Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2006 Critical Use Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide, 62030-62054 [05-21526]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 207 / Thursday, October 27, 2005 / Proposed Rules
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[FRL–7990–1]
RIN 2060–AN18
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The
2006 Critical Use Exemption From the
Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing an
exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide production and import for 2006
critical uses. Specifically, EPA is
proposing uses that will qualify for the
2006 critical use exemption, and the
amount of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or made available
from stocks for those uses in 2006.
EPA’s action is taken under the
authority of the Clean Air Act and
reflects recent consensus Decisions
taken by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer (Protocol) at the 16th
Meeting of the Parties (MOP) and the
2nd Extraordinary Meeting of the Parties
(ExMOP). EPA is seeking comment on
both the list of critical uses, and on
EPA’s determination of the amounts of
methyl bromide needed to satisfy those
uses.
DATES: Written comments on this
proposed rule must be received on or
before November 28, 2005, except as
otherwise noted in this paragraph. Any
party requesting a public hearing must
notify the contact person listed below
by 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on
November 7, 2005. If a hearing is
requested it will be held on November
14, 2005. If a hearing is held, any party
may submit follow-up comments in the
form of rebuttal or supplementary
information, but such comments must
be received on or before December 12,
2005. Persons interested in attending a
public hearing should consult with the
contact person below regarding the
location and time of the hearing.
Whether or not a hearing is held, if data
relevant to the critical use exemption
level is received on or before November
28, 2005, any party may submit followup comments regarding such data, but
such comments must be received on or
before December 12, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Regional Material in
Edocket (RME) ID No. OAR–2005–0122,
by one of the following methods:
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1. Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
instructions for submitting comments.
2. Agency Web site: https://
www.epa.gov/edocket. EDOCKET, EPA’s
electronic public docket and comment
system, is EPA’s preferred method for
receiving comments. Follow the on-line
instructions for submitting comments.
3. E-mail: A-and-R-docket@epa.gov.
4. Fax: (202) 343–2337, attn: Marta
Montoro.
5. Mail: ‘‘OAR–2005–0122’’, Air
Docket, Environmental Protection
Agency, Mailcode: 6102T, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington,
DC 20460.
6. Hand Delivery or Courier. Deliver
your comments to: EPA Air Docket, EPA
West, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Room B108, Mail Code 6102T,
Washington, DC 20460. Such deliveries
are only accepted during the Docket’s
normal hours of operation, and special
arrangements should be made for
deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
OAR–2005–0122. EPA’s policy is that
all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and
may be made available online at https://
www.epa.gov/edocket, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through EDOCKET,
regulations.gov, or e-mail. The EPA
EDOCKET and the Federal
regulations.gov Web site are
‘‘anonymous access’’ systems, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly
to EPA without going through
EDOCKET or regulations.gov, your email address will be automatically
captured and included as part of the
comment that is placed in the public
docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD–ROM
you submit. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form
of encryption, and be free of any defects
or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the EDOCKET index at
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https://www.epa.gov/edocket. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, i.e., CBI or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically in EDOCKET or in hard
copy at the Air Docket, EPA/DC, EPA
West, Room B102, 1301 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC. This
Docket Facility is open from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
excluding legal holidays. The telephone
number for the Public Reading Room is
(202) 566–1744, and the telephone
number for the Air Docket is (202) 566–
1742.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information about this proposed
rule, contact Marta Montoro by
telephone at (202) 343–9321, or by email at mebr.allocation@epa.gov or by
mail at Marta Montoro, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Stratospheric Protection Division,
Stratospheric Program Implementation
Branch (6205J), 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
You may also visit the Ozone Depletion
Web site of EPA’s Stratospheric
Protection Division at https://
www.epa.gov/ozone for further
information about EPA’s Stratospheric
Ozone Protection regulations, the
science of ozone layer depletion, and
other related topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
proposed rule concerns Clean Air Act
restrictions on the consumption,
production and on the use of methyl
bromide (class I, Group VI controlled
substance) for critical uses during the
calendar year of 2006. Under the Clean
Air Act, methyl bromide consumption
and production was phased out on
January 1, 2005 apart from allowable
exemptions, namely the critical use
exemption and the quarantine and preshipment exemption. With today’s
action, EPA is proposing and seeking
comment on the uses that will qualify
for the 2006 critical use exemption, as
well as specific amounts of methyl
bromide that may be produced,
imported, or made available from stocks
for proposed critical uses in 2006.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. Regulated Entities
B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document
and Other Related Information?
II. What Is the Background to the Phaseout
Regulations for Ozone-Depleting
Substances?
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III. What Is Methyl Bromide?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import of
Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
B. How Does This Proposed Rulemaking
Relate to Previous Rulemaking Regarding
the Critical Use Exemption?
C. What Are the Proposed Critical Uses?
D. What Are the Uses That May Obtain
Methyl Bromide for Research?
E. What Amount of Methyl Bromide Is
Necessary for Critical Uses?
F. What Are the Sources of Critical Use
Methyl Bromide?
G. What Are the Critical Use Allowance
Allocations?
H. What Are the Critical Stock Allowance
Allocations?
I. Clarifications to the Framework Rule
J. Proposed Supplementary Critical Use
Exemptions for 2006
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order No. 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order No. 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order No. 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order No. 13045: Protection
of Children From Environmental Health
& Safety Risks
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H. Executive Order No. 13211: Actions
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer
Advancement Act
I. General Information
A. Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this
proposed action are those associated
with the production, import, export,
sale, application and use of methyl
bromide covered by an approved critical
use exemption. Potentially regulated
categories and entities include:
Category
Examples of regulated entities
Industry ..............
Producers, Importers and Exporters of methyl bromide; Applicators, Distributors of methyl bromide; Users of methyl bromide,
e.g. farmers of vegetable crops, fruits and seedlings; and owners of stored food commodities and structures such as grain
mills and processors, Government and non-government researchers.
The above table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather to provide a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this proposed action. This
table lists the types of entities that EPA
is aware could potentially be regulated
by this proposed action. To determine
whether your facility, company,
business, or organization is regulated by
this proposed action, you should
carefully examine the regulations
promulgated at 40 CFR 82, subpart A. If
you have questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the person
listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
B. How Can I Get Copies of This
Document and Other Related
Information?
1. Docket. EPA has established an
official public docket for this action
under the Office of Air and Radiation
Docket & Information Center, Electronic
Air Docket ID No. OAR–2005–0122. The
official public docket consists of the
documents specifically referenced in
this action, any public comments
received, and other information related
to this action. Although a part of the
official docket, the public docket does
not include Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
The official public docket is the
collection of materials that is available
for public viewing at EPA West, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW., Room B108,
Mail Code 6102T, Washington, DC
20460, Phone: (202) 566–1742, Fax:
(202) 566–1741. The materials may be
inspected from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.
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Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. A reasonable fee may be
charged for copying docket materials.
2. Electronic Access. You may access
this Federal Register document
electronically through the EPA Internet
under the Federal Register listings at
https://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/. An
electronic version of the public docket
is available through EPA’s electronic
public docket and comment system,
EPA Dockets. EPA prefers that you use
the electronic EPA Dockets at https://
www.epa.gov/edocket/ to submit or
view public comments and access the
index listing of the contents of the
official public docket. To locate the
docket on EPA’s docket Web site, select
‘‘search,’’ then key in the appropriate
docket identification number, in this
case OAR–2005–0122.
Certain types of information will not
be placed in the EPA Dockets.
Information claimed as confidential
business information (CBI) and other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute, will not be
included in the official public docket
and will not be available for public
viewing in EPA’s electronic public
docket. EPA’s policy is that copyrighted
material will not be placed in EPA’s
electronic public docket but will be
available only in printed, paper form in
the official public docket. Although not
all docket materials may be available
electronically, you may still access any
of the publicly available docket
materials through the docket facility
identified in Unit B.
For public commenters, it is
important to note that EPA’s policy is
that public comments, whether
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submitted electronically or in paper,
will be made available for public
viewing in EPA’s electronic public
docket as EPA receives them and
without change, unless the comment
contains copyrighted material, CBI, or
other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. When EPA
identifies a comment containing
copyrighted material, EPA will provide
a reference to that material in the
version of the comment that is placed in
EPA’s electronic public docket.
Public comments submitted on
computer disks that are mailed or
delivered to the docket will be
transferred to EPA’s electronic public
docket. Public comments that are
mailed or delivered to the Docket will
be scanned and placed in EPA’s
electronic public docket. Where
practical, physical objects will be
photographed, and the photograph will
be placed in EPA’s electronic public
docket along with a brief description
written by the docket staff.
II. What Is the Background to the
Phaseout Regulations for OzoneDepleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements
of the Stratospheric Ozone Protection
Program that limit production and
consumption of ozone depleting
substances can be found at 40 CFR part
82 subpart A. The regulatory program
was originally published in the Federal
Register on August 12, 1988 (53 FR
30566), in response to the 1987 signing
and subsequent ratification of the
Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Protocol). The
U.S. was one of the original signatories
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to the 1987 Montreal Protocol and the
U.S. ratified the Protocol on April 12,
1988. Congress then enacted, and
President George H.W. Bush signed into
law, the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 (CAAA of 1990) which included
Title VI on Stratospheric Ozone
Protection, codified as 42 U.S.C.
Chapter 85, Subchapter VI, to ensure
that the United States could satisfy its
obligations under the Protocol. EPA
issued new regulations to implement
this legislation and has made several
amendments to the regulations since
that time.
III. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless,
colorless, toxic gas which is used as a
broad-spectrum pesticide and is
controlled under the CAA as a Class I
ozone depleting substance (ODS).
Methyl bromide is used in the U.S. and
throughout the world as a fumigant to
control a wide variety of pests such as
insects, weeds, rodents, pathogens, and
nematodes. Additional characteristics
and details about the uses of methyl
bromide can be found in the proposed
rule on the phaseout schedule for
methyl bromide published in the
Federal Register on March 18, 1993 (58
FR 15014) and the final rule published
in the Federal Register on December 10,
1993 (58 FR 65018).
The phaseout schedule for methyl
bromide production and consumption
was revised in a direct final rulemaking
on November 28, 2000 (65 FR 70795),
which allowed for the phased reduction
in methyl bromide consumption and
extended the phaseout to 2005. The
revised phaseout schedule was again
amended to allow for an exemption for
quarantine and preshipment purposes
on July 19, 2001 (66 FR 37751) with an
interim final rule and with a final rule
(68 FR 238) on January 2, 2003.
Information on methyl bromide can be
found at the following sites of the World
Wide Web: https://www.epa.gov/ozone/
mbr and https://www.unep.org/ozone or
by contacting the Stratospheric Ozone
Hotline at 1–800–296–1996.
Because it is a pesticide, methyl
bromide is also regulated by EPA under
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and other
statutes and regulatory authority, as
well as by States under their own
statutes and regulatory authority. Under
FIFRA, methyl bromide is a restricted
use pesticide. Because of this status, a
restricted use pesticide is subject to
certain Federal and State requirements
governing its sale, distribution, and use.
Nothing in this final rule implementing
the Clean Air Act is intended to
derogate from provisions in any other
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Federal, State, or local laws or
regulations governing actions including,
but not limited to, the sale, distribution,
transfer, and use of methyl bromide. All
entities that would be affected by
provisions of this rule must continue to
comply with FIFRA and other pertinent
statutory and regulatory requirements
for pesticides (including, but not limited
to, requirements pertaining to restricted
use pesticides) when importing,
exporting, acquiring, selling,
distributing, transferring, or using
methyl bromide for critical uses. The
regulations in today’s action are
intended only to implement the CAA
restrictions on the production,
consumption and use of methyl bromide
for critical uses exempted from the
phaseout of methyl bromide.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
Methyl bromide was added to the
Protocol as an ozone depleting
substance in 1992 through the
Copenhagen amendment to the Protocol.
The Parties authorize critical use
exemptions through their Decisions.
The Parties agreed that each
industrialized country’s level of methyl
bromide production and consumption
in 1991 should be the baseline for
establishing a freeze in the level of
methyl bromide production and
consumption for industrialized
countries. EPA published a final rule in
the Federal Register on December 10,
1993 (58 FR 65018), listing methyl
bromide as a class I, Group VI
controlled substance, freezing U.S.
production and consumption at this
1991 level, and, in Section 82.7 of the
rule, setting forth the percentage of
baseline allowances for methyl bromide
granted to companies in each control
period (each calendar year) until the
year 2001, when the complete phaseout
would occur (58 FR 65018). This
phaseout date was established in
response to a petition filed in 1991
under sections 602(c)(3) and 606(b) of
the CAA of 1990, requesting that EPA
list methyl bromide as a class I
substance and phase out its production
and consumption. This date was
consistent with section 602(d) of the
CAA of 1990, which for newly listed
class I ozone-depleting substances
provides that ‘‘no extension [of the
phaseout schedule in section 604] under
this subsection may extend the date for
termination of production of any class I
substance to a date more than 7 years
after January 1 of the year after the year
in which the substance is added to the
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list of class I substances.’’ EPA based its
action on scientific assessments and
actions by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol to freeze the level of methyl
bromide production and consumption
for industrialized countries at the 1992
Meeting of the Parties on Copenhagen.
At their 1995 meeting, the Parties
made adjustments to the methyl
bromide control measures and agreed to
reduction steps and a 2010 phaseout
date for industrialized countries with
exemptions permitted for critical uses.
At that time, the U.S. continued to have
a 2001 phaseout date in accordance
with the CAA of 1990 language. At their
1997 meeting, the Parties agreed to
further adjustments to the phaseout
schedule for methyl bromide in
industrialized countries, with reduction
steps leading to a 2005 phaseout for
industrialized countries. In October
1998, the U.S. Congress amended the
CAA to prohibit the termination of
production of methyl bromide prior to
January 1, 2005, to require EPA to bring
the U.S. phaseout of methyl bromide in
line with the schedule specified under
the Protocol, and to authorize EPA to
provide exemptions for critical uses.
These amendments were contained in
Section 764 of the 1999 Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act (Pub.
L. 105–277, October 21, 1998) and were
codified in Section 604 of the CAA, 42
U.S.C. 7671c. On November 28, 2000,
EPA issued regulations to amend the
phaseout schedule for methyl bromide
and extend the complete phaseout of
production and consumption to 2005
(65 FR 70795).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982),
EPA published a final rule in the
Federal Register that established the
framework for the critical use
exemption; set forth a list of approved
critical uses for 2005; and specified the
amount of methyl bromide that could be
supplied in 2005 from available stocks
and new production or import to meet
approved critical uses. Today, EPA is
proposing the uses that will qualify as
approved critical uses in 2006 and the
amount of the 2006 critical use
exemption.
Today’s proposed action reflects
Decision XVI/2, taken at the Parties’
Sixteenth Meeting in November 2004;
and Decision Ex.II/I, taken at the Second
Extraordinary Meeting of the Parties in
July 2005. In accordance with Article
2H(5), the Parties have issued several
Decisions pertaining to the critical use
exemption. These include Decision IX/
6, which sets forth criteria for review of
proposed critical uses; Decision XVI/2,
which approved a portion of the 2006
nominated amounts and critical-use
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categories; and Decision Ex.II/I, which
approved another portion of the 2006
nominated amounts for critical-use
categories. For a discussion of the
relationship between the relevant
provisions of the CAA and Article 2H of
the Protocol, and the extent to which
EPA takes into account Decisions of the
Parties that interpret Article 2H, refer to
the December 23, 2004 FR notice (69 FR
76984–76985). Briefly, EPA regards
Decisions IX/6, XVI/2, and Decision
Ex.II/1 as subsequent consensus
agreements of the Parties that address
the interpretation and application of the
critical use provision in Article 2H(5) of
the Protocol. In today’s action, EPA is
following the terms of these Decisions.
This will ensure consistency with the
Montreal Protocol and satisfy the
requirements of Section 604(d)(6) and
Section 614(b) of the Clean Air Act.
In Decision XVI/2, taken in November
2004, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
as follows: ‘‘for the agreed critical-use
categories for 2006, set forth in section
IIA to the annex to the present decision
for each Party, to permit, subject to the
conditions set forth in decision Ex.I/4,
to the extent those conditions are
applicable, the levels of production and
consumption for 2006 set forth in
section IIB to the annex to the present
decision which are necessary to satisfy
critical uses, with the understanding
that additional levels of production and
consumption and categories of uses may
be approved by the Meeting of the
Parties to the Montreal Protocol in
accordance with decision IX/6.’’ Section
IIA of the Annex to Decision XVI/2 lists
the following critical use categories for
the U.S.: Cucurbits—field; dried fruit
and nuts; forest nursery seedlings;
nursery stock—fruit trees, raspberries,
roses; strawberry runners; turfgrass; dry
commodities cocoa beans; dry
commodities/structures; eggplant field;
mills and processors; peppers field;
strawberry fruit field; tomato field; and
orchard replant with a total agreed
critical-use level of 6,897,680 kilograms,
which is equivalent to 27% of the U.S.
1991 methyl bromide consumption
baseline.
In Decision Ex.II/1, taken in July
2005, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
as follows: ‘‘for the agreed critical uses
for 2006, set forth in table A of the
annex to the present decision, to permit,
subject to the conditions set forth in the
present decision and in decision Ex. I/
4, to the extent those conditions are
applicable, the supplementary levels of
production and consumption for 2006
set forth in table B of the annex to the
present decision which are necessary to
satisfy critical uses, with the
understanding that additional levels and
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categories of uses may be approved by
the Seventeenth Meeting of the Parties
in accordance with decision IX/6.’’
Table A of the Annex to Decision Ex.II/
1 lists the following critical use
categories for the U.S.: Ornamentals;
dry-cured ham; dry commodities/
structures (cocoa beans); dry
commodities/structures (processed
foods, herbs and spices, dried milk and
cheese processing facilities); eggplant—
field, for research only; mills and
processors; peppers—field; strawberry
fruit—field; tomato—field with a total
agreed critical-use level of 1,117,003
kilograms, which is equivalent to 5% of
the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline. When combined,
the agreed critical-use levels for 2006
from Decision XVI/2 and from Decision
Ex.II/1 total 8,074,683 kilograms, which
is equivalent to 32% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline.
