor vehicle refinishing, AIM, solvent
cleaning and portable fuel containers.
P. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
EPA is proposing to approve the
MVEBs established and identified in the
Post 1996–1999 and Post 1999–2005
ROP Plans for the Washington area
submitted by the District, Maryland and
Virginia on the dates as provided in this
document. The MVEBs for 1999 in the
1996–1999 ROP plan are 128.5 tons per
day of VOC and 196.4 tons per day of
NOX. The MVEBs in the 1999–2005 ROP
plan are:
(1) For 2002, 125.2 tons per day for
VOC and 290.3 tons per day of NOX;
and
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(2) For 2005, 97.4 tons per day for
VOC and 234.7 tons per day of NOX.
EPA is also initiating the adequacy
process under 40 CFR 93.118(f) for the
2005 budgets in the 1999–2005 ROP
plans. EPA will not be initiating a
separate adequacy process. Persons
wishing to comment on the adequacy of
these MVEBs should do so at this time.
EPA is soliciting public comments on
all these proposed actions and the
associated issues discussed in this
document. These comments will be
considered before taking final actions.
X. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735, October 4, 1993), this proposed
action is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ and therefore is not subject to
review by the Office of Management and
Budget. For this reason, this action is
also not subject to Executive Order
13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001)). This action merely proposes
to approve state law as meeting Federal
requirements and imposes no additional
requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. Accordingly, the
Administrator certifies that this
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (15 U.S.C.
601 et seq.). Because this rule proposes
to approve pre-existing requirements
under state law and does not impose
any additional enforceable duty beyond
that required by state law, it does not
contain any unfunded mandate or
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, as described in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–4). This proposed rule also
does not have a substantial direct effect
on one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000), nor will
it have substantial direct effects on the
States, on the relationship between the
national government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999), because it merely
proposes to approve a state rule
implementing a Federal standard, and
does not alter the relationship or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean
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Air Act. This proposed rule also is not
subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997), because it is not
economically significant. In reviewing
SIP submissions, EPA’s role is to
approve state choices, provided that
they meet the criteria of the Clean Air
Act. In this context, in the absence of a
prior existing requirement for the State
to use voluntary consensus standards
(VCS), EPA has no authority to
disapprove a SIP submission for failure
to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission,
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. As required by
section 3 of Executive Order 12988 (61
FR 4729, February 7, 1996), in issuing
this proposed rule, EPA has taken the
necessary steps to eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity, minimize
potential litigation, and provide a clear
legal standard for affected conduct. EPA
has complied with Executive Order
12630 (53 FR 8859, March 15, 1988) by
examining the takings implications of
the rule in accordance with the
‘‘Attorney General’s Supplemental
Guidelines for the Evaluation of Risk
and Avoidance of Unanticipated
Takings’’ issued under the executive
order. This proposed rule to approve the
District of Columbia’s, Maryland’s and
Virginia’s post 1996–1999 and post
1999–2005 ROP plans, changes to the
1990 base year inventory, a contingency
measures plan, certain transportation
control measures (TCMs), and a
demonstration that each SIP contains
sufficient transportation control
measures to offset growth in vehicle
miles traveled (VMT) as necessary to
demonstrate ROP and attainment of the
1-hour national ambient air quality
standard (NAAQS) for the Metropolitan
Washington, DC area does not impose
an information collection burden under
the provisions of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: January 5, 2005.
Donald S. Welsh,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 05–617 Filed 1–11–04; 8:45 am]
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2101
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 194
[FRL 7860–2]
Proposed Approval of Waste
Characterization Activities at the
Hanford Central Characterization
Project for Disposal at the Waste
Isolation Pilot Plant
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Notice of availability; opening
of public comment period.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA, we, or Agency) is
announcing, and soliciting public
comment for 45 days on, EPA’s
proposed approval of the Hanford
Central Characterization Project (CCP) to
characterize retrievably-stored, contacthandled, transuranic (TRU) debris waste
for disposal at the Waste Isolation Pilot
Plant (WIPP). EPA is also proposing to
designate any changes or expansions to
this waste characterization approval as
Tier 1, according to EPA’s recently
effective procedures for approval of
WIPP waste generator sites. A Tier 1
designation means that DOE must first
obtain written approval from EPA prior
to disposing of waste characterized
using new or revised processes,
equipment, or waste streams. The
documents related to this proposed
approval are available for review in the
public dockets listed in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION. In accordance with our 40
CFR 194.8(b) approval process, the EPA
conducted an inspection of the Hanford
CCP from September 8–12, 2003. The
purpose of the inspection was to
determine the technical adequacy of the
CCP as implemented at Hanford for the
characterization of transuranic waste
from the Plutonium Finishing Plant
(PFP) to be disposed of at the WIPP in
New Mexico. During the EPA
inspection, EPA evaluated several waste
characterization (WC) activities used to
characterize retrievably-stored, contacthandled debris waste. EPA evaluated
the equipment, procedures and
personnel training/experience for
acceptable knowledge (AK),
nondestructive assay (NDA),
nondestructive examination (NDE) and
data transfer for the WIPP Waste
Information System (WWIS).
DATES: EPA is requesting public
comment on the documents. Comments
must be received by EPA’s official Air
Docket on or before February 28, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by mail to: EPA Docket
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 8 (Wednesday, January 12, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 2085-2101]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-617]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[RME No. R03-OAR-2004-DC-0009; FRL-7861-2]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia; Post 1996 and Post 1999 Rate-
of-Progress Plans, Contingency Measures, Transportation Control
Measures, VMT Offset, and 1990 Base Year Inventory
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revisions submitted by the State of Maryland, Commonwealth of Virginia
and the District of Columbia for the Metropolitan Washington, DC severe
1-hour ozone nonattainment area (the Washington area). These revisions
include the post 1996-1999 and post 1999-2005 rate-of-progress (ROP)
plans, changes to the 1990 base year inventory, a contingency measures
plan, certain transportation control measures (TCMs), and a
demonstration that each SIP contains sufficient transportation control
measures to offset growth in vehicle miles traveled (VMT) as necessary
to demonstrate ROP and attainment of the 1-hour national ambient air
quality standard (NAAQS) for ozone. The intended effect of this action
is to propose approval of revisions submitted to satisfy the SIP
requirements of 1-hour ozone nonattainment areas classified as severe.
These revisions are being proposed for approval in accordance with the
Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act).
