Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; New Jersey: Clean Air Interstate Rule, 36406-36413 [E7-12874]
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approves a state rule implementing a
Federal standard.
In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. In this context, in the
absence of a prior existing requirement
for the State to use voluntary consensus
standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for
failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission,
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. As required by
section 3 of Executive Order 12988 (61
FR 4729, February 7, 1996), in issuing
this proposed rule, EPA has taken the
necessary steps to eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity, minimize
potential litigation, and provide a clear
legal standard for affected conduct. EPA
has complied with Executive Order
12630 (53 FR 8859, March 15, 1988) by
examining the takings implications of
the rule in accordance with the
‘‘Attorney General’s Supplemental
Guidelines for the Evaluation of Risk
and Avoidance of Unanticipated
Takings’’ issued under the executive
order.
This proposed rule, pertaining to
Virginia’s control of particulate matter
from pulp and paper mills, 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, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 22, 2007.
Donald S. Welsh,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. E7–12838 Filed 7–2–07; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and Part 97
[Docket No. EPA–R02–OAR–2007–0233;
FRL–8334–9]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; New Jersey:
Clean Air Interstate Rule
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing action on a
revision to New Jersey’s State
Implementation Plan (SIP) submitted on
February 6, 2007. EPA is proposing to
fully approve its incorporation into the
SIP provided New Jersey’s final rule is
consistent with the modifications
discussed herein.
This revision incorporates provisions
related to the implementation of EPA’s
Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) and the
CAIR Federal Implementation Plans
(CAIR FIPs) concerning sulfur dioxide
(SO2), and annual and ozone season
oxides of nitrogen (NOX) emissions.
EPA is not proposing to make any
changes to the CAIR FIPs, but is
proposing to the extent EPA approves
New Jersey’s SIP revision, to amend the
appropriate appendices in the CAIR FIP
trading rules simply to note that
approval.
On April 28, 2006, EPA promulgated
CAIR FIPs for States covered by CAIR as
a backstop to implement the
requirements of CAIR until States have
obtained fully approved SIPs to replace
the FIPs. The FIPs require certain
electric generating units (EGUs) to
participate in the Federal CAIR cap-andtrade programs addressing SO2, NOX
annual, and NOX ozone season
emissions. The CAIR FIPs also provide
that States may submit ‘‘abbreviated’’
SIP revisions to replace or supplement
specific elements of the FIPs, leaving
the remainder of the overall FIPs in
place, rather than submitting full SIP
revisions that replace the FIPs.
The New Jersey SIP revision that EPA
is proposing to approve is an
abbreviated SIP revision that will
replace two provisions of the CAIR FIP
that allow the State to: (1) Use a
methodology chosen by the State for
allocation of annual and ozone season
NOX allowances and; (2) use a
methodology chosen by the State for
allocation of NOX annual allowances
from the NOX annual Compliance
Supplemental Pool (CSP). The revision
retires, rather than allocates allowances
from the NOX annual CSP.
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The SIP revision that EPA is
proposing to approve will also satisfy
New Jersey’s 110(a)(2)(D)(i) obligations
to submit a SIP revision that contains
adequate provisions to prohibit air
emissions from adversely affecting
another State’s air quality through
interstate transport.
The intent of this proposed revision is
to approve a State specific CAIR
program which will result in emission
reductions necessary to prevent the
interstate transport of air pollutants. The
revision also shows that the interstate
transport of pollutants from the State
has been adequately addressed in the
applicable implementation plan.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 2, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R02–
OAR–2007–0233, by one of the
following methods:
1. https://www.regulations.gov: Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
2. E-mail: Werner.Raymond@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (212) 637–3901.
4. Mail: Docket ID No. EPA–R02–
OAR–2007–0233, Raymond Werner,
Chief, Air Programs Branch,
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007–
1866.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Raymond
Werner, Chief, Air Programs Branch,
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007–
1866. Such deliveries are only accepted
during the Regional Office’s normal
hours of operation. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business is
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R02–OAR–2007–
0233. 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 through
www.regulations.gov or e-mail,
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected. The
www.regulations.gov Web site 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
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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 and any form of
encryption and should 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.
Docket: All documents in the
electronic docket are listed in the
www.regulations.gov index. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, i.e., CBI or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically in www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the Air Programs
Branch, Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway,
25th Floor, New York, New York
10007–1866.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions concerning today’s
proposal, please contact Kenneth
Fradkin, Air Programs Branch,
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007–
1866. The telephone number is (212)
637–3702. Mr. Fradkin can also be
reached via electronic mail at
fradkin.kenneth@epa.gov.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing To Take?
II. What Is the Regulatory History of CAIR
and the CAIR FIPs?
III. What Are the General Requirements of
CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
IV. What Are the Types of CAIR SIP
Submittals?
V. What Is the Result of EPA’s Evaluation of
New Jersey’s CAIR SIP Submittal?
A. State Budgets for Allowance Allocations
B. CAIR Cap-and-Trade Programs
C. Applicability Provisions for Non-EGUs
NOX SIP Call Sources
D. NOX Allowance Allocations
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E. Allocation of NOX Allowances From the
Compliance Supplement Pool
F. Individual Opt-In Units
G. Satisfying Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the
Clean Air Act
VI. Conclusion
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing To
Take?
CAIR SIP and 110(a)(2)(D)(i) Approval
EPA is proposing to approve a
revision to New Jersey’s SIP, submitted
on February 6, 2007, which was
published in the New Jersey Register on
February 5, 2007. The revision modifies
the application of certain provisions of
the CAIR FIP which requires emission
reductions of SO2, NOX annual, and
NOX ozone season emissions. (As
discussed later, this less comprehensive
CAIR SIP is termed an abbreviated SIP.)
This revision includes a new proposed
regulation, N.J.A.C. 7:27–30, Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR) NOX Trading
Program. As part of the revision, New
Jersey has also proposed at N.J.A.C.
7:27–31.23 the date when New Jersey’s
CAIR NOX Trading Program will replace
New Jersey’s NOX Budget Trading
Program (Subchapter 31).
This action is being proposed under a
procedure called parallel processing.
Under parallel processing, EPA
proposes action on a State submission
before it has been formally adopted and
submitted to EPA, and will take final
action on its proposal if the final
submission is substantially unchanged
from the submission on which the
proposal is based, or if significant
changes in the final submission are
anticipated and adequately described in
EPA’s proposal as a basis for EPA’s
proposed action.
This proposed approval is contingent
upon New Jersey making the necessary
changes to New Jersey’s proposed CAIR
rule in order to address EPA’s concerns
discussed in section V, Part D (NOX
Allowance Allocations). If EPA
determines New Jersey’s final
submission is consistent with the
necessary changes outlined in this
proposed action, EPA may proceed to
publish its full approval of New Jersey’s
CAIR SIP in the Federal Register. The
final rule that New Jersey submits to
EPA must be consistent with the
changes discussed in this action for EPA
to fully approve its incorporation into
the SIP.
If New Jersey is unable to make the
required changes upon adoption, and
must repropose their rule, EPA will
finalize a partial approval in lieu of a
full approval. Under the partial
approval alternative, EPA would
approve those portions of the rule
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consistent with EPA requirements into
the SIP and disapprove those not
consistent. EPA believes the approvable
portions of the rule strengthen New
Jersey’s SIP by allowing the State to be
the implementing authority, and make
allocations consistent with New Jersey’s
air quality goals. EPA recognizes that
the Clean Air Act assigns first
responsibility to the States, and it is
EPA’s preference to defer, wherever
possible, to States the decisions about
control mechanisms to prevent
significant contribution, including
States’ decisions about allocation of
NOX allowances. If EPA finalizes a
partial approval, EPA would
concurrently disapprove those portions
of the rule for not meeting those
applicable requirements.
New Jersey is subject to the CAIR FIPs
that implement the CAIR requirements
by requiring certain Electric Generating
Units (EGUs) to participate in the EPAadministered Federal CAIR SO2, NOX
annual, and NOX ozone season cap-andtrade programs. The SIP revision
provides a methodology for allocating
NOX allowances for the NOX annual,
and NOX ozone season trading
programs. The CAIR FIPs provide that
this methodology, if approved as EPA is
proposing, will be used to allocate NOX
allowances to sources in New Jersey,
instead of the Federal allocation
methodology otherwise provided in the
FIPs. The SIP revision also retires rather
than allocates allowances from the NOX
annual Compliance Supplement Pool
(CSP). Consistent with the flexibility
provided in the FIPs, these provisions,
if approved, will also be used to replace
or supplement, as appropriate, the
corresponding provisions in the CAIR
FIPs for New Jersey. EPA is not
proposing to make any changes to the
CAIR FIP, but is proposing, to the extent
EPA approves New Jersey’s SIP revision,
to amend the appropriate appendices in
the CAIR FIP trading rules simply to
note that approval. New Jersey’s
proposed rule does not modify the CAIR
FIP regarding SO2.
Because New Jersey’s CAIR Program
will replace the State’s NOX Budget
Program (subchapter 31) beginning with
the 2009 control period, it is necessary
for New Jersey to establish at N.J.A.C.
7:27–31.23 a transition date for the NOX
Budget Trading Program to prevent an
overlap of ozone season cap and trade
programs for NOX. The NOX Budget
Trading Program’s non-electric
generating units and small electric
generating units (EGUs) that are not
covered under New Jersey’s CAIR NOX
Trading Program will be subject to New
Jersey’s Reasonable Available Control
Technology (RACT) or state of the art
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rules. EPA will propose a separate
rulemaking on New Jersey’s RACT at a
later date.
In addition, EPA is also proposing to
approve a revision to New Jersey’s SIP
to address the requirements of section
110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the Clean Air Act. This
section of the Act requires each State to
submit a SIP that prohibits emissions
that could adversely affect another
State. The SIP must prevent sources in
the State from emitting pollutants in
amounts which will: (1) Contribute
significantly to downwind
nonattainment of the NAAQS, (2)
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS, (3) interfere with provisions to
prevent significant deterioration of air
quality, and (4) interfere with efforts to
protect visibility.
II. What Is the Regulatory History of the
CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
The Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR)
was published by EPA on May 12, 2005
(70 FR 25162). In this rule, EPA
determined that 28 States and the
District of Columbia contribute
significantly to nonattainment and
interfere with maintenance of the
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS) for fine particles (PM2.5)
and/or 8-hour ozone in downwind
States in the eastern part of the country.
