Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans and Designation of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Arizona, 13425-13442 [05-5517]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
but not out-of-state state banks insured
institutions), by operation of law (e.g.,
when state law is preempted for
national banks or federal thrifts, and
federal credit unions, but not for out-ofstate state banks), or by an
administrative determination to enforce
a state rule against an out-of-state state
bank or affiliate, but not against a
federal entity. The rule could give
examples.
• The rule should define ‘‘state law’’
to include laws, ordinances, rules, etc.
of political subdivisions (including any
county, municipality, etc.).
language permit the FDIC to address the
meaning of Section 104(d) for a state
bank confronting state laws outside its
home state that disadvantage it by
putting it in a different legal or
competitive position than its national
bank or in-state state bank competitors.
The following specific items might be
covered in an FDIC rule or statement of
policy:
• The rule should state that the
Section 104(d) preemption applies to
insured banks, and to their subsidiaries,
affiliates and associated persons.
• The rule should define a ‘‘person’’
to include a depository institution,
subsidiary, affiliate, and associated
person.
• The rule should state that in view
of the breadth of the nondiscrimination
requirements stated in Section 104(d)
the word ‘‘restrict’’ in Section 104(d)(1)
is to be read broadly to include any state
law, rule, interpretation or action that
calls for any limitation or requirement.
Any state law that ‘‘restricts’’ but is
nondiscriminatory under Section
104(d)(4) is not preempted under
Section 104(d). By the same token, any
state law that ‘‘restricts’’ and is
discriminatory under Section 104(d)(4)
is preempted under Section 104(d).
• The rule should address each of the
four nondiscrimination provisions in
Section 104(d)(4) to confirm that each is
a distinct test and that any state law or
action that fails any one test is
preempted.
• The rule should address the scope
of ‘‘actions’’ in Section 104(d)(4) to
include all types of formal or informal
administrative actions by any state or
local governmental entity, including
decisions with respect to civil
enforcement of state rules.
• The rule should address Section
104(d)(4)(D)(i) in light of the terms used
in subparagraph (ii) to specify that
subparagraph (i) addresses treatment
under state law of an out-of-state
insured state bank, which is plainly an
‘‘insured depository institution,’’ that is
different from the treatment of any
national bank or in-state state bank and
banks, which is an ‘‘other person
engaged in the same activity’’ under
these provisions. It should also specify
that this discrimination can take various
forms, including state laws, rules, or
‘‘actions’’ that treat out-of-state state
banks or their subsidiaries differently
from in-state or federal institutions,
whether expressly (e.g., through a state
law exemption for federal institutions,
5. The FDIC Should Implement Section
27 of the FDI Act by Adopting a Rule
Parallel to the Rules Promulgated by the
OCC and OTS
The scope and implementation of the
express preemption for the ‘‘interest
rate’’ charged in interstate lending
transactions by state and national banks
under Section 27 of the FDI Act and
Section 85 of the National Bank Act
have been authoritatively addressed by
the courts 29 and in agency
interpretations.30 Nevertheless, both the
OCC and OTS have adopted rules
codifying the scope of the respective
statutory provisions. We request that the
FDIC adopt parallel provisions by rule
so that state banks will operate in a
matching legal framework under these
parallel statutes.
*
*
*
*
*
The Roundtable appreciates the
FDIC’s consideration of this petition.
We recognize that it is very broad and
asks the FDIC to undertake a major
rulemaking. We believe that such an
effort is urgently needed to preserve a
strong dual banking system, to maintain
safety and soundness, and to ensure that
it is attractive to both large and small
banks. Such a system is an integral,
essential part of the framework for
banking in the United States. While we
strongly support the development of
interstate banking and federal
preemption over the last decade, we
believe that the modernization of
American banking requires a parallel
modernization of the state half of the
dual banking system. Since the issues
concern interstate business and
preemption, the needed actions must
come at the federal level. As discussed
above, we believe that Congress has
given the FDIC both the tools and
responsibility to address these needs.
The Roundtable and its members
stand ready to work with the FDIC and
addresses ‘‘other persons engaged in the same
activity’’, while Subparagraph (ii) addresses ‘‘other
persons engaged in the same activity that are not
depository institutions or affiliates thereof.’’
29 Greenwood Trust Co. v. Mass., 971 F.2d 818
(1st Cir. 1992), Smiley v. Citibank, 517 U.S. 735
(1996).
30 See FDIC General Counsel Opinions 10 and 11.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
13425
its staff to achieve these important
objectives. If you have any further
questions or comments, please do not
hesitate to contact me or John Beccia at
(202) 289–4322.
Sincerely,
Richard M. Whiting,
Executive Director and General Counsel.
cc: Chairman Donald E. Powell, William F.
Kroener III, Esq.
[FR Doc. 05–5499 Filed 3–18–05; 8:45]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[AZ131–0078; FRL–7887–1]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans and Designation
of Areas for Air Quality Planning
Purposes; Arizona
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality’s submittals of
revisions to the Arizona state
implementation plan that include
substitution of the clean fuel fleet
program requirement with the cleaner
burning gasoline program, adoption of
the serious area 1-hour ozone plan, and
adoption of the 1-hour ozone
maintenance plan for the Phoenix
(Arizona) metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area. We are also
proposing to approve Arizona’s request
to redesignate the Phoenix metropolitan
1-hour ozone nonattainment area from
nonattainment to attainment. EPA
proposes these actions pursuant to those
provisions of the Clean Air Act that
obligate the agency to take action on
submittals of revisions to state
implementation plans and requests for
redesignation. In addition, under
section 107 of the Clean Air Act, we are
proposing to revise the boundary of the
Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation. EPA is
proposing this last action consistent
with the Federal trust responsibility to
the Tribes and for the purpose of
relieving the Agency or the Gila River
Indian Community of the need to
promulgate and implement plans and
measures for the Community that are
not needed for attainment or
maintenance of the 1-hour or 8-hour
ozone national ambient air quality
standard.
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13426
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Written comments must be
received at the address below on or
before April 20, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Formal written comments
should be mailed or emailed to Wienke
Tax, Office of Air Planning (AIR–2),
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street, San
Francisco, CA 94105–3901,
tax.wienke@epa.gov. Comments may
also be submitted through the Federal
Register Web site at https://
www.regulations.gov. We prefer
electronic comments.
You can inspect copies of EPA’s
Federal Register document at our
Region 9 office during normal business
hours (see address above). Due to
increased security, we suggest that you
call at least 24 hours prior to visiting the
Regional Office so that we can make
arrangements to have someone meet
you. The Federal Register document is
also available as an electronic file on
EPA’s Region 9 Web page at https://
www.epa.gov/region09/air.
You may inspect and copy the
rulemaking docket for this notice at the
following location during business
hours.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 9, Air Division, Air Planning
Office (AIR–2), 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, CA 94105.
Copies of the SIP materials are also
available for inspection at the address
listed below:
Arizona Department of Environmental
Quality, 1110 W. Washington Street,
First Floor, Phoenix, AZ 85007,
Phone: (602) 771–2217.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wienke Tax, Office of Air Planning, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 9, (520) 622–1622, e-mail:
tax.wienke@epa.gov, or see https://
www.epa.gov/region09/air.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, the terms
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ and ‘‘our’’ mean U.S. EPA.
DATES:
Table of Contents
I. Summary of Today’s Proposed Action
II. History of 1-Hour Ozone Planning in the
Phoenix Metropolitan Nonattainment
Area
III. The CAA’s Requirements for
Redesignation Requests and
Maintenance Plans
IV. EPA’s Review of the MAG 1-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan’s Compliance With the CAA’s
Requirements for Ozone Redesignation
Requests and Maintenance Plans
A. The Area Must Be Attaining the 1-Hour
Ozone NAAQS
1. Adequate Monitoring Network
2. Attainment of the Standard
3. Monitoring Results
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
B. The Area Must Have a Fully-Approved
SIP Under Section 110(k)
C. The Improvement in Air Quality Must
Be Due to Permanent and Enforceable
Reductions in Emissions
D. The Area Must Have Met All Applicable
Requirements Under Section 110 and
Part D of the CAA
1. Section 110 Requirements
2. Part D: Provisions for Nonattainment
Areas
a. Section 172 Requirements
b. Section 176 Requirements
c. Section 182 Requirements
E. The Area Must Have a Fully-Approved
Maintenance Plan Meeting the
Requirements of Section 175A
1. Emissions Inventory
2. Maintenance Demonstration
3. Monitoring Network
4. Verification of Continued Attainment
5. Contingency Plan
6. Subsequent Maintenance Plan Revisions
7. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
8. Conclusion
V. Revision of Boundary of the Phoenix
Metropolitan 1-Hour Ozone
Nonattainment Area
A. Background
B. EPA Review of the Community’s
Request
C. Conclusion and Effect of Revising the
Boundary of the Phoenix Metropolitan 1Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area
VI. Proposed Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Today’s Proposed Action
We are proposing to approve, under
sections 182(c)(4)(B) and 110(k)(3) of the
Clean Air Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’), the State
of Arizona’s 1998 request to ‘‘opt-out’’
of the clean fuel fleet (CFF) program and
to approve the cleaner burning gasoline
(CBG) program as a substitute measure.
We are also proposing to approve, under
section 110(k)(3) of the Act, the State’s
2000 submittal of the Final Serious Area
Ozone State Implementation Plan for
Maricopa County (‘‘Serious Area Ozone
Plan’’), which provides a demonstration
of compliance with requirements under
the Clean Air Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’) for the
Phoenix metropolitan ‘‘serious’’ 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area.
We are also proposing to approve,
under sections 107(d)(3)(D) and
110(k)(3), the State’s 2004 submittal of
the One-Hour Ozone Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan for the
Maricopa County Nonattainment Area
(‘‘Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan’’), which was
developed and adopted by the Maricopa
Association of Governments (MAG) as
meeting CAA requirements for
redesignation requests and maintenance
plans. EPA is proposing to determine
that the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area has fully met the
requirements for redesignation found at
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA for
redesignation of an area from
nonattainment to attainment for the 1hour ozone national ambient air quality
standard (NAAQS). However, this
proposal is contingent upon final
approval by EPA of three separate
proposed rulemakings involving two
Maricopa County rules, a negative
declaration, and a set of permit
conditions imposing ‘‘reasonably
available control technology’’ on a
specific stationary source. As part of our
approval of the maintenance plan, we
are proposing to approve the 2006 and
2015 motor vehicle emissions budgets
(MVEBs) for VOC and NOX in the
submitted maintenance plan for
transportation conformity purposes.
In addition, we are proposing, under
section 107(d)(3)(A) of the Act, to revise
the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation. This proposed
action would add the Maricopa County
portion of the Reservation to the current
‘‘unclassifiable/attainment’’ area within
the State of Arizona for the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS. The effect of this action
would be to relieve the Agency and the
Community of the need to develop and
implement plans and measures that are
not needed for attainment or
maintenance of the 1-hour or 8-hour
ozone NAAQS.
II. History of 1-Hour Ozone Planning in
the Phoenix Metropolitan
Nonattainment Area
Under section 107(d) of the CAA, as
amended in 1977, Maricopa County was
designated as a 1-hour oxidant (later
ozone) nonattainment area in March
1978 (43 FR 8962). Originally, the
nonattainment area was county-wide,
but EPA later approved a State request
to limit the nonattainment area to a
subregion within Maricopa County that
was defined by the boundaries of the
Maricopa Association of Governments’
(MAG) Urban Planning Area. See 44 FR
16388, 16393 (March 19, 1979). We refer
to this area herein as the ‘‘Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area’’ or the ‘‘Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area,’’ and
we note that the boundary of this
nonattainment area has remained
defined by reference to the MAG urban
planning area from 1979 through the
present time. However, we are
proposing today to revise the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area boundary to exclude
the Gila River Indian Reservation (see
Section V of this proposed rule).
On November 15, 1990, the CAA
Amendments of 1990 were enacted.
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Under the Act, as amended in 1990, the
Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area remained
nonattainment by operation of law, and
under section 107(d)(4)(A) of the
amended Act, the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area was further
classified as a ‘‘moderate’’ ozone
nonattainment area based on ozone
monitoring data during the 1987–1989
period. See 56 FR 56694, 56717
(November 6, 1991). Because attainment
was not achieved by November 15, 1996
(the CAA attainment date for
‘‘moderate’’ ozone nonattainment areas),
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area was reclassified to
‘‘serious,’’ effective February 13, 1998,
with a new attainment date of
November 15, 1999. See 62 FR 60001
(November 6, 1997) and 63 FR 7290
(February 13, 1998).
In connection with one of the
requirements for ‘‘moderate’’ ozone
nonattainment areas, the State of
Arizona submitted the initial 15 percent
Rate of Progress plan (15 percent ROP
plan) for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area via the Maricopa
Association of Governments 1993 Ozone
Plan for the Maricopa County Area
(November 1993) on November 15,
1993, and an Addendum (March 1994)
to that plan on April 8, 1994. On April
13, 1994, EPA found the initial plan
(including the Addendum) incomplete
because it failed to include in fully
adopted and enforceable form all of the
measures relied upon in the 15 percent
ROP demonstration. This
incompleteness finding started the 18month sanction clock in CAA section
179 and the two year clock under
section 110(c) for EPA to promulgate a
federal implementation plan (FIP)
covering the 15 percent ROP
requirement. Subsequently in November
1994 and April 1995, Arizona submitted
an attainment plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area which
updated the 15 percent ROP
demonstration. On May 12, 1995, we
found the revised 15 percent ROP plan
and the attainment plan complete,
turning off the sanctions clock;
however, under section 110(c), the FIP
clock continued until EPA approved the
15 percent ROP plan.
In August 1996, EPA was sued by the
American Lung Association of Arizona,
ALAA v. Browner, No. CIV 96–1856
PHX ROS (D.Ariz.). This case sought to
enforce EPA’s obligation under CAA
section 110(c) to promulgate a FIP for
the 15 percent ROP requirement. On
July 8, 1997, a consent decree was filed
with the U.S. District Court for the
District of Arizona establishing a
schedule of January 20, 1998 for
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
proposing and May 18, 1998 for
promulgating a 15 percent ROP plan.
Under the consent decree, EPA’s
obligation to promulgate a 15 percent
ROP plan was relieved to the extent that
we had approved State measures. EPA
determined in its final rule that the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area had in place or would have in place
sufficient control measures to meet the
15 percent ROP requirement for volatile
organic compounds (VOCs), a precursor
emission to ozone, under CAA section
182(b)(1)(A) as soon as practicable. See
63 FR 28898 (May 27, 1998), as
amended at 64 FR 36243 (July 6, 1999).
In February 2000, the State of Arizona
requested that EPA make a finding that
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area had attained the 1hour ozone NAAQS by the applicable
‘‘serious’’ area attainment date of
November 15, 1999 based on 1997–1999
ozone monitoring data. In May of 2000,
we proposed such a finding (see 65 FR
31859, May 19, 2000) and
approximately one year later, we
published a final attainment
determination for the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS. See 66 FR 29230 (May 30,
2001).
On December 7, 1998, in connection
with one of the requirements for
‘‘serious’’ ozone nonattainment areas,
the State submitted to EPA a SIP
revision opting out of the Clean Fuel
Fleet program requirement and
requesting EPA approval of its interim
Cleaner Burning Gasoline (CBG)
program as a substitute program. On
June 7, 1999, the revision was found to
be complete by operation of law
pursuant to EPA’s completeness criteria
set forth in 40 CFR part 51, appendix V.
In today’s notice, we are proposed to
approve this request.
On December 14, 2000, the State
submitted the Final Serious Area Ozone
State Implementation Plan for Maricopa
County (‘‘Serious Area Ozone Plan’’) to
EPA as a revision to the Arizona SIP.
This plan was found to be complete by
operation of law on June 14, 2001.
Arizona Department of Environmental
Quality (ADEQ) prepared the Serious
Area Ozone Plan, and in doing so,
anticipated a positive attainment
finding for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area based on 1997–1999
ozone monitoring data. The Serious
Area Ozone Plan includes a complete
emissions inventory for year 1996, and
describes the State’s compliance with
CAA requirements for ‘‘serious’’ ozone
nonattainment areas, including the
requirements for enhanced monitoring.
In today’s notice, we are proposing to
approve the Serious Area Ozone Plan
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
13427
for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area.
In earlier actions, we have already
approved revisions to Arizona’s Cleaner
Burning Gasoline (CBG) program (69 FR
10161, March 4, 2004) and to Arizona’s
Vehicle Emissions Inspection (VEI)
Program (68 FR 2912, January 22, 2003)
as well as many of Maricopa County’s
VOC RACT rules. (The Federal Register
citations and effective dates for these
rules are listed later in this notice in
Table 3.) These programs, as revised, are
the principal State and local controls
relied on in the Serious Area Ozone
Plan.
On April 21, 2004, the State
submitted the One-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan for the Maricopa
County Nonattainment Area
(Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan) to EPA as a revision
to the Arizona SIP. This plan was found
to be complete by operation of law on
October 21, 2004. The Maricopa
Association of Governments (MAG)
prepared the Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan, which relies on
continuation of the control measures
cited above in connection with the
Serious Area Ozone Plan but also
includes additional control measures
including coordination of traffic signal
systems, tougher enforcement of vehicle
registration and emission test
compliance, development of intelligent
transportation systems, and a new
Maricopa County rule governing VOC
emissions from aerospace
manufacturing and rework operations.
The plan includes contingency
measures to remedy any future
violations of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS,
and includes VOC and NOX MVEBs for
2006 and 2015 for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area. In
today’s notice, we are proposing to
approve the Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area.
Our proposed approvals of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan and the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan are contingent upon final EPA
approval of certain other rulemakings
described in more detail later in this
notice. EPA notes that the Phoenix-Mesa
metropolitan area has been designated
nonattainment for the 8-hour ozone
NAAQS, and is subject to additional
requirements as a result. See 69 FR
23858, 23879 (April 30, 2004). Final
approval of this proposal would change
the official designation for the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS found at 40 CFR part 81
for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area from nonattainment
to attainment but would not affect the
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13428
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
8-hour ozone nonattainment area
designation for the Phoenix-Mesa area.