Based, in part, on the applications
underlying the U.S. 2006 nomination,
the extensive review of those
applications culminating in the
preparation of that nomination, and the
Decisions noted above, EPA is
proposing to modify Columns B and C
of Appendix L to 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A to reflect agreed critical-use
categories, locations of use, and limiting
critical conditions applicable for the
2006 control period.
The question of whether, and to what
extent, EPA should adjust the total
critical use level agreed by the Parties
for 2006 is addressed in Section E
below. The question of what amount of
the total should come from new
production or import, and what amount
should come from pre-phaseout
inventories, is addressed in Section F
below. For the reasons given in those
sections, and based, in part, on the
applications underlying the U.S. 2006
nomination, the extensive review of
those applications culminating in the
preparation of that nomination, and the
Decisions noted above, EPA is
proposing to modify the table in 40 CFR
82.8 to reflect the amount of methyl
bromide that may be produced or
imported, and sold from pre-phaseout
inventories, for the 2006 control period.
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying
applicants as to the availability of an
application process for a critical use
exemption to the methyl bromide
phaseout. On May 23, 2005, the Agency
published a notice in the Federal
Register (68 FR 24737) announcing the
deadline to apply, and directing
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applicants to announcements posted on
EPA’s methyl bromide Web site at
https://www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr.
Applicants were told they may apply as
individuals or as part of a group of users
(a ‘‘consortium’’) who face the same
limiting critical conditions (i.e., specific
conditions which establish a critical
need for methyl bromide). This process
has been repeated on an annual basis
since then. The critical use exemption is
designed to meet the needs of methyl
bromide users who do not have
technically and economically feasible
alternatives available to them.
The criteria for the exemption are
delineated in Decision IX/6 of the
Parties to the Protocol. In that Decision,
the Parties agreed that ‘‘a use of methyl
bromide should qualify as ‘critical’ only
if the nominating Party determines that:
(i) The specific use is critical because
the lack of availability of methyl
bromide for that use would result in a
significant market disruption; and (ii)
there are no technically and
economically feasible alternatives or
substitutes available to the user that are
acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and public health and are
suitable to the crops and circumstances
of the nomination.’’
In response to the yearly requests for
critical use exemption applications
published in the Federal Register,
applicants have provided information
supporting their position that they have
no technically and economically
feasible alternatives to methyl bromide
available to them. Applicants for the
exemption have submitted information
on their use of methyl bromide, on
research into the use of alternatives to
methyl bromide, on efforts to minimize
use of methyl bromide and efforts to
reduce emissions and on the specific
technical and economic research results
of testing alternatives to methyl
bromide.
EPA’s December 23, 2004, regulation
describing the operational framework
for the critical use exemption (69 FR
76982) established the majority of
critical uses for the 2005 calendar.
Today’s action proposes exemptions for
2006 reflecting information that the U.S.
Government submitted to the Protocol’s
Ozone Secretariat in its annual
Nomination submission in February
2004, as approved by the Parties in July
2005. For each exemption period, EPA
provides an opportunity such as this for
comment on the amounts of methyl
bromide that may be supplied under the
critical use exemption and the end uses
that may obtain this critical use methyl
bromide.
The domestic review process is
discussed in detail in a memo titled
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‘‘Development of 2003 Nomination for a
Critical Use Exemption for Methyl
Bromide for the United States of
America’’ on EDOCKET OAR–2005–
0122. Briefly, the U.S. Government
reviews applications using the criteria
in Decision IX/6 and creates a package
for submission to the Ozone Secretariat
of the Protocol (the ‘‘critical use
nomination’’ or CUN). The CUNs of
various countries are then reviewed by
the Methyl Bromide Technical Options
Committee (MBTOC) and the Technical
and Economic Assessment Panel
(TEAP), which are independent
advisory bodies to the Parties. These
bodies make recommendations to the
Parties regarding the nominations.
On February 7, 2004, the U.S.
Government submitted the second U.S.
Nomination for a Critical Use
Exemption for Methyl Bromide to the
Ozone Secretariat of the United Nations
Environment Programme. This second
nomination contained a supplemental
request for critical methyl bromide for
2005 and the initial request for 2006. In
June 2004, MBTOC sent questions to the
U.S. Government concerning technical
and economic issues in the nomination.
The U.S. Government’s response was
transmitted on August 12, 2004. The
U.S. submitted a revised request in
conjunction with ‘‘The U.S. Nomination
for Critical Uses for Methyl Bromide in
2007 and Beyond.’’ This revised request
was for an additional amount of 622,053
kilograms of methyl bromide for a total
of 2,844,985 kilograms of methyl
bromide for the year 2006. This revised
request was included in the U.S.
rebuttal to MBTOC’s recommendation
issued in its October 2004 report. These
documents, together with reports by the
advisory bodies noted above, can be
accessed on EDOCKET OAR–2005–
0122.
B. How Does This Proposed Rulemaking
Relate to Previous Rulemakings
Regarding the Critical Use Exemption?
On December 23, 2004, EPA
published in the Federal Register a
Final Rule entitled, ‘‘Protection of
Stratospheric Ozone: Process for
Exempting Critical Uses From the
Phaseout of Methyl Bromide’’ (the
‘‘Framework Rule’’) (69 FR 76982). That
rule established the framework for the
critical use exemption in the U.S,
including trading provisions and
recordkeeping and reporting obligations.
The Framework Rule defines the
terms ‘‘critical use allowances’’ (CUAs)
and ‘‘critical stock allowances’’ (CSAs)
at 40 CFR 82.3. Each allowance
represents the right to produce or
import, or to sell from inventory,
respectively, one kilogram of methyl
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bromide to an approved critical use. For
example, a distributor with 100 CSAs
may sell 100 kilograms of stockpiled
pre-phaseout methyl bromide to an
approved critical use. Today’s action
proposes the uses that will qualify as
approved critical uses for 2006 and the
amount of CUAs and CSAs to be
allocated for those uses. In the future,
EPA will continue to undertake
rulemakings that address both the
approved critical uses and the amounts
of methyl bromide to be allocated for
critical uses in specific exemption
periods.
On August 30, 2005, EPA published a
direct final rule and concurrent
proposal relating to supplemental
critical use exemptions for 2005 (70 FR
51270). These recent notices in the
Federal Register would establish three
(3) additional uses as qualifying for the
critical use exemption and permit
access to critical use methyl bromide for
those uses in 2005. These notices would
also allocate additional CSAs for
supplementary amounts of critical use
methyl bromide in 2005. The additional
allocations for 2005 would supplement
the CUAs and CSAs previously
allocated for 2005 in the Federal
Register on December 23, 2004 (69 FR
76982). In today’s proposed action, the
Agency is proposing: (1) To establish
the list of uses that qualify for the
critical use exemption in 2006; and (2)
to specify the amounts of methyl
bromide that may be produced or
imported, or supplied from prephaseout inventories, for those uses in
2006. EPA seeks comment on the
proposed 2006 critical uses and the
amount of methyl bromide the Agency
has determined to be necessary to
satisfy those uses. For detailed technical
and economic information on the
critical uses and the U.S. Government’s
justifications for why there is a critical
need for exempted methyl bromide, the
Agency refers commenters to the EDocket where the U.S. nominations and
additional information in the form of
responses to MBTOC are available. The
2004 U.S. nomination can be found at
EDOCKET OAR–2003–0017 and
EDOCKET OAR–2005–0122. These are
the technical documents which are the
basis for the Parties’ authorization of
critical uses and permitted exempt
production and import and which form
part of the basis for this rulemaking.
Reports by the Protocol’s advisory
bodies, the MBTOC and TEAP, as well
as questions to the U.S. from MBTOC,
are also available in EDOCKET OAR–
2005–0122.
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C. What Are the Proposed Critical Uses?
In Decision XVI/2, taken in November
2004, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
as follows: ‘‘for the agreed critical-use
categories for 2006, set forth in section
IIA to the annex to the present decision
for each Party, to permit, subject to the
conditions set forth in decision Ex.I/4,
to the extent those conditions are
applicable, the levels of production and
consumption for 2006 set forth in
section IIB to the annex to the present
decision which are necessary to satisfy
critical uses, with the understanding
that additional levels of production and
consumption and categories of uses may
be approved by the Meeting of the
Parties to the Montreal Protocol in
accordance with decision IX/6.’’ Section
IIA of the Annex to Decision XVI/2 lists
the following critical use categories for
the U.S.: Cucurbits—field; dried fruit
and nuts; forest nursery seedlings;
nursery stock—fruit trees, raspberries,
roses; strawberry runners; turfgrass; dry
commodities cocoa beans; dry
commodities/structures; eggplant field;
mills and processors; peppers field;
strawberry fruit field; tomato field; and
orchard replant with a total agreed
critical-use level of 6,897,680 kilograms,
which is equivalent to 27% of the U.S.
1991 methyl bromide consumption
baseline.
In Decision Ex.II/1, taken in July
2005, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
as follows: ‘‘for the agreed critical uses
for 2006, set forth in table A of the
annex to the present decision, to permit,
subject to the conditions set forth in the
present decision and in decision Ex. I/
4, to the extent those conditions are
applicable, the supplementary levels of
production and consumption for 2006
set forth in table B of the annex to the
present decision which are necessary to
satisfy critical uses, with the
understanding that additional levels and
categories of uses may be approved by
the Seventeenth Meeting of the Parties
in accordance with decision IX/6.’’
Table A of the Annex to Decision Ex.II/
1 lists the following critical use
categories for the U.S.: Ornamentals;
dry-cured ham; dry commodities/
structures (cocoa beans); dry
commodities/structures (processed
foods, herbs and spices, dried milk and
cheese processing facilities); eggplant—
field, for research only; mills and
processors; peppers—field; strawberry
fruit—field; tomato—field with a total
agreed critical-use level of 1,117,003
kilograms, which is equivalent to 5% of
the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline. When combined,
the agreed critical-use levels for 2006
from Decision XVI/2 and from Decision
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Ex.II/1 total 8,074,683 kilograms, which
is equivalent to 32% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline.
Based, in part, on the applications
underlying the U.S. 2006 nomination,
the extensive review of those
applications culminating in the
preparation of that nomination, and the
Decisions noted above, EPA is
proposing to modify Columns B and C
of Appendix L to 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A to reflect agreed critical-use
categories.
Under the December 23, 2004,
Framework Rule (69 FR 76982), an
approved critical user may obtain access
to exempted production/import and
limited inventories of pre-phaseout
methyl bromide stocks, the combination
of which constitute the supply of
‘‘critical use methyl bromide’’ intended
to meet the needs of agreed critical uses.
As set out in the Framework Rule, an
approved critical user is a self-identified
entity who meets the following
requirements:
(1) For the applicable control period,
applied to EPA for a critical use
exemption or is a member of a
consortium that applied to EPA for a
critical use exemption for a use and
location of use that was included in the
U.S. nomination, authorized by a
Decision of the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol, and then finally determined by
EPA in a notice-and-comment
rulemaking to be an approved critical
use, and
(2) Has an area in the applicable
location of use that requires methyl
bromide fumigation because the person
reasonably expects that the area will be
subject to a limiting critical condition
(LCC) during the applicable control
period.
Using these criteria, an approved
critical user could be a tomato farmer in
Florida whose farm is over karst
topography but would not include a
tomato farmer in Oklahoma even if he
too has a farm over karst topography
because no exemption application was
filed on behalf of Oklahoma tomato
farmers. Similarly, a Florida tomato
farmer who did not have a field with
karst topography, or one of the other
limiting critical conditions specified in
this rule, would not be an approved
critical user because the circumstance of
the use is not an approved critical use.
A ‘‘limiting critical condition’’ is the
basis on which the critical need for
methyl bromide is demonstrated and
authorized. It is defined as ‘‘the
regulatory, technical, and economic
circumstances * * * that establish
conditions of critical use of methyl
bromide in a fumigation area.’’ 40 CFR
82.3. The limiting critical condition
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placed on a use category reflects certain
regulatory, technical, or economic
factors that either prohibit the use of
alternatives or represent the lack of a
technically or economically feasible
alternative for that use or circumstance.
For example, EPA may determine that a
critical use exemption for tomatoes is
only necessary for areas of tomato
production in karst topography even if
the EPA received applications for all of
U.S. fresh market tomato production. In
this example, not all tomato growers
would be eligible to acquire exempted
critical use methyl bromide. Only those
growers with production in an area with
the limiting critical condition of karst
topography would have access to the
methyl bromide under the critical use
exemption. Another example is as
follows: EPA received applications for
exemptions for all U.S. grain milling
companies that are members of the
North American Milling Association
(NAMA). The Parties authorized the
exemption because grain milling
companies have a critical need for
methyl bromide because the alternatives
can not be used, in part, due to
corrosivity to electronic equipment.
Thus, one of the limiting critical
conditions for this critical use category
is the presence of sensitive electronic
equipment subject to corrosivity from
fumigation with the alternative. All
grain mills that are members of NAMA
that have sensitive electronic equipment
would be eligible to acquire and use
critical use methyl bromide.
EPA is proposing the critical uses for
the year 2006 as well as the conditions
that make these uses ‘‘critical’’ based on
EPA’s assessment of the technical and
economic feasibility of alternatives and
the potential for a significant market
disruption if methyl bromide were not
available for the uses proposed for 2006.
This proposal is based on the
information submitted by CUE
applicants, as well as public and
proprietary data sources. The CUE
applications (except to the extent
claimed confidential), the U.S.
nomination, the questions and answers
between the MBTOC and the U.S.
Government about the nomination, and
procedural memos are all available on
EDOCKET OAR–2005–0122. Data
submitted by the CUE applicants served
as a basis for the nomination. EPA and
other government experts also sought
data from multiple other sources,
including but not limited to the
National Agricultural Statistics Service
of the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
the State of California Department of
Pesticide Regulation, and proprietary
agricultural databases available to EPA.
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62035
All of the CUE applications underwent
a rigorous review by highly qualified
technical experts. A detailed
explanation of the nomination process,
including the criteria used by expert
reviewers, is available in a memo titled
‘‘2003 Nomination Process’’ on
EDOCKET OAR–2005–0122. The memo
was originally written to describe the
process leading to the 2005 critical use
exemption rules, but is applicable
generally to the process leading to
today’s action.
The U.S. Government, in developing
the nomination, defined the limiting
critical conditions for which exempted
methyl bromide was being sought. The
U.S. Government used the information
referenced above to determine if (a) the
lack of availability of methyl bromide
for a particular use would result in
significant market disruption, and (b) if
there were any technically and
economically feasible methyl bromide
substitutes available to the user. The
analysis was described in the U.S.
nomination of critical uses. The
nomination was then sent to the Parties
to the Protocol, and the Parties used the
information in the nomination and the
report from the MBTOC, that was based
in part on the iterative exchange of
questions and answers with the U.S.
Government, as the basis for the
Decisions which authorized critical
uses.
Based on the information described
above, EPA determined that the uses in
Table I, with the limiting critical
conditions specified, qualify to obtain
and use critical use methyl bromide in
2006. However, as discussed in Section
E, some of the circumstances for some
of the critical use categories have
changed due to recent registrations of an
alternative and therefore EPA is
proposing a decrease in the total CUE
level for 2006. EPA welcomes
submissions of additional information
regarding substitutes and alternatives
for any of the uses in the Table I below.
EPA wishes to note that while we may,
in response to comments, reduce the
quantities of critical use methyl
bromide, or the types of critical uses,
compared to what has been authorized
by the Parties, EPA will not increase the
quantities, or types, beyond those
authorized by the Parties.
EPA proposes, based on the
determination described in the U.S.
nomination and its supporting
documents, that users who are in a
specific geographic location, identified
below, or who are members of a specific
industry consortium, identified below,
or companies specifically identified
below, are approved critical users
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provided that such users are subject to
the specified limiting critical condition.
EPA notes the reference to emission
minimization techniques in paragraph 6
of Decision Ex.II/1 and urges the
proposed users listed in Table I. below
to use ‘‘emission minimization
techniques such as virtually
impermeable films, barrier film
technologies, deep shank injection and/
or other techniques that promote
environmental protection, whenever
technically and economically feasible.’’
Users of methyl bromide should make
every effort to decrease overall
emissions of methyl bromide by
implementing measures such as the
ones listed in the previous sentence, to
the extent consistent with state and
local laws and regulations. In addition,
research is being conducted on the
potential to reduce rates and emissions
using high-barrier films.
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
PRE-PLANT USES
Cucurbits ..................
(a) Michigan growers ............................
(b) Southeastern U.S. except Georgia
limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
(c) Georgia growers ..............................
Eggplant ...................
(a) Florida growers ................................
(b) Georgia growers ..............................
(c) Michigan growers .............................
Forest Nursery Seedlings.
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(a) growers in Alabama, Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas
and Virginia.
(b) International Paper with and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations
in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia,
South Carolina and Texas.
(c) Public (government owned) seedling nurseries in the states of Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,
Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, New
Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Utah, Washington, West Virginia and
Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, North
Carolina and South Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing in
Washington and Oregon.
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With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe soilborne fungal disease infestation, or moderate to severe disease infestation could occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or to a lesser
extent: fungal disease infestation and root knot nematodes; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, moderate to
severe fungal disease infestation, or to a lesser extent: root knot nematodes;
or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or restrictions on alternatives due to karst geology; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root and collar rots, or
moderate to severe southern blight infestation, and to a lesser extent: crown
and root rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe soilborne fungal disease infestation could occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe weed infestation including purple and yellow
nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation, or
moderate to severe nematodes, and to a lesser extent: fungal disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, moderate to
severe disease infestation, and to a lesser extent: nematodes and worms.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist of could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe
fungal disease infestation.
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62037
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
(f) Michigan growers .............................