As a result, EPA required those upwind
States to revise their SIPs to include
control measures that reduce emissions
of SO2, which is a precursor to PM2.5
formation, and/or NOX, which is a
precursor to both ozone and PM2.5
formation. For jurisdictions that
contribute significantly to downwind
PM2.5 nonattainment, CAIR sets annual
State-wide emission reduction
requirements (i.e., budgets) for SO2 and
annual State-wide emission reduction
requirements for NOX. Similarly, for
jurisdictions that contribute
significantly to 8-hour ozone
nonattainment, CAIR sets State-wide
emission reduction requirements for
NOX for the ozone season (May 1st to
September 30th). Under CAIR, States
may implement these emission budgets
by participating in the EPAadministered cap-and-trade programs or
by adopting any other control measures.
CAIR explains to subject States what
must be included in SIPs to address the
requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D) of
the Clean Air Act (CAA) with regard to
interstate transport with respect to the
8-hour ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS. EPA
made national findings, effective May
25, 2005, that the States had failed to
submit SIPs meeting the requirements of
section 110(a)(2)(D). The SIPs were due
in July 2000, 3 years after the
promulgation of the 8-hour ozone and
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PM2.5 NAAQS. These May 25, 2005
findings started a 2-year clock for EPA
to promulgate a Federal Implementation
Plan (FIP) to address the requirements
of section 110(a)(2)(D). Under CAA
section 110(c)(1), EPA may issue a FIP
anytime after such findings are made
and must do so within two years unless
a SIP revision correcting the deficiency
is approved by EPA before the FIP is
promulgated. On August 17, 2006 EPA
issued guidance for SIP submissions
states should make to address the
requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)
for the 8-hour ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS.
On April 28, 2006 EPA promulgated
FIPs for all States covered by CAIR in
order to ensure the emissions reductions
required by CAIR are achieved on
schedule. Each CAIR State is subject to
the FIPs until the State fully adopts, and
EPA approves, a SIP revision meeting
the requirements of CAIR. The CAIR
FIPs require certain EGUs to participate
in the EPA-administered CAIR SO2,
NOX annual, and NOX ozone-season
model trading programs, as appropriate.
The CAIR FIP SO2, NOX annual, and
NOX ozone season trading programs
impose essentially the same
requirements as, and are integrated
with, the respective CAIR SIP trading
programs. The integration of the CAIR
FIP and SIP trading programs means
that these trading programs will work
together to create effectively a single
trading program for each regulated
pollutant (SO2, NOX annual, and NOX
ozone season) in all States covered by a
CAIR FIP or SIP trading program for that
pollutant. The CAIR FIPs also allow
States to submit abbreviated SIP
revisions that, if approved by EPA, will
automatically replace or supplement the
corresponding CAIR FIP provisions
(e.g., the methodology for allocating
NOX allowances to sources in the State),
while the CAIR FIP remains in place for
all other provisions.
On April 28, 2006, EPA published
two more CAIR-related final rules that
added the State of Delaware and New
Jersey to the list of States subject to
CAIR for PM2.5 and announced EPA’s
final decisions on reconsideration of
five issues without making any
substantive changes to the CAIR
requirements. The five issues addressed
SO2 allocation methodology; fuel
adjustment factors used in establishing
State NOX budgets; inputs to the fine
particle (PM2.5) modeling used to
determine whether Minnesota should be
included in the CAIR region for PM2.5;
EPA’s determination that Florida should
be included in the CAIR region for
ozone; and the potential impact of a
judicial opinion, New York v. EPA, 413
F.3d 3 (DC Cir. 2005), on EPA’s previous
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determination that CAIR is highly costeffective and timing of compliance
dates.
III. What Are the General Requirements
of CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
CAIR establishes State-wide emission
budgets for SO2 and NOX and is to be
implemented in two phases. The first
phase of NOX reductions starts in 2009
and continues through 2014, while the
first phase of SO2 reductions starts in
2010 and continues through 2014. The
second phase of reductions for both
NOX and SO2 starts in 2015 and
continues thereafter. CAIR requires
States to implement the budgets by
either: (1) Requiring EGUs to participate
in the EPA-administered cap-and-trade
programs: or, (2) adopting other control
measures of the State’s choosing and
demonstrating that such control
measures will result in compliance with
the applicable State SO2 and NOX
budgets.
The May 12, 2005 and April 28, 2006
CAIR rules provide model rules that
States must adopt (with certain limited
changes, if desired) if they want to
participate in the EPA-administered
trading programs.
With two exceptions, only States that
choose to meet the requirements of
CAIR through methods that exclusively
regulate EGUs are allowed to participate
in the EPA-administered trading
programs. One exception is for States
that adopt the opt-in provisions of the
model rules to allow non-EGUs
individually to opt into the EPAadministered trading programs. The
other exception is for States that include
all non-EGUs from their NOX SIP Call
trading programs in their CAIR NOX
ozone season trading programs.
IV. What Are the Types of CAIR SIP
Submittals?
States have the flexibility to choose
the type of control measures they will
use to meet the requirements of CAIR.
EPA anticipates that most States will
choose to meet the CAIR requirements
by selecting an option that requires
EGUs to participate in the EPAadministered CAIR cap-and-trade
programs. For such States, EPA has
provided two approaches for submitting
and obtaining approval for CAIR SIP
revisions. States may submit full SIP
revisions that adopt the model CAIR
cap-and-trade rules. If approved, these
SIP revisions will fully replace the CAIR
FIPs. Alternatively, States may submit
abbreviated SIP revisions. These SIP
revisions will not replace the CAIR FIPs;
however, the CAIR FIPs provide that,
when approved, the provisions in these
abbreviated SIP revisions will be used
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instead of or in conjunction with, as
appropriate, the corresponding
provisions of the CAIR FIPs (e.g., the
NOX allowance allocation
methodology).
A State submitting an abbreviated SIP
revision, may submit limited SIP
revisions to tailor the CAIR FIP cap-andtrade programs to the State submitting
the revision. Specifically, an
abbreviated SIP revision may establish
certain applicability and allowance
allocation provisions that will be used
instead of or in conjunction with the
corresponding provisions in the CAIR
FIP rules in that State. Specifically, the
abbreviated SIP revisions may:
1. Include all NOX SIP Call trading
sources that are not EGUs under CAIR
in the CAIR FIP NOX ozone season
trading program;
2. Provide for allocation of NOX
annual or ozone season allowances by
the State, rather than the Administrator,
and use a methodology chosen by the
State;
3. Provide for allocation of NOX
annual allowances from the CSP by the
State, rather than by the Administrator,
and use the State’s choice of allowed,
alternative methodologies; or
4. Allow units that are not otherwise
CAIR units to opt individually into the
CAIR FIP cap-and-trade programs under
the opt-in provisions in the CAIR FIP
rules.
With approval of an abbreviated SIP
revision, the CAIR FIP remains in place,
as tailored to sources in the State by that
approved SIP revision.
Abbreviated SIP revisions can be
submitted in lieu of, or as part of, CAIR
full SIP revisions. States may want to
designate part of their full SIP as an
abbreviated SIP for EPA to act on first
when the timing of the State’s
submission might not provide EPA with
sufficient time to approve the full SIP
prior to the deadline for recording NOX
allocations. This will help ensure that
the elements of the trading programs,
where flexibility is allowed, are
implemented according to the State’s
decisions. Submission of an abbreviated
SIP revision does not preclude future
submission of a CAIR full SIP revision.
In this case, the February 6, 2007
submittal from New Jersey has been
submitted as an abbreviated SIP
revision.
V. What Is the Result of EPA’s
Evaluation of New Jersey’s CAIR SIP
Submittal?
A. State Budgets for Allowance
Allocations
The CAIR NOX annual and ozone
season budgets were developed from
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historical heat input data for EGUs.
Using these data, EPA calculated annual
and ozone season regional heat input
values, which were multiplied by
0.15 lb/mmBtu, for phase 1, and
0.125 lb/mmBtu, for phase 2, to obtain
regional NOX budgets for 2009–2014
and for 2015 and thereafter,
respectively. EPA derived the State NOX
annual and ozone season budgets from
the regional budgets using State heat
input data adjusted by fuel factors.
The CAIR State SO2 budgets were
derived by discounting the tonnage of
emissions authorized by annual
allowance allocations under the Acid
Rain Program under title IV of the CAA.
Under CAIR, each allowance allocated
under the Acid Rain Program for the
years in phase 1 of CAIR (2010 through
2014) authorizes 0.5 ton of SO2
emissions in the CAIR trading program,
and each Acid Rain Program allowance
allocated for the years in phase 2 of
CAIR (2015 and thereafter) authorizes
0.35 ton of SO2 emissions in the CAIR
trading program.
The CAIR FIP established the EGU
budgets for New Jersey as 12,670 tons
for the years 2009–2014 (Phase I) and
10,558 tons for the years 2015 and
beyond (Phase II) for NOX annual
emissions; 6,654 tons for the years
2009–2014 (Phase I) and 5,545 tons for
the years 2015 and beyond (Phase II) for
NOX ozone season emissions; and
32,392 tons for the years 2010–2014
(Phase I) and 22,674 tons for the years
2015 and beyond (Phase II) for SO2
emissions. New Jersey’s SIP revision,
proposed for approval in today’s action,
does not affect these budgets, which are
the total amount of allowances available
for allocation for each year under the
EPA-administered cap-and-trade
program under the CAIR FIP. In short,
the abbreviated SIP revision only affects
allocations of allowances under the
established budgets.
B. CAIR Cap-and-Trade Programs
The CAIR NOX annual and ozoneseason FIPs both largely mirror the
structure of the NOX SIP Call model
trading rule in 40 CFR part 96, subparts
A through I. While the provisions of the
NOX annual and ozone-season FIPs are
similar, there are some differences. For
example, the NOX annual FIP (but not
the NOX ozone season FIP) provides for
a CSP, which is discussed below and
under which allowances may be
awarded for early reductions of NOX
annual emissions. As a further example,
the NOX ozone season FIP reflects the
fact that the CAIR NOX ozone season
trading program replaces the NOX SIP
Call trading program for EGUs after the
2008 ozone season and is coordinated
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with the NOX SIP Call program. States
also have the option of continuing to
meet their NOX SIP Call non-EGU
reduction obligations by participating in
the CAIR NOX ozone season trading
program and including all their NOX SIP
Call trading sources in that program. In
addition the NOX ozone season FIP
provides incentives for early emissions
reductions by allowing banked, pre–
2009 NOX SIP Call allowances to be
used for compliance in the CAIR NOX
ozone-season trading program.
The provisions of the CAIR SO2 FIP
are also similar to the provisions of the
NOX annual and ozone season FIPs.
However, the SO2 FIP is coordinated
with the ongoing Acid Rain SO2 capand-trade program under CAA title IV.
The SO2 FIP uses the title IV allowances
for compliance, with each allowance
allocated for 2010–2014 authorizing
only 0.50 ton of emissions and each
allowance allocated for 2015 and
thereafter authorizing only 0.35 ton of
emissions. Banked title IV allowances
allocated for years before 2010 can be
used at any time in the CAIR SO2 capand-trade program, with each such
allowance authorizing 1 ton of
emissions. Title IV allowances are to be
freely transferable among sources
covered by the Acid Rain Program and
sources covered by the CAIR SO2 capand-trade program.