III. The CAA’s Requirements for
Redesignation Requests and
Maintenance Plans
The CAA provides the requirements
for redesignating a nonattainment area
to attainment. Specifically, section
107(d)(3)(E) allows for redesignation
providing that the following conditions
are met: (1) The Administrator
determines that the area has attained the
applicable NAAQS; (2) the
Administrator has fully approved the
applicable implementation plan for the
area under section 110(k); (3) the
Administrator determines that the
improvement in air quality is due to
permanent and enforceable reductions
in emissions resulting from
implementation of the applicable SIP
and applicable Federal air pollutant
control regulations and other permanent
and enforceable reductions; (4) the
Administrator has fully approved a
maintenance plan for the area as
meeting the requirements of section
175A; and, (5) the State containing such
area has met all requirements applicable
to the area under section 110 and part
D. EPA provided guidance on
redesignations in the General Preamble
for the Implementation of Title I of the
CAA Amendments of 1990, on April 16,
1992 (57 FR 13498), and supplemented
this guidance on April 28, 1992 (57 FR
18070).
EPA has provided further guidance on
processing redesignation requests in the
following documents:
• ‘‘Maintenance Plans for
Redesignation of Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide Nonattainment Areas’’,
Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief,
Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs
Branch, April 30, 1992 (Helms memo
1992a);
• ‘‘Contingency Measures for Ozone
and Carbon Monoxide (CO)
Redesignations’’, Memorandum from G.
T. Helms, Chief, Ozone/Carbon
Monoxide Programs Branch, June 1,
1992 (Helms memo 1992b);
• ‘‘Procedures for Processing
Requests to Redesignate Areas to
Attainment’’, Memorandum from John
Calcagni, Director, Air Quality
Management Division, September 4,
1992 (Calcagni memo 1992a);
• ‘‘State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Actions Submitted in Response to Clean
Air Act (ACT) Deadlines’’,
Memorandum from John Calcagni,
Director, Air Quality Management
Division, October 28, 1992 (Calcagni
memo 1992b);
• ‘‘State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Requirements for Areas Submitting
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
Requests for Redesignation to
Attainment of the Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide (CO) National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS) On or After
November 15, 1992’’, Memorandum
from Michael H. Shapiro, Acting
Assistant Administrator for Air and
Radiation, September 17, 1993 (Shapiro
memo);
• ‘‘Part D New Source Review (part D
NSR) Requirements for Areas
Requesting Redesignation to
Attainment’’, Memorandum from Mary
D. Nichols, Assistant Administrator for
Air and Radiation, October 14, 1994
(Nichols memo); and
• ‘‘Reasonable Further Progress,
Attainment Demonstration, and Related
Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment
Areas Meeting the Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standard’’,
Memorandum from John S. Seitz,
Director, Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards, May 10, 1995 (Seitz
memo).
IV. EPA’s Review of the MAG 1-Hour
Ozone Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan’s Compliance With
the CAA’s Requirements for Ozone
Redesignation Requests and
Maintenance Plans
EPA believes the State of Arizona has
demonstrated that the area meets all of
the applicable criteria for redesignation
to attainment as specified in Section
107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA.
A. The Area Must Be Attaining the 1Hour Ozone NAAQS
Section 107(d)(3)(E)(i) of the CAA
states that for an area to be redesignated
to attainment, the Administrator must
determine that the area has attained the
applicable NAAQS. In this case, the
applicable NAAQS is the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS.
1. Adequate Monitoring Network
The CAA requires States to establish
and operate air monitoring networks to
compile data on ambient air quality for
all criteria pollutants. See section
110(a)(2)(B)(i) of the Act. Our
regulations in 40 CFR part 58 establish
specific regulatory requirements for
operating air quality surveillance
networks to measure ambient
concentrations of ozone, including
measurement method requirements,
network design, quality assurance
procedures, and in the case of large
urban areas, the minimum number of
monitoring sites designated as National
Air Monitoring Stations (NAMS).
For this proposed action, we are
discussing the adequacy of the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area
monitoring network to support our
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
finding that the Redesignation Request
and Maintenance Plan appropriately
evaluates the 1-hour ozone problem in
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area. Reliable ambient
data are necessary to validate the base
year air quality modeling which in turn
is necessary to assure a sound
maintenance demonstration.
As it existed in the 2000 to 2002
period, the ozone ambient air
monitoring network consisted of four
National Air Monitoring Stations
(NAMS), 14 State and Local Air
Monitoring Stations (SLAMS), and three
Special Purpose Monitors (SPM)
operated by the Maricopa County
Environmental Services Department
(MCESD) and the Arizona Department
of Environmental Quality (ADEQ).
Figure 2–1 on page 2–6 in the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan lists the names of the sites and
their locations in the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area. Since
the 2000–2002 period, the ozone
network has changed, e.g., certain sites
have been discontinued while new sites
have been added. In the 2002–2004
period, the ozone monitoring network
consists of 18 monitoring sites, four
designated as NAMS, 12 designated as
SLAMS, and two SPMs. These sites all
use EPA reference methods, are sited
according to our regulations, meet the
applicable monitoring objectives in our
regulations, and are operated according
to our regulations. We therefore find
that the monitoring network operated by
the MCESD and ADEQ is adequate to
support the technical evaluation of
ozone maintenance in the Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan.
2. Attainment of the Standard
For ozone, an area may be considered
to be attaining the 1-hour ozone NAAQS
if there are no violations, as determined
in accordance with 40 CFR 50.9 and
appendix H, based on three complete,
consecutive calendar years of qualityassured ambient monitoring data. A
violation of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS
occurs when the estimated number of
exceedances per year averaged over
three years is greater than 1.0 at any
monitoring site in the area or its
downwind environs, using conventional
rounding techniques.
The calculation of the estimated
exceedances takes into account not only
the number of exceedances during a
given ozone season, but also
completeness of data, and daily peak
ozone concentrations on days in the
ozone season that can be assumed to be
less than the level of the standard. A
daily exceedance occurs when the
maximum hourly ozone concentration
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13429
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
3. Monitoring Results
during a given day is greater than or
equal to 0.125 parts per million (ppm),
using conventional rounding
techniques. Monitoring data must be
collected and quality-assured in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58, and
recorded in EPA’s Air Quality System
(AQS) database.
MCESD and ADEQ submitted qualityassured ozone monitoring data to EPA
for the 1997 to 1999 ozone monitoring
seasons. As noted previously, we
determined that the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area had attained the 1hour ozone NAAQS by the applicable
attainment date. See 66 FR 29230 (May
30, 2001). Since then, the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area has
continued to meet the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, as shown in Table 1.
TABLE 1.—AVERAGE NUMBER OF EXCEEDANCE DAYS PER YEAR AND DESIGN VALUES BY MONITOR IN THE PHOENIX
METROPOLITAN OZONE NONATTAINMENT AREA (2000 TO 2004)
SITE
type
Site
Blue Point ........................................................................................................................................
Central Phoenix ..............................................................................................................................
Fountain Hills ..................................................................................................................................
South Scottsdale .............................................................................................................................
Tempe .............................................................................................................................................
Falcon Field ....................................................................................................................................
Rio Verde ........................................................................................................................................
Dysart** ...........................................................................................................................................
South Phoenix .................................................................................................................................
West Phoenix ..................................................................................................................................
Pinnacle Peak .................................................................................................................................
North Phoenix .................................................................................................................................
Glendale ..........................................................................................................................................
West Chandler ................................................................................................................................
Cave Creek .....................................................................................................................................
Humboldt Mountain .........................................................................................................................
JLG Supersite* ................................................................................................................................
Palo Verde* .....................................................................................................................................
NAMS
NAMS
NAMS
NAMS
SPM
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
SPM
SLAMS
SLAMS
SLAMS
Average
number of
exceedance
days per year
Site design
value (ppm)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.110
0.098
0.106
0.099
0.098
0.104
0.101
0.085
0.091
0.097
0.101
0.105
0.099
0.099
0.099
0.099
0.086
0.098
Sources: AQS Database and MCESD 2003 Network Review.
*ADEQ Site.
**Site only has data from 2003–2004.
Table 1 also provides design values
for each monitoring site. The design
value generally represents the 4th
highest daily maximum (hourly) ozone
concentration over a given three-year
period at a given site. Design values
provide one basis of comparison
between different parts of a given
nonattainment area with respect to peak
ozone exposure; as such, the design
values are provided herein for
information purposes only. Attainment
of the ozone NAAQS relies on the
average number of exceedances per year
(the design value is used under the CAA
if an area is found to have missed its
attainment deadline and must be
reclassified).
Based on the monitoring data
summarized in Table 1, we propose to
determine that the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area has attained, and
continues to attain, the applicable
NAAQS and therefore meets the related
criterion for redesignation under section
107(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
B. The Area Must Have a Fully
Approved SIP Under Section 110(k)
EPA fully approved the ozone SIP for
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area that had been
required under the CAA, as amended in
1977. See 47 FR 19326 (May 5, 1982)
and 40 CFR 52.123(d). With respect to
ozone-related SIP requirements under
the CAA, as amended in 1990, EPA is
proposing action in today’s notice to
approve the Serious Area Ozone Plan
SIP revision for the Phoenix
metropolitan serious 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area and thereby fulfill
the requirements for a periodic
inventory for 1996 and enhanced
monitoring.
CAA requirements for ozone
nonattainment areas are cumulative in
that ‘‘serious’’ areas must also meet the
applicable requirements for the two
lesser classifications: ‘‘marginal’’ and
‘‘moderate’’. Most of the applicable
requirements for the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area, such as the base
year 1990 emissions inventory, an
enhanced vehicle inspection and
maintenance program and various
Maricopa County RACT rules, have
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
been fully approved under section
110(k) by EPA in previous rulemakings
and our final approval of the Serious
Area Ozone Plan will accomplish the
same for the 1996 periodic inventory
requirement and the enhanced
monitoring requirement.
We recognize that there remain
several EPA proposed rules that need to
be finalized before we can finalize our
action described herein. These proposed
rules involve Maricopa County (MC)
Rule 358, source-specific RACT for W.R.
Meadows, the MC rule establishing the
emissions statements requirement, and a
negative declaration. If, and once, we
finalize our approvals of these separate
proposed actions and finalize our
proposed approval of the Serious Area
Ozone Plan, then we will have fully
approved the applicable
implementation plan for the area under
section 110(k) and satisfied the criterion
for redesignation under section
107(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the CAA.
C. The Improvement in Air Quality Must
Be Due to Permanent and Enforceable
Reductions in Emissions
The improvement in air quality must
be due to permanent and enforceable
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13430
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
reductions in emissions resulting from
implementation of the SIP, Federal
measures, and other State-adopted
measures.
EPA believes that the State has
demonstrated that the observed air
quality improvements are due to the
implementation of permanent and
enforceable emission reductions
through the implementation of emission
controls contained in the Arizona SIP
and Federal measures. Subsequent to
the 1990 CAA amendments, Arizona
implemented a number of emission
controls. The area has complied with all
of the emission requirements for a
serious ozone nonattainment area as
required by the CAA.
Some of the emission reductions were
achieved through the implementation of
the use of low volatility cleaner burning
gasoline, more stringent Tier I motor
vehicle emission standards,
implementation of an enhanced vehicle
I/M program, controls on area sources,
and the adoption of tighter emissions
limits on existing stationary sources. All
of the emission control measures
contained in the 15 percent ROP plan,
serious area ozone plan, and
redesignation request and maintenance
plan have been fully adopted, have been
implemented, and are enforceable in the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area. Maricopa County has adopted and
implemented emission control rules
requiring existing sources of VOC to
meet, at minimum, RACT. These
requirements apply to sources in
categories covered by CTGs and other
major non-CTG sources.
Table 2 shows the decrease in
emissions between 1990 and 1999 due
to permanent and enforceable measures.
TABLE 2.—990 AND 1999 PHOENIX METROPOLITAN NONATTAINMENT AREA VOC AND NOX EMISSIONS
[Emissions in metric tons per day]
1990
1999
Source category
VOC
NOX
VOC
NOX
Point Sources ..................................................................................................................
Area Sources ..................................................................................................................
On-Road Mobile Sources ................................................................................................
Nonroad Mobile Sources ................................................................................................
25.6
111.8
136.2
57.9
70.9
7.4
130.1
85.2
15.3
82.6
106.9
78.5
16.5
43.0
129.8
59.3
Biogenics .........................................................................................................................
Total .........................................................................................................................
37.3
368.8
....................
293.6
76.7
360.0
7.3
255.9
Note: some columns may not add to 100% due to rounding; on-road mobile sources for 1990 were developed with EPA’s MOBILE5a, whereas
1999 on-road mobile sources were developed using EPA’s MOBILE5b.
Sources: 1990 data: 1993 MAG Ozone Plan; 1999 data: MAG 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan.
It can be seen that overall, both VOC
emissions and NOX emissions decreased
in the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area between 1990 and
1999. Increases in emissions of VOC in
the nonroad mobile source category and
biogenics were offset by larger decreases
in emissions from other source
categories. Increases in emissions of
NOX from area sources were offset by
larger decreases in other source
categories. We propose to find that the
improvement in ozone air quality in the
Phoenix metropolitan area is due to
emissions reductions from
implementation of permanent and
enforceable measures and that the area
thereby meets the redesignation
criterion under section 107(d)(3)(E)(iii).
D. The Area Must Have Met All
Applicable Requirements Under Section
110 and Part D of the CAA
1. Section 110 Requirements
Although section 110 was amended in
1990, the Maricopa County portion of
the Arizona SIP meets the requirements
of amended section 110(a)(2). A number
of the requirements did not change in
substance, and, therefore, EPA believes
that the pre-amendment EPA-approved
SIP met these requirements. As to those
requirements that were amended, (see
57 FR 27936 and 23939, June 23, 1993),
many are duplicative of other
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
requirements of the Act. EPA has
analyzed the SIP and determined that it
is consistent with the requirements of
amended section 110(a)(2). The SIP
contains enforceable emission
limitations, requires monitoring,
compiling and analyzing of ambient air
quality data, requires preconstruction
review of new major stationary sources
and major modifications to existing
ones, provides for adequate funding,
staff, and associated resources necessary
to implement its requirements, and
requires stationary source emission
monitoring and reporting.
Specifically, sections 110(a)(2)(A), (C),
and (E) concerning plan enforcement
and implementation requirements are
addressed in Chapter Eight, page 8–146
and Chapter 11, page 11–1 of the
Revised Serious Area Carbon Monoxide
Plan (‘‘Revised 1999 CO Plan’’). EPA
approved this plan in a final rule on
March 9, 2005 (see 70 FR 11553). In
order to comply with these CAA
sections, a State law was passed in 1992
which provides an approach for
assurances that State and local
committed measures will be adequately
implemented (see Arizona Revised
Statutes (A.R.S.) Sections 49–406 I. and
J.) A.R.S. Section 49–406 G. (passed by
the Arizona Legislature in 1992)
requires that each agency which
commits to implement any control
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
measure contained in the SIP must
describe the commitment in a
resolution. The resolution must be
adopted by the appropriate governing
body of the agency. State law also
requires the entity to specify the
following information in the
resolutions: (1) Its authority for
implementing the limitation or measure
as provided in statute, ordinance, or
rule; (2) a program for the enforcement
of the limitation or measure; and (3) the
level of personnel and funding allocated
to the implementation of the measure.
Chapter 11 of the Revised 1999 CO
Plan includes resolutions from the MAG
member agencies and other
implementing entities. These
resolutions indicate specific
commitments to implement various
control strategies which reduce CO as
well as ozone precursor emissions.
Generally, the authorities of the cities
and towns to implement the types of
measures that they have committed to in
their respective resolutions are provided
under A.R.S. section 9–240 Powers of
Common Council. The general
authorities of the County to implement
the measures in the commitments are
provided under A.R.S. section 11–251
and A.R.S. section 49–478. Copies of
these local and county government
authorities were included in Chapter 11
of the Revised 1999 CO Plan.
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
If any State, County, local
government, regional agency, or other
entity failed to implement a committed
measure, the County would file an
action in Superior Court to have the
Court order that the measure be
implemented. Likewise, the Director of
ADEQ will backstop the County if it
fails to implement a committed measure
or if the County fails to backstop the
local governments and regional agencies
(see Appendix C, Exhibit 2, Revised
1999 CO Plan).
2. Part D: Provisions for Nonattainment
Areas
Before an area may be redesignated to
attainment, it must have fulfilled the
applicable requirements of part D.
Under part D of title I of the CAA, an
area’s ozone classification determines
the requirements to which it is subject.
Subpart 1 of part D specifies the basic
requirements applicable to all
nonattainment areas. Subpart 2 of part
D establishes additional requirements
for nonattainment areas classified under
table 1 of section 181(a) of the CAA.
As described in the General Preamble
for Implementation of Title I of the
CAA, specific requirements of subpart 2
may override or modify general
provisions in subpart 1 (57 FR 13501,
April 16, 1992). Therefore, in order to be
redesignated, the States must meet the
applicable requirements of subpart 1 of
part D—specifically sections 172(c) and
176, as well as the applicable
requirements of subpart 2 of part D.
EPA believes that Arizona has met the
requirements of subpart 1 of part D—
specifically sections 172(c) and 176,
insofar as applicable, as well as the
applicable requirements of subpart 2 of
part D of the CAA for the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area, as described below.
a. Section 172 Requirements. This
section contains general requirements
for nonattainment area SIPs. A thorough
discussion of the requirements
contained in section 172(c) may be
found in the General Preamble for
Implementation of title I (57 FR 13498,
April 16, 1992).
EPA has interpreted the requirements
of sections 172(c)(1) (non-RACT
reasonably available control measuresRACM), 172(c)(2) (reasonable further
progress-RFP), 172(c)(6) (other
measures), and 172(c)(9) (contingency
measures) as being irrelevant to a
redesignation request because they only
have meaning for an area that is not
attaining the standard. See the General
Preamble of April 16, 1992, and the
Calcagni Memorandum. Finally, the
State has not sought to exercise the
options that would trigger sections
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
172(c)(4) (identification of certain
emissions increases) and 172(c)(8)
(equivalent techniques). Thus, these
provisions are also not relevant to this
redesignation request. The other plan
provisions under section 172(c) are
discussed below.
Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT). Nonattainment
plans must, at a minimum, require the
implementation of RACT for stationary
sources. These requirements are
discussed below under Section 182
Requirements.
Emissions Inventories. The plan needs
to include a comprehensive, accurate,
current inventory of actual emissions
from all sources of the relevant
pollutant as determined necessary by
the Administrator to assure that the
requirements of part D of the CAA are
met. These requirements are discussed
below under Section 182 Requirements.
Permits for New and Modified Major
Stationary Sources. For the section
172(c)(5) New Source Review (NSR)
requirements, the CAA requires all
nonattainment areas to meet several
requirements regarding NSR, including
provisions to ensure that increased
emissions will not result from any new
or modified major stationary sources
and a general offset rule.
We have determined that areas being
redesignated from nonattainment to
attainment do not need to comply with
the requirement that an NSR program be
approved prior to redesignation
provided that the area demonstrates
maintenance of the standard without
part D nonattainment NSR in effect. The
rationale for this decision is described
in the Nichols memo.1
The Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan for the Phoenix ozone
nonattainment area indicates expected
additional VOC and NOX emissions due
to major source growth. Thus, we find
that the maintenance demonstration for
the Phoenix metropolitan area does not
rely on nonattainment NSR, and the
State need not have a fully-approved
nonattainment NSR program prior to
approval of the redesignation request.
Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) is the replacement
program for NSR, and part of the
obligation under PSD is for a new
source to review increment
consumption and maintenance of the air
quality standards. The PSD program
requires stationary sources to undergo
preconstruction review before facilities
are constructed or modified, and to
1 ‘‘Part D New Source Review (part D NSR)
Requirements for Areas Requesting Redesignation
to Attainment’’, Memorandum from Mary D.
Nichols, Assistant Administrator for Air and
Radiation, October 14, 1994.
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
13431
apply Best Available Control
Technology (BACT). This program will
apply to any major source wishing to
locate in the Phoenix metropolitan area
once the area is redesignated to
attainment. Effective November 22,
1993, we delegated PSD authority to
Maricopa County via a PSD Delegation
Agreement (59 FR 1730, January 12,
1994).
Compliance With Section 110(a)(2).
The plan must contain provisions to
meet the requirements of section
110(a)(2) of the CAA (see the discussion
of section 110 requirements above).
b. Section 176 Requirements. Section
176(c) of the CAA requires States to
establish criteria and procedures to
ensure that Federally supported or
funded projects conform to the air
quality planning goals in the applicable
SIP. The requirement to determine
conformity applies to transportation
plans, programs and projects developed,
funded or approved under Title 23
U.S.C. of the Federal Transit Act
(‘‘transportation conformity’’), as well as
to all other Federally supported or
funded projects (‘‘general conformity’’).
Section 176 further provides that
State conformity revisions must be
consistent with Federal conformity
regulations that the CAA required the
EPA to promulgate. EPA believes it is
reasonable to interpret the conformity
requirements as not applying for
purposes of evaluating the redesignation
request under section 107(d). The
rationale for this is based on a
combination of two factors. First, the
requirement to submit SIP revisions to
comply with the conformity provisions
of the CAA continues to apply to areas
after redesignation to attainment, since
such areas would be subject to a section
175A maintenance plan. Second, the
EPA’s Federal conformity rules require
the performance of conformity analyses
in the absence of Federally approved
State rules. Therefore, because areas are
subject to the conformity requirements
regardless of whether they are
redesignated to attainment and must
implement conformity under Federal
rules if State rules are not yet approved,
EPA believes it is reasonable to view
these requirements as not applying for
purposes of evaluating a redesignation
request. See Wall v. EPA, 265 F. 3d 426,
439 (6th Cir. 2001) upholding this
interpretation.
The State of Arizona has fully
adopted general conformity procedures,
approved by EPA on April 23, 1999 (64
FR 19916). The State-adopted
transportation conformity procedures
are found in A.R.S. Title 18, Chapter 2,
Article 14. We have not yet approved
transportation conformity procedures in
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13432
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
the SIP. For the reasons stated above,
EPA believes the approval of conformity
rules into the State’s SIP is not a
prerequisite for redesignation. Federal
transportation conformity rules
continue to apply.
c. Section 182 Requirements. For
purposes of this redesignation, the part
D, subpart 2, section 182(a), (b) and (c)
requirements for a nonattainment area
apply to the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area.
EPA has interpreted the requirements
of sections 182(c)(2) (attainment and
RFP demonstrations), 182(c)(5)
(transportation control), and 182(c)(9)
(contingency measures) as being
irrelevant to a redesignation request
because they only have meaning for an
area that is not attaining the standard.
See the General Preamble of April 16,
1992, and the Calcagni Memorandum.
The other plan provisions under section
182 are discussed below.
1990 Base Year Inventory and
Periodic Emissions Inventory Updates.
Sections 182(a)(1) and 182(a)(3)(A) of
the Act, as amended in 1990, require
States to submit a comprehensive,
accurate, current inventory of actual
emissions from all sources in the ozone
nonattainment area and to submit
updates of those inventories every three
years until redesignation.
Arizona submitted a complete and
accurate 1990 emissions inventory for
VOC and NOX for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area as
noted in EPA’s final approval of the
emissions inventory on May 27, 1998
(63 FR 28898). Arizona submitted
updated periodic emissions inventories
for 1993, 1996, and 1999. The final 1993
ozone SIP inventory was submitted to
us on November 25, 1996. The 1996
base year (July–September 1996) ozone
inventory was submitted as part of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan, Appendix E.2
We are proposing to approve the 1996
ozone inventory submitted as part of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan. The 1999
periodic ozone emissions inventory for
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area was originally
submitted to EPA in August 2002 and
then re-submitted to EPA as part of the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan, in Appendix A, Exhibit 1. The
Appendix contains a complete
description of the sources and
2 ADEQ held a public hearing for the Serious Area
Ozone Plan on April 26, 2000. ADEQ adopted the
Serious Area Ozone Plan on December 14, 2000 and
submitted it to us on the same date. We find that
ADEQ thereby satisfied the requirements for notice
and public hearing on all SIP revisions under
section 110(1) of the Act.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
methodologies used to calculate ozone
emissions.
The 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan also
contains a description of the 1998 and
1999 base year inventories, the interim
year 2006, and the maintenance year
2015 ozone precursor emissions
inventories for use in Urban Airshed
Model (UAM) simulations.
In MAG’s emissions inventories,
emissions sources are grouped into five
major categories: Point sources, area
sources, nonroad mobile sources, onroad mobile sources, and biogenic
emissions. Point sources include such
categories as industrial, manufacturing,
and electric power generation facilities.
Area sources include residential
woodburning, industrial fuel
combustion, on-site incineration, and
open burning. Biogenic emissions come
from natural vegetation. Nonroad
mobile sources include utility, lawn and
garden, construction, farm and
recreational equipment, and aircraft and
locomotives. On-road mobile sources
include cars, motorcycles, various sizes
of trucks, and buses. Collectively, these
sources contributed a total of 256 metric
tons per day of NOX and 360 metric tons
per day of VOC in 1999.
We propose to approve the 1996 and
1999 periodic emissions inventories and
find that the State has complied with
the inventory requirements of section
182(a)(1) and 182(a)(3)(A). We also
propose to approve the 1998 and 1999
base year inventories, the interim year
2006 inventory, and maintenance year
2015 inventory in connection with the
maintenance demonstration discussed
elsewhere in this notice.
Emissions Statement Requirements.
Section 182(a)(3)(B) of the Act requires
States to submit a SIP revision requiring
owners or operators of stationary
sources of VOC or NOX to provide the
State with estimates of actual emissions
from such sources. Arizona’s SIP
includes regulations requiring annual
emissions statements from major
sources. Specifically, to comply with
this requirement, the State submitted
Maricopa County (MC) Rule 100.503 to
EPA on February 4, 1993. We approved
this rule by direct final action published
on February 10, 2005. See 70 FR 7038
(February 10, 2005). Assuming no
adverse comments are submitted in
connection with this direct final rule,
our final rule published on February 10,
2005 will be effective on April 11, 2005.
If adverse comments are timely
submitted, then we will withdraw the
direct final rule and consider those
comments prior to taking a final action.
See our proposed rule (70 FR 7069) also
published on February 10, 2005. We
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
will finalize our action on MC Rule
100.503 prior to taking final action on
this proposal.
15 Percent ROP Plan Requirements.
Section 182(b)(1) of the CAA requires
the submission of a 15 percent ROP
plan. This plan is to provide for VOC
emission reductions in the
nonattainment area of at least 15
percent, from the 1990 baseline
emissions levels, by no later than
November 15, 1996. Arizona submitted
its initial 15 percent ROP plan for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area on November 15, 1993 and
supplemented it on April 8, 1994. On
April 13, 1994, we found the initial plan
incomplete because it failed to include,
in fully adopted and enforceable form,
all of the measures relied upon in the 15
percent demonstration. This
incompleteness finding started the 18month sanctions clock in CAA section
179 and the two-year clock under
section 110(c) for EPA to promulgate a
FIP covering the 15 percent ROP
requirements. In November 1994 and
April 1995, Arizona submitted an
attainment plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area which
updated the 15 percent ROP
demonstrations.
On May 12, 1995, we found the
revised 15 percent plan and the
attainment plan complete, turning off
the sanctions clock; however, under
section 110(c), the FIP clock continued
until EPA approved the 15 percent plan.
In August 1996, we were sued by the
American Lung Association of Arizona
and others, American Lung Association
of Arizona, Inc. et al. v. Browner, No.
CIV 96 1856, PHX ROS (D. Arizona) to
enforce EPA’s obligation under CAA
section 110(c) to promulgate a FIP for
the 15 percent ROP requirement. On
July 8, 1997, a consent decree was filed
in the case establishing a schedule of
January 20, 1998 for proposing and May
18, 1998 for promulgating a 15 percent
ROP plan. Under the consent decree,
EPA’s obligation to promulgate a 15
percent ROP plan was relieved to the
extent that we had approved State
measures. EPA determined in its final
rule that the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area had in place or
would have in place sufficient control
measures to meet the 15 percent ROP
requirement for volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), a precursor
emission to ozone, under CAA section
182(b)(1)(A) as soon as practicable. See
63 FR 28898 (May 27, 1998), as
amended at 64 FR 36243 (July 6, 1999).
VOC RACT Requirements. Section
172(c)(1) of the CAA specifies that SIPs
must provide for the implementation of
all RACM including all RACT as
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
expeditiously as practicable to attain the
NAAQS. Sections 182(a)(2)(A) and
182(b)(2) further provide that, at a
minimum, the SIPs must require the
implementation of RACT for two classes
of VOC sources. The VOC source classes
are: (a) All sources covered by a Control
Techniques Guideline (CTG) document
issued by the Administrator by the date
of attainment of the ozone standard; and
(b) all other major non-CTG stationary
sources.
Arizona’s redesignation request,
submitted on April 21, 2004, describes
how the State of Arizona has met the
VOC RACT requirements under sections
172(c)(1) and 182(b)(2) of the Act for
nearly all of the CTG source categories
and VOC major sources either through
adoption of Maricopa County air
13433
pollution control regulations or negative
declarations and how the State intends
to fulfill the RACT requirement for the
few remaining CTG source categories
and VOC major sources. EPA, through a
number of rulemakings, has approved
these RACT rules and negative
declarations as revisions to the Arizona
SIP as documented in Table 3.
TABLE 3.—MARICOPA COUNTY VOC RACT RULES AND SIP STATUS
VOC RACT requirement
MC Rule(s), SIP Status, and, if approved, Federal Register Citation
Control Techniques Guidelines
Gasoline Loading Terminals .....................................................................
Gasoline Bulk Plants ................................................................................
Service Stations—Stage I ........................................................................
Fixed Roof Petroleum Tanks ....................................................................
Miscellaneous Refinery Sources ..............................................................
Cutback Asphalt .......................................................................................
Solvent Metal Cleaning ............................................................................
Surface Coating of:
Cans ..................................................................................................
Metal Coils .........................................................................................
Fabrics ...............................................................................................
Paper Products ..................................................................................
Automobile and Light Duty Trucks ....................................................
Metal Furniture ..................................................................................
Magnetic Wire ...................................................................................
Large Appliances ...............................................................................
Leaks from Petroleum Refineries .............................................................
Miscellaneous Metal Parts Surface Coating ............................................
Surface Coating of Flat Wood Paneling ...................................................
Synthetic Pharmaceutical Manufacture ....................................................
Rubber Tire Manufacture .........................................................................
External Floating Roof Petroleum Tanks .................................................
Graphic Arts ..............................................................................................
Perchloroethylene Drycleaning (a) ............................................................
Gasoline Truck Leaks and Vapor Collection ............................................
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
MC Rules 350 and 351: MC Rule 350 adopted July 13, 1988, revised
April 6, 1992; revision approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
MC Rule 351 adopted February 15, 1995, approved February 9,
1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 350: adopted July 13, 1988, revised April 6, 1992; revision
approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
MC Rule 353: adopted July 13, 1988, revised April 6, 1992; approved
February 1, 1996 (61 FR 3578).
MC Rule 350: adopted July 13, 1988, revised April 6, 1992; revision
approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 340: adopted July 13, 1988, revised June 22, 1992, revised
September 21, 1992; approved February 1, 1996 (61 FR 3578).
MC Rule 331: adopted July 13, 1988, revised June 22, 1992, revised
June 19, 1996, revised April 21, 2004; approved February 1, 1996
(61 FR 3578), approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489), approved
December 21, 2004 (69 FR 76417).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 336: revised September 21, 1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR 50759).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 336: revised September 21, 1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR 50759).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 350: adopted July 13, 1988, revised April 6, 1992; revision
approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
MC Rule 337: adopted November 20, 1996, submitted February 26,
1997, approved February 8, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
Perchloroethylene was delisted as a VOC by EPA (see Footnote (a)).
MC Rule 352: adopted November 16, 1992, submitted February 4,
1993, approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13434
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—MARICOPA COUNTY VOC RACT RULES AND SIP STATUS—Continued
VOC RACT requirement
MC Rule(s), SIP Status, and, if approved, Federal Register Citation
Manufacture of High-Density Polyethylene Polypropylene, and Polystyrene Resins.
MC Rule 358: Polystyrene Foam Manufacturing, proposed approval
was signed by Regional Administrator for EPA Region 9 on March 8,
2005. This proposal is expected to be published in the Federal Register by mid-March 2005.
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, Aapproved August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 333: adopted June 19, 1996, submitted February 26, 1997,
approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
Negative declaration, submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Negative declaration: submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Negative declaration: submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 350: adopted July 13, 1988, revised April 6, 1992; revision
approved September 5, 1995 (60 FR 46024).
Negative declaration: submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Negative declaration: submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 336: adopted July 13, 1988, revised September 21, 1992,
June 19, 1996, April 7, 1999, approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR
50759).
MC Rule 331: adopted July 13, 1988, revised June 22, 1992, revised
June 19, 1996, revised April 21, 2004, submitted July 28, 2004; approved February 1, 1996 (61 FR 3578), approved February 9, 1998
(63 FR 6489), approved December 21, 2004 (69 FR 76417).
MC Rule 337: adopted November 20, 1996, submitted February 26,
1997, approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
Negative declaration: submitted December 14, 2000, approved August
26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
MC Rule 342: adopted November 20, 1996, submitted February 26,
1997, approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 348: adopted April 7, 1999, submitted August 4, 1999, approved September 20, 1999 (64 FR 50759).
MC Rule 335 adopted July 13, 1988, submitted January 4, 1990, approved January 06, 1992 (57 FR 354)
Fugitive Emissions from Synthetic Organic Chemical, Polymer, and
Resin Manufacturing Equipment.
Large Petroleum Dry Cleaners .................................................................
Air Oxidation Processes—Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturing
Industries.
Equipment Leaks from Natural Gas/Gasoline Processing Plants ...........
Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturing Industries (SOCMI)—Distillation and Reactor Processes.
Volatile organic liquid storage ..................................................................
SOCMI batch processes ..........................................................................
Industrial Wastewater ...............................................................................
Plastic Parts Coating (for business machines and automobiles) ............
Cleaning solvents .....................................................................................
Offset lithography .....................................................................................
Shipbuilding and ship repair coatings ......................................................
Wood Furniture .........................................................................................
Aerospace .................................................................................................
Architectural and industrial maintenance (AIM) coatings .........................
Major Sources Subject to RACT
Fiberglass Boat Manufacturing .................................................................
Rubber Sports Ball Manufacturing ...........................................................
Metal Casting ............................................................................................
Commercial Bread Bakeries .....................................................................
Semiconductor Manufacturing ..................................................................
Vegetable Oil Extraction Processes .........................................................
Coating Wood Millwork .............................................................................
Ferrous Sand Casting ..............................................................................
Vitamin Manufacturing ..............................................................................
Automotive Windshield Wiper Fluid .........................................................
Fiberboard for Expansion Joints ..............................................................
Negative declaration: submitted April 21, 2004, approved by direct final
rule on February 10, 2005 (70 FR 7038) if no adverse comments are
received by March 14, 2005.
MC Rule 334: adopted June 19, 1996, submitted February 26, 1997,
approved February 2, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 341: adopted August 5, 1994, submitted August 16, 1994, approved February 12, 1996 (61 FR 5287).
MC Rule 343: adopted February 15, 1995, submitted August 31, 1995,
approved March 17, 1997 (62 FR 12544).
MC Rule 338: adopted June 19, 1996, submitted February 26, 1997,
approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 339: adopted November 16, 1992, submitted February 04,
1993, approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 346: adopted November 20, 1996, submitted February 26,
1997, approved February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6489).
MC Rule 347: adopted March 4, 1998, submitted August 4, 1999, approved June 12, 2000 (65 FR 36788).
MC Rule 349: adopted April 7, 1999, submitted August 4, 1999, approved June 8, 2001 (66 FR 30815).
MC Rule 344: adopted April 7, 1999, submitted August 4, 1999, approved November 30, 2001 (66 FR 59699).
