Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans for Arizona; Maricopa County PM-10 Nonattainment Area; Serious Area Plan for Attainment of the 24-Hour and Annual PM-10 Standards, 38064-38067 [05-13032]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 126 / Friday, July 1, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Race, and the area from Point Judith
Pilot Boarding area to The Race.
As part of this study, we will consider
previous studies, analyses of vessel
traffic density, and agency and
stakeholder experience in vessel traffic
management, navigation, vessel
handling, and effects of weather. We
encourage you to participate in the
study process by submitting comments
in response to this notice.
We will publish the results of the
PARS in the Federal Register. It is
possible that the study may validate
continued applicability of existing
vessel routing measures and conclude
that no changes are necessary. It is also
possible that the study may recommend
one or more changes to enhance
navigational safety and vessel traffic
management efficiency. Study
recommendations may lead to future
rulemakings or appropriate
international agreements.
3. Are modifications to existing vessel
routing measures needed to address
hazards and strains and to improve
traffic management efficiency in the
study area? If so, please describe.
4. What costs and benefits are
associated with the measures listed as
potential study recommendations? What
measures do you think are most costeffective?
5. What impacts, both positive and
negative, would changes to existing
routing measures or new routing
measures have on the study area?
6. What impacts would routing
measures implemented in the study area
have on vessels transiting in waters
adjacent to the study area, such as in
Long Island Sound?
Possible Scope of the Recommendations
BILLING CODE 4910–15–P
We are attempting to determine the
scope of any safety problems associated
with vessel transits in the study area.
We expect that information gathered
during the study will identify any
problems and appropriate solutions.
The study may recommend that we—
• Maintain the current vessel routing
measures;
• Establish a deep-water route;
• Establish recommended routes;
• Create precautionary area(s);
• Create one or more inshore traffic
zone(s);
• Establish two-way routes;
• Establish an area to be avoided
(ATBA) in shallow areas where the risk
of grounding is present;
• Establish, disestablish, or modify
anchorage grounds; and
• Establish a Regulated Navigation
Area (RNA) with specific vessel
operating requirements to ensure safe
navigation near shallow water.
Questions
To help us conduct the port access
route study, we request comments on
the following questions, although
comments on other issues addressed in
this document are also welcome. In
responding to a question, please explain
your reasons for each answer, and
follow the instructions under ‘‘Public
Participation and Request for
Comments’’ above.
1. What navigational hazards do
vessels operating in the study area face?
Please describe.
2. Are there strains on the current
vessel routing system (increasing traffic
density, for example)? If so, please
describe.
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Dated: June 23, 2005.
Howard L. Hime,
Acting Director of Standards, Marine Safety,
Security and Environmental Protection.
[FR Doc. 05–13066 Filed 6–30–05; 8:45 am]
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[AZ–092–132; FRL–7931–9]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans for Arizona;
Maricopa County PM–10
Nonattainment Area; Serious Area Plan
for Attainment of the 24-Hour and
Annual PM–10 Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: On July 25, 2002, EPA
approved under the Clean Air Act
(CAA) the serious area particulate
matter (PM–10) plan for the Maricopa
County portion of the metropolitan
Phoenix (Arizona) nonattainment area
(Maricopa County area). Among other
things, EPA approved the best available
control measure (BACM) and most
stringent measure (MSM)
demonstrations in the plan and granted
the State’s request for an attainment
date extension for the area. EPA’s
approval was challenged in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
In response to the Court’s remand, EPA
has reassessed the BACM demonstration
for the significant source categories of
on-road motor vehicles and nonroad
engines and equipment exhaust,
specifically regarding whether or not
California Air Resources Board (CARB)
diesel is a BACM. EPA has also
reassessed the MSM demonstration. As
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a result of these reassessments, EPA is
again proposing to approve the BACM
and MSM demonstrations in the plan
and to grant the State’s request to extend
the attainment deadline from 2001 to
2006.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by
August 1, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Carol
Weisner, Planning Office (AIR–2), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street, San
Francisco, CA 94105–3901 or e-mail to
weisner.carol@epa.gov, or submit
comments at https://
www.regulations.gov.
You can inspect copies of the
submitted state implementation plan
(SIP) revisions, EPA’s technical support
document (TSD), and public comments
at our Region IX office during normal
business hours by appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Carol Weisner, EPA Region IX, (415)
947–4107, weisner.carol@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
I. Background
On July 25, 2002, EPA approved
multiple documents submitted to EPA
by Arizona for the Maricopa County
area as meeting the CAA requirements
for serious PM–10 nonattainment areas
for the 24-hour and annual PM–10
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS). Among these documents is
the ‘‘Revised MAG 1999 Serious Area
Particulate Plan for PM–10 for the
Maricopa County Nonattainment Area,’’
February 2000 (MAG plan) that includes
the BACM demonstrations for all
significant source categories (except
agriculture) for both the 24-hour and
annual PM–10 standards and the State’s
request and supporting documentation,
including the most stringent measure
analysis (except for agriculture) for an
attainment date extension for both
standards. EPA’s July 25, 2002 final
action included approval of these
elements of the MAG plan.1
The Arizona Center for Law in the
Public Interest (ACLPI), on behalf of
Phoenix area residents, subsequently
filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit a petition for review of
EPA’s approval of several elements in
the MAG plan. As relevant to this
proposed rule, ACLPI asserted that
EPA’s approval was arbitrary and
capricious because the plan did not
1 For a detailed discussion of the MAG plan and
the serious area PM–10 requirements, please see
EPA’s proposed and final approval actions at 65 FR
19964 (April 13, 2000), 66 FR 50252 (October 2,
2001) and 67 FR 48718 (July 25, 2002).
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mandate the use of CARB diesel, a fuel
standard adopted by CARB, and thus
did not satisfy the CAA requirements for
BACM and MSM for mobile sources.