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, moderate to severe Canada
thistle infestation, moderate to severe nutsedge infestation, and to a lesser
extent: nematodes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe nematodes, moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, and to a lesser extent: yellow nutsedge and other weeds infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematode infestation, medium to heavy clay
soils, or a prohibition of on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products due to
reaching local township limits on the use of this alternative; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, medium to heavy clay soils, or a
prohibition of on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products due to reaching
local township limits on the use of this alternative; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or user may be prohibited from using
1,3-dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe yellow
or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe black root rot, or moderate to severe root-knot
nematodes, or moderate to severe yellow and purple nutsedge infestation,
and to a lesser extent: crown rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard
replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative
have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard
replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative
have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard
soils to prevent orchard replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township
limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard
soils to prevent orchard replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township
limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(g) Michigan herbaceous perennials
growers.
Orchard Nursery
Seedlings.
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry
Nursery Consortium limited to growing locations in California and Washington (Driscoll’s raspberries and
their contract growers in California
and Washington).
(b) Members of the California Association of Nurserymen-Deciduous Fruit
and Nut Tree Growers.
(c) California rose nurseries ..................
Strawberry Nurseries
(a) California growers ............................
(b) North Carolina, Tennessee and
Maryland growers.
Orchard Replant .......
(a) California stone fruit growers ..........
(b) California table and raisin grape
growers.
(c) California walnut growers ................
(d) California almond growers ...............
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TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
Ornamentals .............
(a) California growers ............................
Peppers ....................
Strawberry Fruit ........
Tomatoes .................
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With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because
local township limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Florida growers ................................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe weed infestation, or moderate to severe disease
infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or karst topography; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) California growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because
local township limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Lou- With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
isiana, North Carolina, South Caroconditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumilina, Tennessee and Virginia growers.
gation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root, collar,
crown and root rots, or the presence of an occupied structure within 100 feet
of a grower’s field the size of 100 acres or less; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(c) Florida growers ................................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or
karst topography; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(d) Georgia growers .............................. With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root and collar rots, or
moderate to severe southern blight infestation, and to a lesser extent: crown
and root rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(e) Michigan growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe fungal disease infestation would occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) California growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe black root rot or crown rot, or moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or
a prohibition of the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative have been reached, time to transition to an alternative; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Florida growers ................................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge, or moderate to severe
nematodes, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or karst topography
and to a lesser extent: carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illi- With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
nois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland,
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumiNew Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
gation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge, or moderate to severe
South Carolina, Tennessee and Virnematodes, or moderate to severe black root and crown rot, or the presence
ginia growers.
of an occupied structure within 100 feet of a grower’s field the size of 100
acres or less; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) Michigan growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe fungal
pathogens infestation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Geor- With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
gia, Kentucky, Louisiana, North
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumiCarolina, South Carolina, and Tengation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or modnessee growers.
erate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or the
presence of an occupied structure within 100 feet of a grower’s field the size
of 100 acres or less, or karst topography; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
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62039
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
(c) California growers ............................
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
For the production of industry certified pure sod; with a reasonable expectation
that one or more of the following limiting critical conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
bermudagrass, nutsedge and off-type perennial grass infestation, or moderate to severe, or moderate to severe white grub infestation; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Turfgrass ..................
(a) U.S. turfgrass sod nursery producers who are members of
Turfgrass Producers International
(TPI).
POST-HARVEST USES
Food Processing ......
(a) Rice millers in all locations in the
U.S. who are members of the USA
Rice Millers Association.
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities in
the U.S. who are active members of
the Pet Food Institute. (For today’s
rule, ‘‘pet food’’ refers to domestic
dog and cat food).
(c) Kraft Foods in the U.S. ....................
(d) Members of the North American
Millers’ Association in the U.S.
Commodity Storage
Dry Cured Pork
Products.
(e) Members of the National Pest Management Association associated with
dry commodity structure fumigation
(cocoa) and dry commodity fumigation (processed foods, herbs, spices,
and dried milk).
(a) California entities storing walnuts,
beans, dried plums, figs, raisins,
dates and pistachios in California.
(a) Members of the National Country
Ham Association.
(b) Members of the American Association of Meat Processors.
(c) Nahunta Pork Center (North Carolina).
D. What Are the Uses That May Obtain
Methyl Bromide for Research?
The categories listed in Section F
above have been designated critical uses
for 2006 in Decision XVI/2 and Decision
Ex.II/1 of the Parties. The amount of
methyl bromide approved for research
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With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: moderate to severe infestation of beetles, weevils or
moths, or older structures that cannot be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: moderate to severe infestation or beetles, moths, or cockroaches, or older structures that cannot be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: older structures that cannot be properly sealed to use an
alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe beetle infestation, or older structures that cannot be
properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of
sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an
alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation, or older structures that can
not be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: rapid fumigation is required to meet a critical market window, such as during the holiday season, rapid fumigation is required when a
buyer provides short (2 working days or less) notification for a purchase, or
there is a short period after harvest in which to fumigate and there is limited
silo availability for using alternatives; or with a need for methyl bromide for
research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
purposes is included in the amount of
methyl bromide approved by the Parties
for the commodities for which
‘‘research’’ is indicated as a limiting
critical condition in the table above.
However, the Agency is not setting aside
a specific quantity of methyl bromide to
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be associated with research activities.
Methyl bromide is needed for research
purposes including experiments that
require methyl bromide as a control
chemical with which to compare the
trial alternatives’ results. EPA is
proposing that the following sectors be
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allowed to use methyl bromide for
research purposes: cucurbits, dried fruit
and nuts, nursery stock, strawberry
nurseries, turfgrass, eggplant, peppers,
strawberry fruit, tomatoes, and orchard
replant. These are the sectors that
requested methyl bromide for research
in their applications to EPA.
E. What Amount of Methyl Bromide Is
Necessary for Critical Uses?
In this section, EPA proposes the
amount of methyl bromide that may be
produced or imported for critical uses in
2006, and the amount that may be sold
for critical uses from pre-phaseout
inventories. Section IIB of the Annex to
Decision XVI/2 lists a ‘‘permitted level
of production and consumption’’ for the
United States in 2006 of 6,897,680
kilograms, which is equivalent to 27%
of the 1991 baseline of 25,528,270
kilograms. Table B of the Annex to
Decision Ex.II/1 lists a ‘‘permitted level
of production and consumption’’ for the
United States in 2006 of 760,585
kilograms, which is equivalent to 3% of
the 1991 baseline. When combined, the
permitted level of production and
consumption from the two Decisions is
7,658,265 kilograms, which is
equivalent to 30% of the 1991 baseline.
Paragraph 2 of Decision Ex.II/1 states,
‘‘that a Party with a critical-use
exemption level in excess of permitted
levels of production and consumption
for critical uses is to make up any such
difference between those levels by using
quantities of methyl bromide available
from existing stocks.’’ The difference
between the agreed critical-use
exemption level of 8,074,683 and the
permitted level of production and
consumption of 7,658,265 kilograms is
416,418 kilograms, which is equivalent
to 2% of the 1991 baseline. In
accordance with paragraph 2 of
Decision Ex.II/1, this amount would
come from stocks. This is the minimum
amount that would come from stocks
under today’s proposed action. A
further elaboration of proposed amounts
that would come from stocks and those
that would come from new production
or import in 2006 is found below in
Sections F and H.
With this action, the Agency is
proposing that the critical use levels of
methyl bromide for 2006 be slightly less
than the amount authorized by the
Parties because of recent registrations of
an alternative to methyl bromide. As
noted above, the U.S. Government
submitted the nomination for 2006
critical use exemptions on February 7,
2004. The information in the U.S.
nomination reflected the most up-todate information on alternatives to
methyl bromide that was available at
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that time of submission to the Parties in
February 2004. In addition, through an
iterative process of questions and
answers with the MBTOC, the U.S.
Government was able to provide new
information about the status of methyl
bromide alternatives in the United
States for the nominated sectors up until
the time the MBTOC issued its final
report in the weeks prior to the 2nd
Extraordinary Meeting of the Parties in
July 2005. Since the MBTOC’s final
review and report on the 2006
nomination there have been two new
actions in the U.S. relevant to uses
included in Decision XVI/2 and
Decision Ex.II/1. The most recent action,
on July 15, 2005, was the issuance of an
EPA rule establishing new Federal
tolerance levels for residues of sulfuryl
fluoride in or on commodities in food
processing facilities (70 FR 40899). On
this same day, EPA issued a Federal
registration for these new uses of
sulfuryl fluoride. The Agency
understands that as many as 45 States
subsequently issued State registrations
allowing the use of sulfuryl fluoride for
these new uses. EPA is soliciting
comments on the verification of State
registrations. In addition, on May 18,
2005, the State of California registered
sulfuryl fluoride for use in mills,
warehouses, stationary transportation
vehicles (railcars, trucks, etc.),
temporary and permanent fumigation
chambers, and storage structures
containing commodities listed on the
State-approved label (cereal and small
grains, dried fruit, and nuts). The State
of California has not approved the label
issued by EPA on July 15, 2005. The
Federal label permits sulfuryl fluoride
use for a wide range of food
commodities, such as dried fruits, tree
nuts, cereals and small grains, and
processed food products. Prior to these
registration actions, sulfuryl fluoride
was not considered as a technically and
economically feasible alternative in the
U.S. nomination. The Agency proposes
to reflect these changes in the
circumstances of the use sectors for
which there is a newly registered
alternative in determining the final
amount of methyl bromide deemed to be
critical for 2006.
In today’s action, with these recent
actions regarding sulfuryl fluoride
described in the preceding paragraph,
EPA is estimating that there will be a
fifteen percent (15%) uptake of sulfuryl
fluoride in the 2006 calendar year by
these newly permitted uses which
would mean that the post-harvest users
would use sulfuryl fluoride instead of
15% of the amount of methyl bromide
for which they were authorized by the
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Parties for critical use exemptions in
2006. Thus, today’s action proposes to
reduce the amount of critical use methyl
bromide by fifteen percent for those
specific uses for which sulfuryl fluoride
is now a newly legal alternative for use.
Specifically, this means a fifteen percent
reduction in the amount of critical use
methyl bromide for the newly registered
uses in California, such as mills, dried
fruit and nuts, as well as a fifteen
percent reduction in the amount of
critical use methyl bromide for the
sectors in the U.S. nomination that
include food processing facilities, such
as mills and processors. For the affected
post-harvest sectors, the reduction
would be from an authorized amount of
707,746 kilograms to an amount of
601,584 kilograms, which would be a
reduction of no more than 0.42% of
baseline. The Agency is estimating that
there will be a 15% uptake of sulfuryl
fluoride in 2006 by the specific uses for
which there are recent registrations
based on information found in MBTOC
reports regarding projected uptake of
sulfuryl fluoride for uses where there
were previous registrations, as well as
on information in the U.S.
Government’s nomination for 2007
critical use exemptions. In the MBTOC
report the uptake estimate was for 10%
for the 2005 calendar year for uses for
which sulfuryl fluoride was registered
in early 2004 (not including the most
recent registration in California or the
new Federal registration for food
processing facilities). In the U.S.
nomination for 2007, the uptake
estimate is for 25% by all registered
sulfuryl fluoride uses. EPA’s estimate of
a 15% uptake of sulfuryl fluoride in the
2006 calendar year falls between
MBTOC’s uptake number for 2005 and
the U.S. nomination’s uptake number
for 2007. EPA notes that the estimated
rate of uptake for 2007 takes into
consideration that there have been 18
months of trials and potential adoption
by similar facilities since the first
sulfuryl fluoride registration action
early in 2004 for mills, cereals and small
grains, and cereal and small grain
processed products. The Agency
believes that new agricultural
techniques are first adopted at a
relatively slow rate. As more people/
companies test the new technology the
rate of adoption gradually increases.
Given the short period of time since the
most recent new registrations and
tolerances, EPA believes that the
specific uses associated with those new
registrations and tolerances are unlikely
to achieve a 25% rate of adoption
during 2006. The 25% estimated rate of
adoption contained in the U.S.
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nomination for 2007 applies to
circumstances (uses and locations)
where the registrations occurred three
years previously—early in 2004. Thus,
with today’s action EPA is seeking
comments on the estimate for a 15%
uptake of sulfuryl fluoride for the 2006
control period for those uses associated
with the recent registration and
tolerance actions, which occurred midyear in 2005.
The Agency seeks comments on the
proposed uptake of sulfuryl fluoride as
an alternative to methyl bromide during
2006 and the corresponding proposed
reduction in the critical use level for
2006. EPA seeks detailed data regarding
sulfuryl fluoride as an alternative to
methyl bromide in the circumstances of
the sectors nominated and authorized
for 2006 and the proposed uptake of
sulfuryl fluoride in those sectors during
2006. Relevant information may include
whether products in a sector are
intended for export, and whether
importing countries have established
approvals or tolerance levels for use of
sulfuryl fluoride. A person submitting
detailed data on sulfuryl fluoride as a
methyl bromide alternative, or data on
any other post-harvest alterative to
methyl bromide, should include:
• Historic information on pest control
efficacy of current fumigant (trap catch
data if available).
• Size and building composition of
facility.
• Data from a range of geographic
conditions.
• Data on methyl bromide which will
be used for comparison purposes.
• Temperature data inside and
outside the facilities.
• Trap catch data from before
treatment and 3-, 7- and 14-working
days after treatment.
• Information on differences in
‘‘down time’’ (non-operating time) at
facility for methyl bromide and
alternative.
• Amount of methyl bromide and
alternative used in treatment.
• Price to treat a typical facility (both
chemical prices and fumigation set-up
and take-down costs).
The Agency recognizes that the status
of other alternatives to methyl bromide
may have changed since the finalization
of the May 2005 MBTOC report and
there may be updated comparative
information regarding alternatives and
methyl bromide, as well as new data on
emission minimization techniques that
would allow a user to obtain the same
results with smaller quantities of methyl
bromide. With today’s action, EPA is
soliciting new information on
alternatives to methyl bromide and
emission minimization techniques. In
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particular, a person submitting detailed
data on pre-plant alternatives should
include:
• Historic information on pest control
efficacy of current fumigant.
• Data from a range of geographic
conditions.
• Data on methyl bromide which will
be used for comparison purposes.
• Yield and quality data for the
alternative as compared to methyl
bromide.
• Pest control data.
• Price to treat an acre of a given
crop.
EPA will review updated data on the
use of sulfuryl fluoride as compared to
methyl bromide, and any other new
information on alternatives or emission
minimization techniques submitted in
response to this notice, before
promulgating the final critical use
exemption level for 2006. The total
critical use amount will not exceed the
amount agreed by the Parties to the
Protocol for 2006.
If adequate quantitative information is
submitted, EPA will conduct an analysis
that is similar to that conducted in the
development of the U.S. nomination in
which EPA’s Office of Pesticide
Programs reviews the quantity of methyl
bromide requested by each applicant
and adjusts the amounts needed where
alternatives are not technically or
economically feasible. Since the review
associated with the development of the
U.S. nomination is two years prior to
the relevant year of exemption there
may be specific situations where the
critical need may have changed. In
individual cases where new, more
relevant and verifiable information
becomes available after submission of
the U.S. nomination, an additional
‘‘post-hoc’’ review to evaluate the
technical and economic feasibility of
alternatives may be warranted.
When considering the suitability of
making a post-hoc assessment EPA
considers two issues: First, whether any
reductions been made in the nominated
amount that are approved at the
Meetings of the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol, and second, the quality and
verification of new data to support a
post-hoc review.
In the post-hoc review process the
amount requested would once again be
the starting point for all calculations.
Each sector would be reviewed on an
individual application basis. The first
assessment would involve the
subtraction process that adjusts for:
Double-counting, growth, quarantine
and preshipment use, and use rate
differences. Adjustments for doublecounting is the estimate measured in
kilograms in situations where an
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62041
applicant has made a request for a CUE
while a consortium has also made a
request on their behalf in the
consortium application. Growth is an
adjustment in kilograms for amounts
greater than the historical amount used.
Adjustments for quarantine and
preshipment (QPS) are for the kilograms
that would qualify as QPS usage, which
is part of a separate exemption category
under the Protocol. Use rate differences
are adjustments in kilograms to the
lower of the historic use rate or
requested use rate.
The second part of the assessment
would involve the percent adjustments.
Use rate adjustment is the use rate in
kilograms per 1000 cubic meters
expressed as the lowest of either the
historic use rate, requested use rate, or
efficacious use rate as indicated by
either: Research reports, usage under
similar pest and environmental
conditions, or MBTOC maximum use
rates. Key pest adjustment is for those
pests that are not adequately controlled
by methyl bromide alternatives.
Regulatory adjustment is for those areas
where the alternatives have additional
regulatory constraints on their use.
Adoption of new fumigants or control
measures is the percent of the requested
volume where alternatives could be
adopted to replace methyl bromide.
Combined impacts adjustments are the
percent of the requested area where
alternatives cannot be used due to key
pest, regulatory, and current status in
adoption of new fumigants. In each case
the total area impacted is the conjoined
area that is impacted by any of the
individual impacts. The effects are
assumed to be independently
distributed unless contrary evidence is
available.
When reviewing the adoption of new
fumigants or control measures, any
information on the relative efficacy of
the alternative is critical. Examples of
relevant information consists of:
Historic information on efficacy of the
current fumigant (comparative efficacy
data should include methyl bromide as
a standard whenever possible), size and
building composition of facility being
treated, data from a range of geographic
conditions, temperature data from
inside and outside the treated facilities,
pest population data from before and
after the treatments, information on
down time between methyl bromide and
alternatives, amounts of methyl bromide
or alternative used, and the price to treat
a typical facility including chemical,
fumigation set-up and take down costs.
The kilogram amount recommended
is calculated by multiplying the final
amount after all subtractions and
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multiplying it by the combined impacts
adjustment.