EPA used the CAIR model trading
rules as the basis for the trading
programs in the CAIR FIPs. The CAIR
FIP trading rules are virtually identical
to the CAIR model trading rules, with
changes made to account for Federal
rather than State implementation. The
CAIR model SO2, NOX annual, and NOX
ozone season trading rules and the
respective CAIR FIP trading rules are
designed to work together as integrated
SO2, NOX annual, and NOX ozone
season trading programs.
New Jersey is subject to the CAIR FIPs
for ozone and PM2.5 and the CAIR FIP
trading programs for SO2, NOX annual,
and NOX ozone season applies to
sources in New Jersey. Consistent with
the flexibility it gives to States, the CAIR
FIPs provide that States may submit
abbreviated SIP revisions that will
replace or supplement, as appropriate,
certain provisions of the CAIR FIP
trading programs. New Jersey has
elected to propose these rules for its
EGU sources as part of the abbreviated
SIP which was submitted on February 6,
2007.
C. Applicability Provisions for Non-EGU
NOX SIP Call Sources
In general, the CAIR FIP trading
programs apply to any stationary, fossilfuel-fired boiler or stationary, fossil-
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fuel-fired combustion turbine serving at
any time, since the later of November
15, 1990 or the start-up of the unit’s
combustion chamber, a generator with
nameplate capacity of more than 25
MWe producing electricity for sale.
States have the option of bringing in,
for the CAIR NOX ozone season program
only, those units in the State’s NOX SIP
Call trading program that are not EGUs
as defined under CAIR. EPA advises
States exercising this option to use
provisions for applicability that are
substantively identical to the provisions
in 40 CFR 96.304 and add the
applicability provisions in the State’s
NOX SIP Call trading rule for non-EGUs
to the applicability provisions in 40 CFR
96.304 in order to include in the CAIR
NOX ozone season trading program all
units required to be in the State’s NOX
SIP Call trading program that are not
already included under 40 CFR 96.304.
Under this option, the CAIR NOX ozone
season program must cover all large
industrial boilers and combustion
turbines, as well as any small EGUs (i.e.
units serving a generator with a
nameplate capacity of 25 MWe or less),
that the State currently requires to be in
the NOX SIP Call trading program.
Consistent with the flexibility given to
States in the CAIR FIP, New Jersey has
not chosen to expand the applicability
provisions of the CAIR NOX ozone
season trading program to include all
non-EGUs in the State’s NOX SIP Call
trading program. New Jersey’s nonEGUs and small electric generating units
(EGUs) will be subject to Reasonable
Available Control Technology (RACT)
or state of the art rules.
D. NOX Allowance Allocations
Under the NOX allowance allocation
methodology in the CAIR model trading
rules and in the CAIR FIP, NOX annual
and ozone season allowances are
allocated to units that have operated at
least for five years, based on heat input
data from a three-year period that are
adjusted for fuel type by using fuel
factors of 1.0 for coal, 0.6 for oil, and 0.4
for other fuels. The CAIR model trading
rules and the CAIR FIP also provide a
new unit set-aside from which units
without five years of operation are
allocated allowances based on the units’
prior year emissions.
The CAIR FIP provides States the
flexibility to establish a different NOX
allowance allocation methodology that
will be used to allocate allowances to
sources in the States if certain
requirements are met concerning the
timing of submission of units’
allocations to the Administrator for
recordation and the total amount of
allowances allocated for each control
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period. In adopting alternative NOX
allowance allocation methodologies,
States have flexibility with regard to:
1. The cost to recipients of the
allowances, which may be distributed
for free or auctioned;
2. The frequency of allocations;
3. The basis for allocating allowances,
which may be distributed, for example,
based on historical heat input or electric
and thermal output; and
4. The use of allowance set-asides
and, if used, their size.
Consistent with the flexibility given to
States in the CAIR FIP, New Jersey has
chosen to replace the provisions of the
CAIR NOX annual and ozone season FIP
concerning allowance allocations with
its own methodology.
New Jersey will distribute NOX
annual and ozone season allowances to
CAIR units based upon historical
electrical and thermal output.
Allowances, which will be distributed
(not auctioned), will be based on three
years of data. For control periods 2009–
2011, NOX annual and ozone season
allowances will be calculated based on
data from years 2003, 2004, and 2005.
New Jersey will submit 2009–2011 NOX
allocations to EPA by April 30, 2007.
For control periods in years 2012 and
thereafter, the calculation of the
allocation shall be based on data from
the three most recent years prior to the
year the allocation is due to the EPA (i.e.
2012 calculations which is due October
31, 2008 will be calculated based on
data from years 2005 through 2007). The
allocations for the control periods
beginning in 2012 are due to EPA by
October 31, 2008 and October 31 of each
year thereafter for the fourth year after
the year of the notification deadline.
New Jersey has established set-asides
for new source/growth (‘‘New Source/
Growth Reserve’’), and energy efficiency
and renewable energy programs or
techniques (‘‘Incentive Reserve’’). New
Jersey is allocating ten percent of the
State’s CAIR NOX annual and CAIR NOX
ozone season budgets to the New
Source/Growth Reserve, and five
percent of the State’s CAIR NOX annual
and CAIR NOX ozone season budgets to
the Incentive Reserve each year.
The priority of the New Source/
Growth Reserve is to hold aside
allowances for distribution to new CAIR
units. Any remaining allowances would
be available for distribution to low NOX
emission rate units that emit more tons
of NOX than the number of allowances
allocated for the control period.
The purpose of the incentive reserve
is to hold aside allowances so that they
are available for distribution after the
control period to persons who claim
incentive allowances, based on their
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energy savings or the generation of
electricity through the implementation
of environmentally beneficial
techniques.
If the New Source/Growth Reserve or
Incentive Reserve is under-allocated,
allowances will be distributed to units
in equal proportion to the number of
allowances available in the reserve. New
Jersey will allow allowances from both
reserves to be used interchangeably if
one reserve is over-allocated while the
other is under-allocated. Any
allowances remaining in the reserves
will remain in the Incentive Reserve or
the New Source/Growth Reserve to be
available for allocation in the following
year.
Unallocated allowances from the
existing New Source/Growth and
Incentive Reserves from New Jersey’s
NOX Budget Trading Program
(Subchapter 31) for the 2008 control
period will be carried over for use in the
2009 CAIR NOX ozone season.
New Jersey is allocating to the New
Source/Growth Reserve 1,267 CAIR
NOX annual allowances and 665 CAIR
NOX ozone season allowances of the
State budget each year for vintage years
2009 through 2014. For years 2015 and
thereafter, New Jersey will allocate
1,056 CAIR NOX annual allowances and
555 CAIR NOX ozone season allowances
of the State budget each year into the
reserve.
New Jersey is allocating to the
Incentive Reserve 634 CAIR NOX annual
allowances and 333 CAIR NOX ozone
season allowances of the State budget
each year into this reserve for vintage
years 2009 through 2014. For years 2015
and thereafter, New Jersey will allocate
528 CAIR NOX annual allowances and
277 CAIR NOX ozone season allowances
of the State budget each year into the
reserve.
Several provisions of New Jersey’s
NOX allocation proposal are
inconsistent with the NOX allocation
timing requirements of the abbreviated
SIP revision requirements and the CAIR
FIP trading programs. Full approval of
New Jersey’s proposed regulation by
EPA is contingent upon New Jersey
modifying the proposed rule in order to
clarify that EPA’s NOX allocation timing
requirements will be met under New
Jersey’s program as discussed in this
section. Sections 51.123(p)(1)(ii)(B) and
(ee)(2)(ii)(C) of CAIR require that the
State determines and notifies the
Administrator of each existing unit’s
allowance allocation at least 3 years in
advance of the CAIR FIP NOX annual
and ozone season programs. Sections
51.123(p)(1)(ii)(C) and (ee)(2)(ii)(D)
require that the State determines, and
notifies the Administrator of each new
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unit’s allowances by October 31 (for the
CAIR NOX annual trading program) or
July 31 (for the CAIR NOX ozone season
trading program) of the year for which
the allowances are being allocated.
New Jersey’s proposed regulation
does not meet NOX allocation timing
requirements for existing or new units
that must surrender and transfer
allowances to EPA for retirement for the
year in which the unit shuts down and
any year thereafter. As currently written
in the proposed rule, the owner or
operator of an existing unit that is
required to surrender allowances will
no longer be able to buy or sell
allowances, or undertake other
allowance market activities, that were
provided three years in advance and
already recorded into their compliance
account. Additionally, the owner or
operator of a new unit could not buy or
sell allowances, or undertake other
allowance market activities, in reliance
on its allocations provided in advance
in October or July.
It is not clear from New Jersey’s
proposal what the timing would be for
surrendering the allowances, and
whether the State intended for recorded
allowances to be surrendered. New
Jersey should clarify the provisions of
the appropriate section regarding
permanently shut down units to be
retired, section 7:27–30.3(g), by either
removing this section from the rule, or
by clarifying that the State can
discontinue making future allocations to
units that permanently shut down.
New Jersey’s proposed regulation
does not meet NOX allocation timing
requirements with regard to the
provision in New Jersey’s proposed rule
which provides that the Department
may determine that allocations for
existing (or new) units for current or
past years had erroneously allocated too
many or too few allowances based on
inaccurate data or projections. As
currently written in the proposed rule,
it is unclear how long after
determination and recordation of an
allocation the Department may
determine that the allocation was
incorrect. The inclusion of the word
‘‘projection’’ also suggests New Jersey
will be correcting allocations that were
based on projections. New Jersey should
correct this problem by either removing
the allocation correction provision,
7:27–30.3(h), from the rule, or modify
this section in order to address NOX
allocation timing requirements. If NJ
chooses to retain the provision, New
Jersey may limit this provision to errors
of calculation, errors in the allowable
emission rates used, and/or errors in
data on actual operations and that does
not correct allocations once the
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allocations are recorded by the
Administrator.
New Jersey’s proposed rule also
provides that if the sum of new unit
allocations (determined by October 31
or July 31 of the year for which
allocations are made) and the existing
unit growth allocations (determined by
the end of the year for which allocations
are made) exceeds the total amount of
the New Source/Growth Reserve for the
year, all the allocations from the reserve
will be reduced on a pro-rata basis so
that the total amount allocated to these
new and existing units does not exceed
the reserve. New Jersey should clarify
that the allocation-proration provisions
will be applied to new unit allocations
before the October 31 deadline or July
31 deadline for submission of new unit
allocations to EPA and applied to the
existing unit growth allocations before
the March 1 deadline for submission of
those allocations to EPA.
