Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2008 Critical Use Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide, 74118-74152 [E7-25065]
Download as PDF
74118
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2006–1016; FRL–8510–8]
RIN 2060–A030
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The
2008 Critical Use Exemption From the
Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is finalizing an
exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide to meet the needs of 2008
critical uses. Specifically, EPA is
authorizing uses that qualify for the
2008 critical use exemption and the
amount of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or supplied from
existing pre-phaseout inventory for
those uses in 2008. EPA is taking action
under the authority of the Clean Air Act
to reflect recent consensus decisions
taken by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer at the 18th Meeting of the
Parties.
DATES: This rule is effective on
December 28, 2007.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action identified under
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2006–
1016. All documents in the docket are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov
site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., 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 only through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy. To
obtain copies of materials in hard copy,
please call the EPA Docket Center at
(202) 564–1744 between the hours of
8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. E.S.T., Monday–
Friday, excluding legal holidays, to
schedule an appointment. The EPA
Docket Center’s Public Reading Room
address is EPA/DC, EPA West, Room
3334, 1301 Constitution Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Aaron Levy by telephone at (202) 343–
9215, or by e-mail at
levy.aaron@epa.gov or by mail at Aaron
Levy, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Stratospheric Protection
Division, Stratospheric Program
Implementation Branch (6205J), 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
Washington, DC, 20460. You may also
visit the Ozone Depletion Web site of
EPA’s Stratospheric Protection Division
at https://www.epa.gov/ozone/
strathome.html for further information
about EPA’s stratospheric ozone
protection regulations, the science of
ozone layer depletion, and other related
topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final
rule concerns Clean Air Act (CAA)
restrictions on the consumption,
production, and use of methyl bromide
(a class I, Group VI controlled
substance) for critical uses during
calendar year 2008. Under the Clean Air
Act, methyl bromide consumption
(consumption is defined under the CAA
as production plus imports minus
exports) and production was phased out
on January 1, 2005, apart from allowable
exemptions, namely the critical use
exemption and the quarantine and preshipment exemption. With this action,
EPA is authorizing the uses that will
qualify for the 2008 critical use
exemption as well as specific amounts
of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or sold from prephaseout inventory for critical uses in
2008.
Section 553(d) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. Chapter
5, generally provides that rules may not
take effect earlier than 30 days after they
are published in the Federal Register.
EPA is issuing this final rule under
section 307(d) of the Clean Air Act,
which states: ‘‘The provisions of section
553 through 557 * * * of Title 5 shall
not, except as expressly provided in this
section, apply to actions to which this
subsection applies.’’ CAA section
307(d)(1). Thus, section 553(d) of the
APA does not apply to this rule. EPA is
nevertheless acting consistently with
the policies underlying APA section
553(d) in making this rule effective on
December 28, 2007. APA section 553(d)
provides an exception for any action
that grants or recognizes an exemption
or relieves a restriction. This final rule
grants an exemption from the phaseout
of methyl bromide.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout
Regulations for Ozone Depleting
Substances?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import of
Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
B. How Does This Final Rulemaking Relate
to Previous Critical Use Exemption
Rulemakings?
C. Critical Uses
D. Critical Use Amounts
1. Background of Critical Use Amounts
2. Calculation of Available Stocks
3. Adjusting New Production and Import
Amounts to Account for Available
Stocks
4. Treatment of Carryover Material
a. Reporting Requirements to Calculate
Carryover Amounts
b. Apportionment of Carryover Reductions
Among Producers
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex.
I/4
F. Emissions Minimization
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations
and the Confidentiality of Information
About the Aggregate Methyl Bromide
Inventory
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children from Environmental Health and
Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
to Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this
action are those associated with the
production, import, export, sale,
application, and use of methyl bromide
covered by an approved critical use
exemption. Potentially regulated
categories and entities include:
Category
Examples of regulated entities
Industry ........
Producers, Importers, and Exporters of methyl bromide;
Applicators and Distributors
of methyl bromide; Users of
methyl bromide, e.g., farmers of vegetable crops,
fruits, and seedlings; Owners of stored food commodities and structures such as
grain mills and processors;
and Agricultural researchers.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
The above table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather to provide a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this action. This table lists
the types of entities that EPA is aware
could potentially be regulated by this
action. To determine whether your
facility, company, business, or
organization is regulated by this action,
you should carefully examine the
regulations promulgated at 40 CFR Part
82, Subpart A. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person
listed in the preceding section.
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless,
colorless, toxic gas which is used as a
broad-spectrum pesticide and is
controlled under the CAA as a class I
ozone-depleting substance (ODS).
Methyl bromide is used in the U.S. and
throughout the world as a fumigant to
control a variety of pests such as insects,
weeds, rodents, pathogens, and
nematodes. Additional characteristics
and details about the uses of methyl
bromide can be found in the proposed
rule on the phaseout schedule for
methyl bromide published in the
Federal Register on March 18, 1993 (58
FR 15014), and the final rule published
in the Federal Register on December 10,
1993 (58 FR 65018). Information on
methyl bromide can be found at
https://www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr and
https://www.ozone.unep.org or by
contacting the Stratospheric Ozone
Hotline at 1–800–296–1996.
Because it is a pesticide, methyl
bromide is also regulated by EPA under
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and other
statutes and regulatory authority, as
well as by States under their own
statutes and regulatory authorities.
Under FIFRA, methyl bromide is a
restricted use pesticide. Restricted use
pesticides are subject to certain Federal
and State requirements governing their
sale, distribution, and use. Nothing in
this final rule implementing the Clean
Air Act is intended to derogate from
provisions in any other Federal, State,
or Local laws or regulations governing
actions including, but not limited to, the
sale, distribution, transfer, and use of
methyl bromide. All entities that are
affected by provisions of this action
must continue to comply with FIFRA
and other pertinent statutory and
regulatory requirements for pesticides
(including, but not limited to,
requirements pertaining to restricted use
pesticides) when importing, exporting,
acquiring, selling, distributing,
transferring, or using methyl bromide
for critical uses. The regulations in this
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
final rule are intended only to
implement the CAA restrictions on the
production, consumption, and use of
methyl bromide for critical uses
exempted from the phaseout of methyl
bromide.
III. What Is the Background to the
Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements
of the stratospheric ozone protection
program that limit production and
consumption of ozone-depleting
substances can be found at 40 CFR Part
82, Subpart A. The regulatory program
was originally published in the Federal
Register on August 12, 1988 (53 FR
30566), in response to the 1987 signing
and subsequent ratification of the
Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Protocol). The
Protocol is the international agreement
aimed at reducing and eliminating the
production and consumption of
stratospheric ozone depleting
substances. The U.S. was one of the
original signatories to the 1987 Montreal
Protocol and the U.S. ratified the
Protocol on April 12, 1988. Congress
then enacted, and President George
H.W. Bush signed into law, the Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA of
1990) which included Title VI on
Stratospheric Ozone Protection, codified
as 42 U.S.C. Chapter 85, Subchapter VI,
to ensure that the United States could
satisfy its obligations under the
Protocol. EPA issued regulations to
implement this legislation and has made
several amendments to the regulations
since that time.
Methyl bromide was added to the
Protocol as an ozone depleting
substance in 1992 through the
Copenhagen Amendment to the
Protocol. The Parties to the Montreal
Protocol (Parties) agreed that each
industrialized country’s level of methyl
bromide production and consumption
in 1991 should be the baseline for
establishing a freeze in the level of
methyl bromide production and
consumption for industrialized
countries. EPA published a final rule in
the Federal Register on December 10,
1993 (58 FR 65018), listing methyl
bromide as a class I, Group VI
controlled substance, freezing U.S.
production and consumption at this
1991 level of 25,528,270 kilograms, and,
in 40 CFR 82.7, EPA also set forth the
percentage of baseline allowances for
methyl bromide granted to companies in
each control period (each calendar year)
until 2001, when the complete phaseout
would occur. This phaseout date was
established in response to a petition
filed in 1991 under sections 602(c)(3)
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74119
and 606(b) of the CAAA of 1990,
requesting that EPA list methyl bromide
as a class I substance and phase out its
production and consumption. This date
was consistent with section 602(d) of
the CAAA of 1990, which for newly
listed class I ozone depleting substances
provides that ‘‘no extension [of the
phaseout schedule in section 604] under
this subsection may extend the date for
termination of production of any class I
substance to a date more than 7 years
after January 1 of the year after the year
in which the substance is added to the
list of class I substances.’’ EPA based its
action on scientific assessments and
actions by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol to freeze the level of methyl
bromide production and consumption
for industrialized countries at the
Fourth Meeting of the Parties (MOP) in
1992 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
At the Seventh MOP in 1995, the
Parties made adjustments to the methyl
bromide control measures and agreed to
reduction steps and a 2010 phaseout
date for industrialized countries with
exemptions permitted for critical uses.
At that time, the U.S. continued to have
a 2001 phaseout date in accordance
with the CAAA of 1990 language. At the
Ninth MOP in 1997, the Parties agreed
to further adjustments to the phaseout
schedule for methyl bromide in
industrialized countries, with reduction
steps leading to a 2005 phaseout.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
In October 1998, the U.S. Congress
amended the CAA to prohibit the
termination of production of methyl
bromide prior to January 1, 2005, to
require EPA to bring the U.S. phaseout
of methyl bromide in line with the
schedule specified under the Protocol,
and to authorize EPA to provide
exemptions for critical uses. These
amendments were contained in section
764 of the 1999 Omnibus Consolidated
and Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 105–277,
October 21, 1998) and were codified in
section 604 of the CAA, 42 U.S.C.
7671c. The amendment that specifically
addresses the critical use exemption
appears at section 604(d)(6), 42 U.S.C.
7671c(d)(6). EPA revised the phaseout
schedule for methyl bromide production
and consumption in a direct final
rulemaking on November 28, 2000 (65
FR 70795), which allowed for the
phased reduction in methyl bromide
consumption and extended the
phaseout to 2005. EPA again amended
the revised phaseout to allow for an
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74120
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
exemption for quarantine and
preshipment purposes on July 19, 2001
(66 FR 37751), with an interim final rule
and with a final rule on January 2, 2003
(68 FR 238).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982),
EPA published a final rule titled
‘‘Protection of Stratospheric Ozone:
Process for Exempting Critical Uses
From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide’’
(the ‘‘Framework Rule’’) in the Federal
Register that established the framework
for the critical use exemption; set forth
a list of approved critical uses for 2005;
and specified the amount of methyl
bromide that could be supplied in 2005
from stocks and new production or
import to meet the needs of approved
critical uses. EPA then promulgated a
supplemental rule on December 13,
2005 that added critical uses to the
exemption program for 2005 and
allocated additional stock allowances
(70 FR 73604). EPA published a final
rule on February 6, 2006, to exempt
production and import of methyl
bromide for 2006 critical uses and
indicated which uses met the criteria for
the exemption program for that year (71
FR 5985). EPA published another final
rule on December 14, 2006, to exempt
production and import of methyl
bromide for critical uses in 2007 and
indicated which uses met the criteria for
critical uses for that year (71 FR 75386).
