Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Implementation Plan Revision; State of New Jersey, 11812-11817 [E7-4665]
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11812
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 72, No. 49
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[Docket No. EPA–R02–OAR–2006–0162;
FRL–8287–4]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Implementation
Plan Revision; State of New Jersey
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) proposes to approve a
request from the State of New Jersey to
revise its State Implementation Plan
(SIP) for ozone to incorporate stateadopted amendments to Subchapter 19
‘‘Control and Prohibition of Air
Pollution from Oxides of Nitrogen’’ and
related amendments to Subchapter 16
‘‘Control and Prohibition of Air
Pollution by Volatile Organic
Compounds.’’ The amendments relate to
the control of oxides of nitrogen (NOX)
emissions from stationary industrial
sources. This SIP revision consists of
control measures needed to meet the
shortfall in emission reductions in New
Jersey’s 1-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP as identified by EPA.
The intended effect of this proposed
rule is to approve the state control
strategy, which will result in emission
reductions that will help achieve
attainment of the national ambient air
quality standards for ozone required by
the Clean Air Act (the Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 13, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R02–
OAR–2006–0162, by one of the
following methods:
• www.regulations.gov: Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: Werner.Raymond@epa.gov.
• Fax: 212–637–3901.
• Mail: Raymond Werner, Chief, Air
Programs Branch, U.S. Environmental
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Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290
Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New
York 10007–1866.
• Hand Delivery: Raymond Werner,
Chief, Air Programs Branch, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007–
1866. Hand deliveries are only accepted
during the Regional Office’s normal
hours of operation. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R02–OAR–2006–
0162. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through www.regulations.gov
or e-mail. The www.regulations.gov
website is an ‘‘anonymous access’’
system, which means EPA will not
know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send an
e-mail comment directly to EPA without
going through www.regulations.gov,
your e-mail address will be
automatically captured and included as
part of the comment that is placed in the
public docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD–ROM
you submit. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form
of encryption, and be free of any defects
or viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anthony (Ted) Gardella
gardella.anthony@epa.gov at the Air
Programs Branch, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290
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Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New
York 10007–1866, telephone number
(212) 637–4249, fax number (212) 637–
3901.
Copies of the New Jersey submittals
are available at the following addresses
for inspection during normal business
hours:
Air Programs Branch, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007–
1866.
New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, Office of
Energy, Bureau of Air Quality Planning,
401 East State Street, CN027, Trenton,
New Jersey 08625.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: For
detailed information on New Jersey’s
SIP revisions see the Technical Support
Document (TSD), prepared in support of
today’s proposed action. A copy of the
TSD is available upon request from the
EPA Regional Office listed in the
ADDRESSES section or it can be viewed
at www.regulations.gov.
The following table of contents
describes the format for this notice:
I. EPA’s Proposed Action
A. What Action Is EPA Proposing Today?
B. Why Is EPA Proposing This Action?
C. What Are the Clean Air Act
Requirements for NOX RACT?
D. What Were the Clean Air Act
Requirements for Attainment of the 1Hour Ozone Standard?
E. When Was New Jersey’s Additional NOX
RACT Requirement Proposed and
Adopted?
F. What Is EPA’s Evaluation of New
Jersey’s Submittal?
II. Conclusion
III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. EPA’s Proposed Action
A. What Action Is EPA Proposing
Today?
EPA proposes to act on a New Jersey
submission that includes a new rule and
amendments to Subchapter 19 ‘‘Control
and Prohibition of Air Pollution from
Oxides of Nitrogen’’; Subchapter 16
‘‘Control and Prohibition of Air
Pollution by Volatile Organic
Compounds’’; Subchapter 8 ‘‘Permits
and Certificates for Minor Facilities (and
Major Facilities Without an Operating
Permit)’’; and Subchapter 22 ‘‘Operating
Permits.’’
Except for certain Open Market
Emissions Trading (OMET) Program
provisions in Subchapters 8, 16, and 19,
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and compliance dates beyond November
15, 2007 for repowering and innovative
control technology, as discussed later in
this notice, EPA proposes to approve, as
revisions to the New Jersey ozone SIP,
the state-adopted amendments to
Subchapter 19 and Subchapter 16, each
adopted by New Jersey on September 8,
2005, and submitted to EPA on
December 16, 2005. EPA is currently
reviewing past amendments to
Subchapter 8 and will address the
approvability of all Subchapter 8
amendments at the same time in a
future action. Subchapter 22 is New
Jersey’s operating permit rule that was
separately approved under title V of the
Clean Air Act and therefore Subchapter
22 should not have been submitted as a
SIP revision. EPA has reviewed the new
amendments to Subchapter 22 and will
formally respond to New Jersey with a
letter.
New Jersey amended Subchapter 19 to
reduce additional emissions of NOX in
response to emission reduction
shortfalls, identified by EPA (64 FR
70380, December 16, 1999), for
attainment of New Jersey’s 1-hour ozone
standard. New Jersey amended
Subchapter 16 to be consistent with
amendments to Subchapter 19. Except
for certain provisions discussed later in
this notice, EPA proposes that New
Jersey’s state-adopted Subchapters 16
and 19 are fully approvable as a SIPstrengthening measure for New Jersey’s
ground level ozone SIP. The
amendments to Subchapters 16 and 19
in New Jersey’s submittal meet New
Jersey’s commitment by adopting
control measures for additional
emission reductions to attain the 1-hour
ozone standard and close the shortfall.
Therefore, EPA will not proceed with
the May 27, 2004 (69 FR 30249)
proposed Finding of Failure to
Implement.
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B. Why Is EPA Proposing This Action?
EPA is proposing this action to:
• Give the public the opportunity to
submit comments on EPA’s proposed
action;
• Approve a control measure which
reduces NOX emissions, a precursor of
ozone formation, to help attain the
national ambient air quality standards
for ozone;
• Fulfill New Jersey’s and EPA’s
requirement under the Act; and
• Make New Jersey’s regulations for
additional emission reductions federally
enforceable and available for emission
reduction credit in the SIP.
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C. What Are the Clean Air Act
Requirements for NOX RACT?
The Act requires certain states to
develop reasonably available control
technology (RACT) regulations for major
stationary sources of NOX and to
provide for their implementation as
soon as practicable but, under the 1hour ozone standard, no later than May
31, 1995. New Jersey amended
Subchapter 19, the State’s NOX RACT
regulation, to achieve the needed
additional NOX reductions. Under the
Act, the definition of major stationary
source is based on the tons per year
(tpy) of air pollution a source emits and
the quality of the air in the area in
which the source is located. In ozone
transport regions, defined as attainment/
unclassified areas as well as marginal
and moderate ozone nonattainment
areas, if a major stationary source of
NOX emits or has the potential to emit
100 tpy or more of NOX, it is subject to
the requirements of a moderate
nonattainment area. New Jersey is
within the Northeast ozone transport
region, established by section 184(a) of
the Act. In New Jersey, pursuant to
§ 19.1 of Subchapter 19, a major
stationary source for NOX emits or has
the potential to emit 25 tpy, the level set
for severe ozone nonattainment areas.
Consequently, under the 1-hour ozone
standard, all sources of NOX that emit
or have the potential to emit 25 tpy
within New Jersey were required to
implement RACT no later than May 31,
1995.
In July 1997, EPA promulgated a
revised national ambient air quality
standard for ozone of 0.08 parts per
million (ppm). The standard was based
on a three-year average of the annual
fourth-highest daily maximum 8-hour
average ozone concentrations measured
at each monitor within an area. On
April 30, 2004 (69 FR 23857), EPA
established air quality designations and
classifications for every area in the
United States, including New Jersey, for
the 8-hour ozone standard. In the April
2004 rule, EPA designated the entire
state of New Jersey as nonattainment
and classified New Jersey as a Subpart
2/moderate area, effective June 15, 2004.
The April 2004 rule also provided that
one year from the effective date of an
area’s 8-hour ozone standard
designation, the 1-hour ozone standard
would no longer apply (i.e., would be
revoked) for that area. In December
2006, the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit vacated the April 2004 rule. S.
Coast Air Quality Management Dist. v.