E. Allocation of NOX Allowances From
the Compliance Supplement Pool
The CSP provides an incentive for
early reductions in NOX annual
emissions. The CSP consists of 200,000
CAIR NOX annual allowances of vintage
2009 for the entire CAIR region, and a
State’s share of the CSP is based upon
the State’s share of the projected
emission reductions under CAIR. States
may distribute CSP allowances, one
allowance for each ton of early
reduction, to sources that make NOX
reductions during 2007 or 2008 beyond
what is required by any applicable State
or Federal emission limitation. States
also may distribute CSP allowances
based upon a demonstration of need for
an extension of the 2009 deadline for
implementing emission controls.
The CAIR NOX annual FIP establishes
specific methodologies for allocations of
CSP allowances. States may choose an
allowed, alternative CSP allocation
methodology to be used to allocate CSP
allowances to sources in those States.
EPA has allocated to New Jersey
allowances equal to 660 tons of NOX
annual emissions for possible
distribution.
Consistent with the flexibility given to
States in the FIP, New Jersey has chosen
to modify the provisions of the CAIR
NOX annual FIP concerning the
allocation of allowances from the CSP.
New Jersey has chosen to retire the CSP
allowances budgeted for New Jersey by
not allocating them to CAIR units. New
Jersey has maintained in their rule that
the CSP allowances, if allocated, would
delay attainment in New Jersey of the
NAAQS for ozone and PM2.5. New
Jersey anticipates that New Jersey CAIR
units will be able to meet their emission
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36411
limits without risk to the reliability of
the energy supply without resorting to
the CSP.
F. Individual Opt-In Units
The opt-in provisions allow for
certain non-EGUs (i.e., boilers,
combustion turbines, and other
stationary fossil-fuel-fired devices) that
do not meet the applicability criteria for
a CAIR trading program to participate
voluntarily in (i.e., opt into) the CAIR
trading program. A non-EGU may opt
into one or more of the CAIR trading
programs. In order to qualify to opt into
a CAIR trading program, a unit must
vent all emissions through a stack and
be able to meet monitoring,
recordkeeping, and recording
requirements of 40 CFR part 75. The
owners and operators seeking to opt a
unit into a CAIR trading program must
apply for a CAIR opt-in permit. If the
unit is issued a CAIR opt-in permit, the
unit becomes a CAIR unit, is allocated
allowances, and must meet the same
allowance-holding and emissions
monitoring and reporting requirements
as other units subject to the CAIR
trading program. The opt-in provisions
provide for two methodologies for
allocating allowances for opt-in units,
one methodology that applies to opt-in
units in general and a second
methodology that allocates allowances
only to opt-in units that the owners and
operators intend to repower before
January 1, 2015.
States have several options
concerning the opt-in provisions. The
rules for each of the CAIR FIP trading
programs include opt-in provisions that
are essentially the same as those in the
respective CAIR SIP model rules, except
that the CAIR FIP opt-in provisions
become effective in a State only if the
State’s abbreviated SIP revision adopts
the opt-in provisions. The State may
adopt the opt-in provisions entirely or
may adopt them but exclude one of the
allowance allocation methodologies.
The State also has the option of not
adopting any opt-in provisions in the
abbreviated SIP revision and thereby
providing for the CAIR FIP trading
program to be implemented in the State
without the ability for units to opt into
the program.
Consistent with the flexibility given to
States in the FIPs, New Jersey has
chosen not to allow non-EGUs meeting
the FIP-specified requirements to
participate in the CAIR NOX annual
trading program, the CAIR NOX ozone
season trading program, and the SO2
trading program. Therefore, non-EGUs
in New Jersey cannot opt into either the
CAIR trading program under EPA’s
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CAIR FIP or New Jersey’s abbreviated
SIP.
G. Satisfying Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of
the Clean Air Act
Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the CAA
requires each State to submit a SIP that
prohibits emissions that could adversely
affect another State. The SIP must
prevent sources in the State from
emitting pollutants in amounts which
will: (1) Contribute significantly to
downwind nonattainment of the
NAAQS, (2) interfere with maintenance
of the NAAQS, (3) interfere with
provisions to prevent significant
deterioration of air quality, and (4)
interfere with efforts to protect
visibility.
EPA issued guidance on August 15,
2006, relating to SIP submissions to
meet the requirements of section
110(a)(2)(D)(i). As discussed below,
New Jersey’s SIP revision with respect
to the statutory requirements is
consistent with the guidance.
New Jersey addresses the first two of
these four elements by complying with
the requirements of CAIR. New Jersey
satisfies these requirements either by
relying on the existing CAIR FIPs, or
through approval of this SIP revision.
The third element New Jersey
addresses was prevention of significant
deterioration (PSD). In accordance with
the guidance issued on August 15, 2006,
States may continue to rely on their
existing Nonattainment New Source
Review (NNSR) and PSD permitting
programs to prevent significant
deterioration of air quality within their
own boundaries and in adjacent States.
For 8-hour ozone, the State has met the
obligation by confirming that the
existing ozone Nonattainment New
Source Review (NNSR) permitting
program remains in effect and applies to
the 8-hour ozone NAAQS standard for
the State’s major stationary sources.
New Jersey has noted that the State’s
current NNSR program retains the lower
applicability levels and higher off-set
ratios previously required under the
States 1-hour ozone classification and
therefore is more stringent than required
under the 8-hour ozone classification.
The State has indicated that it’s on track
to meet its June 15, 2007 obligations to
submit a final attainment demonstration
for the 8-hour ozone NAAQS by that
date. For PM2.5, the State has confirmed
that the State’s NNSR and PSD programs
are being implemented in accordance
with EPA’s interim guidance calling for
the use of PM10 as a surrogate for PM2.5.
New Jersey commits to revising its
NNSR program and adopting a PSD
program after EPA finalizes its PM2.5
implementation rule.
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It should be noted that the entire State
of New Jersey is nonattainment for 8hour ozone necessitating only a NNSR
program (not PSD) for ozone. For PM2.5
the State has both attainment and nonattainment areas necessitating both
NNSR and PSD programs.
Consistent with EPA’s August 15,
2006 guidance, at this time, it is
impossible for New Jersey to accurately
determine whether there is interference
with measures in another State’s SIP
designed to protect visibility, which is
the fourth element that was addressed.
New Jersey has indicated that it will
address the visibility protection
requirements once the regional haze SIP
is completed and submitted to EPA in
December of 2007.
VI. Conclusion
New Jersey is covered by the CAIR
FIPs, which require participation in the
EPA-administered CAIR FIP cap-andtrade programs for SO2, NOX annual,
and NOX ozone season emissions.
Under this abbreviated SIP revision and
consistent with the flexibility given to
States in the FIPs, New Jersey has
proposed to adopt under N.J.A.C. 7:27–
30, Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR)
NOX Trading Program, provisions for
allocating allowances under the CAIR
FIP NOX annual and ozone season
trading programs. In addition, New
Jersey has also proposed at N.J.A.C.
7:27–31.23 the date when New Jersey’s
CAIR NOX Trading Program will replace
New Jersey’s NOX Budget Trading
Program (Subchapter 31). In addition,
New Jersey has proposed to adopt in the
abbreviated SIP revision provisions that
retire CSP allowances.
EPA is proposing to approve New
Jersey’s abbreviated CAIR SIP revision.
This proposed approval is contingent
upon New Jersey making the necessary
changes to New Jersey’s proposed CAIR
rule in order to address EPA’s concerns
discussed in section V, Part D (NOX
Allowance Allocations) concerning
shutdown units, correction of
allocations to new and existing units,
and prorating for the New Source/
Growth Reserve. If EPA determines New
Jersey’s final submission is consistent
with the necessary changes outlined in
this proposed action, EPA may proceed
to publish its full approval of New
Jersey’s CAIR SIP in the Federal
Register, and approve its incorporation
into the SIP. To the extent EPA
approves New Jersey’s SIP revision, EPA
would not make any changes to the
CAIR FIP, but would amend the
appropriate appendices of 40 CFR part
97 in the CAIR FIP trading rules simply
to note approval.
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Although EPA expects New Jersey to
make the necessary changes to their
proposed rule upon final adoption, EPA
will finalize a partial approval/
disapproval should New Jersey be
unable to do so. Although the rule does
not currently meet all of the applicable
requirements in 40 CFR 51.123(p) and
(ee) with regard to NOX annual and NOX
ozone season emissions, EPA believes
that the approvable portions of the rule
strengthen New Jersey’s SIP by allowing
the State to be the implementing
authority, and making allocations
consistent with New Jersey’s air quality
goals. Partial approval/disapproval will
result in EPA approval of New Jersey’s
initial NOX allocations for existing units
for the 2009–2011 control periods. EPA
would not make any changes to the
CAIR FIP, but would amend the
appropriate appendices of 40 CFR part
97 in the CAIR FIP trading rules to note
partial approval. If New Jersey is unable
to make the necessary changes, EPA
proposes partial approval/disapproval
of New Jersey’s proposed rule as
follows: Subchapter 30 approval of all
sections except ‘‘7:27–30.3 Allocation of
CAIR NOX annual allowances and CAIR
NOX ozone season allowances’’. EPA is
approving portions of 7:27–30.3 which
address the allocation of NOX
allowances to existing units and to the
incentive reserve, rounding allowances
to the nearest whole number, and
consideration of other data by the
department if the data is unusable.
(7:27–30.3(a), (b), (c)2, (c)3, (c)4ii(1),
(c)4ii(3), (e), and (f)). EPA is
disapproving provisions for the
allocation to the new source/growth
reserve, post control period allocations,
provisions that require any unit
(existing or new) that permanently shuts
down to surrender and transfer
allowances to EPA for retirement, and
correction of allowances allocated
erroneously or were allocated based on
data or projections that are determined
to be inaccurate. (7:27–30.3(c)1, (c)4i,
(c)4ii(2), (c)4iii, (d), (g), and (h).
EPA is proposing approval of ‘‘7:27–
31.23 Replacement of the NOX Budget
Program’’, and ‘‘7:27A–3.10 Civil
administrative penalties for violation of
the rules adopted pursuant to the Act’’.
EPA is also proposing that this
revision adequately addresses the
required elements of 110(a)(2)(D)(i) with
the exception of the protect visibility
requirement. This requirement will be
re-evaluated after the regional haze SIP
is completed and submitted to EPA in
December 2007.
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VII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735, October 4, 1993), this 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 would impose no
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by State law. Accordingly, the
Administrator certifies that this
proposed rule would 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 action
proposes to approve pre-existing
requirements under State law and
would 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 proposal also does not have
tribal implications because it would 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
proposed action also does not have
Federalism implications because it
would 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 to
amend the appropriate appendices in
the CAIR FIP trading rules to note that
approval. It 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 would approve a State rule
implementing a Federal Standard.