ACLPI further asserted that we granted
an extension of the statutory deadline
for attainment from December 31, 2001
to December 31, 2006 based on an
inadequate MSM demonstration.
On May 10, 2004, the Court issued its
opinion which upheld EPA’s final
approval in part,2 but remanded to EPA
the question of whether CARB diesel
must be included in the serious area
plan as a BACM and a MSM.
Specifically, with respect to whether
CARB diesel was appropriately rejected
as BACM, the Court stated that ‘‘* * *
Arizona has offered one explanation,
which EPA has declined to ratify, and
EPA has not proffered an adequate
explanation of its own.’’ The Court
further stated that ‘‘[i]n light of our
disposition with respect to CARB diesel
as a BACM, we remand to EPA for
further consideration of whether CARB
diesel satisfies MSM as well.’’ Finally,
the Court remanded the question of
whether the Maricopa County area is
eligible for an extension of the
attainment date to 2006, but only insofar
as that question depends on EPA’s
determination regarding CARB diesel as
a MSM. Vigil v. Leavitt, 366 F.3d 1025,
amended at 381 F. 3d 826 (9th Cir.
2004).
II. BACM Demonstration for the
Maricopa County Nonattainment Area
A. EPA’s 2002 Approval
Under CAA section 189(b)(2), serious
area PM–10 plans must provide
assurances that BACM will be
implemented no later than four years
after a moderate PM–10 nonattainment
area is reclassified as serious. For the
Maricopa County area, the BACM
implementation deadline was June 10,
2000. In short, a BACM demonstration
starts with the identification of all
source categories contributing
significantly to nonattainment of the
PM–10 standards. Once the significant
categories are identified, all potential
BACM for these categories must be
identified and a reasoned justification
must be provided for any BACM that are
not implemented. All BACM that are
2 The Court rejected the petitioners’ claim that
Arizona’s general permit rule for agriculture did not
constitute either BACM or MSM. The Court
concluded that Arizona was not required to
mandate implementation by farmers of all 34
identified best management practices to constitute
BACM and that the mandate to implement one BMP
in each of three categories was sufficient. Further,
Arizona was not required to adopt practices
implemented in California’s South Coast region to
satisfy the MSM requirement.
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economically and technologically
feasible must be implemented.3
In the case of the Maricopa County
area, the MAG plan identifies eight
significant PM–10 source categories,
including on-road motor vehicle and
nonroad engines and equipment
exhaust.4,5 A comprehensive list of
potential BACM for controlling both onroad and nonroad exhaust was compiled
and EPA determined the list to be
complete. In our 2002 approval of the
MAG plan, we stated that Arizona had
one of the most comprehensive
programs for addressing on-road motor
vehicle emissions and that the
additional measures in the MAG plan
(e.g., a more stringent diesel inspection
and maintenance (I/M) program and
measures both encouraging and
requiring diesel fleet turnover) would
strengthen and go beyond that program.
For nonroad engines, EPA stated that
Arizona had committed to adopt
measures (e.g., a voluntary retirement
program for gasoline powered lawn and
garden equipment, a program to
encourage use of temporary electrical
power rather than portable generators at
construction sites, a year-round Clean
Burning Gasoline program, limits on the
sulfur content of diesel fuels) that
would strengthen the overall nonroad
engine program making it go beyond the
existing federal program. 65 FR at
19972–19974; 66 FR at 50258–50260.
Strengthening and expanding existing
programs are key criteria for
demonstrating the implementation of
BACM. 59 FR at 42013. EPA noted that
CARB diesel was rejected in the MAG
plan as a BACM due to high costs, but
believed the cost analysis was too
uncertain to judge. 65 FR at 19973; 67
FR at 48725. EPA concluded that,
overall, the on-road and nonroad
measures in the MAG plan constituted
BACM for the Maricopa County area
and that CARB diesel did not have to be
3 For a detailed discussion of EPA’s preliminary
interpretation of the CAA’s BACM requirements,
see ‘‘State Implementation Plans for Serious PM–10
Nonattainment Areas, and Attainment Date Waivers
for PM–10 Nonattainment Areas Generally;
Addendum to the General Preamble for the
Implementation of Title I of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990,’’ 59 FR 41998, 42008–42014
(August 16, 1994).
4 ‘‘Nonroad vehicles’’ and ‘‘nonroad engines’’ are
used interchangeably in EPA’s proposed and final
approval actions listed in footnote 1. In addition,
CARB and other state air agencies typically refer to
these sources as ‘‘off-road.’’ ‘‘Nonroad engines and
equipment,’’ ‘‘nonroad vehicles,’’ ‘‘nonroad
engines,’’ ‘‘nonroad’’ and ‘‘off-road’’ are used
interchangeably in today’s proposed rule.
5 A list of all potential BACM was compiled for
each of the significant source categories and a
detailed analysis of whether the potential BACM
were technically and economically feasible was
provided by the MAG plan and evaluated by EPA.
65 FR at 19964, 66 FR at 50252.
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included as a most stringent measure
(MSM) for the area because its
implementation would not advance the
attainment date. 67 FR at 48725.
B. Reassessment of the BACM
Demonstration
Pursuant to the Ninth Circuit Court’s
directive, in this proposed rule EPA
revisits the BACM demonstration in the
MAG plan for the on-road motor vehicle
and nonroad engines and equipment
exhaust source categories and addresses
the question of whether CARB diesel is
a BACM for the Maricopa County area.
(1) On-Road Motor Vehicle Exhaust
Section 211(c)(4)(A) of the CAA
generally prohibits the state from
prescribing or attempting to enforce
controls respecting motor vehicle fuel
characteristics or components that EPA
has controlled under section 211(c)(1),6
unless the state control is identical to
the Federal control. Under section
211(c)(4)(C), EPA may approve a nonidentical state fuel control as a SIP
provision, if the state demonstrates that
the measure is necessary to achieve the
NAAQS. We may approve a state fuel
requirement as necessary if no other
measures would bring about timely
attainment, or if other measures exist
and are technically possible to
implement but are unreasonable or
impracticable.