VOC RACT by permit (W.R. Meadows): proposed approval was signed
by Regional Administrator for EPA Region 9 on March 3, 2005. This
proposal is expected to be published in the Federal Register by
mid-March 2005.
NA = not applicable.
(a) Perchloroethylene was delisted as a VOC effective March 8, 1996 (see 61 FR 4588, February 7, 1996).
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13435
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
As shown in Table 3, the VOC RACT
requirements under sections 172(c)(1),
182(a)(2)(A) and 182(b)(2) have been
met for the vast majority of CTG source
categories and major sources either
through establishment of Maricopa
County (MC) regulations or by submittal
of negative declarations. At this time,
we propose to find that Arizona has met
the RACT requirement for the MAG 1hour ozone nonattainment area
contingent upon our full final approval
of (1) MC Rule 358 (establishes RACT
requirements for major VOC sources in
the emissions source category of
Polystyrene Foam Manufacturing), (2)
W.R. Meadows’ permit conditions
(establishes RACT requirements for a
specific major VOC source), and (3) the
negative declaration for the one major
VOC source in the emissions source
category of Fiberglass Boat
Manufacturing. The Regional
Administrator for EPA Region 9 signed
rules in early March 2005 proposing
approval of MC Rule 358 and W.R.
Meadows’ permit conditions as meeting
the RACT requirement for the affected
sources, and these proposals are
expected to be published in the Federal
Register in mid-March. EPA approved
the negative declaration for the one
major VOC source in the emissions
source category of Fiberglass Boat
Manufacturing on February 10, 2005 (70
FR 7038) by direct final action. If no
adverse comments are received on that
direct final action by March 14, 2005,
then the approval of the negative
declaration will become effective April
11, 2005, but if such comments are
received then the direct final rule will
be withdrawn and EPA will taken final
action after consideration of the
comments.
Stage II Vapor Recovery
Requirements. Section 182(b)(3) of the
CAA requires States to submit Stage II
vapor recovery rules. The Stage II vapor
recovery regulations for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area were
submitted to us on May 27, 1994 by the
State. These rules had been adopted by
the Arizona Department of Weights and
Measures (ADWM) on August 27, 1993.
We approved the program on November
1, 1994, effective January 3, 1995 (see 59
FR 54521). Subsequent State legislation
(House Bill (HB) 2001, in 1997) required
the ADWM to adopt rules to enhance
enforcement of the program. These rules
can be found at A.R.S. 41–2134. The
regulations in the Arizona SIP fully
adopt and implement the Stage II vapor
recovery requirements in Arizona.
Vehicle I/M Requirements. Section
182(c)(3) and EPA’s final I/M
regulations in 40 CFR part 51, subpart
S require States with ‘‘serious’’ ozone
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
nonattainment areas to submit a fully
adopted ‘‘enhanced’’ I/M program. EPA
approved revisions to Arizona’s
enhanced vehicle I/M program for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area as part of the Arizona SIP on
January 22, 2003 (see 69 FR 2912).
ADEQ implements an enhanced I/M
program in Area A, which includes and
goes beyond the Phoenix metropolitan
1-hour ozone nonattainment area. EPA
believes that the Arizona SIP for the
Phoenix 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area satisfies all of the Section 182(c)(3)
requirements of the CAA.
Clean Fuel Vehicle Programs.
Sections 182(c)(4)(A) of the CAA
requires States to submit a SIP revision
for each serious 1-hour nonattainment
area that includes such measures
necessary to ensure the effectiveness of
clean-fuel vehicle program prescribed
under part C of title II of the Act. In
particular, SIPs for serious ozone
nonattainment areas with 1980
populations of 250,000 or more must
establish a clean-fuel vehicle program
for centrally fueled fleets (referred to
herein as the ‘‘clean fuel fleet’’ (CFF)
program). CAA section 246. Under the
CFF program, a specified percentage of
vehicles purchased by fleet operators for
covered fleets shall be clean-fuel
vehicles and shall use clean alternative
fuels when operating in the covered
area. Section 182(c)(4)(B) of the Act
allows States such as Arizona to ‘‘optout’’ of all or a portion of the clean-fuel
vehicle program including the CFF
program by submitting for EPA approval
a SIP revision consisting of a program or
programs not otherwise required by the
Act that will result in at least equivalent
long term reductions in ozoneproducing and toxic air emissions.
On December 7, 1998, Arizona
submitted to EPA a SIP revision opting
out of the CFF program. The opt-out SIP
requested EPA approval of its interim
Cleaner Burning Gasoline (CBG)
program, which EPA had already
approved into the SIP (see 63 FR 6653,
February 10, 1998), as a substitute
program.3 On June 7, 1999, the revision
was found to be complete by operation
of law pursuant to EPA’s completeness
criteria set forth in 40 CFR part 51,
appendix V. In the 1998 opt-out SIP
submittal, ADEQ had estimated that the
CBG program would provide 9 metric
tons per day (mtpd) of VOC reductions
in 2010 compared to 0.5 to 1.8 mtpd in
that same year that would have been
achieved by a CFF program.4 ADEQ also
3 EPA has since approved additional revisions to
the Arizona CBG program.
4 ADEQ noted that its estimates of the emissions
reductions benefit from a CFF program were likely
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
estimated that the CBG program would
provide 5.0 mtpd of NOX reductions in
2010 compared to 0.6 to 2.5 mtpd in
that same year that would have been
achieved by a CFF program. See also,
Arizona’s modeled emission reductions
from the four control programs, the
National Low Emission Vehicle (NLEV)
program, CBG, Tier 2 and the CFF
Program, in 2015 in Metropolitan
Phoenix.5
TABLE 4.—EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS
FROM FOUR CONTROL PROGRAMS
IN 2015 IN METROPOLITAN PHOENIX
Program
Emissions reductions
(tons per day)
HC
Tier 2 ................
CBG ..................
NLEV ................
Federal Clean
Fuel Fleet ......
NOX
18.3
8.0
2.2
86.4
5.0
3.9
0.5–1.8
0.7–2.5
The CBG program is not explicitly
required by the CAA in the Phoenix
metropolitan ozone nonattainment area.
Additionally, the resulting reductions of
ozone-producing emissions from this
program (VOCs and NOX) meet or
exceed the emissions reductions that
would have occurred if the CFF program
were implemented. EPA will be
approving only those emissions
reductions needed to meet the CFF
program. Finally, because reductions in
toxic air emissions are proportional to
the reduction in VOC emissions, any
substitute plan which reduces VOCs
will also reduce toxic air emissions in
the same proportion. Therefore,
Arizona’s substitute plan will meet the
CFF program requirement for air toxics
emissions.
Based on the above evaluation, we
propose to approve, under section
182(c)(4)(B) of the Act, ADEQ’s
submittal of the CBG program as a
substitute measure achieving equivalent
long-term emissions reductions of
ozone-producing and toxic air
pollutants as would have been achieved
by implementation of a CFF program. In
overstated because the estimates did not account for
the National Low Emission Vehicle (NLEV)
program, which was expected to be implemented in
Arizona and to lead to the availability of loweremitting (conventional) light duty vehicles
beginning with the 2001 model year.
5 EPA promulgated the NLEV program on June 6,
1997 under which vehicle manufacturers
voluntarily agreed to market light duty gasoline
vehicles with emissions substantially lower than
Tier 1 vehicles. (62 FR 31193, (June 6, 1997)). On
February 10, 2000, EPA promulgated the Tier 2/
gasoline sulfur standards that established more
stringent exhuast emissions standards for light and
medium duty gasoline vehicles. (65 FR 6698,
(February 10, 2000)).
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13436
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
doing so, we find that the State has
provided sufficient documentation of
compliance with the notice and hearing
requirements for SIP revisions under
section 110(l) of the Act (see Exhibit 4
of the State’s December 7, 1998 SIP
revision submittal).
NOX Emission Control Requirements.
Section 182(f) establishes NOX
requirements for ozone nonattainment
areas which require the same provisions
for major stationary sources of NOX as
apply to major stationary sources of
VOCs. However, section 182(f) also
provides that these requirements do not
apply to an area if the Administrator
determines that NOX reductions would
not contribute to attainment.
For the Phoenix metropolitan ozone
nonattainment area, EPA granted a
waiver from the section 182(f)
requirements for NOX. The basis for the
waiver was that Arizona demonstrated
using UAM that additional NOX
emission controls in the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area would
not contribute to the attainment of the
1-hour ozone standard in the area. See
60 FR 19510 (April 19, 1995).
Enhanced Monitoring. As a result of
the reclassification of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to ‘‘serious,’’ the
area became subject to the CAA section
182(c)(1) requirement that the area
establish and implement a
Photochemical Assessment Monitoring
Station (PAMS) network. The Serious
Area Ozone Plan describes the steps that
the State has taken to comply with
section 182(c)(1) (see page 2–8 of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan). In the
Serious Area Ozone Plan, ADEQ
indicated that, in 1999, the PAMS
network was not yet fully implemented
but that it was being phased-in over a
five year period in accordance with 40
CFR part 58.44 and 40 CFR part 58. We
propose to find that the State has met
the requirements for enhanced
monitoring under section 182(c)(1).
When EPA finalizes today’s proposal
for the serious area plan revision to the
Arizona SIP as well as the three separate
rulemakings previously discussed, the
Arizona ozone SIP will meet the
applicable requirements of section 110
and part D.
E. The Area Must Have a FullyApproved Maintenance Plan Meeting
the Requirements of Section 175A
Section 107(d)(3)(E)(iv) of the CAA
requires, as a pre-condition to being
redesignated from nonattainment to
attainment, that the Administrator has
fully approved a maintenance plan for
the area as meeting the requirements of
section 175A of the Act.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
Section 175A of the CAA sets forth
the elements of a maintenance plan for
areas seeking redesignation from
nonattainment to attainment. The
maintenance plan is a SIP revision that
provides for maintenance of the relevant
NAAQS in the area for at least 10 years
after redesignation. The Calcagni
memorandum dated September 4, 1992,
provides additional guidance on the
required content of a maintenance plan.
A 1-hour ozone maintenance plan
should address the following five areas:
The attainment emissions inventory,
maintenance demonstration, monitoring
network, verification of continued
attainment, and a contingency plan. The
attainment emissions inventory
identifies the emissions level in the area
that is sufficient to attain the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS, based on emissions
during a three-year period which had no
monitored violations. To demonstrate
maintenance of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, the results from UAM
modeling analyses should not show
predicted 1-hour maximum ozone
concentrations equivalent to or greater
than 0.125 ppm anywhere in the
modeling domain for the episode
modeled. Provisions for continued
operation of an appropriate air quality
monitoring network are to be included
in the maintenance plan. The State must
show how it will track and verify the
progress of the maintenance plan.
Finally, the maintenance plan must
include a list of potential contingency
measures which ensure prompt
correction of any violation of the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS.
1. Emissions Inventory
MAG selected 1999 as the attainment
year for purposes of demonstrating
attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS.
Modeling episodes in both 1998 and
1999 were used; therefore, MAG
developed modeling inventories for
both of the base years (i.e., 1998 and
1999), as well as an interim year 2006
and the maintenance year of 2015.
These emissions inventories all include
on-road mobile, nonroad mobile, point,
area, and biogenic sources. The 1998
inventory was developed for a July 16–
17 modeling episode, and the 1999
inventory was developed for an August
23–24 modeling episode. Both base year
inventories reflect control strategies in
place at that time. The future year
emission inventories include projected
emissions reductions from control
measures that were implemented and
enforceable after 1998 and 1999.
Sections III and VI of MAG’s Technical
Support Document for Ozone Modeling
in Support of the One-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Maintenance Plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan Nonattainment Area,
November 2003 (included as Exhibit 2
of Appendix A of the Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan) describe
the inventories in more technical detail.
Emissions for point, area, and
nonroad mobile sources were developed
for a base year and then projected to
2006 and 2015 using appropriate growth
factors. The growth factors were based
on the 2015 population projections
approved by the MAG Regional Council
in June 1997 and developed from the
1995 Special Census. The 2015
employment factors by Standard
Industrial Classification SIC) code were
extrapolated from projections prepared
by the Arizona Department of Economic
Security (DES) in August 1997. Growth
factors based on 2000 Census Data were
not available at the time the modeling
demonstration was begun. On-road
vehicle activity was increased by eight
and twelve percent for 2006 and 2015,
respectively, because of expected
increases in population and
employment projections for Phoenix
metropolitan.
In the 1998 and 1999 base cases, onroad mobile sources contribute 28 to 30
percent of VOC emissions and 51 to 52
percent of NOX emissions and represent
the largest emissions source category for
both NOX and VOC. With the
implementation of the measures in the
maintenance plan and stricter federal
controls on vehicles and fuels, on-road
mobile source NOX emissions decrease
by about 19 percent between 1999 and
2006, and 58 percent between 1999 and
2015. On-road mobile source VOC
emissions decrease by 32 percent
between 1999 and 2006, and 54 percent
between 1999 and 2015.
Due to anticipated regional
population growth, area sources become
the largest source category for NOX and
VOC emissions in 2015. Area source
NOX emissions increase by 25 percent
between 1999 and 2006, and 56 percent
between 1999 and 2015. Area source
VOC emissions increase by 22 percent
between 1999 and 2006, and 49 percent
between 1999 and 2015.
As a result of expected increases in
power plant emissions, point source
NOX emissions increase from 1999 to
2015. Point source NOX emissions
increase 48 percent between 1999 and
2006, and 59 percent between 1999 and
2015. Point source VOC emissions
increase by 13 percent between 1999
and 2006, and 32 percent between 1999
and 2015. With the implementation of
the federal nonroad vehicle and engine
standards, nonroad mobile NOX
emissions decrease by about 14 percent
between 1999 and 2006. Nonroad
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13437
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
mobile VOC emissions decrease by
about 23 percent between 1999 and
2006, and about 63 percent between
1999 and 2015.
Biogenic emissions are determined by
land use type. Residential land use has
a higher emission factor for biogenic
VOC than agricultural land, while the
opposite is true for biogenic NOX
emissions. Since it is anticipated that
the residential land area will continue
to increase as the Phoenix metropolitan
area grows, and agricultural land uses
will decline, biogenic VOC emissions
are forecast to increase less than 1
percent between 1999 and 2006, and
about 12 percent between 1999 and
2015, while biogenic NOX emissions
decrease by about 3 percent between
1999 and 2006, and about 15 percent
between 1999 and 2015.
By implementing the emissions
control measures in the maintenance
plan, total NOX emissions will decrease
by about 5 percent between 1999 and
2006, and by about 17 percent between
1999 and 2015. Total VOC emissions
will decrease by about 8 percent
between 1999 and 2006, and about 14
percent between 1999 and 2015.
2. Maintenance Demonstration
a. Introduction. To demonstrate
maintenance of the ozone standard
through a ten-year maintenance period,
MAG projected VOC and NOX emissions
for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area to 2006 and 2015
and used these emissions estimates in
UAM. The 2006 emission estimates
were generated to test a midpoint in the
ten-year maintenance period. This
interim year 2006 was developed for the
purposes of transportation conformity.
Table 5 summarizes the VOC and
NOX emissions estimates for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area for 1999, 2006, and 2015.
Comparison of base and future year
inventories, as shown in Table 5,
indicates an 18–21 percent decrease in
NOX emissions between the 1998/1999
base case inventories and 2015. VOC
emissions decrease between 9 and 15
percent during this same time period.
TABLE 5.—PHOENIX METROPOLITAN NONATTAINMENT AREA 1999, 2006, AND 2015 VOC AND NOX EMISSIONS
[Emissions in metric tons per ozone season weekday]
1999*
2006
2015
Source category
VOC
NOX
VOC
NOX
VOC
NOX
Point Sources .........................................................................................
Area Sources ..........................................................................................
On-Road Mobile Sources .......................................................................
Nonroad Mobile Sources ........................................................................
Biogenics ................................................................................................
15.3
82.6
106.9
78.5
76.7
16.5
43.0
129.8
59.3
7.3
17.4
101.4
71.9
61.0
77.2
24.5
54.1
104.8
50.9
7.1
20.2
123.5
48.7
28.7
85.8
26.3
67.4
53.6
57.2
6.2
Total .................................................................................................
360.0
255.9
328.9
241.4
306.9
210.7
Notes: * Emissions from 1999 are for the Tuesday in August base case modeling day. Data are from pages ES–5, ES–6, 3–11 and 3–12 of
the maintenance plan.
b. Modeling Procedure. In developing
the maintenance demonstration, MAG
followed EPA’s Guideline for Regulatory
Application of the Urban Airshed Model
(EPA–450/4–91–013, July 1991;
available at https://www.epa.gov/
scram001/tt25.htm; hereafter
‘‘GRAUAM’’). This involves using
UAM, a photochemical grid model, to
simulate ozone production during
selected recent ozone episodes. These
‘‘base case’’ simulations incorporate
meteorological and emissions data
corresponding to the episode days.
Future case ozone simulations are then
created using future emissions, which
are estimated using information about
control measures, as well as
socioeconomic projections. The goal is
to show that ozone concentrations
continue to be below the standard in the
future, so that NAAQS maintenance is
demonstrated.
Documentation about the
redesignation request’s application of
UAM is contained principally in the
MAG SIP submittal’s Appendix A,
Exhibit 2, ‘‘Technical Support
Document for Ozone Modeling in
Support of the One-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan for the Phoenix metropolitan
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
Nonattainment Area’’ (hereafter ‘‘MAG
TSD’’). Development of the application
of UAM followed a protocol, per
GRAUAM (the EPA guideline), which is
included in the Appendix I of the MAG
TSD. This protocol describes procedures
to be followed in developing model
inputs and in judging model
performance, as well as the size of the
modeling domain and the particular
ozone episodes to be modeled. The
protocol was reviewed and agreed to by
both EPA and ADEQ prior to
submission of the maintenance plan.
c. Model Inputs. The modeling
domain used by MAG for the
maintenance modeling demonstration
was larger than in earlier UAM
applications for the Phoenix
metropolitan area. It was extended to
include some large point sources to the
west (and generally upwind) of the main
metropolitan area, and also to the east
to include more of the ozone plume that
had been seen in previous simulations
as well as urban areas which are
growing rapidly. This expanded domain
ensured that all the relevant source and
receptor areas were included in the
simulation, even beyond the
nonattainment area itself.