DATES: Written comments must be received on or before February 11,
2005.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Regional Material in
EDocket (RME) ID Number R03-OAR-2004-DC-0009 by one of the following
methods:
A. Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
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C. E-mail: morris.makeba@epa.gov.
D. Mail: R03-OAR-2004-DC-0009, Makeba Morris, Chief, Air Quality
Planning Branch, Mailcode 3AP21, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region III, 1650 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.
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Such deliveries are only accepted during the Docket's normal hours of
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Instructions: Direct your comments to RME ID No. R03-OAR-2004-DC-
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Docket: All documents in the electronic docket are listed in the
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index, some information is not publicly available, i.e., CBI or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet
and will be publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly
available docket materials are available either electronically in RME
or in hard copy during normal business hours at the Air Protection
Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region III, 1650 Arch
Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103. Copies of the State submittal
are available at the District of Columbia Department of Public Health,
Air Quality Division, 51 N Street, NE., Washington, DC 20002; Maryland
Department of the Environment, 1800 Washington Boulevard, Suite 705,
Baltimore, Maryland, 21230, Baltimore, Maryland 21224; and the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality, 629 East Main Street, Richmond,
Virginia 23219.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christopher Cripps, (215) 814-2179, or
by e-mail at cripps.christopher@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The use of ``we,'' ``us,'' or ``our'' in
this document refers to EPA. The use of ``States'' in this document
refers to the State of Maryland, the Commonwealth of Virginia and the
District of Columbia.
Outline
I. The Action EPA is Proposing Today
II. Background
A. What is the Washington D.C. 1-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area
(the Washington area)?
B. What Previous Action Has EPA Taken on the Post 1996-1999 ROP
Plans?
C. What Is the Purpose of the Action EPA Is Taking Today?
III. Amendments to the 1990 Base Year Emissions Inventory
IV. Post 1996-1999 and Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans
A. What Agencies/ and Organizations Developed the Post 1996-1999
and Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans for the Washington Area?
B. What ROP Requirements are Applicable to the Washington Area
after 1996?
C. What Are the Basic Components of a ROP Plan?
D. EPA's Evaluation of the Post 1996-1999 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area
E. EPA's Evaluation of the Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area
F. Do the Post 1996-1999 and Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area Meet the Requirements for NOX
Substitution?
V. Contingency Measures Plans
A. What are the Contingency Measures Implemented to Address the
Failure to Attain by November 15, 1999 and for the Post 1996-1999
ROP Plans?
B. What Are the Contingency Measures and Plan for Post-1999 ROP
Plans and for Failure to Attain by November 15, 2005?
[[Page 2086]]
VI. Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) Offset SIP and Transportation
Control Measures (TCMs)
A. What Is a VMT Offset SIP?
B. EPA's Analysis of VMT Offset SIP in the 2004 SIP Revisions?
C. What TCMs Are Part of the SIP?
VII. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets (MVEBs)
A. Background for Transportation Conformity
B. What Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets Currently Apply in the
Washington Area
C. Effect of This Action on the Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
for the Washington Area
D. Review of the Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets in the Post
1996-1999 ROP and Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans
E. What Are the Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets in the ROP
Plans?
VIII. Prerequisites for Approval for the Post 1996-1999 and Post
1999-2005 ROP Plans
IX. Proposed Actions
X. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. The Action EPA Is Proposing Today
The EPA is proposing approval of the post 1996-1999 ROP plans, the
post 1999-2005 ROP plans and the contingency measure plans for both ROP
and attainment submitted by the District of Columbia, Maryland and
Virginia (``the States'') for the Washington area. In addition, EPA is
also proposing approval of the States' revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventory, TCMs, and a demonstration that the SIP for each
State contains sufficient TCMs to offset growth in VMT as necessary to
achieve ROP and to attain the ozone NAAQS (commonly referred to as the
VMT Offset SIP). Tables 1 and 2 identify the initial submittal dates
and the dates on which the States' submitted amendments for these plans
and measures:
Table 1.--Post 1996-1999 ROP Plans From the States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DC MD \1\ VA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial submittal dates.............. November 10, 1997...... December 24, 1997...... December 19, 1997.
Amended submittal dates.............. May 25, 1999........... May 20, 1999........... May 25, 1999.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Maryland SIP revision submittals labeled as 97-04 and 99-12.
The post 1996-1999 ROP Plan SIP revisions also include certain
TCMs, specifically those TCMs identified in Appendix H of the States'
submittals.
Table 2.--1999-2005 ROP Plans, Contingency Measures Plan, Amendments to the 1990 Base Year Inventory, and VMT
Offset Plans
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DC MD \2\ VA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial submittal dates.............. September 5, 2003...... September 2, 2003...... August 19, 2003.
Amended submittal dates.............. February 25, 2004...... February 24, 2004...... February 25, 2004.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Maryland SIP revision submittals labeled as 03-05 and 04-01.
Hereafter, the SIP revisions listed in Table 2 of this document
will be called the ``2004 SIP revisions.'' The States' 2004 SIP
revisions include the post 1999-2005 ROP plans, the VMT Offset SIPs,
revisions to the 1990 base year emissions inventory, and the
contingency measures plans for ROP and attainment for the Washington
area. The 2004 SIP revisions also include certain TCMs, namely those
TCMs identified in Appendix J of the SIP revision submittals. The 2004
SIP revisions also include the States' attainment demonstration plans
for the Washington area. Those attainment demonstration plans are the
subject of a separate rulemaking action.
II. Background
A. What Is the Washington DC 1-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area?
The Washington area is comprised of the entire District of Columbia
(the District), a portion of Maryland (Calvert, Charles, Frederick,
Montgomery, and Prince George's Counties), and a portion of Virginia
(Alexandria, Arlington County, Fairfax, Fairfax County, Falls Church,
Manassas, Manassas Park, Prince William County, and Stafford County).
B. What Previous Action Has EPA Taken on the Post 1996-1999 ROP Plans?
On January 3, 2001 (66 FR 586), the EPA approved the States' post
1996-1999 ROP plans, attainment demonstration plans (those submitted
during 1998 and 2000) and an attainment date extension for the
Washington area. A petition for review of that final rule was filed. On
July 2, 2002, the United States Courts of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit (the court) ruled on the petition and vacated our
January 3, 2001 approval of the States' attainment demonstrations,
their 1996-1999 ROP plans and the attainment date extension. (See
Sierra Club v. Whitman, 294 F.3d 155, 163 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (``Sierra
Club I''). Among other things, the court said that the EPA was without
authority to extend the Washington area's attainment deadline unless it
also ordered the area to be reclassified as a ``severe'' area. The
court also found that the attainment demonstration and ROP plans were
deficient because neither contained approved contingency measures as
required by sections 172(c)(9) and 182(c)(9) of the Clean Air Act (CAA
or the Act). Id. at 164. Furthermore, the court determined that in
addition to a 9 percent reduction in baseline emissions from 1996 to
1999, an area with an attainment date in 2005 must have an approved ROP
plan that demonstrates ROP to 2005. Id. at 163. The Washington area's
post 1996-1999 ROP plan, that had been submitted by each of the States,
demonstrated ROP only through 1999.