EPA currently has nationwide
regulations prescribing limits on various
characteristics and components of motor
vehicle diesel fuel (e.g., sulfur content
limits, minimum cetane index and
limits on aromatic content) (55 FR
34120, August 21, 1990), thus, the state
would need to obtain a CAA section
211(c)(4)(C) waiver in order to
implement a different requirement
governing characteristics and
components of on-road diesel fuel, i.e.,
CARB diesel, in the Maricopa County
area. However, Arizona has not
requested a waiver for the Maricopa
County area and, since EPA has
approved the state’s demonstration of
attainment of the PM–10 NAAQS (67 FR
48718), EPA believes that the state
would not be able to provide a
demonstration that CARB diesel is
necessary to achieve the NAAQS for
PM–10. Thus, the State would not be
able to obtain a section 211(c)(4)(C)
waiver necessary to implement CARB
diesel for on-road motor vehicles.
6 This prohibition applies to all states except
California, as explained in section 211(c)(4)(B).
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(2) Nonroad Engines and Equipment
Exhaust
Unlike on-road diesel fuel, nonroad
diesel fuel currently used in engines
and equipment is not subject to EPA
standards; however, starting in 2007,
fuel sulfur levels in nonroad diesel fuel
will be limited to a maximum of 500
parts per million (ppm). This limit also
covers fuels used in locomotive and
marine applications (though not to the
marine residual fuel used by very large
engines on ocean-going vessels).7 Unlike
motor vehicle fuel, EPA regulation of
nonroad fuel does not trigger
preemption of state fuel controls as the
prohibition in section 211(c)(4)(A) does
not extend to fuels used in nonroad
engines and equipment. 69 FR 38958,
39072–39073 (June 29, 2004).8 EPA
believes however that requiring CARB
diesel only for nonroad engines and
equipment in the Maricopa County area
is not currently feasible as discussed
below.9
(a) Fuel Availability
Arizona currently has no refineries
and, thus, does not produce CARB
diesel; therefore, it must rely on
refineries outside the state to supply the
fuel. (MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned
Justification for Nonimplementation of
Particulate Control Measures Due to
Infeasibility, pp. 29, 33) The Maricopa
County area’s fuel is supplied through
pipelines from Los Angeles refineries
and West Texas/New Mexico refineries.
(Evaluation of Gasoline and Diesel Fuel
Options for Maricopa County for State
of Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality, January 30,
1998, MathPro Inc., (MathPro Report),
pp. v, vi and 10).
In 1997, it is estimated that the
Maricopa County area used
approximately 23,000 barrels/day (352.6
million gallons/year) of diesel fuel. Offroad diesel fuel consumption is
approximately one third of on-road
consumption, thus, off-road
consumption is estimated at 88.2
7 Starting in 2010, fuel sulfur levels in most
nonroad diesel fuel will be reduced to 15 ppm. In
the case of locomotive and marine diesel fuel, this
second step will occur in 2012. See 69 FR 38958
(June 29, 2004).
8 Note that to the extent that nonroad fuel is
available for use by both on-road motor vehicles
and nonroad engines and equipment, it is
preempted. Id.
9 In addition to soliciting information on the
issues discussed in section II.B.2.a–c below, EPA is
soliciting information on the economic feasibility of
requiring CARB diesel for nonroad vehicles only.
Given the issues discussed below and the reduced
emissions reductions benefit of implementing
CARB diesel for only nonroad vehicles, EPA
expects the costs of implementing CARB diesel to
be much higher than if it were implemented for
both on-road and nonroad vehicles.
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million gallons/year. (MathPro Report,
p. 17–18). In order to implement CARB
diesel for nonroad vehicles, Arizona
would need to ensure that the supplying
refiners would be able to produce an
adequate supply of CARB diesel for
shipment to the Maricopa County area.
This would depend on various factors
including, among other things, whether
refiners have adequate additional
capacity beyond their current
obligations to make CARB diesel. The
most likely source of CARB diesel seems
to be from Southern California refiners
since they appear to be the only
refineries currently producing CARB
diesel with pipeline transporting
capabilities to the Maricopa County
area. However, information from CARB
and the California Energy Commission
(CEC) on the availability of CARB diesel
is not conclusive.10 EPA solicits any
additional information that may provide
a clearer understanding of the
availability of CARB diesel for nonroad
engines and equipment in the Maricopa
County area.
10 CARB reports that CARB diesel production by
California refineries has increased more than 14%
since 1998. (Cal EPA, ARB, STAFF REPORT:
INITIAL STATEMENT OF REASONS FOR
PROPOSED RULEMAKING, Proposed Regulatory
Amendments Extending the California Standards
for Motor Vehicle Diesel Fuel to Diesel Fuel Used
in Harborcraft and Intrastate Locomotives, October
1, 2004.) CARB estimates that by 2007 nearly
231,000 barrels per day (or 3.5 billion gallons per
year) of CARB diesel will be needed to meet
California’s demand. Id. CARB also reports that
refineries will have the capacity to produce 275,000
barrels per day (or 4.22 billion gallons per year) by
2007. Id. CARB projects that there will not be a
shortage of CARB diesel for California and in fact
there will be capacity for excess CARB diesel
production in California. Id.
However, data from the CEC indicates that 2.8
billion gallons of CARB diesel were used by on-road
vehicles in California in 2003. (February 2, 2005
MEMORANDUM, February 2, 2005 Phone
Conversation with Chris Kavalec, California Energy
Commission (CEC), on California’s Supply and
Demand for CARB Diesel.) CEC staff estimates that
approximately 70% of total diesel usage in
California is from on-road vehicles, thus, total
CARB diesel usage in California for 2003 is
estimated at 3.99 billion gallons. Id. CEC data also
indicates that California refineries produced
approximately 3.17 billion gallons in 2003. Id.