EPA, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 31451. The
case is still in litigation, thus its
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resolution is unclear. Nonetheless, on
February 4, 2002 (67 FR 5152), EPA
approved New Jersey’s commitment to
adopt NOX emission reductions by
November 15, 2007 in order to close
emissions shortfalls and attain the 1hour ozone standard.
D. What Were the Clean Air Act
Requirements for Attainment of the 1Hour Ozone Standard?
Section 182 of the Act requires states
to submit SIP revisions for areas
classified as nonattainment for ozone
and provides dates when the revisions
are to be submitted to EPA by the states.
The specific requirements vary
depending upon the severity of the
ozone problem. EPA classified the New
York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island
area and the Philadelphia-WilmingtonTrenton area severe nonattainment areas
(NAA) under the 1-hour ozone standard.
Under section 182 of the Act, severe
ozone nonattainment areas were
required to submit demonstrations of
how they would attain the 1-hour ozone
standard. As noted above, on February
4, 2002 (67 FR 5152), EPA approved
New Jersey’s 1-hour ozone attainment
demonstration, which included New
Jersey’s commitment to adopt additional
volatile organic compound (VOC) and
NOX emission reductions to close the
emissions shortfall.
This proposal addresses the NOX
reductions to which New Jersey
committed. For the New York-Northern
New Jersey-Long Island NAA, the
deadline for attainment of the 1-hour
ozone standard is November 15, 2007.
According to ambient air quality data
collected since 2005, the PhiladelphiaWilmington-Trenton NAA is in
attainment for the 1-hour ozone
standard. Although ambient air quality
monitors demonstrate attainment for the
1-hour ozone standard, the
Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton NAA
has never been reclassified to
attainment. As stated above, EPA has
promulgated the 8-hour ozone standard,
which, dependant upon the litigation
mentioned above, may supersede the 1hour ozone standard from the effective
date of the 8-hour ozone designation. If
the 1-hour ozone standard is considered
to be revoked, the New York-Northern
New Jersey-Long Island NAA is no
longer required to attain the 1-hour
ozone standard by November 15, 2007.
In any event, New Jersey is still required
to meet its commitment to reduce
additional NOX emissions to close the
emissions shortfall by November 15,
2007. The emission reductions provided
by control measures in the amendments
to Subchapter 19 will also be necessary
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for attainment of the 8-hour ozone
standard.
The Ozone Transport Commission
(OTC) developed model rules for
potential control measures for achieving
NOX reductions for a number of source
categories and estimated the potential
emission reduction benefits from
implementing the model rules. The
model rules were designed for use by
states in developing their own
regulations to close emission shortfalls.
New Jersey used the OTC model rules
for NOX reductions as the basis for the
submission upon which EPA is now
acting.
E. When Was New Jersey’s NOX RACT
Requirement Proposed and Adopted?
New Jersey proposed NOX RACT rules
and related requirements on September
20, 2004, accepted written comments on
them until November 19, 2004, and held
public hearings on them on October 28,
2004. New Jersey adopted the amended
NOX RACT and related requirements on
September 8, 2005, and submitted them
to EPA for approval as revisions to the
SIP on December 16, 2005. On January
25, 2006, EPA determined the submittal
to be administratively and technically
complete.
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F. What Is EPA’s Evaluation of New
Jersey’s Submittal?
New Jersey previously submitted SIP
revisions to Subchapter 19 to address
the NOX RACT requirements, which
EPA approved as SIP revisions on
January 27, 1997 (62 FR 3806) and
March 29, 1999 (64 FR 14832). New
Jersey also developed a NOX Budget
Trading Program (Subchapter 31),
which EPA approved on May 22, 2001
(66 FR 28063). The current submission
provides amendments that establish
more stringent RACT limits for facilities
that emit NOX. The following is a
summary of EPA’s evaluation of New
Jersey’s December 16, 2005 SIP
submittal consisting of amendments to
Subchapters 16 and 19.
1. Subchapter 19
New Jersey revised Subchapter 19 to
require owners and operators to
implement the following new
requirements:
Stationary reciprocating engines. The
amended Subchapter 19, which has a
compliance date of March 7, 2007,
lowers the presumptive NOX emission
limits and lowers the applicability
threshold for existing stationary
reciprocating engines (REs) used for
generating electricity. These
amendments apply regardless of
whether the source is located at a
facility classified as major for NOX. The
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previous rule that was approved into the
SIP applied to any engine source
category capable of producing an output
of more than 500 brake horsepower
(bhp) (370 kilowatts (kW)). The new
NOX emission limits apply to the
following: (1) An engine that has a rated
power output of 148 kW (about 200 bhp)
or greater; and (2) a group of two or
more engines each of which has a rated
power output of 37 kW (about 50 bhp)
or greater, but less than 148 kW, and
whose total combined power output is
148 kW or greater; and (3) an engine
capable of producing an output of 370
kW (500 bhp) or greater.
The new NOX emission limits for
these three categories of engines,
expressed as grams NOX per bhp-hour
(g/bhp-hr), range from 1.5 to 2.3
depending upon the type of engine and
the fuel combusted, and will result in
additional NOX reductions ranging from
zero percent to 71 percent. The rule
provides that lean-burn engines that
combust gaseous fuels must meet either
a NOX emission limit of 1.5 g/bhp-hr or
an emission limit equivalent to an 80
percent reduction from the uncontrolled
NOX emission level. The rule also
includes NOX emission limits for the
following two new source categories: (1)
Rich-burn engines that combust liquid
fuel and (2) lean-burn engines capable
of combusting dual (gas and liquid)
fuels.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter
19 to apply to engines with a maximum
rated power output of 37 kW or greater
that are new or modified on or after
March 7, 2007. New engines must meet
a NOX emission limit of 0.90 g/bhp-hr;
modified engines are to meet the same
NOX emission limit as new engines or
an emission limit that is equivalent to
a 90 percent NOX reduction from the
uncontrolled emission level.
Pursuant to § 19.3(f) of Subchapter 19,
owners or operators of the category of
engines mentioned above may comply
by meeting the new presumptive NOX
emission limits or by one of the
following existing options: (1) An
emissions averaging plan pursuant to
§§ 19.6 and 19.14; (2) an alternative
maximum allowable emission limit
pursuant to § 19.13; (3) a plan for
phased compliance through the use of
repowering pursuant to § 19.21; or (4) a
plan for phased compliance through the
use of innovative control technology
pursuant to § 19.23. In accordance with
the phased compliance plan option,
owners or operators planning to comply
with a phased compliance plan must
fully implement the plan by November
7, 2009 and have begun to comply with
interim control measures and other
requirements by March 7, 2007.
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Pursuant to § 19.20 of Subchapter 19,
New Jersey must approve of any phased
compliance plan. Applications to
implement the phased compliance plans
were due to New Jersey by February 7,
2006.
Each of the compliance options listed
above are addressed below. First, any
emissions averaging plan must be
approved by New Jersey, however EPA
approval is not required since the
emissions averaging procedures of
Subchapter 19.6 have already been
approved by EPA into the New Jersey
SIP. Second, any alternative maximum
allowable emission limit must be
approved by New Jersey and submitted
for EPA approval as a SIP revision as
provided in § 19.13.
Finally, the phased compliance plan
options in §§ 19.21 and 19.23 would
allow sources to comply with the NOX
RACT requirements in 2009 which is
beyond the November 15, 2007
attainment deadline for the New YorkNorthern New Jersey-Long Island NAA.
Sources that implement these phased
compliance plan options in 2009 would
not help the New York-Northern New
Jersey-Long Island NAA achieve the
NOX reductions needed for attainment
of the 1-hour ozone standard by the
November 15, 2007 attainment date. For
this reason, the new amended 2009
compliance date for phased compliance
plan options is not acceptable to EPA.
If the amendments to the phased
compliance plan options had a
compliance date prior to the start of the
2007 ozone season this would be
acceptable to EPA.