If adequate quantitative information is
not submitted, EPA will review the 15
percent uptake estimate in light of all
information that the Agency holds and
any new information received before the
development of the final rule regarding
the basis for that estimate. As noted
above, the proposed 15 percent uptake
of sulfuryl fluoride in 2006 for the
limited number of uses for which there
are recent registrations would result in
an approximate reduction of the level of
critical use methyl bromide for 2006 by
0.42% of the U.S. 1991 consumption
baseline level.
F. What Are the Sources of Critical Use
Methyl Bromide?
As discussed above and in the
Framework Rule (69 FR 76982), an
approved critical user may obtain access
to exempted production/import of
methyl bromide and to limited
inventories of pre-phaseout methyl
bromide, the combination of which
constitute the supply of ‘‘critical use
methyl bromide’’ intended to meet the
needs of agreed critical uses. In Decision
XVI/2 and Decision Ex.II/1 the Parties to
the Protocol authorized agreed criticaluse levels for 2006 of 8,074,683
kilograms, which is equivalent to 32%
of the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline. As noted above,
paragraph 2 of Decision Ex.II/1 states,
‘‘that a Party with a critical-use
exemption level in excess of permitted
levels of production and consumption
for critical uses is to make up any such
difference between those levels by using
quantities of methyl bromide available
from existing stocks.’’ The permitted
level of production and consumption of
critical use methyl bromide in Decision
XVI/2 and Decision Ex.II/1 is 7,658,265
kilograms which is equivalent to 30% of
the U.S. 1991 consumption baseline,
making the amount to come from stocks
equivalent to 2% of baseline.
In developing today’s action, the
Agency notes that Decision XVI/2 (para.
4) contains the following language,
‘‘each Party which has an agreed critical
use should ensure that the criteria in
paragraph 1 of decision IX/6 are applied
when licensing, permitting or
authorizing critical use of methyl
bromide and that such procedures take
into account available stocks of banked
or recycled methyl bromide,’’ and
Decision Ex.II/1 (para. 5) contains the
following slightly different language,
‘‘each Party which has an agreed critical
use renews its commitment to ensure
that the criteria in paragraph 1 of
decision IX/6 are applied when
licensing, permitting or authorizing
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critical use of methyl bromide and that
such procedures take into account
quantities of methyl bromide available
from existing stocks.’’
The language in these Decisions is
similar to language in Decision Ex I/3,
paragraph 5. In the December 23, 2004
Federal Register notice establishing the
framework for critical use exemptions
and the critical use level for 2005, EPA
interpreted paragraph 5 of Decision Ex
I/3 ‘‘as meaning that the U.S. should not
authorize critical use exemptions
without including provisions addressing
drawdown from stocks for critical uses’’
(69 FR 76987). The December 23, 2004
final rule established provisions
governing the sale of pre-phaseout
inventories for critical uses, including
the concept of critical stock allowances
(CSAs) and a prohibition on sale of prephaseout inventories for critical uses in
excess of the amount of CSAs held by
the seller. In addition, EPA noted that
stocks were further taken into account
through the trading provisions that
allow critical use allowances to be
converted into critical stock allowances.
Under today’s proposed action, no
significant changes would be made to
those provisions, which would remain
part of the framework for the critical use
exemption and which would continue
to be in accordance with Decisions of
the Parties. Bearing in mind the United
States’ ‘‘renewed commitment’’ as stated
in Decision Ex II/1, EPA is proposing an
additional action based on experience
with the 2005 critical use exemption.
EPA is proposing to adjust the portion
of critical use methyl bromide to come
from exempted production or import as
compared to the portion to come from
stocks. With today’s action, the Agency
is proposing that 6,823,707 kilograms of
methyl bromide, which is equivalent to
27% percent of the 1991 consumption
baseline, come from new production or
import, and that 1,150,824 kilograms,
which is equivalent to 5% of baseline,
come from pre-phaseout methyl
bromide inventories. The percentage of
methyl bromide proposed to come from
pre-phaseout inventories is the same as
the percentage that was to come from
pre-phaseout inventories in the 2005
control period. To date, it does not
appear that critical users have had
difficulty in obtaining methyl bromide
from stocks during the 2005 control
period. Drawing on this experience,
EPA is proposing to grant CSAs
equivalent to 5% of baseline for the
2006 control period, on the assumption
that users will continue to be able to
access this level of stocks during 2006.
There is some uncertainty in this
determination, however, given that we
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have not come to the end of the control
period, and because we anticipate that
stock levels will be lower in 2006. In
part because of this, EPA is proposing
a safeguard to ensure that critical needs
will be met should the assumption that
users will be able to access this amount
of stocks prove to be incorrect. EPA
seeks comments on the proposed
fractional portion of the 8,074,683
kilograms authorized for critical uses in
2006 that would come from prephaseout inventories of methyl bromide.
In developing today’s proposal of the
percentage that would come from new
production or import as compared to the
percentage that would come from prephaseout inventories of methyl bromide
for the 2006 control period, the Agency
recognizes there is still market
uncertainty regarding the availability of
stocks for critical uses and therefore
proposes a petition process that would
allow real-time responses to market
conditions. The Agency is proposing a
petition mechanism that will allow a
critical user to demonstrate his or her
inability to acquire sufficient methyl
bromide from stocks. Upon receipt of a
petition that meets the information
criteria discussed below, EPA would
review the petition and consider
converting a limited number of CSAs to
CUAs (up to the 30% limit agreed by the
Parties to the Protocol in Decision XVI/
2 and Ex.II/1). EPA believes that this
petition process is warranted given the
uncertainty in projecting the amount of
pre-phaseout inventories that may be
available for critical uses. Thus, the
proposed petition process would
provide an important safety mechanism
for critical users.
Information To Be Submitted in Petition
EPA proposes that if you are an
approved critical user who has
attempted unsuccessfully to obtain
methyl bromide from at least two CSA
holders, you may request additional
production or import of methyl bromide
by submitting the following information
to EPA: (a) Your name and address; (b)
name of contact person and phone and
fax number(s), and e-mail address; (c)
the name of the organization/
consortium that submitted an
application for a critical use exemption
and of which you are a member, (d)
description of use, location and limiting
critical condition qualifying for critical
use methyl bromide; (e) quantity (in
kilograms) of methyl bromide needed
for the relevant control period and the
amount acquired to date; (f)
documentation or phone logs of
unsuccessful attempts to place an order
for a specific quantity of critical use
methyl bromide with at least two
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entities listed in 82.8; (g) the name,
address and contract information for the
distributor and the producer/importer
who will be part of the adjustment
transaction (converting CSAs to CUAs);
(h) a letter from the distributor
confirming that they hold CSAs for
which they do not hold, and cannot
obtain, a corresponding quantity of prephaseout inventories of methyl bromide;
agreeing to the transfer, with EPA
approval, of a specified quantity of their
CSAs to an identified producer/importer
for conversion to CUAs, on the
condition that the producer/importer
offer the distributor an opportunity to
purchase a quantity of critical use
methyl bromide equivalent to that
produced or imported through the
expenditure of the resulting CUAs; and
confirming that the distributor will offer
the petitioner, in turn, an opportunity to
purchase the same quantity of critical
use methyl bromide for critical uses; (i)
a letter from the identified producer/
importer agreeing to the receipt of the
CSAs transferred by the distributor,
requesting EPA approval to convert the
CSAs to CUAs, and confirming that they
will offer the distributor an opportunity
to purchase a quantity of critical use
methyl bromide equivalent to that
produced or imported with the CUAs
resulting from the transaction. The
offset established in the framework rule
(69 FR 76982) for trades from CUAs to
CSAs would not apply to a petition for
converting CUAs to CSAs. The
companies involved in a petition should
indicate what information they are
claiming as Confidential Business
Information. Information claimed as
confidential will be treated in
accordance with EPA’s regulations on
confidential business information at 40
CFR part 2 subpart B. EPA will notify
petitioners of deficiencies and give them
an opportunity to provide information
needed to fully complete the petition.
However, if petitioners do not respond
to EPA’s requests for additional
information within 15 working days of
the request and the petition remains
incomplete, the petition will not be
considered. A statement from a
distributor that they cannot obtain
stockpiled methyl bromide in a quantity
corresponding to the number of CSAs
they hold could be supported by on
letters from local or regional suppliers
indicating that stockpiled methyl
bromide is unavailable.
EPA is proposing that the petitioner
submit documentation for an
adjustment transaction that includes a
letter from a distributor certifying that
they hold CSAs but do not hold
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corresponding supplies of pre-phaseout
methyl bromide and are unable to
obtain such pre-phaseout material, and
that the distributor is willing to have
these CSAs converted to CUAs, if
authorized, in a transaction with a
producer/importer. The Agency is
proposing a review and authorization of
the petition request to ensure there is a
need for an adjustment between the
amount of critical use methyl bromide
from new production/import as
compared with the amount from prephaseout inventories. In addition, the
Agency must ensure that the total
aggregate amount of new production/
import does not exceed the limit agreed
to by the Parties to the Protocol in
Decision XVI/2 and Decision Ex.II/1.
EPA seeks comment on the petition
requirements outlined above and has
submitted an Information Collection
Request (ICR) to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
approval to collect this data. For
additional information, please see
Section VI.B, ‘‘Paperwork Reduction
Act.’’
Deadline for Petitioning
EPA is proposing that petitions would
be due no later than October 1st of the
relevant control period. EPA is
proposing that the period for petitioning
end October 1st to allow sufficient time
for the Agency’s petition review and to
assure the final authorization leaves
enough time for the commercial
transaction to occur within the control
period to address concerns about the
availability of critical use methyl
bromide. EPA believes it is important to
establish a fixed end-point for
submission of petitions to give the
petitions due consideration and ensure
that total production and import for
critical uses does not exceed the level
agreed by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol for the control period. Because
most of the information needed to
support a petition should be readily
available, EPA believes that the first
three quarters of the calendar year
(control period) should be sufficient
time for petitioners to assess the market
availability of critical use methyl
bromide and collect and compile
supporting documentation. Although
EPA may request additional information
from petitioners after the deadline of
October 1st, the Agency will not
consider petitions filed after these dates.
Length of Agency Review of Petitions
EPA is proposing a 30-working-day
review period for petitions. If more
information is needed, EPA will contact
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62043
the applicant and specify the necessary
information. EPA will consider the
merits of each individual petition and
industry-wide data on the availability
and viability of alternatives. EPA retains
the right to deny a petition based on
information received regarding, inter
alia, fraud, misrepresentation,
inconsistency with Articles and
Decisions under the Montreal Protocol,
inconsistency with the CAA
Amendments of 1990, or other reasons
related to human health and the
environment.
Notification of Petitioners
EPA will issue a letter to the
petitioner, copying the distributor and
producer/importer, stating whether the
Agency is granting or denying the
petition. Denial letters will state the
reason for the denial. Within ten
working working days after receipt of
the denial letter, the petitioner may file
a one-time appeal, with supporting
reasons. EPA may affirm the denial or
grant the petition based on the
information provided by petitioner or
other available evidence. If no appeal is
taken by the tenth working day after
receipt of the denial letter, the denial
will be final on that day.
G. What Are the Critical Use Allowance
Allocations?
EPA is proposing to allow limited
amounts of new production or import of
methyl bromide for critical uses for
2006 in the amount of 6,823,707
kilograms as shown in Table II. below.
With today’s action, EPA is proposing to
allocate critical use allowances (CUAs)
to producers and importers of methyl
bromide on a pro-rata basis based on
their 1991 consumption baseline levels.
Each critical use allowance (CUA) is
equivalent to 1 kg of critical use methyl
bromide. These allowances expire at the
end of the control period and, consistent
with the Framework Rule, are not
bankable from one year to the next.
Today’s proposal for allocating the
following number of pre-plant and postharvest critical use allowances (CUAs)
to the entities listed below would be
subject to the trading provisions at 40
CFR 82.12, which are discussed in
section V.(G) of the preamble to the
Framework Rule (69 FR 76982).
As discussed in section V.(E) of the
preamble to the Framework Rule (69 FR
76990), EPA issues CUAs once a year
except in the instance where the Parties
authorize supplemental CUEs. EPA may
amend allocations in a subsequent
rulemaking to allocate supplemental
methyl bromide for 2006.
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TABLE II.—ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL USE ALLOWANCES
2006 Critical
use allowances for preplant uses*
(kilograms)
2006 Critical
use allowances for postharvest uses*
(kilograms)
Great Lakes Chemical Corp ....................................................................................................................................
Albemarle Corp ........................................................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc ........................................................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc ................................................................................................................................................................
3,831,117
1,575,415
870,292
26,971
315,974
129,934
129,934
2,224
Total ..................................................................................................................................................................
6,303,796
519,910
Company
* For production or import of class I, Group VI controlled substance exclusively for the Pre-Plant or Post-Harvest uses specified in Appendix L
to 40 CFR Part 82.
EPA seeks comment on the total
levels of exempted production/import
for critical uses in 2006.
Paragraph four of Decision Ex. I/3,
taken at the 1st Extraordinary Meeting
of the Parties, stated ‘‘that Parties
should endeavor to allocate the
quantities of methyl bromide
recommended by the Technology and
Economic Assessment Panel as listed in
annex II A to the report of the First
Extraordinary Meeting of the Parties.’’
Similarly, paragraph four of Decision
Ex. II/1 states, ‘‘that Parties that have an
agreed critical use shall endeavor to
license, permit, authorize or allocate the
quantities of methyl bromide
recommended by the Technology and
Economic Assessment Panel to the
specific categories of use shown in table
A of the annex to the present decision.’’
In accordance with Decision Ex. I/3,
paragraph four, and consistent with the
more recent Decision, the Agency
endeavored to allocate directly on a
sector-by-sector basis by analyzing and
proposing this option, among others, in
August of 2004. In the final Framework
Rule, the Agency made a reasoned
decision as to the economic,
environmental and practical effects of
implementing the various proposed
approaches, after considering public
comment. In the August 25, 2004
Allocation Framework proposed
rulemaking (69 FR 52366), EPA solicited
comment on both universal and sectorbased allocation of critical use
allowances, as well as more flexible
methods for determining allocations.
After comments were received, it was
determined in the final Framework Rule
(69 FR 76989) that a lump-sum, or
universal, allocation, modified to
include distinct caps for pre-plant and
post-harvest uses, was the most efficient
and least burdensome approach that
would achieve the desired
environmental results, and that there
would be significant administrative and
practical difficulties associated with a
sector-specific approach. EPA is not
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aware of any factors that would alter the
analysis performed during the
development of the Framework rule but
seeks comment on today’s proposal to
allocate CUAs in the same two
groupings (pre-plant and post-harvest)
as was done for 2005 control period.
In developing the Framework Rule
and allocating CUAs for 2005, EPA
examined the economic, environmental
and administrative effects of various
allocation options over the projected life
of the CUE exemption program. The
Agency found that a universal approach
would offer equal environmental
protection, at less cost and with easier
implementation compared to the other
options, such as sector-specific
allocation method. The Agency adopted
a modified universal approach,
separating pre-plant from post-harvest
uses in order to address concerns raised
by smaller, less frequent and end-of-year
uses.
In addition, although the approach
adopted in the Framework Rule does
not directly allocate allowances to each
category of use, the Agency anticipates
that reliance on market mechanisms
will achieve similar results indirectly.
As described in the August 25, 2004
notice of proposed rulemaking and
accompanying regulatory impact
analysis (E-Docket OAR–2003–0230),
the Agency believes that under the
Universal system, as divided into preplant and post-harvest sectors, the
actual critical use will closely follow the
sector breakout listed by the TEAP and
incorporated into the Parties’ Decision.
EPA will continue to monitor sectoral
use. The TEAP recommendations are
based on data submitted by the U.S.
which in turn are based on recent
historic use data under the current
methyl bromide phaseout market. In
other words, the TEAP
recommendations agreed to by the
Parties are based on current use and the
current uses are taking place in a
marketplace where all methyl bromide
uses in the pre-plant and post-harvest
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markets compete for a lump sum. A
market-based lump sum system will
likely operate to mirror a sector-specific
allocation over time. For the reasons
stated above, EPA is not proposing to
change the approach adopted in the
Framework Rule for the allocation of
CUAs. However, in making today’s
proposal, EPA endeavors to seek
comments on a sector-specific allocation
that would reflect groupings in the U.S.
nomination that were subsequently
recommended by the Technology and
Economic Assessment Panel for 2006.
H. What Are the Critical Stock
Allowance Allocations?
EPA is proposing to allocate critical
stock allowances (CSAs) to the entities
listed below in Table III for the control
period of 2006 in the amount of
1,150,824 kilograms.
In the Framework Rule, EPA
restricted access to stocks for approved
critical users as a condition of obtaining
new production and import (69 FR
76987–76988). EPA is not planning to
change this aspect of the critical use
exemption framework through today’s
proposed action. Decision Ex. II/1
established two distinct levels: A
critical-use exemption level and a
permitted level of production and
consumption. It further indicates that
the difference between the two levels is
to be made up ‘‘by using quantities of
methyl bromide available from existing
stocks.’’ The higher critical-use
exemption level would have no
meaning if critical users were allowed
continued access to pre-phaseout
inventories once the combination of
new production or import and sale of
pre-phaseout inventories for critical
uses reached that level. Therefore,
despite the absence in Decision XVI/2 or
Decision Ex. II/1 of the explicit use
prohibition that appeared in Decision
Ex. I/3, paragraph 3, EPA continues to
view the previously promulgated stock
restrictions as an appropriate means of
ensuring that total critical use does not
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exceed the level agreed to by the Parties.
The Agency also believes that the
restriction on access to stocks for critical
users is an expression of the United
States’ ‘‘renewed commitment’’ to take
stocks into account and that there is a
likely environmental benefit to the
establishment of an upper limit because
it will increase the price of methyl
bromide and thereby encourage the
transition to alternatives in the long run.
EPA currently possesses information
on existing stocks of methyl bromide
that has been claimed as confidential.
With regard to data for 2003, EPA has
determined that the aggregate stock
information is not confidential business
information and may be disclosed but is
currently withholding that information
due to the filing of complaints by
affected businesses seeking to enjoin the
Agency from its release (40 CFR 2.205).
