Regional Haze Regulations; Revisions to Provisions Governing Alternative to Source-Specific Best Available Retrofit Technology (BART) Determinations, 60612-60634 [06-8630]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 198 / Friday, October 13, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 51
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2002–0076; FRL–8230–4]
RIN 2060–AN22
Regional Haze Regulations; Revisions
to Provisions Governing Alternative to
Source-Specific Best Available Retrofit
Technology (BART) Determinations
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The EPA promulgated
regulations to address a type of visibility
impairment known as regional haze in
1999. These regulations have been
judicially challenged twice. On May 24,
2002, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit issued a
ruling vacating the Regional Haze Rule
in part and sustaining it in part, based
on a finding that EPA’s prescribed
methods for determining best available
retrofit technology (BART) were
inconsistent with the Clean Air Act
(CAA). American Corn Growers Ass’n v.
EPA, 291 F.3d 1 (DC Cir. 2002). We
finalized a rule on July 6, 2005
addressing the court’s ruling in this
case. On February 18, 2005, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit issued another ruling,
in Center for Energy and Economic
Development v. EPA, 398 F.3d 653(DC
Cir. 2005), granting a petition
challenging provisions of the Regional
Haze Rule governing an optional
emissions trading program for certain
western States and Tribes (the Western
Regional Air Partnership (WRAP)
Annex Rule). We published proposed
regulations to revise the provisions of
the Regional Haze Rule governing
alternative trading programs, and to
provide additional guidance on such
programs in August 2005. We received
several comments on the August 2005
proposal. This final rule finalizes the
proposed revisions, including changes
in response to the public comments.
DATES: This rule is effective December
12, 2006.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2002–0076. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
i.e., confidential business information
(CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
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the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the OAR Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West,
Room B102, 1301 Constitution Ave.,
NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room 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 and Radiation
Docket and Information Center is (202)
566–1742. NOTE: The EPA Docket
Center suffered damage due to flooding
during the last week of June 2006. The
Docket Center is continuing to operate.
However, during the cleanup, there will
be temporary changes to Docket Center
telephone numbers, addresses, and
hours of operation for people who wish
to visit the Public Reading Room to
view documents. Consult EPA’s Federal
Register notice at 71 FR 38147 (July 5,
2006) or the EPA Web site at
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm for
current information on docket status,
locations and telephone numbers.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathy Kaufman, EPA, Air Quality
Planning Division, Geographic
Strategies Group, C504–02, 919–541–
0102 or by e-mail at
kaufman.kathy@epa.gov, or Todd
Hawes, EPA, Air Quality Planning
Division, Geographic Strategies Group,
C504–02, 919–541–5591 or by e-mail at
hawes.todd@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulated Entities. This final rule will
affect the following: State and local
permitting authorities and Indian Tribes
containing major stationary sources of
pollution affecting visibility in
federally-protected scenic areas.
This list is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this action. This list gives
examples of the types of entities EPA is
now aware could potentially be
regulated by this action. Other types of
entities not listed could also be affected.
To determine whether your facility,
company, business, organization, etc., is
regulated by this action, you should
examine the applicability criteria in
section II of this preamble. If you have
any questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the people
listed in the preceding section.
Outline. The contents of today’s
preamble are listed in the following
outline.
I. Overview and Background
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II. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule
§ 51.308(e)(2) Governing Alternatives to
Source-by-Source BART
A. Establishing a BART Benchmark and
Demonstrating Greater Reasonable
Progress Than BART
B. Comments Relating to the Final
Determination That CAIR Makes Greater
Reasonable Progress Than BART in the
July 6, 2005 BART Guidelines Rule
C. Minimum Elements of Cap and Trade
Programs
III. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule § 51.309
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use.
I. National Technology Transfer
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
to Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
IV. Statutory Provisions and Legal Authority
I. Overview and Background
This rulemaking provides the
following changes to the regional haze
regulations:
(1) Revised regulatory text in section
51.308(e)(2)(i) in response to the Center
for Energy and Economic Development
(CEED) v. EPA court’s remand, to
remove the requirement that the
determination of the BART
‘‘benchmark’’ be based on cumulative
visibility analyses and to clarify the
process for making such determinations;
(2) New regulatory text in
§ 51.308(e)(2)(vi), to provide minimum
elements for cap and trade programs
adopted in lieu of BART; and
(3) Revised regulatory text in § 51.309,
to reconcile the optional framework for
certain western States and Tribes to
implement the recommendations of the
Grand Canyon Visibility Transport
Commission (GCVTC) with the CEED v.
EPA decision.
How This Preamble Is Structured
Section I provides background on the
BART requirements of the CAA as
codified in the Regional Haze Rule, on
the decision in American Corn Growers
in which the DC Circuit vacated and
remanded parts of the rule addressing
the BART requirements, on the June
2005 BART rule, and on the EPA’s
approval of the WRAP Annex and the
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subsequent litigation. Section II
discusses specific issues relating to the
revisions to § 51.308(e)(2) of the
Regional Haze Rule governing
alternatives to source-by-source BART.
Section III discusses specific issues
relating to the revisions to § 51.309 of
the Regional Haze Rule pertaining to the
optional emissions trading program for
certain western States and Tribes.
Section IV provides a discussion of how
this rulemaking complies with the
requirements of Statutory and Executive
Order Reviews.
The Regional Haze Rule and BART
Guidelines
In 1999, we published the Regional
Haze Rule to address visibility
impairment produced by a multitude of
sources and activities which emit fine
particles and their precursors and which
are located across a broad geographic
area (64 FR 35714). The Regional Haze
Rule requires States to submit State
implementation plans (SIPs) to address
regional haze visibility impairment in
156 federally-protected parks and
wilderness areas, such as the Grand
Canyon and Yosemite. These 156 scenic
areas are called ‘‘mandatory Class I
Federal areas’’ in the CAA 1 but are
referred to simply as ‘‘Class I areas’’ in
today’s rulemaking. The 1999 rule was
issued to fulfill a long-standing EPA
commitment to address regional haze
under the authority and requirements of
sections 169A and 169B of the CAA.
As required by the CAA, we included
in the final Regional Haze Rule a
requirement for BART for certain large
stationary sources that were put in place
between 1962 and 1977. We discussed
these requirements in detail in the
preamble to the final rule (64 FR 35737–
35743). The regulatory requirements for
BART were codified at section 51.308(e)
and in definitions that appear in section
51.301.
In the preamble to the Regional Haze
Rule, we committed to issuing further
guidelines to clarify the requirements of
the BART provision. These guidelines
were issued on July 6, 2005 in a final
rule entitled ‘‘Regional Haze
Regulations and Guidelines for Best
Available Retrofit Technology (BART)
Determinations’ (‘‘the BART Rule’’) (70
FR 39104). The purpose of the BART
guidelines is to assist States as they
identify which of their BART-eligible
sources should undergo a BART
analysis (i.e., which are ‘‘sources subject
to BART’’) and select appropriate
controls (‘‘the BART determination’’).
We explained in the preamble to the
1999 Regional Haze Rule that the BART
1 See,
e.g. CAA section 169(a)(1).
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requirements in section 169A(b)(2)(A) of
the CAA demonstrate Congress’ intent
to focus attention directly on the
problem of pollution from a specific set
of existing sources (64 FR 35737). The
CAA requires that any of these existing
sources ‘‘which, as determined by the
State, emits any air pollutant which may
reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to any impairment of
visibility [in any Class I area],’’ shall
install the best available retrofit
technology for controlling emissions.2
In determining BART, the CAA requires
the State to consider several factors that
are set forth in section 169A(g)(2) of the
CAA, including the degree of
improvement in visibility which may
reasonably result from the use of such
technology.
Because the problem of regional haze
is caused in large part by the long-range
transport of emissions from multiple
sources, and for certain technical and
other reasons explained in that
rulemaking, we had adopted in the 1999
rule an approach that required States to
look at the contribution of all BART
sources to the problem of regional haze
in determining both applicability and
the appropriate level of control for
BART. Specifically, we had concluded
that if a source potentially subject to
BART is located in an area from which
pollutants may be transported to a Class
I area, that source ‘‘may reasonably be
anticipated to cause or contribute’’ to
visibility impairment in the Class I area.
We had also concluded that in weighing
the factors set forth in the statute for
determining BART, the States should
consider the collective impact of BART
sources on visibility. In particular, in
considering the degree of visibility
improvement that could reasonably be
anticipated to result from the use of
such technology, we stated that the
State should consider the degree of
improvement in visibility that would
result from the cumulative impact of
applying controls to all sources subject
to BART. We concluded that the States
should use this analysis to determine
the appropriate BART emission
limitations for specific sources.3
The 1999 Regional Haze Rule also
included provisions in section 51.309
based on the strategies developed by the
GCVTC. Certain western States and
Tribes were eligible to submit
implementation plans under section
51.309 as an alternative method of
achieving reasonable progress for those
Class I areas covered by the GCVTC’s
2 CAA
sections 169A(b)(2) and (g)(7).
66 FR 35737–35743 for a discussion of the
rationale for the BART requirements in the 1999
Regional Haze Rule.
3 See
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analysis—i.e., the 16 Class I areas on the
Colorado Plateau. In order for States and
Tribes to be able to utilize this section,
however, the rule provided that EPA
must receive an ‘‘Annex’’ to the
GCVTC’s final recommendations. The
purpose of the Annex was to provide
the specific provisions needed to
translate the GCVTC’s general
recommendations for stationary source
sulfur dioxide (SO2) reductions into an
enforceable regulatory program. The
rule provided that such an Annex,
meeting certain requirements, be
submitted to EPA no later than October
1, 2000. See section 51.309(d)(4) and (f)
(2000).
American Corn Growers v. EPA
In American Corn Growers, industry
petitioners challenged EPA’s
interpretation of the BART
determination process and raised other
challenges to the rule. The court in
American Corn Growers concluded that
the BART provisions in the 1999
Regional Haze Rule were inconsistent
with the provisions in the CAA ‘‘giving
the states broad authority over BART
determinations.’’ 291 F.3d at 8.
Specifically, with respect to the test for
determining whether a source is subject
to BART, the court held that the method
EPA had prescribed for determining
which eligible sources are subject to
BART illegally constrained the authority
Congress had conferred on the States.
Id. The court did not decide whether the
general collective contribution approach
to determining BART applicability was
necessarily inconsistent with the CAA.
Id. at 9. Rather, the court stated that
‘‘[i]f the [Regional Haze Rule] contained
some kind of a mechanism by which a state
could exempt a BART-eligible source on the
basis of an individualized contribution
determination, then perhaps the plain
meaning of the Act would not be violated.
But the [Regional Haze Rule] contains no
such mechanism.’’
Id. at 12.
The court in American Corn Growers
also found that our interpretation of the
CAA requiring the States to consider the
degree of improvement in visibility that
would result from the cumulative
impact of applying controls in
determining BART was inconsistent
with the language of the CAA. 291 F.3d
at 8. Based on its review of the statute,
the court concluded that the five
statutory factors in section 169A(g)(2)
‘‘were meant to be considered together
by the states.’’ Id. at 6.
The final rule promulgated on July 6,
2005 responded to the American Corn
Growers court’s decision on the BART
provisions by amending the Regional
Haze Rule at § 51.308 and by finalizing
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changes to the BART guidelines at part
51, appendix Y (70 FR 39104). These
changes eliminate the previous
constraint on State discretion and
provide States with appropriate
techniques and methods for determining
which BART-eligible sources ‘‘may
reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to any impairment of
visibility in any mandatory Class I
Federal area.’’ In addition, the revised
regulations list the visibility
improvement factor with the other
statutory BART determination factors in
section 51.308(e)(1)(A), so that States
will be required to consider all five
factors, including visibility impacts, on
an individual source basis when making
each individual source BART
determination, rather than considering
the cumulative impacts of all BART
sources on visibility (‘‘group BART’’).
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The Annex Rule
In a rule dated June 5, 2003, EPA
approved the WRAP’s Annex to the
GCVTC report (68 FR 33764). In this
action, referred to as the ‘‘Annex rule,’’
EPA approved the quantitative SO2
emission reduction milestones and the
detailed provisions of the backstop
market trading program developed by
the WRAP as meeting the requirements
of section 51.309(f), and therefore
codified the Annex provisions in
section 51.309(h). Subsequently, five
States and one local agency submitted
SIPs developed to comply with all of
section 51.309, including the Annex
provisions at section 51.309(h). In
accordance with section 51.309(c) these
SIPs were submitted prior to December
31, 2003.
Center for Energy and Economic
Development v. EPA
The EPA’s approval of the Annex rule
was challenged by CEED on, among
other grounds, that the CAA prohibits
EPA from allowing States to adopt
alternative measures, such as a trading
program, in lieu of BART. The court, in
CEED v. EPA, affirmed our
interpretation of section 169A(b)(2) of
the CAA as allowing for alternatives to
BART where those alternatives are
demonstrated to make greater progress
than BART. CEED v. EPA, 398 F.3d at
659–660. The court, however, took issue
with the methodology that EPA had
required the States to use in that
demonstration, pursuant to certain
provisions of the Regional Haze Rule.
As noted above, § 51.308(e)(2) of the
1999 Regional Haze Rule required that
visibility improvements under sourcespecific BART—the benchmark for
comparison to the alternative program—
must be estimated based on the
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application of BART controls to all
sources subject to BART. This section
was incorporated into the WRAP Annex
rule by reference at § 51.309(f). The
court held that EPA could not require
this type of ‘‘group BART’’ approach,
which was vacated in American Corn
Growers in a source-specific BART
context, even in an alternative trading
program in which State participation
was wholly optional.
The BART guidelines as proposed in
May 2004 contained a section offering
guidance to States choosing to address
their BART-eligible sources under the
alternative strategy provided for in
§ 51.308(e)(2). This guidance included a
broad overview of the steps in
developing an emissions trading
program and criteria for demonstrating
that such a trading program would
achieve greater progress towards
eliminating visibility impairment than
would BART. In light of the D.C.
Circuit’s decision in CEED v. EPA in
2005, we did not include the overview
of emissions trading programs in the
final BART guidelines. We did note,
however, that our authority to address
BART through alternative means was
upheld in CEED v. EPA and that we
remained committed to providing States
with that flexibility. Today’s revisions
to the Regional Haze Rule, which
responds to the holding in CEED v. EPA,
provide the flexibility that States need
to implement alternatives to BART.
Overview of Changes to §§ 51.308(e)(2)
and 51.309 of the Regional Haze Rule
The EPA continues to support State
efforts to develop trading programs and
other alternative strategies to fulfill the
goals of the CAA. We believe such
strategies have the potential to achieve
greater progress towards the national
visibility goals than more traditional
approaches to regulation, and to do so
in the most cost-effective manner
practicable. In August 2005, we
proposed amendments to the Regional
Haze Rule to enable States to continue
to develop and implement such
programs (70 FR 44154, August 1, 2005).
Today’s rule finalizes these
amendments, including changes in
response to comments on the proposal.
First, we are amending the generally
applicable provisions at § 51.308(e)(2),
which prescribe the type of analysis
used to determine emissions reductions
achievable from source-by-source
BART, for purposes of comparing to the
alternative program. These amendments
reconcile the methodology for
determining whether an alternative
program is approvable with the court’s
decision in CEED v. EPA. Today’s rule
also establishes the minimum elements
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of an acceptable cap and trade program
and provides for consistent application
of the BART guidelines for electric
generating units (EGUs) between sourceby-source programs and alternative cap
and trade programs.
Second, we are amending section
51.309 to enable certain western States
and Tribes to continue to utilize the
strategies contained in the GCVTC
report as an optional means to satisfy
reasonable progress requirements for
certain Class I areas, for the first longterm planning period. These changes
provide States and Tribes with an
opportunity to revise and resubmit the
backstop SO2 emissions trading program
absent any requirement to assess
visibility on a cumulative basis when
determining the emissions reductions
achievable by source-by-source BART.
II. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule
§ 51.308(e)(2) Governing Alternatives to
Source-by-Source BART
In this section of the preamble, we
discuss changes or clarifications to the
provisions proposed in August, 2005.
Where relevant, we also respond to
significant comments received during
the comment periods on our earlier
BART proposals. For each provision
that we are changing or clarifying,
where relevant, we provide discussion
of comments received on the
proposal(s), changes or clarifications we
are finalizing, and the reasons for these
changes or clarifications.
A. Establishing a BART Benchmark and
Demonstrating Greater Reasonable
Progress Than BART
The Regional Haze Rule provides
States with the authority to implement
an emissions trading program or other
alternative measures in lieu of meeting
the requirements for source-by-source
BART. Under this provision of the
Regional Haze Rule, States have the
flexibility to design programs to reduce
emissions from stationary sources in a
more cost-effective manner so long as
they can demonstrate that the
alternative approach will achieve
greater reasonable progress towards
improving visibility than would have
been achieved by implementation of the
BART requirements.
As described in the preamble to the
August proposal, the 1999 Regional
Haze Rule had specified a methodology
for comparing an alternative trading or
other type program against source-bysource BART. These regulations were
challenged following a rulemaking by
EPA to revise the Regional Haze Rule to
incorporate an optional emissions
trading program for certain Western
States and Tribes (the Annex rule). The
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court in CEED v. EPA, granted
petitioner’s challenge to the Annex rule
because EPA’s regional haze regulations
had required the States submitting the
Annex to consider ‘‘the impact of all
emissions reductions to estimate
visibility progress’’ in establishing a
BART benchmark against which to
compare their BART alternative
program. In the August proposal, we
proposed to revise the method for
comparing an alternative trading or
other type program against source-bysource BART. Specifically, we proposed
to amend the regional haze regulations
to provide that States estimate the
emission reductions that could be
achieved by BART in the same manner
as in making source-by-source BART
determinations.
Today’s final rule revises section
51.308(e)(2) to make clear that the
emissions reductions that could be
achieved through implementation of the
BART provisions at section 51.308(e)(1)
serve as the benchmark against which
States can compare an alternative
program. In short, to demonstrate that a
trading program or other alternative
program makes greater reasonable
progress than BART, the State can
develop an estimate of BART emissions
reductions using the same approach that
it would use to establish source-bysource BART emissions limitations
under the BART guidelines. As
discussed in more detail below, today’s
rule also makes clear that where a
trading program or other similar
alternative program has been designed
primarily to meet a Federal or State
requirement other than BART, the State
can use a more simplified approach to
demonstrating that the alternative
program will make greater reasonable
progress than BART. Such an approach
may be appropriate where the State
believes the alternative program is
clearly superior to BART and a detailed
BART analysis is not necessary to assure
that the alternative program will result
in greater reasonable progress than
BART.
Framework for Demonstrating That an
Alternative Program Provides for
Greater Reasonable Progress
The development of a BART
benchmark using the approach for
source-by-source BART determinations
will require States to identify those
existing sources which are BARTeligible, to determine which of those
sources are subject to BART, and to then
determine the level of control that
would be BART for these sources. Once
the State has established a BART
benchmark, it can then compare the
benchmark against the alternative
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program it has developed. This
approach could entail separate visibility
analyses in as many as three distinct
stages: (1) Determining which BARTeligible sources are subject to BART; (2)
determining what BART is for each
source subject to BART; and (3)
determining the overall visibility
improvement anticipated from the
application of BART to all sources
subject to BART. The following sections
discuss the comments received on the
visibility analyses in the first two steps,
as well as comments on additional
issues for determining which sources
are subject to BART and the
determination of BART for such
sources.
Sources Subject to BART
Proposal. In the proposal, we noted
that the BART guidelines finalized on
July 6, 2005 provide States with
guidance on how to determine which
BART-eligible sources are reasonably
anticipated to cause or contribute to
visibility. The Guidelines explain that
States may consider all BART-eligible
sources to meet this threshold and
therefore subject all these sources to
review, or, alternatively, that States may
determine which BART-eligible sources
are subject to BART using the methods
for modeling source specific impacts on
visibility discussed in the guidance. We
noted that by considering all BARTeligible sources to be subject to BART in
the context of setting the BART
benchmark, States could ease their
administrative burden and maximize
the number of BART-eligible sources
included in the benchmark analysis.
Where a State takes this approach, the
opportunity for assessing source-bysource visibility impact would still
remain at the next step of setting the
benchmark—the BART determination
analysis.
Comments. Several commenters
stated that allowing States to consider
all BART-eligible sources to be ‘‘subject
to BART’’ (i.e., subject to a BART
determination analysis) is contrary to
the CAA as interpreted by the D.C.
Circuit in American Corn Growers. Two
commenters have indicated that they
plan to challenge this provision of the
BART guidelines in a petition for review
before the D.C. Circuit and are opposed
to it in the context of BART alternative
programs as well. One of these
commenters also stated that it is unclear
from the preamble discussion where in
the proposed revisions to the
regulations this option is authorized.
Final Rule. We are reiterating here, as
we pointed out in the proposal, that the
language in section 169A(b)(2) of the
CAA establishing the threshold for
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BART review provides a State with the
discretion to consider all BART-eligible
sources to be subject to BART and to
make BART determinations for all its
BART-eligible sources. In other words,
as noted in the BART guidelines, once
a State has identified its BART-eligible
sources, it must decide whether (1) to
make BART determinations for all of
them, or (2) to consider exempting some
of them from BART because they may
not reasonably be anticipated to cause
or contribute to any visibility
impairment in any Class I area. As
explained in the 1999 Regional Haze
Rule, given the nature of regional haze,
it would be reasonable for a State to
determine that where the State as a
whole contributes to visibility
impairment at a Class I area, any large
stationary source in the State that emits
SO2 or other visibility-impairing
pollutants would emit air pollutants
that would ‘‘reasonably be anticipated
to cause or contribute to any
impairment of visibility in [any Class I
area].’’ CAA Section 169A(b)(2).