On January 24, 2003 (68 FR 3410), EPA published a final rule
determining that the Washington area failed to attain the November 15,
1999 ozone attainment deadline for serious areas and reclassifying the
Washington area from serious to severe ozone nonattainment. That final
rule also specified the additional SIP elements mandated by the CAA for
that severe area, that would have to be adopted and submitted as SIP
revisions by the States for the Washington area as a result of its
reclassification to severe.
[[Page 2087]]
On April 17, 2003 (68 FR 19106), EPA conditionally approved the
States' post 1996-1999 ROP plans and those versions of the attainment
demonstration plans submitted during 1998 and 2000, contingent upon the
States fulfilling commitments they made to submit the additional
elements required of SIPs for a severe area within one year. The Sierra
Club filed a petition for review of that final rule alleging, among
other things, that EPA could not lawfully conditionally approve these
SIP revisions due to a lack of specificity in the States' commitment
letters, and that EPA should require the post 1996-1999 ROP plans be
revised to use the latest mobile sources emission factor model.
On February 3, 2004, the court ruled on that petition and issued
its opinion vacating our April 17, 2003 rule. The court granted the
petition solely on the issue that use of a conditional approval was not
appropriate nor available to EPA on these SIPs. The court denied the
petition for review in all other respects. (See Sierra Club v. EPA, 356
F.3d at 301-04 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (``Sierra Club II'').\3\ On April 23,
2004, the court issued its mandate, thereby relinquishing jurisdiction
over the post 1996-1999 ROP plans and the attainment demonstration SIP
revisions and remanding them back to EPA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ On April 16, 2004, the court issued an order revising the
February 3, 2004 opinion to address a petition for rehearing and
leaving its decision to vacate and remand the conditional approval
to EPA intact. Sierra Club v. EPA, 356 F.3d 296, 301-304 (D.C. Cir.)
2004), amended by No. 03-1084, 2004 WL 877850 (D.C. Cir. Apr. 16,
2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. What Is the Purpose of the Action EPA Is Taking Today?
Given that the States have now adopted and submitted contingency
measures plans and ROP plans through to the 2005 attainment year, EPA
is proposing to approve the post 1996-1999 ROP plans that applied to
the Washington area pursuant to the area's initial classification as a
serious ozone nonattainment area. In addition, EPA is proposing
approval of the States' revisions to the 1990 base year emissions
inventory. EPA is also proposing to approve the 2004 SIP revisions
listed in Table 2 of this document, namely the post 1999-2005 ROP
plans, contingency measures plans, and VMT offset plans that apply to
the Washington area as a result of its reclassification to severe 1-
hour ozone nonattainment. The contingency measure plans identify those
measures that were implemented as a consequence of the failure of the
Washington area to meet its original November 15, 1999 serious area
attainment date, and also identify those adopted measures that will be
implemented should the now reclassified Washington area fail to attain
the1-hour ozone NAAQS by the severe area deadline date of November 15,
2005 or if the area fails to make reasonable further progress (RFP) or
meet a ROP milestone. In addition, EPA is proposing to approve certain
TCMs which were made part of the States' post 1996-1999 ROP plans as
well as part of the 2004 SIP revisions. These SIP revisions and our
rationale for proposing to approve them are discussed in more detail in
the subsequent sections of this document.
III. Amendments to the 1990 Base Year Emissions Inventory
EPA mandated the use of the MOBILE6 model for the post-1999 ROP
plan development and also required associated revisions to the 1990
base year inventory. (See 68 FR at 3418, January 24, 2003; and the
joint memorandum issued by EPA's Office of Air Quality Planning &
Standards and Office of Transportation & Air Quality, January 18, 2002)
\4\ As we explained in our January 24, 2003 final rule, requiring the
use of MOBILE6 to calculate the 2002 and 2005 ROP target levels will
``necessitate a revision to the 1990 base year inventory which is,
among other things, the planning base line from which the 2002 and 2005
ROP targets are calculated.'' In their 2004 SIP revisions, the States
updated the 1990 base year inventory to reflect the use of MOBILE6.
This affected the base year on-road mobile source inventory as well as
the emissions resulting from vehicle refueling and the benefits of
stage II vapor recovery and of reformulated gasoline (RFG). The States
also made other changes as a result of new inventory methods and
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Joint Memorandum dated January 18, 2002, From John S. Seitz,
Director, Office of Air Quality Planning & Standards, and Margo
Tsirigotis Oge, Director of Office of Transportation and Air
Quality, ``Policy Guidance for the Use of MOBILE6 in SIP Development
and Transportation Conformity''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The States added several new sources to the point source inventory,
that is, large stationary sources of VOC and nitrogen oxides
(NOX) emissions, as result of the area's January 24, 2003
reclassification to severe ozone nonattainment. This reclassification
lowered the threshold of what is considered a major stationary source
to 25 tons per year (TPY) from 50 TPY. This resulted in additional
sources being added to the point source inventory for NOX
emissions. The threshold for inclusion in the point source inventory
for VOC emissions had already been 10 TPY of VOC emissions and remains
at this level.
The States also updated the area and nonroad portion of the
inventory for aircraft emissions and ground support equipment at
commercial airports using the Emissions Dispersion Modeling System
(EDMS) to recompute the 1990 base year emissions. The Federal Aviation
Administration requires EDMS as the methodology for performing air
quality emissions and air quality analyses modeling for aviation
sources. It further requires airport sponsors to use the most recent
EDMS model to calculate all emissions at airports to satisfy the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the CAA's general conformity
requirements, and other statutorily mandated analyses. EPA has endorsed
the use of EDMS.