EPA will continue to follow its own
regulations with respect to the treatment
of this information.
TABLE III.—ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL
STOCK ALLOWANCES
Company
Albemarle
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Blair Soil Fumigation
Burnside Services, Inc.
Cardinal Professional Products
Carolina Eastern, Inc.
Degesch America, Inc.
Dodson Bros.
Great Lakes Chemical Corp.
Harvey Fertilizer & Gas
Helena Chemical Co.
Hendrix & Dail
Hy Yield Bromine
Industrial Fumigation Company
J.C. Ehrlich Co.
Pacific Ag
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One
Reddick Fumigants
Royster-Clark, Inc.
Southern State Cooperative, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident Agricultural Products
UAP Southeast (NC)
UAP Southeast (SC)
Univar
Vanguard Fumigation Co.
Western Fumigation
TOTAL—1,150,824 kilograms
I. Clarifications to the Framework Rule
EPA is proposing to clarify language
in the Framework Rule regarding
consecutive use of non-critical use
methyl bromide and critical use methyl
bromide. Under 82.13(dd), an approved
critical user who purchases a quantity of
critical use methyl bromide is required
to certify, in part: ‘‘I will not use this
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quantity of methyl bromide for a
treatment chamber, facility, or field that
I previously fumigated with non-critical
use methyl bromide purchased during
the same control period’’ unless certain
exceptions apply. This certification, by
itself, would not preclude the user from
using the critical-use methyl bromide
for a treatment chamber, facility, or field
that he or she had fumigated earlier that
year with non-critical use methyl
bromide purchased during an earlier
control period. However, the
prohibition at 82.4(p)(2)(vi) states: ‘‘No
person who purchases critical use
methyl bromide during the control
period shall use that methyl bromide on
a field or structure for which that person
has used non-critical use methyl
bromide for the same use (as defined in
Columns A and B of appendix L) in the
same control period’’ unless certain
exceptions apply. That prohibition does
not distinguish between non-critical use
methyl bromide purchased during the
current control period and carryover
amounts purchased during earlier
control periods. Most purchases will be
used in the same control period in
which they are bought. However, some
amounts may be bought in one control
period and used in a following control
period, particularly when the purchase
occurs close to the end of the calendar
year.
In the previous Federal Register
notice concerning the supplemental
allocation for 2005, EPA proposed to
change 82.4(p)(2)(vi) so that end users
who had been using non-critical use
methyl bromide during the first part of
2005 would not be prevented from using
critical use methyl bromide on the same
field or structure for the same use if they
became approved critical users as a
result of that supplemental rulemaking.
The proposed change would also
prevent adverse consequences for end
users if the main allocation rule for a
particular calendar year were delayed.
In that instance, end users who were
designated as approved critical users by
the supplemental rule would not be
penalized for having used non-critical
use methyl bromide prior to the
effective date of the rule making a
supplemental allocation.
EPA is proposing to reconcile the
language in 82.4(p)(2)(vi) and 82.13(dd).
EPA’s preferred approach is to change
the language of the certification to omit
the word ‘‘purchased’’ from the
sentence that begins ‘‘I will not use this
quantity of methyl bromide for a
treatment chamber, facility, or field that
I previously fumigated with non-critical
use methyl bromide purchased during
the same control period * * *’’. This
approach would put the focus on
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62045
actions taken during the current control
period and would provide greater clarity
and simplicity by eliminating the date
of purchase of non-critical use methyl
bromide as an issue. The change
proposed in the Federal Register notice
for the 2005 supplemental rule would
provide a safeguard in the event of an
administrative delay. Because that
change is still pending, EPA is also
considering a change to the language of
the prohibition, using the current
certification language as a model. Under
this alternative approach, 82.4(p)(2)(vi)
would read: ‘‘No person who purchases
critical use methyl bromide during the
control period shall use that methyl
bromide on a field or structure for
which that person has used non-critical
use methyl bromide, purchased during
the same control period, for the same
use (as defined in Columns A and B of
appendix L) in the same control period’’
unless certain exceptions apply. This
alternative approach would employ the
point of sale to the end user as a proxy
for actual use, following the example of
provisions in the Framework Rule that
address the purchase of critical use
methyl bromide. EPA is requesting
comment on these and other ways to
reconcile these two provisions.
J. Proposed Supplementary Critical Use
Exemptions for 2006
On January 31, 2005, the U.S.
Government submitted a supplemental
nomination for critical use exemptions
for 2006 that is equivalent to 0.02% of
the 1991 U.S. baseline. The
supplemental nomination for 7,070
kilograms for California dried beans was
considered ‘‘unable to assess’’ by the
MBTOC in their May 2005 report
because of a need for clarification about
the label for phosphine and the
principal pest, the cowpea weevil. This
supplemental nomination for 2006 will
be considered by the Parties to the
Protocol at their 17th Meeting in Dakar,
Senegal in December 2005. The U.S.
submitted additional information in
August 2005 to the MBTOC responding
to various questions on critical use
nominations. The response included a
clarification of the status of the
phosphine label with regards to its use
for dried beans. The MBTOC will issue
another report in the fall of 2005 before
the 17th Meeting. The Parties are
unlikely to approve more than the
amount nominated by the U.S. in this
supplemental request. In anticipation of
action on this supplemental nomination
in December 2005, EPA is proposing to
include this quantity in the critical use
levels for 2006, subject to the estimate
of a 15% uptake of sulfuryl fluoride due
to the recent California registration. If
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the Parties reach a decision that a lesser
amount is appropriate, EPA will adjust
the quantity accordingly in the final
rule. This proposed inclusion would
very slightly increase the actual amount
of critical use methyl bromide allocated,
without a noticeable change in the
overall percentages discussed in today’s
action.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order No. 12866:
Regulatory Planning and Review
Under Executive Order No. 12866, (58
FR 51735, October 4, 1993) the Agency
must determine whether the regulatory
action is ‘‘significant’’ and therefore
subject to OMB review and the
requirements of the Executive Order.
The Order defines ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as one that is likely
to result in a rule that may: (1) Have an
annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a
material way the economy, a sector of
the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) create
a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfere with an action taken or
planned by another agency; (3)
materially alter the budgetary impact of
entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) raise novel
legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order.
OMB has notified EPA that it
considers this a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ under Executive Order No.
12866 and EPA has submitted it to OMB
for review. Changes made in response to
OMB suggestions or recommendations
will be documented in the public
record.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this proposed rule have
been submitted for approval to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The
Information Collection Request (ICR)
document prepared by EPA has been
assigned EPA ICR number 2179.04.
Total number
of
responses
Number of
respondents
Collection activity
The ICR pertains only to the
petitioning requirements described in
Section V.F. The information collection
under this rule is authorized under
Sections 603(b), 603(d) and 614(b) of the
Clean Air Act (CAA).
The petition requirements included in
this rule are intended, in part, to:
(1) Satisfy U.S. obligations under the
international treaty, The Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer (Protocol), to report data
under Article 7;
(2) Fulfill statutory obligations under
Section 603(b) of Title VI of the Clean
Air Act (CAA) for reporting and
monitoring;
(3) Provide information to report to
Congress on the production, use and
consumption of class I controlled
substances as statutorily required in
Section 603(d) of the CAA.
Critical users would only need to
submit the information if they were
otherwise unable to obtain methyl
bromide. Section V.F contains a list of
the data elements required for the
petition process.
Hours per
response
Total hours
Familiarization with Petition Process by end users .....................................
Submission of Data to EPA (Petitioner) ......................................................
Submission of Letter to EPA Documenting Lack of Inventory (Distributor)
Submission of Letter to EPA Accepting Conversion of CSAs to CUAs
(Producer/Importer) ..................................................................................
Report to EPA Documenting Expended Allowances (Producer/Importer) ..
2,000
20
30
20
20
3
1
3
.25
4
4
2
2
.25
.25
.5
.5
Total Burden Hours ..............................................................................
........................
........................
4.75
81.75
Burden means the total time, effort, or
financial resources expended by persons
to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose
or provide information to or for a
Federal agency. This includes the time
needed to review instructions; develop,
acquire, install, and utilize technology
and systems for the purposes of
collecting, validating, and verifying
information, processing and
maintaining information, and disclosing
and providing information; adjust the
existing ways to comply with any
previously applicable instructions and
requirements; train personnel to be able
to respond to a collection of
information; search data sources;
complete and review the collection of
information; and transmit or otherwise
disclose the information.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
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control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
To comment on the Agency’s need for
this information, the accuracy of the
provided burden estimates, and any
suggested methods for minimizing
respondent burden, including the use of
automated collection techniques, EPA
has established a public docket for this
rule, which includes this ICR, under EDocket OAR–2005–0122. Submit any
comments related to the ICR for this
proposed rule to EPA and OMB. See
ADDRESSES section at the beginning of
this notice for where to submit
comments to EPA. Send comments to
OMB at the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503,
Attention: Desk Office for EPA. Since
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the ICR between 30 and 60
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20
60
.75
days after October 27, 2005, a comment
to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it by November
28, 2005. The final rule will respond to
any OMB or public comments on the
information collection requirements
contained in this proposal.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA generally requires an agency
to prepare a regulatory flexibility
analysis of any rule subject to noticeand-comment rulemaking requirements
under the Administrative Procedure Act
or any other statute unless the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. For
purposes of assessing the impacts of
today’s rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small business
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that is identified by the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
Code in the Table below; (2) a small
governmental jurisdiction that is a
government of a city, county, town,
school district or special district with a
population of less that 50,000; and (3)
a small organization that is any not-for-
profit enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
NAICS small business size
standard (in number of
employees or millions
of dollars)
Category
NAICS code
SIC code
Agricultural production ......................
1112—Vegetable and Melon farming.
1113—Fruit and Nut Tree Farming ..
1114—Greenhouse, Nursery, and
Floriculture Production.
0171—Berry Crops ..........................
$6 million.
115114—Postharvest Crop activities
(except Cotton Ginning).
311211—Flour Milling ......................
311212—Rice Milling .......................
Producers and Importers ..................
493110—General Warehousing and
Storage.
493130—Farm
Product
Warehousing and Storage.
115112—Soil Preparation, Planting
and Cultivating.
325320—Pesticide and Other Agricultural Chemical Manufacturing.
Agricultural producers of minor crops
and entities that store agricultural
commodities are categories of affected
entities that contain small entities. This
rule only affects entities that applied to
EPA for a de-regulatory exemption. In
most cases, EPA received aggregated
requests for exemptions from industry
consortia. On the exemption
application, EPA asked consortia to
describe the number and size
distribution of entities their application
covered. EPA estimated that 3,218
entities petitioned EPA for an
exemption for the 2005 control period.
EPA received requests from a
comparable number of entities for the
2006 control period. Since many
applicants did not provide information
on the distribution of sizes of entities
covered in their applications, EPA
estimated that between 1⁄4 to 1⁄3 of the
entities may be small businesses based
on the definition given above. In
addition, other categories of affected
entities do not contain small businesses
based on the above description.
After considering the economic
impacts of today’s proposed rule on
small entities, EPA certifies that this
action will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. In determining
whether a rule has a significant
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16:08 Oct 26, 2005
$0.75 million.
0172—Grapes.
0173—Tree Nuts ..............................
0175—Deciduous Tree Fruits (except apple orchards and farms).
0179—Fruit and Tree Nuts, NEC ....
0181—Ornamental Floriculture and
Nursery Products.
0831—Forest Nurseries and Gathering of Forest Products.
Storage Uses ....................................
Distributors and Applicators ..............
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Jkt 208001
2041—Flour and Other Grain Mill
Products.
2044—Rice Milling ...........................
4221—Farm Product Warehousing
and Storage.
4225—General Warehousing and
Storage.
0721—Crop Planting, Cultivation,
and Protection.
...........................................................
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
$6 million.
500 employees.
2879—Pesticides and Agricultural
Chemicals, NEC.
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, the impact of
concern is any significant adverse
economic impact on small entities,
since the primary purpose of the
regulatory flexibility analyses is to
identify and address regulatory
alternatives ‘‘which minimize any
significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.’’ (5
U.S.C. 603–604). Thus, an Agency may
certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities if
the rule relieves a regulatory burden, or
otherwise has a positive economic effect
on all of the small entities subject to the
rule. Since this rule exempts methyl
bromide for approved critical uses after
the phaseout date of January 1, 2005,
this is a de-regulatory action which will
confer a benefit to users of methyl
bromide. EPA believes the estimated deregulatory value for users of methyl
bromide is between $20 million to $30
million annually. We have therefore
concluded that today’s proposed rule
will relieve regulatory burden for all
small entities. We continue to be
interested in the potential impacts of the
proposed rule on small entities and
welcome comments on issues related to
such impacts.
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Sfmt 4702
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Pub. L.
104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under Section 202 of the UMRA,
EPA generally must prepare a written
statement, including a cost-benefit
analysis, for proposed and final rules
with ‘‘Federal mandates’’ that may
result in expenditures by State, local
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million
or more in any one year. If a written
statement is required under Section 202,
Section 205 of the UMRA generally
requires EPA to identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives and adopt the least costly,
most cost-effective or least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule, unless the Agency explains
why this alternative is not selected or
the selection of this alternative is
inconsistent with law.
Section 203 of the UMRA requires the
Agency to establish a plan for obtaining
input from and informing, educating,
and advising any small governments
that may be significantly or uniquely
affected by the rule. Section 204 of the
UMRA requires the Agency to develop
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a process to allow elected state, local,
and tribal government officials to
provide input in the development of any
proposal containing a significant
Federal intergovernmental mandate.
EPA has determined that this rule
does not contain a Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures of $100
million or more by State, local and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, in any one year. Today’s
action seeks comments on proposals
made in accordance with obligations
under the international treaty, The
Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer, as well as
requirements set forth by Congress in
Section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act.
Viewed as a whole, all of today’s
amendments do not create a Federal
mandate resulting in costs of $100
million or more in any one year for
State, local and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or for the private sector.
Thus, today’s proposed rule is not
subject to the requirements of Sections
202 and 205 of the UMRA. EPA has also
determined that this proposed rule
contains no regulatory requirements that
might significantly or uniquely affect
small governments; therefore, EPA is
not required to develop a plan with
regard to small governments under
Section 203. Finally, because this
proposal does not contain a significant
intergovernmental mandate, the Agency
is not required to develop a process to
obtain input from elected State, local,
and tribal officials under Section 204.
E. Executive Order No. 13132:
Federalism
Executive Order No. 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999), requires EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ The phrase ‘‘policies that
have federalism implications’’ is
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that 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.’’
Under Section 6 of Executive Order
No. 13132, EPA may not issue a
regulation that has federalism
implications, that imposes substantial
direct control costs, and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct control costs
incurred by State and local
governments, or EPA consults with
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State and local officials early in the
process of developing the regulation.
EPA also may not issue a regulation that
has federalism implications and that
preempts State law, unless the Agency
consults with State and local officials
early in the process of developing the
regulation.
This proposed rule does not have
federalism implications. It will 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 No. 13132. Today’s
proposed rule is expected to primarily
affect producers, suppliers, importers
and exporters and users of methyl
bromide. Thus, Executive Order 13132
does not apply to this rule.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between EPA
and State and local governments, EPA
specifically solicits comment on this
proposed rule from State and local
officials.
F. Executive Order No. 13175:
Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
Executive Order No. 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 9, 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.’’ This proposed rule does
not have tribal implications, as specified
in Executive Order No. 13175. Today’s
proposed rule does not significantly or
uniquely affect the communities of
Indian tribal governments. The
proposed rule does not impose any
enforceable duties on communities of
Indian tribal governments. Thus,
Executive Order No. 13175 does not
apply to this proposed rule.
EPA specifically solicits additional
comment on this proposed rule from
tribal officials.
G. Executive Order No. 13045:
Protection of Children From
Environmental Health & Safety Risks
Executive Order No. 13045:
‘‘Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks’’ (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997)
applies to any rule that: (1) Is
determined to be ‘‘economically
significant’’ as defined under Executive
Order 12866, and (2) concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
EPA has reason to believe may have a
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
disproportionate effect on children. If
the regulatory action meets both criteria,
the Agency must evaluate the
environmental health or safety effects of
the planned rule on children, and
explain why the planned regulation is
preferable to other potentially effective
and reasonably feasible alternatives
considered by the Agency.
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
as applying only to those regulatory
actions that are based on health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under Section 5–501 of the Order has
the potential to influence the regulation.
This proposed rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does
not establish an environmental standard
intended to mitigate health or safety
risks.
H. Executive Order No. 13211: Actions
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This proposed rule is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ as defined in
Executive Order No. 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001)) because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
This proposed rule does not pertain to
any segment of the energy production
economy nor does it regulate any
manner of energy use. Therefore, we
have concluded that this proposed rule
is not likely to have any adverse energy
effects.
I. The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law.
No. 104–113, Section 12(d) (15 U.S.C.
272 note) directs EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be
inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications,
test methods, sampling procedures, and
business practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. The NTTAA directs
EPA to provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards. This
rulemaking does not involve technical
standards. Therefore, EPA is not
considering the use of any voluntary
consensus standards.
EPA welcomes comments on this
aspect of the proposed rulemaking and,
specifically, invites the public to
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identify potentially-applicable
voluntary consensus standards and to
explain why such standards should be
used in this regulation.
Dated: October 21, 2005.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 82
Environmental protection;
Environmental treaty; Montreal Protocol
on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer; Ozone depletion; Methyl
bromide; Chemicals; Exports, Imports,
Production, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
40 CFR part 82 is proposed to be
amended as follows:
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Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7601, 7671–
7671q.
2. Section 82.8 is amended by revising
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 82.8 Grant of essential use allowances
and critical use allowances.
PART 82—PROTECTION OF
STRATOSPHERIC OZONE
*
1. The authority citation for part 82
continues to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) Allocated critical use allowances
granted for specified control period.