This approach is authorized by the
regulations through the cross reference
to § 51.308(e)(1) in § 51.308(e)(2). By
providing that the BART-benchmark
should be established by conducting
BART determinations in accordance
with § 51.308(e)(1), we provide the State
with the same options as are available
in those provisions for determining
source-by-source BART. In the context
of subject-to-BART determinations, this
includes either considering all BARTeligible sources to be subject to BART
or, using the methods described in the
BART guidelines or other reasonable
approaches, to exempt sources which
the State determines are not reasonably
anticipated to cause or contribute to any
visibility impairment.4
The BART Determination
Proposal. The CAA identifies five
factors that States are to consider in
making BART determinations. One of
these factors is ‘‘the degree of
improvement in visibility which may
reasonably be anticipated to result from
4 We are also clarifying an unintended ambiguity
in the regulatory provisions pertaining to BART
determinations under 51.308(e)(1). Specifically, as
discussed in the preamble to the BART Rule,
consistent with our proposal in 2004, we revised
the regional haze regulations to allow States to
‘‘exclude from the BART determination process
potential emissions from a source of less than forty
tons per year for SO2 or NOX, or 15 tons per year
for PM10.’’ 70 FR at 39117 (emphasis added). The
regulatory text at 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(C), however, did
not clearly state that the de minimis level for PM10
should be based on a source’s potential to emit. In
this rulemaking we are clarifying that States are not
required to determine BART for BART-eligible
sources with a potential to emit less than 15 tons
per year of PM10.
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the use of [BART].’’ Today’s rulemaking,
in large part, is focused on how States
should handle consideration of this
factor in establishing a BART
benchmark.
In the proposal, we stated that one
way to handle the visibility
improvement element of the BART
determination for all BART sources
covered by the program would be to
conduct individualized assessments of
the visibility improvement expected
from each BART source under various
control scenarios, as described in the
BART guidelines. We noted that such an
approach could impose significant
resource burdens on the States and
solicited recommendations on more
streamlined approaches for estimating
BART sources’ individual impacts that
might be appropriate in the context of
assessing alternative programs. One area
of consideration that we identified is the
type of model used. We requested
comment on whether regional scale
models might be used to consolidate
individual source impact analyses into
one or a few model runs, and whether
this would significantly ease the burden
on States.
In the proposal, we also made clear
our belief that in determining whether
an alternative program provides for
greater reasonable progress than would
source-by-source BART, States have the
discretion to employ a cumulative
visibility analysis for purposes of
estimating the potential visibility
impacts of BART. Based on our analysis
of American Corn Growers and CEED,
we stated that although EPA may not
require States to use a cumulative
visibility approach to estimating the
improvement achievable from BART,
States are not barred from using such an
approach if they so choose.
Finally, in the proposal preamble, we
discussed the situation where emissions
reductions at BART-eligible sources are
required by CAA requirements other
than BART (or to fulfill requirements of
a State law or regulation not required by
the CAA). We noted that in such cases,
a State may wish to evaluate whether
the emissions reductions from the
program would result in greater
reasonable progress towards the
national visibility goal than would the
installation of BART. We noted that
EPA had made such a determination
with respect to the Clean Air Interstate
Rule (CAIR) for EGUs in States which
participate in the CAIR cap and trade
program.
We noted that such a situation affects
the type of analysis that is permissible
to show that the alternative program
makes greater reasonable progress than
BART. Specifically, where a
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requirement other than BART
determines the level of emissions
reductions required from BART-eligible
sources (along with other sources), a
most-stringent case BART may be used
as the BART benchmark. (This moststringent case BART is essentially a
form of ‘‘group BART,’’ because is
assumes that every BART-eligible
source will apply controls). The reason
for this is that if it is shown that
implementation of another requirement
results in greater progress than would
the most stringent BART for all the
BART-eligible sources, then it can safely
be said that this most-stringent-BART
benchmark is not the determinative
factor in establishing the emission
reductions requirement. Therefore, there
can be no concern that the group-BART
analysis would lead States to adopt an
unduly stringent alternative approach.
(1) Types of Models
Comments. The comments submitted
supported EPA’s proposal that States
could use the approach in the
Guidelines in making individualized
visibility assessments for BART
determinations. In response to our
request for recommendations for more
streamlined approaches to assessing
source specific visibility impacts, we
received several comments supporting
regulations that would allow for this.
One commenter pointed out that
streamlined approaches, such as the use
of photochemical grid models, would
significantly ease the burden on States
and Tribes. The commenter also pointed
out that § 51.308(e)(1), cross-referenced
as the guiding provision for BART
determinations in proposed
§ 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), does not explicitly
recognize streamlined approaches for
determining BART. Thus, the
commenter believes, EPA should ‘‘take
care to ensure that a streamlined
approach for the purpose of determining
[the BART benchmark] is clear,
permissible, and not legally unsound in
the final rule.’’
Another commenter said that a
streamlined approach ‘‘is an appropriate
option that should be explicitly
recognized and more fully developed in
the final rule.’’ According to the
commenter, either the CMAQ or CAMx
regional photochemical models would
be suitable for streamlined visibility
assessments for BART determinations,
but also stated that none of the models
is capable of consistently producing
unbiased results for all chemical
constituents responsible for haze. One
State commenter said that States in EPA
Region 5 are using the CALPUFF model
and it would prefer to continue doing
so. The State would not object to
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allowing other models to be used so
long as they are optional.
Another commenter submitted
comments detailing the reasons it
believes CALPUFF is superior to
photochemical grid models for purposes
of source-by-source BART analysis. In
brief, commenter explained that with
grid models, the concentration of
pollutants from a point source is
automatically diluted evenly across the
grid in which the source is located. This
dilution effect can be partially redressed
by employing smaller grid sizes or by
using a hybrid model which employs
Lagrangian methods (as used in
CALPUFF) close to the source and
switches to a grid method farther
downstream. However, both of these
methods are resource intensive. The
commenter therefore believed that
CALPUFF, which can use
meteorological data bases developed for
CMAQ and CAMx, should be the
preferred option.
Final Rule. Section 308(e)(1)(ii)(B)
requires that, for fossil fuel-fired power
plants with a total generating capacity of
greater than 750MW, BART
determinations be made pursuant to the
BART guidelines. With respect to the
type of air quality model used for the
BART determination, the guidelines
instruct States to use CALPUFF or
another appropriate dispersion model to
determine the visibility improvement
expected at a Class I area from the BART
control technology being evaluated (70
FR 39170).
We maintain that CALPUFF is the
best model currently available for
predicting visibility impacts from single
sources. The use of regional scale
photochemical grid models may have
merit, but to date, such models have not
been evaluated for single source
applications (70 FR 39123). As the
science and structure of regional
photochemical grid models are
improved and demonstrated to
successfully predict impacts from single
sources (e.g. plume in grid or source
tagging techniques) at least as well as
CALPUFF, such models may become
more useful in streamlining the BART
benchmark determination. All modeling
applications in making BART
determinations call for the development
of a modeling protocol for all modeling,
and States should consult with EPA and
the relevant regional planning
organization (RPO) before conducting
any modeling.
(2) State Discretion to Consider
Cumulative Visibility Impacts
Comments. Several commenters said
that the Agency’s position described in
the preamble to the proposed rule—that
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States have the discretion to require a
cumulative visibility approach in setting
the BART benchmark—violates the
American Corn Growers decision. Most
commenters opposed to EPA’s proposed
interpretation, however, were also
careful to point out that this did not
indicate opposition to the policy of
allowing a ‘‘group BART’’ benchmark to
be used in the special case of evaluating
emissions reductions required by other
CAA or State law requirements.
Commenters that objected to EPA’s
statement that States have the discretion
to use ‘‘group BART’’ in setting the
BART benchmark referenced the courts’
opinions in American Corn Growers and
CEED v. EPA to argue that such a
statement was inconsistent with the
CAA. Several commenters cited the
American Corn Growers court’s
statement that ‘‘the state must consider
the degree of improvement in visibility
in national parks and wilderness areas
that would result from the source’s
installing and operating the retrofit
technology [in making a BART
determination].’’ See American Corn
Growers, 291 F.3d at 7. One commenter
emphasized that the court had used the
singular noun (‘‘the source’s’’) rather
than the plural as a clear indication that
the visibility factor must be assessed on
a source-by-source basis. Another
commenter pointed to the court’s
statement, in regard to the approach in
the 1999 Regional Haze Rule which
separated the visibility factor from the
other BART factors, that ‘‘[t]o treat one
of the five statutory factors in such a
dramatically different fashion distorts
the judgment Congress directed the
states to make for each BART-eligible
source.’’ (291 F.3d at 6). No comments
were received that explicitly supported
EPA’s proposed interpretation of the DC
Circuit’s decisions on this point. Several
commenters also claimed that the
flexibility to use ‘‘group BART,’’
described in the preamble, was not
actually provided for in the proposed
regulatory text, which cross-referenced
to the source-by-source BART
determinations prescribed in
§ 51.308(e)(1). One commenter that
strongly opposed EPA’s proposed
position on this issue noted that ‘‘it is
nevertheless true that states can use
simplifying assumptions or even apply
some type of ‘‘weight of evidence’’ test
in determining the amount of emissions
reductions that BART-eligible sources
may be required to undertake as part of
a regional trading program’’ The
commenter did not elaborate on
examples of appropriate simplifying
assumptions or methods by which
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weight of evidence could be taken into
account.
Where an independent requirement
determines the emissions reductions
required of BART sources in a trading
program or other type of similar
program, however, commenters
appeared to agree that a BART
benchmark can be used that does not
depend on source specific visibility
assessments. In other words, for BART
alternatives that are required by or that
satisfy another CAA provision, the
BART benchmark to be used in a
‘‘better-than-BART’’ test may be
established using a group BART
approach. In particular, several
commenters representing electric
utilities and other industries submitted
comments agreeing with our
interpretation of section 169A of the
CAA as allowing other programs to
substitute for BART, and agreeing that
where an independent requirement
determines the emissions reductions
required of BART sources, a moststringent BART benchmark could be
used without raising the concerns at
issue in the American Corn Growers and
CEED v. EPA cases. These commenters
particularly agreed with and supported
the application of this rationale to the
CAIR, as was finalized in the July 6
BART Guidelines rulemaking. One
commenter urged EPA to adopt specific
regulatory language, as was done in the
case of the CAIR, to implement this
option both with respect to the WRAP’s
program and to other programs which
may be developed elsewhere.
Final Rule. We have carefully
considered the comments on the
discussion in the NPRM addressing the
discretion of the States in establishing a
BART benchmark and concluded that
this rulemaking should focus on the
type of alternative program that we
anticipate that some States may submit
in lieu of BART. In providing States
with the flexibility to adopt an
alternative program, EPA has assumed
that States would adopt trading
programs, or other substantially similar
programs—such as the WRAP’s
backstop market trading program—as
alternatives to source-by-source BART.
While it is possible that a State could
design a trading program under the
authority of section 169A(b)(2)(A) of the
CAA (the BART provision), we believe
that it is far more likely that a State
designing its regional haze plan would
adopt a trading program under the
broader authority of section
169A(b)(2)(B) (the long-term strategy for
making reasonable progress). As such,
the regulations promulgated today
provide a basic framework for States to
demonstrate that any type of alternative
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60617
program provides greater reasonable
progress than BART, but provide greater
detail as to how that demonstration
might be done for a trading program (or
other substantially similar program)
designed to fulfill requirements other
than BART.
Generally, the comments received
criticizing the statement that States have
discretion to consider visibility in a
cumulative manner in determining
whether or not an alternative makes
greater reasonable progress than would
BART appear to be premised on the
argument that any type of program that
could be characterized as a BART
program—even an alternative program—
is bounded by the requirements in
section 169A(b)(2)(A). Thus, for
example, several commenters cited the
American Corn Growers court’s
statement interpreting the definition of
BART as grounds for limiting a State’s
ability to take a different approach in
developing an alternative program. In
other words, in determining the amount
of emissions reductions that sources in
a trading program alternative must
achieve to demonstrate that the trading
program is ‘‘better’’ than source-bysource BART, these commenters argued
that the States are limited to designing
a program that begins with source
specific visibility analyses. Applying
the same logic, however, States would
need to undertake source specific
assessments of the other four factors in
the BART definition: the costs of
control, the energy and nonair quality
environmental impacts, any existing
pollution control technology in use at
the source, and the remaining useful life
of the source. Only once the State had
ascertained what BART would be at
each source subject to BART—based on
a thorough source specific analysis of
these five factors—could the State then
show that its trading program achieves
greater reasonable progress. Although
the States may certainly adopt such an
approach under this final rule, we think
it unlikely that States would conduct
such an extensive assessment only to
then go through the additional, resource
intensive steps of establishing a trading
program.
The concern underlying these
comments appears to be that EPA
should not explicitly authorize States to
design a program more stringent than
required for BART in establishing a
BART alternative program under section
169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA.5 Obviously,
5 The comments criticizing the statement by EPA
that States have the discretion to require a
cumulative visibility analysis do not appear to
challenge the general principle that a State may
adopt measures in a SIP more stringent than
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under EPA’s interpretation of the CAA,
upheld by the CEED v. EPA court, the
alternative program must achieve
greater reasonable progress than would
BART, presumably in most cases by
achieving greater emissions reductions
over time. However, the commenters
opposed to what they label a ‘‘group
BART’’ approach argue that States must
consider source-specific visibility
impacts to avoid setting too high a bar
for the program. Although the
commenters have not suggested that the
other simplifying approaches that we
have suggested in the past for assessing
the costs of control were an
inappropriate form of ‘‘group-BART,’’ if
the CAA requires visibility impacts to
be considered on a case-by-case basis,
then it would also seem to require that
the costs of control and other factors be
considered on a case-by-case basis. In
other words, these commenters argue
that the BART benchmark for an
alternative program under section
169A(b)(2)(A) must be based on a caseby-case analysis of what BART would
be for each source subject to BART.
The DC Circuit in CEED v. EPA was
not absolutely clear as to whether its
decision was based solely on the fact
that EPA had required a ‘‘group BART’’
approach, or whether the fact the Annex
contained such an analysis was in itself
a sufficient reason to invalidate the
Annex approval. As EPA explained in
the proposed rule, we believe that the
CEED v. EPA decision is limited to
circumstances where EPA requires or
induces States to adopt cumulative
approaches that result in programs more
stringent than required by the CAA.
However, we did not receive comments
from any States explicitly supporting
our interpretation of the court’s
holdings, and as we do not anticipate
that States will submit plans with
trading programs designed only to meet
the requirements of section 169A(b)(2),
we have concluded that the issue of
whether the CAA provides States with
the discretion in designing such
programs to employ some type of
cumulative approach or simplifying
assumptions in the process of estimating
emissions reductions achievable by
source-by-source BART is not relevant
to today’s rulemaking.
The regulations finalized today
provide that as a general matter, States
must undertake source specific BART
required under the CAA, except where explicitly
prohibited. See Union Electric Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S.
246, 263–264 (1976); see also Summary of
Comments on the Revisions to Provisions Governing
Alternative to Source-specific Best Available
Retrofit Technology (BART) Determinations, Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2002–0076,
www.regulations.gov.
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analyses under § 51.308(e)(1) for each
source subject to BART in order to
estimate the emissions reductions
achievable under the source-by-source
BART requirements. The use of such a
BART benchmark enables a State to
design an alternative program that is
‘‘better than BART’’ based on a precise
estimation of the emissions reductions
that could be achieved under BART.
For trading programs where the
emissions reductions are required to
fulfill CAA requirements other than
BART (or to fulfill requirements of a
State law or regulation not required by
the CAA), we are amending the
regulations to make clear that States
may establish a BART benchmark based
on a simplified BART analysis in such
a situation. We agree with commenters
that a BART benchmark based on such
an analysis raises none of the concerns
that were at issue in the American Corn
Growers and CEED v. EPA cases. Where
a trading program is designed to fulfill
other requirements, including the
requirement to make reasonable
progress, an independent requirement
determines the level of reductions
achieved and the BART analysis serves
only to ensure that the program meets
the requirement that a BART alternative
make greater reasonable progress than
BART. In other words, there is no need
to develop a precise estimate of the
emissions reductions that could be
achieved by BART in order simply to
compare two programs. As EPA did in
the CAIR, States should have the ability
to develop a BART benchmark based on
simplifying assumptions as to what the
most-stringent BART is likely to
achieve. The regulations finalized today
therefore provide that where an
emissions trading program has been
designed to meet a requirement other
than BART, including the reasonable
progress requirement, the State may
establish a BART benchmark based on
an analysis that includes simplifying
assumptions about BART control levels
for sources within a source category.
We do agree with commenters that
EPA should issue regulatory language
expressly allowing for the use of a
BART benchmark based on a simplified
BART analysis for demonstrating that
emissions reductions required by other
provisions also make greater reasonable
progress than BART and may be used to
substitute for BART. We have finalized
such a provision at § 51.308(E)(2)(i)(C).
This will help clarify that in such cases,
the BART benchmark is not the ‘‘driver’’
of emissions reductions and is therefore
not subject to the concerns on which the
DC Circuit decided American Corn
Growers and CEED.
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Role of BART Guidelines for EGUs in
Determinations Proposal
The BART guidelines establish
control levels or emission rates as
presumptive standards for EGUs greater
than 200 MW capacity at plants with a
total generating capacity in excess of
750 MW. We proposed that the States
apply these presumptive standards
contained in the final BART guidelines
in developing a BART benchmark for a
trading program or other alternative that
includes such EGUs. In other words,
when States are estimating emission
reductions achievable from source-bysource BART, they must assume that the
EGUs which would otherwise be subject
to BART will control at the presumptive
level, unless the State demonstrates that
such presumptions are not appropriate
at particular units. The preamble to the
proposed rule explained that this would
be accomplished by the cross reference
to § 51.308(e)(1) within proposed
§ 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), the provision
prescribing the method of setting the
BART benchmark. Section 51.308(e)(1),
in turn, provides that BART
determinations for EGUs of greater than
200 MW capacity at plants with a total
generating capacity greater than 750
MW must be done in accordance with
the BART guidelines in appendix Y to
part 51.
Comments. One commenter said that
the presumptive standards for EGUs are
too lenient and should be lowered
before EPA allows States to use them for
purposes of a ‘‘better than BART’’
demonstration. Another commenter
supported the use of the presumptive
standards in this context, but contested
the preamble statement that the
presumptive standards ‘‘apply to certain
EGUs on a mandatory basis’’ because,
according to the commenter, the
presumptions are not mandatory in that
they are rebuttable. Another commenter
argued that the use of presumptive
standards would make the installation
of controls more likely, without regard
to the visibility benefit expected. The
commenter believes EPA use of
presumptions is incompatible with CAA
section 169A as interpreted in American
Corn Growers and incompatible with
EPA’s authority to issue BART guidance
for EGUs of 750 MW or greater.
Final Rule. The final rule
promulgated on July 6, 2005, addresses
the authority of EPA to establish the
presumptions in the BART guidelines
for certain EGUs, as well as the level of
control reflected by those presumptions.
In the NPRM, EPA did not request
comment on the presumptions
established in the Guidelines, but rather
whether these presumptions should be
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used in establishing a BART benchmark
for comparing an alternative program to
BART.
In today’s final rule, the regulations
make clear that, with one exception,
States must follow the approach for
making BART determinations under
section 51.308(e)(1) in establishing a
BART benchmark. This includes the
requirement for States to use the BART
guidelines in making BART
determinations for EGUs at power
plants of a certain size. As discussed
above, the one exception to this general
approach is where the alternative
program has been designed to meet
requirements other than BART; in this
case, States are not required to make
BART determinations under
§ 51.308(e)(1) and may use simplifying
assumptions in establishing a BART
benchmark based on an analysis of what
BART is likely to be for similar types of
sources within a source category. Under
either approach to establishing a BART
benchmark, we believe that the
presumptions for EGUs in the BART
guidelines should be used for
comparison to a trading program or
other alternative measure, unless the
State determines that such
presumptions are not appropriate for
particular EGUs. We note that this
limitation on the use of the
presumptions is most likely to apply
only in a source-by-source
determination under § 51.308(e)(1).
States establishing a BART benchmark
based on simplifying assumptions as to
the most-stringent BART for EGUs may
rely on the presumptions, as EPA did in
the CAIR rule. For States considering
the appropriateness of the presumptions
in specific cases, the same criteria
discussed in the BART guidelines
should guide them in reaching a
conclusion. Thus, the presumptive
standards are ‘‘mandatory’’ for the
identified EGUs, in that the
presumption must be applied to the
specified class of EGUs; but the
presumptive standards are rebuttable, as
explained in the BART guidelines.
We do not agree that EPA should
revise the presumptive standards before
allowing States to use them for purposes
of establishing a BART benchmark. We
believe it is appropriate for the States to
use the same presumptions in
developing the BART benchmark that
they would use in making BART
determinations.
We determined in the BART final rule
that the limits represented by the
presumptions are cost effective for large
EGUs at the largest power plants. We
believe that the presumptions represent
a reasonable estimate of a stringent case
BART, particularly because in
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developing a BART benchmark they
would be applied across the board to a
wide variety of units with varying
impacts on visibility, at power plants of
varying size and distance from Class I
areas.
We do not agree that the use of
presumptive standards ignores the
visibility benefits to be expected from
the control of the EGUs covered by the
presumption. In the final BART
guidelines establishing the
presumptions, EPA took into account
the degree of improvement in visibility
that would result from the installation
of the presumptive level of controls in
finding that such controls should
generally be found to be BART. As
explained in the preamble to the BART
guidelines, controlling the type of
sources covered by the presumptions at
the level of the presumptive standards
is likely to result in a substantial degree
of visibility improvement based on
EPA’s modeling analyses.