The prior methodology used by the States for the 1990 inventory, as
compared to EDMS, resulted in higher base year NOX emissions
and provided for higher allowable levels of NOX emissions
for these source categories. Therefore, the prior methodology would
have set a higher NOX emissions budget against which general
conformity would be determined in future years' analyses. However, as
previously noted, EDMS is the required methodology for performing the
future years' general conformity analyses, themselves. The States'
revisions to update and recompute the SIPs' 1990 base year area and
nonroad inventory for aircraft emissions and ground support equipment
at commercial airports using EDMS provide for consistency between the
methodologies used to establish the SIPs' allowable NOX
growth budget and for performing future year's general conformity
analyses. The States have also based the 2002 and 2005 year area
aircraft emissions and ground support equipment at commercial airports
portions of the area and nonroad portion of the inventory upon EDMS
projections. EPA is proposing to approve the changes to the 1990 base
year inventories.
IV. Post 1996-1999 and Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans
A. What Agencies and Organizations Developed the Post 1996-1999 and
Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans for the Washington Area?
The District, Virginia and Maryland must demonstrate reasonable
further progress (RFP) for the Washington area. These jurisdictions,
under the auspices of the Metropolitan Washington Air Quality Committee
(MWAQC), with the assistance of the Metropolitan
[[Page 2088]]
Washington Council of Governments (COG), collaborated on a coordinated
post 1996-1999 ROP plan and later a coordinated post 1999-2005 ROP plan
for the Washington area. The MWAQC includes state and local elected
officials and representatives of the District's Department of Health
(DoH), the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE), the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality (VADEQ) and the National Capital
Region Transportation Planning Board (TPB). The CAA provides for such
interstate coordination for multi-state nonattainment areas. Because
control strategy SIPs, such as the ROP plans, must establish and
identify motor vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs) for use in conformity
determinations of transportation improvement plans, municipal planning
organizations have historically been involved in air quality planning
in the Washington area. The MWAQC ensures consultation with the TPB
during the development of the Washington area ROP plans and their
associated MVEBs. The post 1996-1999 ROP plan and the post 1999-2005
ROP plan each include the emission target levels that demonstrate ROP
for the milestone year(s), the projections of growth and the total
amount of creditable reductions required for the entire Washington
area. The District, Maryland and Virginia agreed to apportion this
total amount of required creditable reductions among themselves.
Although both the ROP plans were developed on an area-wide basis, each
State met the CAA requirements by submitting the post 1996-1999 ROP
plan and the post 1999-2005 ROP plan to the EPA as revisions to its
SIP.
B. What ROP Requirements Are Applicable to the Washington Area After
1996?
The CAA requires that serious and above ozone nonattainment areas
develop plans to reduce area-wide VOC base line emissions after 1996 by
3 percent per year (averaged over consecutive 3-year periods) until the
year of the attainment date required for that classification of
nonattainment area. The Washington area was initially classified as a
serious ozone nonattainment area with an attainment date of November
15, 1999. As such, the Washington area States had and continue to have
a requirement that a post 1996-1999 ROP plan be SIP-approved which
demonstrates a 9 percent reduction in baseline emissions by 1999.
As previously noted, EPA published a final rule reclassifying the
Washington area to severe ozone nonattainment on January 24, 2003,
effective March 25, 2003. The statutory attainment date for severe
areas is November 15, 2005. The final rule reclassifying the Washington
area to severe ozone nonattainment imposed additional requirements on
the Washington area including, among other things, a post 1999-2005 ROP
plan to achieve an additional 9 percent reduction in base line
emissions between 1999 and 2002, and, a further 9 percent reduction
between 2002 and 2005. This 9 percent reduction requirement is a
continuation of the ROP requirement for a 15 percent reduction in VOC
post 1990-1996. For post 1996 and post 1999 ROP plans, the Act allows
the substitution of NOX emissions reductions for VOC
emission reductions where equivalent air quality benefits are achieved
as determined using the applicable EPA guidance.
C. What Are the Basic Components of a ROP Plan?
1. An Overview--A ROP plan consists of a plan to achieve a target
level of emissions by each of the milestone years covered by the plan.
There are several important emission inventories and calculations
associated with the plan including the base year emissions inventory,
future year projection inventories, and target level calculations.
After accounting for growth in emissions after 1990, the plan must also
demonstrate that future year emissions with be held to levels by the
creditable control programs' emissions reductions to an amount that is
less than or equal to the applicable target level. One method for
demonstrating this is to determine how many emission reductions are
required by subtracting the target level from the future year
uncontrolled emissions.
2. How is the Target Level Determined?--EPA has issued guidance on
how to calculate the target levels. This guidance outlines a process
for calculating a target level. In summary, the State first calculates
the 1996 VOC target level that corresponds to the 15 percent reduction
in VOC baseline emissions (the 15 percent plan) required under section
182(b)(1) of the Act. The target level starts with the 1990 ROP VOC
inventory of VOC. The 1996 VOC target level equals the 1990 ROP VOC
inventory minus:
(a) The ``noncreditable reductions'' due to the Federal Motor
Vehicle Control Program (FMVCP) promulgated by January 1, 1990,
(``FMVCP Tier 0'') and Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP) regulations required
under section 211(h) of the Act (Phase 2 RVP),
(b) Any noncreditable reasonably available control technology
(RACT) rule correction reductions required by section 182(a)(2)(A) of
the Act,\5\ and,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Any reductions in 1990 baseline emissions due to the
corrections in vehicle inspection and maintenance programs under
section 182(a)(2)(B) are also treated excluded from counting towards
the required 15 percent reduction (see CAA section
182(b)(1)(D)(iv)). There were no required corrections in vehicle
inspection and maintenance programs in the Washington area and this
provision will not be discussed further in this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) An amount equal to the required 15 percent reduction in
baseline VOC emissions.
The required 15 percent reduction in baseline VOC emissions is not
computed as 15 percent of the 1990 ROP VOC emissions inventory. Because
section 182(b)(1)(C) defines ``base line emissions'' as the 1990 ROP
inventory less those 1990 calendar year emissions that would be
eliminated by the FMVCP Tier 0 and Phase 2 RVP programs by the
milestone year, an ``adjusted'' 1990 base year inventory must be
computed to reduce the 1990 ROP inventory by the amount of emissions
that would be eliminated by implementation of the FMVCP Tier 0 and
Phase 2 RVP programs. The required 15 percent reduction in baseline VOC
emissions is, therefore, 15 percent of the ``adjusted'' 1990 base year
inventory for 1996.