2006 Critical
use allowances for preplant*
(kilograms)
2006 Critical
uses allowances for postharvest uses*
(kilograms)
Great Lakes Chemical Corp ....................................................................................................................................
Albemarle Corp ........................................................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc ........................................................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc ................................................................................................................................................................
3,831,117
1,575,415
870,292
26,971
315,974
129,934
129,934
2,224
Total ..................................................................................................................................................................
6,303,796
519,910
Company
* For
production or import of class I, Group VI controlled substance exclusively for the Pre-Plant or Post-Harvest uses specified in appendix L
to this subpart.
(2) Allocated critical stock allowances
granted for specified control period.
Company
Albemarle
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Blair Soil Fumigation
Burnside Services, Inc.
Cardinal Professional Products
Carolina Eastern, Inc.
Degesch America, Inc.
Dodson Bros.
Great Lakes Chemical Corp.
Harvey Fertilizer & Gas
Helena Chemical Co.
Hendrix & Dail
Hy Yield Bromine
Industrial Fumigation Company
J.C. Ehrlich Co.
Pacific Ag
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One
Reddick Fumigants
Royster-Clark, Inc.
Southern State Cooperative, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident Agricultural Products
UAP Southeast (NC)
UAP Southeast (SC)
Univar
Vanguard Fumigation Co.
Western Fumigation
TOTAL—1,150,824 kilograms
3. Section 82.13 is amended by
revising paragraph (dd) and adding
paragraph (ee) to read as follows:
§ 82.13 Recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for class I controlled
substances.
*
*
*
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*
*
16:08 Oct 26, 2005
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(dd) Every approved critical user
purchasing an amount of critical use
methyl bromide or purchasing
fumigation services with critical use
methyl bromide must, for each request,
identify the use as a critical use and
certify being an approved critical users.
The approved critical user certification
will state, in part: I certify, under
penalty of law, ‘‘I am an approved
critical user and I will use this quantity
of methyl bromide for an approved
critical use. My action conforms to the
requirements associated with the critical
use exemption published in 40 CFR part
82. I am aware that any agricultural
commodity within a treatment chamber,
facility or field I fumigate with critical
use methyl bromide cannot
subsequently or concurrently be
fumigated with non-critical use methyl
bromide during the same control period,
excepting a QPS exemption or a
treatment for a different use (e.g., a
different crop or commodity). I will not
use this quantity of methyl bromide for
a treatment chamber, facility, or field
that I previously fumigated with noncritical use methyl bromide during the
same control period, excepting a QPS
treatment for a different use (e.g., a
different crop or commodity), unless a
local township limit now prevents me
from using methyl bromide alternatives
or I have now become an approved
critical user as a result of rulemaking.’’
The certification will also indicate that
type of critical use methyl bromide
purchased, the acreage/square footage
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treated and will be signed and dated by
the approved critical user.
(ee) Petition Process for Critical Use
Methyl Bromide.
(1) By October 1 of the relevant
control period, an approved critical user
may petition the Director of the Office
of Atmospheric Programs to convert a
quantity of critical stock allowances
held by an identified distributor to
critical use allowances to be expended
by an identified producer/importer. The
approved critical user, or a consortium
acting on the user’s behalf, must submit
the following information. The entities
that provide information to be included
in a petition should indicate what
information they are claiming as
confidential business information.
Information claimed as confidential will
be treated in accordance with EPA’s
regulations on confidential business
information at 40 CFR part 2, subpart B.
(i) Name and address;
(ii) Name of contact person and phone
and fax number(s), and e-mail address;
(iii) The name of the organization/
consortium that submitted an
application for a critical use exemption
and of which the approved critical user
is a member;
(iv) Description of use, location and
limiting critical condition qualifying for
critical use methyl bromide;
(v) Quantity (in kilograms) of methyl
bromide needed for the relevant control
period and the amount acquired to date;
(vi) Documentation or phone logs of
unsuccessful attempts to place an order
for a specific quantity of critical use
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methyl bromide with at least two
entities listed in 82.8;
(vii) The name, address and contact
information for the distributor and the
producer/importer who will be part of
the adjustment transaction (converting
critical stock allowances (CSAs) to
critical use allowances (CUAs));
(viii) A letter from the distributor
confirming that they hold critical stock
allowances (CSAs) for which they do
not hold, and cannot obtain, a
corresponding quantity of pre-phaseout
inventories of methyl bromide; agreeing
to the transfer, with EPA approval, of a
specified quantity of their critical stock
allowances (CSAs) to an identified
producer/importer for conversion to
critical use allowances (CUAs), on the
condition that the producer/importer
offer the distributor an opportunity to
purchase a quantity of critical use
methyl bromide equivalent to that
produced or imported through the
expenditure of the resulting critical use
allowances (CUAs); and confirming that
the distributor will offer the petitioner,
in turn, an opportunity to purchase the
same quantity of critical use methyl
bromide for critical uses;
(ix) A letter from the identified
producer/importer agreeing to the
receipt of the critical stock allowances
(CSAs) transferred by the distributor,
requesting EPA approval to convert the
critical stock allowances (CSAs) to
critical use allowances (CUAs), and
confirming that they will offer the
distributor an opportunity to purchase a
quantity of critical use methyl bromide
equivalent to that produced or imported
with the critical use allowances (CUAs)
resulting from the transaction.
(2) If the Director of the Office of
Atmospheric Programs notifies the
petitioner of deficiencies in the
submitted information, the petitioner
will have 15 working days to submit the
missing information. If the petitioner
does not submit the missing information
within the 15 working days, the Director
of the Office of Atmospheric Programs
will not further consider the petition.
(3) Within 30 working days of receipt
of a fully complete petition, the Director
of the Office of Atmospheric Programs
will issue a letter to the petitioner, and
copies to the distributor and producer/
importer identified as being involved in
the transaction, either granting or
denying the petition. The Director of the
Office of Atmospheric Programs will
consider the information received in
accordance with paragraph (ee)(1) of
this section and other available
information such as the availability and
technical and economic feasibility of
stockpiles and the industry-wide
progress on implementing alternatives.
The Director of the Office of
Atmospheric Programs may deny a
petition, make a determination to deny,
in full or in part, a petition to convert
a quantity of critical stock allowances
(CSAs) to critical use allowances (CUAs)
for one or more of the following reasons:
(i) The need for the quantity of methyl
bromide in the petition can be supplied
from existing stocks held by other
distributors, or from critical use methyl
bromide produced or imported with
critical use allowances (CUAs) held by
other distributors;
(ii) The need for the quantity of
methyl bromide in the petition can be
met by an alternative to methyl bromide
due to changed circumstances in the
situation of the approved critical use
category;
(iii) There is evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation;
(iv) Approval of the petition would be
inconsistent with U.S. commitments
and obligations under the provisions of
the Montreal Protocol or (including
Decisions agreed by the Parties);
(v) Approval of the petition would be
inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
(vi) Granting the petition may
reasonably be expected to endanger
human health or the environment.
(4) Within 10 working days of receipt
of a letter (the ‘‘denial letter’’) from the
Director of the Office of Atmospheric
Programs denying, in full or in part, the
petition to convert a quantity of critical
stock allowances (CSAs) to critical use
allowances (CUAs), the petitioner may
submit a one-time appeal with
elaborated information. Within 10
working days, the Director of the Office
of Atmospheric Programs may affirm the
denial or determination to deny the
petition to convert a quantity of critical
stock allowances (CSAs) to critical use
allowances (CUAs) or make a
determination to grant the petition to
convert a quantity of critical stock
allowances (CSAs) to critical use
allowances (CUAs) in light of the
information evidence submitted with
the appeal and other available
information. If no appeal is submitted
by the tenth day after receipt of the
denial letter notice outlining a
determination by the Director of the
Office of Atmospheric Programs to deny
or grant a petition, the denial will be
final on that day.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Appendix L is revised to read as
follows:
Appendix L to Part 82 Subpart A—
Approved Critical Uses, and Limiting
Critical Conditions for Those Uses for
the 2006 Control Period
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
PRE-PLANT USES
Cucurbits ..................
(a) Michigan growers ............................
(b) Southeastern U.S. except Georgia
limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
(c) Georgia growers ..............................
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With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe soilborne fungal disease infestation, or moderate to severe disease infestation could occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or to a lesser
extent: fungal disease infestation and root knot nematodes; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, moderate to
severe fungal disease infestation, or to a lesser extent: root knot nematodes;
or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
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62051
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
Eggplant ...................
(a) Florida growers ................................
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or restrictions on alternatives due to karst geology; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root and collar rots, or
moderate to severe southern blight infestation, and to a lesser extent: crown
and root rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe soilborne fungal disease infestation could occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe disease infestation.
(b) Georgia growers ..............................
(c) Michigan growers .............................
Forest Nursery Seedlings.
(a) Growers in Alabama, Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas
and Virginia.
(b) International Paper and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in
Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina and Texas.
(c) Public (government owned) seedling nurseries in the states of Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,
Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, New
Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Utah, Washington, West Virginia and
Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, North
Carolina and South Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing in
Washington and Oregon.
(f) Michigan growers .............................
(g) Michigan herbaceous perennials
growers.
Orchard Nursery
Seedlings.
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry
Nursery Consortium limited to growing locations in California and Washington (Driscoll’s raspberries and
their contract growers in California
and Washington).
(b) Members of the California Association of Nurserymen-Deciduous Fruit
and Nut Tree Growers.
(c) California rose nurseries ..................
Strawberry Nurseries
VerDate Aug<31>2005
(a) California growers ............................
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With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe weed infestation including purple and yellow
nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation, or
moderate to severe nematodes, and to a lesser extent: fungal disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, moderate to
severe disease infestation, and to a lesser extent: nematodes and worms.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist of could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe
fungal disease infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, moderate to severe Canada
thistle infestation, moderate to severe nutsedge infestation, and to a lesser
extent: nematodes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe nematodes, moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, and to a lesser extent: yellow nutsedge and other weeds infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematode infestation, medium to heavy clay
soils, or a prohibition of the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products due to
reaching local township limits on the use of this alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, medium to heavy clay soils, or a
prohibition of the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products due to reaching local
township limits on the use of this alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or user may be prohibited from using
1,3-dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative have been reached.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe yellow
or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
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Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
(b) North Carolina, Tennessee and
Maryland growers.
Orchard Replant .......
Ornamentals .............
Peppers ....................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe black root rot, or moderate to severe root-knot
nematodes, or moderate to severe yellow and purple nutsedge infestation,
and to a lesser extent: crown rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) California stone fruit growers .......... With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard
replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative
have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) California table and raisin grape With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
growers.
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe fungal disease infestation, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard
replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative
have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(c) California walnut growers ................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard
soils to prevent orchard replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township
limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(d) California almond growers ............... With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe nematodes, or replanted (non-virgin) orchard
soils to prevent orchard replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township
limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) California growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because
local township limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Florida growers ................................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe weed infestation, or moderate to severe disease
infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or karst topography; or with a
need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(a) California growers ............................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or a prohibition on the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because
local township limits for this alternative have been reached; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Lou- With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
isiana, North Carolina, South Caroconditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumilina, Tennessee and Virginia growers.
gation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root, collar,
crown and root rots, or the presence of an occupied structure within 100 feet
of a grower’s field the size of 100 acres or less; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(c) Florida growers ................................ With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or
karst topography; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(d) Georgia growers .............................. With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions either already exist or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate
to severe nematodes, or moderate to severe pythium root and collar rots, or
moderate to severe southern blight infestation, and to a lesser extent: crown
and root rot; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
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62053
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
(e) Michigan growers ............................
With a reasonable expectation that moderate to severe fungal disease infestation would occur without methyl bromide fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe black root rot or crown rot, or moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or
a prohibition of the use of 1,3-dichloropropene products because local township limits for this alternative have been reached, time to transition to an alternative; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge, or moderate to severe
nematodes, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or karst topography
and to a lesser extent: carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge, or moderate to severe
nematodes, or moderate to severe black root and crown rot, or the presence
of an occupied structure within 100 feet of a grower’s field the size of 100
acres or less; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe fungal
pathogens infestation; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes, or the
presence of an occupied structure within 100 feet of a grower’s field the size
of 100 acres or less, or karst topography; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe disease infestation, or moderate to severe nematodes; or with a need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
For the production of industry certified pure sod; with a reasonable expectation
that one or more of the following limiting critical conditions already either exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
bermudagrass, nutsedge and off-type perennial grass infestation, or moderate to severe, or moderate to severe white grub infestation; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Strawberry Fruit ........
(a) California growers ............................
(b) Florida growers ................................
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland,
New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia growers.
Tomatoes .................
(a) Michigan growers ............................
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee growers.
(c) California growers ............................
Turfgrass ..................
(a) U.S. turfgrass sod nursery producers who are members of
Turfgrass Producers International
(TPI).
POST-HARVEST USES
Food Processing ......
(a) Rice millers in all locations in the
U.S. who are members of the USA
Rice Millers Association.
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities in
the U.S. who are active members of
the Pet Food Institute. (For today’s
rule, ‘‘pet food’’ refers to domestic
dog and cat food).
(c) Kraft Foods in the U.S. ....................
(d) Members of the North American
Millers’ Association in the U.S.
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With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: moderate to severe infestation of beetles, weevils or
moths, or older structures that can not be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: moderate to severe infestation or beetles, moths, or cockroaches, or older structures that can not be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: older structures that can not be properly sealed to use an
alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe beetle infestation, or older structures that can not be
properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of
sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an
alternative.
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Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical
uses
Approved critical user and location of
use
Limiting critical conditions
(e) Members of the National Pest Management Association associated with
dry commodity structure fumigation
(cocoa) and dry commodity fumigation (processed food, herbs, spices,
and dried milk).
(a) California entities storing walnuts,
beans, dried plums, figs, raisins,
dates and pistachios in California.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation, or older structures that can
not be properly sealed to use an alternative to methyl bromide, or the presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosivity, time to transition to an alternative.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions exists: rapid fumigation is required to meet a critical market window, such as during the holiday season, rapid fumigation is required when a
buyer provides short (2 working days or less) notification for a purchase, or
there is a short period after harvest in which to fumigate and there is limited
silo availability for using alternatives; or with a need for methyl bromide for
research purposes.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
With a reasonable expectation that one or more of the following limiting critical
conditions already exists or could occur without methyl bromide fumigation:
moderate to severe red legged ham beetle, cheese/ham skipper, dermested
beetle or ham mite infestation.
Commodity Storage
Dry Cured Pork
Products.
(a) Members of the National Country
Ham Association.
(b) Members of the American Association of Meat Processors.
(c) Nahunta Pork Center (North Carolina).
[FR Doc. 05–21526 Filed 10–26–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 207 (Thursday, October 27, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 62030-62054]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-21526]
[[Page 62029]]
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Part III
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 82
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2006 Critical Use Exemption From
the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 207 / Thursday, October 27, 2005 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 62030]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[FRL-7990-1]
RIN 2060-AN18
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2006 Critical Use
Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing an exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide production and import for 2006 critical uses. Specifically, EPA
is proposing uses that will qualify for the 2006 critical use
exemption, and the amount of methyl bromide that may be produced,
imported, or made available from stocks for those uses in 2006. EPA's
action is taken under the authority of the Clean Air Act and reflects
recent consensus Decisions taken by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Protocol) at the
16th Meeting of the Parties (MOP) and the 2nd Extraordinary Meeting of
the Parties (ExMOP). EPA is seeking comment on both the list of
critical uses, and on EPA's determination of the amounts of methyl
bromide needed to satisfy those uses.
DATES: Written comments on this proposed rule must be received on or
before November 28, 2005, except as otherwise noted in this paragraph.
Any party requesting a public hearing must notify the contact person
listed below by 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on November 7, 2005. If a
hearing is requested it will be held on November 14, 2005. If a hearing
is held, any party may submit follow-up comments in the form of
rebuttal or supplementary information, but such comments must be
received on or before December 12, 2005. Persons interested in
attending a public hearing should consult with the contact person below
regarding the location and time of the hearing. Whether or not a
hearing is held, if data relevant to the critical use exemption level
is received on or before November 28, 2005, any party may submit
follow-up comments regarding such data, but such comments must be
received on or before December 12, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Regional Material in
Edocket (RME) ID No. OAR-2005-0122, by one of the following methods:
1. Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
2. Agency Web site: https://www.epa.gov/edocket. EDOCKET, EPA's
electronic public docket and comment system, is EPA's preferred method
for receiving comments. Follow the on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
3. E-mail: A-and-R-docket@epa.gov.
4. Fax: (202) 343-2337, attn: Marta Montoro.
5. Mail: ``OAR-2005-0122'', Air Docket, Environmental Protection
Agency, Mailcode: 6102T, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC
20460.