Under authority of section 604(d)(6) of
the CAA, this action lists the uses that
qualify as approved critical uses in 2008
and the amount of methyl bromide that
may be produced, imported, or supplied
from inventory to satisfy those uses.
This action reflects Decision XVIII/13,
taken at the Eighteenth Meeting of the
Parties in October 2006. In accordance
with Article 2H(5) of the Montreal
Protocol, the Parties have issued several
Decisions pertaining to the critical use
exemption. These include Decisions IX/
6 and Ex. I/4, which set forth criteria for
review of proposed critical uses (see
Section V.E. of this preamble). The
status of Decisions is addressed in
NRDC v. EPA, (464 F.3d 1, DC Cir. 2006)
and in EPA’s ‘‘Supplemental Brief for
the Respondent,’’ filed in NRDC v. EPA
and available in the docket for this
action. In this final rule, EPA is
honoring commitments made by the
United States in the Montreal Protocol
context.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying
applicants of the process for obtaining a
critical use exemption from the methyl
bromide phaseout. On May 8, 2003, the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
Agency published its first notice in the
Federal Register (68 FR 24737)
announcing the availability of the
application for a critical use exemption
and the deadline for submission of the
requisite data. Applicants were
informed that they may apply as
individuals or as part of a group of users
(a ‘‘consortium’’) who face the same
limiting critical conditions (i.e. specific
conditions that establish a critical need
for methyl bromide). EPA has repeated
this process annually since then. The
critical use exemption is designed to
permit production and import of methyl
bromide for uses that do not have
technically and economically feasible
alternatives.
The criteria for the exemption
initially appeared in Decision IX/6 of
the Parties to the Protocol. In that
Decision, the Parties agreed that ‘‘a use
of methyl bromide should qualify as
‘critical’ only if the nominating Party
determines that: (i) The specific use is
critical because the lack of availability
of methyl bromide for that use would
result in a significant market disruption;
and (ii) there are no technically and
economically feasible alternatives or
substitutes available to the user that are
acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and public health and are
suitable to the crops and circumstances
of the nomination.’’ These criteria are
reflected in EPA’s definition of ‘‘critical
use’’ at 40 CFR 82.3.
In response to the annual requests for
critical use exemption applications
published in the Federal Register,
applicants provide data on the technical
and economic feasibility of using
alternatives to methyl bromide.
Applicants also submit data on their use
of methyl bromide, on research
programs into the use of alternatives to
methyl bromide, and on efforts to
minimize use and emissions of methyl
bromide.
EPA’s Office of Pesticide Programs
reviews the data submitted by
applicants, as well as data from
governmental and academic sources, to
establish whether there are technically
and economically feasible alternatives
available for a particular use of methyl
bromide and whether there would be a
significant market disruption if no
exemption were available. In addition,
EPA reviews other parameters of the
exemption applications such as dosage
and emissions minimization techniques
and applicants’ research or transition
plans. This assessment process
culminates in the development of a
document referred to as the critical use
nomination, or CUN. The U.S.
Department of State submits the CUN
annually to the United Nations
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Environment Programme (UNEP) Ozone
Secretariat. The CUNs of various
countries are subsequently reviewed by
the Methyl Bromide Technical Options
Committee (MBTOC) and the Technical
and Economic Assessment Panel
(TEAP), which are independent
advisory bodies to Parties to the
Montreal Protocol. These bodies make
recommendations to the Parties on the
nominations. The Parties then take a
Decision to authorize a critical use
exemption for a particular country. The
Decision also identifies how much
methyl bromide may be supplied for the
exempted critical uses. As required in
section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act,
for each exemption period, EPA
consults with the United States
Department of Agriculture and other
departments and institutions of the
Federal government that have regulatory
authority related to methyl bromide,
and provides an opportunity for public
comment on the amounts of methyl
bromide that the Agency has
determined to be necessary for critical
uses and the uses that the Agency has
determined meet the criteria of the
critical use exemption.
For more information on the domestic
review process and methodology
employed by the Office of Pesticide
Programs, please refer to a detailed
memo titled ‘‘Development of 2003
Nomination for a Critical Use
Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the
United States of America’’ available on
the docket for this rulemaking. While
the particulars of the data continue to
evolve and administrative matters are
further streamlined, the technical
review itself has remained the same
since the inception of the exemption
program.
On January 24, 2006, the U.S.
Government (USG) submitted the fourth
Nomination for a Critical Use
Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the
United States of America to the Ozone
Secretariat of the UNEP. This fourth
nomination contained the request for
2008 critical uses. In March 2006,
MBTOC sent questions to the USG
concerning technical and economic
issues in the nomination. In April 2006,
the USG transmitted responses to
MBTOC’s requests for clarification. The
USG received MBTOC’s second round
of questions in June 2006, and sent
responses to MBTOC in August 2006.
These documents, together with reports
by the advisory bodies noted above, can
be accessed in the public docket for this
rulemaking. The determination in this
final rule reflects the analysis contained
in those documents.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
B. How Does This Final Rulemaking
Relate to Previous Critical Use
Exemption Rulemakings?
The December 23, 2004, Framework
Rule (69 FR 76982) established the
operational framework for the critical
use exemption program in the U.S.,
including trading provisions and
recordkeeping and reporting obligations.
The Framework Rule defined the terms
‘‘critical use allowances’’ (CUAs) and
‘‘critical stock allowances’’ (CSAs) at 40
CFR 82.3. Today’s action authorizes the
uses that will qualify as critical uses for
2008 and the amounts of CUAs and
CSAs that will be allocated for those
uses. The uses that EPA is authorizing
as 2008 critical uses are the uses which
the USG included in the fourth CUN,
and which were approved by the Parties
in Decision XVIII/13. In this action, EPA
is also refining its approach for
determining the amount of CSAs to
allocate in 2008 and each year
thereafter. EPA discusses the refined
approach in detail in Section V.D. of
this preamble.
C. Critical Uses
In Decision XVIII/13, taken in October
2006, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
as follows: ‘‘for the agreed critical-use
categories for 2008, set forth in table C
of the annex to the present decision for
each Party to permit, subject to the
conditions set forth in the present
decision and decision Ex.I/4, to the
extent that those conditions are
applicable, the levels of production and
consumption for 2008 set forth in table
D of the annex to the present decision
which are necessary to satisfy critical
uses * * *’’
The following uses are those set forth
in table C of the annex to Decision
XVIII/13: Commodities, Cocoa beans
(NPMA 1 subset), NPMA food
processing structures (cocoa beans
removed), Mills and processors,
Smokehouse ham, Cucurbits—field,
Eggplant—field, Forest nursery, Nursery
stock—fruit, nut, flower, Orchard
replant, Ornamentals, Peppers—field,
Strawberry—field, Strawberry runners,
Tomatoes—field, and Sweet potato
slips. The agreed critical-use levels for
2008 total 5,355,946 kilograms (kg),
which is equivalent to 21.0% of the U.S.
1991 methyl bromide consumption
baseline of 25,528,270 kg. However, the
maximum amount of allowable new
production and import as set forth in
table D of Decision XVIII/13 is 4,595,040
kg (18.0% of baseline). For the reasons
described in Section V.D. of this
preamble, EPA is allowing up to
3,083,763 kg (12.1% of baseline) of new
production or import of methyl bromide
for critical uses for 2008, with 1,729,689
kg (6.8% of baseline) coming from
stocks. To clarify, while the Parties
require only 760,906 kg of stockpile use
if the entire U.S. allotment is utilized,
EPA is allowing use of 1,729,689 kg of
74121
pre-phaseout inventory for critical uses
and reducing allowable production
accordingly.
In this final rule, EPA is amending
columns B and C of Appendix L to 40
CFR art 82, subpart A to reflect the
agreed critical-use categories identified
in Decision XVIII/13 for the 2008
control period (calendar year). The
Agency is amending the table of critical
uses based, in part, on the technical
analysis contained in the 2008 U.S.
nomination that assesses data submitted
by applicants to the critical use
exemption program as well as public
and proprietary data on the use of
methyl bromide and its alternatives.
EPA sought comment on the analysis
contained in the 2008 nomination and,
in particular, any information regarding
changes to the registration or use of
alternatives that may have transpired
after the 2008 nomination was
submitted. The Agency stated that such
information has the potential to alter the
technical or economic feasibility of an
alternative and could thus cause EPA to
modify the analysis that underpins
EPA’s determination as to which uses
and what amounts of methyl bromide
qualify for the critical use exemption.
Based on Decision XIII/13 and the 2008
U.S. CUN, EPA is determining that the
uses in Table I: Approved Critical Uses,
with the limiting critical conditions
specified, qualify to obtain and use
critical use methyl bromide in 2008.
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Pre-Plant Uses:
Cucurbits .....................................................
(a) Michigan growers .......................................
(b) Southeastern U.S. limited to growing locations in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Virginia.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(c) Georgia growers .........................................
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
1 NPMA stands for National Pest Management
Association.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74122
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Eggplant ......................................................
(a) Florida growers ...........................................
(b) Georgia growers .........................................
(c) Michigan growers .......................................
Forest Nursery Seedlings ............................
(a) Growers in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina,
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Virginia.
(b) International Paper and its subsidiaries
limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, South Carolina, and
Texas.
(c) Public (government-owned) seedling nurseries in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, and South
Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Oregon
and Washington.
(f) Michigan growers ........................................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Orchard Nursery Seedlings .........................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry Nursery Consortium limited to growing locations
in Washington.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium collar, crown and
root rot.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe weed infestation including
purple and yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode or worm infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Presence of medium to heavy clay soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
74123
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(b) Members of the California Association of
Nursery and Garden Centers representing
Deciduous Tree Fruit Growers.
(c) California rose nurseries ............................
Strawberry Nurseries ...................................