It should be noted that New Jersey
received no applications for phased
compliance plan options before New
Jersey’s application deadline of
February 7, 2006. Therefore, the new
amendments to the phased compliance
plan options at §§ 19.21 and 19.23 have
no practical effect. Accordingly, EPA is
not proposing to approve or disapprove
these sections into the SIP. For the
reasons stated above, EPA further
recommends that New Jersey delete the
new amendments to §§ 19.21 and 19.23
from Subchapter 19. These comments
also apply to new amendments to
Subchapter 19 that established phased
compliance plan options for owners or
operators of stationary combustion
turbines and owners or operators of
industrial/commercial/institutional
boilers and other indirect heat
exchangers.
Pursuant to § 19.8(f), effective either
in 2005 or 2007, depending on the
engine size, owners and operators of
engines used for generating electricity,
whether or not the engine is located at
a major NOX facility or, having a
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maximum rated output of at least 37 kW
or greater, shall adjust the engine’s
combustion process in accordance with
the procedures specified in Subchapter
19. While combustion process
adjustment is expected to reduce
emissions of NOX, New Jersey has
indicated that it is not depending upon
these reductions to meet the emissions
shortfall.
Stationary combustion turbines. New
Jersey amended Subchapter 19 by
lowering the presumptive NOX emission
limits and by lowering the applicability
threshold for existing stationary
combustion turbines. The amendments
provide that, effective March 7, 2007,
the maximum gross heat input rate
applicability threshold for stationary
combustion turbines is 25 MM BTU/hr
instead of 30 MM BTU/hr, as was the
case in the previous State rule. Also,
New Jersey changed the NOX emission
limits from heat input based limits
(pounds per MM BTU (Lb/MM BTU)) to
production output based limits (pounds
per megawatt-hour (Lb/MWh)). Output
based limits encourage sources to
improve plant operating efficiency and
pollution prevention, such as clean
energy supply, which result in reduced
fuel consumption and reduce emissions
of pollutants, including NOX. The new
NOX emission limits for stationary
combustion turbines are in Table 4 of
Subchapter 19. For oil fired turbines,
the new output based NOX limits are
more stringent, by about 25 percent,
than the previous input based NOX
limits. For gas fired turbines, the new
NOX emission limits are as stringent as
the previous NOX emission limits. One
exception is that owners or operators of
NOX budget sources, regulated under
Subchapter 31, shall continue to be
subject to the current SIP-approved NOX
emission limits provided in Tables 2
and 3 of Subchapter 19.
Pursuant to § 19.5(d), owners or
operators of stationary combustion
turbines, with a maximum gross heat
input rate of at least 25 MM BTU/hr,
have the option of complying with any
one of the following: (1) The new
presumptive output based NOX
emission limits provided in Table 4 of
Subchapter 19; (2) the alternative
compliance options, in § 19.3(f) of
Subchapter 19, as described above, for
stationary reciprocating engines; and (3)
a SIP-approved compliance option
pursuant to § 19.5(c) of Subchapter 19,
which requires the owner or operator to
obtain New Jersey’s approval of its
application demonstrating an
insufficient supply of water to the
turbine suitable for NOX emission
control and to establish that no
commercially available dry-low NOX
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combustor suitable for use in the
specific turbine. It should be noted that
EPA believes that the reference in
§ 19.5(d) to ‘‘(c)1 through 5 below’’ is a
typographical error. EPA believes that
the reference should read ‘‘(c)1 through
5 above,’’ and that New Jersey should
correct the error accordingly.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter
19 to require an owner or operator of a
turbine, with a maximum gross heat
input rate of at least 25 MM BTU/hr, to
adjust the turbine’s combustion process
in accordance with the procedures
specified in Subchapter 19, starting in
either 2005 or 2007, depending upon
the turbine’s heat input rate.
Industrial/commercial/institutional
boilers and other indirect heat
exchangers. New Jersey amended
Subchapter 19 by lowering certain
presumptive NOX emission limits and
by lowering the applicability threshold
for annual combustion process
adjustments for industrial/commercial/
institutional (ICI) boilers and other
indirect heat exchangers (IHE). The
amendments provide that, effective
March 7, 2007, the NOX emission limits
for natural gas fired ICI boilers or other
IHEs that have a maximum gross heat
input rate of at least 100 MM BTU/hr is
lowered to 0.10 lb NOX/MM BTU from
0.20 lb NOX/MM BTU and 0.43 lb NOX/
MM BTU. The change represents a
reduction in NOX emissions ranging
from 50 percent to almost 77 percent,
depending upon whether the firing
method type is tangential, face or
cyclone. New Jersey did not revise the
NOX emission limits for other size or
type ICI boilers or other IHEs. The new
NOX emission limits for ICI boilers and
other IHEs are in provided Table 7 of
Subchapter 19.
As with owners and operators of
stationary combustion turbines and
stationary reciprocating engines, owners
and operators of ICI boilers and other
IHEs have the option of complying with
either the new presumptive NOX
emission limits or the alternative
compliance options, pursuant to
§ 19.3(f) of Subchapter 19, as described
above for stationary reciprocating
engines.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter
19 by lowering the applicability
threshold of 20 MM BTU/hr heat input
rate for sources required to annually
adjust their combustion process. The
amendments provide that, effective
March 7, 2007, the applicability
threshold for such sources is 5 MM
BTU/hr maximum gross heat input rate.
This threshold applies regardless of
whether the source is located at a
facility classified as major for NOX.
Effective in either 2007, 2008, or 2010,
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depending upon the source’s heat input
rate, owners or operators of such
sources are required to adjust the
combustion process in accordance with
the procedures specified in Subchapter
19.
Emergency generators. New Jersey
amended Subchapter 19 by adding a
new provision, § 19.11, which requires
owners and operators of emergency
generators with a maximum rated
output of 37 kW, to maintain detailed
and specific records on site for five
years whenever an emergency generator
has been in use. In addition, New Jersey
amended § 19.2(d) by deleting the
following two conditions for an
emergency generator exemption from
Subchapter 19: (1) 500 hours operating
restriction over any consecutive twelve
month period; and (2) potential to emit
(PTE) of less than 25 tpy NOX emissions
during an annual period of operation.
EPA has determined that New Jersey’s
additional amendments to § 19.2(d), and
to the definition of emergency
generators in § 19.1, clarify when
emergency generators shall and shall
not be used. These amendments
combined with the new recordkeeping
provisions in § 19.11 provide New
Jersey and EPA with information for any
enforcement action, if needed.
During the public comment period, a
citizen commented that the removal of
the 500 hour emergency operation time
limit made the PTE analysis and netting
analysis for a source ambiguous. EPA’s
September 1995 guidance entitled,
‘‘Calculating Potential to Emit (PTE) for
Emergency Generators,’’ establishes the
criteria for determining a source’s PTE
and recommends 500 hours as an
appropriate default assumption for
estimating the number of hours an
emergency generator could be expected
to operate under worst-case conditions.
EPA’s PTE guidance for emergency
generators also states that alternative
estimates can be made on a case-by-case
basis where justified by the source
owner or permitting authority.
New Jersey deleted the 500 hour
operating restriction for emergency
generators from Subchapter 19 because
it believed that ‘‘hours of operation’’ is
not an appropriate criteria for defining
an emergency generator. In a
communication to EPA, New Jersey
interpreted the EPA proposed rule
‘‘Standards of Performance for
Stationary Compression Ignition
Internal Combustion Engines’’ (70 FR
39869, July 11, 2005), as further
justification for deletion of the 500 hour
restriction. In a February 14, 2006 letter
to New Jersey, EPA responded that New
Jersey misinterpreted EPA’s July 2005
proposed rule and that ‘‘for purposes of
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the NSR and title V programs New
Jersey should continue as they have and
permit emergency units at some amount
of operation sufficiently large to cover
emergencies (i.e., 500 hours per year).
Malfunctions that may require the
operation of the emergency units and
that may exceed the 500 hours/year
limit could be handled through
enforcement discretion on a case-bycase basis, as appropriate.’’ Therefore,
PTE requirements for emergency
generators should be included in New
Jersey’s operating permit regulations,
i.e., Subchapters 8 and 22, and should
include the provisions that were deleted
from the current SIP approved
Subchapter 19, i.e., (1) the 500 hour
annual operational restriction, or some
other appropriate operating period in
accordance with EPA’s September 1995
guidance, and (2) the exemption for
sources with a PTE of less than 25 tpy
NOX.