6. Hand Delivery or Courier. Deliver your comments to: EPA Air
Docket, EPA West, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW., Room B108, Mail Code
6102T, Washington, DC 20460. Such deliveries are only accepted during
the Docket's normal hours of operation, and special arrangements should
be made for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to OAR-2005-0122. EPA's policy
is that all comments received will be included in the public docket
without change and may be made available online at https://www.epa.gov/
edocket, including any personal information provided, unless the
comment includes information claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Do not submit information that you consider to be CBI or
otherwise protected through EDOCKET, regulations.gov, or e-mail. The
EPA EDOCKET and the Federal regulations.gov Web site are ``anonymous
access'' systems, which means EPA will not know your identity or
contact information unless you provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly to EPA without going through
EDOCKET or regulations.gov, your e-mail address will be automatically
captured and included as part of the comment that is placed in the
public docket and made available on the Internet. If you submit an
electronic comment, EPA recommends that you include your name and other
contact information in the body of your comment and with any disk or
CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of encryption, and be free of any defects
or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the EDOCKET index
at https://www.epa.gov/edocket. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, i.e., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically in EDOCKET or in hard
copy at the Air Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room B102, 1301 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC. This Docket Facility is open from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The
telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the
telephone number for the Air Docket is (202) 566-1742.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about this
proposed rule, contact Marta Montoro by telephone at (202) 343-9321, or
by e-mail at mebr.allocation@epa.gov or by mail at Marta Montoro, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Stratospheric Protection Division,
Stratospheric Program Implementation Branch (6205J), 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460. You may also visit the Ozone
Depletion Web site of EPA's Stratospheric Protection Division at http:/
/www.epa.gov/ozone for further information about EPA's Stratospheric
Ozone Protection regulations, the science of ozone layer depletion, and
other related topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This proposed rule concerns Clean Air Act
restrictions on the consumption, production and on the use of methyl
bromide (class I, Group VI controlled substance) for critical uses
during the calendar year of 2006. Under the Clean Air Act, methyl
bromide consumption and production was phased out on January 1, 2005
apart from allowable exemptions, namely the critical use exemption and
the quarantine and pre-shipment exemption. With today's action, EPA is
proposing and seeking comment on the uses that will qualify for the
2006 critical use exemption, as well as specific amounts of methyl
bromide that may be produced, imported, or made available from stocks
for proposed critical uses in 2006.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. Regulated Entities
B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document and Other Related
Information?
II. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone-
Depleting Substances?
[[Page 62031]]
III. What Is Methyl Bromide?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and
Import of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
B. How Does This Proposed Rulemaking Relate to Previous
Rulemaking Regarding the Critical Use Exemption?
C. What Are the Proposed Critical Uses?
D. What Are the Uses That May Obtain Methyl Bromide for
Research?
E. What Amount of Methyl Bromide Is Necessary for Critical Uses?
F. What Are the Sources of Critical Use Methyl Bromide?
G. What Are the Critical Use Allowance Allocations?
H. What Are the Critical Stock Allowance Allocations?
I. Clarifications to the Framework Rule
J. Proposed Supplementary Critical Use Exemptions for 2006
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order No. 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order No. 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order No. 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order No. 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health & Safety Risks
H. Executive Order No. 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer Advancement Act
I. General Information
A. Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this proposed action are those
associated with the production, import, export, sale, application and
use of methyl bromide covered by an approved critical use exemption.
Potentially regulated categories and entities include:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Examples of regulated entities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry............................... Producers, Importers and Exporters of methyl bromide; Applicators,
Distributors of methyl bromide; Users of methyl bromide, e.g. farmers
of vegetable crops, fruits and seedlings; and owners of stored food
commodities and structures such as grain mills and processors,
Government and non-government researchers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The above table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather to
provide a guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated
by this proposed action. This table lists the types of entities that
EPA is aware could potentially be regulated by this proposed action. To
determine whether your facility, company, business, or organization is
regulated by this proposed action, you should carefully examine the
regulations promulgated at 40 CFR 82, subpart A. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action to a particular entity,
consult the person listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document and Other Related Information?
1. Docket. EPA has established an official public docket for this
action under the Office of Air and Radiation Docket & Information
Center, Electronic Air Docket ID No. OAR-2005-0122. The official public
docket consists of the documents specifically referenced in this
action, any public comments received, and other information related to
this action. Although a part of the official docket, the public docket
does not include Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. The official
public docket is the collection of materials that is available for
public viewing at EPA West, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW., Room B108, Mail
Code 6102T, Washington, DC 20460, Phone: (202) 566-1742, Fax: (202)
566-1741. The materials may be inspected from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. A reasonable fee may
be charged for copying docket materials.
2. Electronic Access. You may access this Federal Register document
electronically through the EPA Internet under the Federal Register
listings at https://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/. An electronic version of the
public docket is available through EPA's electronic public docket and
comment system, EPA Dockets. EPA prefers that you use the electronic
EPA Dockets at https://www.epa.gov/edocket/ to submit or view public
comments and access the index listing of the contents of the official
public docket. To locate the docket on EPA's docket Web site, select
``search,'' then key in the appropriate docket identification number,
in this case OAR-2005-0122.
Certain types of information will not be placed in the EPA Dockets.
Information claimed as confidential business information (CBI) and
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute, will not
be included in the official public docket and will not be available for
public viewing in EPA's electronic public docket. EPA's policy is that
copyrighted material will not be placed in EPA's electronic public
docket but will be available only in printed, paper form in the
official public docket. Although not all docket materials may be
available electronically, you may still access any of the publicly
available docket materials through the docket facility identified in
Unit B.
For public commenters, it is important to note that EPA's policy is
that public comments, whether submitted electronically or in paper,
will be made available for public viewing in EPA's electronic public
docket as EPA receives them and without change, unless the comment
contains copyrighted material, CBI, or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. When EPA identifies a comment
containing copyrighted material, EPA will provide a reference to that
material in the version of the comment that is placed in EPA's
electronic public docket.
Public comments submitted on computer disks that are mailed or
delivered to the docket will be transferred to EPA's electronic public
docket. Public comments that are mailed or delivered to the Docket will
be scanned and placed in EPA's electronic public docket. Where
practical, physical objects will be photographed, and the photograph
will be placed in EPA's electronic public docket along with a brief
description written by the docket staff.
II. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone-
Depleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements of the Stratospheric Ozone
Protection Program that limit production and consumption of ozone
depleting substances can be found at 40 CFR part 82 subpart A. The
regulatory program was originally published in the Federal Register on
August 12, 1988 (53 FR 30566), in response to the 1987 signing and
subsequent ratification of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Protocol). The U.S. was one of the original
signatories
[[Page 62032]]
to the 1987 Montreal Protocol and the U.S. ratified the Protocol on
April 12, 1988. Congress then enacted, and President George H.W. Bush
signed into law, the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA of 1990)
which included Title VI on Stratospheric Ozone Protection, codified as
42 U.S.C. Chapter 85, Subchapter VI, to ensure that the United States
could satisfy its obligations under the Protocol. EPA issued new
regulations to implement this legislation and has made several
amendments to the regulations since that time.
III. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless, colorless, toxic gas which is used
as a broad-spectrum pesticide and is controlled under the CAA as a
Class I ozone depleting substance (ODS). Methyl bromide is used in the
U.S. and throughout the world as a fumigant to control a wide variety
of pests such as insects, weeds, rodents, pathogens, and nematodes.
Additional characteristics and details about the uses of methyl bromide
can be found in the proposed rule on the phaseout schedule for methyl
bromide published in the Federal Register on March 18, 1993 (58 FR
15014) and the final rule published in the Federal Register on December
10, 1993 (58 FR 65018).
The phaseout schedule for methyl bromide production and consumption
was revised in a direct final rulemaking on November 28, 2000 (65 FR
70795), which allowed for the phased reduction in methyl bromide
consumption and extended the phaseout to 2005. The revised phaseout
schedule was again amended to allow for an exemption for quarantine and
preshipment purposes on July 19, 2001 (66 FR 37751) with an interim
final rule and with a final rule (68 FR 238) on January 2, 2003.
Information on methyl bromide can be found at the following sites of
the World Wide Web: https://www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr and https://
www.unep.org/ozone or by contacting the Stratospheric Ozone Hotline at
1-800-296-1996.
Because it is a pesticide, methyl bromide is also regulated by EPA
under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
and other statutes and regulatory authority, as well as by States under
their own statutes and regulatory authority. Under FIFRA, methyl
bromide is a restricted use pesticide. Because of this status, a
restricted use pesticide is subject to certain Federal and State
requirements governing its sale, distribution, and use. Nothing in this
final rule implementing the Clean Air Act is intended to derogate from
provisions in any other Federal, State, or local laws or regulations
governing actions including, but not limited to, the sale,
distribution, transfer, and use of methyl bromide. All entities that
would be affected by provisions of this rule must continue to comply
with FIFRA and other pertinent statutory and regulatory requirements
for pesticides (including, but not limited to, requirements pertaining
to restricted use pesticides) when importing, exporting, acquiring,
selling, distributing, transferring, or using methyl bromide for
critical uses. The regulations in today's action are intended only to
implement the CAA restrictions on the production, consumption and use
of methyl bromide for critical uses exempted from the phaseout of
methyl bromide.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
Methyl bromide was added to the Protocol as an ozone depleting
substance in 1992 through the Copenhagen amendment to the Protocol. The
Parties authorize critical use exemptions through their Decisions.
The Parties agreed that each industrialized country's level of
methyl bromide production and consumption in 1991 should be the
baseline for establishing a freeze in the level of methyl bromide
production and consumption for industrialized countries. EPA published
a final rule in the Federal Register on December 10, 1993 (58 FR
65018), listing methyl bromide as a class I, Group VI controlled
substance, freezing U.S. production and consumption at this 1991 level,
and, in Section 82.7 of the rule, setting forth the percentage of
baseline allowances for methyl bromide granted to companies in each
control period (each calendar year) until the year 2001, when the
complete phaseout would occur (58 FR 65018). This phaseout date was
established in response to a petition filed in 1991 under sections
602(c)(3) and 606(b) of the CAA of 1990, requesting that EPA list
methyl bromide as a class I substance and phase out its production and
consumption. This date was consistent with section 602(d) of the CAA of
1990, which for newly listed class I ozone-depleting substances
provides that ``no extension [of the phaseout schedule in section 604]
under this subsection may extend the date for termination of production
of any class I substance to a date more than 7 years after January 1 of
the year after the year in which the substance is added to the list of
class I substances.'' EPA based its action on scientific assessments
and actions by the Parties to the Montreal Protocol to freeze the level
of methyl bromide production and consumption for industrialized
countries at the 1992 Meeting of the Parties on Copenhagen.
At their 1995 meeting, the Parties made adjustments to the methyl
bromide control measures and agreed to reduction steps and a 2010
phaseout date for industrialized countries with exemptions permitted
for critical uses. At that time, the U.S. continued to have a 2001
phaseout date in accordance with the CAA of 1990 language. At their
1997 meeting, the Parties agreed to further adjustments to the phaseout
schedule for methyl bromide in industrialized countries, with reduction
steps leading to a 2005 phaseout for industrialized countries. In
October 1998, the U.S. Congress amended the CAA to prohibit the
termination of production of methyl bromide prior to January 1, 2005,
to require EPA to bring the U.S. phaseout of methyl bromide in line
with the schedule specified under the Protocol, and to authorize EPA to
provide exemptions for critical uses. These amendments were contained
in Section 764 of the 1999 Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 105-277, October 21, 1998) and
were codified in Section 604 of the CAA, 42 U.S.C. 7671c. On November
28, 2000, EPA issued regulations to amend the phaseout schedule for
methyl bromide and extend the complete phaseout of production and
consumption to 2005 (65 FR 70795).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982), EPA published a final rule in
the Federal Register that established the framework for the critical
use exemption; set forth a list of approved critical uses for 2005; and
specified the amount of methyl bromide that could be supplied in 2005
from available stocks and new production or import to meet approved
critical uses. Today, EPA is proposing the uses that will qualify as
approved critical uses in 2006 and the amount of the 2006 critical use
exemption.
Today's proposed action reflects Decision XVI/2, taken at the
Parties' Sixteenth Meeting in November 2004; and Decision Ex.II/I,
taken at the Second Extraordinary Meeting of the Parties in July 2005.
In accordance with Article 2H(5), the Parties have issued several
Decisions pertaining to the critical use exemption. These include
Decision IX/6, which sets forth criteria for review of proposed
critical uses; Decision XVI/2, which approved a portion of the 2006
nominated amounts and critical-use
[[Page 62033]]
categories; and Decision Ex.II/I, which approved another portion of the
2006 nominated amounts for critical-use categories. For a discussion of
the relationship between the relevant provisions of the CAA and Article
2H of the Protocol, and the extent to which EPA takes into account
Decisions of the Parties that interpret Article 2H, refer to the
December 23, 2004 FR notice (69 FR 76984-76985). Briefly, EPA regards
Decisions IX/6, XVI/2, and Decision Ex.II/1 as subsequent consensus
agreements of the Parties that address the interpretation and
application of the critical use provision in Article 2H(5) of the
Protocol. In today's action, EPA is following the terms of these
Decisions. This will ensure consistency with the Montreal Protocol and
satisfy the requirements of Section 604(d)(6) and Section 614(b) of the
Clean Air Act.
In Decision XVI/2, taken in November 2004, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed as follows: ``for the agreed critical-use categories
for 2006, set forth in section IIA to the annex to the present decision
for each Party, to permit, subject to the conditions set forth in
decision Ex.I/4, to the extent those conditions are applicable, the
levels of production and consumption for 2006 set forth in section IIB
to the annex to the present decision which are necessary to satisfy
critical uses, with the understanding that additional levels of
production and consumption and categories of uses may be approved by
the Meeting of the Parties to the Montreal Protocol in accordance with
decision IX/6.'' Section IIA of the Annex to Decision XVI/2 lists the
following critical use categories for the U.S.: Cucurbits--field; dried
fruit and nuts; forest nursery seedlings; nursery stock--fruit trees,
raspberries, roses; strawberry runners; turfgrass; dry commodities
cocoa beans; dry commodities/structures; eggplant field; mills and
processors; peppers field; strawberry fruit field; tomato field; and
orchard replant with a total agreed critical-use level of 6,897,680
kilograms, which is equivalent to 27% of the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline.
In Decision Ex.II/1, taken in July 2005, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed as follows: ``for the agreed critical uses for 2006,
set forth in table A of the annex to the present decision, to permit,
subject to the conditions set forth in the present decision and in
decision Ex. I/4, to the extent those conditions are applicable, the
supplementary levels of production and consumption for 2006 set forth
in table B of the annex to the present decision which are necessary to
satisfy critical uses, with the understanding that additional levels
and categories of uses may be approved by the Seventeenth Meeting of
the Parties in accordance with decision IX/6.'' Table A of the Annex to
Decision Ex.II/1 lists the following critical use categories for the
U.S.: Ornamentals; dry-cured ham; dry commodities/structures (cocoa
beans); dry commodities/structures (processed foods, herbs and spices,
dried milk and cheese processing facilities); eggplant--field, for
research only; mills and processors; peppers--field; strawberry fruit--
field; tomato--field with a total agreed critical-use level of
1,117,003 kilograms, which is equivalent to 5% of the U.S. 1991 methyl
bromide consumption baseline. When combined, the agreed critical-use
levels for 2006 from Decision XVI/2 and from Decision Ex.II/1 total
8,074,683 kilograms, which is equivalent to 32% of the U.S. 1991 methyl
bromide consumption baseline. Based, in part, on the applications
underlying the U.S. 2006 nomination, the extensive review of those
applications culminating in the preparation of that nomination, and the
Decisions noted above, EPA is proposing to modify Columns B and C of
Appendix L to 40 CFR part 82, subpart A to reflect agreed critical-use
categories, locations of use, and limiting critical conditions
applicable for the 2006 control period.
The question of whether, and to what extent, EPA should adjust the
total critical use level agreed by the Parties for 2006 is addressed in
Section E below. The question of what amount of the total should come
from new production or import, and what amount should come from pre-
phaseout inventories, is addressed in Section F below. For the reasons
given in those sections, and based, in part, on the applications
underlying the U.S. 2006 nomination, the extensive review of those
applications culminating in the preparation of that nomination, and the
Decisions noted above, EPA is proposing to modify the table in 40 CFR
82.8 to reflect the amount of methyl bromide that may be produced or
imported, and sold from pre-phaseout inventories, for the 2006 control
period.
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying applicants as to the
availability of an application process for a critical use exemption to
the methyl bromide phaseout. On May 23, 2005, the Agency published a
notice in the Federal Register (68 FR 24737) announcing the deadline to
apply, and directing applicants to announcements posted on EPA's methyl
bromide Web site at https://www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr. Applicants were told
they may apply as individuals or as part of a group of users (a
``consortium'') who face the same limiting critical conditions (i.e.,
specific conditions which establish a critical need for methyl
bromide). This process has been repeated on an annual basis since then.
The critical use exemption is designed to meet the needs of methyl
bromide users who do not have technically and economically feasible
alternatives available to them.
The criteria for the exemption are delineated in Decision IX/6 of
the Parties to the Protocol. In that Decision, the Parties agreed that
``a use of methyl bromide should qualify as `critical' only if the
nominating Party determines that: (i) The specific use is critical
because the lack of availability of methyl bromide for that use would
result in a significant market disruption; and (ii) there are no
technically and economically feasible alternatives or substitutes
available to the user that are acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and public health and are suitable to the crops and
circumstances of the nomination.''
In response to the yearly requests for critical use exemption
applications published in the Federal Register, applicants have
provided information supporting their position that they have no
technically and economically feasible alternatives to methyl bromide
available to them. Applicants for the exemption have submitted
information on their use of methyl bromide, on research into the use of
alternatives to methyl bromide, on efforts to minimize use of methyl
bromide and efforts to reduce emissions and on the specific technical
and economic research results of testing alternatives to methyl
bromide.
EPA's December 23, 2004, regulation describing the operational
framework for the critical use exemption (69 FR 76982) established the
majority of critical uses for the 2005 calendar. Today's action
proposes exemptions for 2006 reflecting information that the U.S.
Government submitted to the Protocol's Ozone Secretariat in its annual
Nomination submission in February 2004, as approved by the Parties in
July 2005. For each exemption period, EPA provides an opportunity such
as this for comment on the amounts of methyl bromide that may be
supplied under the critical use exemption and the end uses that may
obtain this critical use methyl bromide.
The domestic review process is discussed in detail in a memo titled
[[Page 62034]]
``Development of 2003 Nomination for a Critical Use Exemption for
Methyl Bromide for the United States of America'' on EDOCKET OAR-2005-
0122. Briefly, the U.S. Government reviews applications using the
criteria in Decision IX/6 and creates a package for submission to the
Ozone Secretariat of the Protocol (the ``critical use nomination'' or
CUN). The CUNs of various countries are then reviewed by the Methyl
Bromide Technical Options Committee (MBTOC) and the Technical and
Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP), which are independent advisory bodies
to the Parties. These bodies make recommendations to the Parties
regarding the nominations.