For subsequent milestone years, a similar process is used to
compute the target level of emissions. For each three year period after
1996, the ``fleet turnover correction'' (FTC) (that amount of base line
emission eliminated by FMVCP Tier 0 and Phase 2 RVP programs during
that three year period) is computed and the ``adjusted'' 1990 base year
inventory is computed (which is the ``adjusted'' 1990 base year
inventory for the prior milestone year minus the relevant FTC). The
target level for a milestone year is the target level for the prior
milestone year minus the FTC for the three-year period minus the
required ROP reductions.\6\ In the absence of NOX
substitution, the required post-1996 ROP reduction is 9 percent of the
adjusted 1990 VOC base year inventory for the milestone year in
question. With NOX substitution, the required post-1996 ROP
VOC reductions can be an amount less than 9 percent as long as the
percentage of NOX substituted plus the VOC ROP percentage
equals or exceeds 9 and as long as the amount of NOX
substituted
[[Page 2089]]
meets EPA's December 1993 NOX Substitution Guidance. With
NOX substitution, a NOX target is also calculated
along the same lines as for a VOC target.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ With the exception of 1999 when NOX substitution
is used. In that case, for the 1999 VOC target level, the starting
point is the 1996 VOC target level from the 15 percent plan, but for
the 1999 NOX target level the 1990 ROP NOX
inventory is used in lieu of a 1996 target level because the 15
percent plan does not set a NOX target level for 1996.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 3 summarizes the process for computing ROP target levels
continued through the 2005 milestone year:
Table 3.--General Process for Computing ROP Target Levels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row Description How computed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................. 1990 ROP Inventory....... 1990 base year inventory
less biogenic emissions
and sources outside the
nonattainment area.
2................. Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 1996. emissions eliminated
through 1996 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
3................. Emissions eliminated Row 1 minus Row 2 (see
through 1996 by Tier 0 Note 1).
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
Programs.
4................. Reductions from RACT Rule Amount 1990 base year
Corrections. emissions reduced by
required RACT rule
corrections (see Note
1).
5................. Required 15 Percent 0.15 times Row 2.
Reduction.
6................. 1996 Target Level........ Row 1 minus Rows 3, 4 and
5.
7................. Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 1999. emissions eliminated
through 1999 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
8................. Fleet Turnover Correction Row 2 minus Row 7 (see
(FTC) for 1999. Note 2).
9................. Required ROP Reduction ROP Percentage (0.0 to
for 1999. 0.09) times Row 7 (see
Note 3).
10................ 1999 Target Level........ Row 6 minus Rows 8 and 9
(See Note 4).
11................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 2002. emissions eliminated
through 2002 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
12................ FTC for 2002............. Row 7 minus Row 11.
13................ Required ROP Reduction ROP Percentage (0.0 to
for 2002. 0.09) times Row 11 (see
Note 2).
14................ 2002 Target Level........ Row 10 minus Rows 12 and
13.
15................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 2005. emissions eliminated
through 2005 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
16................ FTC for 2005............. Row 15 minus Row 11.
17................ Required ROP Reduction ROP Percentage (0.0 to
for 2005. 0.09) times Row 15 (see
Note 2).
18................ 2005 Target Level........ Row 14 minus Rows 16 and
17 (see Note 3).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note 1. With NOX substitution this need not be computed for any 1999 or
later NOX target levels. Also, because RACT was not required on
sources of NOX prior to 1990, there were no RACT rule corrections that
might reduce 1990 base line NOX emissions and thus this need not be
computed for any 1999 or later NOX target levels.
Note 2. Formula shown for 1999 applies to VOC. When using NOX
substitution the FTC for 1999 is Row 1 minus Row 7.
Note 3. For any three-year, post-1999 period, States are free to choose
the amount of NOX substituted as long as the percentage of VOC plus
the percentage of NOX reduction equals 9 percent (0.09), and, as long
as the plan adheres to the other restraints on the amount of NOX
substituted found in EPA's December 1993 NOX Substitution Guidance.
Note 4. When NOX substitution is used, the 1999 target level starts with
the 1990 ROP inventory, not a 1996 target level, and hence would be
Row 1 minus Rows 8 and 9. Row 4 is not relevant when computing NOX
targets.
D. EPA's Evaluation of the Post 1996-1999 ROP Plans for the Washington
Area
1. How Were the 3 Percent per Year Reduction Needs for the Post-1996-
1999 ROP Plans Calculated?
A post 1996-1999 ROP plan consists of a plan to achieve a target
level of emissions by November 15, 1999. As previously stated, there
are emission inventories and calculations associated with the plan
including the base year emission inventory, future year projection
inventories, and target level calculations. The post 1996-1999 ROP plan
also identifies the amount of creditable emission reductions that each
state must achieve for the nonattainment area-wide plan to get a 9
percent reduction accounting for any growth in emissions from 1990 to
1999. The EPA addressed the sufficiency of the Washington area's post
1996-1999 ROP plan base year emission inventory, future year projection
inventories, and target level calculations in its previous notices
regarding the Washington area attainment demonstration. (See 65 FR
58243 September 28, 2000, 65 FR 62658, October 19, 2000, 68 FR 5246,
February 3, 2004, and 68 FR 19106, April 17, 2004.)
Although EPA requires that states use the latest mobile source
emissions factor model available at the time a plan is developed, our
policy is not to require states that have already submitted SIPs or
that submitted SIPs shortly after MOBILE6's release to revise these
SIPs simply because the new motor vehicle emissions model becomes
available. (See 68 FR at 19120, April 17, 2003 and Memorandum from EPA
Office of Air Quality Planning & Standards, January 18, 2002.\7\) In
the case of the Washington area's post 1996-1999 ROP plans, the States'
SIP revisions were submitted in 1999 more than 3 years prior to the
release of the MOBILE6 model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Joint Memorandum dated January 18, 2002, from John S. Seitz,
Director, Office of Air Quality Planning & Standards, and Margo
Tsirigotis Oge, Director of Office of Transportation and Air
Quality, ``Policy Guidance for the Use of MOBILE6 in SIP Development
and Transportation Conformity''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated previously, EPA promulgated a final action on January 3,
2001 (66 FR 586) fully approving and a final action on April 17, 2003
(68 FR 19106) conditionally approving these 1996-1999 ROP plan SIP
revisions which the court vacated. It is important to note that
although the Sierra Club's petition for review of our April 17, 2003
final rule claimed, among other things, that the approval of the
States' 1996-1999 ROP plans was arbitrary and capricious because those
plans relied on an outdated emissions model and that EPA should require
that the post 1996-1999 ROP plans be revised using MOBILE6, in its
February 3, 2004 ruling on the petition, the court denied the petition
for review on this claim. (See Sierra Club II, 356 F.3d 296, 307-308
(D.C. Cir. 2004). The court upheld EPA's decision not to require the
Washington area States to revise their post 1996-1999 ROP plans to
reflect MOBILE6. Therefore, EPA believes that the ROP target levels of
the post 1996-1999 ROP plans are approvable.