Minimum Universe of Sources Covered
Proposal. In the 1999 Regional Haze
Rule, the provisions for alternative
programs to BART at section
51.308(e)(2) contained a requirement
that such a program must include, at a
minimum, each BART-eligible source
within the State. In the August 1, 2005
proposal, we noted that having had the
occasion to consider BART alternative
programs in more detail, we believed
that some categories of BART eligible
sources might not be appropriate for
inclusion in a cap and trade program.
We provided the example of the
difficulty in quantifying emissions with
sufficient accuracy to participate in a
trading program for some source
categories. We therefore proposed to
allow States to use a trading program or
alternative measure to substitute for
BART for some source categories, while
requiring source-by-source BART for
BART-eligible sources in any source
categories not covered by the alternative
program. We further proposed that for
any categories which were included in
the alternative program, we would
retain the requirement that all BARTeligible sources in the State within that
source category must be subject to the
program. See proposed section
51.308(e)(2)(ii). One reason for this
proposed provision was to prevent any
shifting of emissions from covered to
non-covered BART eligible sources,
which could potentially undermine the
effectiveness of the emissions cap. In a
related provision we proposed, as one of
the minimum elements of a cap and
trade program, that the applicability
provisions must be designed to prevent
any significant potential shifting of
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60619
production and emissions within the
State or multi-State region. See
proposed section 51.308(e)(2)(vi)(A).
Comments. Several commenters
opposed the requirement to include in
the alternative program all BARTeligible sources within a source
category. Several of these commenters
argued that such a requirement is a form
of ‘‘group BART’’ invalidated by the DC
Circuit because it would impose
requirements on BART eligible sources
without a demonstration that those
sources are reasonably anticipated to
cause or contribute to visibility
impairment. One commenter argued
that the requirement was unjustified as
a practical matter, at least in the case of
the forest products industry, because in
order to be economically viable mills
must be operated at near capacity. This
would leave no leeway for production
and emissions shifting. The commenter
also argued that the provision is
conceptually unjustified, considering
that under a conventional source-bysource program, emissions shifting
theoretically could occur to BARTeligible sources which were determined
to be exempt from BART because they
do not cause or contribute to visibility
impairment. The commenter argued that
it would be illegal to impose
‘‘compensating costs’’ on such sources
outside the trading program context.
The implication of this comment is that
it would also be illegal to impose such
costs on these BART-eligible sources by
requiring them to participate in the
alternative program.
In contrast, one State commented that
allowing some source categories to add
controls while others may avoid
controls by buying reductions elsewhere
would be contrary to its management
principles. This commenter thought that
the use of a trading program to address
haze for some but not all sources subject
to BART might be counter-productive.
Similarly, another commenter noted
that ‘‘carving out source categories
would only shrink the universe of
potential participants, the opposite of
what is needed for a successful trading
program.’’
Final Rule. Having carefully
considered the comments and the
relationship between the requirement
for category-wide participation of
BART-eligible sources and the
requirements for the State to address
emissions shifting, we are adopting final
provisions that maximize the flexibility
of the States while insuring that the
BART-eligible sources are addressed in
some fashion by the States. As we noted
in 1999 in establishing the criteria
governing BART alternative trading
programs, the legislative history of the
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CAA demonstrates Congress’
recognition of the need to control
emissions from a specific set of sources.
We are therefore finalizing in this rule
that States must require that each
BART-eligible source in the State either
participate in a BART alternative
program or, alternatively, be subject to
the case-by-case BART requirements
under section 51.308(e)(1). In other
words, States are not required to include
each BART-eligible source in a source
category in an alternative program;
however, any BART-eligible sources not
included in an alternative program
would remain subject to the general
requirements governing BART sources.
For most trading programs, we do not
anticipate that this requirement will
have a significant impact on the scope
of the program. Because trading
programs generally include all sources
within a source category in a trading
region, trading programs designed to
meet either reasonable progress goals or
other requirements of the CAA are likely
to have broad applicability provisions
that encompass all BART-eligible
sources in the trading region (or at least
all BART-eligible sources within certain
categories of sources for some trading
programs). States have the inherent
authority to determine the applicability
of their regulations for programs such as
those designed to meet reasonable
progress requirements, or to attain the
National Ambient Air Quality Standard
(NAAQS), and are most likely to design
programs with applicability provisions
that are not dependent on factors such
as the age of sources covered by the
program. For example, States in the
WRAP designed their program to apply
to all stationary sources with actual
emissions of 100 tons per year or more,
regardless of the type of source or the
age of the facility.
We disagree that the requirement that
States either require BART-eligible
sources to participate in a trading
program or go through a BART analysis
is a form of ‘‘group BART’’ that would
illegally impose requirements on such
sources without a demonstration that
those sources emit a pollutant that may
reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to visibility impairment. As
noted above, for programs designed to
meet other requirements of the CAA, we
would expect that the States would
design programs that apply broadly, and
nothing in the BART provisions of the
CAA limits a States’ ability to regulate
BART-eligible sources under other
provisions in the CAA. Thus, for
example, a State need not demonstrate
that an EGU built between 1962 and
1977 has a certain measurable impact on
visibility before regulating it under the
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CAIR. Rather, the BART sources would
be treated in the same manner as other
sources in the State.6
In the case of programs designed
solely to satisfy BART requirements,
which may arguably be limited to BART
sources only, the approach set forth in
the final rule provides the opportunity
for an individual source not to be
regulated by a trading program. In
particular, rather than participate in a
trading program, a source may
demonstrate that it does not meet the
‘‘subject to BART’’ test or that BART
should be ‘‘no control’’ in its particular
case, seek an exemption from the
Administrator under section
51.308(e)(4), or install BART controls.
This approach therefore avoids any
potential problems involving BARTeligible sources which are not
reasonably anticipated to cause or
contribute to visibility impairment
being illegally subject to program
requirements. Rather, section
51.308(e)(2) provides BART-eligible
sources which are reasonably
anticipated to cause or contribute to
visibility the opportunity to participate
in a trading program instead of meeting
source specific control limits.
Our concerns with emissions shifting
will be addressed under the more
general requirements applicable to
trading programs. These provisions
require States to demonstrate that the
applicability provisions are designed to
prevent any significant, potential
shifting within the State of production
and emissions from sources in the
program to sources outside the program.
This provision addresses emissions
shifting from sources in the program to
those outside the program, irrespective
of the BART-eligibility status of the
sources. Moreover, this demonstration
will enable States to take into account
the type of practical and economic
factors raised by commenters which
may obviate theoretical concerns with
emission shifting. We also note that the
periodic SIP updates required under
§ 51.308(g) of the regional haze rule will
provide an opportunity to assess
whether emissions shifting is in fact a
problem.
Comparison of BART and Alternative
Scenarios
Proposal. In the NPRM, we proposed
several changes to § 51.308(e)(2)(i). As
6 In theory, a State could design a program to
meet the reasonable progress or other requirements
of the CAA that does not have sufficiently broad
applicability provisions to encompass all BART
sources. For example, a State could adopt a program
that covers all sources with SO2 emissions greater
than 1000 tons per year. In such a case, the BART
sources not subject to the trading program would
be subject to the requirements of section 308(e)(1).
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explained in the preamble, the critical
revision to that section to bring it into
compliance with the decision of the DC
Circuit in CEED v. EPA was to remove
the requirement of a bifurcated
approach to establishing the BART
benchmark. We also proposed
additional changes in the section which
were intended to establish a clear
‘‘framework’’ or step-by-step procedure
for comparing an alternative program to
source-by-source BART. This consisted
of a five-step procedure in proposed
paragraphs (A)–(E) within
§ 51.308(e)(2)(i). In brief, those steps
were: (A) List all BART-eligible sources,
(B) list all BART source categories
covered by the program, (C) analyze the
degree of visibility improvement at each
affected Class I area expected as a result
of the application of BART pursuant to
paragraph (e)(1) at each source subject
to BART in each source category
covered by the program, (D) analyze the
emissions reductions and associated
visibility improvement expected under
the trading program or other alternative
measure, and (E) compare the results of
the steps in paragraphs (C) and (D) using
the method prescribed under
§ 51.308(e)(3).
Section 51.308(e)(3), which was
finalized in the BART guidelines
rulemaking, establishes criteria for
determining whether an alternative
program makes greater reasonable
progress than source-by-source BART.
First, if the distribution of emissions is
similar between the two scenarios, the
comparison may be made on the basis
of emissions alone. In that case, the
alternative program may be deemed to
make greater reasonable progress than
BART if it results in greater emissions
reductions than source-by-source BART.
If, however, the geographic distribution
of emissions reductions is significantly
different under the two alternatives, the
State must conduct visibility modeling
and evaluate the alternative program
under a two-pronged test. The first
prong is that the alternative program
must not cause a decline in visibility at
any Class I area. The second prong is
that there is an overall improvement in
visibility under the alternative program,
‘‘determined by comparing the average
differences between BART and the
alternative over all affected Class I
areas.’’ See section 51.308(e)(3).
In proposing the above-described
structure of section 51.308(e)(2), we
noted that we were proposing to add the
term ‘‘affected’’ to modify the term
‘‘Class I areas’’ in paragraph (C). The
purpose of this was to clarify that a
State need not evaluate visibility
improvement at every Class I area
nationwide. We also noted that, as
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described in the preamble to the final
BART guidelines, States have discretion
in defining an ‘‘affected’’ Class I area.
Finally, while noting that section
51.308(e)(3) had been finalized, we
sought comment on whether EPA
should allow other means of
demonstrating that an alternative
program makes greater reasonable
progress than would BART.
Specifically, we solicited comments on
whether a weight of evidence approach
would be appropriate. We gave the
following scenario as an example of a
situation where such an approach might
be appropriate: ‘‘(1) The alternative
program achieves emissions reductions
that are within the range believed
achievable from source-by-source BART
at affected sources, (2) the program
imposes a firm cap on emissions that
represents meaningful reductions from
current levels and, in contrast to BART,
would prevent emissions growth from
new sources, and (3) the State is unable
to perform a sufficiently robust
assessment of the programs using the
two pronged visibility test due to
technical or data limitations.’’
Comments. One commenter noted
that there was a contradiction between
the terms of § 51.308(e)(3) as finalized
and § 51.308(e)(2) as proposed.
Specifically, whereas under
§ 51.308(e)(3), dispersion modeling is
required only if the distribution of
emissions distribution is significantly
different, under the alternative measure,
in proposed section 51.308(e)(2),
dispersion modeling is required as a
matter of course in developing the two
scenarios to be compared.
Several commenters also supported
the ‘‘weight of evidence’’ approach to
demonstrate that an alterantive makes
greater reasonable progress than BART.
One commenter specified that the
‘‘regulation should require a weight of
evidence demonstration to include
emission inventory, monitoring data,
meteorology, and various data analysis
studies,’’ and that modeling should not
necessarily be weighted more heavily
than the other factors listed.
With respect to the definition of an
‘‘affected’’ Class I area, one commenter
pointed to possible inconsistent
application among States and
uncertainty as to which States should
make the determination (i.e., only the
State which contains the Class I area, or
other States as well). The commenter
therefore requested that EPA clarify
when a Class I area is affected by
emissions and the radius from a source
within which an analysis should be
done.
Another commenter claimed that our
discussion of section 51.308(e)(3) re-
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opened that provision for comment in
this rulemaking and created a renewed
opportunity for judicial review. The
commenter then raised several
arguments regarding the legality of
section 51.308(e)(3) under the CAA. The
commenter argued that the proposed
rule was overly broad in failing to
specify that only sources participating
in a trading program or other alternative
measure may satisfy BART for those
sources and the specific visibilityimpairing pollutant at issue. The
commenter also argued that the test is
impermissibly vague in providing for
dispersion modeling if the distribution
of emission is ‘‘substantially different.’’
The commenter also claimed that by
allowing States to compare ‘‘average
differences’’ between BART and the
alternative over all affected Class I areas
was inconsistent with the CAA. Finally,
the commenter responded to our request
for comment on a weight of evidence
test, stating that allowing unspecified
‘‘qualitative factors’’ to trump other,
more quantitative assessments would
dramatically weaken the rule.
Final Rule. We agree with
commenters who pointed to the
inconsistency between the proposed
provisions of section 51.308(e)(2) and
the existing terms of section
51.308(e)(3). This conflict was the result
of inadvertent error, and we are
correcting it in the final rule.
Specifically, we have eliminated the
clauses within section 51.308(e)(2)(C)
and section 51.308(e)(2)(D) which
required that visibility improvement be
projected at those steps in the process.
Instead, these paragraphs call only for
an assessment of emissions reductions
under BART and alternative scenarios,
respectively. We have also clarified in
section 51.308(e)(2)(E) that visibility
projections are required only if
necessary, pursuant to section
51.308(e)(3).
Because we have eliminated the
requirement for visibility projections
within the analysis prescribed in section
51.308(e)(2), there is no longer a need to
define an affected Class I area in the
context of this section. Instead, that
term is defined in the context of section
51.308(e)(3), at the States’ discretion as
discussed in the preamble to the final
BART rule. See 70 FR 39138. The EPA
continues to believe that it is not
necessary to bound the terms of that
discretion upfront through Federal
regulation. Any potential problems due
to inconsistent application among States
can be addressed through the RPO and
inter-RPO processes already in place
and ultimately through the SIP process.
This will allow consideration of the
potential effects of local conditions and
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60621
of particular trading programs as they
are developed. It should, therefore,
produce more reasoned results than
would the establishment of a
nationwide, one-size-fits-all radius of
influence criterion.
We disagree with comments that EPA
reopened section 51.308(e)(3) by
discussing the provisions of this section
of the rule in the proposal, or that
today’s rule has impacted the meaning
of section 51.308(e)(3).
Notwithstanding the fact that this
provision was not reopened, we note
that EPA disagrees with the substance of
the comments claiming that section
51.308(e)(3) is overly broad and vague.
The commenter’s concerns regarding the
failure of section 51.308(e)(3) to specify
that only those sources participating in
a trading program may satisfy BART for
those sources is addressed in the
regulations under section
51.308(e)(2)(i)(B), which provides that
each BART-eligible source in a State
must be included in an alternative
program, have a BART emission limit,
or otherwise be addressed under the
BART provisions. The commenter’s
concerns regarding the ‘‘impermissibly
vague’’ language used in section
51.308(e)(3) that would allow a State to
approve alternative measures that are
less protective than BART ignore the
SIP process. The State’s discretion in
this area is subject to the condition that
it must be reasonably exercised and that
its decisions be supported by adequate
documentation of its analyses.
We also disagree with the comments
criticizing the test finalized in section
51.308(e)(3) for allowing States to
consider the average differences
between BART and the alternative in
determining whether the alternative
makes greater reasonable progress. In
short, as explained in the response to
comments to the BART Guideline
rulemaking, EPA believes the test in
section 51.308(e)(3) is an appropriate
one:
In addition, within a regional haze context,
not every measure taken is required to
achieve a visibility improvement at every
class I area. BART is one component of long
term strategies to make reasonable progress,
but it is not the only component. The
requirement that the alternative achieves
greater progress based on the average
improvement at all Class I areas assures that,
by definition, the alternative will achieve
greater progress overall. Though there may be
cases where BART could produce greater
improvement at one or more class I areas, the
no-degradation prong assures that the
alternative will not result in worsened
conditions anywhere than would otherwise
exist, and the possibility of BART for
reasonably attributable visibility protects
against any potential ‘‘hot spots.’’ Taken
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together, the EPA believes these factors make
a compelling case that the proposed test
properly defines ‘‘greater reasonable
progress.’’ The EPA anticipates that regional
haze implementation plans will also contain
measures addressing other sources as
necessary to make progress at every
mandatory federal Class I area.7
With respect to the use of a ‘‘weight
of evidence’’ approach as an alternative
to the methodology of section
51.308(e)(3), we support the use of such
a test as an alternative to the
methodology set forth in section
51.308(e)(3). ‘‘Weight of evidence’’
demonstrations attempt to make use of
all available information and data which
can inform a decision while recognizing
the relative strengths and weaknesses of
that information in arriving at the
soundest decision possible. Factors
which can be used in a weight of
evidence determination in this context
may include, but not be limited to,
future projected emissions levels under
the program as compared to under
BART, future projected visibility
conditions under the two scenarios, the
geographic distribution of sources likely
to reduce or increase emissions under
the program as compared to BART
sources, monitoring data and emissions
inventories, and sensitivity analyses of
any models used. This array of
information and other relevant data may
be of sufficient quality to inform the
comparison of visibility impacts
between BART and the alternative
program. In showing that an alternative
program is better than BART and when
there is confidence that the difference in
visibility impacts between BART and
the alternative scenarios are expected to
be large enough, a weight of evidence
comparison may be warranted in
making the comparison. The EPA will
carefully consider the evidence before
us in evaluating any SIPs submitted by
States employing such an approach.
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B. Comments Relating to the Final
Determination That CAIR Makes Greater
Reasonable Progress Than BART in the
July 6, 2005 BART Guideline Rule
In the final BART guidelines
rulemaking on July 6, 2005, EPA
determined that the CAIR makes greater
reasonable progress than BART for
certain EGUs and pollutants (70 FR
39138–39143). We did not seek
comment on this determination, but we
nonetheless received comments related
to this final rule.
7 Summary of Comments and Responses on the
2004 and 2001 Proposed Guidelines for Best
Available Retrofit Technology (‘‘BART’’)
Determinations under the Regional Haze Rule,
Docket Number EPA–HQ–OAR–2002–0076, at 253.
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Comments. Several organizations
submitted comments regarding BART
relief for non-EGUs in the CAIR region.
They assert that the CAIR will achieve
more reasonable progress than would
BART for all BART-eligible sources in
the CAIR region, including non-EGUs.
Therefore, they urge EPA to amend its
final determination to include BART
relief for non-EGUs and to provide
supporting analysis for this
demonstration.
In contrast, another commenter
disagreed with our previous
determination that the CAIR will make
greater reasonable progress than BART.
The commenter acknowledged that that
determination was not at issue in this
rulemaking. However, this commenter
was concerned that there would not be
enough BART-eligible sources in nonCAIR States to support an effective
BART trading program outside the CAIR
region. The commenter was also
concerned about the administrative
costs that a trading program would
impose on non-CAIR States. The
commenter therefore urged EPA to
establish an alternative mechanism,
such as ‘‘an exchange ratio for Acid
Rain allowances held, or ‘BART’
allowances generated by sources located
in CAIR states’’ in order to allow
participation in an effective trading
program by sources in non-CAIR States.
One commenter urged EPA to clarify
that where another program requires
controls of one pollutant at BARTeligible sources, BART applicability for
other pollutants is not affected.
One commenter said that it does not
believe EPA has the authority to
‘‘circumvent’’ CAA requirements for
controlling specific BART sources that
affect visibility in a Class I area. They
believe that EPA should require States
to show that all BART sources will be
controlled first as part of any showing
that an alternative program is ‘‘better
than BART.’’ This commenter also
requested clarification as to which CAA
requirements could be included in SIPs
to make a ‘‘better than BART’’ showing.
Final Rule. The DC Circuit in CEED v.
EPA upheld EPA’s interpretation of
section 169A of the CAA as allowing for
an alternative program, such as an
emissions trading program, to be
adopted in lieu of source-by-source
BART controls. It is EPA’s view that
emissions reductions required by CAA
(or State) provisions other than BART
may be used to satisfy BART, so long as
the program achieves greater reasonable
progress than would BART at the BARTeligible sources affected. The
preponderance of comments also
supported this position, and the
comments in opposition did not raise
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any arguments that were not addressed
either in the course of the CAIR
rulemaking or in the final determination
that the CAIR may substitute for BART
for EGUs in affected States made in the
July 6, 2005 rule. As previously
explained, ‘‘EPA does not believe that
anything in the CAA or relevant case
law prohibits a State from considering
emissions reductions required to meet
other CAA requirements when
determining whether source-by-source
BART controls are necessary to make
reasonable progress.’’ (70 FR 39143; see
also 70 FR 25300–302).
With respect to those comments
specifically directed at whether the
CAIR makes greater reasonable progress
than BART and, if so, what the scope of
BART relief should be (i.e., whether it
should extend to non-EGUs), it is
important to emphasize that the
determination that the CAIR makes
greater reasonable progress than BART
for SO2 and nitrogen oxides (NOX) at
EGUs in the CAIR region, and thus may
substitute for BART for those pollutants
and those sources, was finalized in the
July 2005 BART rule. Our supporting
technical analysis for the determination
that the CAIR is ‘‘better than BART’’
addressed only the comparative
visibility impacts of the CAIR trading
programs with respect to EGUs versus
BART for EGUs. A determination at this
time that the CAIR trading programs for
EGUs could substitute for BART at nonEGUs as well as for EGUs is beyond the
scope of this rulemaking.
With respect to the request that we
clarify that where another program
requires controls of one pollutant at
BART-eligible sources, BART-eligibility
for other pollutants is not affected, we
note that EPA agrees with this
interpretation of the BART
requirements.8 As a general matter, if a
program exists for the control of one
pollutant at BART-eligible sources,
emissions of other visibility-impairing
pollutants merit analysis to determine if
visibility impairment is such that
additional controls would or would not
be warranted. However, it is possible
that a State could demonstrate that a
trading program that addresses one or
two visibility-impairing pollutants
under an alternative program would
provide greater reasonable progress than
would case-by-case BART applied to all
visibility-impairing pollutants. With
respect to EPA’s determination that the
CAIR provides for greater reasonable
progress than BART for EGUs, EPA
found that CAIR States which
participate in the EPA-administered
8 The final BART Guidelines address this general
question of applicability. 70 FR at 39161.