While EPA proposes to approve the
new emergency generator provisions, for
rule consistency, EPA believes it
appropriate, although not required, that
New Jersey revise the currently adopted
Subchapter 19 to also include the
emergency generator restrictions
identified in the current SIP-approved
Subchapter 19. EPA would consider
new language within Subchapter 19 that
would allow owners and operators to
operate emergency generators without
restriction to operating hours for special
situations such as when the governor of
New Jersey declared an emergency
because of an unprecedented and
unexpectedly long blackout or a force
majeure event (like a severe hurricane).
Open Market Emissions Trading
(OMET) Program. In July 1996, New
Jersey adopted amendments to
Subchapter 19 for consistency with the
state-adopted Subchapter 30, called the
OMET Program. The OMET Program,
and amendments to Subchapter 19,
permitted a source regulated under
Subchapter 19 to meet its NOX RACT
emission requirements by purchasing
discrete emission reduction credits
(DERs). The DERs were generated by a
source that reduced NOX emissions
beyond its regulatory requirements. EPA
and New Jersey identified a number of
problems with the OMET Program. EPA
withdrew its proposed conditional
approval of the OMET Program on
October 18, 2002 and New Jersey
terminated Subchapter 30 on February
25, 2004. On April 5, 2004, New Jersey
amended Subchapter 19, withdrew the
OMET provisions adopted in July 1996,
and replaced them with new provisions
that included a compliance schedule for
the affected OMET sources. The latter
OMET compliance provisions are
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included in New Jersey’s December
2005 SIP revision to EPA.
EPA objected to the new OMET
compliance schedule, and related
compliance requirements for sources
subject to NOX RACT regulation. The
new OMET compliance schedule would
allow sources to comply with the NOX
RACT requirements of Subchapter 19
beyond the May 31, 1995 compliance
date deadline mandated by the Act. In
a December 2005 SIP submittal letter,
New Jersey committed to delete OMET
from Subchapter 19, and from
Subchapters 8 and 16. Therefore, EPA
expects New Jersey, in future
rulemaking, to delete the OMET-related
provisions in Subchapters 8, 16 and 19,
i.e., §§ 8.3(o), 8.20(b)(3), 16.1A(g),
16.1A(h), 19.3(g), 19.3(h), 19.27, and the
19.27 Appendix, and is not approving
them into the SIP.
Additional amendments to
Subchapter 19. New Jersey adopted a
number of other amendments since EPA
last approved amendments to
Subchapter 19 (64 FR 14832, March 29,
1999). Among other things, these
amendments: (1) Revised terms and
definitions that do not change the
meaning or stringency of the provisions;
(2) revised the due date for permit
applications and submittals of NOX
Control Plans, pursuant to § 19.13, to
February 7, 2006; (3) revised §§ 19.2 and
19.9 by deleting the applicability
threshold of 25 tpy PTE NOX for asphalt
plants, which made the provisions more
stringent; (4) revised the ozone season
closing date to September 30 to conform
with the closing date provided in
Subchapter 31, the NOX Budget
Program; and (5) revised testing
requirements to conform with certain
new control measures for stationary
reciprocating engines.
2. Subchapter 16
The amendments to Subchapter 16 are
administrative in nature and ensure
consistency with the amendments to
Subchapter 19. The amendments to
Subchapter 16 include the following: (1)
Revised terms and definitions that do
not change the meaning or stringency of
the provisions; (2) lowered applicability
thresholds for the following source
categories that are required to
implement annual combustion
adjustments: (a) Small boilers and IHEs,
not used for generating electricity; (b)
stationary combustion turbines; and (c)
stationary reciprocating engines, if used
to generate electricity; and (3) a revised
definition and recordkeeping
requirements for emergency generators.
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3. Summary of EPA’s Evaluation
EPA expects that the revisions to
Subchapter 19 will result in additional
reductions in NOX emissions to help
New Jersey meet the emissions
reduction shortfall and attain the ozone
standard. EPA evaluated New Jersey’s
SIP submittal and proposes to find
Subchapters 16 and 19 approvable.
However, as explained above, EPA takes
no action on and expects New Jersey to
delete: (1) All OMET provisions in
Subchapters 8, 16 and 19; (2) the new
amendments to phased compliance plan
through repowering in § 19.21; and (3)
the new amendments to phased
compliance plan through the use of
innovative control technology in
§ 19.23. The December 16, 2005 SIP
submittal will strengthen New Jersey’s
SIP for reducing ground level ozone by
providing additional NOX reductions
beginning on March 7, 2007.
EPA completed a detailed analysis
and evaluation to determine the
approvability of New Jersey’s December
16, 2005 SIP revision. EPA’s evaluation
of the SIP submittal is detailed in a
document entitled ‘‘Technical Support
Document—NOX RACT SIP Revision—
State of New Jersey.’’ A copy of that
document is available, upon request,
from the EPA Regional Office listed in
the ADDRESSES section of this document
or the Technical Support Document can
be viewed at https://
www.regulations.gov.
II. Conclusions
EPA evaluated New Jersey’s submittal
for consistency with the Act, EPA
regulations and EPA policy. The
proposed new control measures will
strengthen the SIP by providing
additional NOX emission reductions.
Accordingly, EPA is proposing to
approve the revisions to Subchapter 19,
and related revisions to Subchapter 16,
as adopted on September 8, 2005,
except that EPA is not acting, at this
time, on OMET Program provisions in
Subchapters 16 and 19 or the new
amendments to phased compliance
plans by repowering and innovative
control technology in §§ 19.21 and
19.23, respectively. EPA is not
approving any dates that allow for NOX
RACT compliance beyond May 31,
1995, in general, and beyond May 1,
1999 for completion of repowering for
sources that should have complied by
the date required in the March 29, 1999
EPA-approved SIP. In addition, at a later
date, EPA will act on Subchapter 8, as
adopted by New Jersey on September 8,
2005.
With the adoption of Subchapter 19,
New Jersey has fulfilled its obligation to
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adopt all six control measures that New
Jersey identified as necessary to attain
the 1-hour ozone standard. Therefore,
EPA will not proceed with the May 27,
2004 (69 FR 30249) proposed Finding of
Failure to Implement.
III. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735, October 4, 1993), this proposed
action is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ and therefore is not subject to
review by the Office of Management and
Budget. For this reason, this action is
also not subject to Executive Order
13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355, May
22, 2001). This action merely proposes
to approve state law as meeting Federal
requirements and imposes no additional
requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. Accordingly, the
Administrator certifies that this
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.). Because this rule proposes to
approve pre-existing requirements
under state law and does not impose
any additional enforceable duty beyond
that required by state law, it does not
contain any unfunded mandate or
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, as described in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–4).
This proposed rule also does not have
tribal implications because it will not
have a substantial direct effect on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
as specified by Executive Order 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). This
action also does not have Federalism
implications because it does not have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999). This action merely
proposes to approve a state rule
implementing a Federal standard, and
does not alter the relationship or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean
Air Act. This proposed rule also is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
‘‘Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks’’ (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997),
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because it is not economically
significant.
In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. In this context, in the
absence of a prior existing requirement
for the State to use voluntary consensus
standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for
failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission,
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272) do not apply. This proposed rule
does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: March 6, 2007.
Alan J. Steinberg,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. E7–4665 Filed 3–13–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 73
11817
Commission decision is available for
inspection and copying during normal
business hours in the FCC Reference
Information Center (Room CY–A257),
445 12th Street, SW., Washington, DC
20554. The complete text of this
decision may also be purchased from
the Commission’s copy contractor, Best
Copy and Printing, Inc., Portals II, 445
12th Street, SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554, telephone 1–
800–378–3160 or https://
www.BCPIWEB.com.
In response to a rulemaking petition
filed by Charles Crawford, the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking proposed the
allotment of Channel 242A at Melvin,
Texas. To accommodate this allotment,
it also proposed the substitution of
Channel 292A for vacant Channel 242A
at Menard, Texas, and the substitution
of Channel 224A for vacant Channel
292A at Junction, Texas. The
withdrawal of the petition for
rulemaking complies with Section
1.420(j) of the Commission’s rules
because the rulemaking petitioner is not
receiving any money or other
consideration in return for the
withdrawal. See 70 FR 19398 (April 13,
2005).