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
After analysis of 32 high ozone days
spread among 21 episodes, two ozone
episodes were chosen for modeling: July
16–17, 1998 and August 23–24, 1999.
While there have been no recent
NAAQS exceedances, these episodes
have among the highest ozone
concentrations observed; their peak
concentrations are 118 ppb and 124
ppb, respectively (the NAAQS is 0.12
ppm, or 120 ppb, but values below 125
ppb are rounded down and not
considered exceedances). These
episodes are representative of the two
meteorological ‘‘regimes’’ observed for
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area; simulating both
ensures that the NAAQS will be
maintained under the various
meteorological conditions that can
occur in the Phoenix metropolitan area.
Both regimes involve a low pressure
center over southwestern Arizona, with
relatively high temperatures and low
wind speeds. But the regime type of the
July 1998 episode tends to have high
ozone in the metropolitan center and
extending northwest. The regime type of
the August 1999 episode is less
common, but has a different spatial
pattern; high ozone tends to occur more
to the east. It also tends to have longer-
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13438
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
lasting southwesterly winds during the
day than the other regime.
Standard procedures were followed in
developing the meteorological and
emissions inputs. The Diagnostic Wind
Model (DWM) was used for wind
inputs, as it often is with the UAM IV
model, and gave reasonable wind fields.
Mixing heights were prepared using
MIXEMUP, also a fairly standard
procedure for use with UAM.
MIXEMUP inputs were upper air
temperature soundings from Tucson
(the only ones available) combined with
Sky Harbor (Phoenix) Airport surface
temperatures; also, local temperature
and wind data from monitoring sites
were used to generate a spatiallyvarying mixing height that better
reflected the differing land uses (and
hence heating and mixing
characteristics) across the domain.
Emissions inputs were developed
using EPA’s EPS2.0 for spatially and
temporally allocating area source
emissions; MOBILE6 was used for
vehicle emissions, in conjunction with
MAG traffic data and the EMME/2
transportation model. Biogenic
emissions, which are roughly 20% of
total VOC emissions, were estimated
using MAGBEIS2, a localized version of
EPA’s Biogenic Emissions Inventory
Software (BEIS2) and incorporating
emission factors from EPA’s BELD3
database.
d. Model Testing and Performance. A
number of sensitivity and diagnostic
tests were carried out to test the effect
of alternative inputs to improve model
performance, and to test whether the
model responds in a physically
reasonable way to various input
changes. This process helps avoid
spurious good performance due to
fortuitously compensating input errors.
The test simulations included several
alternative boundary concentrations,
zeroing of emissions for various broad
emissions categories, doubling on-road
emissions, and reducing wind speeds by
20 percent. This set of simulations is
comparable to the recommendations in
EPA guidelines, and helped elucidate
the functioning of the model.
Model performance statistics for peak
error, overall bias, and overall error
were all well within EPA-recommended
targets. For example, the July 1998
predicted peak was 119 ppb, while the
peak observation was 118 ppb. For
August 1999, the predicted peak was
125, while peak observation was 124
ppb. Despite this good agreement, there
appears to be a spatial mismatch
between some predictions and
observations for the August 1999
episode. High ozone appears to persist
longer and to be more in the north of the
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
central business district rather than to
the east-northeast as indicated by
monitored observations. The
explanation for this discrepancy appears
to be that the wind field used in the
model may be shifted slightly relative to
the actual winds, so that the ozone
plume was shifted relative to the
monitors. The model still predicts a
comparable ozone peak, both in timing
and in concentration, but it just does not
happen to be at the monitor locations.
This conclusion is supported by the
sensitivity simulations with reduced
wind speed, since the model responded
as expected to this change, and also has
a fairly large sensitivity to this as
opposed to other variables.
A second anomaly of the August 1999
episode was a persistent moderately
high ozone level south of the central
business district that was not apparent
in the observations and did not seem to
match what would be expected from the
wind directions and the location of
emissions. This did not affect the peak
prediction of the model at all, and
appeared to be a localized effect that
might have been caused by the
proximity of South Mountain, which
blocks transport toward the south and
southeast, and by alternation of morning
and afternoon slope flows that cause
recirculation of pollutants in the area.
Despite these issues, both episodes meet
EPA performance criteria and provide
an acceptable basis for a maintenance
demonstration.
e. Maintenance Demonstrated. The
maintenance demonstration itself
involves projecting emissions to 2015,
including the effect of controls, using
similar procedures as for the base case
episodes. The model is then re-run on
the two episodes with the new
emissions to test whether the future
controlled emissions are still consistent
with NAAQS attainment. As shown in
Tables 3–3 though and 3–6 of the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan (pages 3–9 through 3–12), point
and area source emissions increase over
the 1998–2015 period, but this is more
than made up for by emissions
decreases in nonroad mobile and onroad mobile sources. This resulted in
predicted ozone peaks decreasing by
2015 from 119 to 116 ppb for the July
1998 episode, and from 125 to 120 for
the August 1999 episode. Since these
levels are both at or below 124 ppb,
maintenance of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS has been demonstrated.
3. Monitoring Network
The Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan addresses the
requirements for continued operation of
an ozone monitoring network. ADEQ
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
and MCESD have committed to
continue the operation of the monitors
in the area in accordance with 40 CFR
part 58. See also section IV.A.1 and
IV.A.2 of this proposed rule for more
detail on Arizona’s monitoring network
for the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area.
4. Verification of Continued Attainment
ADEQ, MAG, Maricopa County, and
the local jurisdictions have the legal
authority to implement and enforce the
requirements of the Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan. This
includes the authority to adopt,
implement, and enforce any subsequent
emission control contingency measures
determined to be necessary to correct
future ozone attainment problems. To
implement the 1-hour ozone
maintenance plan, as noted above,
ADEQ and MCESD will continue to
monitor ozone levels in the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area. To
track progress on the Maintenance Plan,
Maricopa County has also committed to
update the emissions inventory for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area every three years for the duration
of the maintenance plan with input and
assistance from ADEQ and MAG. The
ozone monitoring data and the updated
emissions inventories will be used
through the State’s contingency plan to
assure maintenance of the 1-hour ozone
standard.
5. Contingency Plan
Section 175A(d) of the CAA requires
maintenance plans to contain
contingency provisions. EPA guidance
on the requirements for the contingency
plan is provided in the September 4,
1992 Calcagni memo (Calcagni 1992a).
As set forth in the Calcagni memo, we
interpret section 175A(d) of the CAA
not to require fully adopted measures in
the contingency plan. However, the plan
should contain clearly identified
contingency measures to be adopted, a
schedule, and a specific time limit for
action by the State. In addition, specific
triggers should be identified which will
be used to determine when the
contingency measures need to be
implemented. The contingency plan
portion of the State’s maintenance plans
delineate the State’s planned actions in
the event of increasing ozone levels
threatening a subsequent violation of
the ozone standard.
MAG followed the August 13, 1993
EPA guidance memorandum entitled
‘‘Early Implementation of Contingency
Measures for Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide (CO) Nonattainment Areas’’.
The contingency plan described in
MAG’s maintenance plan contains
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13439
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
control measures that are expected to be
implemented early. MAG’s contingency
plan contains three measures, Area A
Expansion, Gross Polluter Option for
I/M Program Waivers, and Increased
Waiver Repair Limit Options. Emissions
reduction credit for these measures was
not taken in the maintenance
demonstration.
MAG defines the trigger for the
implementation of the contingency plan
as when the fourth highest daily
maximum hourly measurement over the
past three years exceeds 0.120 ppm at
any ozone monitor. If this occurs,
additional measures will be considered,
which may include the strengthening of
existing contingency measures. When
the trigger is activated, additional
control measures will be considered
according to the following schedule: (a)
Verification of the monitoring data to be
completed three months after activation
of the trigger; (b) applicable measures to
be considered for adoption six months
after the date established in (a); and (c)
resulting contingency measure to be
implemented within six to twelve
months, depending on the time needed
to implement the measure. The State
has also committed to continue to
implement all control measures
included in the SIP prior to
redesignation consistent with section
175A(d) of the CAA.
MAG’s Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan adequately addresses
the five basic components which
comprise a maintenance plan
(attainment inventory, maintenance
demonstration, monitoring network,
verification of continued attainment,
and a contingency plan) and, therefore,
satisfies the maintenance plan
requirement.
6. Subsequent Maintenance Plan
Revisions
Section 175A(b) of the CAA requires
States to submit a subsequent
maintenance plan revision eight years
after the original redesignation request
and maintenance plan have been
approved by EPA. The subsequent
revision is to provide for maintenance of
the air quality standard for an additional
10 years following the first 10-year
maintenance period. As the designated
regional air quality planning agency for
the Phoenix metropolitan area, MAG
has committed on page 3–18 of the 1Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan to prepare a revised
maintenance plan eight years after
redesignation to attainment.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
7. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
In addition to meeting the criteria for
redesignation, as a control strategy SIP,
the maintenance plan must contain
MVEBs that, in conjunction with
emissions from all other sources, are
consistent with attainment and
maintenance. An MVEB is the total
allowable VOC and NOX emissions
allocated to highway and transit vehicle
use during the maintenance period
(highway and transit vehicle use
emissions impacted by transportation
plans are projected to 2015 and tested
against the 2015 motor vehicle
emissions budget). The rules and
requirements governing transportation
conformity require certain
transportation activities to be consistent
with the MVEBs contained in emission
control SIPs (40 CFR 93.118). The
projected emissions resulting from the
transportation activities must be less
than or equal to the emissions budget
levels (40 CFR 93.118(a)). The review of
the transportation plan impacts relative
to the emissions budgets occurs after
EPA declares that the emissions budgets
meet the adequacy criteria of the
transportation conformity rule under 40
CFR 93.118(e).
The MVEBs for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area were
developed using emission factors
generated using EPA’s MOBILE6 model.
Arizona developed MVEBs for the
maintenance plan years of 2006 and
2015. The MVEBs are for both VOC and
NOX, as precursors to ozone formation,
and were applicable for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area upon
the effective date of the MVEB adequacy
finding.
We found the budgets in the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan adequate in a letter to Nancy
Wrona, Air Division Director, ADEQ
and Dennis Smith, Executive Director of
MAG, dated August 3, 2004. (See also
69 FR 51079, August 17, 2004.) The
adequacy finding on the maintenance
plan budgets was effective as of
September 1, 2004.
EPA is proposing to approve the
MVEBs included in Arizona’s
maintenance plans for conformity
purposes. EPA believes that the
submitted MVEBs are consistent with
the control measures identified in the
SIP, and that the SIP as a whole
demonstrates maintenance with the 1hour ozone standard. The 2006 and
2015 motor vehicle emission budgets
included in the MAG maintenance plan
are summarized in Table 6 below.
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
TABLE 6.—PHOENIX METROPOLITAN
NONATTAINMENT AREA 2006 AND
2015 MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSION
BUDGETS
[Emissions in metric tons per ozone season
summer day]
Year
2006 ..........................
2015 ..........................
VOC
71.9
48.7
NOX
104.8
53.6
8. Conclusion
We propose to approve the State’s
submittal (dated April 21, 2004) of
MAG’s Resignation Request and
Maintenance Plan as a revision to the
Arizona SIP. In doing so, we find that
ADEQ and MAG have provided
sufficient documentation of compliance
with the notice and hearing
requirements for SIP revisions under
section 110(l) of the Act.6
V. Revision of Boundary of the Phoenix
Metropolitan 1-Hour Ozone
Nonattainment Area
At the request of the Gila River Indian
Community and based on the evaluation
provided below, EPA is proposing to
change the boundary of the Phoenix
Metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation
(‘‘Reservation’’).
A. Background
1. Current Area Boundary, Designation,
and Classification
Areas of the country were originally
designated as attainment, nonattainment
or unclassifiable following enactment of
the 1977 Amendments to the CAA. See
43 FR 8962 (March 3, 1978). These
designations were generally based on
monitored air quality values compared
to the applicable NAAQS. EPA
originally designated all of Maricopa
County as a nonattainment area for the
photochemical oxidant NAAQS. See 43
FR 8962, 8968 (March 3, 1978). The
following year, EPA approved a request
by the State of Arizona to reduce the
size of this nonattainment area to
include only the Maricopa Association
of Governments (MAG) Urban Planning
Area (see 44 FR 16388, March 19, 1979),
which included the Phoenix
metropolitan area and also the northern
quarter of the Gila River Indian
Reservation (most of the reservation lies
6 MAG and ADEQ held a joint public hearing for
the Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan
on March 1, 2004. The MAG Regional Council
adopted the Redesignation and Maintenance Plan
on March 25, 2004 and ADEQ adopted the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan on
April 21, 2004.
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13440
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
within Pinal County). We refer to this
area in this notice as the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area. Also in 1979, we
established a new ozone NAAQS to
replace the photochemical oxidant
NAAQS (see 44 FR 8202, February 8,
1979) but retained the designation of
‘‘nonattainment’’ for the new ozone
NAAQS for the Phoenix metropolitan 1hour nonattainment area.
Under the 1990 Clean Air Act
Amendments, the designation of
‘‘nonattainment’’ for the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area was carried forward
by operation of law, and pursuant to the
1990 amended Act, the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area was
further classified as ‘‘moderate’’
nonattainment. See 56 FR 56694, 56717
(November 6, 1991). The nonattainment
area boundary remained the same, i.e.,
the MAG Urban Planning Area. On
November 6, 1997, the MAG 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area was
reclassified to serious due to a failure to
attain the 1-hour ozone standard by
November 15, 1996. The reclassification
was effective February 13, 1998. See 62
FR 60001 (November 6, 1997) and 63 FR
7290 (February 13, 1998).
Area boundaries and area
classifications have been amended over
the years under the applicable CAA
provisions, either by request of a state,
by operation of law, or by EPA
initiative. For the State of Arizona, the
current area designations and
classifications are codified at 40 CFR
81.303.
2. Gila River Indian Community’s
Request for a Boundary Change
On March 2, 2005, the Gila River
Indian Community (‘‘Community’’), a
federally-recognized tribal government,7
submitted a request to EPA to correct
the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the
Reservation.8 The Community’s request
included background information and
analysis of air quality data existing at
the time of and subsequent to the
designation in 1978 as well as the
nature of the ozone sources on the
Reservation demonstrated that the
Reservation has not had a monitored or
predicted violation of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS since, and that no significant
sources of ozone precursor emissions
exist on the Reservation. The
7 See
67 FR 46328, 46329 (July 12, 2002).
noted previously, the Phoenix metropolitan
1-hour ozone nonattainment area includes the
portion of the Reservation that lies within Maricopa
County, approximately the northern 25 percent of
the Reservation.
8 As
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
Community’s request and supporting
documentation are included in the
docket for this proposed action.
population of over 3 million, with a
population density of over 230 people
per square mile.
B. EPA Review of the Community’s
Request
3. Ozone and the Reservation
In general, ambient ozone
concentrations are caused by on-road
and nonroad mobile emissions sources,
area sources, large stationary sources
and biogenic sources that emit VOCs
and NOX. The level of mobile source
emissions, often the largest part of the
inventory in a major metropolitan area,
can be generally correlated to
population density and land use
patterns. The Community population
density of 20 people per square mile is
minor compared to all of Maricopa
County, which has a density of over 230
people per square mile. Commuting
patterns on the Reservation are virtually
nonexistent. Approximately 2,200 cars,
trucks and vans commute to work
within the Reservation, compared to
1,250,000 in Maricopa County. There is
little economic integration with
commercial development in
metropolitan Phoenix, and the
Reservation remains largely rural and
agricultural. The Community plans to
expand its agricultural base by investing
millions of dollars in agricultural
infrastructure.
There is only one major source of
emissions in the Community, an
aluminum extrusion facility. Based on
an inventory prepared by the
Community for year 1997 and the fact
that sources within the Community
have not changed in any significant way
since then, the Community estimates
that total annual emissions of ozone
precursor pollutants are approximately
1,000 tons of VOCs and 1,900 tons of
NOX for the entire Community. For the
purposes of comparison with the other
emissions estimates cited in this notice,
total Community emissions are
approximately 2.5 metric tons per day
(mtpd) of VOCs and 4.7 mtpd of NOX on
an annual average basis. In that part of
the Community that is within the
Phoenix nonattainment area, the
Community estimates that there are 250
tons of VOC and 490 tons of NOX per
year (equivalent to 0.6 mtpd of VOC and
1.2 mtpd of NOX). Emissions of VOCs
from the Community portion of the
nonattainment area represent less than
0.002% and 0.006% of VOC and NOX
emissions, respectively, of total
estimated emissions generated within
the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area. Thus, total
emissions from the Community are not
sufficient to cause or contribute to
violations of the 1-hour standard or
otherwise have a measurable impact on
rest of the Phoenix metropolitan
1. EPA’s Authority to Change
Boundaries
The Community requested that EPA
act under section 110(k)(6) to correct the
boundary of the Phoenix metropolitan
1-hour ozone nonattainment area, and
while we agree that a revision to the
boundary to exclude the Reservation is
warranted, we have decided to
redesignate the boundary of the area
under section 107(d)(3)(A) of the Act
rather than to correct the boundary
under section 110(k)(6). Under section
107(d)(3)(A), EPA has the authority to
revise the boundary of a nonattainment
area on the basis of air quality data,
planning and control considerations, or
any other air quality-related
considerations the Administrator deems
appropriate.
2. The Gila River Indian Reservation
Airshed
The Gila River Indian Reservation
consists of approximately 374,000 acres
in south central Arizona, south of the
Phoenix metropolitan area. Currently,
the MAG 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area includes the northern 92,000 acres
of the Reservation. The Reservation is
physically separated from the Phoenix
metropolitan area by the Sierra Estrella
and South Mountain Ranges. The Sierra
Estrella Mountain Range runs north and
south along the western edge of the
Reservation. The South Mountain Range
runs diagonally in a northeasterly
direction, between one and five miles
beyond the northern Reservation
boundary. These mountain ranges act as
a physical barrier between the two
airsheds.