(a) California growers ......................................
(b) North Carolina and Tennessee growers ....
Orchard Replant ..........................................
(a) California stone fruit growers .....................
(b) California table and raisin grape growers ..
(c) California wine grape growers ....................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(d) California walnut growers. ..........................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Presence of medium to heavy clay soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot.
Moderate to severe root-knot nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow and purple
nutsedge infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Presence of medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74124
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(e) California almond growers .........................
Ornamentals ................................................
(a) California growers ......................................
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
(c) Michigan herbaceous perennials growers ..
Peppers .......................................................
(a) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia growers.
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
(c) Georgia growers .........................................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(d) Michigan growers .......................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe weed infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge and
other weed infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium root, collar,
crown and root rots.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation, or
moderate to severe pythium root and collar
rots.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation, crown or root rot.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
74125
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Strawberry Fruit ...........................................
(a) California growers ......................................
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi,
Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia
growers.
Sweet Potato Slips ......................................
(a) California growers ......................................
Tomatoes ....................................................
(a) Michigan growers .......................................
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia growers.
Post-Harvest Uses:
Food Processing .........................................
(a) Rice millers in all locations in the U.S. who
are members of the USA Rice Millers Association.
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities in the
U.S. who are active members of the Pet
Food Institute (for this rule, ‘‘pet food’’ refers to domestic dog and cat food).
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(c) Bakeries in the U.S. ...................................
(d) Members of the North American Millers’
Association in the U.S.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe black root rot or crown
rot.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Time to transition to an alternative.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe black root and crown rot.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematodes.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features, and in Florida, soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe infestation of beetles,
weevils, or moths.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe infestation or beetles,
moths, or cockroaches.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74126
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE I.—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Commodities ...............................................
Dry Cured Pork Products ............................
(e) Members of the National Pest Management Association treating cocoa beans in
storage and associated spaces and equipment and processed food, cheese, herbs,
spices and spaces and equipment in associated processing facilities.
(a) California entities storing walnuts, beans,
dried plums, figs, raisins, and dates (in Riverside county only) in California.
(a) Members of the National Country Ham Association.
(b) Members of the American Association of
Meat Processors.
(c) Nahunta Pork Center (North Carolina) .......
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(d) Gwaltney of Smithfield Ltd .........................
The National Pest Management
Association (NPMA) requested that the
language in Column B of Table I
describing the NPMA be changed to
‘‘Members of the National Pest
Management Association treating cocoa
beans in storage and associated spaces
and equipment and processed food,
cheese, dried milk, herbs, spices and
spaces and equipment in associated
processing facilities.’’ EPA has
incorporated this revised language
describing the NPMA because it clarifies
that commodities will be fumigated as
part of space fumigations, as indicated
in NPMA’s application.
Dow Agrosciences LLC (Dow)
commented that sulfuryl fluoride
(ProFume) can replace methyl bromide
for all post-harvest uses during the 2008
control period. Dow also states that
some post-harvest use limiting critical
conditions are no longer relevant and
should be removed. The commenter
noted that sulfuryl fluoride has
superseded phosphine and heat as the
preferred alternative in post-harvest use
categories. The commenter requested
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
removal of the following limiting
critical conditions:
• Time to transition to an alternative
• Older structures that cannot be
properly sealed
• Presence of sensitive electronic
equipment subject to corrosion by
phosphine
• Rapid fumigation
First, EPA addresses the transition
rate and overall feasibility of sulfuryl
fluoride for post-harvest sectors in
Section V.D.6. of this preamble. Second,
EPA agrees that the inability to properly
seal older structures in preparation for
fumigation should not be the sole
condition for granting critical use
exemption status to food processing
facilities. The 2008 CUN does not state
that the inability to seal older structures
is a basis for methyl bromide need.
Therefore, EPA agrees and has removed
this limiting critical condition from the
rule text.
Third, as discussed in the 2008 CUN,
research is still ongoing regarding the
efficacy of sulfuryl fluoride for the postharvest critical uses listed in Table I,
and EPA must ensure that post-harvest
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Rapid fumigation is required to meet a critical
market window, such as during the holiday
season, rapid fumigation is required when a
buyer provides short (2 working days or
less) notification for a purchase or there is
a short period after harvest in which to fumigate and there is limited silo availability
for using alternatives.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
sectors have sufficient time to validate
and adopt the new technology.
Therefore, the presence of sensitive
electronic equipment remains a proper
limiting critical condition for critical
use applications that would otherwise
use phosphine, which corrodes
electronic equipment.
Finally, regarding the rapid
fumigation limiting critical condition
for certain post-harvest sectors, the
United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) Agriculture Research Service
(ARS) is currently conducting research
on the efficacy and practicality of using
alternative fumigants, including sulfuryl
fluoride, to control post-harvest pests of
durable commodities such as nuts and
dried fruit. While acknowledging that
sulfuryl fluoride appears to have the
potential to provide effective and rapid
vacuum fumigation of nuts and dried
fruit, the Agency must ensure that the
tree nut and dried fruit industry has
sufficient time to validate and adopt the
new technology. Therefore, rapid
fumigation remains a valid limiting
critical condition for the sectors where
it is listed in Table I.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Dow commented that EPA should
remove or modify some of the pre-plant
limiting critical conditions in the final
rule. The commenter stated that with
the availability of 1,3-Dichloropropene
(1,3-D) as a nematicide, ‘‘nematode
infestations’’ should not qualify as a
limiting critical condition. The 2008
CUN explained that methyl bromide is
the only option to effectively control the
target pests, including nematodes, found
in the Southeastern U.S. where pest
pressures commonly exist at moderate
to severe levels. EPA responds in more
detail in the Response to Comments
document for this action.
At the public hearing for this action
the Florida Golf Course Superintendents
Association and a researcher from
Florida University argued that the golf
and turf industry should qualify for
critical use methyl bromide. EPA
responds to these comments in a
Response to Comments document
available on the docket for this
rulemaking.
EPA is finalizing the proposed
changes amending the table in 40 CFR
Part 82, subpart A, Appendix L, as
reflected above. EPA is adding six
references and deleting four references
in column B, changing the description
of one critical use in column B, and
removing one limiting critical condition
from five post-harvest sectors in column
C. Specifically, the changes are as
follows: Adding Mississippi to the
approved locations for cucurbit growers
because that location was included in
the approved Southeast Cucurbit
Consortium application for 2008;
removing Florida from the approved
forest seedling locations because a 2008
application for that location was not
submitted to EPA; removing Maryland
from the approved strawberry nursery
locations because a 2008 application for
that location was not submitted to EPA;
removing California from the approved
locations for pepper growers because
the United States Government did not
reflect this location in its 2008 CUN;
adding Mississippi to the approved
locations for pepper growers because
that location was included in the
approved Southeast Pepper Consortium
application for 2008; adding Mississippi
and Missouri to the approved locations
for strawberry fruit growers because
those locations were included in the
approved Southeastern Strawberry
Consortium application for 2008; adding
California sweet potato slip growers to
reflect the authorization of that use in
Decision XVIII/13; adding Mississippi to
the approved locations for tomato
growers because that location was
included in the approved Southeastern
Tomato Consortium application for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
2008; removing turf grass because that
use was not agreed to by the Parties in
Decision XVIII/13; adding Gwaltney and
Smithfield Inc. to the approved entities
for dry cured pork products because
their application was approved for 2008;
changing the description of members of
the National Pest Management
Association (NPMA) as requested by
NPMA; and deleting the limiting critical
condition ‘‘older structures that can not
be properly sealed to use an alternative
to methyl bromide’’ for post-harvest
sectors.
The categories listed in Table I above
have been designated critical uses for
2008 in Decision XVIII/13 of the Parties.
The amount of methyl bromide
approved for research purposes is
included in the amount of methyl
bromide approved by the Parties for the
commodities for which ‘‘research
purposes’’ is indicated as a limiting
critical condition in the table above. As
explained in Section V.D.5. of this
preamble, EPA is allowing sale of
15,491 kg of methyl bromide from
existing stocks for research purposes,
and adjusting new production
accordingly.
In accordance with the
recommendations in Table 9 of the
TEAP’s September 2006 Final Report
entitled ‘‘Evaluations of 2006 Critical
Use Nominations for Methyl Bromide
and Related Matters,’’ available on the
docket for this rulemaking, EPA is
allowing the following sectors to use
critical use methyl bromide for research
purposes: Commodities, cucurbits
(field), eggplant (field), nursery stock
(fruit, nut, flower), ornamentals,
peppers (field), strawberry (field),
strawberry runners, and tomatoes
(field). In their applications to EPA,
these sectors identified research
programs that require the use of methyl
bromide.
D. Critical Use Amounts
Section V.C. of this preamble explains
that Table C of the annex to Decision
XVIII/13 lists critical uses and amounts
agreed to by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol (Parties). When added together,
the critical use amounts authorized by
the Parties for the U.S. in 2008 total
5,355,946 kilograms (kg), which is
equivalent to 21.0% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline
of 25,528,270 kg. However, the limit on
authorized new production or import as
set forth in Table D of the annex to
Decision XVIII/13 is 4,595,040 kg
(18.0% of baseline). The difference
between allowable new production and
import and the total critical use amount
is to be made up from pre-phaseout
inventory that was produced before
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74127
January 1, 2005. EPA further discusses
the breakout between new production or
import and stocks in sections V.D.1–3.
of this preamble.
EPA is establishing the following
reductions to the amount of newly
produced or imported methyl bromide
authorized in Decision XVIII/13 to
satisfy critical uses:
(a) Reductions to account for the
amount of available stocks;
(b) Reductions to account for unused
critical use methyl bromide at the end
of 2006;
(c) Reductions to account for methyl
bromide for research purposes that EPA
encourages researchers to purchase from
available stocks;
(d) Reductions to accommodate
uptake of sulfuryl fluoride for postharvest cocoa bean fumigation in 2008;
and
(e) Reduction to accommodate a
certain amount of transition to the
recently registered fumigant
iodomethane for some pre-plant uses.
After accounting for the reductions
listed above, in this action EPA is
issuing 3,083,763 kg of critical use
allowances (CUAs), which allow limited
amounts of new production and import
of methyl bromide for 2008 critical uses
up to the amount of 3,083,763 kg (12.1%
of baseline) as shown in Table II. EPA
is also issuing 1,729,689 kg of critical
stock allowances (CSAs), which allow
sales of 1,729,689 kg (6.8% of baseline)
from existing pre-phaseout inventories
for critical uses in 2008. Sections V.H.
and V.I. of this preamble provide
definitions for the terms CUA and CSA.