This document is not subject to the
Congressional Review Act. (The
Commission, is, therefore, not required
to submit a copy of this Report and
Order to GAO, pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A) because the petition for
rulemaking was dismissed).
Federal Communications Commission.
John A. Karousos,
Assistant Chief, Audio Division, Media
Bureau.
[FR Doc. E7–4544 Filed 3–13–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
[DA 07–805; MB Docket No. 05–132; RM–
11217]
Radio Broadcasting Services;
Junction, Melvin, and Menard, TX
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; withdrawal.
AGENCY:
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
49 CFR Parts 350, 385, 395, and 396
[DOT Docket No. FMCSA–2004–18940]
The staff approves the
withdrawal of a petition for rulemaking
in this FM allotment rulemaking
proceeding See SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew J. Rhodes, Media Bureau, (202)
418–2180.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
synopsis of the Commission’s Report
and Order, MB Docket No. 05–132,
adopted February 21, 2007, and released
February 23, 2007. The full text of this
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RIN 2126–AA89
Electronic On-Board Recorders
(EOBRs) for Documenting Hours of
Service; Listening Sessions
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of public listening
sessions.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA)
announces public listening sessions to
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[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 49 (Wednesday, March 14, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 11812-11817]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-4665]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 49 / Wednesday, March 14, 2007 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 11812]]
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[Docket No. EPA-R02-OAR-2006-0162; FRL-8287-4]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Implementation
Plan Revision; State of New Jersey
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposes to approve
a request from the State of New Jersey to revise its State
Implementation Plan (SIP) for ozone to incorporate state-adopted
amendments to Subchapter 19 ``Control and Prohibition of Air Pollution
from Oxides of Nitrogen'' and related amendments to Subchapter 16
``Control and Prohibition of Air Pollution by Volatile Organic
Compounds.'' The amendments relate to the control of oxides of nitrogen
(NOX) emissions from stationary industrial sources. This SIP
revision consists of control measures needed to meet the shortfall in
emission reductions in New Jersey's 1-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP as identified by EPA.
The intended effect of this proposed rule is to approve the state
control strategy, which will result in emission reductions that will
help achieve attainment of the national ambient air quality standards
for ozone required by the Clean Air Act (the Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 13, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R02-
OAR-2006-0162, by one of the following methods:
www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line instructions for
submitting comments.
E-mail: Werner.Raymond@epa.gov.
Fax: 212-637-3901.
Mail: Raymond Werner, Chief, Air Programs Branch, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866.
Hand Delivery: Raymond Werner, Chief, Air Programs Branch,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway,
25th Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866. Hand deliveries are only
accepted during the Regional Office's normal hours of operation. The
Regional Office's official hours of business are Monday through Friday,
8:30 to 4:30, excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R02-OAR-
2006-0162. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Do not submit information that you consider to
be CBI or otherwise protected through www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
The www.regulations.gov website is an ``anonymous access'' system,
which means EPA will not know your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an e-
mail comment directly to EPA without going through www.regulations.gov,
your e-mail address will be automatically captured and included as part
of the comment that is placed in the public docket and made available
on the Internet. If you submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends
that you include your name and other contact information in the body of
your comment and with any disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read
your comment due to technical difficulties and cannot contact you for
clarification, EPA may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic
files should avoid the use of special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or viruses. For additional
information about EPA's public docket visit the EPA Docket Center
homepage at https://www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Anthony (Ted) Gardella
gardella.anthony@epa.gov at the Air Programs Branch, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York,
New York 10007-1866, telephone number (212) 637-4249, fax number (212)
637-3901.
Copies of the New Jersey submittals are available at the following
addresses for inspection during normal business hours:
Air Programs Branch, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2
Office, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866.
New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Office of
Energy, Bureau of Air Quality Planning, 401 East State Street, CN027,
Trenton, New Jersey 08625.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: For detailed information on New Jersey's SIP
revisions see the Technical Support Document (TSD), prepared in support
of today's proposed action. A copy of the TSD is available upon request
from the EPA Regional Office listed in the ADDRESSES section or it can
be viewed at www.regulations.gov.
The following table of contents describes the format for this
notice:
I. EPA's Proposed Action
A. What Action Is EPA Proposing Today?
B. Why Is EPA Proposing This Action?
C. What Are the Clean Air Act Requirements for NOX
RACT?
D. What Were the Clean Air Act Requirements for Attainment of
the 1-Hour Ozone Standard?
E. When Was New Jersey's Additional NOX RACT
Requirement Proposed and Adopted?
F. What Is EPA's Evaluation of New Jersey's Submittal?
II. Conclusion
III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. EPA's Proposed Action
A. What Action Is EPA Proposing Today?
EPA proposes to act on a New Jersey submission that includes a new
rule and amendments to Subchapter 19 ``Control and Prohibition of Air
Pollution from Oxides of Nitrogen''; Subchapter 16 ``Control and
Prohibition of Air Pollution by Volatile Organic Compounds'';
Subchapter 8 ``Permits and Certificates for Minor Facilities (and Major
Facilities Without an Operating Permit)''; and Subchapter 22
``Operating Permits.''
Except for certain Open Market Emissions Trading (OMET) Program
provisions in Subchapters 8, 16, and 19,
[[Page 11813]]
and compliance dates beyond November 15, 2007 for repowering and
innovative control technology, as discussed later in this notice, EPA
proposes to approve, as revisions to the New Jersey ozone SIP, the
state-adopted amendments to Subchapter 19 and Subchapter 16, each
adopted by New Jersey on September 8, 2005, and submitted to EPA on
December 16, 2005. EPA is currently reviewing past amendments to
Subchapter 8 and will address the approvability of all Subchapter 8
amendments at the same time in a future action. Subchapter 22 is New
Jersey's operating permit rule that was separately approved under title
V of the Clean Air Act and therefore Subchapter 22 should not have been
submitted as a SIP revision. EPA has reviewed the new amendments to
Subchapter 22 and will formally respond to New Jersey with a letter.
New Jersey amended Subchapter 19 to reduce additional emissions of
NOX in response to emission reduction shortfalls, identified
by EPA (64 FR 70380, December 16, 1999), for attainment of New Jersey's
1-hour ozone standard. New Jersey amended Subchapter 16 to be
consistent with amendments to Subchapter 19. Except for certain
provisions discussed later in this notice, EPA proposes that New
Jersey's state-adopted Subchapters 16 and 19 are fully approvable as a
SIP-strengthening measure for New Jersey's ground level ozone SIP. The
amendments to Subchapters 16 and 19 in New Jersey's submittal meet New
Jersey's commitment by adopting control measures for additional
emission reductions to attain the 1-hour ozone standard and close the
shortfall. Therefore, EPA will not proceed with the May 27, 2004 (69 FR
30249) proposed Finding of Failure to Implement.
B. Why Is EPA Proposing This Action?
EPA is proposing this action to:
Give the public the opportunity to submit comments on
EPA's proposed action;
Approve a control measure which reduces NOX
emissions, a precursor of ozone formation, to help attain the national
ambient air quality standards for ozone;
Fulfill New Jersey's and EPA's requirement under the Act;
and
Make New Jersey's regulations for additional emission
reductions federally enforceable and available for emission reduction
credit in the SIP.
C. What Are the Clean Air Act Requirements for NOX RACT?
The Act requires certain states to develop reasonably available
control technology (RACT) regulations for major stationary sources of
NOX and to provide for their implementation as soon as
practicable but, under the 1-hour ozone standard, no later than May 31,
1995. New Jersey amended Subchapter 19, the State's NOX RACT
regulation, to achieve the needed additional NOX reductions.