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CAIR cap-and-trade programs for SO2
and NOX would be allowed to treat the
participation of EGUs in this program as
a substitute for the application of BART
controls for these pollutants at affected
EGUs. EPA further explained in the
preamble to the July 2005 BART rule
that a CAIR State that participates in the
EPA-administered CAIR seasonal NOX
trading program only, would still need
to address BART for SO2 emissions from
EGUs. 70 FR at 39143. In short, EPA’s
determination that the EPAadministered CAIR trading programs
provide for greater reasonable progress
than BART was limited to the pollutants
covered by the EPA-administered CAIR
trading programs in which the State
chooses to participate.
Finally, we agree with the comment
that EPA should clarify those CAA
requirements that a State should include
in its implementation plan if it intends
to rely on its participation in the CAIR
trading programs rather than to require
BART for its EGUs. In our July 2005
BART rule, EPA promulgated
regulations effectuating our
determination that States which adopt
the CAIR model trading rules for SO2
and NOX would be allowed to treat the
participation of EGUs in these programs
as a substitute for application of BART
controls for these pollutants at affected
EGUs. The regulations at 40 CFR
51.308(e)(4) (as established in the July 6,
2005 BART rule) provide the following:
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A State that opts to participate in the Clean
Air Interstate Rule cap-and-trade and trade
[sic] program under part 96 AAA–EEE need
not require affected BART-eligible EGU’s
[sic] to install, operate, and maintain BART.
A State that chooses this option may also
include provisions for a geographic
enhancement to the program to address the
requirement under § 51.302(c) related to
BART for reasonably attributable impairment
from the pollutants covered by the CAIR capand-trade program.
70 FR at 39156. Subparts AAA–EEE of
part 96 set forth a portion of the model
trading rules (which comprise subparts
AAA–III of part 96) that States must
incorporate, with some allowed
modifications, into their SIPs to
participate in the EPA-administered
CAIR SO2 cap-and-trade program.
Although the regulations do not
specifically address participation in the
NOX cap-and-trade program, EPA fully
anticipated that any State choosing to
adopt the annual SO2 model trading
rules would also choose to adopt the
annual NOX model trading rules. In
addition to numerous practical
considerations that would lead States to
adopt the model rules for and thus
choose to participate in both annual
trading programs (as opposed to the SO2
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program only), as noted above, the CAIR
substitutes for BART only for those
pollutants covered by the EPAadministered CAIR trading programs in
which the State chooses to participate.
EPA agrees, however, with the comment
that the BART requirements for SIPs
should be clarified and is revising the
regulatory text of the regional haze rule
to more closely align with the
determination regarding the relationship
between CAIR and BART made by EPA
in 2005. We are revising the regulations
accordingly to make clear that
participation in either the annual or
seasonal CAIR NOX cap-and-trade
program is a necessary condition for
relying on EPA’s determination that
States can substitute CAIR for BART for
NOX. We are also revising the
regulations to clarify that a State that
participates only in the ozone season
NOX cap-and-trade program may rely on
EPA’s determination that CAIR makes
greater reasonable progress than BART
for NOX, but, as discussed above, such
a State would still need to address
BART for SO2. As noted above, EPA
anticipates that all States opting to
participate in the annual NOX cap-andtrade program will also participate in
the SO2 cap-and-trade program.
In addition to clarifying the
applicable SIP requirements, we are also
revising the regulatory text to account
for the rule signed by the Administrator
on March 15, 2006 promulgating
Federal implementation plans (FIPs) for
all jurisdictions covered by the CAIR.
These FIPs adopt the model cap-andtrade programs that EPA proposed in
the CAIR as a control option for States,
with minor adjustments to account for
Federal rather than state
implementation. Each jurisdiction in the
CAIR region will be subject to the
requirements set forth in these FIPs
when they became effective on June 27,
2006. The EPA intends to withdraw the
FIP in a State in coordination with
EPA’s approval of a SIP for that State
that meets the CAIR requirements.
However, EPA anticipates that some
States may choose to remain subject to
the CAIR FIP and either not submit any
SIP revisions or submit abbreviated SIP
revisions that modify certain limited
provisions of the CAIR FIP trading
programs. The EPA’s determination in
the 2005 BART rule that States which
adopt the CAIR model trading rules
could treat this as a substitute for BART
for EGUs was based on our finding that,
if the CAIR reductions are achieved
through implementation of the EPAadministered trading programs in the
model trading rules, CAIR makes greater
reasonable progress than BART for these
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60623
sources. This finding holds true whether
a State chooses to submit a SIP under
part 96, remain subject to a FIP under
part 97, or adopt some combination of
the two.
C. Minimum Elements of Cap and Trade
Programs
The August proposal discussed a set
of minimum elements that any cap and
trade program should contain, in order
that it be workable and enforceable. We
received very little comment on most of
the proposed minimum elements. The
discussion below focuses only on those
provisions on which we received
comment. Other elements on which we
did not receive comments are finalized
as they were proposed, and are not
discussed further below.
Penalty Provisions
Proposal. We proposed that the
minimum program element for excess
emission penalties would be a
mandatory deduction, from a source’s
allowance account, of at least three
times the excess emissions. We
explained that this allowance deduction
must occur automatically upon the
State’s or Tribe’s determination of
excess emissions, though it may be
reversed if the source successfully
appeals that determination. The appeal
could be based on the determination of
the number of allowances held by the
source as of the allowance transfer
deadline and available for compliance,
the amount of the source’s emissions, or
the comparison of the amount of the
source’s emissions and the total tonnage
value of the source’s allowances held
and available for compliance.
Comments. A commenter said that in
order to effectively and clearly deter
noncompliance and preserve
consistency with other cap and trade
programs and EPA’s economic incentive
policies, EPA must require as a
minimum element of all cap and trade
programs the imposition of monetary
penalties for noncompliance, in
addition to the automatic allowance
deductions prescribed. No other
comments were received on this specific
issue.
Final Rule. The EPA agrees that cap
and trade programs need to have swift
and unambiguous penalties to deter
noncompliance and to ensure the
integrity of the market for allowances.
The EPA believes that an automatic
allowance deduction penalty of at least
three times the amount of excess
emissions, which is required under
section 51.308(e)(2)(vi)(J), is an effective
deterrent for noncompliance. And given
that allowances have monetary value,
such a deduction would result in an
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automatic monetary loss to the entity in
question.
The commenter asserted that EPA
must require in section
51.308(e)(2)(vi)(J) that a cap and trade
program provide for both an automatic
offset of any excess emissions (i.e., the
automatic deduction of one allowance
for each ton of emissions for which an
allowance was not held by the source)
and an automatic monetary penalty (i.e.,
the automatic requirement to pay a
specified amount of money for each ton
of excess emissions). In the proposed
regulation, EPA instead took the
approach of requiring an automatic
allowance deduction of at least three
allowances for each ton of excess
emissions. This deduction includes both
an automatic one-to-one offset and an
automatic allowance penalty of at least
two-to-one. The commenter failed to
explain why giving up allowances in
addition to a one-for-one offset provides
any less deterrence for noncompliance
than paying money in addition to a onefor-one offset. Each allowance has a
monetary value on the allowance
market, and the source is penalized for
noncompliance by having to give up
assets whether the assets are in the form
of allowances or in the form of money.
In short, there is nothing inherent in the
nature of an automatic allowance
deduction that would make such a
deduction any less effective a deterrent
than an automatic monetary penalty.
Further, EPA believes that the cost, to
a source, of a penalty for excess
emissions should be significantly
greater than the cost, to a source, of
purchasing allowances to be in
compliance. The most straight-forward
way of ensuring a consistent
relationship between the cost of
noncompliance (i.e., the excess
emissions penalty) and the cost of
compliance is to impose an excess
emissions penalty in the form of an
automatic allowance deductions that are
a fixed multiple of the amount of excess
emissions. Here, the automatic penalty
consists of at least a three-to-one
allowance deduction, which includes
the one-for-one offset plus an additional
two-for-one allowance surrender. The
EPA notes that the commenter did not
object to this level of penalty, but
simply claimed that the penalty should
have a portion in the form of money.
The EPA believes that the level of the
penalty, as well as the form of the
penalty, specified in section
51.308(e)(2)(vi)(J) are reasonable.
Finally, the commenter errs in its
assertion that EPA’s approach in section
51.308(e)(2)(vi)(J) deviates from ‘‘longstanding’’ policies in requiring
automatic allowance deductions rather
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than automatic monetary penalties for
cap and trade programs. In fact, EPA
took the same approach in the NOX
Budget Trading Program regulations
promulgated in 1998 (63 FR 57356,
57528) (section 96.54(d)(1))) and in the
CAIR trading program regulations
recently promulgated in 2005 (70 FR
25162, 25353, 25373–74, and
25396)(section 96.154(d)(1), section
96.254(d)(1), and section 96.354(d)(1))
and Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR)
trading program regulations
promulgated in 2005 (70 FR 28606,
28669) (section 60.4154(d)(1)). The EPA
notes that, for any trading program
established under the CAA, a source
with excess emissions is subject to
discretionary monetary penalties under
section 113 of the CAA, in addition to
the automatic penalties established by
the respective trading program. See, e.g.,
63 FR 57528 (section 96.64(d)(3) (stating
that the automatic penalty under NOX
Budget Trading Program does not affect
liability for any other penalty under the
CAA).
Emissions Monitoring
Proposal. In the NPRM, we proposed
a requirement that the monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
for boilers, combustion turbines, and
cement kilns participating in a trading
program comply with part 75, and that
other sources in the program include
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting provisions that result in
information of the same precision,
reliability, accessibility and timeliness
as provided for under part 75. This
proposed requirement was based on the
need for consistent and accurate
measurement of emissions to ensure
that each allowance actually represents
its specified tonnage value of emissions
and that reported emissions are fungible
across different sources. We also
proposed that any sources that are
subject to the cap and trade program but
prohibited from selling emissions
allowances would not be subject to the
requirement that the monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
be consistent with, or equivalent to, part
75.
Comments. Several commenters
expressed concerned that the emissions
monitoring requirement would be
unduly burdensome for small sources
which are not currently subject to
monitoring requirements. One
commenter stated that because the cost
of operating continuous emissions
monitors (CEMs) tends not to decline
proportionally with emissions or
output, the costs of CEMs for small
industrial sources is much higher than
for large EGUs on a per-ton basis. The
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commenter also argued that the superior
accuracy of CEMs compared to other
methods such as emission factors, on a
percentage basis, was not worth the cost
when applied to the total emissions
from small sources. The commenter
therefore suggested that EPA should
allow States to assume, when
establishing the BART benchmark, that
individual emissions units with annual
emission levels less than the de minimis
levels would not be controlled, and to
the extent that such sources are required
to participate in a BART trading
program, that they not be required to
use CEMs. Another commenter, citing
similar concerns, suggested that EPA
could establish a threshold source size
for each affected source category, and
provide alternatives to Part 75
monitoring for sources below the
threshold. The commmenter also
suggested allowing alternatives such as
parametric monitoring or periodic
sources test, possibly with the use of a
conservative adjustment factor to
compensate for the greater uncertainty
of those methods.
Final Rule. The EPA is aware of the
need to balance considerations of the
accuracy and reliability of emissions
monitoring and reporting with costs
considerations, particularly as
applicable to small sources. We believe
the approach contained in the proposal
strikes the proper balance and provides
States with adequate flexibility to
address sources’ concerns with the cost
of CEMs monitoring. First, the
requirement to comply with part 75
only applies to boilers, combustion
turbines and cement kilns. For all other
sources, the requirement is that the
sources ‘‘provide information with the
same precision, reliability, accessibility,
and timeliness’’ as provided by part 75.
Any sources which are prohibited from
selling allowances (including boilers,
combustion turbines, or cement kilns)
are not required either to comply with,
or be consistent with, part 75.
Second, even within part 75, there are
alternatives to CEMs in appropriate
circumstances. As explained in a
footnote in the proposal, part 75
establishes requirements for CEMS, as
well as other types of monitoring (e.g.,
low mass emissions monitoring under
section 75.19) that may be used in lieu
of CEMS under certain circumstances.
Part 75 also establishes a process for
proposal by owners and operators, and
approval by the Administrator, of
alternative monitoring systems (under
subpart E of part 75) that meet
requirements concerning precision,
reliability, accessibility, and timeliness.
We continue to believe that it is
essential to the integrity of any
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emissions trading program that those
sources that are allowed to sell
allowances must either comply with or
be consistent with the requirements of
part 75 (depending on the source
category). Therefore, we are finalizing
those requirements as proposed.
Finally, we believe there is some
merit to the commenter’s point that
States should be allowed to assume,
when establishing the BART
benchmark, that individual emissions
units with annual emission levels less
than the de minimis levels would not be
controlled. In the BART Guidelines we
indicated that States may choose to set
de minimis levels for individual
pollutants at BART-eligible sources, so
long as those de minimis levels are set
at or below PSD applicability levels for
those pollutants. We said that sources
with emissions of an individual
pollutant below de minimis levels could
be excluded from BART-eligibility.
Similarly, we believe that for the
purposes of an alternative program, de
minimis levels set at or below PSD
applicability levels for those pollutants
would be appropriate. In other words,
States could assume, when establishing
the BART benchmark, that they need
not include emissions that total less
than de minimis amounts of an
individual pollutant at a BART-eligible
source.
III. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule
§ 51.309
Support for the WRAP Program
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Comments. We received very few
comments addressing our proposed
revisions to section 51.309. One
commenter stated that it agreed with
EPA’s proposed changes to this section
of the Regional Haze Rule, but asked for
clarification on several points. At the
public hearing on the proposed rule,
representatives of the WRAP and the
State of Utah Division of Air Quality
expressed general support for the
proposal and appreciation of EPA’s
efforts to provide an opportunity for
affected States and tribes to continue to
utilize the extensive work of the GCVTC
and the WRAP. The representative of
Utah added:
Any suggestion that EPA has forced Utah
into protecting visibility in Utah’s protected
areas or that EPA is forcing Utah to
participate in alternatives to BART is simply
untrue * * * Statements that claim this rule
usurps state authority are absolutely not true
* * * In fact, Section 309 has always been,
and continues to be, a state-driven
regulation.9
9 See
Docket EPA–HQ–OAR–2002–0076.
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Another commenter requested
clarification of the potential geographic
scope of the program in § 51.309.
Final Rule. The EPA remains
committed to allowing States and Tribes
the flexibility to use innovative
approaches such as market-based
emissions trading programs to meet
CAA requirements where appropriate,
and agrees that EPA has never
attempted to coerce States and Tribes
into adopting such alternative programs
in lieu of BART. The provisions in the
Regional Haze Rule allowing for
alternatives to BART generally, and the
WRAP backstop trading program in
particular, were originally included at
the request of the States.10
As was the case in 1999 when EPA
added section 51.309 to the Regional
Haze Rule to recognize to work of the
GCVTC, the option set out in section
51.309 is applicable to the States and
Tribes of the GCVTC transport region:
Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon,
Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and
Wyoming, and all federally-recognized
Tribes within the exterior boundaries of
those States. Section 51.309 establishes
the requirements for the first regional
haze plans for the 16 Class I areas
covered by the GCVTC Report, listed in
section 51.309(b)(1). The geographic
scope of the program, in terms of the
Class I areas for which reasonable
progress goals are satisfied, may be
expanded upon adequate
demonstrations pursuant to section
51.309(g).
The WRAP Program as a Reasonable
Progress Measure
Proposal. The requirement in the
CAA that States make reasonable
progress towards the national visibility
goal, while related to the BART
requirement, is a separate requirement
analogous to the NAAQS-based
requirements in the CAIR. For the
reasons presented above in this
preamble in the discussion of
‘‘independent requirements’’ in general,
we proposed that for a program
designed to meet reasonable progress
requirements, the BART benchmark
may be based on simplifying
assumptions without running afoul of
the DC Circuit’s decision in CEED v.
EPA. We characterized such a program
as one that includes BART sources and
has the purpose of satisfying reasonable
progress requirements for a larger
universe of sources.
Comments. Although the preamble
discussion of this issue was not limited
to or expressly directed towards the
10 See legacy EPA Docket A–95–38, Item number
VII–G–76.
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60625
WRAP’s program, most of the comments
received were in regard to the
application of this concept to the
WRAP. The WRAP itself submitted
comments in agreement with our
interpretation and supporting the
inclusion of this option in the final rule.
In addition, another commenter
explicitly supported the use of this
approach. In its comments, the UARG
stated that the ‘‘[u]se of the group-BART
approach for justifying the WRAP
Annex would be appropriate because
the WRAP Annex would be the SO2
portion of the section 169A reasonable
progress program for the 16 Colorado
Plateau Class I areas, and thus would be
a BART alternative program that is
required under another CAA provision.’’
As noted previously in this preamble,
this commenter urged EPA to include
language within the rule itself, in
addition to the preamble discussion, to
allow States to use a ‘‘group BART’’
approach to derive the BART
benchmark when the BART alternative
program is required by another
provision of law. This commenter also
requested that EPA make it clear in
regulatory language that this provision
applies to the WRAP.
Another commenter said that through
the proposed rule, EPA was essentially
proposing to repromulgate the WRAP
Annex. The commenter, while not
disputing the proposition that a program
designed to meet reasonable progress
could be evaluated against a groupBART benchmark, argued that the
previous Annex milestones could not be
‘‘recycled’’ under this rationale because
they were not developed as reasonable
progress measures. Instead, the
commenter argued, the milestones were
derived directly from BART by the
WRAP. The commenter also argued that
the milestones cannot be justified as a
reasonable progress measure because
the modeling submitted with the Annex
showed that the stationary source
program for SO2 would achieve no
humanly perceptible visibility
improvement. Finally, the commenter
argued that the milestones cannot be
‘‘restored’’ because there is no ‘‘coherent
reasonable progress rationale’’
underlying them.
After the comment period closed, a
commenter submitted supplemental
comments which directly responded to
the CEED’s comments on the WRAP
program. The commenter stated that in
its view, ‘‘the fact that the WRAP Annex
(or, more precisely, its SO2 milestones)
were established based on a groupBART approach does not taint the
Annex, so long as the Annex is required
by or satisfies (in whole or in part) the
CAA’s reasonable progress requirements
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(or some other CAA or State
requirement.’’ (Emphasis in original).
The commenter also opined on the
manner in which the WRAP program
could be shown to satisfy reasonable
progress requirements. First, the
commenter cited the EPA’s discussion
of the purpose of section 309 in the
preamble to the 1999 Regional Haze
Rule, as meeting the reasonable progress
requirements for the 16 Class I areas
addressed by the GCVTC (See 64 FR
35749–51). Second, the commenter
notes that it is the States’’, not EPA’s,
obligation to demonstrate that the
program satisfy reasonable progress
requirements. In support of this, the
commenter points to the provision in
the proposed provision at section
51.309(d)(2), requiring a visibility
improvement projection in order to
demonstrate that section 51.309 as a
whole comprises reasonable progress for
the 16 Class I areas on the Colorado
Plateau. Therefore, the commenter
asserts, if a ‘‘State demonstrates to EPA,
as part of its section 51.309 SIP
submittal, that the WRAP annex
satisfies part or all of the reasonable
progress requirement, the sourcespecific BART benchmark to be used in
the ‘better than BART’ test can be
established using a group BART
approach.’’
Final Rule. Today’s rule does not ‘‘repromulgate’’ or ‘‘pre-approve’’ the
stationary source SO2 trading program
addressed by the WRAP Annex. Rather,
we are amending the Regional Haze
Rule to remove the requirement that
States use a ‘‘group BART’’ benchmark
for evaluating alternative programs and
providing western States and tribes the
opportunity to reconsider the
milestones absent that invalid analytical
requirement. The Regional Haze Rule
makes clear that the WRAP States have
the option of using source-by-source
BART determinations to develop a
BART benchmark against which to
compare their backstop market trading
program. Alternatively, if a WRAP State
were to demonstrate as part of its SIP
submittal that the backstop market
trading program satisfies part or all of its
reasonable progress requirement for the
Class I areas at issue, then the
regulations provide that the WRAP
States could use a BART benchmark
based on category-wide assumptions
about control levels which could be
expected to result from BART to
demonstrate that the trading program
makes greater reasonable progress than
BART. In either case, a new
demonstration is required, based on
regulatory requirements and control
technology factors as they currently
exist, not as they were in 2000.
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Therefore the ‘‘Annex’’ milestones are
not being ‘‘recycled.’’
We do agree that regulatory certainty
and clarity are best served by specifying
within the regulatory provisions the
circumstances in which a State,
including a State submitting a SIP under
section 51.309, may use simplifying
assumptions to estimate BART
emissions reductions in establishing a
BART benchmark. As discussed in
section II of the preamble, we have
amended section 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C) to
clarify the methodologies for
determining the BART benchmark. The
new language codifies the approach,
discussed in the proposal preamble,
which may be used in the case of an
emissions trading or other alternative
program designed to meet a Federal or
State requirement other than BART. The
paragraph specifies that the CAA
section 169A requirement to make
reasonable progress may be considered
such a requirement.
Although a commenter argues that we
are ‘‘recycling’’ the WRAP Annex, we
are not determining at this time that a
SIP with a backstop market trading
program identical to that approved by
EPA in 2003 would meet the
requirements of the amended Regional
Haze Rule. In other words, it is
unnecessary at this time to address the
CEED’s central argument that the
backstop market trading program in the
WRAP Annex cannot qualify as a BART
alternative program designed to meet
another CAA provision. If any SIPs are
submitted under section 51.309, EPA
will review the plans at that time based
on the State’s submittal and any
additional information adduced during
the public comment period.
We do note that EPA disagrees with
the commenter that a WRAP State could
not show that a stationary source market
trading program similar to that in the
WRAP Annex was designed to satisfy
the reasonable progress requirements.