EPA explains each of the reductions
listed above in subsequent sections of
this preamble.
EPA received five comments that
object to the Agency’s proposed
reductions and state that EPA should
grant the full amount of new production
allowed by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol in Decision XVIII/13.
EPA received one comment from
Chemtura Corporation (Chemtura)
asserting that EPA ‘‘arbitrarily’’ reduces
the amount of production authorized by
the Parties and ‘‘never deigns to explain
how amounts for production previously
determined to be critical are deemed no
longer to be critical.’’ At the public
hearing for this action three commenters
argued that the methyl bromide
allocations have been reduced at each
stage of the review process and do not
need to be further reduced by the
Agency in this rulemaking. When the
USG prepares a critical use nomination,
it is making a determination as to the
level of critical need. It is not making a
determination that a particular portion
of that need should be met from new
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74128
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
production as compared to stocks. The
Parties’ Decisions contain a
determination as to the level of critical
need as well as a maximum amount of
that total need that may be met from
new production. The Parties’ Decisions
do not specify a minimum amount that
must be met from new production. It is
not accurate to state, as the commenter
does, that a particular production
amount is itself ‘‘critical.’’ As explained
elsewhere in this preamble, EPA is
adjusting the amount of new production
to take into account stocks that it has
determined to be available.
Fumigation Service and Supply, Inc.
(FSS) commented that the Copenhagen
Amendment was signed by the U.S. to
phase out methyl bromide 14 years ago,
and stated that this time period should
have been adequate for all users of
methyl bromide to switch to alternative
fumigation methods. The commenter
stated that EPA’s proposed allocations
will penalize companies that have
already phased out methyl bromide. The
Natural Resources Defense Council
(NRDC) requested that EPA reduce the
2008 CUE allocations by at least
1,275,000 kg and by larger amounts in
2009 due to advancements in using
sulfuryl fluoride and iodomethane. The
comments on EPA’s proposed allocation
amounts are addressed in subsequent
sections of this preamble and in the
Response to Comments document
available on the docket for this action.
1. Background of Critical Use Amounts
The Framework Rule (69 FR 76982)
and subsequent CUE rules each took
note of language regarding stocks of
methyl bromide in relevant decisions of
the Parties. In developing this action,
the Agency noted that paragraph six of
Decision XVIII/13 contains the
following language: ‘‘that each Party
which has an agreed critical use renews
its commitment to ensure that the
criteria in paragraph 1 of decision IX/6
are applied when licensing, permitting
or authorizing critical use of methyl
bromide and that such procedures take
into account available stocks of banked
or recycled methyl bromide, in
particular, the criterion laid down in
paragraph 1(b)(ii) of decision IX/6.’’
Language calling on Parties to address
stocks also appears in prior Decisions
related to the critical use exemption.
In the Framework Rule, which
established the architecture of the CUE
program and set out the exempted levels
of critical use for 2005, EPA interpreted
paragraph 5 of Decision Ex. I/3, which
is similar to Decision XVIII/13(6), ‘‘as
meaning that the U.S. should not
authorize critical use exemptions
without including provisions addressing
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
drawdown from stocks for critical uses’’
(69 FR 76987). Consistent with that
interpretation, the Framework Rule
established provisions governing the
sale of pre-phaseout inventories for
critical uses, including the concept of
CSAs and a prohibition on the sale of
pre-phaseout inventories for critical
uses in excess of the amount of CSAs
held by the seller. In addition, EPA
noted that stocks were further taken into
account through the trading provisions
that allow CUAs to be converted into
CSAs. In developing this final rule, EPA
did not propose changes to these basic
CSA provisions.
In the August 25, 2004, Proposed
Framework Rule (69 FR 52366), EPA
proposed to adjust the authorized level
of new production and consumption for
critical uses by the amount of
‘‘available’’ stocks. The methodology for
determining the amount of ‘‘available’’
stocks considered exports, methyl
bromide for feedstock uses, and the
need for a buffer in case of catastrophic
events. However, the Final Framework
Rule did not adopt the proposed
methodology for determining available
stocks. Instead, EPA issued CSAs in an
amount equal to the difference between
the total authorized CUE amount and
the amount of new production or import
authorized by the Parties (Total
Authorized CUE Amount—Authorized
New Production and Import).
In the 2006 CUE Rule, published
February 6, 2006 (71 FR 5985), EPA
applied the approach described in the
Framework Rule by allocating as CSAs
the difference between the total
authorized CUE amount and the amount
of new production and import
authorized by the Parties (2.0% of
baseline), as well as the small
supplemental allocation in Decision
XVII/9 (0.4% of baseline). EPA also
issued CSAs allowing additional
amounts of existing stocks to be sold for
critical uses (roughly 3.0% of baseline).
In the 2006 CUE Rule, EPA issued a
total of 1,136,008 kg as CSAs, equivalent
to 5.0% of baseline. Similarly, in the
2007 CUE Rule, EPA issued a number of
CSAs that represented not only the
difference between the total authorized
CUE amount and the amount of
authorized new production and import
(6.2% of baseline), but also an
additional amount (1.3% of baseline) for
a total of 1,915,600 CSAs (7.5% of
baseline).
EPA viewed the allocation of
additional CSA amounts as an
appropriate exercise of its discretion.
EPA reasoned that the Agency was not
required to allocate the full amount of
authorized new production and
consumption. The Parties agreed to
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
‘‘permit’’ a particular level of
production and consumption; they did
not—and could not—mandate that the
U.S. authorize this level of production
and consumption domestically. Nor
does the CAA require EPA to exempt
the full amount permitted by the Parties.
Section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) does not require EPA to exempt
any amount of production and
consumption for critical uses, but
instead specifies that the Agency ‘‘may’’
exempt amounts for production, import,
and consumption, thus providing EPA
with substantial discretion in creating
critical use exemptions.
In the July 6, 2006, Proposed 2007
CUE Rule (71 FR 38325), EPA sought
comment on ‘‘whether, in the critical
use exemption context, it would be
appropriate to adjust the level of new
production and import with the goal of
maintaining a stockpile of some
specified duration [* * *] and on how
many months of methyl bromide
inventory would be appropriate, in
order to maintain non-disruptive
management of this chemical in the
supply chain’’ (71 FR 38339). In the
Final 2007 CUE Rule, EPA noted that
‘‘the Parties have not taken a decision
on an appropriate amount of inventory
for reserve. Nor has EPA reached any
conclusion regarding what amount
might be appropriate. Given this
uncertainty, and the continuing decline
in inventory levels, EPA is exercising
caution in this year’s CSA allocation.
EPA will consider various approaches to
this issue in the future based on the data
received during this notice and
comment rulemaking process and other
information obtained by the Agency’’
(71 FR 75399).
The benefits of pre-phaseout methyl
bromide inventories for critical uses
were discussed at the 18th and 19th
Meetings of the Parties (MOPs). The
Parties did not take a decision at the
18th or 19th MOP on whether it would
be appropriate to allow some specific
amount of pre-phaseout stocks to
remain in inventory, or what amount
that might be. However, at the 19th
MOP, the Parties did recognize that it is
appropriate to adjust new production
and import levels to account for the
amount of ‘‘available stocks.’’ In Table
D of the Annex to Decision XIX/9, the
Parties authorized new production and
consumption for critical uses in the
United States during 2009 of 3,961,974
kg, ‘‘minus available stocks.’’
In the proposed rule, EPA noted that
in another instance—essential use
exemption process for the use of
chlorofluorocarbons in the manufacture
of metered-dose inhalers—the Parties
have allowed companies to maintain
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
working stocks of up to one year’s
supply. As explained in the FDA
Determination Letter available on the
public docket for this rulemaking, FDA
bases its determination of the amount of
CFC production that is necessary for
medical devices ‘‘on an estimate of the
quantity of CFCs that would allow
manufacturers to maintain as much as a
12-month stockpile.’’ However, neither
FDA nor EPA maintains a CFC reserve
on behalf of any essential use
manufacturer, or guarantees that a
certain amount of CFCs will always be
held in inventory.
Similarly, in developing this action,
EPA did not propose to maintain a
reserve of methyl bromide for critical
uses, or to guarantee that a certain
amount of methyl bromide would
always be held in inventory. EPA did,
however, propose to calculate the
amount of existing methyl bromide
stocks that is available for critical uses
in 2008, and to consider this amount in
the Agency’s determination of how
much sale of existing stocks and how
much production and import to allow
for critical uses in 2008. Section V.D.2.
of the proposed rule described EPA’s
proposed method to calculate the
amount of stocks available for critical
uses in 2008. Section V.D.3. of the
proposed rule explained how EPA
proposed to adjust new production and
import levels to account for the
Agency’s calculation of the amount of
available stocks.
In the proposed rule, EPA explained
that through data collection and
experience, EPA has gained information
about the CUE program that the Agency
did not have when the program began.
For example, data on the aggregate
amount of methyl bromide held in
inventory at the end of calendar years
2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006 is now
available in the public docket for this
rulemaking. The pre-phaseout inventory
has gradually declined to the point
where, for the first time, EPA estimates
that at the start of the 2008 control
period the pre-phaseout inventory will
represent less than a one-year supply of
critical use methyl bromide. EPA
explained that the proposed approach is
intended as a clear and repeatable
process for the Agency to make
responsible allocations that reflect a
reasonable estimate of the amount of
inventory available in a future control
period based on data collected from
earlier control periods.
2. Calculation of Available Stocks
In developing this action, EPA
proposed a formula to calculate the
amount of available stocks in 2008,
expressed as follows: AS = ES—D—SCF,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
where AS = available stocks on January
1, 2008; ES = existing pre-phaseout
stocks of methyl bromide held in the
United States by producers, importers,
and distributors on January 1, 2007; D
= estimated drawdown of existing
stocks during calendar year 2007; and
SCF = a supply chain factor, the
calculation of which was described in
the proposed rule and in the Technical
Support Document (TSD) available on
the public docket for this rulemaking.
Using the methodology described in the
proposed rule, EPA proposed that ES =
7,671,091 kg; D = 3,224,351 kg; and SCF
= 2,731,211 kg. EPA proposed that
1,715,438 kg (6.7% of baseline) of prephaseout methyl bromide stocks will be
available for critical uses in 2008. The
Agency sought comments on its
proposed methodology.