A segment of the northern border of
the Reservation adjacent to Chandler
does not have a topographical barrier to
air pollution transport. However, the
prevailing winds flow to the northeast,
sending ozone emissions from Chandler
away from the Reservation. Along the
northeastern border of the Reservation,
the Santan Mountain Range separates
the Reservation from Gilbert and
Apache Junction.
The Reservation has a population of
approximately 11,250 people, with a
population density of approximately 20
people per square mile. There are no
major population centers within the
Reservation. By comparison, Maricopa
County (including vast rural areas west
of the urban area, which are not part of
the nonattainment area) has a
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
nonattainment area. High 1-hour ozone
concentrations in the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area are
associated almost exclusively with
summertime temperatures and
meteorological patterns. During the
summer months, the natural wind
patterns in the Salt River Valley are
from the west toward the northeast,
causing air pollutants from Phoenix to
be transported away from the Gila River
Indian Reservation. Therefore, there is
substantial basis for concluding that the
Reservation is an insignificant generator
of ozone emissions.
4. Ozone Planning Issues
Attainment of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS in the Phoenix metropolitan
area was achieved by Arizona through
the SIP planning process. It is important
to note that, under the CAA, the State
and local air pollution control agencies
do not have authority to administer air
regulatory programs over the
Reservation; consequently, the SIP rules
that were applied to the metropolitan
area and resulted in attainment of the
NAAQS did not apply to the
Reservation. Furthermore, due to the
Reservation’s lack of ozone precursor
sources, it was never considered
necessary to apply ozone precursor
limits to sources on the Reservation.9
Just as it was clear that it was not
necessary for an attainment plan to be
applicable to the Reservation for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area to attain the 1-hour ozone NAAQS,
it is clear to EPA that it will not be
necessary for a maintenance plan to be
applicable to the Reservation for the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area to maintain attainment of the 1hour ozone NAAQS.
C. Conclusion and Effect of Revising the
Boundary of the Phoenix Metropolitan
1-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area
In view of the above considerations,
EPA believes that it is appropriate to
exercise discretionary authority under
section 107(d)(3)(A) and to propose to
revise the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation. Geographical
and meteorological factors support the
conclusion that the Reservation is not
significantly affected by emissions
generated in the Phoenix metropolitan
area nor is the Phoenix metropolitan
area affected by emissions generated
within the Reservation. The effect of
9 EPA could have applied VOC or NO limits to
X
sources on the Reservation, as it has authority
under CAA 301(d) to promulgate regulations for
Indian country as necessary or appropriate ‘‘to
achieve the appropriate purpose’’ of the Act.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
this proposed action would be to attach
the Maricopa County portion of the Gila
River Indian Reservation to the preexisting ‘‘unclassifiable/attainment’’
area for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS that
consists of all of those portions of the
State of Arizona (including the rest of
the Reservation that lies in Pinal
County) that are not designated as a
‘‘nonattainment’’ area or as an
‘‘attainment’’ area that is subject to a
maintenance plan. Also, this proposed
action would eliminate any remaining
obligations to develop plans or
measures to attain and maintain the 1hour ozone NAAQS or to implement
nonattainment NSR within the
Maricopa County portion of the Gila
River Indian Reservation.
We note that this proposed action to
revise the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation is consistent
with EPA’s 2004 rule establishing an 8hour ozone nonattainment area for the
metropolitan Phoenix area, i.e., in both
instances the Gila River Indian
Reservation is excluded from the ozone
nonattainment area. See 69 FR 23858,
23878 (April 30, 2004). Finally, we
propose to interpret our proposed action
herein to eliminate the requirement to
develop a section 110 maintenance plan
that would otherwise have been
required for the Maricopa County
portion of the Gila River Indian
Reservation because of its 1-hour
NAAQS designation (i.e.,
nonattainment) at the time when the 8hour ozone designations final rule was
signed by the EPA Administrator (April
15, 2004). See 69 FR 23951, 23999
(April 30, 2004).
VI. Proposed Action
We are soliciting comments on all
aspects of this proposed SIP rulemaking
action. We will consider your comments
in deciding our final action if your
comments are received by April 20,
2005.
We are proposing, under the Clean
Air Act, to fully approve three revisions
to the Arizona SIP submitted to us by
ADEQ and related to the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area for the
1-hour ozone NAAQS. First, under
sections 182(c)(4)(B) and 110(k)(3) of the
Clean Air Act (CAA, or ‘‘the Act’’), we
are proposing to approve the State of
Arizona’s request to ‘‘opt-out’’ of the
Clean Fuel Fleet (CFF) program and to
approve the Cleaner Burning Gasoline
(CBG) program as a substitute measure.
Second, we are proposing to approve,
under section 110(k)(3) of the Act, the
State’s submittal of the Final Serious
Area Ozone State Implementation Plan
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
13441
for Maricopa County as meeting the
applicable requirements for serious 1hour ozone nonattainment areas. Third,
under sections 107(d)(3)(D) and
110(k)(3), we are proposing to approve
the State’s submittal of the One-Hour
Ozone Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan for the Maricopa
County Nonattainment Area as meeting
CAA requirements for redesignation
requests and maintenance plans under
sections 107(d)(3)(E) and 175A.
However, this proposal is contingent
upon final approval by EPA of three
separate proposed rulemakings
involving two Maricopa County rules, a
negative declaration, and a set of permit
conditions imposing reasonably
available control technology on a
specific stationary source. As part of our
approval of the maintenance plan, we
are proposing to approve the 2006 and
2015 motor vehicle emissions budgets
(MVEBs) for VOC and NOX in the
submitted maintenance plan for
transportation conformity purposes.
In addition, we are proposing, under
section 107(d)(3)(A) of the Act, to revise
the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila
River Indian Reservation. This proposed
action would add the Maricopa County
portion of the Reservation to the current
unclassifiable/attainment area within
the State of Arizona for the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS and would relieve the
Agency and Gila River Indian
Community from the need to develop
plans and measures that are not
necessary to provide for attainment and
maintenance of the 1-hour or 8-hour
ozone NAAQS.
VII. 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 proposed action merely
proposes to approve state law as
meeting Federal requirements, reduce
the size of a nonattainment area, and
redesignate the area (as modified) to
attainment for air quality planning
purposes 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
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
13442
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 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
(Public Law 104–4).
Executive Order 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 6, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have tribal
implications’’ is defined in the
Executive Order to include regulations
that have ‘‘substantial direct effects on
one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
government and the Indian tribes, or on
the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes.’’
Under section 5(b) of Executive Order
13175, EPA may not issue a regulation
that has tribal implications, that
imposes substantial direct compliance
costs, and that is not required by statute,
unless the Federal government provides
the funds necessary to pay the direct
compliance costs incurred by tribal
governments, or EPA consults with
tribal officials early in the process of
developing the proposed regulation.
Under section 5(c) of Executive Order
13175, EPA may not issue a regulation
that has tribal implications and that
preempts tribal law, unless the Agency
consults with tribal officials early in the
process of developing the proposed
regulation.
EPA has concluded that this proposed
rule may have tribal implications. EPA’s
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:53 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
action will revise the boundary of the
Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment maintenance area to
exclude the Gila River Indian
Reservation. However, it will neither
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on tribal governments, nor
preempt tribal law. Thus, the
requirements of sections 5(b) and 5(c) of
the Executive Order do not apply to this
rule.
Consistent with EPA policy, EPA
nonetheless consulted with
representatives of tribal governments
early in the process of developing this
proposal to permit them to have
meaningful and timely input into its
development. Representatives of tribal
governments approached EPA two years
ago and requested that EPA make this
boundary change. We agree with the
technical and policy rationale the tribes
provided, and believe that all tribal
concerns have been met.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13175,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between EPA
and tribal governments, EPA
specifically solicits additional comment
on this proposed rule from tribal
officials.
This action also does not have
Federalism implications because it does
not 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). This action merely
proposes to approve a state rule
implementing a Federal standard,
reduce the size of a nonattainment area,
and redesignate the area (as modified) to
attainment for air quality planning
purposes and does not alter the
relationship or the distribution of power
and responsibilities established in the
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Clean Air Act. This proposed rule also
is not subject to Executive Order 13045
‘‘Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks’’ (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997),
because it is not economically
significant.
In reviewing SIP submissions and
redesignation requests, 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 or
redesignation request for failure to use
VCS. It would thus be inconsistent with
applicable law for EPA, when it reviews
a SIP submission or redesignation
request, 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. This proposed
rule 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
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Ozone, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
40 CFR Part 81
Air pollution control, National parks,
Wilderness areas.
Dated: March 14, 2005.
Wayne Nastri,
Regional Administrator, Region 9.
[FR Doc. 05–5517 Filed 3–18–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 53 (Monday, March 21, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 13425-13442]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-5517]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[AZ131-0078; FRL-7887-1]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans and Designation
of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Arizona
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality's submittals of revisions to the Arizona state
implementation plan that include substitution of the clean fuel fleet
program requirement with the cleaner burning gasoline program, adoption
of the serious area 1-hour ozone plan, and adoption of the 1-hour ozone
maintenance plan for the Phoenix (Arizona) metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area. We are also proposing to approve Arizona's request
to redesignate the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment area
from nonattainment to attainment. EPA proposes these actions pursuant
to those provisions of the Clean Air Act that obligate the agency to
take action on submittals of revisions to state implementation plans
and requests for redesignation. In addition, under section 107 of the
Clean Air Act, we are proposing to revise the boundary of the Phoenix
metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment area to exclude the Gila River
Indian Reservation. EPA is proposing this last action consistent with
the Federal trust responsibility to the Tribes and for the purpose of
relieving the Agency or the Gila River Indian Community of the need to
promulgate and implement plans and measures for the Community that are
not needed for attainment or maintenance of the 1-hour or 8-hour ozone
national ambient air quality standard.
[[Page 13426]]
DATES: Written comments must be received at the address below on or
before April 20, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Formal written comments should be mailed or emailed to
Wienke Tax, Office of Air Planning (AIR-2), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA
94105-3901, tax.wienke@epa.gov. Comments may also be submitted through
the Federal Register Web site at https://www.regulations.gov. We prefer
electronic comments.
You can inspect copies of EPA's Federal Register document at our
Region 9 office during normal business hours (see address above). Due
to increased security, we suggest that you call at least 24 hours prior
to visiting the Regional Office so that we can make arrangements to
have someone meet you. The Federal Register document is also available
as an electronic file on EPA's Region 9 Web page at https://www.epa.gov/
region09/air.
You may inspect and copy the rulemaking docket for this notice at
the following location during business hours.
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9, Air Division, Air Planning
Office (AIR-2), 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105.
Copies of the SIP materials are also available for inspection at
the address listed below:
Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, 1110 W. Washington Street,
First Floor, Phoenix, AZ 85007, Phone: (602) 771-2217.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wienke Tax, Office of Air Planning,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9, (520) 622-1622, e-mail:
tax.wienke@epa.gov, or see https://www.epa.gov/region09/air.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, the terms ``we,''
``us,'' and ``our'' mean U.S. EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of Today's Proposed Action
II. History of 1-Hour Ozone Planning in the Phoenix Metropolitan
Nonattainment Area
III. The CAA's Requirements for Redesignation Requests and
Maintenance Plans
IV. EPA's Review of the MAG 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan's Compliance With the CAA's Requirements for Ozone
Redesignation Requests and Maintenance Plans
A. The Area Must Be Attaining the 1-Hour Ozone NAAQS
1. Adequate Monitoring Network
2. Attainment of the Standard
3. Monitoring Results
B. The Area Must Have a Fully-Approved SIP Under Section 110(k)
C. The Improvement in Air Quality Must Be Due to Permanent and
Enforceable Reductions in Emissions
D. The Area Must Have Met All Applicable Requirements Under
Section 110 and Part D of the CAA
1. Section 110 Requirements
2. Part D: Provisions for Nonattainment Areas
a. Section 172 Requirements
b. Section 176 Requirements
c. Section 182 Requirements
E. The Area Must Have a Fully-Approved Maintenance Plan Meeting
the Requirements of Section 175A
1. Emissions Inventory
2. Maintenance Demonstration
3. Monitoring Network
4. Verification of Continued Attainment
5. Contingency Plan
6. Subsequent Maintenance Plan Revisions
7. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets (MVEBs)
8. Conclusion
V. Revision of Boundary of the Phoenix Metropolitan 1-Hour Ozone
Nonattainment Area
A. Background
B. EPA Review of the Community's Request
C. Conclusion and Effect of Revising the Boundary of the Phoenix
Metropolitan 1-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area
VI. Proposed Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Today's Proposed Action
We are proposing to approve, under sections 182(c)(4)(B) and
110(k)(3) of the Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act''), the State of Arizona's
1998 request to ``opt-out'' of the clean fuel fleet (CFF) program and
to approve the cleaner burning gasoline (CBG) program as a substitute
measure. We are also proposing to approve, under section 110(k)(3) of
the Act, the State's 2000 submittal of the Final Serious Area Ozone
State Implementation Plan for Maricopa County (``Serious Area Ozone
Plan''), which provides a demonstration of compliance with requirements
under the Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act'') for the Phoenix metropolitan
``serious'' 1-hour ozone nonattainment area.
We are also proposing to approve, under sections 107(d)(3)(D) and
110(k)(3), the State's 2004 submittal of the One-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan for the Maricopa County
Nonattainment Area (``Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan''),
which was developed and adopted by the Maricopa Association of
Governments (MAG) as meeting CAA requirements for redesignation
requests and maintenance plans. EPA is proposing to determine that the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area has fully met the requirements
for redesignation found at section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA for
redesignation of an area from nonattainment to attainment for the 1-
hour ozone national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS). However, this
proposal is contingent upon final approval by EPA of three separate
proposed rulemakings involving two Maricopa County rules, a negative
declaration, and a set of permit conditions imposing ``reasonably
available control technology'' on a specific stationary source. As part
of our approval of the maintenance plan, we are proposing to approve
the 2006 and 2015 motor vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs) for VOC and
NOX in the submitted maintenance plan for transportation
conformity purposes.
In addition, we are proposing, under section 107(d)(3)(A) of the
Act, to revise the boundary of the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area to exclude the Gila River Indian Reservation. This
proposed action would add the Maricopa County portion of the
Reservation to the current ``unclassifiable/attainment'' area within
the State of Arizona for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS. The effect of this
action would be to relieve the Agency and the Community of the need to
develop and implement plans and measures that are not needed for
attainment or maintenance of the 1-hour or 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
II. History of 1-Hour Ozone Planning in the Phoenix Metropolitan
Nonattainment Area
Under section 107(d) of the CAA, as amended in 1977, Maricopa
County was designated as a 1-hour oxidant (later ozone) nonattainment
area in March 1978 (43 FR 8962). Originally, the nonattainment area was
county-wide, but EPA later approved a State request to limit the
nonattainment area to a subregion within Maricopa County that was
defined by the boundaries of the Maricopa Association of Governments'
(MAG) Urban Planning Area. See 44 FR 16388, 16393 (March 19, 1979). We
refer to this area herein as the ``Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area'' or the ``Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area,'' and we note that the boundary of this nonattainment area has
remained defined by reference to the MAG urban planning area from 1979
through the present time. However, we are proposing today to revise the
Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment area boundary to
exclude the Gila River Indian Reservation (see Section V of this
proposed rule).
On November 15, 1990, the CAA Amendments of 1990 were enacted.
[[Page 13427]]
Under the Act, as amended in 1990, the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area remained nonattainment by operation of law,
and under section 107(d)(4)(A) of the amended Act, the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area was further classified as a
``moderate'' ozone nonattainment area based on ozone monitoring data
during the 1987-1989 period. See 56 FR 56694, 56717 (November 6, 1991).
Because attainment was not achieved by November 15, 1996 (the CAA
attainment date for ``moderate'' ozone nonattainment areas), the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area was reclassified to
``serious,'' effective February 13, 1998, with a new attainment date of
November 15, 1999. See 62 FR 60001 (November 6, 1997) and 63 FR 7290
(February 13, 1998).
In connection with one of the requirements for ``moderate'' ozone
nonattainment areas, the State of Arizona submitted the initial 15
percent Rate of Progress plan (15 percent ROP plan) for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area via the Maricopa Association of
Governments 1993 Ozone Plan for the Maricopa County Area (November
1993) on November 15, 1993, and an Addendum (March 1994) to that plan
on April 8, 1994. On April 13, 1994, EPA found the initial plan
(including the Addendum) incomplete because it failed to include in
fully adopted and enforceable form all of the measures relied upon in
the 15 percent ROP demonstration. This incompleteness finding started
the 18-month sanction clock in CAA section 179 and the two year clock
under section 110(c) for EPA to promulgate a federal implementation
plan (FIP) covering the 15 percent ROP requirement. Subsequently in
November 1994 and April 1995, Arizona submitted an attainment plan for
the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area which updated the 15
percent ROP demonstration. On May 12, 1995, we found the revised 15
percent ROP plan and the attainment plan complete, turning off the
sanctions clock; however, under section 110(c), the FIP clock continued
until EPA approved the 15 percent ROP plan.
In August 1996, EPA was sued by the American Lung Association of
Arizona, ALAA v. Browner, No. CIV 96-1856 PHX ROS (D.Ariz.). This case
sought to enforce EPA's obligation under CAA section 110(c) to
promulgate a FIP for the 15 percent ROP requirement. On July 8, 1997, a
consent decree was filed with the U.S. District Court for the District
of Arizona establishing a schedule of January 20, 1998 for proposing
and May 18, 1998 for promulgating a 15 percent ROP plan. Under the
consent decree, EPA's obligation to promulgate a 15 percent ROP plan
was relieved to the extent that we had approved State measures. EPA
determined in its final rule that the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area had in place or would have in place sufficient
control measures to meet the 15 percent ROP requirement for volatile
organic compounds (VOCs), a precursor emission to ozone, under CAA
section 182(b)(1)(A) as soon as practicable. See 63 FR 28898 (May 27,
1998), as amended at 64 FR 36243 (July 6, 1999).