In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s
role is to approve State choices,
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provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. In this context, in the
absence of a prior existing requirement
for the State to use voluntary consensus
standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for
failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission;
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. This proposed
rule would not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Electric utilities,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
oxides, Ozone, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur dioxide.
40 CFR Part 97
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Electric utilities,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
oxides, Ozone, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur dioxide.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 25, 2007.
Alan J. Steinberg,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. E7–12874 Filed 7–2–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 62
[EPA–R03–OAR–2005–VA–0012; FRL–8333–
9]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Commonwealth of Virginia; Control of
Total Reduced Sulfur From Pulp and
Paper Mills
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
revisions to a Section 111(d) regulation
submitted by the Commonwealth of
Virginia Department of Environmental
Quality. The revisions pertain to
amendments to an existing regulation to
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Frm 00044
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control total reduced sulfur (TRS) from
pulp and paper mills. This action is
being taken under the Clean Air Act
(CAA or the Act).
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before August 2, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID Number EPA–
R03–OAR–2005–VA–0012 by one of the
following methods:
A. www.regulations.gov. Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
B. E-mail:
cripps.christopher@epa.gov.
C. Mail: EPA–R03–OAR–2005–VA–
0012, Christopher Cripps, Acting Chief,
Air Quality and Planning Branch,
Mailcode 3AP21, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region III, 1650
Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
19103.
D. Hand Delivery: At the previouslylisted EPA Region III address. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Docket’s normal hours of operation, and
special arrangements should be made
for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R03–OAR–2005–
VA–0012. 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 Web
site 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 email address will be automatically
captured and included as part of the
comment that is placed in the public
docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD–ROM
you submit. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form
of encryption, and be free of any defects
or viruses.
E:\FR\FM\03JYP1.SGM
03JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 127 (Tuesday, July 3, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 36406-36413]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-12874]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and Part 97
[Docket No. EPA-R02-OAR-2007-0233; FRL-8334-9]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; New Jersey:
Clean Air Interstate Rule
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing action on a revision to New Jersey's State
Implementation Plan (SIP) submitted on February 6, 2007. EPA is
proposing to fully approve its incorporation into the SIP provided New
Jersey's final rule is consistent with the modifications discussed
herein.
This revision incorporates provisions related to the implementation
of EPA's Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) and the CAIR Federal
Implementation Plans (CAIR FIPs) concerning sulfur dioxide
(SO2), and annual and ozone season oxides of nitrogen
(NOX) emissions. EPA is not proposing to make any changes to
the CAIR FIPs, but is proposing to the extent EPA approves New Jersey's
SIP revision, to amend the appropriate appendices in the CAIR FIP
trading rules simply to note that approval.
On April 28, 2006, EPA promulgated CAIR FIPs for States covered by
CAIR as a backstop to implement the requirements of CAIR until States
have obtained fully approved SIPs to replace the FIPs. The FIPs require
certain electric generating units (EGUs) to participate in the Federal
CAIR cap-and-trade programs addressing SO2, NOX
annual, and NOX ozone season emissions. The CAIR FIPs also
provide that States may submit ``abbreviated'' SIP revisions to replace
or supplement specific elements of the FIPs, leaving the remainder of
the overall FIPs in place, rather than submitting full SIP revisions
that replace the FIPs.
The New Jersey SIP revision that EPA is proposing to approve is an
abbreviated SIP revision that will replace two provisions of the CAIR
FIP that allow the State to: (1) Use a methodology chosen by the State
for allocation of annual and ozone season NOX allowances
and; (2) use a methodology chosen by the State for allocation of
NOX annual allowances from the NOX annual
Compliance Supplemental Pool (CSP). The revision retires, rather than
allocates allowances from the NOX annual CSP.
The SIP revision that EPA is proposing to approve will also satisfy
New Jersey's 110(a)(2)(D)(i) obligations to submit a SIP revision that
contains adequate provisions to prohibit air emissions from adversely
affecting another State's air quality through interstate transport.
The intent of this proposed revision is to approve a State specific
CAIR program which will result in emission reductions necessary to
prevent the interstate transport of air pollutants. The revision also
shows that the interstate transport of pollutants from the State has
been adequately addressed in the applicable implementation plan.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before August 2, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R02-
OAR-2007-0233, by one of the following methods:
1. https://www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line instructions for
submitting comments.
2. E-mail: Werner.Raymond@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (212) 637-3901.
4. Mail: Docket ID No. EPA-R02-OAR-2007-0233, Raymond Werner,
Chief, Air Programs Branch, Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2
Office, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Raymond Werner, Chief, Air Programs
Branch, Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway,
25th Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866. Such deliveries are only
accepted during the Regional Office's normal hours of operation. The
Regional Office's official hours of business is Monday through Friday,
8:30 to 4:30, excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R02-OAR-
2007-0233. 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 through www.regulations.gov or e-
mail, information that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected.
The www.regulations.gov Web site 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
[[Page 36407]]
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 and any form of encryption and should 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.
Docket: All documents in the electronic docket are listed in the
www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, i.e., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically in www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the Air Programs Branch, Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New York
10007-1866.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions concerning
today's proposal, please contact Kenneth Fradkin, Air Programs Branch,
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, 290 Broadway, 25th
Floor, New York, New York 10007-1866. The telephone number is (212)
637-3702. Mr. Fradkin can also be reached via electronic mail at
fradkin.kenneth@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing To Take?
II. What Is the Regulatory History of CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
III. What Are the General Requirements of CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
IV. What Are the Types of CAIR SIP Submittals?
V. What Is the Result of EPA's Evaluation of New Jersey's CAIR SIP
Submittal?
A. State Budgets for Allowance Allocations
B. CAIR Cap-and-Trade Programs
C. Applicability Provisions for Non-EGUs NOX SIP Call
Sources
D. NOX Allowance Allocations
E. Allocation of NOX Allowances From the Compliance
Supplement Pool
F. Individual Opt-In Units
G. Satisfying Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the Clean Air Act
VI. Conclusion
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing To Take?
CAIR SIP and 110(a)(2)(D)(i) Approval
EPA is proposing to approve a revision to New Jersey's SIP,
submitted on February 6, 2007, which was published in the New Jersey
Register on February 5, 2007. The revision modifies the application of
certain provisions of the CAIR FIP which requires emission reductions
of SO2, NOX annual, and NOX ozone
season emissions. (As discussed later, this less comprehensive CAIR SIP
is termed an abbreviated SIP.) This revision includes a new proposed
regulation, N.J.A.C. 7:27-30, Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR)
NOX Trading Program. As part of the revision, New Jersey has
also proposed at N.J.A.C. 7:27-31.23 the date when New Jersey's CAIR
NOX Trading Program will replace New Jersey's NOX
Budget Trading Program (Subchapter 31).
This action is being proposed under a procedure called parallel
processing. Under parallel processing, EPA proposes action on a State
submission before it has been formally adopted and submitted to EPA,
and will take final action on its proposal if the final submission is
substantially unchanged from the submission on which the proposal is
based, or if significant changes in the final submission are
anticipated and adequately described in EPA's proposal as a basis for
EPA's proposed action.
This proposed approval is contingent upon New Jersey making the
necessary changes to New Jersey's proposed CAIR rule in order to
address EPA's concerns discussed in section V, Part D (NOX
Allowance Allocations). If EPA determines New Jersey's final submission
is consistent with the necessary changes outlined in this proposed
action, EPA may proceed to publish its full approval of New Jersey's
CAIR SIP in the Federal Register. The final rule that New Jersey
submits to EPA must be consistent with the changes discussed in this
action for EPA to fully approve its incorporation into the SIP.
If New Jersey is unable to make the required changes upon adoption,
and must repropose their rule, EPA will finalize a partial approval in
lieu of a full approval. Under the partial approval alternative, EPA
would approve those portions of the rule consistent with EPA
requirements into the SIP and disapprove those not consistent. EPA
believes the approvable portions of the rule strengthen New Jersey's
SIP by allowing the State to be the implementing authority, and make
allocations consistent with New Jersey's air quality goals. EPA
recognizes that the Clean Air Act assigns first responsibility to the
States, and it is EPA's preference to defer, wherever possible, to
States the decisions about control mechanisms to prevent significant
contribution, including States' decisions about allocation of
NOX allowances. If EPA finalizes a partial approval, EPA
would concurrently disapprove those portions of the rule for not
meeting those applicable requirements.
New Jersey is subject to the CAIR FIPs that implement the CAIR
requirements by requiring certain Electric Generating Units (EGUs) to
participate in the EPA-administered Federal CAIR SO2,
NOX annual, and NOX ozone season cap-and-trade
programs. The SIP revision provides a methodology for allocating
NOX allowances for the NOX annual, and
NOX ozone season trading programs. The CAIR FIPs provide
that this methodology, if approved as EPA is proposing, will be used to
allocate NOX allowances to sources in New Jersey, instead of
the Federal allocation methodology otherwise provided in the FIPs. The
SIP revision also retires rather than allocates allowances from the
NOX annual Compliance Supplement Pool (CSP). Consistent with
the flexibility provided in the FIPs, these provisions, if approved,
will also be used to replace or supplement, as appropriate, the
corresponding provisions in the CAIR FIPs for New Jersey. EPA is not
proposing to make any changes to the CAIR FIP, but is proposing, to the
extent EPA approves New Jersey's SIP revision, to amend the appropriate
appendices in the CAIR FIP trading rules simply to note that approval.
New Jersey's proposed rule does not modify the CAIR FIP regarding
SO2.
Because New Jersey's CAIR Program will replace the State's
NOX Budget Program (subchapter 31) beginning with the 2009
control period, it is necessary for New Jersey to establish at N.J.A.C.
7:27-31.23 a transition date for the NOX Budget Trading
Program to prevent an overlap of ozone season cap and trade programs
for NOX. The NOX Budget Trading Program's non-
electric generating units and small electric generating units (EGUs)
that are not covered under New Jersey's CAIR NOX Trading
Program will be subject to New Jersey's Reasonable Available Control
Technology (RACT) or state of the art
[[Page 36408]]
rules. EPA will propose a separate rulemaking on New Jersey's RACT at a
later date.
In addition, EPA is also proposing to approve a revision to New
Jersey's SIP to address the requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of
the Clean Air Act. This section of the Act requires each State to
submit a SIP that prohibits emissions that could adversely affect
another State. The SIP must prevent sources in the State from emitting
pollutants in amounts which will: (1) Contribute significantly to
downwind nonattainment of the NAAQS, (2) interfere with maintenance of
the NAAQS, (3) interfere with provisions to prevent significant
deterioration of air quality, and (4) interfere with efforts to protect
visibility.