The Methyl Bromide Industry Panel
(MBIP) correctly noticed in its
comments that EPA made a
mathematical error in its calculation of
available stocks in the proposed rule.
Even though EPA listed existing stocks
as 7,671,091 kg, which is the correct
value, the Agency used the value
7,671,000 kg in its calculation. As a
result, EPA proposed 1,715,438 kg of
available stocks in 2008, when EPA
intended to proposed available stocks of
1,715,529 kg. In other words, EPA
underestimated available stocks by 91
kg. EPA has corrected its calculations in
this final rule.
The North American Millers’
Association (NAMA) commented that
the mechanisms for reporting prephaseout inventory and usage are
imprecise, and therefore the Agency’s
calculations of inventory levels are
likely inaccurate. The commenter did
not explain why it stated that the
mechanisms for reporting stocks and
usage are imprecise, and EPA has not
found any specific reason to question
the accuracy of its aggregate prephaseout inventory data.
EPA received seven comments
supporting the creation of a supply
chain factor (SCF), but these comments
asserted that the 15-week SCF suggested
for use in the event of a supply
disruption is inadequate and
recommended a one-year supply
instead. The commenters may have
misunderstood the assumption in the
TSD, which explains EPA’s analysis of
how large the SCF should be, that it
would take up to 15 weeks for adequate
amounts of methyl bromide imports to
reach the U.S. if there is a domestic
production failure. Because the Agency
proposed an SCF that would provide
insurance against a production failure
during the peak production season (i.e.
the beginning of the calendar year), the
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74129
Agency’s proposed SCF is actually
equivalent to about 51% of the
5,355,946 kg authorized for U.S. critical
uses in 2008, or roughly a six-month
supply if demand were constant
throughout the year. The commenters
provide a number of reasons why they
recommend a larger supply buffer, and
EPA responds to those comments below.
Chemtura stated that EPA’s proposed
SCF is inappropriate because it conflicts
with the USG’s position at the 19th
Meeting of the Parties (MOP) to the
Montreal Protocol in Montreal, Canada,
where the commenter asserted the USG
delegation requested a six month
reserve for critical uses. NRDC
commented that the Parties rejected the
U.S. proposal to allow maintenance of a
half-year supply chain reserve at the
19th Meeting of the Parties. EPA
disagrees with Chemtura’s
characterization of the events at the
September 2007 MOP, and with
Chemtura’s assertion because a
negotiating position does not constitute
a factual basis for a rulemaking, or a
specific policy or technical finding of
the USG. Furthermore, as explained in
the proposed rule (72 FR 48966), EPA’s
proposed SCF provides a technical basis
for calculating available stocks that is
consistent with the Montreal Protocol,
and therefore clearly within EPA’s
authority under Section 604(d)(6) of the
Clean Air Act. EPA also disagrees with
NRDC’s assertion, because the Parties
neither adopted nor rejected the
creation of such a reserve. More
information about the 2007 MOP is
provided in the Report of the
Nineteenth MOP, available on the
docket for this action.
Chemtura and MBIP quoted the
technical limitations discussed in the
TSD and stated that these limitations
render the final calculation invalid. The
Agency does not agree that any of the
acknowledged technical limitations
individually, or taken together,
invalidate either the proposed SCF or
EPA’s calculation of available prephaseout inventory. EPA’s proposed
SCF should be considered within the
context of the United States’ renewed
commitment in paragraph six of
Decision Ex.II/1, which was restated in
Decision XVIII/13, to ensure that the
criteria in Decision IX/6(1), which is
explained above, are applied when
allowing the use of methyl bromide.
One of the primary ways that EPA met
this commitment in previous years was
to consider the aggregate quantity of
existing stocks, and to reduce
authorized new production levels to
encourage a more rapid drawdown of
existing stocks than required by the
Parties. EPA’s consideration of stocks in
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
74130
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
determining the appropriate production
level is partially responsible for steadily
shrinking the volume of pre-phaseout
inventory to less than half of its 2003
amount, and the Agency projects that
aggregate stocks will represent less than
a one year supply of critical use methyl
bromide at the beginning of 2008. With
existing inventories declining
significantly, EPA asked, at what point
should the Agency stop facilitating a
more rapid inventory drawdown? To
answer this question, and to enhance
the transparency and uniformity of
future CUE allocation rules, EPA
proposed to estimate the level of
aggregate inventory that would be
necessary to respond to a scenario in
which all methyl bromide production in
the U.S. is abruptly halted during peak
production season. The Agency did not
conduct a statistical or probability
analysis of the likelihood of this
scenario. EPA chose this scenario
because in the U.S. methyl bromide,
unlike most commercial chemicals, is
produced at only one facility. Therefore,
a scenario in which this facility
completely ceases production is of
special concern. In estimating the
amount of methyl bromide that would
be necessary in such a scenario, EPA
considered the effect of such a
production failure during the peak
production season. EPA chose this
conservative approach partly in
recognition that there could be other
contingencies that might affect critical
users’ ability to obtain methyl bromide.
Five commenters raised examples of
other events that could occur, and
argued that the SCF should account for
all of these contingencies happening
together. EPA notes that the probability
that all of these contingencies occurring
together is lower than the probability
that any of them will occur
individually. In addition, many of the
possible events described by the
commenters would have an uncertain
effect not easily quantified. The scenario
that EPA used as a basis for the size of
the proposed SCF is straightforward and
allows for quantification. In general,
EPA relies on private entities to take
prudent steps to protect themselves
against various contingencies. The
inclusion of the SCF in the calculation
of available stocks provides suppliers an
opportunity to maintain a buffer, but is
not designed to guarantee the
availability of pre-phaseout inventory in
all conceivable circumstances.
NRDC and Dow stated that EPA has
no basis for assuming a catastrophic loss
at the U.S. methyl bromide production
plant, as no such event has ever
occurred at this location. In addition,
they found unlikely EPA’s assumption
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
of such an event happening right after
the first of the year. First, EPA points
out—as it did in the proposed rule—that
the methyl bromide industry is unlike
many others because there is only one
active production facility in the United
States. EPA recognizes that a
catastrophic loss is unlikely, but this
does not obviate the need to plan for
such a scenario. While EPA expects
private entities to take prudent steps to
protect themselves, EPA does not wish
to render them incapable of maintaining
a reasonable supply buffer. In
developing the TSD, the Agency
estimated that significant imports could
arrive in up to 15 weeks. Depending on
what season the production failure
occurred, EPA estimated that the lost
production would be within the range of
11–51% of the 2008 demand for 2008
critical use methyl bromide. EPA
proposed the conservative value, an SCF
equivalent to 51% of the 2008 need for
critical use methyl bromide, in part to
account for a wider range of other
supply disruption scenarios that could
occur.
Below, EPA reiterates the technical
limitations of the TSD, and explains
why each limitation does not render the
final estimate invalid, as a number of
the commenters contended.
The TSD stated that, ‘‘pre-2005
inventory is held by multiple
companies, and the sale of that
inventory is governed by market forces.
Hence, in the event of a production
failure, the stockpile could be
purchased by any user (i.e., critical use/
non-critical use, quarantine and
preshipment, feedstock, or foreign
users). Most likely, the stockpile would
go to the user willing to pay the highest
price in time of short-term global
shortage. Second, there may also be
existing contract agreements that must
be honored. As a result, there is no
guarantee that the existing pre-2005
inventory of methyl bromide will flow
towards U.S. critical uses in the case of
a production failure.’’ Quarantine and
preshipment (QPS) refers to the
exemption from the phaseout of methyl
bromide for quarantine and
preshipment applications as defined in
the January 2, 2003, QPS Final Rule (68
FR 238) and at 40 CFR 82.3. EPA
believes that methyl bromide for QPS,
feedstock, and exempted Article 5
country (developing country) uses
would not have to be supplied from prephaseout inventory after a supply
disruption, because, as explained in the
proposed rule, existing regulations
allow manufacturers and distributors to
manage inventories of methyl bromide
designated for those purposes (72 FR
48968).
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
There is precedent in the CUE
program for allowing methyl bromide
distributors to respond to market forces.
In the Proposed Framework Rule, EPA
explained that, ‘‘The issuance of critical
stock allowances (CSAs) does not
obligate holders to make these
quantities available to critical uses if
they choose for practical or business
reasons not to sell or distribute stocks to
critical uses. However, EPA believes
that these firms will respond to market
conditions’’ (69 FR 52376). Similarly,
EPA’s consideration of a SCF in its
calculation of available stocks does not
obligate suppliers to sell their stocks to
critical users following a supply
disruption. EPA is unable to predict
exactly how stocks would be used after
a disruption. All things considered, EPA
does not believe that the possibility that
some inventory would be consumed by
non-critical users after a supply
disruption should invalidate or alter the
size of the proposed SCF.
The TSD also stated that, ‘‘it is not
clear that a contingency plan exists
amongst the various methyl bromide
producers as to how to respond to a
major supply disruption. Thus, the
reallocation of shipping containers to
import methyl bromide into the United
States may not occur smoothly over the
first weeks or months while the various
manufacturers, shippers, and customers
sort out their arrangements.’’ Similarly,
two commenters expressed concern that
importing the methyl bromide necessary
to meet U.S. demand would take far
longer than 15 weeks due to
inflexibilities in the methyl bromide
shipping system. Chemtura stated that
‘‘adjusting distribution patterns to
accommodate a sudden shift in
worldwide demand and supply, as
would occur with the loss of U.S.
production, would require an extensive,
ad hoc redesign of this distribution
system with very little, if any, lead
time.’’
The possibility that methyl bromide
distributors have not conducted
emergency response planning does not
invalidate the SCF estimate described in
the TSD. Methyl bromide distribution is
the responsibility of the methyl bromide
industry and not EPA. EPA’s role is to
allow producers and distributors to
satisfy critical needs for methyl
bromide, not to guarantee that they will
do so. The Agency carefully considered
physical shipping constraints that
dictate how rapidly methyl bromide
distribution patterns can shift, including
ISO container capacity, the length and
timing of shipping routes, and the
volume of methyl bromide that could be
shipped internationally to maintain the
global distribution system following a
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
U.S. production failure. However, for
the reasons expressed above, the TSD
does not assume that distributors would
need long periods of time to redesign
their distribution patterns in order to
respond. Furthermore, since each
shipping route would take weeks to
complete, the TSD assumed that
industry would have ample planning
time to re-route containers as necessary.