In February 2000, the State of Arizona requested that EPA make a
finding that the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area had attained
the 1-hour ozone NAAQS by the applicable ``serious'' area attainment
date of November 15, 1999 based on 1997-1999 ozone monitoring data. In
May of 2000, we proposed such a finding (see 65 FR 31859, May 19, 2000)
and approximately one year later, we published a final attainment
determination for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS. See 66 FR 29230 (May 30,
2001).
On December 7, 1998, in connection with one of the requirements for
``serious'' ozone nonattainment areas, the State submitted to EPA a SIP
revision opting out of the Clean Fuel Fleet program requirement and
requesting EPA approval of its interim Cleaner Burning Gasoline (CBG)
program as a substitute program. On June 7, 1999, the revision was
found to be complete by operation of law pursuant to EPA's completeness
criteria set forth in 40 CFR part 51, appendix V. In today's notice, we
are proposed to approve this request.
On December 14, 2000, the State submitted the Final Serious Area
Ozone State Implementation Plan for Maricopa County (``Serious Area
Ozone Plan'') to EPA as a revision to the Arizona SIP. This plan was
found to be complete by operation of law on June 14, 2001. Arizona
Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) prepared the Serious Area
Ozone Plan, and in doing so, anticipated a positive attainment finding
for the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area based on 1997-1999
ozone monitoring data. The Serious Area Ozone Plan includes a complete
emissions inventory for year 1996, and describes the State's compliance
with CAA requirements for ``serious'' ozone nonattainment areas,
including the requirements for enhanced monitoring. In today's notice,
we are proposing to approve the Serious Area Ozone Plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area.
In earlier actions, we have already approved revisions to Arizona's
Cleaner Burning Gasoline (CBG) program (69 FR 10161, March 4, 2004) and
to Arizona's Vehicle Emissions Inspection (VEI) Program (68 FR 2912,
January 22, 2003) as well as many of Maricopa County's VOC RACT rules.
(The Federal Register citations and effective dates for these rules are
listed later in this notice in Table 3.) These programs, as revised,
are the principal State and local controls relied on in the Serious
Area Ozone Plan.
On April 21, 2004, the State submitted the One-Hour Ozone
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan for the Maricopa County
Nonattainment Area (Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan) to EPA
as a revision to the Arizona SIP. This plan was found to be complete by
operation of law on October 21, 2004. The Maricopa Association of
Governments (MAG) prepared the Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan, which relies on continuation of the control measures cited above
in connection with the Serious Area Ozone Plan but also includes
additional control measures including coordination of traffic signal
systems, tougher enforcement of vehicle registration and emission test
compliance, development of intelligent transportation systems, and a
new Maricopa County rule governing VOC emissions from aerospace
manufacturing and rework operations. The plan includes contingency
measures to remedy any future violations of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, and
includes VOC and NOX MVEBs for 2006 and 2015 for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area. In today's notice, we are proposing to
approve the Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area.
Our proposed approvals of the Serious Area Ozone Plan and the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan are contingent upon final
EPA approval of certain other rulemakings described in more detail
later in this notice. EPA notes that the Phoenix-Mesa metropolitan area
has been designated nonattainment for the 8-hour ozone NAAQS, and is
subject to additional requirements as a result. See 69 FR 23858, 23879
(April 30, 2004). Final approval of this proposal would change the
official designation for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS found at 40 CFR part 81
for the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area from nonattainment to
attainment but would not affect the
[[Page 13428]]
8-hour ozone nonattainment area designation for the Phoenix-Mesa area.
III. The CAA's Requirements for Redesignation Requests and Maintenance
Plans
The CAA provides the requirements for redesignating a nonattainment
area to attainment. Specifically, section 107(d)(3)(E) allows for
redesignation providing that the following conditions are met: (1) The
Administrator determines that the area has attained the applicable
NAAQS; (2) the Administrator has fully approved the applicable
implementation plan for the area under section 110(k); (3) the
Administrator determines that the improvement in air quality is due to
permanent and enforceable reductions in emissions resulting from
implementation of the applicable SIP and applicable Federal air
pollutant control regulations and other permanent and enforceable
reductions; (4) the Administrator has fully approved a maintenance plan
for the area as meeting the requirements of section 175A; and, (5) the
State containing such area has met all requirements applicable to the
area under section 110 and part D. EPA provided guidance on
redesignations in the General Preamble for the Implementation of Title
I of the CAA Amendments of 1990, on April 16, 1992 (57 FR 13498), and
supplemented this guidance on April 28, 1992 (57 FR 18070).
EPA has provided further guidance on processing redesignation
requests in the following documents:
``Maintenance Plans for Redesignation of Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide Nonattainment Areas'', Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief,
Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs Branch, April 30, 1992 (Helms memo
1992a);
``Contingency Measures for Ozone and Carbon Monoxide (CO)
Redesignations'', Memorandum from G. T. Helms, Chief, Ozone/Carbon
Monoxide Programs Branch, June 1, 1992 (Helms memo 1992b);
``Procedures for Processing Requests to Redesignate Areas
to Attainment'', Memorandum from John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality
Management Division, September 4, 1992 (Calcagni memo 1992a);
``State Implementation Plan (SIP) Actions Submitted in
Response to Clean Air Act (ACT) Deadlines'', Memorandum from John
Calcagni, Director, Air Quality Management Division, October 28, 1992
(Calcagni memo 1992b);
``State Implementation Plan (SIP) Requirements for Areas
Submitting Requests for Redesignation to Attainment of the Ozone and
Carbon Monoxide (CO) National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) On
or After November 15, 1992'', Memorandum from Michael H. Shapiro,
Acting Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, September 17,
1993 (Shapiro memo);
``Part D New Source Review (part D NSR) Requirements for
Areas Requesting Redesignation to Attainment'', Memorandum from Mary D.
Nichols, Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, October 14,
1994 (Nichols memo); and
``Reasonable Further Progress, Attainment Demonstration,
and Related Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment Areas Meeting the
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard'', Memorandum from John S.
Seitz, Director, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, May 10,
1995 (Seitz memo).
IV. EPA's Review of the MAG 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan's Compliance With the CAA's Requirements for Ozone
Redesignation Requests and Maintenance Plans
EPA believes the State of Arizona has demonstrated that the area
meets all of the applicable criteria for redesignation to attainment as
specified in Section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA.
A. The Area Must Be Attaining the 1-Hour Ozone NAAQS
Section 107(d)(3)(E)(i) of the CAA states that for an area to be
redesignated to attainment, the Administrator must determine that the
area has attained the applicable NAAQS. In this case, the applicable
NAAQS is the 1-hour ozone NAAQS.
1. Adequate Monitoring Network
The CAA requires States to establish and operate air monitoring
networks to compile data on ambient air quality for all criteria
pollutants. See section 110(a)(2)(B)(i) of the Act. Our regulations in
40 CFR part 58 establish specific regulatory requirements for operating
air quality surveillance networks to measure ambient concentrations of
ozone, including measurement method requirements, network design,
quality assurance procedures, and in the case of large urban areas, the
minimum number of monitoring sites designated as National Air
Monitoring Stations (NAMS).
For this proposed action, we are discussing the adequacy of the
Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area monitoring network to support
our finding that the Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan
appropriately evaluates the 1-hour ozone problem in the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area. Reliable ambient data are necessary to
validate the base year air quality modeling which in turn is necessary
to assure a sound maintenance demonstration.
As it existed in the 2000 to 2002 period, the ozone ambient air
monitoring network consisted of four National Air Monitoring Stations
(NAMS), 14 State and Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS), and three
Special Purpose Monitors (SPM) operated by the Maricopa County
Environmental Services Department (MCESD) and the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality (ADEQ). Figure 2-1 on page 2-6 in the
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan lists the names of the sites
and their locations in the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area.
Since the 2000-2002 period, the ozone network has changed, e.g.,
certain sites have been discontinued while new sites have been added.
In the 2002-2004 period, the ozone monitoring network consists of 18
monitoring sites, four designated as NAMS, 12 designated as SLAMS, and
two SPMs. These sites all use EPA reference methods, are sited
according to our regulations, meet the applicable monitoring objectives
in our regulations, and are operated according to our regulations. We
therefore find that the monitoring network operated by the MCESD and
ADEQ is adequate to support the technical evaluation of ozone
maintenance in the Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan.
2. Attainment of the Standard
For ozone, an area may be considered to be attaining the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS if there are no violations, as determined in accordance
with 40 CFR 50.9 and appendix H, based on three complete, consecutive
calendar years of quality-assured ambient monitoring data. A violation
of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS occurs when the estimated number of
exceedances per year averaged over three years is greater than 1.0 at
any monitoring site in the area or its downwind environs, using
conventional rounding techniques.
The calculation of the estimated exceedances takes into account not
only the number of exceedances during a given ozone season, but also
completeness of data, and daily peak ozone concentrations on days in
the ozone season that can be assumed to be less than the level of the
standard. A daily exceedance occurs when the maximum hourly ozone
concentration
[[Page 13429]]
during a given day is greater than or equal to 0.125 parts per million
(ppm), using conventional rounding techniques. Monitoring data must be
collected and quality-assured in accordance with 40 CFR part 58, and
recorded in EPA's Air Quality System (AQS) database.
3. Monitoring Results
MCESD and ADEQ submitted quality-assured ozone monitoring data to
EPA for the 1997 to 1999 ozone monitoring seasons. As noted previously,
we determined that the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area had attained the 1-hour ozone NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date. See 66 FR 29230 (May 30, 2001). Since then, the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area has continued to meet the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, as shown in Table 1.
Table 1.--Average Number of Exceedance Days per Year and Design Values by Monitor in the Phoenix Metropolitan
Ozone Nonattainment Area (2000 to 2004)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average number
Site SITE type of exceedance Site design
days per year value (ppm)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Blue Point.................................... NAMS 0 0.110
Central Phoenix............................... NAMS 0 0.098
Fountain Hills................................ NAMS 0 0.106
South Scottsdale.............................. NAMS 0 0.099
Tempe......................................... SPM 0 0.098
Falcon Field.................................. SLAMS 0 0.104
Rio Verde..................................... SLAMS 0 0.101
Dysart**...................................... SLAMS 0 0.085
South Phoenix................................. SLAMS 0 0.091
West Phoenix.................................. SLAMS 0 0.097
Pinnacle Peak................................. SLAMS 0 0.101
North Phoenix................................. SLAMS 0 0.105
Glendale...................................... SLAMS 0 0.099
West Chandler................................. SLAMS 0 0.099
Cave Creek.................................... SPM 0 0.099
Humboldt Mountain............................. SLAMS 0 0.099
JLG Supersite*................................ SLAMS 0 0.086
Palo Verde*................................... SLAMS 0 0.098
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources: AQS Database and MCESD 2003 Network Review.
*ADEQ Site.
**Site only has data from 2003-2004.
Table 1 also provides design values for each monitoring site. The
design value generally represents the 4th highest daily maximum
(hourly) ozone concentration over a given three-year period at a given
site. Design values provide one basis of comparison between different
parts of a given nonattainment area with respect to peak ozone
exposure; as such, the design values are provided herein for
information purposes only. Attainment of the ozone NAAQS relies on the
average number of exceedances per year (the design value is used under
the CAA if an area is found to have missed its attainment deadline and
must be reclassified).
Based on the monitoring data summarized in Table 1, we propose to
determine that the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment area
has attained, and continues to attain, the applicable NAAQS and
therefore meets the related criterion for redesignation under section
107(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act.
B. The Area Must Have a Fully Approved SIP Under Section 110(k)
EPA fully approved the ozone SIP for the Phoenix metropolitan
nonattainment area that had been required under the CAA, as amended in
1977. See 47 FR 19326 (May 5, 1982) and 40 CFR 52.123(d). With respect
to ozone-related SIP requirements under the CAA, as amended in 1990,
EPA is proposing action in today's notice to approve the Serious Area
Ozone Plan SIP revision for the Phoenix metropolitan serious 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area and thereby fulfill the requirements for a
periodic inventory for 1996 and enhanced monitoring.
CAA requirements for ozone nonattainment areas are cumulative in
that ``serious'' areas must also meet the applicable requirements for
the two lesser classifications: ``marginal'' and ``moderate''. Most of
the applicable requirements for the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area, such as the base year 1990 emissions inventory, an
enhanced vehicle inspection and maintenance program and various
Maricopa County RACT rules, have been fully approved under section
110(k) by EPA in previous rulemakings and our final approval of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan will accomplish the same for the 1996 periodic
inventory requirement and the enhanced monitoring requirement.
We recognize that there remain several EPA proposed rules that need
to be finalized before we can finalize our action described herein.
These proposed rules involve Maricopa County (MC) Rule 358, source-
specific RACT for W.R. Meadows, the MC rule establishing the emissions
statements requirement, and a negative declaration. If, and once, we
finalize our approvals of these separate proposed actions and finalize
our proposed approval of the Serious Area Ozone Plan, then we will have
fully approved the applicable implementation plan for the area under
section 110(k) and satisfied the criterion for redesignation under
section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the CAA.
C. The Improvement in Air Quality Must Be Due to Permanent and
Enforceable Reductions in Emissions
The improvement in air quality must be due to permanent and
enforceable
[[Page 13430]]
reductions in emissions resulting from implementation of the SIP,
Federal measures, and other State-adopted measures.
EPA believes that the State has demonstrated that the observed air
quality improvements are due to the implementation of permanent and
enforceable emission reductions through the implementation of emission
controls contained in the Arizona SIP and Federal measures. Subsequent
to the 1990 CAA amendments, Arizona implemented a number of emission
controls. The area has complied with all of the emission requirements
for a serious ozone nonattainment area as required by the CAA.
Some of the emission reductions were achieved through the
implementation of the use of low volatility cleaner burning gasoline,
more stringent Tier I motor vehicle emission standards, implementation
of an enhanced vehicle I/M program, controls on area sources, and the
adoption of tighter emissions limits on existing stationary sources.
All of the emission control measures contained in the 15 percent ROP
plan, serious area ozone plan, and redesignation request and
maintenance plan have been fully adopted, have been implemented, and
are enforceable in the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area.
Maricopa County has adopted and implemented emission control rules
requiring existing sources of VOC to meet, at minimum, RACT. These
requirements apply to sources in categories covered by CTGs and other
major non-CTG sources.
Table 2 shows the decrease in emissions between 1990 and 1999 due
to permanent and enforceable measures.
Table 2.--990 and 1999 Phoenix Metropolitan Nonattainment Area VOC and NOX Emissions
[Emissions in metric tons per day]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1990 1999
Source category ----------------------------------------------------
VOC NOX VOC NOX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Point Sources.............................................. 25.6 70.9 15.3 16.5
Area Sources............................................... 111.8 7.4 82.6 43.0
On-Road Mobile Sources..................................... 136.2 130.1 106.9 129.8
Nonroad Mobile Sources..................................... 57.9 85.2 78.5 59.3
--------------
Biogenics.................................................. 37.3 ............ 76.7 7.3
Total.................................................. 368.8 293.6 360.0 255.9
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: some columns may not add to 100% due to rounding; on-road mobile sources for 1990 were developed with
EPA's MOBILE5a, whereas 1999 on-road mobile sources were developed using EPA's MOBILE5b.
Sources: 1990 data: 1993 MAG Ozone Plan; 1999 data: MAG 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan.
It can be seen that overall, both VOC emissions and NOX
emissions decreased in the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area
between 1990 and 1999. Increases in emissions of VOC in the nonroad
mobile source category and biogenics were offset by larger decreases in
emissions from other source categories. Increases in emissions of
NOX from area sources were offset by larger decreases in
other source categories. We propose to find that the improvement in
ozone air quality in the Phoenix metropolitan area is due to emissions
reductions from implementation of permanent and enforceable measures
and that the area thereby meets the redesignation criterion under
section 107(d)(3)(E)(iii).
D. The Area Must Have Met All Applicable Requirements Under Section 110
and Part D of the CAA
1. Section 110 Requirements
Although section 110 was amended in 1990, the Maricopa County
portion of the Arizona SIP meets the requirements of amended section
110(a)(2). A number of the requirements did not change in substance,
and, therefore, EPA believes that the pre-amendment EPA-approved SIP
met these requirements. As to those requirements that were amended,
(see 57 FR 27936 and 23939, June 23, 1993), many are duplicative of
other requirements of the Act. EPA has analyzed the SIP and determined
that it is consistent with the requirements of amended section
110(a)(2). The SIP contains enforceable emission limitations, requires
monitoring, compiling and analyzing of ambient air quality data,
requires preconstruction review of new major stationary sources and
major modifications to existing ones, provides for adequate funding,
staff, and associated resources necessary to implement its
requirements, and requires stationary source emission monitoring and
reporting.
Specifically, sections 110(a)(2)(A), (C), and (E) concerning plan
enforcement and implementation requirements are addressed in Chapter
Eight, page 8-146 and Chapter 11, page 11-1 of the Revised Serious Area
Carbon Monoxide Plan (``Revised 1999 CO Plan''). EPA approved this plan
in a final rule on March 9, 2005 (see 70 FR 11553). In order to comply
with these CAA sections, a State law was passed in 1992 which provides
an approach for assurances that State and local committed measures will
be adequately implemented (see Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.)
Sections 49-406 I. and J.) A.R.S. Section 49-406 G. (passed by the
Arizona Legislature in 1992) requires that each agency which commits to
implement any control measure contained in the SIP must describe the
commitment in a resolution. The resolution must be adopted by the
appropriate governing body of the agency. State law also requires the
entity to specify the following information in the resolutions: (1) Its
authority for implementing the limitation or measure as provided in
statute, ordinance, or rule; (2) a program for the enforcement of the
limitation or measure; and (3) the level of personnel and funding
allocated to the implementation of the measure.
Chapter 11 of the Revised 1999 CO Plan includes resolutions from
the MAG member agencies and other implementing entities. These
resolutions indicate specific commitments to implement various control
strategies which reduce CO as well as ozone precursor emissions.
Generally, the authorities of the cities and towns to implement the
types of measures that they have committed to in their respective
resolutions are provided under A.R.S. section 9-240 Powers of Common
Council. The general authorities of the County to implement the
measures in the commitments are provided under A.R.S. section 11-251
and A.R.S. section 49-478. Copies of these local and county government
authorities were included in Chapter 11 of the Revised 1999 CO Plan.