Although, as the commenter pointed
out, EPA did not provide an analysis in
the proposal of how the milestones from
2003 could contribute to reasonable
progress should any States submit SIPs
containing a trading program based on
these milestones, the history of the
program authorized under § 51.309 of
the Regional Haze Rule suggests
strongly that the stationary source
program for SO2 was designed by the
States and others in the GCVTC as a
measure for obtaining reasonable
progress. In the preamble to the 1999
Regional Haze Rule, we stated:
‘‘The EPA finds that the GCVTC actions to
date address, or provide a mechanism to
address, the statutory factors for assessing
reasonable progress required by the CAA.
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The EPA is satisfied that the GCVTC’s
strategies as set forth in section 51.309, when
supplemented by the annex process
discussed below, will provide for ‘reasonable
progress’ toward the national visibility goal
for the 16 parks and wilderness areas
addressed by the GCVTC.’’ [64 FR 35749
emphasis added].
In elaborating on the Annex process,
we noted that the haze rule contained a
provision calling for the submission of
an Annex to the GCVTC report ‘‘for the
purpose of completing the program
requirements to meet reasonable
progress under the CAA, including
submission of a complete long-term
strategy and addressing the BART
requirement for the 16 Class I areas on
the Colorado Plateau.’’ [64 FR 35756
emphasis added]. Thus, from the
beginning of the process, it is clear that
EPA believed that satisfying the BART
requirement was a subsidiary
component of the reasonable progress
requirement, but that the purpose of the
Annex and of section 309 generally was
to satisfy the overall reasonable progress
requirements of western States and
Tribes with respect to the 16 Class 1
areas on the Colorado Plateau.11 Based
on this, in EPA’s opinion, a WRAP State
could demonstrate in a SIP submittal
that a stationary source program similar
to the WRAP Annex was designed to
make reasonable progress. However, as
one commenter noted, such an
obligation belongs to the State, ‘‘and the
time for the State to provide that
justification is when the State submits a
section 51.309 SIP that contains the
WRAP Annex’s provisions.’’ In short,
whether any SIPs submitted several
years from now under section 51.309 by
the WRAP States meet the minimum
requirements set forth in EPA’s
regulations will depend on the
submission made by the States at that
time.
We also disagree with the comments
that EPA’s approval of the WRAP Annex
in 2003 was not rational as the trading
program had not been shown to produce
a ‘‘humanly perceptible’’ degree of
visibility improvement. We determined
in the 1999 rule that the analysis
conducted by the GCVTC was the
functional equivalent of the reasonable
progress analysis required under section
51.308. Under section 308, States must
establish reasonable progress goals by
considering the uniform rate of progress
11 Section 51.309(a) of the Regional Haze Rule, in
requiring submission of an implementation plan for
the 16 Class I areas covered by the GCTVC report,
states that ‘‘[i]f a transport region State submits an
implementation plan which is approved by EPA as
meeting the requirements of this section, it will be
deemed to comply with the requirements for
reasonable progress for the period from approval of
the plan to 2018.’’ (64 FR 35769).
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(in deciviews) to natural conditions in
2064 (i.e. the ‘‘glide path’’), and the
statutory reasonable progress factors
contained in CAA 169A(g)(1). If the
state adopts a slower rate of progress
than the glide path, it must demonstrate
that this slower rate is justified based on
the statutory factors. In approving the
GCVTC analysis as comparable to such
an analysis, we found that the GCVTC
had demonstrated that a faster rate of
progress was not feasible, considering
the costs and other factors. This
determination does not necessarily
reflect what would be expected in other
parts of the country, as it is unique to
the situation of the Colorado Plateau, in
terms of air quality, pollutant
concentrations, source location, and
meteorology.
In addition, the commenter’s
argument ignores the fact that there are
two elements of national visibility goals
established by Congress in CAA
169A(a)(1): Preventing future
impairment as well as remedying
existing impairment. It cannot be
disputed that a program that prevents
degradation for the first long-term
planning period constitutes reasonable
progress towards the goal of preventing
any future impairment. In other words,
holding the line against visibility
degradation for the first 10-year strategy
period is reasonable progress towards
holding the line indefinitely.
Geographic Enhancements
Proposal. The proposed rule made no
mention of ‘‘geographic enhancements’’
because no changes were intended for
the relevant provisions. The term
geographic enhancement refers to a
‘‘method, procedure, or process to allow
a broad regional strategy, such as a
milestone or backstop market trading
program designed to achieve greater
reasonable progress than BART for
regional haze, to accommodate BART
for reasonably attributable impairment.’’
See 40 CFR 51.301 and 51.309(b)(7). As
explained in the preamble to the 1999
Regional Haze Rules, the purpose of this
provision is to allow a market-based
system to accommodate actions taken
under the ‘‘reasonably attributable’’
BART provisions at section 51.302 to
address ‘‘hot spot’’ issues. Section
51.308(e)(2)(v) provides that States may,
at their option, include geographic
enhancements in an emissions trading
program or other alternative measure.
We proposed changes to
§ 51.308(e)(2)(i), (ii), and (vi), but not to
paragraph (e)(2)(v). In addition,
§ 51.309(f)(4) had contained a provision
for optional geographic enhancements,
similar to that in § 51.308(e)(2)(v).
However, as explained in the preamble
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of the August 1 proposal, the ‘‘Annex’’
mechanism embodied in § 309(f) is no
longer necessary or appropriate. We
therefore proposed to repeal section
309(f), while incorporating certain stillrelevant provisions into § 309(d)(4).
Comments. One commenter requested
a clarification that the option of
geographic enhancements is preserved
for the WRAP program through the
cross-reference to § 51.308(e)(2) that
appeared in proposed § 51.309(d)(4)(i).
Final Rule. We agree with the
commenter that geographic
enhancements are retained as an option
under the WRAP program. The
geographic enhancement provision is
contained within § 51.308(e)(2), the
general requirements for trading
programs or other alternative measures
in lieu of BART. The geographic
enhancement provision within
§ 51.308(e)(2) provides a mechanism
which could affect the milestones. The
proposed rule relied upon the fact that
§ 51.309(d)(4) would require that the
WRAP stationary source milestones
comply with the provisions of
§ 51.308(e)(2), which include the
geographic enhancement provision.
However, for additional clarity, we have
added a geographic enhancement
provision specific to the WRAP program
in § 51.309(d)(4)(v).
Tribal Issues
Proposal. Throughout the preamble to
the proposed rule, we referred to Tribes
along with States in recognition that
tribes may be delegated authority to
implement CAA programs, as provided
in section 301(d) of the CAA and the
Tribal Authority Rule (§§ 49.1 through
49.11). We proposed to retain, in the
text of the rule at proposed § 51.309(c),
the provision that Indian Tribes may
submit implementation plans after the
proposed deadline of December 17,
2007.
Comments. One commenter included
two issues related to Tribes. First, the
commenter stated that participation in a
program under this rule would not be ‘‘a
trivial exercise for any Tribal program to
accomplish given most tribal programs
lack the staff and expertise of state air
programs,’’ and requested that EPA
recognize this reality. The second
comment was specifically focused on
the Tribal allowance set-aside provision
of the former ‘‘Annex’’ program. The
commenter noted that the rule as
proposed did not contain a specific
requirement for a Tribal set-aside,
presumably due to the fact that the
Annex rule had been vacated and that
EPA was therefore aware of the need to
avoid the inclusions of ‘‘provisions of
the Annex rule that were directly or
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60627
indirectly dependent or related to the
specific quantitative milestones
contained in the Annex.’’ The
commenter noted that in the 2003
approval of the WRAP Annex, EPA had
specified that the Tribal set-aside
provision was the one element of the
allocation methodology that was
appropriate for treatment in the Federal
regulation (rather than in SIPs and
Tribal implementation plans (TIPs)).
The commenter therefore requested that
EPA clarify ‘‘what expectations it has
regarding the consistency of tribal set
aside provisions between the section
309 SIPs submitted by various states,
and what role, if any, EPA would play
in assuring implementation of such
provisions.’’
Final Rule. The EPA agrees that
regulatory activities such as BART
determinations and the development of
trading programs is not by any means
trivial and would be difficult to perform
or participate in with the small staffs
and limited resources typical of many
nascent Tribal air programs.
Fortunately, there are few BART-eligible
sources within Indian country across
the nation. Also, EPA has provided
funding as well as technical and other
forms of support to the five RPOs
established to serve both State and
Tribal needs in regional haze planning.
EPA has an ongoing commitment to
insure that tribal interests are addressed
within the RPO process. Also, EPA is
committed to fulfilling its responsibility
to implement CAA provisions in Indian
country as necessary and appropriate, in
consultation with any affected Tribes.
The EPA agrees with the commenter’s
assessment that the reason a tribal
allowance set-aside was not included in
the proposal was that the set-aside
provision in the Annex was integrally
related to the milestones previously
submitted. The Tribal set-aside was
developed voluntarily by the WRAP and
not in response to any CAA
requirement. Having been so developed,
EPA determined at the time of the
Annex rule approval that it was
appropriate for inclusion within section
309, in order to provide an efficient
mechanism to implement the set-aside.
Given that the CEED v. EPA decision
necessitates that States and Tribes be
given the opportunity to revisit the
milestones, that there is no CAA
provision that requires a Tribal setaside, and that the details of the
WRAP’s emissions trading program will
be developed directly in SIPs and TIPs
without the intermediary step of
codifying detailed requirements in an
Annex-like Federal rule, the EPA
believes it would be inappropriate to
attempt to mandate a Tribal allowance
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set-aside at this time. However, the EPA
does continue to encourage States and
Tribes in the WRAP as well as
elsewhere to develop mechanisms to
address Tribal interests and concerns,
such as allowance set-asides. We will
review SIPs and TIPs submitted under
section 309 to insure that the allocation
methodologies, including any Tribal
provisions, are consistent among
jurisdictions and will provide the
certainty and regularity necessary for a
functioning market. What other role, if
any, the EPA will play in assuring the
implementation of any Tribal set-aside
provisions is dependent in large part
upon the nature of the program
developed by participating states and
Tribes—for example, whether the
program would be administered by the
EPA, States and Tribes, or a third-party
contractor.
Other Comments and Responses
One commenter requested that EPA
make explicit in the final rule that
backstop trading programs are
permissible under both §§ 51.309 and
51.308 for SO2 and NOX. The
commenter noted that the proposal
preamble stated only that ‘‘nothing
precludes states outside the 9-state
region from incorporating elements of
the GCVTC strategies into their SIPs.’’
While this would indicate that the
section 309 program (including the
backstop trading program) could be
expanded geographically, it does not
address the question of whether the
backstop approach could be utilized,
either inside or outside the GCVTC
region, for NOX as well as SO2.
We wish to clarify here that a
backstop trading program (i.e., a system
of voluntary milestones backed by an
automatically required cap and trade
program in the event the milestones are
exceeded) could qualify as an ‘‘other
alternative measure’’ under
§ 51.308(e)(2) as a BART substitute. This
could be accomplished for any visibility
impairing pollutant, on a pollutant-bypollutant basis. The key distinction
between programs under §§ 51.308 and
51.309 is that under § 51.309, the
reasonable progress requirements for
SO2, with respect to the 16 Class I areas
on the Colorado plateau, have already
been defined by the GCVTC. With
respect to SO2 reductions to meet
reasonable progress requirements at
other Class I areas, and with respect to
other pollutants such as NOX, the
emission reductions requirements
remain to be determined. This could be
accomplished either according to the
reasonable progress requirements of
§ 51.308(d)(1), in the case of a program
designed to meet reasonable progress
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goals; or through source-by-source
BART determinations as described in
this rule, for programs designed only to
satisfy BART. Provided these
requirements are met, it is acceptable for
a State to use a backstop trading
program under § 51.308.
Finally, we note that there was an
obvious omission in the proposed
provisions regarding the comparison of
actual emissions to the emissions
milestones. Specifically, proposed
§ 51.309(d)(4)(i) provided for the use of
a 3-year rolling average of actual
emissions for this purpose. This does
not account for the fact that it is not
possible to generate a 3-year average
during the first two years of emission
tracking. Therefore, the final rule
provides that for the first 2 years,
compliance with the milestones may be
measured by a methodology of the
States’ choosing, so long as all States in
the program use the same methodology.
After the first 2 years of the program,
compliance with the annual milestones
may be measured by comparing a 3-year
rolling average of actual emissions with
a rolling average of the emissions
milestones for the same 3 years.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
Under Executive Order (EO) 12866
(58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ because it raises novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the EO.
Accordingly, EPA submitted this action
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review under EO 12866 and
any changes made in response to OMB
recommendations have been
documented in the docket for this
action.
Today’s rule provides States and
interested Tribes with optional means,
such as emissions trading programs, to
comply with CAA requirements for
BART. The rule requires that
alternatives achieve greater ‘‘reasonable
progress’’ towards CAA visibility goals
than would source-by-source BART. By
their nature, emissions trading programs
are designed to achieve a given level of
environmental improvement in the most
cost-effective manner possible.
Therefore, today’s rule will achieve at
least as great a societal benefit as sourceby-source BART, at a social cost that is
likely to be less than, or at worst equal
to, the social costs of source-by-source
BART.
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In the Regulatory Impact Analysis
(RIA) for our recent promulgation of the
source-by-source BART guidelines, we
determined that the social costs of
source-by-source BART for both EGUs
and non-EGUs nationwide was between
$0.3 and $2.9 billion (1999 dollars),
depending on the level of stringency
implemented by States and on the
interest rate used. The human health
benefits of BART, in contrast, ranged
from $1.9 to $12 billion (1999 dollars),
depending on the same variables. These
figures do not include many other
human health benefits that could not be
quantified or monetized, including all
benefits attributable to ozone reduction
(the benefits were based on reductions
in PM only). In addition, economic
benefits due to visibility improvement
in the southeastern and southwestern
U.S. were estimated to be from $80
million to $420 million. Finally, BART
would also produce visibility benefits in
other parts of the country, and nonvisibility ecosystem benefits, which
were also not quantified. Therefore, the
social benefits of BART far outweigh the
social costs.
It is not possible to perform an
economic analysis of today’s rule
because the actual parameters of any
trading programs in lieu of BART will
be determined by States and Tribes.
However, because trading program
alternatives would produce comparable
overall benefits (in the course of
satisfying the requirement to achieve
greater ‘‘reasonable progress’’ towards
visibility goals) and use market forces to
reduce costs, the benefits of today’s rule
would also far outweigh the costs.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not add any new
requirements involving the collection of
information as defined by the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. This action does not impose
any new collections that would require
an amendment to the existing approved
Information Collection Request (ICR).
The OMB has approved the information
collection requirements contained in the
final Regional Haze regulations (64 FR
35714, July 1, 1999) and has assigned
OMB control number 2060–0421 (EPA
ICR No. 1813.04). A copy of the OMB
approved ICR may be obtained from
Susan Auby, Collection Strategies
Division; U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (2822T); 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460 or by
calling (202) 566–1672.
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
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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 control
number. The OMB control numbers for
EPA’s regulations are listed in part 9
and 48 CFR chapter 15.
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C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and 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 proposed rulemaking on
small entities, small entity is defined as:
(1) A small business as defined by the
Small Business Administration’s (SBA)
regulations at 13 CFR 121.201; (2) a
small governmental jurisdiction that is a
government of a city, county, town,
school district or special district with a
population of less than 50,000; and (3)
a small organization that is any not-forprofit enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
After considering the economic
impacts of today’s rule on small entities,
I certify that this action will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
This rule will not impose any
requirements on small entities. This rule
revises the provisions of the Regional
Haze Rule governing alternative trading
programs, and provides additional
guidance to States, which are not
defined as small entities. In addition,
we did not receive any comments
relating to potential impacts on small
entities as a result of this rulemaking.
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D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Public Law 104–4)
(UMRA), 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,
2 U.S.C. 1532, EPA generally must
prepare a written statement, including a
cost-benefit analysis, for any proposed
or final rule that ‘‘includes any Federal
mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and Tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100,000,000 or more
* * * in any one year.’’ A ‘‘Federal
mandate’’ is defined under section
421(6), 2 U.S.C. 658(6), to include a
‘‘Federal intergovernmental mandate’’
and a ‘‘Federal private sector mandate.’’
A ‘‘Federal intergovernmental
mandate,’’ in turn, is defined to include
a regulation that ‘‘would impose an
enforceable duty upon State, local, or
tribal governments,’’ section
421(5)(A)(i), 2 U.S.C. 658(5)(A)(i),
except for, among other things, a duty
that is ‘‘a condition of Federal
assistance,’’ section 421(5)(A)(i)(I). A
‘‘Federal private sector mandate’’
includes a regulation that ‘‘would
impose an enforceable duty upon the
private sector,’’ with certain exceptions,
section 421(7)(A), 2 U.S.C. 658(7)(A).
Before promulgating an EPA rule for
which a written statement is needed
under section 202 of the UMRA, section
205, 2 U.S.C. 1535, 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. In addition,
before EPA establishes any regulatory
requirements that may significantly or
uniquely affect small governments,
including Tribal governments, it must
have developed under section 203 of the
UMRA a small government agency plan.
The plan must provide for notifying
potentially affected small governments,
enabling officials of affected small
governments to have meaningful and
timely input in the development of EPA
regulatory proposals with significant
Federal intergovernmental mandates,
and informing, educating, and advising
small governments on compliance with
the regulatory requirements.
We believe that this rulemaking is not
subject to the requirements of UMRA.
For regional haze SIPs overall, it is
questionable whether a requirement to
submit a SIP revision constitutes a
Federal mandate, as discussed in the
preamble to the Regional Haze Rule (64
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60629
FR 35761, July 1, 1999). However,
today’s rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of title II of the UMRA) for
State, local or Tribal governments or the
private sector. In addition, the program
contained in section 51.309, including
today’s revisions, is an optional
program. Because the alternative trading
programs under §§ 51.308 and 51.309
are options that each of the States may
choose to exercise, these revisions to
§§ 51.308 and 51.309 do not establish
any regulatory requirements that may
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, including Tribal
governments. The program is not
required and, thus is clearly not a
‘‘mandate.’’ Moreover, as explained
above, today’s rule would reduce any
regulatory burdens. Accordingly, this
rule will not result in expenditures to
State, local, and Tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any given year.
Thus, EPA is not obligated, under
section 203 of UMRA, to develop a
small government agency plan.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 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.’’ ‘‘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(b) of Executive Order
13132, EPA may not issue a regulation
that has federalism implications, that
imposes substantial direct compliance
costs, and that is not required by statute,
unless the Federal government provides
the funds necessary to pay the direct
compliance costs incurred by State and
local governments, or EPA consults with
State and local officials early in the
process of developing a regulation.
Under section 6(c) of Executive Order
13132, EPA may not issue a regulation
that has federalism implications and
that preempts State law, unless EPA
consults with State and local officials
early in the process of developing the
regulation.
We have concluded that today’s rule
does not have federalism implications.
It does not have substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
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the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government, as
specified in Executive Order 13132. As
described above, this rule contains
revisions to sections 51.308 and 51.309
of the Regional Haze Rule which will
reduce any regulatory burden on the
States. In addition, these are optional
programs for States. These revisions to
sections 51.308 and 51.309, accordingly,
will not directly impose significant new
requirements on State and local
governments. Moreover, even if today’s
revisions did have federalism
implications, these revisions would not
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on State or local governments, nor
would they preempt State law. Thus,
Executive Order 13132 does not apply
to this rule.
Consistent with EPA policy, we
nonetheless did consult with
representatives of State and local
governments in developing this final
rule. This rule directly implements
specific recommendations from the
WRAP, which includes representatives
from all the affected States.
In addition, in the spirit of Executive
Order 13132 and consistent with EPA
policy to promote communications
between EPA and State and local
governments, EPA specifically solicited
comment on today’s rule from State and
local officials.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 6, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have tribal
implications’’ is defined in the
Executive Order to include regulations
that have ‘‘substantial direct effects on
one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
government and the Indian tribes, or on
the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes.’’
Tribes who participate in this rule
will experience an overall reduction in
regulatory burden. Moreover, the
§§ 51.308 (e)(2) and 51.309 programs are
optional programs for Tribes.
Accordingly, this rule would not have
Tribal implications. In addition, this
rule directly implements specific
recommendations from the WRAP,
which includes representatives of Tribal
governments. Thus, although this rule
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does not have Tribal implications,
representatives of Tribal governments
have had the opportunity to provide
input into development of the
recommendations forming its basis.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045: ‘‘Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
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
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.
The 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. Similarly to the recently
finalized source-specific BART
revisions (70 FR 39104, July 6, 2005),
this rule is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because it does not
establish an environmental standard
based on health or safety risks.
Therefore, this rule does not involve
decisions on environmental health or
safety risks that may disproportionately
affect children. We believe that the
emissions reductions from the control
strategies considered in this rulemaking
will further improve air quality and will
further improve children’s health.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This rule is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, ‘‘Actions 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 rule
is not a ‘‘significant energy action,’’
because it will have less than a 1
percent impact on the cost of energy
production and does not exceed other
factors described by OMB that may
indicate a significant adverse effect.
(See, ‘‘Guidance for Implementing E.O.
13211,’’ OMB Memorandum 01–27 (July
13, 2001) www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
memoranda/m01–27.html.)
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This rule provides an optional costeffective and less burdensome
alternative to source-by-source BART as
recently finalized (70 FR 39104, July 6,
2005); we have already found that
source-by-source BART is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
The 1999 Regional Haze Rule provides
substantial flexibility to the States,
allowing them to adopt alternative
measures such as a trading program in
lieu of requiring the installation and
operation of BART on a source-bysource basis. This rule contains
provisions governing these alternative
measures, which provides an alternative
to BART that reduces the overall cost of
the regulation and its impact on the
energy supply.