Finally, the TSD stated that,
‘‘characteristics such as the purity of the
pre-2005 inventory of methyl bromide
could affect users’ ability to use this
inventory to meet their needs for methyl
bromide; however, these characteristics
are not known. For example, some of
the methyl bromide held in inventory
intended for pre-plant uses may be premixed with chloropicrin in compressed
gas cylinders and therefore could not be
used for post-harvest fumigation.’’
Similarly, EPA received comments from
The Industrial Fumigant Company (IFC)
and MBIP that expressed concern about
the availability of stocks of methyl
bromide free of chloropicrin for the
post-harvest sector. MBIP stated that
chloropicrin is premixed in ‘‘virtually
the entire’’ U.S. inventory of existing
stocks. IFC was especially concerned
about the possible need for emergency
fumigation treatments, which would
require pure methyl bromide.
EPA’s current reporting requirements
do not request information about all of
the characteristics, or composition, of
the existing stockpile. Just prior to
publishing the proposed rule, the
Agency received anecdotal information
suggesting that a large percentage of the
existing stockpile is mixed with
chloropicrin, and therefore unsuitable
for post-harvest uses. EPA has also
heard conflicting reports stating that a
substantial portion of the existing
stockpile is pure methyl bromide. The
Agency is currently considering options
to obtain more information about the
existing stockpile, including but not
limited to, requesting information from
holders of pre-phaseout inventory using
information-gathering authority under
section 114 of the Clean Air Act.
Because the CUA amount in today’s
final rule is less than the production
amount authorized by the Parties, EPA
may consider allowing the conversion of
some CSAs to CUAs in appropriate
circumstances. The Agency also notes
that if pre-phaseout inventory contains
very small amounts of pure methyl
bromide, then allowing for a larger
supply buffer composed of that
inventory would not remedy the
commenters’ concerns.
Chemtura commented that EPA needs
to acknowledge methyl bromide’s role
as a tool in responding to catastrophic
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
events such as a need to provide
widespread re-fumigation after a natural
disaster, and that methyl bromide has
security as well as economic
importance. EPA agrees with the
commenter and acknowledges methyl
bromide’s role in responding to the
situations described by the commenter.
Methyl bromide’s role in responding to
such challenges as those listed by the
commenter is one of the reasons EPA
proposed a SCF in its analysis of
available stocks, and based its estimate
of the SCF on conservative assumptions.
Four commenters stated that the SCF
should be a one-year supply because of
the global ramifications that the supply
disruption from the U.S.’s one plant
could have. EPA agrees that a severe
critical use methyl bromide shortage in
the U.S. could have important global
ramifications. That is one reason EPA
considered international factors in its
SCF analysis. For example, after close
scrutiny, EPA estimated that foreign
production capacity is capable of
meeting global demands for methyl
bromide. While the commenters did not
provide a specific basis for why a oneyear supply would be most appropriate,
EPA responds to some of their other
concerns below and in the Response to
Comments document on the docket for
this rulemaking.
Four commenters raised concerns
about the ability of the Israeli plant,
which could supply critical use methyl
bromide to the U.S. after a domestic
production failure, to divert methyl
bromide to the U.S., especially in light
of conflicts occurring in the Middle
East. The commenters did not provide
specific information about the
likelihood or consequences of the Israeli
supply disruption that they mentioned.
The TSD required a determination about
which contingencies to use as the basis
for the analysis. Contingencies that were
too speculative or whose effects could
not be readily quantified were not
included in the analysis. However, EPA
adopted a conservative approach in
recognition that its analysis could not
address all possible contingencies. One
of the commenters stated that the U.S.
would not be sacrificing environmental
goals by maintaining a one-year SCF
because stockpiled methyl bromide that
is not in use can do no harm to the
environment. EPA notes that using
existing methyl bromide can displace
the need for new production, with
corresponding environmental benefits.
MBIP and Chemtura both asserted
that importing methyl bromide to meet
U.S. demand would take longer than the
15 weeks EPA estimates. MBIP claimed
that the current capacity of specialized
ISO containers, which are used to ship
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74131
methyl bromide overseas, is inadequate
to maintain global distribution
following a supply disruption. MBIP
stated, ‘‘Assuming round trip times of
45 days for shipments from Israel to
Europe and 90 days for all other trips,
the current worldwide fleet of ISO
containers would need to immediately
grow by more than 35% to establish and
maintain the global distribution system
for methyl bromide within the 15-week
period estimated by EPA.’’ In their
public comments Chemtura stated, ‘‘To
assist the Agency further in
understanding the logistical challenges
raised by a shut-down of U.S.
production, Chemtura is submitting, as
business-confidential exhibits, two
diagrams showing its estimates of the
current global distribution map, and
how the distribution map would change
if U.S. production were suddenly
disrupted.’’
EPA disagrees with MBIP’s claim that
the current fleet of ISO containers
would be unable to maintain the global
distribution system for methyl bromide
within the 15-week period estimated by
the Agency. The conclusions described
in the TSD are based, in part, on a
detailed analysis of the capacity of the
existing ISO container fleet, and other
shipping logistics. EPA could not
reconcile the differences between the
Agency’s estimate and MBIP’s estimate,
because MBIP did not provide details
about how it concluded that the existing
fleet of containers would be inadequate.
After close analysis, EPA found a
number of points of disagreement with
the assumptions in Chemtura’s
confidential submission. In general,
these disagreements are related to
concerns that Chemtura raised in its
public comments, which EPA addresses
in this preamble. For confidentiality
reasons, the Agency is unable to
elaborate on how Chemtura’s
submission conflicts with the analysis
explained in the TSD. The Agency
closely analyzed Chemtura’s
confidential submissions and did not
find a specific reason therein to revise
the TSD, or the size of the proposed
SCF. EPA’s detailed response to
Chemtura’s confidential comments has
been placed on a confidential section of
the docket because it includes
information claimed as confidential
business information.
MBIP raised several concerns about
the amount of time it would take for
foreign methyl bromide producers—
specifically Israel Chemicals Ltd.
(ICL)—to ramp-up production after a
U.S. production failure. MBIP stated
that increasing foreign production
would take longer than EPA estimated
because: Methyl bromide manufacturers
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
74132
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
typically plan production several
months in advance; foreign producers
may have to wait for government
approval before increasing their
production; and an immediate increase
in methyl bromide production may not
be possible due to limited storage
capacity.
In the analysis underpinning the TSD,
EPA built in a certain amount of time—
starting when U.S. production fails—for
foreign producers to make arrangements
and adjustments to their production
schedules before they would need to
ramp-up production. EPA considered
the ability of foreign producers to rampup production, including gaining access
to raw materials and storage capacity.
Foreign producers could increase
production and exports to the United
States without approval from the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol, so long as
entities holding CUA allowances are
willing to expend their CUAs to import
that material. MBIP did not provide
specific information about how the
concerns it raised should change the
analysis contained in the TSD, or
whether there are steps that foreign
producers could take in advance as
contingency measures that could
alleviate these concerns. EPA responds
to these comments in more detail in the
Response to Comments document on
the docket for this action.
MBIP noted that ‘‘significant
regulatory challenges could hamper
companies’ ability to obtain a sufficient
supply of chloropicrin for methyl
bromide formulations’’ and that ‘‘if
quantities of chloropicrin had to be
exported from the U.S. to Israel, several
CWC [Chemical Weapons Convention]
regulatory requirements would be
triggered.’’ While it is true that the
export of chloropicrin to Israel would
involve certain export certificates, it is
not clear that quantities of chloropicrin
would need to be exported from the U.S.
to Israel.
According to preliminary Form R
reports from the 2006 Toxic Release
Inventory (TRI), as well as past reports
from 2005, methyl bromide/chloropicrin
products are currently formulated at five
or more facilities around the United
States (EPA has placed information
collected from the TRI on the docket for
this action). Thus, at least for the
products sold by these distributors to
U.S. critical users, chloropicrin would
not be required to be exported to Israel
for formulation. The commenter did not
provide specific information about the
likelihood that the CWC, or other
regulatory measures, would impede the
supply of methyl bromide products to
U.S. critical users, or whether advance
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
planning could help resolve potential
difficulties.
MBIP commented that the
distribution system for methyl bromide
in the U.S. is complex and that imports
would not reach all repackaging
locations in the same time period. The
commenter stated that 500,000
kilograms of methyl bromide must
remain in the system (a minimum of
3,231 metric tons of pre-phaseout
stocks) to keep the domestic distribution
system functional. EPA specifically
accounted for this concern in the
proposed SCF analysis. The SCF would
replace lost production for 15 weeks
until imports arrive. Assuming these
imports are all shipped to the location
where methyl bromide is currently
produced in the U.S., imported methyl
bromide could be expected to reach
repackaging locations in the same
amount of time as it would if there were
no production failure. EPA recognizes
that the timely distribution of prephaseout stocks after a domestic
production failure would depend upon
business decisions made by suppliers.
However, the proposed SCF is large
enough to give suppliers the
opportunity to provide uninterrupted
distribution in the analyzed scenario.
In its comments, MBIP stated: ‘‘EPA
does not consider regulatory obstacles
that may delay the availability of
alternate supply * * * In addition,
formulations of methyl bromide are
regulated by EPA as pesticides under
FIFRA. As such, suppliers of these
products must maintain registrations
with EPA. Under FIFRA, the source of
methyl bromide used in the products
must be identified to EPA and detailed
information about the manufacturing
process must be submitted. In addition,
the labels for all products must bear a
special number that denotes the
pesticide producing establishment
where the product is formulated. If
production is shifted to another
location, the source information,
manufacturing process data, and labels
for all affected products would have to
be updated before the products could be
imported or distributed in the U.S. For
example, if the methyl bromide that is
sourced from Israel is made using a
different manufacturing process than
those on file with EPA, U.S. registrants
may need to notify EPA of the change
in the formulation process that is on file
or even file an amendment to that
process.’’
Pesticide registration information is
highly confidential, but critical sales
data shows that imported methyl
bromide is registered for some critical
uses in the U.S. EPA does not obligate
producers to register their products for
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
all U.S. critical uses, but the Agency
believes that firms will respond to
market conditions, and undertake
appropriate emergency response
planning. A firm’s decision about
whether to register its product for
critical uses is similar to business
planning decisions under the
established critical stock allowance
policy noted above; in which EPA let
firms respond to market conditions,
instead of requiring them to sell methyl
bromide to critical users (69 FR 52376).