Under the Act, the definition of major stationary source is based on
the tons per year (tpy) of air pollution a source emits and the quality
of the air in the area in which the source is located. In ozone
transport regions, defined as attainment/unclassified areas as well as
marginal and moderate ozone nonattainment areas, if a major stationary
source of NOX emits or has the potential to emit 100 tpy or
more of NOX, it is subject to the requirements of a moderate
nonattainment area. New Jersey is within the Northeast ozone transport
region, established by section 184(a) of the Act. In New Jersey,
pursuant to Sec. 19.1 of Subchapter 19, a major stationary source for
NOX emits or has the potential to emit 25 tpy, the level set
for severe ozone nonattainment areas. Consequently, under the 1-hour
ozone standard, all sources of NOX that emit or have the
potential to emit 25 tpy within New Jersey were required to implement
RACT no later than May 31, 1995.
In July 1997, EPA promulgated a revised national ambient air
quality standard for ozone of 0.08 parts per million (ppm). The
standard was based on a three-year average of the annual fourth-highest
daily maximum 8-hour average ozone concentrations measured at each
monitor within an area. On April 30, 2004 (69 FR 23857), EPA
established air quality designations and classifications for every area
in the United States, including New Jersey, for the 8-hour ozone
standard. In the April 2004 rule, EPA designated the entire state of
New Jersey as nonattainment and classified New Jersey as a Subpart 2/
moderate area, effective June 15, 2004. The April 2004 rule also
provided that one year from the effective date of an area's 8-hour
ozone standard designation, the 1-hour ozone standard would no longer
apply (i.e., would be revoked) for that area. In December 2006, the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
vacated the April 2004 rule. S. Coast Air Quality Management Dist. v.
EPA, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 31451. The case is still in litigation, thus
its resolution is unclear. Nonetheless, on February 4, 2002 (67 FR
5152), EPA approved New Jersey's commitment to adopt NOX
emission reductions by November 15, 2007 in order to close emissions
shortfalls and attain the 1-hour ozone standard.
D. What Were the Clean Air Act Requirements for Attainment of the 1-
Hour Ozone Standard?
Section 182 of the Act requires states to submit SIP revisions for
areas classified as nonattainment for ozone and provides dates when the
revisions are to be submitted to EPA by the states. The specific
requirements vary depending upon the severity of the ozone problem. EPA
classified the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island area and the
Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton area severe nonattainment areas (NAA)
under the 1-hour ozone standard. Under section 182 of the Act, severe
ozone nonattainment areas were required to submit demonstrations of how
they would attain the 1-hour ozone standard. As noted above, on
February 4, 2002 (67 FR 5152), EPA approved New Jersey's 1-hour ozone
attainment demonstration, which included New Jersey's commitment to
adopt additional volatile organic compound (VOC) and NOX
emission reductions to close the emissions shortfall.
This proposal addresses the NOX reductions to which New
Jersey committed. For the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island NAA,
the deadline for attainment of the 1-hour ozone standard is November
15, 2007. According to ambient air quality data collected since 2005,
the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton NAA is in attainment for the 1-hour
ozone standard. Although ambient air quality monitors demonstrate
attainment for the 1-hour ozone standard, the Philadelphia-Wilmington-
Trenton NAA has never been reclassified to attainment. As stated above,
EPA has promulgated the 8-hour ozone standard, which, dependant upon
the litigation mentioned above, may supersede the 1-hour ozone standard
from the effective date of the 8-hour ozone designation. If the 1-hour
ozone standard is considered to be revoked, the New York-Northern New
Jersey-Long Island NAA is no longer required to attain the 1-hour ozone
standard by November 15, 2007. In any event, New Jersey is still
required to meet its commitment to reduce additional NOX
emissions to close the emissions shortfall by November 15, 2007. The
emission reductions provided by control measures in the amendments to
Subchapter 19 will also be necessary
[[Page 11814]]
for attainment of the 8-hour ozone standard.
The Ozone Transport Commission (OTC) developed model rules for
potential control measures for achieving NOX reductions for
a number of source categories and estimated the potential emission
reduction benefits from implementing the model rules. The model rules
were designed for use by states in developing their own regulations to
close emission shortfalls. New Jersey used the OTC model rules for
NOX reductions as the basis for the submission upon which
EPA is now acting.
E. When Was New Jersey's NOX RACT Requirement Proposed and
Adopted?
New Jersey proposed NOX RACT rules and related
requirements on September 20, 2004, accepted written comments on them
until November 19, 2004, and held public hearings on them on October
28, 2004. New Jersey adopted the amended NOX RACT and
related requirements on September 8, 2005, and submitted them to EPA
for approval as revisions to the SIP on December 16, 2005. On January
25, 2006, EPA determined the submittal to be administratively and
technically complete.
F. What Is EPA's Evaluation of New Jersey's Submittal?
New Jersey previously submitted SIP revisions to Subchapter 19 to
address the NOX RACT requirements, which EPA approved as SIP
revisions on January 27, 1997 (62 FR 3806) and March 29, 1999 (64 FR
14832). New Jersey also developed a NOX Budget Trading
Program (Subchapter 31), which EPA approved on May 22, 2001 (66 FR
28063). The current submission provides amendments that establish more
stringent RACT limits for facilities that emit NOX. The
following is a summary of EPA's evaluation of New Jersey's December 16,
2005 SIP submittal consisting of amendments to Subchapters 16 and 19.
1. Subchapter 19
New Jersey revised Subchapter 19 to require owners and operators to
implement the following new requirements:
Stationary reciprocating engines. The amended Subchapter 19, which
has a compliance date of March 7, 2007, lowers the presumptive
NOX emission limits and lowers the applicability threshold
for existing stationary reciprocating engines (REs) used for generating
electricity. These amendments apply regardless of whether the source is
located at a facility classified as major for NOX. The
previous rule that was approved into the SIP applied to any engine
source category capable of producing an output of more than 500 brake
horsepower (bhp) (370 kilowatts (kW)). The new NOX emission
limits apply to the following: (1) An engine that has a rated power
output of 148 kW (about 200 bhp) or greater; and (2) a group of two or
more engines each of which has a rated power output of 37 kW (about 50
bhp) or greater, but less than 148 kW, and whose total combined power
output is 148 kW or greater; and (3) an engine capable of producing an
output of 370 kW (500 bhp) or greater.
The new NOX emission limits for these three categories
of engines, expressed as grams NOX per bhp-hour (g/bhp-hr),
range from 1.5 to 2.3 depending upon the type of engine and the fuel
combusted, and will result in additional NOX reductions
ranging from zero percent to 71 percent. The rule provides that lean-
burn engines that combust gaseous fuels must meet either a
NOX emission limit of 1.5 g/bhp-hr or an emission limit
equivalent to an 80 percent reduction from the uncontrolled
NOX emission level. The rule also includes NOX
emission limits for the following two new source categories: (1) Rich-
burn engines that combust liquid fuel and (2) lean-burn engines capable
of combusting dual (gas and liquid) fuels.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter 19 to apply to engines with a
maximum rated power output of 37 kW or greater that are new or modified
on or after March 7, 2007. New engines must meet a NOX
emission limit of 0.90 g/bhp-hr; modified engines are to meet the same
NOX emission limit as new engines or an emission limit that
is equivalent to a 90 percent NOX reduction from the
uncontrolled emission level.
Pursuant to Sec. 19.3(f) of Subchapter 19, owners or operators of
the category of engines mentioned above may comply by meeting the new
presumptive NOX emission limits or by one of the following
existing options: (1) An emissions averaging plan pursuant to
Sec. Sec. 19.6 and 19.14; (2) an alternative maximum allowable
emission limit pursuant to Sec. 19.13; (3) a plan for phased
compliance through the use of repowering pursuant to Sec. 19.21; or
(4) a plan for phased compliance through the use of innovative control
technology pursuant to Sec. 19.23. In accordance with the phased
compliance plan option, owners or operators planning to comply with a
phased compliance plan must fully implement the plan by November 7,
2009 and have begun to comply with interim control measures and other
requirements by March 7, 2007. Pursuant to Sec. 19.20 of Subchapter
19, New Jersey must approve of any phased compliance plan. Applications
to implement the phased compliance plans were due to New Jersey by
February 7, 2006.
Each of the compliance options listed above are addressed below.
First, any emissions averaging plan must be approved by New Jersey,
however EPA approval is not required since the emissions averaging
procedures of Subchapter 19.6 have already been approved by EPA into
the New Jersey SIP. Second, any alternative maximum allowable emission
limit must be approved by New Jersey and submitted for EPA approval as
a SIP revision as provided in Sec. 19.13.