[[Page 13431]]
If any State, County, local government, regional agency, or other
entity failed to implement a committed measure, the County would file
an action in Superior Court to have the Court order that the measure be
implemented. Likewise, the Director of ADEQ will backstop the County if
it fails to implement a committed measure or if the County fails to
backstop the local governments and regional agencies (see Appendix C,
Exhibit 2, Revised 1999 CO Plan).
2. Part D: Provisions for Nonattainment Areas
Before an area may be redesignated to attainment, it must have
fulfilled the applicable requirements of part D. Under part D of title
I of the CAA, an area's ozone classification determines the
requirements to which it is subject. Subpart 1 of part D specifies the
basic requirements applicable to all nonattainment areas. Subpart 2 of
part D establishes additional requirements for nonattainment areas
classified under table 1 of section 181(a) of the CAA.
As described in the General Preamble for Implementation of Title I
of the CAA, specific requirements of subpart 2 may override or modify
general provisions in subpart 1 (57 FR 13501, April 16, 1992).
Therefore, in order to be redesignated, the States must meet the
applicable requirements of subpart 1 of part D--specifically sections
172(c) and 176, as well as the applicable requirements of subpart 2 of
part D.
EPA believes that Arizona has met the requirements of subpart 1 of
part D--specifically sections 172(c) and 176, insofar as applicable, as
well as the applicable requirements of subpart 2 of part D of the CAA
for the Phoenix metropolitan 1-hour ozone nonattainment area, as
described below.
a. Section 172 Requirements. This section contains general
requirements for nonattainment area SIPs. A thorough discussion of the
requirements contained in section 172(c) may be found in the General
Preamble for Implementation of title I (57 FR 13498, April 16, 1992).
EPA has interpreted the requirements of sections 172(c)(1) (non-
RACT reasonably available control measures-RACM), 172(c)(2) (reasonable
further progress-RFP), 172(c)(6) (other measures), and 172(c)(9)
(contingency measures) as being irrelevant to a redesignation request
because they only have meaning for an area that is not attaining the
standard. See the General Preamble of April 16, 1992, and the Calcagni
Memorandum. Finally, the State has not sought to exercise the options
that would trigger sections 172(c)(4) (identification of certain
emissions increases) and 172(c)(8) (equivalent techniques). Thus, these
provisions are also not relevant to this redesignation request. The
other plan provisions under section 172(c) are discussed below.
Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT). Nonattainment plans
must, at a minimum, require the implementation of RACT for stationary
sources. These requirements are discussed below under Section 182
Requirements.
Emissions Inventories. The plan needs to include a comprehensive,
accurate, current inventory of actual emissions from all sources of the
relevant pollutant as determined necessary by the Administrator to
assure that the requirements of part D of the CAA are met. These
requirements are discussed below under Section 182 Requirements.
Permits for New and Modified Major Stationary Sources. For the
section 172(c)(5) New Source Review (NSR) requirements, the CAA
requires all nonattainment areas to meet several requirements regarding
NSR, including provisions to ensure that increased emissions will not
result from any new or modified major stationary sources and a general
offset rule.
We have determined that areas being redesignated from nonattainment
to attainment do not need to comply with the requirement that an NSR
program be approved prior to redesignation provided that the area
demonstrates maintenance of the standard without part D nonattainment
NSR in effect. The rationale for this decision is described in the
Nichols memo.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Part D New Source Review (part D NSR) Requirements for
Areas Requesting Redesignation to Attainment'', Memorandum from Mary
D. Nichols, Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, October
14, 1994.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan for the Phoenix
ozone nonattainment area indicates expected additional VOC and
NOX emissions due to major source growth. Thus, we find that
the maintenance demonstration for the Phoenix metropolitan area does
not rely on nonattainment NSR, and the State need not have a fully-
approved nonattainment NSR program prior to approval of the
redesignation request.
Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) is the replacement
program for NSR, and part of the obligation under PSD is for a new
source to review increment consumption and maintenance of the air
quality standards. The PSD program requires stationary sources to
undergo preconstruction review before facilities are constructed or
modified, and to apply Best Available Control Technology (BACT). This
program will apply to any major source wishing to locate in the Phoenix
metropolitan area once the area is redesignated to attainment.
Effective November 22, 1993, we delegated PSD authority to Maricopa
County via a PSD Delegation Agreement (59 FR 1730, January 12, 1994).
Compliance With Section 110(a)(2). The plan must contain provisions
to meet the requirements of section 110(a)(2) of the CAA (see the
discussion of section 110 requirements above).
b. Section 176 Requirements. Section 176(c) of the CAA requires
States to establish criteria and procedures to ensure that Federally
supported or funded projects conform to the air quality planning goals
in the applicable SIP. The requirement to determine conformity applies
to transportation plans, programs and projects developed, funded or
approved under Title 23 U.S.C. of the Federal Transit Act
(``transportation conformity''), as well as to all other Federally
supported or funded projects (``general conformity'').
Section 176 further provides that State conformity revisions must
be consistent with Federal conformity regulations that the CAA required
the EPA to promulgate. EPA believes it is reasonable to interpret the
conformity requirements as not applying for purposes of evaluating the
redesignation request under section 107(d). The rationale for this is
based on a combination of two factors. First, the requirement to submit
SIP revisions to comply with the conformity provisions of the CAA
continues to apply to areas after redesignation to attainment, since
such areas would be subject to a section 175A maintenance plan. Second,
the EPA's Federal conformity rules require the performance of
conformity analyses in the absence of Federally approved State rules.
Therefore, because areas are subject to the conformity requirements
regardless of whether they are redesignated to attainment and must
implement conformity under Federal rules if State rules are not yet
approved, EPA believes it is reasonable to view these requirements as
not applying for purposes of evaluating a redesignation request. See
Wall v. EPA, 265 F. 3d 426, 439 (6th Cir. 2001) upholding this
interpretation.
The State of Arizona has fully adopted general conformity
procedures, approved by EPA on April 23, 1999 (64 FR 19916). The State-
adopted transportation conformity procedures are found in A.R.S. Title
18, Chapter 2, Article 14. We have not yet approved transportation
conformity procedures in
[[Page 13432]]
the SIP. For the reasons stated above, EPA believes the approval of
conformity rules into the State's SIP is not a prerequisite for
redesignation. Federal transportation conformity rules continue to
apply.
c. Section 182 Requirements. For purposes of this redesignation,
the part D, subpart 2, section 182(a), (b) and (c) requirements for a
nonattainment area apply to the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area.
EPA has interpreted the requirements of sections 182(c)(2)
(attainment and RFP demonstrations), 182(c)(5) (transportation
control), and 182(c)(9) (contingency measures) as being irrelevant to a
redesignation request because they only have meaning for an area that
is not attaining the standard. See the General Preamble of April 16,
1992, and the Calcagni Memorandum. The other plan provisions under
section 182 are discussed below.
1990 Base Year Inventory and Periodic Emissions Inventory Updates.
Sections 182(a)(1) and 182(a)(3)(A) of the Act, as amended in 1990,
require States to submit a comprehensive, accurate, current inventory
of actual emissions from all sources in the ozone nonattainment area
and to submit updates of those inventories every three years until
redesignation.
Arizona submitted a complete and accurate 1990 emissions inventory
for VOC and NOX for the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment
area as noted in EPA's final approval of the emissions inventory on May
27, 1998 (63 FR 28898). Arizona submitted updated periodic emissions
inventories for 1993, 1996, and 1999. The final 1993 ozone SIP
inventory was submitted to us on November 25, 1996. The 1996 base year
(July-September 1996) ozone inventory was submitted as part of the
Serious Area Ozone Plan, Appendix E.\2\ We are proposing to approve the
1996 ozone inventory submitted as part of the Serious Area Ozone Plan.
The 1999 periodic ozone emissions inventory for the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area was originally submitted to EPA in
August 2002 and then re-submitted to EPA as part of the Redesignation
Request and Maintenance Plan, in Appendix A, Exhibit 1. The Appendix
contains a complete description of the sources and methodologies used
to calculate ozone emissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ ADEQ held a public hearing for the Serious Area Ozone Plan
on April 26, 2000. ADEQ adopted the Serious Area Ozone Plan on
December 14, 2000 and submitted it to us on the same date. We find
that ADEQ thereby satisfied the requirements for notice and public
hearing on all SIP revisions under section 110(1) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 1-Hour Ozone Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan also
contains a description of the 1998 and 1999 base year inventories, the
interim year 2006, and the maintenance year 2015 ozone precursor
emissions inventories for use in Urban Airshed Model (UAM) simulations.
In MAG's emissions inventories, emissions sources are grouped into
five major categories: Point sources, area sources, nonroad mobile
sources, on-road mobile sources, and biogenic emissions. Point sources
include such categories as industrial, manufacturing, and electric
power generation facilities. Area sources include residential
woodburning, industrial fuel combustion, on-site incineration, and open
burning. Biogenic emissions come from natural vegetation. Nonroad
mobile sources include utility, lawn and garden, construction, farm and
recreational equipment, and aircraft and locomotives. On-road mobile
sources include cars, motorcycles, various sizes of trucks, and buses.
Collectively, these sources contributed a total of 256 metric tons per
day of NOX and 360 metric tons per day of VOC in 1999.
We propose to approve the 1996 and 1999 periodic emissions
inventories and find that the State has complied with the inventory
requirements of section 182(a)(1) and 182(a)(3)(A). We also propose to
approve the 1998 and 1999 base year inventories, the interim year 2006
inventory, and maintenance year 2015 inventory in connection with the
maintenance demonstration discussed elsewhere in this notice.
Emissions Statement Requirements. Section 182(a)(3)(B) of the Act
requires States to submit a SIP revision requiring owners or operators
of stationary sources of VOC or NOX to provide the State
with estimates of actual emissions from such sources. Arizona's SIP
includes regulations requiring annual emissions statements from major
sources. Specifically, to comply with this requirement, the State
submitted Maricopa County (MC) Rule 100.503 to EPA on February 4, 1993.
We approved this rule by direct final action published on February 10,
2005. See 70 FR 7038 (February 10, 2005). Assuming no adverse comments
are submitted in connection with this direct final rule, our final rule
published on February 10, 2005 will be effective on April 11, 2005. If
adverse comments are timely submitted, then we will withdraw the direct
final rule and consider those comments prior to taking a final action.
See our proposed rule (70 FR 7069) also published on February 10, 2005.
We will finalize our action on MC Rule 100.503 prior to taking final
action on this proposal.
15 Percent ROP Plan Requirements. Section 182(b)(1) of the CAA
requires the submission of a 15 percent ROP plan. This plan is to
provide for VOC emission reductions in the nonattainment area of at
least 15 percent, from the 1990 baseline emissions levels, by no later
than November 15, 1996. Arizona submitted its initial 15 percent ROP
plan for the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area on November 15,
1993 and supplemented it on April 8, 1994. On April 13, 1994, we found
the initial plan incomplete because it failed to include, in fully
adopted and enforceable form, all of the measures relied upon in the 15
percent demonstration. This incompleteness finding started the 18-month
sanctions clock in CAA section 179 and the two-year clock under section
110(c) for EPA to promulgate a FIP covering the 15 percent ROP
requirements. In November 1994 and April 1995, Arizona submitted an
attainment plan for the Phoenix metropolitan nonattainment area which
updated the 15 percent ROP demonstrations.
On May 12, 1995, we found the revised 15 percent plan and the
attainment plan complete, turning off the sanctions clock; however,
under section 110(c), the FIP clock continued until EPA approved the 15
percent plan. In August 1996, we were sued by the American Lung
Association of Arizona and others, American Lung Association of
Arizona, Inc. et al. v. Browner, No. CIV 96 1856, PHX ROS (D. Arizona)
to enforce EPA's obligation under CAA section 110(c) to promulgate a
FIP for the 15 percent ROP requirement. On July 8, 1997, a consent
decree was filed in the case establishing a schedule of January 20,
1998 for proposing and May 18, 1998 for promulgating a 15 percent ROP
plan. Under the consent decree, EPA's obligation to promulgate a 15
percent ROP plan was relieved to the extent that we had approved State
measures. EPA determined in its final rule that the Phoenix
metropolitan nonattainment area had in place or would have in place
sufficient control measures to meet the 15 percent ROP requirement for
volatile organic compounds (VOCs), a precursor emission to ozone, under
CAA section 182(b)(1)(A) as soon as practicable. See 63 FR 28898 (May
27, 1998), as amended at 64 FR 36243 (July 6, 1999).
VOC RACT Requirements. Section 172(c)(1) of the CAA specifies that
SIPs must provide for the implementation of all RACM including all RACT
as
[[Page 13433]]
expeditiously as practicable to attain the NAAQS. Sections 182(a)(2)(A)
and 182(b)(2) further provide that, at a minimum, the SIPs must require
the implementation of RACT for two classes of VOC sources. The VOC
source classes are: (a) All sources covered by a Control Techniques
Guideline (CTG) document issued by the Administrator by the date of
attainment of the ozone standard; and (b) all other major non-CTG
stationary sources.
Arizona's redesignation request, submitted on April 21, 2004,
describes how the State of Arizona has met the VOC RACT requirements
under sections 172(c)(1) and 182(b)(2) of the Act for nearly all of the
CTG source categories and VOC major sources either through adoption of
Maricopa County air pollution control regulations or negative
declarations and how the State intends to fulfill the RACT requirement
for the few remaining CTG source categories and VOC major sources. EPA,
through a number of rulemakings, has approved these RACT rules and
negative declarations as revisions to the Arizona SIP as documented in
Table 3.
Table 3.--Maricopa County VOC RACT Rules and SIP Status
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MC Rule(s), SIP Status, and, if
VOC RACT requirement approved, Federal Register
Citation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Control Techniques Guidelines
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline Loading Terminals............. MC Rules 350 and 351: MC Rule
350 adopted July 13, 1988,
revised April 6, 1992;
revision approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024). MC Rule
351 adopted February 15, 1995,
approved February 9, 1998 (63
FR 6489).
Gasoline Bulk Plants................... MC Rule 350: adopted July 13,
1988, revised April 6, 1992;
revision approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024).
Service Stations--Stage I.............. MC Rule 353: adopted July 13,
1988, revised April 6, 1992;
approved February 1, 1996 (61
FR 3578).
Fixed Roof Petroleum Tanks............. MC Rule 350: adopted July 13,
1988, revised April 6, 1992;
revision approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024).
Miscellaneous Refinery Sources......... Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Cutback Asphalt........................ MC Rule 340: adopted July 13,
1988, revised June 22, 1992,
revised September 21, 1992;
approved February 1, 1996 (61
FR 3578).
Solvent Metal Cleaning................. MC Rule 331: adopted July 13,
1988, revised June 22, 1992,
revised June 19, 1996, revised
April 21, 2004; approved
February 1, 1996 (61 FR 3578),
approved February 9, 1998 (63
FR 6489), approved December
21, 2004 (69 FR 76417).
Surface Coating of:
Cans............................... MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Metal Coils........................ MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Fabrics............................ MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Paper Products..................... MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Automobile and Light Duty Trucks... Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Metal Furniture.................... MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999; approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Magnetic Wire...................... Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Large Appliances................... MC Rule 336: revised September
21, 1992, June 19, 1996, April
7, 1999; approved September
20, 1999 (64 FR 50759).
Leaks from Petroleum Refineries........ Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Miscellaneous Metal Parts Surface MC Rule 336: revised September
Coating. 21, 1992, June 19, 1996, April
7, 1999; approved September
20, 1999 (64 FR 50759).
Surface Coating of Flat Wood Paneling.. Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Synthetic Pharmaceutical Manufacture... Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Rubber Tire Manufacture................ Negative declaration, submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
External Floating Roof Petroleum Tanks. MC Rule 350: adopted July 13,
1988, revised April 6, 1992;
revision approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024).
Graphic Arts........................... MC Rule 337: adopted November
20, 1996, submitted February
26, 1997, approved February 8,
1998 (63 FR 6489).
Perchloroethylene Drycleaning \(a)\.... Perchloroethylene was delisted
as a VOC by EPA (see Footnote
(a)).
Gasoline Truck Leaks and Vapor MC Rule 352: adopted November
Collection. 16, 1992, submitted February
4, 1993, approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024).
[[Page 13434]]
Manufacture of High-Density MC Rule 358: Polystyrene Foam
Polyethylene Polypropylene, and Manufacturing, proposed
Polystyrene Resins. approval was signed by
Regional Administrator for EPA
Region 9 on March 8, 2005.
This proposal is expected to
be published in the Federal
Register by mid-March 2005.
Fugitive Emissions from Synthetic Negative declaration, submitted
Organic Chemical, Polymer, and Resin December 14, 2000, Aapproved
Manufacturing Equipment. August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Large Petroleum Dry Cleaners........... MC Rule 333: adopted June 19,
1996, submitted February 26,
1997, approved February 9,
1998 (63 FR 6489).
Air Oxidation Processes--Synthetic Negative declaration, submitted
Organic Chemical Manufacturing December 14, 2000, approved
Industries. August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Equipment Leaks from Natural Gas/ Negative declaration: submitted
Gasoline Processing Plants. December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Synthetic Organic Chemical Negative declaration: submitted
Manufacturing Industries (SOCMI)-- December 14, 2000, approved
Distillation and Reactor Processes. August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Volatile organic liquid storage........ MC Rule 350: adopted July 13,
1988, revised April 6, 1992;
revision approved September 5,
1995 (60 FR 46024).
SOCMI batch processes.................. Negative declaration: submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Industrial Wastewater.................. Negative declaration: submitted
December 14, 2000, approved
August 26, 2002 (67 FR 54741).
Plastic Parts Coating (for business MC Rule 336: adopted July 13,
machines and automobiles). 1988, revised September 21,
1992, June 19, 1996, April 7,
1999, approved September 20,
1999 (64 FR 50759).
Cleaning solvents...................... MC Rule 331: adopted July 13,
1988, revised June 22, 1992,
revised June 19, 1996, revised
April 21, 2004, submitted July