I. National Technology Transfer
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. We specifically
invited commenters to identify
potentially-applicable voluntary
consensus standards and to explain why
such standards should be used in this
regulation; no commenters responded.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 requires that
each Federal agency make achieving
environmental justice part of its mission
by identifying and addressing, as
appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of its programs,
policies, and activities on minorities
and low-income populations. The
requirements of Executive Order 12898
have been previously addressed to the
extent practicable in the RIA for the
Regional Haze Rule (cited above),
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particularly in chapters 2 and 9 of the
RIA. This rule makes no changes that
would have a disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effect on minorities and
low-income populations.
K. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. We will submit a
report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule
will be effective December 12, 2006.
IV. Statutory Provisions and Legal
Authority
Statutory authority for today’s rule
comes from sections 169A and 169B of
the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7491 and 7492).
These sections require EPA to issue
regulations that will require States to
revise their SIPs to ensure that
reasonable progress is made toward the
national visibility goals specified in
section 169A.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 51
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Lead, Nitrogen dioxide,
Ozone, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: October 5, 2006.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, part 51 of chapter I of title 40
of the Code of Federal Regulations is
amended as follows:
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I
PART 51—REQUIREMENTS FOR
PREPARATION, ADOPTION, AND
SUBMITTAL OF IMPLEMENTATION
PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 51
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 101; 42 U.S.C. 7401–
7671q.
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Subpart P—Protection of Visibility
2. Section 51.308 is amended as
follows:
I a. By revising paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(C).
I b. By revising paragraphs (e)(2)
introductory text and (e)(2)(i).
I c. By removing and reserving
paragraph (e)(1)(ii).
I d. By adding paragraph (e)(2)(vi).
I e. By revising paragraph (e)(4).
I
§ 51.308 Regional haze program
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(C) Exception. A State is not required
to make a determination of BART for
SO2 or for NOX if a BART-eligible
source has the potential to emit less
than 40 tons per year of such
pollutant(s), or for PM10 if a BARTeligible source has the potential to emit
less than 15 tons per year of such
pollutant.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) A State may opt to implement or
require participation in an emissions
trading program or other alternative
measure rather than to require sources
subject to BART to install, operate, and
maintain BART. Such an emissions
trading program or other alternative
measure must achieve greater
reasonable progress than would be
achieved through the installation and
operation of BART. For all such
emission trading programs or other
alternative measures, the State must
submit an implementation plan
containing the following plan elements
and include documentation for all
required analyses:
(i) A demonstration that the emissions
trading program or other alternative
measure will achieve greater reasonable
progress than would have resulted from
the installation and operation of BART
at all sources subject to BART in the
State and covered by the alternative
program. This demonstration must be
based on the following:
(A) A list of all BART-eligible sources
within the State.
(B) A list of all BART-eligible sources
and all BART source categories covered
by the alternative program. The State is
not required to include every BART
source category or every BART-eligible
source within a BART source category
in an alternative program, but each
BART-eligible source in the State must
be subject to the requirements of the
alternative program, have a federally
enforceable emission limitation
determined by the State and approved
by EPA as meeting BART in accordance
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60631
with section 302(c) or paragraph (e)(1)
of this section, or otherwise addressed
under paragraphs (e)(1) or (e)(4)of this
section.
(C) An analysis of the best system of
continuous emission control technology
available and associated emission
reductions achievable for each source
within the State subject to BART and
covered by the alternative program. This
analysis must be conducted by making
a determination of BART for each
source subject to BART and covered by
the alternative program as provided for
in paragraph (e)(1) of this section,
unless the emissions trading program or
other alternative measure has been
designed to meet a requirement other
than BART (such as the core
requirement to have a long-term strategy
to achieve the reasonable progress goals
established by States). In this case, the
State may determine the best system of
continuous emission control technology
and associated emission reductions for
similar types of sources within a source
category based on both source-specific
and category-wide information, as
appropriate.
(D) An analysis of the projected
emissions reductions achievable
through the trading program or other
alternative measure.
(E) A determination under paragraph
(e)(3) of this section or otherwise based
on the clear weight of evidence that the
trading program or other alternative
measure achieves greater reasonable
progress than would be achieved
through the installation and operation of
BART at the covered sources.
(ii) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
(vi) For plans that include an
emissions trading program that
establishes a cap on total annual
emissions of SO2 or NOX from sources
subject to the program, requires the
owners and operators of sources to hold
allowances or authorizations to emit
equal to emissions, and allows the
owners and operators of sources and
other entities to purchase, sell, and
transfer allowances, the following
elements are required concerning the
emissions covered by the cap:
(A) Applicability provisions defining
the sources subject to the program. The
State must demonstrate that the
applicability provisions (including the
size criteria for including sources in the
program) are designed to prevent any
significant potential shifting within the
State of production and emissions from
sources in the program to sources
outside the program. In the case of a
program covering sources in multiple
States, the States must demonstrate that
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 198 / Friday, October 13, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the applicability provisions in each
State cover essentially the same size
facilities and, if source categories are
specified, cover the same source
categories and prevent any significant,
potential shifting within such States of
production and emissions to sources
outside the program.
(B) Allowance provisions ensuring
that the total value of allowances (in
tons) issued each year under the
program will not exceed the emissions
cap (in tons) on total annual emissions
from the sources in the program.
(C) Monitoring provisions providing
for consistent and accurate
measurements of emissions from
sources in the program to ensure that
each allowance actually represents the
same specified tonnage of emissions and
that emissions are measured with
similar accuracy at all sources in the
program. The monitoring provisions
must require that boilers, combustion
turbines, and cement kilns in the
program allowed to sell or transfer
allowances must comply with the
requirements of part 75 of this chapter.
The monitoring provisions must require
that other sources in the program
allowed to sell or transfer allowances
must provide emissions information
with the same precision, reliability,
accessibility, and timeliness as
information provided under part 75 of
this chapter.
(D) Recordkeeping provisions that
ensure the enforceability of the
emissions monitoring provisions and
other program requirements. The
recordkeeping provisions must require
that boilers, combustion turbines, and
cement kilns in the program allowed to
sell or transfer allowances must comply
with the recordkeeping provisions of
part 75 of this chapter. The
recordkeeping provisions must require
that other sources in the program
allowed to sell or transfer allowances
must comply with recordkeeping
requirements that, as compared with the
recordkeeping provisions under part 75
of this chapter, are of comparable
stringency and require recording of
comparable types of information and
retention of the records for comparable
periods of time.
(E) Reporting provisions requiring
timely reporting of monitoring data with
sufficient frequency to ensure the
enforceability of the emissions
monitoring provisions and other
program requirements and the ability to
audit the program. The reporting
provisions must require that boilers,
combustion turbines, and cement kilns
in the program allowed to sell or
transfer allowances must comply with
the reporting provisions of part 75 of
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this chapter, except that, if the
Administrator is not the tracking system
administrator for the program,
emissions may be reported to the
tracking system administrator, rather
than to the Administrator. The reporting
provisions must require that other
sources in the program allowed to sell
or transfer allowances must comply
with reporting requirements that, as
compared with the reporting provisions
under part 75 of this chapter, are of
comparable stringency and require
reporting of comparable types of
information and require comparable
timeliness and frequency of reporting.
(F) Tracking system provisions which
provide for a tracking system that is
publicly available in a secure,
centralized database to track in a
consistent manner all allowances and
emissions in the program.
(G) Authorized account representative
provisions ensuring that the owners and
operators of a source designate one
individual who is authorized to
represent the owners and operators in
all matters pertaining to the trading
program.
(H) Allowance transfer provisions
providing procedures that allow timely
transfer and recording of allowances,
minimize administrative barriers to the
operation of the allowance market, and
ensure that such procedures apply
uniformly to all sources and other
potential participants in the allowance
market.
(I) Compliance provisions prohibiting
a source from emitting a total tonnage of
a pollutant that exceeds the tonnage
value of its allowance holdings,
including the methods and procedures
for determining whether emissions
exceed allowance holdings. Such
method and procedures shall apply
consistently from source to source.
(J) Penalty provisions providing for
mandatory allowance deductions for
excess emissions that apply consistently
from source to source. The tonnage
value of the allowances deducted shall
equal at least three times the tonnage of
the excess emissions.
(K) For a trading program that allows
banking of allowances, provisions
clarifying any restrictions on the use of
these banked allowances.
(L) Program assessment provisions
providing for periodic program
evaluation to assess whether the
program is accomplishing its goals and
whether modifications to the program
are needed to enhance performance of
the program.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) A State that chooses to meet the
emission reduction requirements of the
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Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) by
participating in one or more of the EPAadministered CAIR trading programs for
SO2 and NOX need not require BART—
eligible EGUs subject to such trading
programs in the State to install, operate,
and maintain BART for the pollutants
covered by such trading programs in the
State. A State may choose to participate
in the EPA-administered CAIR trading
programs either by submitting a State
implementation plan that incorporates
the CAIR model trading rules in part 96
of this chapter, and is approved, in
accordance with § 51.123(o)(1) or (2) (for
the NOX annual program) and (aa)(1) or
(2) (for the NOX ozone season program)
and § 51.124(o)(1) or (2) (for the SO2
program) or by remaining subject to the
Federal implementation plan in part 97
of this chapter (which may be modified
by a State implementation plan
approved in accordance with
§§ 51.123(p) and (ee) and 51.124(r)). A
State that chooses to participate in such
trading programs may also adopt
provisions, consistent with such trading
programs, for a geographic enhancement
to the program to address the
requirement under § 51.302(c) related to
BART for reasonably attributable
impairment from the pollutants covered
by the CAIR cap-and-trade programs.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. 51.309 is amended as follows:
I a. By revising paragraph (a).
I b. By revising paragraphs (b)(5) and
(b)(7).
I c. By removing and reserving
paragraphs (b)(9) through (b)(12).
I d. By revising paragraph (c).
I e. By revising paragraphs (d)(1) and
(d)(4)(i) through (d)(4)(v).
I f. By adding paragraphs (d)(4)(vi) and
(d)(4)(vii).
I g. By revising paragraph (d)(10)
introductory text.
I h. By removing and reserving
paragraph (f).
I i. By revising paragraph (g).
I j. By removing paragraph (h).
§ 51.309 Requirements related to the
Grand Canyon Visibility Transport
Commission.
(a) What is the purpose of this
section? This section establishes the
requirements for the first regional haze
implementation plan to address regional
haze visibility impairment in the 16
Class I areas covered by the Grand
Canyon Visibility Transport
Commission Report. For the period
through 2018, certain States (defined in
paragraph (b) of this section as
Transport Region States) may choose to
implement the Commission’s
recommendations within the framework
of the national regional haze program
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 198 / Friday, October 13, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and applicable requirements of the Act
by complying with the provisions of this
section. If a Transport Region State
submits an implementation plan which
is approved by EPA as meeting the
requirements of this section, it will be
deemed to comply with the
requirements for reasonable progress
with respect to the 16 Class I areas for
the period from approval of the plan
through 2018. Any Transport Region
State electing not to submit an
implementation plan under this section
is subject to the requirements of
§ 51.308 in the same manner and to the
same extent as any State not included
within the Transport Region. Except as
provided in paragraph (g) of this
section, each Transport Region State is
also subject to the requirements of
§ 51.308 with respect to any other
Federal mandatory Class I areas within
the State or affected by emissions from
the State.
(b) * * *
(5) Milestone means the maximum
level of annual regional SO2 emissions,
in tons per year, for a given year,
assessed annually, through the year
2018, consistent with paragraph (d)(4) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(7) Base year means the year for
which data for a source included within
the program were used by the WRAP to
calculate emissions as a starting point
for development of the milestone
required by paragraph (d)(4)(i) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Implementation Plan Schedule.
Each Transport Region State electing to
submit an implementation plan under
this section must submit such a plan no
later than December 17, 2007. Indian
Tribes may submit implementation
plans after this deadline.
(d) * * *
(1) Time period covered. The
implementation plan must be effective
through December 31, 2018 and
continue in effect until an
implementation plan revision is
approved by EPA in accordance with
§ 51.308(f).
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(i) Provisions for stationary source
emissions of SO2. The plan submission
must include a SO2 program that
contains quantitative emissions
milestones for stationary source SO2
emissions for each year through 2018.
After the first two years of the program,
compliance with the annual milestones
may be measured by comparing a threeyear rolling average of actual emissions
with a rolling average of the emissions
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15:26 Oct 12, 2006
Jkt 211001
milestones for the same three years.
During the first two years of the
program, compliance with the
milestones may be measured by a
methodology of the States’ choosing, so
long as all States in the program use the
same methodology. Compliance with
the 2018 milestone shall be measured by
comparing actual emissions from the
year 2018 with the 2018 milestone. The
milestones must provide for steady and
continuing emissions reductions
through 2018 consistent with the
Commission’s definition of reasonable
progress, its goal of 50 to 70 percent
reduction in SO2 emissions from 1990
actual emission levels by 2040,
applicable requirements under the CAA,
and the timing of implementation plan
assessments of progress and
identification of any deficiencies which
will be due in the years 2013 and 2018.
The milestones must be shown to
provide for greater reasonable progress
than would be achieved by application
of BART pursuant to § 51.308(e)(2).
(ii) Documentation of emissions
calculation methods for SO2. The plan
submission must include
documentation of the specific
methodology used to calculate SO2
emissions during the base year for each
emitting unit included in the program.
The implementation plan must also
provide for documentation of any
change to the specific methodology used
to calculate emissions at any emitting
unit for any year after the base year.
(iii) Monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting of SO2 emissions. The plan
submission must include provisions
requiring the monitoring,
recordkeeping, and annual reporting of
actual stationary source SO2 emissions
within the State. The monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting data must
be sufficient to determine annually
whether the milestone for each year
through 2018 is achieved. The plan
submission must provide for reporting
of these data by the State to the
Administrator and to the regional
planning organization. The plan must
provide for retention of records for at
least 10 years from the establishment of
the record.
(iv) Criteria and Procedures for a
Market Trading Program. The plan must
include the criteria and procedures for
conducting an annual evaluation of
whether the milestone is achieved and,
in accordance with paragraph (d)(4)(v)
of this section, for activating a market
trading program in the event the
milestone is not achieved. A draft of the
annual report evaluating whether the
milestone for each year is achieved shall
be completed no later than 12 months
from the end of each milestone year.
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60633
The plan must also provide for
assessments of the program in the years
2013 and 2018.
(v) Market Trading Program. The
implementation plan must include
requirements for a market trading
program to be implemented in the event
that a milestone is not achieved. The
plan shall require that the market
trading program be activated beginning
no later than 15 months after the end of
the first year in which the milestone is
not achieved. The plan shall also
require that sources comply, as soon as
practicable, with the requirement to
hold allowances covering their
emissions. Such market trading program
must be sufficient to achieve the
milestones in paragraph (d)(4)(i) of this
section, and must be consistent with the
elements for such programs outlined in
§ 51.308(e)(2)(vi). Such a program may
include a geographic enhancement to
the program to address the requirement
under § 51.302(c) related to BART for
reasonably attributable impairment from
the pollutants covered under the
program.
(vi) Provision for the 2018 milestone.
(A) Unless and until a revised
implementation plan is submitted in
accordance with § 51.308(f) and
approved by EPA, the implementation
plan shall prohibit emissions from
covered stationary sources in any year
beginning in 2018 that exceed the year
2018 milestone. In no event shall a
market-based program approved under
§ 51.308(f) allow an emissions cap for
SO2 that is less stringent than the 2018
milestone, unless the milestones are
replaced by a different program
approved by EPA as meeting the BART
and reasonable progress requirements
established in § 51.308.
(B) The implementation plan must
provide a framework, including
financial penalties for excess emissions
based on the 2018 milestone, sufficient
to ensure that the 2018 milestone will
be met even if the implementation of the
market trading program in paragraph
(d)(4)(v) of this section has not yet been
triggered, or the source allowance
compliance provision of the trading
program is not yet in effect.
(vii) Provisions for stationary source
emissions of NOX and PM. The
implementation plan must contain any
necessary long term strategies and
BART requirements for stationary
source PM and NOX emissions. Any
such BART provisions may be
submitted pursuant to either
§ 51.308(e)(1) or ’51.308(e)(2).
*
*
*
*
*
(10) Periodic implementation plan
revisions. Each Transport Region State
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must submit to the Administrator
periodic reports in the years 2013 and
2018. The progress reports must be in
the form of implementation plan
revisions that comply with the
procedural requirements of §§ 51.102
and 51.103.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) [Reserved]
(g) Additional Class I areas. Each
Transport Region State implementing
the provisions of this section as the
basis for demonstrating reasonable
progress for mandatory Class I Federal
areas other than the 16 Class I areas
must include the following provisions
in its implementation plan. If a
Transport Region State submits an
implementation plan which is approved
by EPA as meeting the requirements of
this section, it will be deemed to
comply with the requirements for
reasonable progress for the period from
approval of the plan to 2018.
(1) A demonstration of expected
visibility conditions for the most
impaired and least impaired days at the
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additional mandatory Class I Federal
area(s) based on emissions projections
from the long-term strategies in the
implementation plan. This
demonstration may be based on
assessments conducted by the States
and/or a regional planning body.
(2) Provisions establishing reasonable
progress goals and implementing any
additional measures necessary to
demonstrate reasonable progress for the
additional mandatory Federal Class I
areas. These provisions must comply
with the provisions of § 51.308(d)(1)
through (4).
(i) In developing long-term strategies
pursuant to § 51.308(d)(3), the State may
build upon the strategies implemented
under paragraph (d) of this section, and
take full credit for the visibility
improvement achieved through these
strategies.
(ii) The requirement under § 51.308(e)
related to Best Available Retrofit
Technology for regional haze is deemed
to be satisfied for pollutants addressed
by the milestones and backstop trading
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program if, in establishing the emission
reductions milestones under paragraph
(d)(4) of this section, it is shown that
greater reasonable progress will be
achieved for these additional Class I
areas than would be achieved through
the application of source-specific BART
emission limitations under
§ 51.308(e)(1).
(iii) The Transport Region State may
consider whether any strategies
necessary to achieve the reasonable
progress goals required by paragraph
(g)(2) of this section are incompatible
with the strategies implemented under
paragraph (d) of this section to the
extent the State adequately
demonstrates that the incompatibility is
related to the costs of the compliance,
the time necessary for compliance, the
energy and no air quality environmental
impacts of compliance, or the remaining
useful life of any existing source subject
to such requirements.
[FR Doc. 06–8630 Filed 10–12–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 198 (Friday, October 13, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 60612-60634]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-8630]
[[Page 60611]]
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Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 51
Regional Haze Regulations; Revisions to Provisions Governing
Alternative to Source-Specific Best Available Retrofit Technology
(BART) Determinations; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 198 / Friday, October 13, 2006 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 60612]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 51
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2002-0076; FRL-8230-4]
RIN 2060-AN22
Regional Haze Regulations; Revisions to Provisions Governing
Alternative to Source-Specific Best Available Retrofit Technology
(BART) Determinations
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA promulgated regulations to address a type of
visibility impairment known as regional haze in 1999. These regulations
have been judicially challenged twice. On May 24, 2002, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued a ruling
vacating the Regional Haze Rule in part and sustaining it in part,
based on a finding that EPA's prescribed methods for determining best
available retrofit technology (BART) were inconsistent with the Clean
Air Act (CAA). American Corn Growers Ass'n v. EPA, 291 F.3d 1 (DC Cir.
2002). We finalized a rule on July 6, 2005 addressing the court's
ruling in this case. On February 18, 2005, the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit issued another ruling, in Center
for Energy and Economic Development v. EPA, 398 F.3d 653(DC Cir. 2005),
granting a petition challenging provisions of the Regional Haze Rule
governing an optional emissions trading program for certain western
States and Tribes (the Western Regional Air Partnership (WRAP) Annex
Rule). We published proposed regulations to revise the provisions of
the Regional Haze Rule governing alternative trading programs, and to
provide additional guidance on such programs in August 2005. We
received several comments on the August 2005 proposal. This final rule
finalizes the proposed revisions, including changes in response to the
public comments.
DATES: This rule is effective December 12, 2006.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2002-0076. All documents in the docket are
listed on the www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the
index, some information is not publicly available, i.e., confidential
business information (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 through www.regulations.gov or in hard
copy at the OAR Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room B102, 1301 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC. The Public Reading Room 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 and Radiation Docket and Information
Center is (202) 566-1742. NOTE: The EPA Docket Center suffered damage
due to flooding during the last week of June 2006. The Docket Center is
continuing to operate. However, during the cleanup, there will be
temporary changes to Docket Center telephone numbers, addresses, and
hours of operation for people who wish to visit the Public Reading Room
to view documents. Consult EPA's Federal Register notice at 71 FR 38147
(July 5, 2006) or the EPA Web site at www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm
for current information on docket status, locations and telephone
numbers.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kathy Kaufman, EPA, Air Quality
Planning Division, Geographic Strategies Group, C504-02, 919-541-0102
or by e-mail at kaufman.kathy@epa.gov, or Todd Hawes, EPA, Air Quality
Planning Division, Geographic Strategies Group, C504-02, 919-541-5591
or by e-mail at hawes.todd@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulated Entities. This final rule will affect the following:
State and local permitting authorities and Indian Tribes containing
major stationary sources of pollution affecting visibility in
federally-protected scenic areas.
This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this
action. This list gives examples of the types of entities EPA is now
aware could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of
entities not listed could also be affected. To determine whether your
facility, company, business, organization, etc., is regulated by this
action, you should examine the applicability criteria in section II of
this preamble. If you have any questions regarding the applicability of
this action to a particular entity, consult the people listed in the
preceding section.
Outline. The contents of today's preamble are listed in the
following outline.