Finally, the phased compliance plan options in Sec. Sec. 19.21 and
19.23 would allow sources to comply with the NOX RACT
requirements in 2009 which is beyond the November 15, 2007 attainment
deadline for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island NAA. Sources
that implement these phased compliance plan options in 2009 would not
help the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island NAA achieve the
NOX reductions needed for attainment of the 1-hour ozone
standard by the November 15, 2007 attainment date. For this reason, the
new amended 2009 compliance date for phased compliance plan options is
not acceptable to EPA. If the amendments to the phased compliance plan
options had a compliance date prior to the start of the 2007 ozone
season this would be acceptable to EPA.
It should be noted that New Jersey received no applications for
phased compliance plan options before New Jersey's application deadline
of February 7, 2006. Therefore, the new amendments to the phased
compliance plan options at Sec. Sec. 19.21 and 19.23 have no practical
effect. Accordingly, EPA is not proposing to approve or disapprove
these sections into the SIP. For the reasons stated above, EPA further
recommends that New Jersey delete the new amendments to Sec. Sec.
19.21 and 19.23 from Subchapter 19. These comments also apply to new
amendments to Subchapter 19 that established phased compliance plan
options for owners or operators of stationary combustion turbines and
owners or operators of industrial/commercial/institutional boilers and
other indirect heat exchangers.
Pursuant to Sec. 19.8(f), effective either in 2005 or 2007,
depending on the engine size, owners and operators of engines used for
generating electricity, whether or not the engine is located at a major
NOX facility or, having a
[[Page 11815]]
maximum rated output of at least 37 kW or greater, shall adjust the
engine's combustion process in accordance with the procedures specified
in Subchapter 19. While combustion process adjustment is expected to
reduce emissions of NOX, New Jersey has indicated that it is
not depending upon these reductions to meet the emissions shortfall.
Stationary combustion turbines. New Jersey amended Subchapter 19 by
lowering the presumptive NOX emission limits and by lowering
the applicability threshold for existing stationary combustion
turbines. The amendments provide that, effective March 7, 2007, the
maximum gross heat input rate applicability threshold for stationary
combustion turbines is 25 MM BTU/hr instead of 30 MM BTU/hr, as was the
case in the previous State rule. Also, New Jersey changed the
NOX emission limits from heat input based limits (pounds per
MM BTU (Lb/MM BTU)) to production output based limits (pounds per
megawatt-hour (Lb/MWh)). Output based limits encourage sources to
improve plant operating efficiency and pollution prevention, such as
clean energy supply, which result in reduced fuel consumption and
reduce emissions of pollutants, including NOX. The new
NOX emission limits for stationary combustion turbines are
in Table 4 of Subchapter 19. For oil fired turbines, the new output
based NOX limits are more stringent, by about 25 percent,
than the previous input based NOX limits. For gas fired
turbines, the new NOX emission limits are as stringent as
the previous NOX emission limits. One exception is that
owners or operators of NOX budget sources, regulated under
Subchapter 31, shall continue to be subject to the current SIP-approved
NOX emission limits provided in Tables 2 and 3 of Subchapter
19.
Pursuant to Sec. 19.5(d), owners or operators of stationary
combustion turbines, with a maximum gross heat input rate of at least
25 MM BTU/hr, have the option of complying with any one of the
following: (1) The new presumptive output based NOX emission
limits provided in Table 4 of Subchapter 19; (2) the alternative
compliance options, in Sec. 19.3(f) of Subchapter 19, as described
above, for stationary reciprocating engines; and (3) a SIP-approved
compliance option pursuant to Sec. 19.5(c) of Subchapter 19, which
requires the owner or operator to obtain New Jersey's approval of its
application demonstrating an insufficient supply of water to the
turbine suitable for NOX emission control and to establish
that no commercially available dry-low NOX combustor
suitable for use in the specific turbine. It should be noted that EPA
believes that the reference in Sec. 19.5(d) to ``(c)1 through 5
below'' is a typographical error. EPA believes that the reference
should read ``(c)1 through 5 above,'' and that New Jersey should
correct the error accordingly.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter 19 to require an owner or
operator of a turbine, with a maximum gross heat input rate of at least
25 MM BTU/hr, to adjust the turbine's combustion process in accordance
with the procedures specified in Subchapter 19, starting in either 2005
or 2007, depending upon the turbine's heat input rate.
Industrial/commercial/institutional boilers and other indirect heat
exchangers. New Jersey amended Subchapter 19 by lowering certain
presumptive NOX emission limits and by lowering the
applicability threshold for annual combustion process adjustments for
industrial/commercial/institutional (ICI) boilers and other indirect
heat exchangers (IHE). The amendments provide that, effective March 7,
2007, the NOX emission limits for natural gas fired ICI
boilers or other IHEs that have a maximum gross heat input rate of at
least 100 MM BTU/hr is lowered to 0.10 lb NOX/MM BTU from
0.20 lb NOX/MM BTU and 0.43 lb NOX/MM BTU. The
change represents a reduction in NOX emissions ranging from
50 percent to almost 77 percent, depending upon whether the firing
method type is tangential, face or cyclone. New Jersey did not revise
the NOX emission limits for other size or type ICI boilers
or other IHEs. The new NOX emission limits for ICI boilers
and other IHEs are in provided Table 7 of Subchapter 19.
As with owners and operators of stationary combustion turbines and
stationary reciprocating engines, owners and operators of ICI boilers
and other IHEs have the option of complying with either the new
presumptive NOX emission limits or the alternative
compliance options, pursuant to Sec. 19.3(f) of Subchapter 19, as
described above for stationary reciprocating engines.
New Jersey also amended Subchapter 19 by lowering the applicability
threshold of 20 MM BTU/hr heat input rate for sources required to
annually adjust their combustion process. The amendments provide that,
effective March 7, 2007, the applicability threshold for such sources
is 5 MM BTU/hr maximum gross heat input rate. This threshold applies
regardless of whether the source is located at a facility classified as
major for NOX. Effective in either 2007, 2008, or 2010,
depending upon the source's heat input rate, owners or operators of
such sources are required to adjust the combustion process in
accordance with the procedures specified in Subchapter 19.
Emergency generators. New Jersey amended Subchapter 19 by adding a
new provision, Sec. 19.11, which requires owners and operators of
emergency generators with a maximum rated output of 37 kW, to maintain
detailed and specific records on site for five years whenever an
emergency generator has been in use. In addition, New Jersey amended
Sec. 19.2(d) by deleting the following two conditions for an emergency
generator exemption from Subchapter 19: (1) 500 hours operating
restriction over any consecutive twelve month period; and (2) potential
to emit (PTE) of less than 25 tpy NOX emissions during an
annual period of operation.
EPA has determined that New Jersey's additional amendments to Sec.
19.2(d), and to the definition of emergency generators in Sec. 19.1,
clarify when emergency generators shall and shall not be used. These
amendments combined with the new recordkeeping provisions in Sec.
19.11 provide New Jersey and EPA with information for any enforcement
action, if needed.
During the public comment period, a citizen commented that the
removal of the 500 hour emergency operation time limit made the PTE
analysis and netting analysis for a source ambiguous. EPA's September
1995 guidance entitled, ``Calculating Potential to Emit (PTE) for
Emergency Generators,'' establishes the criteria for determining a
source's PTE and recommends 500 hours as an appropriate default
assumption for estimating the number of hours an emergency generator
could be expected to operate under worst-case conditions. EPA's PTE
guidance for emergency generators also states that alternative
estimates can be made on a case-by-case basis where justified by the
source owner or permitting authority.