[[Page 2090]]
2. What Control Strategies Are the District, Maryland and Virginia
Including in the Post 1996-1999 ROP Plan?
The post 1996-1999 ROP plan describes the emission reduction
credits that the Washington area jurisdictions are claiming toward
their 9 percent reduction requirement. We can credit reductions for the
ROP requirement for rules promulgated by EPA and for state measures we
have approved as SIP revisions. The post 1996-1999 ROP plan control
measures for the Washington area are listed in Tables 4 and 5 of this
document and described in more detail in the Technical Support Document
(TSD) for this rulemaking.
3. What Are the Total Reductions in the 1996-1999 ROP Plan?
Table 6 summarizes the VOC and NOX creditable measures
in Maryland's, Virginia's and the District's 1996-1999 ROP plan for the
Washington area.
Table 4.--Creditable VOC Emission Reductions in the Post 1996-1999 ROP
Plan for the Washington Area
[Tons/day]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure DC MD VA
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tier 1 FMVCP................................. 1.4 5.5 5.9
RFG Refueling Benefits....................... 0.0 0.9 0.7
National low emission vehicle (NLEV)......... 0.2 0.6 1.3
Reformulated Gasoline (on/off road).......... 2.2 7.9 8.0
Surface Cleaning/Degreasing.................. 0.0 2.9 0.0
Autobody Refinishing......................... 0.5 3.8 2.7
AIM.......................................... 1.6 6.6 5.6
Consumer Products............................ 0.6 2.2 1.9
Seasonal Open Burning Ban.................... 0.0 3.7 2.6
Graphic Arts................................. 0.9 1.0 1.5
Landfill Regulations......................... 0.0 0.0 0.3
Non-CTG RACT to 50 TPY....................... 0.0 0.4 0.4
RACT on Additional Sources >25 TPY and <50 N/A 0.3 0.0
TPY.........................................
Stage II Vapor Recovery...................... 0.0 8.9 7.9
Stage I Enhancement (excluding Loudoun 0.0 0.9 0.3
County, VA).................................
Federal Non-road Gasoline Engine Standards... 0.9 6.3 6.8
TCMs......................................... 0.0 0.1 0.1
Enhanced I/M................................. 3.9 18.0 17.9
----------
Total Creditable Reductions.............. 11.8 70.0 63.9
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5.--Creditable NOX Emission Reductions in the Post 1996-1999 ROP
Plan for the Washington Area
[Tons/day]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure DC MD VA
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enhanced I/M................................. 2.4 14.8 16.9
Tier 1....................................... 2.5 13.7 14.7
NLEV......................................... .2 0.3 1.5
Reformulated Gasoline (on-road).............. 0.0 0.1 0.1
Federal Non-road Gasoline Engine Standards... -0.1 -0.4 -0.5
Federal Non-road Diesel Engine Standards..... 0.4 3.7 3.2
State NOX RACT/beyond NOX RACT rules......... 2.1 67.9 12.0
Open Burning Ban............................. 0 0.8 0.6
TCMs......................................... 0 0.2 0.2
----------
Total Creditable Reductions.............. 7.5 101.1 48.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 6.--Creditable Emission Reductions Compared to the Emissions
Reductions Needed for the Post 1996-1999 ROP Plan for the Washington
Area
[Tons/day]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area-
DC MD VA wide
total
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOC Reductions in Plan.............. 11.8 70.0 63.9 145.7
Area-wide Reduction Needs........... ....... ....... ....... 131.5
Surplus............................. ....... ....... ....... 14.2
NOX Reductions in Plan.............. 7.5 101.1 48.7 157.3
Area-wide Reduction Needs........... ....... ....... ....... 150.6
Surplus............................. ....... ....... ....... 6.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 2091]]
E. EPA's Evaluation of the of the Post 1999-2005 ROP Plans for the
Washington Area
1. What Effect Do the Amendments to the 1990 Base Year Have on the Post
1999-2005 ROP Plans
Unlike the post 1996-1999 ROP plan, EPA explicitly requires that
the States develop the post 1999-2005 ROP plan using the updated
MOBILE6 emission factor model because the requirement for such a plan
came due for the Washington area after the release of MOBILE6. (See 68
FR 3410 at 3420, January 24, 2003.) The 1990 ROP and ``adjusted'' 1990
base year inventories, as discussed in section IV. C. this document,
are significantly dependent upon the mobile source emission factor
model. The mobile source emission factor model is the tool used to
determine the amount of 1990 baseline emissions that would be
eliminated by the pertinent milestone year due to the Tier 0 FMVCP and
Phase 2 RVP programs, and, thus, is a fundamental aspect of the
development of the FTC and ``adjusted'' 1990 base year inventories. In
the guidance that we provided for the post 1999-2005 ROP plan under the
reclassification of the Washington area to severe, we recognized that
the 1990 ROP and adjusted 1990 base year inventories and the 1996 and
1999 target levels would have to be re-computed in order to determine
the target levels for the post 1999 ROP requirements. We had identified
that in addition to motor vehicle emissions budgets for the 2002 and
2005 milestone years, development of the required post 1999 ROP plan
would also require the development of revisions to the 1990 base year
emissions inventories and development of up to seven 1990 adjusted
inventories (VOC for 1996, VOC and NOX for 1999, VOC and
NOX for 2002, plus VOC and NOX for 2005). See 67
FR 68805 at 68811, November 13, 2003.
As shown in Table 3 of this document, the 1999 target level is the
1996 target level minus a percentage of the adjusted 1990 Base Year
Inventory for 1999 and the FTC for 1999; and the 1996 target level is
the 1990 ROP Inventory minus the following three amounts:
(a) 15 percent of the ``adjusted'' 1990 base year inventory for
1996;
(b) Reductions from RACT rule corrections; and
(c) Emissions eliminated through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
programs.
Therefore, the 1999 target level is just the 1990 ROP inventory
minus the following five amounts:
(1) 15 percent of the ``adjusted'' 1990 base year inventory for
1996;
(2) Reductions from RACT rule corrections;
(3) Emissions eliminated through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
programs;
(4) A percentage of the ``adjusted'' 1990 Base Year Inventory for
1999; and
(5) The FTC for 1999.