I. Overview and Background
II. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule Sec. 51.308(e)(2) Governing
Alternatives to Source-by-Source BART
A. Establishing a BART Benchmark and Demonstrating Greater
Reasonable Progress Than BART
B. Comments Relating to the Final Determination That CAIR Makes
Greater Reasonable Progress Than BART in the July 6, 2005 BART
Guidelines Rule
C. Minimum Elements of Cap and Trade Programs
III. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule Sec. 51.309
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use.
I. National Technology Transfer Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
IV. Statutory Provisions and Legal Authority
I. Overview and Background
This rulemaking provides the following changes to the regional haze
regulations:
(1) Revised regulatory text in section 51.308(e)(2)(i) in response
to the Center for Energy and Economic Development (CEED) v. EPA court's
remand, to remove the requirement that the determination of the BART
``benchmark'' be based on cumulative visibility analyses and to clarify
the process for making such determinations;
(2) New regulatory text in Sec. 51.308(e)(2)(vi), to provide
minimum elements for cap and trade programs adopted in lieu of BART;
and
(3) Revised regulatory text in Sec. 51.309, to reconcile the
optional framework for certain western States and Tribes to implement
the recommendations of the Grand Canyon Visibility Transport Commission
(GCVTC) with the CEED v. EPA decision.
How This Preamble Is Structured
Section I provides background on the BART requirements of the CAA
as codified in the Regional Haze Rule, on the decision in American Corn
Growers in which the DC Circuit vacated and remanded parts of the rule
addressing the BART requirements, on the June 2005 BART rule, and on
the EPA's approval of the WRAP Annex and the
[[Page 60613]]
subsequent litigation. Section II discusses specific issues relating to
the revisions to Sec. 51.308(e)(2) of the Regional Haze Rule governing
alternatives to source-by-source BART. Section III discusses specific
issues relating to the revisions to Sec. 51.309 of the Regional Haze
Rule pertaining to the optional emissions trading program for certain
western States and Tribes. Section IV provides a discussion of how this
rulemaking complies with the requirements of Statutory and Executive
Order Reviews.
The Regional Haze Rule and BART Guidelines
In 1999, we published the Regional Haze Rule to address visibility
impairment produced by a multitude of sources and activities which emit
fine particles and their precursors and which are located across a
broad geographic area (64 FR 35714). The Regional Haze Rule requires
States to submit State implementation plans (SIPs) to address regional
haze visibility impairment in 156 federally-protected parks and
wilderness areas, such as the Grand Canyon and Yosemite. These 156
scenic areas are called ``mandatory Class I Federal areas'' in the CAA
\1\ but are referred to simply as ``Class I areas'' in today's
rulemaking. The 1999 rule was issued to fulfill a long-standing EPA
commitment to address regional haze under the authority and
requirements of sections 169A and 169B of the CAA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See, e.g. CAA section 169(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As required by the CAA, we included in the final Regional Haze Rule
a requirement for BART for certain large stationary sources that were
put in place between 1962 and 1977. We discussed these requirements in
detail in the preamble to the final rule (64 FR 35737-35743). The
regulatory requirements for BART were codified at section 51.308(e) and
in definitions that appear in section 51.301.
In the preamble to the Regional Haze Rule, we committed to issuing
further guidelines to clarify the requirements of the BART provision.
These guidelines were issued on July 6, 2005 in a final rule entitled
``Regional Haze Regulations and Guidelines for Best Available Retrofit
Technology (BART) Determinations' (``the BART Rule'') (70 FR 39104).
The purpose of the BART guidelines is to assist States as they identify
which of their BART-eligible sources should undergo a BART analysis
(i.e., which are ``sources subject to BART'') and select appropriate
controls (``the BART determination'').
We explained in the preamble to the 1999 Regional Haze Rule that
the BART requirements in section 169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA demonstrate
Congress' intent to focus attention directly on the problem of
pollution from a specific set of existing sources (64 FR 35737). The
CAA requires that any of these existing sources ``which, as determined
by the State, emits any air pollutant which may reasonably be
anticipated to cause or contribute to any impairment of visibility [in
any Class I area],'' shall install the best available retrofit
technology for controlling emissions.\2\ In determining BART, the CAA
requires the State to consider several factors that are set forth in
section 169A(g)(2) of the CAA, including the degree of improvement in
visibility which may reasonably result from the use of such technology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ CAA sections 169A(b)(2) and (g)(7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the problem of regional haze is caused in large part by the
long-range transport of emissions from multiple sources, and for
certain technical and other reasons explained in that rulemaking, we
had adopted in the 1999 rule an approach that required States to look
at the contribution of all BART sources to the problem of regional haze
in determining both applicability and the appropriate level of control
for BART. Specifically, we had concluded that if a source potentially
subject to BART is located in an area from which pollutants may be
transported to a Class I area, that source ``may reasonably be
anticipated to cause or contribute'' to visibility impairment in the
Class I area. We had also concluded that in weighing the factors set
forth in the statute for determining BART, the States should consider
the collective impact of BART sources on visibility. In particular, in
considering the degree of visibility improvement that could reasonably
be anticipated to result from the use of such technology, we stated
that the State should consider the degree of improvement in visibility
that would result from the cumulative impact of applying controls to
all sources subject to BART. We concluded that the States should use
this analysis to determine the appropriate BART emission limitations
for specific sources.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See 66 FR 35737-35743 for a discussion of the rationale for
the BART requirements in the 1999 Regional Haze Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 1999 Regional Haze Rule also included provisions in section
51.309 based on the strategies developed by the GCVTC. Certain western
States and Tribes were eligible to submit implementation plans under
section 51.309 as an alternative method of achieving reasonable
progress for those Class I areas covered by the GCVTC's analysis--i.e.,
the 16 Class I areas on the Colorado Plateau. In order for States and
Tribes to be able to utilize this section, however, the rule provided
that EPA must receive an ``Annex'' to the GCVTC's final
recommendations. The purpose of the Annex was to provide the specific
provisions needed to translate the GCVTC's general recommendations for
stationary source sulfur dioxide (SO2) reductions into an
enforceable regulatory program. The rule provided that such an Annex,
meeting certain requirements, be submitted to EPA no later than October
1, 2000. See section 51.309(d)(4) and (f) (2000).
American Corn Growers v. EPA
In American Corn Growers, industry petitioners challenged EPA's
interpretation of the BART determination process and raised other
challenges to the rule. The court in American Corn Growers concluded
that the BART provisions in the 1999 Regional Haze Rule were
inconsistent with the provisions in the CAA ``giving the states broad
authority over BART determinations.'' 291 F.3d at 8. Specifically, with
respect to the test for determining whether a source is subject to
BART, the court held that the method EPA had prescribed for determining
which eligible sources are subject to BART illegally constrained the
authority Congress had conferred on the States. Id. The court did not
decide whether the general collective contribution approach to
determining BART applicability was necessarily inconsistent with the
CAA. Id. at 9. Rather, the court stated that
``[i]f the [Regional Haze Rule] contained some kind of a
mechanism by which a state could exempt a BART-eligible source on
the basis of an individualized contribution determination, then
perhaps the plain meaning of the Act would not be violated. But the
[Regional Haze Rule] contains no such mechanism.''
Id. at 12.
The court in American Corn Growers also found that our
interpretation of the CAA requiring the States to consider the degree
of improvement in visibility that would result from the cumulative
impact of applying controls in determining BART was inconsistent with
the language of the CAA. 291 F.3d at 8. Based on its review of the
statute, the court concluded that the five statutory factors in section
169A(g)(2) ``were meant to be considered together by the states.'' Id.
at 6.
The final rule promulgated on July 6, 2005 responded to the
American Corn Growers court's decision on the BART provisions by
amending the Regional Haze Rule at Sec. 51.308 and by finalizing
[[Page 60614]]
changes to the BART guidelines at part 51, appendix Y (70 FR 39104).
These changes eliminate the previous constraint on State discretion and
provide States with appropriate techniques and methods for determining
which BART-eligible sources ``may reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to any impairment of visibility in any mandatory Class I
Federal area.'' In addition, the revised regulations list the
visibility improvement factor with the other statutory BART
determination factors in section 51.308(e)(1)(A), so that States will
be required to consider all five factors, including visibility impacts,
on an individual source basis when making each individual source BART
determination, rather than considering the cumulative impacts of all
BART sources on visibility (``group BART'').
The Annex Rule
In a rule dated June 5, 2003, EPA approved the WRAP's Annex to the
GCVTC report (68 FR 33764). In this action, referred to as the ``Annex
rule,'' EPA approved the quantitative SO2 emission reduction
milestones and the detailed provisions of the backstop market trading
program developed by the WRAP as meeting the requirements of section
51.309(f), and therefore codified the Annex provisions in section
51.309(h). Subsequently, five States and one local agency submitted
SIPs developed to comply with all of section 51.309, including the
Annex provisions at section 51.309(h). In accordance with section
51.309(c) these SIPs were submitted prior to December 31, 2003.
Center for Energy and Economic Development v. EPA
The EPA's approval of the Annex rule was challenged by CEED on,
among other grounds, that the CAA prohibits EPA from allowing States to
adopt alternative measures, such as a trading program, in lieu of BART.
The court, in CEED v. EPA, affirmed our interpretation of section
169A(b)(2) of the CAA as allowing for alternatives to BART where those
alternatives are demonstrated to make greater progress than BART. CEED
v. EPA, 398 F.3d at 659-660. The court, however, took issue with the
methodology that EPA had required the States to use in that
demonstration, pursuant to certain provisions of the Regional Haze
Rule. As noted above, Sec. 51.308(e)(2) of the 1999 Regional Haze Rule
required that visibility improvements under source-specific BART--the
benchmark for comparison to the alternative program--must be estimated
based on the application of BART controls to all sources subject to
BART. This section was incorporated into the WRAP Annex rule by
reference at Sec. 51.309(f). The court held that EPA could not require
this type of ``group BART'' approach, which was vacated in American
Corn Growers in a source-specific BART context, even in an alternative
trading program in which State participation was wholly optional.
The BART guidelines as proposed in May 2004 contained a section
offering guidance to States choosing to address their BART-eligible
sources under the alternative strategy provided for in Sec.
51.308(e)(2). This guidance included a broad overview of the steps in
developing an emissions trading program and criteria for demonstrating
that such a trading program would achieve greater progress towards
eliminating visibility impairment than would BART. In light of the D.C.
Circuit's decision in CEED v. EPA in 2005, we did not include the
overview of emissions trading programs in the final BART guidelines. We
did note, however, that our authority to address BART through
alternative means was upheld in CEED v. EPA and that we remained
committed to providing States with that flexibility. Today's revisions
to the Regional Haze Rule, which responds to the holding in CEED v.
EPA, provide the flexibility that States need to implement alternatives
to BART.
Overview of Changes to Sec. Sec. 51.308(e)(2) and 51.309 of the
Regional Haze Rule
The EPA continues to support State efforts to develop trading
programs and other alternative strategies to fulfill the goals of the
CAA. We believe such strategies have the potential to achieve greater
progress towards the national visibility goals than more traditional
approaches to regulation, and to do so in the most cost-effective
manner practicable. In August 2005, we proposed amendments to the
Regional Haze Rule to enable States to continue to develop and
implement such programs (70 FR 44154, August 1, 2005). Today's rule
finalizes these amendments, including changes in response to comments
on the proposal.
First, we are amending the generally applicable provisions at Sec.
51.308(e)(2), which prescribe the type of analysis used to determine
emissions reductions achievable from source-by-source BART, for
purposes of comparing to the alternative program. These amendments
reconcile the methodology for determining whether an alternative
program is approvable with the court's decision in CEED v. EPA. Today's
rule also establishes the minimum elements of an acceptable cap and
trade program and provides for consistent application of the BART
guidelines for electric generating units (EGUs) between source-by-
source programs and alternative cap and trade programs.
Second, we are amending section 51.309 to enable certain western
States and Tribes to continue to utilize the strategies contained in
the GCVTC report as an optional means to satisfy reasonable progress
requirements for certain Class I areas, for the first long-term
planning period. These changes provide States and Tribes with an
opportunity to revise and resubmit the backstop SO2
emissions trading program absent any requirement to assess visibility
on a cumulative basis when determining the emissions reductions
achievable by source-by-source BART.
II. Revisions to Regional Haze Rule Sec. 51.308(e)(2) Governing
Alternatives to Source-by-Source BART
In this section of the preamble, we discuss changes or
clarifications to the provisions proposed in August, 2005. Where
relevant, we also respond to significant comments received during the
comment periods on our earlier BART proposals. For each provision that
we are changing or clarifying, where relevant, we provide discussion of
comments received on the proposal(s), changes or clarifications we are
finalizing, and the reasons for these changes or clarifications.
A. Establishing a BART Benchmark and Demonstrating Greater Reasonable
Progress Than BART
The Regional Haze Rule provides States with the authority to
implement an emissions trading program or other alternative measures in
lieu of meeting the requirements for source-by-source BART. Under this
provision of the Regional Haze Rule, States have the flexibility to
design programs to reduce emissions from stationary sources in a more
cost-effective manner so long as they can demonstrate that the
alternative approach will achieve greater reasonable progress towards
improving visibility than would have been achieved by implementation of
the BART requirements.
As described in the preamble to the August proposal, the 1999
Regional Haze Rule had specified a methodology for comparing an
alternative trading or other type program against source-by-source
BART. These regulations were challenged following a rulemaking by EPA
to revise the Regional Haze Rule to incorporate an optional emissions
trading program for certain Western States and Tribes (the Annex rule).
The
[[Page 60615]]
court in CEED v. EPA, granted petitioner's challenge to the Annex rule
because EPA's regional haze regulations had required the States
submitting the Annex to consider ``the impact of all emissions
reductions to estimate visibility progress'' in establishing a BART
benchmark against which to compare their BART alternative program. In
the August proposal, we proposed to revise the method for comparing an
alternative trading or other type program against source-by-source
BART. Specifically, we proposed to amend the regional haze regulations
to provide that States estimate the emission reductions that could be
achieved by BART in the same manner as in making source-by-source BART
determinations.
Today's final rule revises section 51.308(e)(2) to make clear that
the emissions reductions that could be achieved through implementation
of the BART provisions at section 51.308(e)(1) serve as the benchmark
against which States can compare an alternative program. In short, to
demonstrate that a trading program or other alternative program makes
greater reasonable progress than BART, the State can develop an
estimate of BART emissions reductions using the same approach that it
would use to establish source-by-source BART emissions limitations
under the BART guidelines. As discussed in more detail below, today's
rule also makes clear that where a trading program or other similar
alternative program has been designed primarily to meet a Federal or
State requirement other than BART, the State can use a more simplified
approach to demonstrating that the alternative program will make
greater reasonable progress than BART. Such an approach may be
appropriate where the State believes the alternative program is clearly
superior to BART and a detailed BART analysis is not necessary to
assure that the alternative program will result in greater reasonable
progress than BART.
Framework for Demonstrating That an Alternative Program Provides for
Greater Reasonable Progress
The development of a BART benchmark using the approach for source-
by-source BART determinations will require States to identify those
existing sources which are BART-eligible, to determine which of those
sources are subject to BART, and to then determine the level of control
that would be BART for these sources. Once the State has established a
BART benchmark, it can then compare the benchmark against the
alternative program it has developed. This approach could entail
separate visibility analyses in as many as three distinct stages: (1)
Determining which BART-eligible sources are subject to BART; (2)
determining what BART is for each source subject to BART; and (3)
determining the overall visibility improvement anticipated from the
application of BART to all sources subject to BART. The following
sections discuss the comments received on the visibility analyses in
the first two steps, as well as comments on additional issues for
determining which sources are subject to BART and the determination of
BART for such sources.
Sources Subject to BART
Proposal. In the proposal, we noted that the BART guidelines
finalized on July 6, 2005 provide States with guidance on how to
determine which BART-eligible sources are reasonably anticipated to
cause or contribute to visibility. The Guidelines explain that States
may consider all BART-eligible sources to meet this threshold and
therefore subject all these sources to review, or, alternatively, that
States may determine which BART-eligible sources are subject to BART
using the methods for modeling source specific impacts on visibility
discussed in the guidance. We noted that by considering all BART-
eligible sources to be subject to BART in the context of setting the
BART benchmark, States could ease their administrative burden and
maximize the number of BART-eligible sources included in the benchmark
analysis. Where a State takes this approach, the opportunity for
assessing source-by-source visibility impact would still remain at the
next step of setting the benchmark--the BART determination analysis.
Comments. Several commenters stated that allowing States to
consider all BART-eligible sources to be ``subject to BART'' (i.e.,
subject to a BART determination analysis) is contrary to the CAA as
interpreted by the D.C. Circuit in American Corn Growers. Two
commenters have indicated that they plan to challenge this provision of
the BART guidelines in a petition for review before the D.C. Circuit
and are opposed to it in the context of BART alternative programs as
well. One of these commenters also stated that it is unclear from the
preamble discussion where in the proposed revisions to the regulations
this option is authorized.
Final Rule. We are reiterating here, as we pointed out in the
proposal, that the language in section 169A(b)(2) of the CAA
establishing the threshold for BART review provides a State with the
discretion to consider all BART-eligible sources to be subject to BART
and to make BART determinations for all its BART-eligible sources. In
other words, as noted in the BART guidelines, once a State has
identified its BART-eligible sources, it must decide whether (1) to
make BART determinations for all of them, or (2) to consider exempting
some of them from BART because they may not reasonably be anticipated
to cause or contribute to any visibility impairment in any Class I
area. As explained in the 1999 Regional Haze Rule, given the nature of
regional haze, it would be reasonable for a State to determine that
where the State as a whole contributes to visibility impairment at a
Class I area, any large stationary source in the State that emits
SO2 or other visibility-impairing pollutants would emit air
pollutants that would ``reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to any impairment of visibility in [any Class I area].'' CAA
Section 169A(b)(2).
This approach is authorized by the regulations through the cross
reference to Sec. 51.308(e)(1) in Sec. 51.308(e)(2). By providing
that the BART-benchmark should be established by conducting BART
determinations in accordance with Sec. 51.308(e)(1), we provide the
State with the same options as are available in those provisions for
determining source-by-source BART. In the context of subject-to-BART
determinations, this includes either considering all BART-eligible
sources to be subject to BART or, using the methods described in the
BART guidelines or other reasonable approaches, to exempt sources which
the State determines are not reasonably anticipated to cause or
contribute to any visibility impairment.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ We are also clarifying an unintended ambiguity in the
regulatory provisions pertaining to BART determinations under
51.308(e)(1). Specifically, as discussed in the preamble to the BART
Rule, consistent with our proposal in 2004, we revised the regional
haze regulations to allow States to ``exclude from the BART
determination process potential emissions from a source of less than
forty tons per year for SO2 or NOX, or 15 tons
per year for PM10.'' 70 FR at 39117 (emphasis added). The
regulatory text at 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(C), however, did not clearly
state that the de minimis level for PM10 should be based
on a source's potential to emit. In this rulemaking we are
clarifying that States are not required to determine BART for BART-
eligible sources with a potential to emit less than 15 tons per year
of PM10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The BART Determination
Proposal. The CAA identifies five factors that States are to
consider in making BART determinations. One of these factors is ``the
degree of improvement in visibility which may reasonably be anticipated
to result from
[[Page 60616]]
the use of [BART].'' Today's rulemaking, in large part, is focused on
how States should handle consideration of this factor in establishing a
BART benchmark.
In the proposal, we stated that one way to handle the visibility
improvement element of the BART determination for all BART sources
covered by the program would be to conduct individualized assessments
of the visibility improvement expected from each BART source under
various control scenarios, as described in the BART guidelines. We
noted that such an approach could impose significant resource burdens
on the States and solicited recommendations on more streamlined
approaches for estimating BART sources' individual impacts that might
be appropriate in the context of assessing alternative programs. One
area of consideration that we identified is the type of model used. We
requested comment on whether regional scale models might be used to
consolidate individual source impact analyses into one or a few model
runs, and whether this would significantly ease the burden on States.
In the proposal, we also made clear our belief that in determining
whether an alternative program provides for greater reasonable progress
than would source-by-source BART, States have the discretion to employ
a cumulative visibility analysis for purposes of estimating the
potential visibility impacts of BART. Based on our analysis of American
Corn Growers and CEED, we stated that although EPA may not require
States to use a cumulative visibility approach to estimating the
improvement achievable from BART, States are not barred from using such
an approach if they so choose.
Finally, in the proposal preamble, we discussed the situation where
emissions reductions at BART-eligible sources are required by CAA
requirements other than BART (or to fulfill requirements of a State law
or regulation not required by the CAA). We noted that in such cases, a
State may wish to evaluate whether the emissions reductions from the
program would result in greater reasonable progress towards the
national visibility goal than would the installation of BART. We noted
that EPA had made such a determination with respect to the Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR) for EGUs in States which participate in the CAIR
cap and trade program.
We noted that such a situation affects the type of analysis that is
permissible to show that the alternative program makes greater
reasonable progress than BART. Specifically, where a requirement other
than BART determines the level of emissions reductions required from
BART-eligible sources (along with other sources), a most-stringent case
BART may be used as the BART benchmark. (This most-stringent case BART
is essentially a form of ``group BART,'' because is assumes that every
BART-eligible source will apply controls). The reason for this is that
if it is shown that implementation of another requirement results in
greater progress than would the most stringent BART for all the BART-
eligible sources, then it can safely be said that this most-stringent-
BART benchmark is not the determinative factor in establishing the
emission reductions requirement. Therefore, there can be no concern
that the group-BART analysis would lead States to adopt an unduly
stringent alternative approach.
(1) Types of Models
Comments. The comments submitted supported EPA's proposal that
States could use the approach in the Guidelines in making
individualized visibility assessments for BART determinations. In
response to our request for recommendations for more streamlined
approaches to assessing source specific visibility impacts, we received
several comments supporting regulations that would allow for this.