The Agency believes that the added
transparency of the SCF approach will
help companies respond to market
conditions more rapidly and
appropriately.
NRDC and Dow objected to the
proposal to create an SCF and believe
the methyl bromide in question should
be used to reduce or eliminate the need
for new production and import
allocations for 2008. The Agency
explained the reasons for proposing an
SCF in the proposed rule. EPA responds
to the commenters’ specific concerns
below and in the Response to Comments
document.
NRDC stated that the SCF will be
equivalent to existing stockpiles and
will be easy to get and use by those with
restricted use pesticide licenses. NRDC
also stated that stocks will not be
maintained for the purpose of the SCF—
the stocks intended for the SCF that
remain unallocated for CUEs can be
freely used by non-critical users. The
commenter is correct that this supply
buffer would be composed of methyl
bromide produced before the January 1,
2005, phaseout. The commenter is also
correct that non-critical users are not
barred from purchasing pre-phaseout
methyl bromide inventory. In the Final
Framework Rule, EPA explained its
rationale and authority for allowing
non-critical users to access pre-phaseout
inventory (69 FR 76988). EPA is not
revisiting that issue in this rulemaking.
The Agency does not believe that the
fact that producers and distributors may
sell pre-phaseout inventory to noncritical users invalidates the proposed
SCF, or EPA’s proposed estimation of
the amount of available stocks in 2008.
The commenter is speculating about
what suppliers would do given the
opportunity to maintain a buffer, which
is something that has not yet been
tested. Information on pre-phaseout
inventory drawdown during 2008 will
inform EPA’s future CUE rulemakings.
While EPA did not propose to require
that distributors keep the SCF amount
as a supply buffer for critical users,
Section V.D.3. of the proposed rule laid
out an approach in which the Agency
would stop drawing down stocks faster
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
than the minimum agreed by the Parties,
if EPA determines that available stocks
will be less than the SCF amount. By
considering a SCF in its analysis of the
amount of stocks that are available for
critical uses, EPA is giving producers
and distributors the opportunity to
provide a reasonable supply buffer to
satisfy critical needs.
At the public hearing for this action
the California Strawberry Commission
(CSC) and Ameribrom Inc. commented
that the private companies that own prephaseout inventory have no obligation
to sell it. Ameribrom commented that
the SCF needs to be held by
manufacturers and importers because
distributors, who own a large portion of
the pre-phaseout inventory, do not
distribute the methyl bromide when it is
needed. EPA notes that the supply of
pre-phaseout inventories to critical
users is based upon private business
decisions that the Agency does not
control and responds to these comments
in more detail in the Response to
Comments document available on the
docket for this action.
Dow stated that the SCF should be
based on what it called ‘‘the actual 2008
methyl bromide demand (4,816,514 kg)
as determined by the U.S. Government
and as proposed in the rule,’’ rather
than the amount approved by the Parties
(5,355,946 kg). The commenter stated
that an SCF calculated based upon a
methyl bromide volume that exceeds
the critical need for 2008 renders the
SCF value and basis for the calculation
nonsensical. Dow concluded that this
simple recalculation would reduce
overall new production in 2008 by more
than 250,000 kg.
It appears that the Dow’s figure for
‘‘actual methyl bromide demand’’ is
derived by subtracting the proposed
539,432 kg carryover amount (72 FR
48969), from the critical use amount
agreed to by the Parties (5,355,946 kg).
As discussed in Section V.D.4. of this
preamble, EPA reduces new production
to account for carryover critical use
material in order to prevent companies
from building inventories of newly
produced critical use methyl bromide.
EPA reduces new production amounts
to account for carryover, but in doing so
the Agency is not reopening the issue of
the overall amount of total critical need.
EPA expects that critical users will
satisfy the remainder of their critical
needs by using the critical use methyl
bromide that was unused in previous
control periods. Therefore, the SCF is
only affected by reductions to account
for the feasibility of alternatives.
Accordingly, for the reasons explained
in Section V.D.6. of this preamble, EPA
is reducing the total 2008 CUE by
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
27,769 kg to account for the increased
uptake of sulfuryl fluoride and
iodomethane in 2008. The Agency has
re-calculated the SCF by applying a
revised 2008 critical use demand of
5,328,177 kg. This adjustment reduces
the SCF by 14,160 kg.
To clarify, EPA proposed that the SCF
should represent about 51% of the total
critical need in 2008. In the proposed
rule, the Agency assumed that the total
critical need in 2008 would be
5,355,946 kg, as agreed to by the Parties
in Decision XVIII/13. Therefore, EPA
proposed an SCF of 2,731,211 kg
(5,355,946 kg * 50.994% = 2,731,211
kg). As explained in Section V.D.6. of
this preamble, EPA now estimates that
the total critical need in 2008 will be
27,769 kg less than the Parties
authorized in Decision XVIII/13,
because EPA is making further
reductions to account for the uptake of
sulfuryl fluoride for cocoa bean
fumigation, and for the newly registered
fumigant iodomethane. Therefore, in
this final rule EPA estimates that the
total critical need in 2008 will be
5,328,177 kg. Accordingly, EPA now
calculates an SCF of 2,717,051 kg
(5,328,177 kg * 50.944% = 2,717,051
kg).
Dow commented that the SCF is
counterproductive to the phase-out of
methyl bromide and offers disincentives
to companies to invest in alternatives.
EPA recognizes that a very large methyl
bromide inventory could have the
counterproductive effects that the
commenter mentioned. In response to
this concern, EPA has encouraged a
faster draw down of the pre-phaseout
inventory than the minimum agreed by
the Parties. The Agency has also
explained the rigorous technical review
process for critical uses both
domestically and internationally.
Companies should be aware that as soon
as technically and economically feasible
methyl bromide alternatives are
available for particular uses, critical use
exemptions will be reduced
accordingly. Because the SCF is a
percentage of the current year’s
estimated critical need, companies
should also consider that, all things
being equal, the SCF will change in
accordance with critical use exemption
levels.
NRDC objected to the SCF because
Congress and the Parties did not intend
for EPA to designate stocks as
‘‘unavailable.’’ EPA did not propose to
designate any amount of pre-phaseout
inventory, or any specific holdings, as
‘‘unavailable.’’ EPA proposed to
recognize the amount of existing stocks
that is available. As discussed above
and in the proposed rule, in paragraph
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74133
4 of Decision XVIII/13, and similar
Decisions, the Parties indicated that
each individual Party has discretion to
recognize the amount of existing stocks
that is available for critical uses. Most
recently, Table D of the Annex to
Decision XIX/9 explicitly indicates that
for the 2009 control period the United
States will reduce authorized new
production levels to account for the
amount of available stocks. Thus, EPA’s
proposed approach is consistent with
the practice under the Montreal
Protocol. It is also an appropriate
exercise of the discretion granted by
Congress under Section 604(d)(6) of the
Clean Air Act.
NRDC stated that no chemical
company keeps more than a two- or
three-month supply of a chemical, yet
the SCF is nearly a four-month supply.
The commenter provided no evidence
for its assertion that no chemical
company keeps more than a two- to
three-month supply of a chemical.
Furthermore, the methyl bromide
industry is unusual because there is
only one production facility in the
United States and in fact in the Western
Hemisphere. The proposed rule
estimated that the SCF for 2008 should
be 2,731,211 kg, or roughly a six-month
supply of critical use methyl bromide if
demand were constant throughout the
year.
NRDC commented that methyl
bromide users can make temporary
adjustments at a manageable cost in the
event of a supply disruption, such as
using alternatives or shifting fumigation
schedules. EPA agrees that depending
on when a supply disruption occurs, it
is possible that a limited number of
entities might be able to delay
scheduled fumigations. It is also
possible that some non-critical users
might need to access the pre-phaseout
inventory for security or other
emergency purposes. We do not know
whether these effects would occur or to
what extent they would offset each
other. Such speculation does not change
the validity of EPA’s estimate that
2,717,051 kg is a reasonable SCF for
2008. EPA disagrees with the
commenter’s assertion that critical users
could readily switch to alternatives
following a supply disruption. By
definition, and as confirmed by several
rounds of expert review, entities that
qualify for critical use methyl bromide
do not have access to technically and
economically feasible alternatives.
In this final rule, EPA is adopting the
proposed formula for calculating the
amount of stocks available for critical
uses in 2008, expressed as follows:
AS2008 = ES2007¥D2007¥SCF2008, where
AS2008 = available stocks on January 1,
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74134
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
2008; ES2007 = existing pre-phaseout
stocks of methyl bromide held in the
United States by producers, importers,
and distributors on January 1, 2007;
D2007 = estimated drawdown of existing
stocks during calendar year 2007; and
SCF2008 = a supply chain factor for 2008,
the calculation of which was described
in the proposed rule and in the TSD
available on the public docket for this
rulemaking. Using the methodology
described in the proposed rule,
correcting for mathematical errors
explained above, and reducing 2008
critical needs by 27,769 kg to account
for the uptake of sulfuryl fluoride and
iodomethane explained below in
Section V.D.6., EPA finds that ES2007 =
7,671,091 kg; D2007 = 3,224,351 kg; and
SCF2008 = 2,717,051 kg. Therefore, EPA
calculates that 1,729,689 kg (6.8% of
baseline) of pre-phaseout methyl
bromide stocks will be available for
critical uses in 2008.
EPA believes 1,729,689 kg is a
reasonable estimate of the amount of
stocks that should be considered
available for critical uses in 2008,
especially given the U.S. role as one of
the world’s largest suppliers to meet
global methyl bromide needs. EPA also
believes the methodology used to make
this estimate is consistent with the
relevant Decisions of the Parties,
including Decision IX/6, and the Clean
Air Act. EPA has determined that the
approach finalized in this action is the
most efficient and reasonable way to
balance the goals of satisfying critical
needs for methyl bromide and also
facilitating the transition to ozone-safe
alternatives. Finally, as discussed above
and in the Response to Comments
document, EPA considered all of the
comments received and did not find a
specific reason to change its proposed
refined approach for calculating the
amount of available stocks.
3. Adjusting New Production and
Import Amounts To Account for
Available Stocks
In developing this action, EPA
proposed to refine its allocation
approach to account for the amount of
stocks available for critical uses in 2008,
and each year thereafter as appropriate
and feasible. EPA proposed to allocate
critical stock allowances (CSAs) in 2008
in an amount equal to the quantity of
pre-phaseout inventory ‘‘available’’ for
critical uses in 2008, as estimated by
EPA using the formula described above.