To continue this process for 2002 and 2005, the steps outlined in
Table 3 of this document entitled, ``General Process for Computing ROP
Target Levels'' are used for the 2002 and 2005 milestone targets as
shown in Tables 7a and 7b.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ To facilitate comparison by the reader of Tables 7a and 7b
with Table 3, the rows identifiers in the following two tables
remain the same as those for the corresponding item in Table 3.
Table 7a.--General Process for Computing 2002 and 2005 ROP VOC Target
Levels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row Description How computed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................. 1990 VOC ROP Inventory... 1990 base year inventory
less biogenic emissions
and sources outside the
nonattainment area.
2................. Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
VOC Inventory for 1996. emissions eliminated
through 1996 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
3................. VOC Emissions eliminated Row 1 minus Row 2.
through 1996 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP
Programs.
4................. VOC Reductions from RACT Amount 1990 base year
Rule Corrections. emissions reduced by
required RACT rule
corrections.
5................. Required 15 Percent VOC 0.15 times Row 2.
Reduction.
7................. Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
VOC Inventory for 1999. emissions eliminated
through 1999 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
8................. Fleet Turnover Correction Row 2 minus Row 7.
(FTC) for 1999.
9................. Required ROP VOC ROP Percentage (0.0 to
Reduction for 1999. 0.09) times Row 7.
11................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 2002. emissions eliminated
through 2002 by Tier 0
FM VCP/Phase 2 RVP.
12................ FTC for 2002............. Row 7 minus Row 11.
13................ Required ROP Reduction ROP Percentage (0.0 to
for 2002. 0.09) times Row 11.
14................ 2002 VOC Target Level.... Row 1 minus Rows 3, 4, 5,
8, 9, 12 and 13.
15................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
VOC Inventory for 2005. emissions eliminated
through 2005 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
16................ FTC for 2005............. Row 15 minus Row 11.
17................ Required ROP VOC ROP Percentage (0.0 to
Reduction for 2005. 0.09) times Row 15.
18................ 2005 VOC Target Level.... Row 14 minus Rows 16 and
17.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 7B.--General Process for Computing 2002 and 2005 TOP NOX Target
Levels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Row Description How computed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................. 1990 NOX ROP Inventory... 1990 base year inventory
less biogenic emissions
and sources outside the
nonattainment area.
7................. Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
NOX Inventory for 1999. emissions eliminated
through 1999 by Tier 0
FMCVP/Phase 2 RVP.
8................. Fleet Turnover Correction Row 1 minus Row 7.
(FTC) for 1999.
9................. Required ROP NOX ROP Percentage (0.0 to
Reduction for 1999. 0.09) times Tow 7.
[[Page 2092]]
11................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
NOX Inventory for 2002. emissions eliminated
through 2002 by Tier 0
FMCVP/Phase 2 RVP.
12................ FTC for 2002............. Row 7 minus Row 11.
13................ Required ROP Reduction ROP Percentage (0.0 to
for 2002. 0.9) times Tow 11.
14................ 2002 NOX Target Level.... Row 1 minus Rows 8, 9, 12
and 13.
15................ Adjusted 1990 Base Year 1990 ROP inventory less
Inventory for 2005. emissions eliminated
through 2005 by Tier 0
FMVCP/Phase 2 RVP.
16................ FTC for 2005............. Row 15 minus Tow 11.
17................ Required ROP NOX ROP Percentage (0.0 to
Reduction for 2005. 0.9) times Row 15.
18................ 2005 NOX Target Level.... Row 14 minus Rows 16 and
17.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. How Were the 3 Percent per Year Reductions for the Post 1999-2005
ROP Plan Calculated?
Table 8.--2002 and 2005 ROP Target Levels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOC NOX
Row Description tons/ tons/
day day
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1..................... 1990 VOC ROP Inventory........ 578.7 869.3
2..................... Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC 455.5 N/R *
Inventory for 1996.
3..................... VOC Emissions eliminated 123.2 N/R
through 1996 by Tier 0 FMVCP/
Phase 2 RVP Programs.
4..................... VOC Reductions from RACT Rule 0.1 N/A *
Corrections.
5..................... Required 15 Percent VOC 68.3 N/R
Reduction.
7..................... Adjusted 1990 Base Year 433.7 778.5
Inventory for 1999.
8..................... Fleet Turnover Correction 21.8 90.8
(FTC) for 1999.
9..................... Required ROP Reduction for 4.3 62.3
1999--1% VOC & 8% NOX.
11.................... Adjusted 1990 Base Year 420.5 756.7
Inventory for 2002.
12.................... FTC for 2002.................. 13.2 21.8
13.................... Required ROP Reduction for 0.0 68.1
2002--0 % VOC and 9 % NOX.
14.................... 2002 Target Level............. 347.7 626.3
15.................... Adjusted 1990 Base Year VOC 412.1 735.6
Inventory for 2005.
16.................... FTC for 2005.................. 8.4 21.1
17.................... Required ROP VOC Reduction for 0.0 66.2
2005--0% VOC & 9 % NOX.
18.................... 2005 Target Level............. 339.3 539.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* N/R means not required, and N/A means not applicable.
3. What Control Strategies Are the District, Maryland and Virginia
Including in the Post 1999-2005 ROP Plan?
The post 1999-2005 ROP plan describes the emission reduction
credits that the Washington area jurisdictions are claiming toward
their 9 percent reduction requirements. We can credit reductions for
the ROP requirement for rules promulgated by the EPA and for state
measures we have approved as SIP revisions. The control measures used
in the post 1999-2005 ROP plan for the Washington area are listed in
Tables 9 and 10 of this document and described in more detail in the
TSD for this rulemaking. The control measures include all those in the
post 1996-1999 portion of the plan, plus additional measures. Table 9
lists those measures credited in the 1996-1999 ROP that continue to
produce benefits in the post-1999 period. There are several reasons why
a post 1996-1999 measure can also be credited in the post-1999 period.
First, the uncontrolled baseline is computed from the1990 levels, not
the 1999 levels. Thus, if a source category emits at a rate of one ton
of pollutant per 10 units of activity (e.g., VMT or millions of British
Thermal Units heat input) and had a 1990 activity level of 100 units,
the source would have baseline emissions of 10 tons. If the source
categories activity level was projected to grow to 130 units by 1999
and 140 units by 2002, the projected uncontrolled emissions would be 13
tons in 1999 and 14 tons in 2002. If this source category was
controlled at a 50 percent control, that is, required to emit at a rate
of a half ton per unit of activity by some date before 1999, then the
projected, controlled emissions would be 6.5 tons in 1999 and 7 tons in
2002. The reductions would be the projected uncontrolled emissions
minus the controlled emissions. The reductions would be 6.5 tons for
1999 and 7 tons for 2002.