Thus, in 2003, it appears that California’s usage of
CARB diesel exceeded what its refineries produced.
Id. This shortage was likely made up by CARB
diesel imports from other domestic and foreign
sources. Id. If there is not a sufficient excess supply
of CARB diesel, California refineries may need to
make a substantial investment of time and resources
for environmental permitting and construction in
order to expand operations before being able to
supply CARB diesel to the Maricopa County area.
(MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned Justification for
Nonimplementation of Particulate Control Measures
Due to Infeasibility, p. 33 and December 6, 2004
MEMORANDUM, November 24, 2004 Phone
Conversation with Gordon Shremp, CEC, on the
availability of CARB diesel). EPA was unable to
obtain any information on the availability of
imports that could be supplied to the Maricopa
County area.
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(b) Fuel Storage and Segregation
Increasing the number of fuels
provided to a specific geographic area
complicates and increases the demands
on the fuels distribution system at
various points. Distinct fuels need to be
segregated to prevent contamination at
each point in distributing fuels from a
small number of suppliers (refiners) to
a large number of users. If the Maricopa
County area implements CARB diesel
for nonroad engines and equipment, it
would have to ensure that the fuel could
be stored separately 11 from other fuels
and its distribution could be segregated
so that only nonroad engines and
equipment would use it.
These uncertainties must be resolved
before CARB diesel can be considered a
feasible measure for the Maricopa
County area. EPA solicits any additional
information that may provide a better
understanding of the fuel storage and
segregation problems.
(c) Fueling Outside the Maricopa
County Area
The effectiveness of implementing
CARB diesel in the Maricopa County
area for nonroad engines and equipment
is uncertain. Due to the size of the area
and the additional cost of CARB diesel,
there would be a significant incentive
for owners and operators to fuel their
nonroad equipment outside the area
and/or move their base of operations
outside the area whenever possible, thus
greatly reducing the effectiveness of the
measure. Owners and operators of
nonroad engines and equipment using
diesel fuel tend to be more sensitive to
price increases and are more likely to go
outside the area to avoid higher priced
fuels than owners and operators of
gasoline powered vehicles. This is
because diesel powered equipment
tends to be larger and use much more
fuel than gasoline powered vehicles.12
11 According to ADWM staff (10/25/04
MEMORANDUM, October 24, 2004 Telephone
Conversation with Duane Yantorno, Air/Fuel
Quality Manager, Arizona Department of Weights
and Measures, Doris Lo, USEPA Region 9, Wienke
Tax, USEPA Region 9 on Availability of CARB
Diesel for the Maricopa County Nonattainment
Area.), tank farms for fuel storage in the Maricopa
County area are currently at maximum capacity.
Thus, if some of the current diesel or gasoline
tankage were to be converted to CARB diesel, there
could be shortages of other fuels or new tankage
might need to be built to accommodate storage of
CARB diesel while keeping it segregated from other
fuels, thus preventing contamination.
12 Diesel powered engines and equipment
generally include items such as construction
equipment (tractors, backhoes, pile drivers),
agricultural equipment and heavy duty trucks.
Gasoline powered engines and equipment generally
include items such as cars, recreational vehicles
and lawn and garden equipment. In addition, the
diesel powered engines and equipment also are
likely to be owned or operated in fleets where
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The MAG plan states that ‘‘California
requires CARB diesel statewide. * * *
however, [in Arizona] CARB diesel
would [apply solely to] * * * part of
Maricopa County and 12 townships in
two other counties. At its widest point,
this area is approximately 66 miles
across. The small size of the area means
that diesel users will be able to fuel
their vehicles outside the nonattainment
area and reduce any potential
effectiveness the measure would have.’’
(MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned
Justification for Nonimplementation of
Particulate Control Measures Due to
Infeasibility, p. 29) In addition, the
American Trucking Associations, Inc.
(ATA) states that ‘‘[t]he trucking
industry is extremely competitive.
* * * Since fuel is one of the largest
expenses for trucking companies,
companies operating in the Maricopa
nonattainment area would have a strong
incentive to travel outside the
nonattainment area to avoid purchasing
the more expensive CARB-diesel.
* * *’’ (ATA Amicus Curiae Brief, Vigil
v. Leavitt, Case No. 02–72424; decided
at 366 F.3d 1025, amended at 381 F. 3d
826 (9th Cir. 2004).13 EPA agrees with
these statements from the MAG plan
and ATA; however, EPA solicits any
additional information that may provide
a better understanding of factors that
may or may not cause owners and
operators of nonroad engines and
equipment to purchase diesel fuel
outside the Maricopa County area.
III. MSM Demonstration and Extension
of Attainment Date
As a serious PM–10 nonattainment
area, the Maricopa County area was
required to attain the annual and 24hour PM–10 standards by no later than
December 31, 2001. CAA section
188(c)(2). However, CAA section 188(e)
allows us to extend the attainment date
for a serious PM–10 nonattainment area
for up to five years if attainment by 2001
is impracticable and certain specified
additional conditions are met. Among
these conditions is that the State must
demonstrate to our satisfaction that its
serious area plan includes the most
stringent measures that are included in
the implementation plan of any state
and/or are achieved in practice in any
state and are feasible for the area.14
Since, as discussed above, EPA is
proposing to approve the BACM
livelihood of the owner or operator’s business will
be sensitive to small increases in per gallon fuel
costs.
13 While diesel trucks are not a nonroad source
category, EPA believes the concerns of refueling
outside the Maricopa County area raised by ATA
are relevant to nonroad engines and equipment.