On February 7, 2004, the U.S. Government submitted the second U.S.
Nomination for a Critical Use Exemption for Methyl Bromide to the Ozone
Secretariat of the United Nations Environment Programme. This second
nomination contained a supplemental request for critical methyl bromide
for 2005 and the initial request for 2006. In June 2004, MBTOC sent
questions to the U.S. Government concerning technical and economic
issues in the nomination. The U.S. Government's response was
transmitted on August 12, 2004. The U.S. submitted a revised request in
conjunction with ``The U.S. Nomination for Critical Uses for Methyl
Bromide in 2007 and Beyond.'' This revised request was for an
additional amount of 622,053 kilograms of methyl bromide for a total of
2,844,985 kilograms of methyl bromide for the year 2006. This revised
request was included in the U.S. rebuttal to MBTOC's recommendation
issued in its October 2004 report. These documents, together with
reports by the advisory bodies noted above, can be accessed on EDOCKET
OAR-2005-0122.
B. How Does This Proposed Rulemaking Relate to Previous Rulemakings
Regarding the Critical Use Exemption?
On December 23, 2004, EPA published in the Federal Register a Final
Rule entitled, ``Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Process for
Exempting Critical Uses From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide'' (the
``Framework Rule'') (69 FR 76982). That rule established the framework
for the critical use exemption in the U.S, including trading provisions
and recordkeeping and reporting obligations.
The Framework Rule defines the terms ``critical use allowances''
(CUAs) and ``critical stock allowances'' (CSAs) at 40 CFR 82.3. Each
allowance represents the right to produce or import, or to sell from
inventory, respectively, one kilogram of methyl bromide to an approved
critical use. For example, a distributor with 100 CSAs may sell 100
kilograms of stockpiled pre-phaseout methyl bromide to an approved
critical use. Today's action proposes the uses that will qualify as
approved critical uses for 2006 and the amount of CUAs and CSAs to be
allocated for those uses. In the future, EPA will continue to undertake
rulemakings that address both the approved critical uses and the
amounts of methyl bromide to be allocated for critical uses in specific
exemption periods.
On August 30, 2005, EPA published a direct final rule and
concurrent proposal relating to supplemental critical use exemptions
for 2005 (70 FR 51270). These recent notices in the Federal Register
would establish three (3) additional uses as qualifying for the
critical use exemption and permit access to critical use methyl bromide
for those uses in 2005. These notices would also allocate additional
CSAs for supplementary amounts of critical use methyl bromide in 2005.
The additional allocations for 2005 would supplement the CUAs and CSAs
previously allocated for 2005 in the Federal Register on December 23,
2004 (69 FR 76982). In today's proposed action, the Agency is
proposing: (1) To establish the list of uses that qualify for the
critical use exemption in 2006; and (2) to specify the amounts of
methyl bromide that may be produced or imported, or supplied from pre-
phaseout inventories, for those uses in 2006. EPA seeks comment on the
proposed 2006 critical uses and the amount of methyl bromide the Agency
has determined to be necessary to satisfy those uses. For detailed
technical and economic information on the critical uses and the U.S.
Government's justifications for why there is a critical need for
exempted methyl bromide, the Agency refers commenters to the E-Docket
where the U.S. nominations and additional information in the form of
responses to MBTOC are available. The 2004 U.S. nomination can be found
at EDOCKET OAR-2003-0017 and EDOCKET OAR-2005-0122. These are the
technical documents which are the basis for the Parties' authorization
of critical uses and permitted exempt production and import and which
form part of the basis for this rulemaking. Reports by the Protocol's
advisory bodies, the MBTOC and TEAP, as well as questions to the U.S.
from MBTOC, are also available in EDOCKET OAR-2005-0122.
C. What Are the Proposed Critical Uses?
In Decision XVI/2, taken in November 2004, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed as follows: ``for the agreed critical-use categories
for 2006, set forth in section IIA to the annex to the present decision
for each Party, to permit, subject to the conditions set forth in
decision Ex.I/4, to the extent those conditions are applicable, the
levels of production and consumption for 2006 set forth in section IIB
to the annex to the present decision which are necessary to satisfy
critical uses, with the understanding that additional levels of
production and consumption and categories of uses may be approved by
the Meeting of the Parties to the Montreal Protocol in accordance with
decision IX/6.'' Section IIA of the Annex to Decision XVI/2 lists the
following critical use categories for the U.S.: Cucurbits--field; dried
fruit and nuts; forest nursery seedlings; nursery stock--fruit trees,
raspberries, roses; strawberry runners; turfgrass; dry commodities
cocoa beans; dry commodities/structures; eggplant field; mills and
processors; peppers field; strawberry fruit field; tomato field; and
orchard replant with a total agreed critical-use level of 6,897,680
kilograms, which is equivalent to 27% of the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline.
In Decision Ex.II/1, taken in July 2005, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed as follows: ``for the agreed critical uses for 2006,
set forth in table A of the annex to the present decision, to permit,
subject to the conditions set forth in the present decision and in
decision Ex. I/4, to the extent those conditions are applicable, the
supplementary levels of production and consumption for 2006 set forth
in table B of the annex to the present decision which are necessary to
satisfy critical uses, with the understanding that additional levels
and categories of uses may be approved by the Seventeenth Meeting of
the Parties in accordance with decision IX/6.'' Table A of the Annex to
Decision Ex.II/1 lists the following critical use categories for the
U.S.: Ornamentals; dry-cured ham; dry commodities/structures (cocoa
beans); dry commodities/structures (processed foods, herbs and spices,
dried milk and cheese processing facilities); eggplant--field, for
research only; mills and processors; peppers--field; strawberry fruit--
field; tomato--field with a total agreed critical-use level of
1,117,003 kilograms, which is equivalent to 5% of the U.S. 1991 methyl
bromide consumption baseline. When combined, the agreed critical-use
levels for 2006 from Decision XVI/2 and from Decision
[[Page 62035]]
Ex.II/1 total 8,074,683 kilograms, which is equivalent to 32% of the
U.S. 1991 methyl bromide consumption baseline. Based, in part, on the
applications underlying the U.S. 2006 nomination, the extensive review
of those applications culminating in the preparation of that
nomination, and the Decisions noted above, EPA is proposing to modify
Columns B and C of Appendix L to 40 CFR part 82, subpart A to reflect
agreed critical-use categories.
Under the December 23, 2004, Framework Rule (69 FR 76982), an
approved critical user may obtain access to exempted production/import
and limited inventories of pre-phaseout methyl bromide stocks, the
combination of which constitute the supply of ``critical use methyl
bromide'' intended to meet the needs of agreed critical uses.
As set out in the Framework Rule, an approved critical user is a
self-identified entity who meets the following requirements:
(1) For the applicable control period, applied to EPA for a
critical use exemption or is a member of a consortium that applied to
EPA for a critical use exemption for a use and location of use that was
included in the U.S. nomination, authorized by a Decision of the
Parties to the Montreal Protocol, and then finally determined by EPA in
a notice-and-comment rulemaking to be an approved critical use, and
(2) Has an area in the applicable location of use that requires
methyl bromide fumigation because the person reasonably expects that
the area will be subject to a limiting critical condition (LCC) during
the applicable control period.
Using these criteria, an approved critical user could be a tomato
farmer in Florida whose farm is over karst topography but would not
include a tomato farmer in Oklahoma even if he too has a farm over
karst topography because no exemption application was filed on behalf
of Oklahoma tomato farmers. Similarly, a Florida tomato farmer who did
not have a field with karst topography, or one of the other limiting
critical conditions specified in this rule, would not be an approved
critical user because the circumstance of the use is not an approved
critical use.
A ``limiting critical condition'' is the basis on which the
critical need for methyl bromide is demonstrated and authorized. It is
defined as ``the regulatory, technical, and economic circumstances * *
* that establish conditions of critical use of methyl bromide in a
fumigation area.'' 40 CFR 82.3. The limiting critical condition placed
on a use category reflects certain regulatory, technical, or economic
factors that either prohibit the use of alternatives or represent the
lack of a technically or economically feasible alternative for that use
or circumstance. For example, EPA may determine that a critical use
exemption for tomatoes is only necessary for areas of tomato production
in karst topography even if the EPA received applications for all of
U.S. fresh market tomato production. In this example, not all tomato
growers would be eligible to acquire exempted critical use methyl
bromide. Only those growers with production in an area with the
limiting critical condition of karst topography would have access to
the methyl bromide under the critical use exemption. Another example is
as follows: EPA received applications for exemptions for all U.S. grain
milling companies that are members of the North American Milling
Association (NAMA). The Parties authorized the exemption because grain
milling companies have a critical need for methyl bromide because the
alternatives can not be used, in part, due to corrosivity to electronic
equipment. Thus, one of the limiting critical conditions for this
critical use category is the presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosivity from fumigation with the alternative. All grain
mills that are members of NAMA that have sensitive electronic equipment
would be eligible to acquire and use critical use methyl bromide.
EPA is proposing the critical uses for the year 2006 as well as the
conditions that make these uses ``critical'' based on EPA's assessment
of the technical and economic feasibility of alternatives and the
potential for a significant market disruption if methyl bromide were
not available for the uses proposed for 2006. This proposal is based on
the information submitted by CUE applicants, as well as public and
proprietary data sources. The CUE applications (except to the extent
claimed confidential), the U.S. nomination, the questions and answers
between the MBTOC and the U.S. Government about the nomination, and
procedural memos are all available on EDOCKET OAR-2005-0122. Data
submitted by the CUE applicants served as a basis for the nomination.
EPA and other government experts also sought data from multiple other
sources, including but not limited to the National Agricultural
Statistics Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the State of
California Department of Pesticide Regulation, and proprietary
agricultural databases available to EPA. All of the CUE applications
underwent a rigorous review by highly qualified technical experts. A
detailed explanation of the nomination process, including the criteria
used by expert reviewers, is available in a memo titled ``2003
Nomination Process'' on EDOCKET OAR-2005-0122. The memo was originally
written to describe the process leading to the 2005 critical use
exemption rules, but is applicable generally to the process leading to
today's action.
The U.S. Government, in developing the nomination, defined the
limiting critical conditions for which exempted methyl bromide was
being sought. The U.S. Government used the information referenced above
to determine if (a) the lack of availability of methyl bromide for a
particular use would result in significant market disruption, and (b)
if there were any technically and economically feasible methyl bromide
substitutes available to the user. The analysis was described in the
U.S. nomination of critical uses. The nomination was then sent to the
Parties to the Protocol, and the Parties used the information in the
nomination and the report from the MBTOC, that was based in part on the
iterative exchange of questions and answers with the U.S. Government,
as the basis for the Decisions which authorized critical uses.
Based on the information described above, EPA determined that the
uses in Table I, with the limiting critical conditions specified,
qualify to obtain and use critical use methyl bromide in 2006. However,
as discussed in Section E, some of the circumstances for some of the
critical use categories have changed due to recent registrations of an
alternative and therefore EPA is proposing a decrease in the total CUE
level for 2006. EPA welcomes submissions of additional information
regarding substitutes and alternatives for any of the uses in the Table
I below. EPA wishes to note that while we may, in response to comments,
reduce the quantities of critical use methyl bromide, or the types of
critical uses, compared to what has been authorized by the Parties, EPA
will not increase the quantities, or types, beyond those authorized by
the Parties.
EPA proposes, based on the determination described in the U.S.
nomination and its supporting documents, that users who are in a
specific geographic location, identified below, or who are members of a
specific industry consortium, identified below, or companies
specifically identified below, are approved critical users
[[Page 62036]]
provided that such users are subject to the specified limiting critical
condition.
EPA notes the reference to emission minimization techniques in
paragraph 6 of Decision Ex.II/1 and urges the proposed users listed in
Table I. below to use ``emission minimization techniques such as
virtually impermeable films, barrier film technologies, deep shank
injection and/or other techniques that promote environmental
protection, whenever technically and economically feasible.'' Users of
methyl bromide should make every effort to decrease overall emissions
of methyl bromide by implementing measures such as the ones listed in
the previous sentence, to the extent consistent with state and local
laws and regulations. In addition, research is being conducted on the
potential to reduce rates and emissions using high-barrier films.
Table I.--Approved Critical Uses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column A Column B Column C
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approved critical user and
Approved critical uses location of use Limiting critical conditions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRE-PLANT USES
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cucurbits.......................... (a) Michigan growers....... With a reasonable expectation that moderate to
severe soilborne fungal disease infestation,
or moderate to severe disease infestation
could occur without methyl bromide
fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
(b) Southeastern U.S. With a reasonable expectation that one or more
except Georgia limited to of the following limiting critical conditions
growing locations in either already exist or could occur without
Alabama, Arkansas, methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
Kentucky, Louisiana, North yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or to
Carolina, South Carolina, a lesser extent: fungal disease infestation
Tennessee, and Virginia. and root knot nematodes; or with a need for
methyl bromide for research purposes.
(c) Georgia growers........ With a reasonable expectation that one or more
of the following limiting critical conditions
either already exist or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation,
moderate to severe fungal disease
infestation, or to a lesser extent: root knot
nematodes; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
Eggplant........................... (a) Florida growers........ With a reasonable expectation that one or more
of the following limiting critical conditions
either already exist or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or
moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to
severe disease infestation, or restrictions
on alternatives due to karst geology; or with
a need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Georgia growers........ With a reasonable expectation that one or more
of the following limiting critical conditions
either already exist or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or
moderate to severe nematodes, or moderate to
severe pythium root and collar rots, or
moderate to severe southern blight
infestation, and to a lesser extent: crown
and root rot; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(c) Michigan growers....... With a reasonable expectation that moderate to
severe soilborne fungal disease infestation
could occur without methyl bromide
fumigation; or with a need for methyl bromide
for research purposes.
Forest Nursery Seedlings........... (a) growers in Alabama, With a reasonable expectation that one or more
Arkansas, Florida, of the following limiting critical conditions
Georgia, Louisiana, already either exist or could occur without
Mississippi, North methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
Carolina, Oklahoma, South yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas moderate to severe disease infestation.
and Virginia.
(b) International Paper With a reasonable expectation that one or more
with and its subsidiaries of the following limiting critical conditions
limited to growing already either exist or could occur without
locations in Arkansas, methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
Alabama, Georgia, South yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or
Carolina and Texas. moderate to severe disease infestation.
(c) Public (government With a reasonable expectation that one or more
owned) seedling nurseries of the following limiting critical conditions
in the states of Idaho, either already exist or could occur without
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
Kentucky, Maryland, weed infestation including purple and yellow
Missouri, Nebraska, New nutsedge infestation, or moderate to severe
Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Canada thistle infestation, or moderate to
Pennsylvania, Utah, severe nematodes, and to a lesser extent:
Washington, West Virginia fungal disease infestation.
and Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company With a reasonable expectation that one or more
and its subsidiaries of the following limiting critical conditions
limited to growing already either exist or could occur without
locations in Alabama, methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
Arkansas, North Carolina yellow or purple nutsedge infestation,
and South Carolina. moderate to severe disease infestation, and
to a lesser extent: nematodes and worms.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company With a reasonable expectation that one or more
and its subsidiaries of the following limiting critical conditions
limited to growing in already either exist of could occur without
Washington and Oregon. methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
yellow nutsedge infestation, or moderate to
severe fungal disease infestation.
[[Page 62037]]
(f) Michigan growers....... With a reasonable expectation that one or more
of the following limiting critical conditions
already either exist or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
disease infestation, moderate to severe
Canada thistle infestation, moderate to
severe nutsedge infestation, and to a lesser
extent: nematodes.
(g) Michigan herbaceous With a reasonable expectation that one or more
perennials growers. of the following limiting critical conditions
already exist or could occur without methyl
bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
nematodes, moderate to severe fungal disease
infestation, and to a lesser extent: yellow
nutsedge and other weeds infestation.
Orchard Nursery Seedlings.......... (a) Members of the Western With a reasonable expectation that one or more
Raspberry Nursery of the following limiting critical conditions
Consortium limited to already either exists or could occur without
growing locations in methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
California and Washington nematode infestation, medium to heavy clay
(Driscoll's raspberries soils, or a prohibition of on the use of 1,3-
and their contract growers dichloropropene products due to reaching
in California and local township limits on the use of this
Washington). alternative; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(b) Members of the With a reasonable expectation that one or more
California Association of of the following limiting critical conditions
Nurserymen-Deciduous Fruit already either exists or could occur without
and Nut Tree Growers. methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
nematodes, medium to heavy clay soils, or a
prohibition of on the use of 1,3-
dichloropropene products due to reaching
local township limits on the use of this
alternative; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(c) California rose With a reasonable expectation that one or more
nurseries. of the following limiting critical conditions
already either exists or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
nematodes, or user may be prohibited from
using 1,3-dichloropropene products because
local township limits for this alternative
have been reached; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
Strawberry Nurseries............... (a) California growers..... With a reasonable expectation that one or more
of the following limiting critical conditions
already either exists or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
disease infestation, or moderate to severe
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation, or
moderate to severe nematodes; or with a need
for methyl bromide for research purposes.
(b) North Carolina, With a reasonable expectation that one or more
Tennessee and Maryland of the following limiting critical conditions
growers. already either exists or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
black root rot, or moderate to severe root-
knot nematodes, or moderate to severe yellow
and purple nutsedge infestation, and to a
lesser extent: crown rot; or with a need for
methyl bromide for research purposes.
Orchard Replant.................... (a) California stone fruit With a reasonable expectation that one or more
growers. of the following limiting critical conditions
already either exists or could occur without
methyl bromide fumigation: moderate to severe
nematodes, or moderate to severe fungal
disease infestation, or replanted (non-
virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard
replant disease, or medium to heavy soils, or
a prohibition on the use of 1,3-
dichloropropene products because local
township limits for this alternative have
been reached; or with a need for methyl
bromide for research purposes.
(b) California table and With a reasonable expectation that one or more
raisin grape growers. of the following limiting critical conditions