Another way a measure included in the post 1996-1999 ROP plan can
produce additional emission reduction benefits after 1999 is when
increasing portions of the source category are subject to more
stringent standards over time. This is true of mobile source controls
under the FMVCP and NLEV programs and for EPA's nonroad mobile source
standards. As time passes, more and more of the source category is made
of newer vehicles or engines that were manufactured to meet the most
recent emission standards. For instance, in the case of on-road mobile
sources, the emission factor computed using the MOBILE emission factor
model declines for future years. Once again, reductions are computed by
subtracting a future controlled projected emissions from uncontrolled
emissions. The future year uncontrolled emissions assume only the FMVCP
in place as of 1990 (termed ``Tier 0 FMVCP''), the ``Phase 2 RVP''
standards issued mandated for 1992, and other programs in place in
1990.
[[Page 2093]]
The future year controlled programs include all the creditable programs
issued or adopted since 1990 such as the Tier 1 and 2 FMVCP
standards,\9\ federal heavy duty on-road diesel engine standards,
reformulated gasoline, the enhanced inspection maintenance programs,
and the National Low Emission Vehicle program. Because the same future
year VMT is used for both the projected uncontrolled and controlled
cases, the reductions are net of growth in VMT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The MOBILE model automatically keeps track of when which
program is required and thus does not compute any credit for Tier 2
for the 2002 year but will for a 2005 year which is after the 2004
model year.
Table 9.--VOC and NOX Emission Reductions Eligible for Credit in the
Post 1999-2005 ROP Plan From Measures in the 1996-1999 ROP Plan for the
Washington Area
[Tons/day]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002 reductions 2005 reductions
Measure -------------------------------------------
VOC NOX VOC NOX
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tiers 1 & 2 FMVCP, 56.0 44.9 80.5 85.8
Reformulated Gasoline (On-
road), Federal Heavy Duty
Diesel Engines rule, NLEV &
Enhanced Inspection and
Maintenance................
Reformulated Gasoline 2.7 ......... 2.9
(Nonroad/Off-road).........
Surface Cleaning/Decreasing. 4.1 ......... 4.4
Autobody Refinishing........ 9.3 ......... 9.8
AIM......................... 16.7 ......... 17.5
Consumer Products........... 4.1 ......... 4.3
Seasonal Open Burning Ban... 7.4 1.6 7.4 1.6
Graphic Arts................ 3.8 ......... 4.0
Landfill Regulations........ 2.4 ......... 2.5
Non-CTG RACT to 50 TPD--MD/ 1.5 ......... 1.5
VA/DC......................
Stage I Enhancement......... 1.5 ......... 1.6
Expanded State Point Source 2.4 ......... 2.5
Regulation to 25 TPD.......
Stage II Vapor Recovery 15.1 ......... 15.1
Nozzles....................
RFG refueling benefits...... 2.6 ......... 2.3
Non-road Gasoline Engines 22.2 ......... 26.6
Rule.......................
Non-road Diesel Engines..... ......... 14.9 ......... 22.1
State NOX RACT/beyond RACT.. ......... 203.8 ......... 279.4
------------
Total Creditable 151.8 265.2 182.9 388.9
Reductions.............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The post 1999-2005 ROP plan for the Washington area also includes
additional emission reduction measures beyond those included in the
post 1996-1999 ROP plan. All the States have adopted limits on certain
architectural and industrial maintenance (AIM) coatings that are more
stringent than the limits required under the Federal regulations for
AIM coatings. The post 1999-2005 ROP plan also includes Virginia's rule
for solvent cleaning operations which is based on the Federal maximum
achievable control technology (MACT) standard for chlorinated solvent
vapor degreasers. The States each have issued rules that regulate VOC
emissions from portable fuel containers by setting standards for the
design and construction of these containers.
The post 1999-2005 ROP plan also relies upon VOC emission
reductions from emissions standards promulgated by EPA for several
categories of nonroad mobile sources. These categories are:
(a) Spark ignition outboard, personal water craft and jetboat
engines (OB/PWC) and stern drive and inboard engines;
(b) Large spark-ignition engines such as those used in forklifts
and airport ground-service equipment;
(c) Recreational vehicles using spark-ignition engines such as off-
highway motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, and snowmobiles; and
(d) Recreational marine diesel engines.
The 1999-2005 ROP plan also relies upon additional TCMs which are
strategies to both reduce VMT and decrease the amount of emissions per
VMT, and are considered an essential element of control strategies for
nonattainment areas.
The post 1999-2005 ROP plan also relies upon certain voluntary non-
regulatory measures as an alternative to traditional ``command and
control'' regulatory approaches. Voluntary emission reduction program
measures have the potential to encourage new, untried and cost-
effective approaches to reduce emissions. Under EPA's guidance,
voluntary emission reduction program measures can be approved if the
State retains enforceable responsibility for the amount of emission
reductions associated with the voluntary measures and meets certain
other obligations.
The post 1999-2005 ROP plan's control measures for the Washington
area are listed in Table 10 of this document and described in more
detail in the TSD for this rulemaking.
[[Page 2094]]
Table 10.--VOC and NOX Emission Reductions From Measures in the 1999-2005 ROP Plan for the Washington Area
[Tons/day]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002 Reductions 2005 Reductions
Line Measure -------------------------------------------
VOC NOX VOC NOX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............................ Measures in 1996-1999 ROP plan (from 151.8 265.2 182.9 388.9
Table 9).
2............................ State Portable Fuel Container Rules-- 0.9 ......... 2.4
MD/VA.
3............................ State Solvent Cleaning Rules......... ......... ......... 9.0
4............................ EPA's Non-road Engines and vehicles ......... 0.6 ......... 0.5
rule--Large Spark Ignition Engine
Rule.
5............................ EPA's Non-road Engines and vehicles 1.3 ......... 3.1
rule--Spark Ignition Marine Engines.
6............................ TCMs in 2004 SIP Revisions........... 0.3 0.5 0.3 0.7
7............................ State AIM Rules...................... ......... ......... 12.3
8............................ Voluntary Measures................... ......... ......... 3.19 .19
9............................ State Portable Fuel Container Rules-- ......... ......... 0.2
DC.
----------------------------------------
Total.................... Reductions........................... 154.3 266.3 213.39 390.29
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. What Are the Creditable Reductions in the Post 1999-2005 ROP Plan