14 See footnote 1.
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demonstration in the MAG plan for the
on-road and nonroad vehicle exhaust
source categories without CARB diesel,
our determination for the Maricopa
County area in our July 25, 2002 action
that CARB diesel is also not required as
a MSM because it does not advance the
attainment date is not affected. Thus,
the attainment date extension granted to
the Maricopa County area in that action
is also not affected.
IV. Proposed Action
EPA proposes to approve the BACM
demonstration in the MAG plan for the
source categories of on-road and
nonroad vehicle exhaust without CARB
diesel. CARB diesel is not feasible for
on-road motor vehicles because Arizona
cannot obtain a CAA section
211(c)(4)(C) waiver for purposes of PM–
10 attainment. CARB diesel is not
feasible for nonroad engines and
equipment because of the uncertainties
with fuel availability, storage and
segregation and program effectiveness
due to owners and operators fueling
outside the Maricopa County area.
Therefore, EPA also proposes to approve
the MSM demonstration in the MAG
plan and the associated extension of the
attainment deadline for the area from
December 31, 2001 to December 31,
2006.
V. 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 and
imposes no additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law.
Accordingly, the Administrator certifies
that this proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (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 (Pub. L. 104–4).
This proposed rule also does not have
tribal implications because it will not
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38067
have a substantial direct effect on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
as specified by Executive Order 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). 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, and
does not alter the relationship or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the 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, EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. In this context, in the
absence of a prior existing requirement
for the State to use voluntary consensus
standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for
failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission,
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. 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 in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 22, 2005.
Laura Yoshi,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 05–13032 Filed 6–30–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
E:\FR\FM\01JYP1.SGM
01JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 126 (Friday, July 1, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 38064-38067]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-13032]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[AZ-092-132; FRL-7931-9]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans for Arizona;
Maricopa County PM-10 Nonattainment Area; Serious Area Plan for
Attainment of the 24-Hour and Annual PM-10 Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: On July 25, 2002, EPA approved under the Clean Air Act (CAA)
the serious area particulate matter (PM-10) plan for the Maricopa
County portion of the metropolitan Phoenix (Arizona) nonattainment area
(Maricopa County area). Among other things, EPA approved the best
available control measure (BACM) and most stringent measure (MSM)
demonstrations in the plan and granted the State's request for an
attainment date extension for the area. EPA's approval was challenged
in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. In response to the
Court's remand, EPA has reassessed the BACM demonstration for the
significant source categories of on-road motor vehicles and nonroad
engines and equipment exhaust, specifically regarding whether or not
California Air Resources Board (CARB) diesel is a BACM. EPA has also
reassessed the MSM demonstration. As a result of these reassessments,
EPA is again proposing to approve the BACM and MSM demonstrations in
the plan and to grant the State's request to extend the attainment
deadline from 2001 to 2006.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by August 1, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Carol Weisner, Planning Office (AIR-2),
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, CA 94105-3901 or e-mail to weisner.carol@epa.gov, or
submit comments at https://www.regulations.gov.
You can inspect copies of the submitted state implementation plan
(SIP) revisions, EPA's technical support document (TSD), and public
comments at our Region IX office during normal business hours by
appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carol Weisner, EPA Region IX, (415)
947-4107, weisner.carol@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to EPA.
I. Background
On July 25, 2002, EPA approved multiple documents submitted to EPA
by Arizona for the Maricopa County area as meeting the CAA requirements
for serious PM-10 nonattainment areas for the 24-hour and annual PM-10
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS). Among these documents
is the ``Revised MAG 1999 Serious Area Particulate Plan for PM-10 for
the Maricopa County Nonattainment Area,'' February 2000 (MAG plan) that
includes the BACM demonstrations for all significant source categories
(except agriculture) for both the 24-hour and annual PM-10 standards
and the State's request and supporting documentation, including the
most stringent measure analysis (except for agriculture) for an
attainment date extension for both standards. EPA's July 25, 2002 final
action included approval of these elements of the MAG plan.\1\
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\1\ For a detailed discussion of the MAG plan and the serious
area PM-10 requirements, please see EPA's proposed and final
approval actions at 65 FR 19964 (April 13, 2000), 66 FR 50252
(October 2, 2001) and 67 FR 48718 (July 25, 2002).
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The Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest (ACLPI), on
behalf of Phoenix area residents, subsequently filed in the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit a petition for review of EPA's
approval of several elements in the MAG plan. As relevant to this
proposed rule, ACLPI asserted that EPA's approval was arbitrary and
capricious because the plan did not
[[Page 38065]]
mandate the use of CARB diesel, a fuel standard adopted by CARB, and
thus did not satisfy the CAA requirements for BACM and MSM for mobile
sources. ACLPI further asserted that we granted an extension of the
statutory deadline for attainment from December 31, 2001 to December
31, 2006 based on an inadequate MSM demonstration.
On May 10, 2004, the Court issued its opinion which upheld EPA's
final approval in part,\2\ but remanded to EPA the question of whether
CARB diesel must be included in the serious area plan as a BACM and a
MSM. Specifically, with respect to whether CARB diesel was
appropriately rejected as BACM, the Court stated that ``* * * Arizona
has offered one explanation, which EPA has declined to ratify, and EPA
has not proffered an adequate explanation of its own.'' The Court
further stated that ``[i]n light of our disposition with respect to
CARB diesel as a BACM, we remand to EPA for further consideration of
whether CARB diesel satisfies MSM as well.'' Finally, the Court
remanded the question of whether the Maricopa County area is eligible
for an extension of the attainment date to 2006, but only insofar as
that question depends on EPA's determination regarding CARB diesel as a
MSM. Vigil v. Leavitt, 366 F.3d 1025, amended at 381 F. 3d 826 (9th
Cir. 2004).