New Jersey deleted the 500 hour operating restriction for emergency
generators from Subchapter 19 because it believed that ``hours of
operation'' is not an appropriate criteria for defining an emergency
generator. In a communication to EPA, New Jersey interpreted the EPA
proposed rule ``Standards of Performance for Stationary Compression
Ignition Internal Combustion Engines'' (70 FR 39869, July 11, 2005), as
further justification for deletion of the 500 hour restriction. In a
February 14, 2006 letter to New Jersey, EPA responded that New Jersey
misinterpreted EPA's July 2005 proposed rule and that ``for purposes of
[[Page 11816]]
the NSR and title V programs New Jersey should continue as they have
and permit emergency units at some amount of operation sufficiently
large to cover emergencies (i.e., 500 hours per year). Malfunctions
that may require the operation of the emergency units and that may
exceed the 500 hours/year limit could be handled through enforcement
discretion on a case-by-case basis, as appropriate.'' Therefore, PTE
requirements for emergency generators should be included in New
Jersey's operating permit regulations, i.e., Subchapters 8 and 22, and
should include the provisions that were deleted from the current SIP
approved Subchapter 19, i.e., (1) the 500 hour annual operational
restriction, or some other appropriate operating period in accordance
with EPA's September 1995 guidance, and (2) the exemption for sources
with a PTE of less than 25 tpy NOX.
While EPA proposes to approve the new emergency generator
provisions, for rule consistency, EPA believes it appropriate, although
not required, that New Jersey revise the currently adopted Subchapter
19 to also include the emergency generator restrictions identified in
the current SIP-approved Subchapter 19. EPA would consider new language
within Subchapter 19 that would allow owners and operators to operate
emergency generators without restriction to operating hours for special
situations such as when the governor of New Jersey declared an
emergency because of an unprecedented and unexpectedly long blackout or
a force majeure event (like a severe hurricane).
Open Market Emissions Trading (OMET) Program. In July 1996, New
Jersey adopted amendments to Subchapter 19 for consistency with the
state-adopted Subchapter 30, called the OMET Program. The OMET Program,
and amendments to Subchapter 19, permitted a source regulated under
Subchapter 19 to meet its NOX RACT emission requirements by
purchasing discrete emission reduction credits (DERs). The DERs were
generated by a source that reduced NOX emissions beyond its
regulatory requirements. EPA and New Jersey identified a number of
problems with the OMET Program. EPA withdrew its proposed conditional
approval of the OMET Program on October 18, 2002 and New Jersey
terminated Subchapter 30 on February 25, 2004. On April 5, 2004, New
Jersey amended Subchapter 19, withdrew the OMET provisions adopted in
July 1996, and replaced them with new provisions that included a
compliance schedule for the affected OMET sources. The latter OMET
compliance provisions are included in New Jersey's December 2005 SIP
revision to EPA.
EPA objected to the new OMET compliance schedule, and related
compliance requirements for sources subject to NOX RACT
regulation. The new OMET compliance schedule would allow sources to
comply with the NOX RACT requirements of Subchapter 19
beyond the May 31, 1995 compliance date deadline mandated by the Act.
In a December 2005 SIP submittal letter, New Jersey committed to delete
OMET from Subchapter 19, and from Subchapters 8 and 16. Therefore, EPA
expects New Jersey, in future rulemaking, to delete the OMET-related
provisions in Subchapters 8, 16 and 19, i.e., Sec. Sec. 8.3(o),
8.20(b)(3), 16.1A(g), 16.1A(h), 19.3(g), 19.3(h), 19.27, and the 19.27
Appendix, and is not approving them into the SIP.
Additional amendments to Subchapter 19. New Jersey adopted a number
of other amendments since EPA last approved amendments to Subchapter 19
(64 FR 14832, March 29, 1999). Among other things, these amendments:
(1) Revised terms and definitions that do not change the meaning or
stringency of the provisions; (2) revised the due date for permit
applications and submittals of NOX Control Plans, pursuant
to Sec. 19.13, to February 7, 2006; (3) revised Sec. Sec. 19.2 and
19.9 by deleting the applicability threshold of 25 tpy PTE
NOX for asphalt plants, which made the provisions more
stringent; (4) revised the ozone season closing date to September 30 to
conform with the closing date provided in Subchapter 31, the
NOX Budget Program; and (5) revised testing requirements to
conform with certain new control measures for stationary reciprocating
engines.
2. Subchapter 16
The amendments to Subchapter 16 are administrative in nature and
ensure consistency with the amendments to Subchapter 19. The amendments
to Subchapter 16 include the following: (1) Revised terms and
definitions that do not change the meaning or stringency of the
provisions; (2) lowered applicability thresholds for the following
source categories that are required to implement annual combustion
adjustments: (a) Small boilers and IHEs, not used for generating
electricity; (b) stationary combustion turbines; and (c) stationary
reciprocating engines, if used to generate electricity; and (3) a
revised definition and recordkeeping requirements for emergency
generators.
3. Summary of EPA's Evaluation
EPA expects that the revisions to Subchapter 19 will result in
additional reductions in NOX emissions to help New Jersey
meet the emissions reduction shortfall and attain the ozone standard.
EPA evaluated New Jersey's SIP submittal and proposes to find
Subchapters 16 and 19 approvable. However, as explained above, EPA
takes no action on and expects New Jersey to delete: (1) All OMET
provisions in Subchapters 8, 16 and 19; (2) the new amendments to
phased compliance plan through repowering in Sec. 19.21; and (3) the
new amendments to phased compliance plan through the use of innovative
control technology in Sec. 19.23. The December 16, 2005 SIP submittal
will strengthen New Jersey's SIP for reducing ground level ozone by
providing additional NOX reductions beginning on March 7,
2007.
EPA completed a detailed analysis and evaluation to determine the
approvability of New Jersey's December 16, 2005 SIP revision. EPA's
evaluation of the SIP submittal is detailed in a document entitled
``Technical Support Document--NOX RACT SIP Revision--State
of New Jersey.'' A copy of that document is available, upon request,
from the EPA Regional Office listed in the ADDRESSES section of this
document or the Technical Support Document can be viewed at https://
www.regulations.gov.
II. Conclusions
EPA evaluated New Jersey's submittal for consistency with the Act,
EPA regulations and EPA policy. The proposed new control measures will
strengthen the SIP by providing additional NOX emission
reductions. Accordingly, EPA is proposing to approve the revisions to
Subchapter 19, and related revisions to Subchapter 16, as adopted on
September 8, 2005, except that EPA is not acting, at this time, on OMET
Program provisions in Subchapters 16 and 19 or the new amendments to
phased compliance plans by repowering and innovative control technology
in Sec. Sec. 19.21 and 19.23, respectively. EPA is not approving any
dates that allow for NOX RACT compliance beyond May 31,
1995, in general, and beyond May 1, 1999 for completion of repowering
for sources that should have complied by the date required in the March
29, 1999 EPA-approved SIP. In addition, at a later date, EPA will act
on Subchapter 8, as adopted by New Jersey on September 8, 2005.
With the adoption of Subchapter 19, New Jersey has fulfilled its
obligation to
[[Page 11817]]
adopt all six control measures that New Jersey identified as necessary
to attain the 1-hour ozone standard. Therefore, EPA will not proceed
with the May 27, 2004 (69 FR 30249) proposed Finding of Failure to
Implement.
III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
proposed action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' and
therefore is not subject to review by the Office of Management and
Budget. For this reason, this action is also not subject to Executive
Order 13211, ``Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use'' (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001). This
action merely proposes to approve state law as meeting Federal
requirements and imposes no additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. Accordingly, the Administrator certifies that
this proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). Because this rule proposes to approve pre-
existing requirements under state law and does not impose any
additional enforceable duty beyond that required by state law, it does
not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or uniquely affect
small governments, as described in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104-4).
This proposed rule also does not have tribal implications because
it will not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes, as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). This action also does not
have Federalism implications because it does not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government, as specified
in Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999). This action
merely proposes to approve a state rule implementing a Federal
standard, and does not alter the relationship or the distribution of
power and responsibilities established in the Clean Air Act. This
proposed rule also is not subject to Executive Order 13045 ``Protection
of Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks'' (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997), because it is not economically significant.
In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. In
this context, in the absence of a prior existing requirement for the
State to use voluntary consensus standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for EPA, when it reviews a SIP
submission, to use VCS in place of a SIP submission that otherwise
satisfies the provisions of the Clean Air Act. Thus, the requirements
of section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272) do not apply. This proposed rule does not
impose an information collection burden under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: March 6, 2007.
Alan J. Steinberg,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. E7-4665 Filed 3-13-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P