II. What Is the Regulatory History of the CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
The Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) was published by EPA on May
12, 2005 (70 FR 25162). In this rule, EPA determined that 28 States and
the District of Columbia contribute significantly to nonattainment and
interfere with maintenance of the national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) for fine particles (PM2.5) and/or 8-hour
ozone in downwind States in the eastern part of the country. As a
result, EPA required those upwind States to revise their SIPs to
include control measures that reduce emissions of SO2, which
is a precursor to PM2.5 formation, and/or NOX,
which is a precursor to both ozone and PM2.5 formation. For
jurisdictions that contribute significantly to downwind
PM2.5 nonattainment, CAIR sets annual State-wide emission
reduction requirements (i.e., budgets) for SO2 and annual
State-wide emission reduction requirements for NOX.
Similarly, for jurisdictions that contribute significantly to 8-hour
ozone nonattainment, CAIR sets State-wide emission reduction
requirements for NOX for the ozone season (May 1st to
September 30th). Under CAIR, States may implement these emission
budgets by participating in the EPA-administered cap-and-trade programs
or by adopting any other control measures.
CAIR explains to subject States what must be included in SIPs to
address the requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) with regard to interstate transport with respect to the 8-hour
ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS. EPA made national findings, effective
May 25, 2005, that the States had failed to submit SIPs meeting the
requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D). The SIPs were due in July 2000, 3
years after the promulgation of the 8-hour ozone and PM2.5
NAAQS. These May 25, 2005 findings started a 2-year clock for EPA to
promulgate a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) to address the
requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D). Under CAA section 110(c)(1), EPA
may issue a FIP anytime after such findings are made and must do so
within two years unless a SIP revision correcting the deficiency is
approved by EPA before the FIP is promulgated. On August 17, 2006 EPA
issued guidance for SIP submissions states should make to address the
requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) for the 8-hour ozone and
PM2.5 NAAQS.
On April 28, 2006 EPA promulgated FIPs for all States covered by
CAIR in order to ensure the emissions reductions required by CAIR are
achieved on schedule. Each CAIR State is subject to the FIPs until the
State fully adopts, and EPA approves, a SIP revision meeting the
requirements of CAIR. The CAIR FIPs require certain EGUs to participate
in the EPA-administered CAIR SO2, NOX annual, and
NOX ozone-season model trading programs, as appropriate. The
CAIR FIP SO2, NOX annual, and NOX
ozone season trading programs impose essentially the same requirements
as, and are integrated with, the respective CAIR SIP trading programs.
The integration of the CAIR FIP and SIP trading programs means that
these trading programs will work together to create effectively a
single trading program for each regulated pollutant (SO2,
NOX annual, and NOX ozone season) in all States
covered by a CAIR FIP or SIP trading program for that pollutant. The
CAIR FIPs also allow States to submit abbreviated SIP revisions that,
if approved by EPA, will automatically replace or supplement the
corresponding CAIR FIP provisions (e.g., the methodology for allocating
NOX allowances to sources in the State), while the CAIR FIP
remains in place for all other provisions.
On April 28, 2006, EPA published two more CAIR-related final rules
that added the State of Delaware and New Jersey to the list of States
subject to CAIR for PM2.5 and announced EPA's final
decisions on reconsideration of five issues without making any
substantive changes to the CAIR requirements. The five issues addressed
SO2 allocation methodology; fuel adjustment factors used in
establishing State NOX budgets; inputs to the fine particle
(PM2.5) modeling used to determine whether Minnesota should
be included in the CAIR region for PM2.5; EPA's
determination that Florida should be included in the CAIR region for
ozone; and the potential impact of a judicial opinion, New York v. EPA,
413 F.3d 3 (DC Cir. 2005), on EPA's previous determination that CAIR is
highly cost-effective and timing of compliance dates.
III. What Are the General Requirements of CAIR and the CAIR FIPs?
CAIR establishes State-wide emission budgets for SO2 and
NOX and is to be implemented in two phases. The first phase
of NOX reductions starts in 2009 and continues through 2014,
while the first phase of SO2 reductions starts in 2010 and
continues through 2014. The second phase of reductions for both
NOX and SO2 starts in 2015 and continues
thereafter. CAIR requires States to implement the budgets by either:
(1) Requiring EGUs to participate in the EPA-administered cap-and-trade
programs: or, (2) adopting other control measures of the State's
choosing and demonstrating that such control measures will result in
compliance with the applicable State SO2 and NOX
budgets.
The May 12, 2005 and April 28, 2006 CAIR rules provide model rules
that States must adopt (with certain limited changes, if desired) if
they want to participate in the EPA-administered trading programs.
With two exceptions, only States that choose to meet the
requirements of CAIR through methods that exclusively regulate EGUs are
allowed to participate in the EPA-administered trading programs. One
exception is for States that adopt the opt-in provisions of the model
rules to allow non-EGUs individually to opt into the EPA-administered
trading programs. The other exception is for States that include all
non-EGUs from their NOX SIP Call trading programs in their
CAIR NOX ozone season trading programs.
IV. What Are the Types of CAIR SIP Submittals?
States have the flexibility to choose the type of control measures
they will use to meet the requirements of CAIR. EPA anticipates that
most States will choose to meet the CAIR requirements by selecting an
option that requires EGUs to participate in the EPA-administered CAIR
cap-and-trade programs. For such States, EPA has provided two
approaches for submitting and obtaining approval for CAIR SIP
revisions. States may submit full SIP revisions that adopt the model
CAIR cap-and-trade rules. If approved, these SIP revisions will fully
replace the CAIR FIPs. Alternatively, States may submit abbreviated SIP
revisions. These SIP revisions will not replace the CAIR FIPs; however,
the CAIR FIPs provide that, when approved, the provisions in these
abbreviated SIP revisions will be used
[[Page 36409]]
instead of or in conjunction with, as appropriate, the corresponding
provisions of the CAIR FIPs (e.g., the NOX allowance
allocation methodology).
A State submitting an abbreviated SIP revision, may submit limited
SIP revisions to tailor the CAIR FIP cap-and-trade programs to the
State submitting the revision. Specifically, an abbreviated SIP
revision may establish certain applicability and allowance allocation
provisions that will be used instead of or in conjunction with the
corresponding provisions in the CAIR FIP rules in that State.
Specifically, the abbreviated SIP revisions may:
1. Include all NOX SIP Call trading sources that are not
EGUs under CAIR in the CAIR FIP NOX ozone season trading
program;
2. Provide for allocation of NOX annual or ozone season
allowances by the State, rather than the Administrator, and use a
methodology chosen by the State;
3. Provide for allocation of NOX annual allowances from
the CSP by the State, rather than by the Administrator, and use the
State's choice of allowed, alternative methodologies; or
4. Allow units that are not otherwise CAIR units to opt
individually into the CAIR FIP cap-and-trade programs under the opt-in
provisions in the CAIR FIP rules.
With approval of an abbreviated SIP revision, the CAIR FIP remains in
place, as tailored to sources in the State by that approved SIP
revision.
Abbreviated SIP revisions can be submitted in lieu of, or as part
of, CAIR full SIP revisions. States may want to designate part of their
full SIP as an abbreviated SIP for EPA to act on first when the timing
of the State's submission might not provide EPA with sufficient time to
approve the full SIP prior to the deadline for recording NOX
allocations. This will help ensure that the elements of the trading
programs, where flexibility is allowed, are implemented according to
the State's decisions. Submission of an abbreviated SIP revision does
not preclude future submission of a CAIR full SIP revision. In this
case, the February 6, 2007 submittal from New Jersey has been submitted
as an abbreviated SIP revision.
V. What Is the Result of EPA's Evaluation of New Jersey's CAIR SIP
Submittal?
A. State Budgets for Allowance Allocations
The CAIR NOX annual and ozone season budgets were
developed from historical heat input data for EGUs. Using these data,
EPA calculated annual and ozone season regional heat input values,
which were multiplied by 0.15 lb/mmBtu, for phase 1, and 0.125 lb/
mmBtu, for phase 2, to obtain regional NOX budgets for 2009-
2014 and for 2015 and thereafter, respectively. EPA derived the State
NOX annual and ozone season budgets from the regional
budgets using State heat input data adjusted by fuel factors.
The CAIR State SO2 budgets were derived by discounting
the tonnage of emissions authorized by annual allowance allocations
under the Acid Rain Program under title IV of the CAA. Under CAIR, each
allowance allocated under the Acid Rain Program for the years in phase
1 of CAIR (2010 through 2014) authorizes 0.5 ton of SO2
emissions in the CAIR trading program, and each Acid Rain Program
allowance allocated for the years in phase 2 of CAIR (2015 and
thereafter) authorizes 0.35 ton of SO2 emissions in the CAIR
trading program.
The CAIR FIP established the EGU budgets for New Jersey as 12,670
tons for the years 2009-2014 (Phase I) and 10,558 tons for the years
2015 and beyond (Phase II) for NOX annual emissions; 6,654
tons for the years 2009-2014 (Phase I) and 5,545 tons for the years
2015 and beyond (Phase II) for NOX ozone season emissions;
and 32,392 tons for the years 2010-2014 (Phase I) and 22,674 tons for
the years 2015 and beyond (Phase II) for SO2 emissions. New
Jersey's SIP revision, proposed for approval in today's action, does
not affect these budgets, which are the total amount of allowances
available for allocation for each year under the EPA-administered cap-
and-trade program under the CAIR FIP. In short, the abbreviated SIP
revision only affects allocations of allowances under the established
budgets.
B. CAIR Cap-and-Trade Programs
The CAIR NOX annual and ozone-season FIPs both largely
mirror the structure of the NOX SIP Call model trading rule
in 40 CFR part 96, subparts A through I. While the provisions of the
NOX annual and ozone-season FIPs are similar, there are some
differences. For example, the NOX annual FIP (but not the
NOX ozone season FIP) provides for a CSP, which is discussed
below and under which allowances may be awarded for early reductions of
NOX annual emissions. As a further example, the
NOX ozone season FIP reflects the fact that the CAIR
NOX ozone season trading program replaces the NOX
SIP Call trading program for EGUs after the 2008 ozone season and is
coordinated with the NOX SIP Call program. States also have
the option of continuing to meet their NOX SIP Call non-EGU
reduction obligations by participating in the CAIR NOX ozone
season trading program and including all their NOX SIP Call
trading sources in that program. In addition the NOX ozone
season FIP provides incentives for early emissions reductions by
allowing banked, pre-2009 NOX SIP Call allowances to be used
for compliance in the CAIR NOX ozone-season trading program.
The provisions of the CAIR SO2 FIP are also similar to
the provisions of the NOX annual and ozone season FIPs.