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\2\ The Court rejected the petitioners' claim that Arizona's
general permit rule for agriculture did not constitute either BACM
or MSM. The Court concluded that Arizona was not required to mandate
implementation by farmers of all 34 identified best management
practices to constitute BACM and that the mandate to implement one
BMP in each of three categories was sufficient. Further, Arizona was
not required to adopt practices implemented in California's South
Coast region to satisfy the MSM requirement.
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II. BACM Demonstration for the Maricopa County Nonattainment Area
A. EPA's 2002 Approval
Under CAA section 189(b)(2), serious area PM-10 plans must provide
assurances that BACM will be implemented no later than four years after
a moderate PM-10 nonattainment area is reclassified as serious. For the
Maricopa County area, the BACM implementation deadline was June 10,
2000. In short, a BACM demonstration starts with the identification of
all source categories contributing significantly to nonattainment of
the PM-10 standards. Once the significant categories are identified,
all potential BACM for these categories must be identified and a
reasoned justification must be provided for any BACM that are not
implemented. All BACM that are economically and technologically
feasible must be implemented.\3\
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\3\ For a detailed discussion of EPA's preliminary
interpretation of the CAA's BACM requirements, see ``State
Implementation Plans for Serious PM-10 Nonattainment Areas, and
Attainment Date Waivers for PM-10 Nonattainment Areas Generally;
Addendum to the General Preamble for the Implementation of Title I
of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990,'' 59 FR 41998, 42008-42014
(August 16, 1994).
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In the case of the Maricopa County area, the MAG plan identifies
eight significant PM-10 source categories, including on-road motor
vehicle and nonroad engines and equipment exhaust.4,5 A
comprehensive list of potential BACM for controlling both on-road and
nonroad exhaust was compiled and EPA determined the list to be
complete. In our 2002 approval of the MAG plan, we stated that Arizona
had one of the most comprehensive programs for addressing on-road motor
vehicle emissions and that the additional measures in the MAG plan
(e.g., a more stringent diesel inspection and maintenance (I/M) program
and measures both encouraging and requiring diesel fleet turnover)
would strengthen and go beyond that program. For nonroad engines, EPA
stated that Arizona had committed to adopt measures (e.g., a voluntary
retirement program for gasoline powered lawn and garden equipment, a
program to encourage use of temporary electrical power rather than
portable generators at construction sites, a year-round Clean Burning
Gasoline program, limits on the sulfur content of diesel fuels) that
would strengthen the overall nonroad engine program making it go beyond
the existing federal program. 65 FR at 19972-19974; 66 FR at 50258-
50260. Strengthening and expanding existing programs are key criteria
for demonstrating the implementation of BACM. 59 FR at 42013. EPA noted
that CARB diesel was rejected in the MAG plan as a BACM due to high
costs, but believed the cost analysis was too uncertain to judge. 65 FR
at 19973; 67 FR at 48725. EPA concluded that, overall, the on-road and
nonroad measures in the MAG plan constituted BACM for the Maricopa
County area and that CARB diesel did not have to be included as a most
stringent measure (MSM) for the area because its implementation would
not advance the attainment date. 67 FR at 48725.
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\4\ ``Nonroad vehicles'' and ``nonroad engines'' are used
interchangeably in EPA's proposed and final approval actions listed
in footnote 1. In addition, CARB and other state air agencies
typically refer to these sources as ``off-road.'' ``Nonroad engines
and equipment,'' ``nonroad vehicles,'' ``nonroad engines,''
``nonroad'' and ``off-road'' are used interchangeably in today's
proposed rule.
\5\ A list of all potential BACM was compiled for each of the
significant source categories and a detailed analysis of whether the
potential BACM were technically and economically feasible was
provided by the MAG plan and evaluated by EPA. 65 FR at 19964, 66 FR
at 50252.
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B. Reassessment of the BACM Demonstration
Pursuant to the Ninth Circuit Court's directive, in this proposed
rule EPA revisits the BACM demonstration in the MAG plan for the on-
road motor vehicle and nonroad engines and equipment exhaust source
categories and addresses the question of whether CARB diesel is a BACM
for the Maricopa County area.
(1) On-Road Motor Vehicle Exhaust
Section 211(c)(4)(A) of the CAA generally prohibits the state from
prescribing or attempting to enforce controls respecting motor vehicle
fuel characteristics or components that EPA has controlled under
section 211(c)(1),\6\ unless the state control is identical to the
Federal control. Under section 211(c)(4)(C), EPA may approve a non-
identical state fuel control as a SIP provision, if the state
demonstrates that the measure is necessary to achieve the NAAQS. We may
approve a state fuel requirement as necessary if no other measures
would bring about timely attainment, or if other measures exist and are
technically possible to implement but are unreasonable or
impracticable.
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\6\ This prohibition applies to all states except California, as
explained in section 211(c)(4)(B).
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EPA currently has nationwide regulations prescribing limits on
various characteristics and components of motor vehicle diesel fuel
(e.g., sulfur content limits, minimum cetane index and limits on
aromatic content) (55 FR 34120, August 21, 1990), thus, the state would
need to obtain a CAA section 211(c)(4)(C) waiver in order to implement
a different requirement governing characteristics and components of on-
road diesel fuel, i.e., CARB diesel, in the Maricopa County area.
However, Arizona has not requested a waiver for the Maricopa County
area and, since EPA has approved the state's demonstration of
attainment of the PM-10 NAAQS (67 FR 48718), EPA believes that the
state would not be able to provide a demonstration that CARB diesel is
necessary to achieve the NAAQS for PM-10. Thus, the State would not be
able to obtain a section 211(c)(4)(C) waiver necessary to implement
CARB diesel for on-road motor vehicles.