One commenter pointed out that streamlined approaches, such as the
use of photochemical grid models, would significantly ease the burden
on States and Tribes. The commenter also pointed out that Sec.
51.308(e)(1), cross-referenced as the guiding provision for BART
determinations in proposed Sec. 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), does not
explicitly recognize streamlined approaches for determining BART. Thus,
the commenter believes, EPA should ``take care to ensure that a
streamlined approach for the purpose of determining [the BART
benchmark] is clear, permissible, and not legally unsound in the final
rule.''
Another commenter said that a streamlined approach ``is an
appropriate option that should be explicitly recognized and more fully
developed in the final rule.'' According to the commenter, either the
CMAQ or CAMx regional photochemical models would be suitable for
streamlined visibility assessments for BART determinations, but also
stated that none of the models is capable of consistently producing
unbiased results for all chemical constituents responsible for haze.
One State commenter said that States in EPA Region 5 are using the
CALPUFF model and it would prefer to continue doing so. The State would
not object to allowing other models to be used so long as they are
optional.
Another commenter submitted comments detailing the reasons it
believes CALPUFF is superior to photochemical grid models for purposes
of source-by-source BART analysis. In brief, commenter explained that
with grid models, the concentration of pollutants from a point source
is automatically diluted evenly across the grid in which the source is
located. This dilution effect can be partially redressed by employing
smaller grid sizes or by using a hybrid model which employs Lagrangian
methods (as used in CALPUFF) close to the source and switches to a grid
method farther downstream. However, both of these methods are resource
intensive. The commenter therefore believed that CALPUFF, which can use
meteorological data bases developed for CMAQ and CAMx, should be the
preferred option.
Final Rule. Section 308(e)(1)(ii)(B) requires that, for fossil
fuel-fired power plants with a total generating capacity of greater
than 750MW, BART determinations be made pursuant to the BART
guidelines. With respect to the type of air quality model used for the
BART determination, the guidelines instruct States to use CALPUFF or
another appropriate dispersion model to determine the visibility
improvement expected at a Class I area from the BART control technology
being evaluated (70 FR 39170).
We maintain that CALPUFF is the best model currently available for
predicting visibility impacts from single sources. The use of regional
scale photochemical grid models may have merit, but to date, such
models have not been evaluated for single source applications (70 FR
39123). As the science and structure of regional photochemical grid
models are improved and demonstrated to successfully predict impacts
from single sources (e.g. plume in grid or source tagging techniques)
at least as well as CALPUFF, such models may become more useful in
streamlining the BART benchmark determination. All modeling
applications in making BART determinations call for the development of
a modeling protocol for all modeling, and States should consult with
EPA and the relevant regional planning organization (RPO) before
conducting any modeling.
(2) State Discretion to Consider Cumulative Visibility Impacts
Comments. Several commenters said that the Agency's position
described in the preamble to the proposed rule--that
[[Page 60617]]
States have the discretion to require a cumulative visibility approach
in setting the BART benchmark--violates the American Corn Growers
decision. Most commenters opposed to EPA's proposed interpretation,
however, were also careful to point out that this did not indicate
opposition to the policy of allowing a ``group BART'' benchmark to be
used in the special case of evaluating emissions reductions required by
other CAA or State law requirements.
Commenters that objected to EPA's statement that States have the
discretion to use ``group BART'' in setting the BART benchmark
referenced the courts' opinions in American Corn Growers and CEED v.
EPA to argue that such a statement was inconsistent with the CAA.
Several commenters cited the American Corn Growers court's statement
that ``the state must consider the degree of improvement in visibility
in national parks and wilderness areas that would result from the
source's installing and operating the retrofit technology [in making a
BART determination].'' See American Corn Growers, 291 F.3d at 7. One
commenter emphasized that the court had used the singular noun (``the
source's'') rather than the plural as a clear indication that the
visibility factor must be assessed on a source-by-source basis. Another
commenter pointed to the court's statement, in regard to the approach
in the 1999 Regional Haze Rule which separated the visibility factor
from the other BART factors, that ``[t]o treat one of the five
statutory factors in such a dramatically different fashion distorts the
judgment Congress directed the states to make for each BART-eligible
source.'' (291 F.3d at 6). No comments were received that explicitly
supported EPA's proposed interpretation of the DC Circuit's decisions
on this point. Several commenters also claimed that the flexibility to
use ``group BART,'' described in the preamble, was not actually
provided for in the proposed regulatory text, which cross-referenced to
the source-by-source BART determinations prescribed in Sec.
51.308(e)(1). One commenter that strongly opposed EPA's proposed
position on this issue noted that ``it is nevertheless true that states
can use simplifying assumptions or even apply some type of ``weight of
evidence'' test in determining the amount of emissions reductions that
BART-eligible sources may be required to undertake as part of a
regional trading program'' The commenter did not elaborate on examples
of appropriate simplifying assumptions or methods by which weight of
evidence could be taken into account.
Where an independent requirement determines the emissions
reductions required of BART sources in a trading program or other type
of similar program, however, commenters appeared to agree that a BART
benchmark can be used that does not depend on source specific
visibility assessments. In other words, for BART alternatives that are
required by or that satisfy another CAA provision, the BART benchmark
to be used in a ``better-than-BART'' test may be established using a
group BART approach. In particular, several commenters representing
electric utilities and other industries submitted comments agreeing
with our interpretation of section 169A of the CAA as allowing other
programs to substitute for BART, and agreeing that where an independent
requirement determines the emissions reductions required of BART
sources, a most-stringent BART benchmark could be used without raising
the concerns at issue in the American Corn Growers and CEED v. EPA
cases. These commenters particularly agreed with and supported the
application of this rationale to the CAIR, as was finalized in the July
6 BART Guidelines rulemaking. One commenter urged EPA to adopt specific
regulatory language, as was done in the case of the CAIR, to implement
this option both with respect to the WRAP's program and to other
programs which may be developed elsewhere.
Final Rule. We have carefully considered the comments on the
discussion in the NPRM addressing the discretion of the States in
establishing a BART benchmark and concluded that this rulemaking should
focus on the type of alternative program that we anticipate that some
States may submit in lieu of BART. In providing States with the
flexibility to adopt an alternative program, EPA has assumed that
States would adopt trading programs, or other substantially similar
programs--such as the WRAP's backstop market trading program--as
alternatives to source-by-source BART. While it is possible that a
State could design a trading program under the authority of section
169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA (the BART provision), we believe that it is
far more likely that a State designing its regional haze plan would
adopt a trading program under the broader authority of section
169A(b)(2)(B) (the long-term strategy for making reasonable progress).
As such, the regulations promulgated today provide a basic framework
for States to demonstrate that any type of alternative program provides
greater reasonable progress than BART, but provide greater detail as to
how that demonstration might be done for a trading program (or other
substantially similar program) designed to fulfill requirements other
than BART.
Generally, the comments received criticizing the statement that
States have discretion to consider visibility in a cumulative manner in
determining whether or not an alternative makes greater reasonable
progress than would BART appear to be premised on the argument that any
type of program that could be characterized as a BART program--even an
alternative program--is bounded by the requirements in section
169A(b)(2)(A). Thus, for example, several commenters cited the American
Corn Growers court's statement interpreting the definition of BART as
grounds for limiting a State's ability to take a different approach in
developing an alternative program. In other words, in determining the
amount of emissions reductions that sources in a trading program
alternative must achieve to demonstrate that the trading program is
``better'' than source-by-source BART, these commenters argued that the
States are limited to designing a program that begins with source
specific visibility analyses. Applying the same logic, however, States
would need to undertake source specific assessments of the other four
factors in the BART definition: the costs of control, the energy and
nonair quality environmental impacts, any existing pollution control
technology in use at the source, and the remaining useful life of the
source. Only once the State had ascertained what BART would be at each
source subject to BART--based on a thorough source specific analysis of
these five factors--could the State then show that its trading program
achieves greater reasonable progress. Although the States may certainly
adopt such an approach under this final rule, we think it unlikely that
States would conduct such an extensive assessment only to then go
through the additional, resource intensive steps of establishing a
trading program.
The concern underlying these comments appears to be that EPA should
not explicitly authorize States to design a program more stringent than
required for BART in establishing a BART alternative program under
section 169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA.\5\ Obviously,
[[Page 60618]]
under EPA's interpretation of the CAA, upheld by the CEED v. EPA court,
the alternative program must achieve greater reasonable progress than
would BART, presumably in most cases by achieving greater emissions
reductions over time. However, the commenters opposed to what they
label a ``group BART'' approach argue that States must consider source-
specific visibility impacts to avoid setting too high a bar for the
program. Although the commenters have not suggested that the other
simplifying approaches that we have suggested in the past for assessing
the costs of control were an inappropriate form of ``group-BART,'' if
the CAA requires visibility impacts to be considered on a case-by-case
basis, then it would also seem to require that the costs of control and
other factors be considered on a case-by-case basis. In other words,
these commenters argue that the BART benchmark for an alternative
program under section 169A(b)(2)(A) must be based on a case-by-case
analysis of what BART would be for each source subject to BART.
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\5\ The comments criticizing the statement by EPA that States
have the discretion to require a cumulative visibility analysis do
not appear to challenge the general principle that a State may adopt
measures in a SIP more stringent than required under the CAA, except
where explicitly prohibited. See Union Electric Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S.
246, 263-264 (1976); see also Summary of Comments on the Revisions
to Provisions Governing Alternative to Source-specific Best
Available Retrofit Technology (BART) Determinations, Docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OAR-2002-0076, www.regulations.gov.
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The DC Circuit in CEED v. EPA was not absolutely clear as to
whether its decision was based solely on the fact that EPA had required
a ``group BART'' approach, or whether the fact the Annex contained such
an analysis was in itself a sufficient reason to invalidate the Annex
approval. As EPA explained in the proposed rule, we believe that the
CEED v. EPA decision is limited to circumstances where EPA requires or
induces States to adopt cumulative approaches that result in programs
more stringent than required by the CAA. However, we did not receive
comments from any States explicitly supporting our interpretation of
the court's holdings, and as we do not anticipate that States will
submit plans with trading programs designed only to meet the
requirements of section 169A(b)(2), we have concluded that the issue of
whether the CAA provides States with the discretion in designing such
programs to employ some type of cumulative approach or simplifying
assumptions in the process of estimating emissions reductions
achievable by source-by-source BART is not relevant to today's
rulemaking.
The regulations finalized today provide that as a general matter,
States must undertake source specific BART analyses under Sec.
51.308(e)(1) for each source subject to BART in order to estimate the
emissions reductions achievable under the source-by-source BART
requirements. The use of such a BART benchmark enables a State to
design an alternative program that is ``better than BART'' based on a
precise estimation of the emissions reductions that could be achieved
under BART.
For trading programs where the emissions reductions are required to
fulfill CAA requirements other than BART (or to fulfill requirements of
a State law or regulation not required by the CAA), we are amending the
regulations to make clear that States may establish a BART benchmark
based on a simplified BART analysis in such a situation. We agree with
commenters that a BART benchmark based on such an analysis raises none
of the concerns that were at issue in the American Corn Growers and
CEED v. EPA cases. Where a trading program is designed to fulfill other
requirements, including the requirement to make reasonable progress, an
independent requirement determines the level of reductions achieved and
the BART analysis serves only to ensure that the program meets the
requirement that a BART alternative make greater reasonable progress
than BART. In other words, there is no need to develop a precise
estimate of the emissions reductions that could be achieved by BART in
order simply to compare two programs. As EPA did in the CAIR, States
should have the ability to develop a BART benchmark based on
simplifying assumptions as to what the most-stringent BART is likely to
achieve. The regulations finalized today therefore provide that where
an emissions trading program has been designed to meet a requirement
other than BART, including the reasonable progress requirement, the
State may establish a BART benchmark based on an analysis that includes
simplifying assumptions about BART control levels for sources within a
source category.
We do agree with commenters that EPA should issue regulatory
language expressly allowing for the use of a BART benchmark based on a
simplified BART analysis for demonstrating that emissions reductions
required by other provisions also make greater reasonable progress than
BART and may be used to substitute for BART. We have finalized such a
provision at Sec. 51.308(E)(2)(i)(C). This will help clarify that in
such cases, the BART benchmark is not the ``driver'' of emissions
reductions and is therefore not subject to the concerns on which the DC
Circuit decided American Corn Growers and CEED.
Role of BART Guidelines for EGUs in Determinations Proposal
The BART guidelines establish control levels or emission rates as
presumptive standards for EGUs greater than 200 MW capacity at plants
with a total generating capacity in excess of 750 MW. We proposed that
the States apply these presumptive standards contained in the final
BART guidelines in developing a BART benchmark for a trading program or
other alternative that includes such EGUs. In other words, when States
are estimating emission reductions achievable from source-by-source
BART, they must assume that the EGUs which would otherwise be subject
to BART will control at the presumptive level, unless the State
demonstrates that such presumptions are not appropriate at particular
units. The preamble to the proposed rule explained that this would be
accomplished by the cross reference to Sec. 51.308(e)(1) within
proposed Sec. 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), the provision prescribing the method
of setting the BART benchmark. Section 51.308(e)(1), in turn, provides
that BART determinations for EGUs of greater than 200 MW capacity at
plants with a total generating capacity greater than 750 MW must be
done in accordance with the BART guidelines in appendix Y to part 51.
Comments. One commenter said that the presumptive standards for
EGUs are too lenient and should be lowered before EPA allows States to
use them for purposes of a ``better than BART'' demonstration. Another
commenter supported the use of the presumptive standards in this
context, but contested the preamble statement that the presumptive
standards ``apply to certain EGUs on a mandatory basis'' because,
according to the commenter, the presumptions are not mandatory in that
they are rebuttable. Another commenter argued that the use of
presumptive standards would make the installation of controls more
likely, without regard to the visibility benefit expected. The
commenter believes EPA use of presumptions is incompatible with CAA
section 169A as interpreted in American Corn Growers and incompatible
with EPA's authority to issue BART guidance for EGUs of 750 MW or
greater.
Final Rule. The final rule promulgated on July 6, 2005, addresses
the authority of EPA to establish the presumptions in the BART
guidelines for certain EGUs, as well as the level of control reflected
by those presumptions. In the NPRM, EPA did not request comment on the
presumptions established in the Guidelines, but rather whether these
presumptions should be
[[Page 60619]]
used in establishing a BART benchmark for comparing an alternative
program to BART.
In today's final rule, the regulations make clear that, with one
exception, States must follow the approach for making BART
determinations under section 51.308(e)(1) in establishing a BART
benchmark. This includes the requirement for States to use the BART
guidelines in making BART determinations for EGUs at power plants of a
certain size. As discussed above, the one exception to this general
approach is where the alternative program has been designed to meet
requirements other than BART; in this case, States are not required to
make BART determinations under Sec. 51.308(e)(1) and may use
simplifying assumptions in establishing a BART benchmark based on an
analysis of what BART is likely to be for similar types of sources
within a source category. Under either approach to establishing a BART
benchmark, we believe that the presumptions for EGUs in the BART
guidelines should be used for comparison to a trading program or other
alternative measure, unless the State determines that such presumptions
are not appropriate for particular EGUs. We note that this limitation
on the use of the presumptions is most likely to apply only in a
source-by-source determination under Sec. 51.308(e)(1). States
establishing a BART benchmark based on simplifying assumptions as to
the most-stringent BART for EGUs may rely on the presumptions, as EPA
did in the CAIR rule. For States considering the appropriateness of the
presumptions in specific cases, the same criteria discussed in the BART
guidelines should guide them in reaching a conclusion. Thus, the
presumptive standards are ``mandatory'' for the identified EGUs, in
that the presumption must be applied to the specified class of EGUs;
but the presumptive standards are rebuttable, as explained in the BART
guidelines.
We do not agree that EPA should revise the presumptive standards
before allowing States to use them for purposes of establishing a BART
benchmark. We believe it is appropriate for the States to use the same
presumptions in developing the BART benchmark that they would use in
making BART determinations.
We determined in the BART final rule that the limits represented by
the presumptions are cost effective for large EGUs at the largest power
plants. We believe that the presumptions represent a reasonable
estimate of a stringent case BART, particularly because in developing a
BART benchmark they would be applied across the board to a wide variety
of units with varying impacts on visibility, at power plants of varying
size and distance from Class I areas.
We do not agree that the use of presumptive standards ignores the
visibility benefits to be expected from the control of the EGUs covered
by the presumption. In the final BART guidelines establishing the
presumptions, EPA took into account the degree of improvement in
visibility that would result from the installation of the presumptive
level of controls in finding that such controls should generally be
found to be BART. As explained in the preamble to the BART guidelines,
controlling the type of sources covered by the presumptions at the
level of the presumptive standards is likely to result in a substantial
degree of visibility improvement based on EPA's modeling analyses.
Minimum Universe of Sources Covered
Proposal. In the 1999 Regional Haze Rule, the provisions for
alternative programs to BART at section 51.308(e)(2) contained a
requirement that such a program must include, at a minimum, each BART-
eligible source within the State. In the August 1, 2005 proposal, we
noted that having had the occasion to consider BART alternative
programs in more detail, we believed that some categories of BART
eligible sources might not be appropriate for inclusion in a cap and
trade program. We provided the example of the difficulty in quantifying
emissions with sufficient accuracy to participate in a trading program
for some source categories. We therefore proposed to allow States to
use a trading program or alternative measure to substitute for BART for
some source categories, while requiring source-by-source BART for BART-
eligible sources in any source categories not covered by the
alternative program. We further proposed that for any categories which
were included in the alternative program, we would retain the
requirement that all BART-eligible sources in the State within that
source category must be subject to the program. See proposed section
51.308(e)(2)(ii). One reason for this proposed provision was to prevent
any shifting of emissions from covered to non-covered BART eligible
sources, which could potentially undermine the effectiveness of the
emissions cap. In a related provision we proposed, as one of the
minimum elements of a cap and trade program, that the applicability
provisions must be designed to prevent any significant potential
shifting of production and emissions within the State or multi-State
region. See proposed section 51.308(e)(2)(vi)(A).
Comments. Several commenters opposed the requirement to include in
the alternative program all BART-eligible sources within a source
category. Several of these commenters argued that such a requirement is
a form of ``group BART'' invalidated by the DC Circuit because it would
impose requirements on BART eligible sources without a demonstration
that those sources are reasonably anticipated to cause or contribute to
visibility impairment. One commenter argued that the requirement was
unjustified as a practical matter, at least in the case of the forest
products industry, because in order to be economically viable mills
must be operated at near capacity. This would leave no leeway for
production and emissions shifting. The commenter also argued that the
provision is conceptually unjustified, considering that under a
conventional source-by-source program, emissions shifting theoretically
could occur to BART-eligible sources which were determined to be exempt
from BART because they do not cause or contribute to visibility
impairment. The commenter argued that it would be illegal to impose
``compensating costs'' on such sources outside the trading program
context. The implication of this comment is that it would also be
illegal to impose such costs on these BART-eligible sources by
requiring them to participate in the alternative program.
In contrast, one State commented that allowing some source
categories to add controls while others may avoid controls by buying
reductions elsewhere would be contrary to its management principles.
This commenter thought that the use of a trading program to address
haze for some but not all sources subject to BART might be counter-
productive. Similarly, another commenter noted that ``carving out
source categories would only shrink the universe of potential
participants, the opposite of what is needed for a successful trading
program.''
Final Rule. Having carefully considered the comments and the
relationship between the requirement for category-wide participation of
BART-eligible sources and the requirements for the State to address
emissions shifting, we are adopting final provisions that maximize the
flexibility of the States while insuring that the BART-eligible sources
are addressed in some fashion by the States. As we noted in 1999 in
establishing the criteria governing BART alternative trading programs,
the legislative history of the
[[Page 60620]]
CAA demonstrates Congress' recognition of the need to control emissions
from a specific set of sources. We are therefore finalizing in this
rule that States must require that each BART-eligible source in the
State either participate in a BART alternative program or,
alternatively, be subject to the case-by-case BART requirements under
section 51.308(e)(1). In other words, States are not required to
include each BART-eligible source in a source category in an
alternative program; however, any BART-eligible sources not included in
an alternative program would remain subject to the general requirements
governing BART sources.
For most trading programs, we do not anticipate that this
requirement will have a significant impact on the scope of the program.
Because trading programs generally include all sources within a source
category in a trading region, trading programs designed to meet either
reasonable progress goals or other requirements of the CAA are likely
to have broad applicability provisions that encompass all BART-eligible
sources in the trading region (or at least all BART-eligible sources
within certain categories of sources for some trading programs). States
have the inherent authority to determine the applicability of their
regulations for programs such as those designed to meet reasonable
progress requirements, or to attain the National Ambient Air Quality
Standard (NAAQS), and are most likely to design programs with
applicability provisions that are not dependent on factors such as the
age of sources covered by the program. For example, States in the WRAP
designed their program to apply to all stationary sources with actual
emissions of 100 tons per year or more, regardless of the type of
source or the age of the facility.
We disagree that the requirement that States either require BART-
eligible sources to participate in a trading program or go through a
BART analysis is a form of ``group BART'' that would illegally impose
requirements on such sources without a demonstration that those sources
emit a pollutant that may reasonably be anticipated to cause or
contribute to visibility impairment. As noted above, for programs
designed to meet other requirements of the CAA, we would expect that
the States would design programs that apply broadly, and nothing in the
BART provisions of the CAA limits a States' ability to regulate BART-
eligible sources under other provisions in the CAA. Thus, for example,
a State need not demonstrate that an EGU built between 1962 and 1977
has a certain measurable impact on visibility before regulating it
under the CAIR. Rather, the BART sources would be treated in the same
manner as other sources in the State.\6\
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\6\ In theory, a State could design a program to meet the
reasonable progress or other requirements of the CAA that does not
have sufficie