However, the SO2 FIP is coordinated with the ongoing Acid
Rain SO2 cap-and-trade program under CAA title IV. The
SO2 FIP uses the title IV allowances for compliance, with
each allowance allocated for 2010-2014 authorizing only 0.50 ton of
emissions and each allowance allocated for 2015 and thereafter
authorizing only 0.35 ton of emissions. Banked title IV allowances
allocated for years before 2010 can be used at any time in the CAIR
SO2 cap-and-trade program, with each such allowance
authorizing 1 ton of emissions. Title IV allowances are to be freely
transferable among sources covered by the Acid Rain Program and sources
covered by the CAIR SO2 cap-and-trade program.
EPA used the CAIR model trading rules as the basis for the trading
programs in the CAIR FIPs. The CAIR FIP trading rules are virtually
identical to the CAIR model trading rules, with changes made to account
for Federal rather than State implementation. The CAIR model
SO2, NOX annual, and NOX ozone season
trading rules and the respective CAIR FIP trading rules are designed to
work together as integrated SO2, NOX annual, and
NOX ozone season trading programs.
New Jersey is subject to the CAIR FIPs for ozone and
PM2.5 and the CAIR FIP trading programs for SO2,
NOX annual, and NOX ozone season applies to
sources in New Jersey. Consistent with the flexibility it gives to
States, the CAIR FIPs provide that States may submit abbreviated SIP
revisions that will replace or supplement, as appropriate, certain
provisions of the CAIR FIP trading programs. New Jersey has elected to
propose these rules for its EGU sources as part of the abbreviated SIP
which was submitted on February 6, 2007.
C. Applicability Provisions for Non-EGU NOX SIP Call Sources
In general, the CAIR FIP trading programs apply to any stationary,
fossil-fuel-fired boiler or stationary, fossil-
[[Page 36410]]
fuel-fired combustion turbine serving at any time, since the later of
November 15, 1990 or the start-up of the unit's combustion chamber, a
generator with nameplate capacity of more than 25 MWe producing
electricity for sale.
States have the option of bringing in, for the CAIR NOX
ozone season program only, those units in the State's NOX
SIP Call trading program that are not EGUs as defined under CAIR. EPA
advises States exercising this option to use provisions for
applicability that are substantively identical to the provisions in 40
CFR 96.304 and add the applicability provisions in the State's
NOX SIP Call trading rule for non-EGUs to the applicability
provisions in 40 CFR 96.304 in order to include in the CAIR
NOX ozone season trading program all units required to be in
the State's NOX SIP Call trading program that are not
already included under 40 CFR 96.304. Under this option, the CAIR
NOX ozone season program must cover all large industrial
boilers and combustion turbines, as well as any small EGUs (i.e. units
serving a generator with a nameplate capacity of 25 MWe or less), that
the State currently requires to be in the NOX SIP Call
trading program. Consistent with the flexibility given to States in the
CAIR FIP, New Jersey has not chosen to expand the applicability
provisions of the CAIR NOX ozone season trading program to
include all non-EGUs in the State's NOX SIP Call trading
program. New Jersey's non-EGUs and small electric generating units
(EGUs) will be subject to Reasonable Available Control Technology
(RACT) or state of the art rules.
D. NOX Allowance Allocations
Under the NOX allowance allocation methodology in the
CAIR model trading rules and in the CAIR FIP, NOX annual and
ozone season allowances are allocated to units that have operated at
least for five years, based on heat input data from a three-year period
that are adjusted for fuel type by using fuel factors of 1.0 for coal,
0.6 for oil, and 0.4 for other fuels. The CAIR model trading rules and
the CAIR FIP also provide a new unit set-aside from which units without
five years of operation are allocated allowances based on the units'
prior year emissions.
The CAIR FIP provides States the flexibility to establish a
different NOX allowance allocation methodology that will be
used to allocate allowances to sources in the States if certain
requirements are met concerning the timing of submission of units'
allocations to the Administrator for recordation and the total amount
of allowances allocated for each control period. In adopting
alternative NOX allowance allocation methodologies, States
have flexibility with regard to:
1. The cost to recipients of the allowances, which may be
distributed for free or auctioned;
2. The frequency of allocations;
3. The basis for allocating allowances, which may be distributed,
for example, based on historical heat input or electric and thermal
output; and
4. The use of allowance set-asides and, if used, their size.
Consistent with the flexibility given to States in the CAIR FIP,
New Jersey has chosen to replace the provisions of the CAIR
NOX annual and ozone season FIP concerning allowance
allocations with its own methodology.
New Jersey will distribute NOX annual and ozone season
allowances to CAIR units based upon historical electrical and thermal
output. Allowances, which will be distributed (not auctioned), will be
based on three years of data. For control periods 2009-2011,
NOX annual and ozone season allowances will be calculated
based on data from years 2003, 2004, and 2005. New Jersey will submit
2009-2011 NOX allocations to EPA by April 30, 2007. For
control periods in years 2012 and thereafter, the calculation of the
allocation shall be based on data from the three most recent years
prior to the year the allocation is due to the EPA (i.e. 2012
calculations which is due October 31, 2008 will be calculated based on
data from years 2005 through 2007). The allocations for the control
periods beginning in 2012 are due to EPA by October 31, 2008 and
October 31 of each year thereafter for the fourth year after the year
of the notification deadline.
New Jersey has established set-asides for new source/growth (``New
Source/ Growth Reserve''), and energy efficiency and renewable energy
programs or techniques (``Incentive Reserve''). New Jersey is
allocating ten percent of the State's CAIR NOX annual and
CAIR NOX ozone season budgets to the New Source/Growth
Reserve, and five percent of the State's CAIR NOX annual and
CAIR NOX ozone season budgets to the Incentive Reserve each
year.
The priority of the New Source/Growth Reserve is to hold aside
allowances for distribution to new CAIR units. Any remaining allowances
would be available for distribution to low NOX emission rate
units that emit more tons of NOX than the number of
allowances allocated for the control period.
The purpose of the incentive reserve is to hold aside allowances so
that they are available for distribution after the control period to
persons who claim incentive allowances, based on their energy savings
or the generation of electricity through the implementation of
environmentally beneficial techniques.
If the New Source/Growth Reserve or Incentive Reserve is under-
allocated, allowances will be distributed to units in equal proportion
to the number of allowances available in the reserve. New Jersey will
allow allowances from both reserves to be used interchangeably if one
reserve is over-allocated while the other is under-allocated. Any
allowances remaining in the reserves will remain in the Incentive
Reserve or the New Source/Growth Reserve to be available for allocation
in the following year.
Unallocated allowances from the existing New Source/Growth and
Incentive Reserves from New Jersey's NOX Budget Trading
Program (Subchapter 31) for the 2008 control period will be carried
over for use in the 2009 CAIR NOX ozone season.
New Jersey is allocating to the New Source/Growth Reserve 1,267
CAIR NOX annual allowances and 665 CAIR NOX ozone
season allowances of the State budget each year for vintage years 2009
through 2014. For years 2015 and thereafter, New Jersey will allocate
1,056 CAIR NOX annual allowances and 555 CAIR NOX
ozone season allowances of the State budget each year into the reserve.
New Jersey is allocating to the Incentive Reserve 634 CAIR
NOX annual allowances and 333 CAIR NOX ozone
season allowances of the State budget each year into this reserve for
vintage years 2009 through 2014. For years 2015 and thereafter, New
Jersey will allocate 528 CAIR NOX annual allowances and 277
CAIR NOX ozone season allowances of the State budget each
year into the reserve.
Several provisions of New Jersey's NOX allocation
proposal are inconsistent with the NOX allocation timing
requirements of the abbreviated SIP revision requirements and the CAIR
FIP trading programs. Full approval of New Jersey's proposed regulation
by EPA is contingent upon New Jersey modifying the proposed rule in
order to clarify that EPA's NOX allocation timing
requirements will be met under New Jersey's program as discussed in
this section. Sections 51.123(p)(1)(ii)(B) and (ee)(2)(ii)(C) of CAIR
require that the State determines and notifies the Administrator of
each existing unit's allowance allocation at least 3 years in advance
of the CAIR FIP NOX annual and ozone season programs.
Sections 51.123(p)(1)(ii)(C) and (ee)(2)(ii)(D) require that the State
determines, and notifies the Administrator of each new
[[Page 36411]]
unit's allowances by October 31 (for the CAIR NOX annual
trading program) or July 31 (for the CAIR NOX ozone season
trading program) of the year for which the allowances are being
allocated.
New Jersey's proposed regulation does not meet NOX
allocation timing requirements for existing or new units that must
surrender and transfer allowances to EPA for retirement for the year in
which the unit shuts down and any year thereafter. As currently written
in the proposed rule, the owner or operator of an existing unit that is
required to surrender allowances will no longer be able to buy or sell
allowances, or undertake other allowance market activities, that were
provided three years in advance and already recorded into their
compliance account. Additionally, the owner or operator of a new unit
could not buy or sell allowances, or undertake other allowance market
activities, in reliance on its allocations provided in advance in
October or July.
It is not clear from New Jersey's proposal what the timing would be
for surrendering the allowances, and whether the State intended for
recorded allowances to be surrendered. New Jersey should clarify the
provisions of the appropriate section regarding permanently shut down
units to be retired, section 7:27-30.3(g), by either removing this
section from the rule, or by clarifying that the State can discontinue
making future allocations to units that permanently shut down.
New Jersey's proposed regulation does not meet NOX
allocation timing requirements with regard to the provision in New
Jersey's proposed rule which provides that the Department may determine
that allocations for existing (or new) units for current or past years
had erroneously allocated too many or too few allowances based on
inaccurate data or projections. As currently written in the proposed
rule, it is unclear how long after determination and recordation of an
allocation the Department may determine that the allocation was
incorrect. The inclusion of the word ``projection'' also suggests New
Jersey will be correcting allocations that were based on projections.
New Jersey should correct this problem by either removing the
allocation correction provision, 7:27-30.3(h), from the rule, or modify
this section in order to address NOX allocation timing
requirements. If NJ chooses to retain the provision, New Jersey may
limit this provision to errors of calculation, errors in the allowable
emission rates used, and/or errors in data on actual operations and
that does not correct allocations once the allocations are recorded by
the Administrator.
New Jersey's proposed rule also provides that if the sum of new
unit allocations (determined by October 31 or July 31 of the year for
which allocations are made) and the existing unit growth allocations
(determined by the end of the year for which allocations are made)
exceeds the total amount of the New Source/Growth Reserve for the year,
all the allocations from the reserve will be reduced on a pro-rata
basis so that the total amount allocated to these new and existing
units does not exceed the reserve. New Jersey should clarify that the
allocation-proration provisions will be applied to new unit allocations
before the October 31 deadline or July 31 deadline for submission of
new unit allocations to EPA and applied to the existing unit growth
allocations before the March 1 deadline for submission of those
allocations to EPA.