[[Page 38066]]
(2) Nonroad Engines and Equipment Exhaust
Unlike on-road diesel fuel, nonroad diesel fuel currently used in
engines and equipment is not subject to EPA standards; however,
starting in 2007, fuel sulfur levels in nonroad diesel fuel will be
limited to a maximum of 500 parts per million (ppm). This limit also
covers fuels used in locomotive and marine applications (though not to
the marine residual fuel used by very large engines on ocean-going
vessels).\7\ Unlike motor vehicle fuel, EPA regulation of nonroad fuel
does not trigger preemption of state fuel controls as the prohibition
in section 211(c)(4)(A) does not extend to fuels used in nonroad
engines and equipment. 69 FR 38958, 39072-39073 (June 29, 2004).\8\ EPA
believes however that requiring CARB diesel only for nonroad engines
and equipment in the Maricopa County area is not currently feasible as
discussed below.\9\
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\7\ Starting in 2010, fuel sulfur levels in most nonroad diesel
fuel will be reduced to 15 ppm. In the case of locomotive and marine
diesel fuel, this second step will occur in 2012. See 69 FR 38958
(June 29, 2004).
\8\ Note that to the extent that nonroad fuel is available for
use by both on-road motor vehicles and nonroad engines and
equipment, it is preempted. Id.
\9\ In addition to soliciting information on the issues
discussed in section II.B.2.a-c below, EPA is soliciting information
on the economic feasibility of requiring CARB diesel for nonroad
vehicles only. Given the issues discussed below and the reduced
emissions reductions benefit of implementing CARB diesel for only
nonroad vehicles, EPA expects the costs of implementing CARB diesel
to be much higher than if it were implemented for both on-road and
nonroad vehicles.
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(a) Fuel Availability
Arizona currently has no refineries and, thus, does not produce
CARB diesel; therefore, it must rely on refineries outside the state to
supply the fuel. (MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned Justification for
Nonimplementation of Particulate Control Measures Due to Infeasibility,
pp. 29, 33) The Maricopa County area's fuel is supplied through
pipelines from Los Angeles refineries and West Texas/New Mexico
refineries. (Evaluation of Gasoline and Diesel Fuel Options for
Maricopa County for State of Arizona Department of Environmental
Quality, January 30, 1998, MathPro Inc., (MathPro Report), pp. v, vi
and 10).
In 1997, it is estimated that the Maricopa County area used
approximately 23,000 barrels/day (352.6 million gallons/year) of diesel
fuel. Off-road diesel fuel consumption is approximately one third of
on-road consumption, thus, off-road consumption is estimated at 88.2
million gallons/year. (MathPro Report, p. 17-18). In order to implement
CARB diesel for nonroad vehicles, Arizona would need to ensure that the
supplying refiners would be able to produce an adequate supply of CARB
diesel for shipment to the Maricopa County area. This would depend on
various factors including, among other things, whether refiners have
adequate additional capacity beyond their current obligations to make
CARB diesel. The most likely source of CARB diesel seems to be from
Southern California refiners since they appear to be the only
refineries currently producing CARB diesel with pipeline transporting
capabilities to the Maricopa County area. However, information from
CARB and the California Energy Commission (CEC) on the availability of
CARB diesel is not conclusive.\10\ EPA solicits any additional
information that may provide a clearer understanding of the
availability of CARB diesel for nonroad engines and equipment in the
Maricopa County area.
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\10\ CARB reports that CARB diesel production by California
refineries has increased more than 14% since 1998. (Cal EPA, ARB,
STAFF REPORT: INITIAL STATEMENT OF REASONS FOR PROPOSED RULEMAKING,
Proposed Regulatory Amendments Extending the California Standards
for Motor Vehicle Diesel Fuel to Diesel Fuel Used in Harborcraft and
Intrastate Locomotives, October 1, 2004.) CARB estimates that by
2007 nearly 231,000 barrels per day (or 3.5 billion gallons per
year) of CARB diesel will be needed to meet California's demand. Id.
CARB also reports that refineries will have the capacity to produce
275,000 barrels per day (or 4.22 billion gallons per year) by 2007.
Id. CARB projects that there will not be a shortage of CARB diesel
for California and in fact there will be capacity for excess CARB
diesel production in California. Id.
However, data from the CEC indicates that 2.8 billion gallons of
CARB diesel were used by on-road vehicles in California in 2003.
(February 2, 2005 MEMORANDUM, February 2, 2005 Phone Conversation
with Chris Kavalec, California Energy Commission (CEC), on
California's Supply and Demand for CARB Diesel.) CEC staff estimates
that approximately 70% of total diesel usage in California is from
on-road vehicles, thus, total CARB diesel usage in California for
2003 is estimated at 3.99 billion gallons. Id. CEC data also
indicates that California refineries produced approximately 3.17
billion gallons in 2003. Id. Thus, in 2003, it appears that
California's usage of CARB diesel exceeded what its refineries
produced. Id. This shortage was likely made up by CARB diesel
imports from other domestic and foreign sources. Id. If there is not
a sufficient excess supply of CARB diesel, California refineries may
need to make a substantial investment of time and resources for
environmental permitting and construction in order to expand
operations before being able to supply CARB diesel to the Maricopa
County area. (MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned Justification for
Nonimplementation of Particulate Control Measures Due to
Infeasibility, p. 33 and December 6, 2004 MEMORANDUM, November 24,
2004 Phone Conversation with Gordon Shremp, CEC, on the availability
of CARB diesel). EPA was unable to obtain any information on the
availability of imports that could be supplied to the Maricopa
County area.
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(b) Fuel Storage and Segregation
Increasing the number of fuels provided to a specific geographic
area complicates and increases the demands on the fuels distribution
system at various points. Distinct fuels need to be segregated to
prevent contamination at each point in distributing fuels from a small
number of suppliers (refiners) to a large number of users. If the
Maricopa County area implements CARB diesel for nonroad engines and
equipment, it would have to ensure that the fuel could be stored
separately \11\ from other fuels and its distribution could be
segregated so that only nonroad engines and equipment would use it.