E. Allocation of NOX Allowances From the Compliance
Supplement Pool
The CSP provides an incentive for early reductions in
NOX annual emissions. The CSP consists of 200,000 CAIR
NOX annual allowances of vintage 2009 for the entire CAIR
region, and a State's share of the CSP is based upon the State's share
of the projected emission reductions under CAIR. States may distribute
CSP allowances, one allowance for each ton of early reduction, to
sources that make NOX reductions during 2007 or 2008 beyond
what is required by any applicable State or Federal emission
limitation. States also may distribute CSP allowances based upon a
demonstration of need for an extension of the 2009 deadline for
implementing emission controls.
The CAIR NOX annual FIP establishes specific
methodologies for allocations of CSP allowances. States may choose an
allowed, alternative CSP allocation methodology to be used to allocate
CSP allowances to sources in those States.
EPA has allocated to New Jersey allowances equal to 660 tons of
NOX annual emissions for possible distribution.
Consistent with the flexibility given to States in the FIP, New
Jersey has chosen to modify the provisions of the CAIR NOX
annual FIP concerning the allocation of allowances from the CSP. New
Jersey has chosen to retire the CSP allowances budgeted for New Jersey
by not allocating them to CAIR units. New Jersey has maintained in
their rule that the CSP allowances, if allocated, would delay
attainment in New Jersey of the NAAQS for ozone and PM2.5.
New Jersey anticipates that New Jersey CAIR units will be able to meet
their emission limits without risk to the reliability of the energy
supply without resorting to the CSP.
F. Individual Opt-In Units
The opt-in provisions allow for certain non-EGUs (i.e., boilers,
combustion turbines, and other stationary fossil-fuel-fired devices)
that do not meet the applicability criteria for a CAIR trading program
to participate voluntarily in (i.e., opt into) the CAIR trading
program. A non-EGU may opt into one or more of the CAIR trading
programs. In order to qualify to opt into a CAIR trading program, a
unit must vent all emissions through a stack and be able to meet
monitoring, recordkeeping, and recording requirements of 40 CFR part
75. The owners and operators seeking to opt a unit into a CAIR trading
program must apply for a CAIR opt-in permit. If the unit is issued a
CAIR opt-in permit, the unit becomes a CAIR unit, is allocated
allowances, and must meet the same allowance-holding and emissions
monitoring and reporting requirements as other units subject to the
CAIR trading program. The opt-in provisions provide for two
methodologies for allocating allowances for opt-in units, one
methodology that applies to opt-in units in general and a second
methodology that allocates allowances only to opt-in units that the
owners and operators intend to repower before January 1, 2015.
States have several options concerning the opt-in provisions. The
rules for each of the CAIR FIP trading programs include opt-in
provisions that are essentially the same as those in the respective
CAIR SIP model rules, except that the CAIR FIP opt-in provisions become
effective in a State only if the State's abbreviated SIP revision
adopts the opt-in provisions. The State may adopt the opt-in provisions
entirely or may adopt them but exclude one of the allowance allocation
methodologies. The State also has the option of not adopting any opt-in
provisions in the abbreviated SIP revision and thereby providing for
the CAIR FIP trading program to be implemented in the State without the
ability for units to opt into the program.
Consistent with the flexibility given to States in the FIPs, New
Jersey has chosen not to allow non-EGUs meeting the FIP-specified
requirements to participate in the CAIR NOX annual trading
program, the CAIR NOX ozone season trading program, and the
SO2 trading program. Therefore, non-EGUs in New Jersey
cannot opt into either the CAIR trading program under EPA's
[[Page 36412]]
CAIR FIP or New Jersey's abbreviated SIP.
G. Satisfying Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the Clean Air Act
Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) of the CAA requires each State to submit a
SIP that prohibits emissions that could adversely affect another State.
The SIP must prevent sources in the State from emitting pollutants in
amounts which will: (1) Contribute significantly to downwind
nonattainment of the NAAQS, (2) interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS, (3) interfere with provisions to prevent significant
deterioration of air quality, and (4) interfere with efforts to protect
visibility.
EPA issued guidance on August 15, 2006, relating to SIP submissions
to meet the requirements of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). As discussed
below, New Jersey's SIP revision with respect to the statutory
requirements is consistent with the guidance.
New Jersey addresses the first two of these four elements by
complying with the requirements of CAIR. New Jersey satisfies these
requirements either by relying on the existing CAIR FIPs, or through
approval of this SIP revision.
The third element New Jersey addresses was prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD). In accordance with the guidance issued
on August 15, 2006, States may continue to rely on their existing
Nonattainment New Source Review (NNSR) and PSD permitting programs to
prevent significant deterioration of air quality within their own
boundaries and in adjacent States. For 8-hour ozone, the State has met
the obligation by confirming that the existing ozone Nonattainment New
Source Review (NNSR) permitting program remains in effect and applies
to the 8-hour ozone NAAQS standard for the State's major stationary
sources. New Jersey has noted that the State's current NNSR program
retains the lower applicability levels and higher off-set ratios
previously required under the States 1-hour ozone classification and
therefore is more stringent than required under the 8-hour ozone
classification. The State has indicated that it's on track to meet its
June 15, 2007 obligations to submit a final attainment demonstration
for the 8-hour ozone NAAQS by that date. For PM2.5, the
State has confirmed that the State's NNSR and PSD programs are being
implemented in accordance with EPA's interim guidance calling for the
use of PM10 as a surrogate for PM2.5. New Jersey commits to
revising its NNSR program and adopting a PSD program after EPA
finalizes its PM2.5 implementation rule.
It should be noted that the entire State of New Jersey is
nonattainment for 8-hour ozone necessitating only a NNSR program (not
PSD) for ozone. For PM2.5 the State has both attainment and
non-attainment areas necessitating both NNSR and PSD programs.
Consistent with EPA's August 15, 2006 guidance, at this time, it is
impossible for New Jersey to accurately determine whether there is
interference with measures in another State's SIP designed to protect
visibility, which is the fourth element that was addressed. New Jersey
has indicated that it will address the visibility protection
requirements once the regional haze SIP is completed and submitted to
EPA in December of 2007.
VI. Conclusion
New Jersey is covered by the CAIR FIPs, which require participation
in the EPA-administered CAIR FIP cap-and-trade programs for
SO2, NOX annual, and NOX ozone season
emissions. Under this abbreviated SIP revision and consistent with the
flexibility given to States in the FIPs, New Jersey has proposed to
adopt under N.J.A.C. 7:27-30, Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR)
NOX Trading Program, provisions for allocating allowances
under the CAIR FIP NOX annual and ozone season trading
programs. In addition, New Jersey has also proposed at N.J.A.C. 7:27-
31.23 the date when New Jersey's CAIR NOX Trading Program
will replace New Jersey's NOX Budget Trading Program
(Subchapter 31). In addition, New Jersey has proposed to adopt in the
abbreviated SIP revision provisions that retire CSP allowances.
EPA is proposing to approve New Jersey's abbreviated CAIR SIP
revision. This proposed approval is contingent upon New Jersey making
the necessary changes to New Jersey's proposed CAIR rule in order to
address EPA's concerns discussed in section V, Part D (NOX
Allowance Allocations) concerning shutdown units, correction of
allocations to new and existing units, and prorating for the New
Source/ Growth Reserve. If EPA determines New Jersey's final submission
is consistent with the necessary changes outlined in this proposed
action, EPA may proceed to publish its full approval of New Jersey's
CAIR SIP in the Federal Register, and approve its incorporation into
the SIP. To the extent EPA approves New Jersey's SIP revision, EPA
would not make any changes to the CAIR FIP, but would amend the
appropriate appendices of 40 CFR part 97 in the CAIR FIP trading rules
simply to note approval.
Although EPA expects New Jersey to make the necessary changes to
their proposed rule upon final adoption, EPA will finalize a partial
approval/ disapproval should New Jersey be unable to do so. Although
the rule does not currently meet all of the applicable requirements in
40 CFR 51.123(p) and (ee) with regard to NOX annual and
NOX ozone season emissions, EPA believes that the approvable
portions of the rule strengthen New Jersey's SIP by allowing the State
to be the implementing authority, and making allocations consistent
with New Jersey's air quality goals. Partial approval/disapproval will
result in EPA approval of New Jersey's initial NOX
allocations for existing units for the 2009-2011 control periods. EPA
would not make any changes to the CAIR FIP, but would amend the
appropriate appendices of 40 CFR part 97 in the CAIR FIP trading rules
to note partial approval. If New Jersey is unable to make the necessary
changes, EPA proposes partial approval/disapproval of New Jersey's
proposed rule as follows: Subchapter 30 approval of all sections except
``7:27-30.3 Allocation of CAIR NOX annual allowances and
CAIR NOX ozone season allowances''. EPA is approving
portions of 7:27-30.3 which address the allocation of NOX
allowances to existing units and to the incentive reserve, rounding
allowances to the nearest whole number, and consideration of other data
by the department if the data is unusable. (7:27-30.3(a), (b), (c)2,
(c)3, (c)4ii(1), (c)4ii(3), (e), and (f)). EPA is disapproving
provisions for the allocation to the new source/growth reserve, post
control period allocations, provisions that require any unit (existing
or new) that permanently shuts down to surrender and transfer
allowances to EPA for retirement, and correction of allowances
allocated erroneously or were allocated based on data or projections
that are determined to be inaccurate. (7:27-30.3(c)1, (c)4i, (c)4ii(2),
(c)4iii, (d), (g), and (h).
EPA is proposing approval of ``7:27-31.23 Replacement of the
NOX Budget Program'', and ``7:27A-3.10 Civil administrative
penalties for violation of the rules adopted pursuant to the Act''.
EPA is also proposing that this revision adequately addresses the
required elements of 110(a)(2)(D)(i) with the exception of the protect
visibility requirement. This requirement will be re-evaluated after the
regional haze SIP is completed and submitted to EPA in December 2007.
[[Page 36413]]
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
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 would impose no additional requirements beyond those imposed by
State law. Accordingly, the Administrator certifies that this proposed
rule would 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 action proposes to approve pre-existing
requirements under State law and would 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 proposal also does not have tribal implications because it
would 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 proposed action also
does not have Federalism implications because it would 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 to amend the appropriate appendices in the CAIR FIP
trading rules to note that approval. It 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 would
approve a State rule implementing a Federal Standard.
In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve State
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. In
this context, in the absence of a prior existing requirement for the
State to use voluntary consensus standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for EPA, when it reviews a SIP
submission; to use VCS in place of a SIP submission that otherwise
satisfies the provisions of the Clean Air Act. Thus, the requirements
of section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) do not apply. This proposed rule would
not impose an information collection burden under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Electric
utilities, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen oxides, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
dioxide.
40 CFR Part 97
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Electric
utilities, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen oxides, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
dioxide.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 25, 2007.
Alan J. Steinberg,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. E7-12874 Filed 7-2-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P