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\11\ According to ADWM staff (10/25/04 MEMORANDUM, October 24,
2004 Telephone Conversation with Duane Yantorno, Air/Fuel Quality
Manager, Arizona Department of Weights and Measures, Doris Lo, USEPA
Region 9, Wienke Tax, USEPA Region 9 on Availability of CARB Diesel
for the Maricopa County Nonattainment Area.), tank farms for fuel
storage in the Maricopa County area are currently at maximum
capacity. Thus, if some of the current diesel or gasoline tankage
were to be converted to CARB diesel, there could be shortages of
other fuels or new tankage might need to be built to accommodate
storage of CARB diesel while keeping it segregated from other fuels,
thus preventing contamination.
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These uncertainties must be resolved before CARB diesel can be
considered a feasible measure for the Maricopa County area. EPA
solicits any additional information that may provide a better
understanding of the fuel storage and segregation problems.
(c) Fueling Outside the Maricopa County Area
The effectiveness of implementing CARB diesel in the Maricopa
County area for nonroad engines and equipment is uncertain. Due to the
size of the area and the additional cost of CARB diesel, there would be
a significant incentive for owners and operators to fuel their nonroad
equipment outside the area and/or move their base of operations outside
the area whenever possible, thus greatly reducing the effectiveness of
the measure. Owners and operators of nonroad engines and equipment
using diesel fuel tend to be more sensitive to price increases and are
more likely to go outside the area to avoid higher priced fuels than
owners and operators of gasoline powered vehicles. This is because
diesel powered equipment tends to be larger and use much more fuel than
gasoline powered vehicles.\12\
[[Page 38067]]
The MAG plan states that ``California requires CARB diesel statewide. *
* * however, [in Arizona] CARB diesel would [apply solely to] * * *
part of Maricopa County and 12 townships in two other counties. At its
widest point, this area is approximately 66 miles across. The small
size of the area means that diesel users will be able to fuel their
vehicles outside the nonattainment area and reduce any potential
effectiveness the measure would have.'' (MAG plan, Summary of Reasoned
Justification for Nonimplementation of Particulate Control Measures Due
to Infeasibility, p. 29) In addition, the American Trucking
Associations, Inc. (ATA) states that ``[t]he trucking industry is
extremely competitive. * * * Since fuel is one of the largest expenses
for trucking companies, companies operating in the Maricopa
nonattainment area would have a strong incentive to travel outside the
nonattainment area to avoid purchasing the more expensive CARB-diesel.
* * *'' (ATA Amicus Curiae Brief, Vigil v. Leavitt, Case No. 02-72424;
decided at 366 F.3d 1025, amended at 381 F. 3d 826 (9th Cir. 2004).\13\
EPA agrees with these statements from the MAG plan and ATA; however,
EPA solicits any additional information that may provide a better
understanding of factors that may or may not cause owners and operators
of nonroad engines and equipment to purchase diesel fuel outside the
Maricopa County area.
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\12\ Diesel powered engines and equipment generally include
items such as construction equipment (tractors, backhoes, pile
drivers), agricultural equipment and heavy duty trucks. Gasoline
powered engines and equipment generally include items such as cars,
recreational vehicles and lawn and garden equipment. In addition,
the diesel powered engines and equipment also are likely to be owned
or operated in fleets where livelihood of the owner or operator's
business will be sensitive to small increases in per gallon fuel
costs.
\13\ While diesel trucks are not a nonroad source category, EPA
believes the concerns of refueling outside the Maricopa County area
raised by ATA are relevant to nonroad engines and equipment.
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III. MSM Demonstration and Extension of Attainment Date
As a serious PM-10 nonattainment area, the Maricopa County area was
required to attain the annual and 24-hour PM-10 standards by no later
than December 31, 2001. CAA section 188(c)(2). However, CAA section
188(e) allows us to extend the attainment date for a serious PM-10
nonattainment area for up to five years if attainment by 2001 is
impracticable and certain specified additional conditions are met.
Among these conditions is that the State must demonstrate to our
satisfaction that its serious area plan includes the most stringent
measures that are included in the implementation plan of any state and/
or are achieved in practice in any state and are feasible for the
area.\14\ Since, as discussed above, EPA is proposing to approve the
BACM demonstration in the MAG plan for the on-road and nonroad vehicle
exhaust source categories without CARB diesel, our determination for
the Maricopa County area in our July 25, 2002 action that CARB diesel
is also not required as a MSM because it does not advance the
attainment date is not affected. Thus, the attainment date extension
granted to the Maricopa County area in that action is also not
affected.
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\14\ See footnote 1.
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IV. Proposed Action
EPA proposes to approve the BACM demonstration in the MAG plan for
the source categories of on-road and nonroad vehicle exhaust without
CARB diesel. CARB diesel is not feasible for on-road motor vehicles
because Arizona cannot obtain a CAA section 211(c)(4)(C) waiver for
purposes of PM-10 attainment. CARB diesel is not feasible for nonroad
engines and equipment because of the uncertainties with fuel
availability, storage and segregation and program effectiveness due to
owners and operators fueling outside the Maricopa County area.
Therefore, EPA also proposes to approve the MSM demonstration in the
MAG plan and the associated extension of the attainment deadline for
the area from December 31, 2001 to December 31, 2006.
V. 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 and imposes no additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. Accordingly, the Administrator certifies that
this proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (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 (Pub. L. 104-4).
This proposed rule also does not have tribal implications because
it will not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes, as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). 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, and does not alter the relationship or the distribution of
power and responsibilities established in the 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, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. In
this context, in the absence of a prior existing requirement for the
State to use voluntary consensus standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for EPA, when it reviews a SIP
submission, to use VCS in place of a SIP submission that otherwise
satisfies the provisions of the Clean Air Act. Thus, the requirements
of section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) do not apply. 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 in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 22, 2005.
Laura Yoshi,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 05-13032 Filed 6-30-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P