In the proposed rule, EPA calculated
that there would be 1,715,438 kg of
available inventory in 2008. Therefore,
EPA proposed to allow the sale of
1,715,438 kg from existing stocks for
critical uses in 2008 by allocating an
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
equivalent number of CSAs. As in past
years, EPA proposed to adjust the
critical use allowance (CUA) amounts
accordingly, so that the total number of
CUAs and CSAs is not greater than the
total critical use amount authorized by
the Parties. In the proposed rule, EPA
noted that to account for carryover
amounts of methyl bromide, amounts
for research purposes or other
appropriate reasons, including updated
information on alternatives, EPA may
allocate a total number of CUAs and
CSAs that is less than the total critical
use amount authorized by the Parties for
2008. EPA also proposed a method for
adjusting new production and import to
account for the amount of available
stocks in future years if the amount of
available stocks is less than the amount
of stocks the Parties authorize for
critical uses for the year in question.
EPA sought comments on its proposed
approach for adjusting new production
and import amounts to account for the
amount of stocks available for critical
uses.
EPA received six comments that
expressed concern about the proposed
level of CSAs for 2008. The commenters
noted that the proposed amount of
methyl bromide to come from prephaseout inventory is greater than the
amount agreed to by the Parties in
Decision XVIII/13. The proposed rule
and Section V.D.1. of this preamble
explain that in previous years EPA has
determined that more critical use
methyl bromide should come from
stocks than the minimum levels agreed
to by the Parties, and that EPA
understands those actions to be in
compliance with the Montreal Protocol,
and within the Agency’s authority
established in Section 604(d)(6) of the
Clean Air Act. Furthermore, the
inclusion of a SCF in EPA’s
determination of the amount of
available stocks should relieve some of
the commenters’ concerns.
MBIP commented that EPA’s proposal
to use pre-phaseout inventory for
critical uses jeopardizes the U.S.’s
ability to address a catastrophic supply
disruption. The proposed rule and
Section V.D.2. of this preamble explain
that by including a SCF in its
calculation of available stocks, EPA is
allowing for the maintenance of a
supply buffer that could help to satisfy
critical needs in the event of an
emergency, such as a major supply
disruption.
The Florida Fruit and Vegetable
Association (FFVA) stated that EPA
should develop and make available to
CUE holders a timely and accurate
accounting system for use during the
control period for both new production
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and CSAs. The commenter contended
that this accounting system would be
important as stockpiles decrease and
would allow the Agency flexibility to
shift from CSAs to new production
during the control period if necessary.
The commenter stated that without this
flexibility the Agency should authorize
the total quantity approved for the 2008
control period as new production with
the understanding that the portion of
material not used as a result of the use
of pre-phaseout stocks during 2008
would be deducted from future
authorizations. If EPA understands
correctly, the commenter is concerned
that at some point existing stocks will
not be able to satisfy all of the CSAs
issued by EPA for a given control
period, and that if this happens during
a control period, EPA should convert
CSAs to CUAs. The Agency believes
that the proposed approach for
determining CUA and CSA amounts,
which accounts for the amount of
available stocks, is a major step towards
decreasing the probability that EPA
would issue more CSAs than existing
stocks are able to satisfy in a given
control period. Currently, EPA collects
annual data about critical sales of new
production and pre-phaseout inventory.
EPA agrees with the commenter that
collecting this data more often, quarterly
for example, could have certain benefits
related to monitoring pre-phaseout
inventory information. As the
commenter stated, more timely data
could help EPA determine more rapidly
if it would be appropriate to allow the
conversion of some CSAs to CUAs.
However, by increasing the frequency of
reporting, the commenter’s proposal
would impose a substantial
administrative burden upon the
regulated community, especially upon
small distributors. Considering the
approach that EPA is finalizing in this
rule, which should decrease the
likelihood of impractically large CSA
allocations, the Agency does not believe
the benefits of the commenter’s proposal
would justify the additional costs it
would impose.
In this rule, EPA is adopting the
proposed approach for adjusting
allowable new production and import
levels to account for the amount of
available stocks. As discussed above,
this approach is consistent with the
relevant Decisions of the Parties,
especially Table D of the Annex to
Decision XIX/9, which for 2009
explicitly authorizes for the United
States a certain amount of new
production and import ‘‘minus available
stocks.’’ After considering all of the
comments received, EPA believes that
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
this is the most reasonable, efficient,
and transparent way for the Agency to
continue to facilitate responsible
management of pre-phaseout inventory.
Therefore, with this action the Agency
is allowing 1,729,689 kg of methyl
bromide to be supplied from prephaseout inventory for critical uses in
2008 by issuing an equivalent number of
CSAs, and adjusting the amount of
CUAs accordingly.
To clarify, the critical use amounts
authorized by the Parties in Decision
XVIII/13 for 2008 total 5,355,946 kg.
However, the maximum amount of
authorized new production or import as
set forth in Table D of the Annex to
Decision XVIII/13 is 4,595,040 kg. This
means that while the Parties require
only 760,906 kg of stockpile
consumption if the entire U.S. allotment
is utilized, EPA is allowing 1,729,689 kg
of 2008 critical use needs to be met from
pre-phaseout inventory. Thus, to
account for the amount of available
stocks, EPA is allocating 968,783 kg of
extra pre-phaseout inventory
consumption for critical uses in 2008.
As in past years, EPA proposed to adjust
the amount of CUAs accordingly, so that
the sum of CUAs and CSAs is not
greater than the total amount authorized
by the Parties. After accounting for the
additional reductions discussed below
for unused critical use methyl bromide
at the end of 2006, increased uptake of
sulfuryl fluoride for post-harvest cocoa
bean fumigation in 2008, transition to
the recently registered fumigant
iodomethane, and reductions to
encourage research amounts to be
supplied from pre-phaseout inventory,
EPA is allowing 3,083,763 kg of new
production and import for critical uses
in 2008.
In developing this action, EPA
proposed to adjust new production and
import to account for the amount of
available stocks in future years if the
amount of available stocks is less than
the amount of stocks the Parties
authorize for critical uses for the year in
question (72 FR 48969). EPA did not
receive any comments on how it
proposed to account for available stocks
if the amount of available stocks is less
than the amount of stocks the Parties
authorize for critical uses for the year in
question. If that scenario arises, EPA
may adopt the approach it described in
the proposed rule after a notice and
comment rulemaking process. EPA
estimates that there will be sufficient
pre-phaseout inventory at the beginning
of the 2009 control period to satisfy the
amount of 2009 inventory drawdown
(300,000 kg) for critical uses authorized
by the Parties in Decision XIX/19.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
4. Treatment of Carryover Material
As described in the December 23,
2004, Framework Rule (69 FR 76997),
EPA is not permitting entities to build
stocks of methyl bromide produced or
imported after January 1, 2005, under
the critical use exemption. Under
current regulations, quantities of methyl
bromide produced, imported, exported,
or sold to end-users under the critical
use exemption in a calendar year must
be reported to EPA the following year.
These reporting requirements appear at
§§ 82.13(f)(3), 82.13(g)(4), 82.13(h)(1),
82.13(bb)(2), and 82.13(cc)(2). EPA uses
the reported information to calculate the
amount of methyl bromide that was
produced or imported under the critical
use exemption, but not exported or sold
to end-users in that year. An amount
equivalent to this ‘‘carryover,’’ whether
pre-plant or post-harvest, is then
deducted from the total level of
allowable new production and import in
the year following the year of the data
report. For example, the amount of
carryover from 2005, which was
reported in 2006, was deducted from the
allowable amount of production or
import for critical uses in 2007. In
developing this action, EPA proposed to
treat carryover the same way for 2008.
As discussed in Section V.D.2.,
carryover critical use material is not
included in EPA’s definition of existing
stocks as it applies to the proposed
formula for determining the amount of
available stocks. EPA is not including
carryover amounts as part of existing
stocks, because doing so could lead to
a double-counting of carryover amounts,
and thus a double reduction of CUAs.
The definition of existing stocks
specifically refers to pre-phaseout
inventory, not material produced or
imported under the critical use
exemption.
In developing this action, EPA
explained that in February 2007 the
Agency, received reports about critical
use methyl bromide production,
imports, exports, sales and/or inventory
holdings in 2006 under the
requirements at 40 CFR 82.13. The
information reported to EPA indicated
that 6,923,926 kg of critical use methyl
bromide was acquired through
production or import in 2006, and
6,384,493 kg of critical use methyl
bromide was exported or sold to endusers in 2006. EPA proposed to
calculate the amount of carryover at the
end of 2006 with the method used in
column L of the U.S. Accounting
Framework for critical uses of methyl
bromide. The Agency calculated that the
carryover amount at the end of 2006 was
539,433 kg, which was the difference
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74135
between the reported amount of critical
use methyl bromide acquired (i.e.
produced or imported) in 2006 and the
reported amount used (i.e. sold to end
users in 2006) (6,923,926 kg¥6,384,493
kg = 539,433 kg). On March 16, 2007, in
the 2006 U.S. Accounting Framework
for critical uses of methyl bromide,
which is available on the docket for this
action, the Agency officially reported
539 metric tons of carryover from 2006
to the UNEP Ozone Secretariat.
In the proposed rule, EPA brought
attention to a petition submitted by
Chemtura that proposed changes to: (1)
The Agency’s established method for
calculating carryover; (2) the
distribution of subsequent CUA
reductions; and (3) the existing
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. The Agency made
Chemtura’s petition available on the
public docket, and specifically sought
detailed comments on Chemtura’s
proposals. EPA asked that comments
suggesting alternative methods for
calculating the amount of carryover
material at the end of each year be
detailed and comprehensive; address
what changes would be needed to the
reporting requirements; and discuss the
degree of administrative burden that
alternative methods might impose. The
Agency also sought comment on ways to
improve the completeness of data
reporting by affected companies. EPA
emphasized that the process for
calculating the amount of carryover CUE
material each year relies on data
regarding sales to end users as reported
to EPA by distributors and applicators.
The Agency specifically requested
comment on whether requiring
producers, importers, and distributors to
report the names of distributors and
third-party applicators to which they
have sold critical-use methyl bromide
would result in more complete
reporting, and whether this would
justify the additional burden of such
requirements.
Chemtura’s petition asserted that
‘‘EPA must adjust its methodology for
calculating carry over.’’ EPA disagrees
for two fundamental reasons: the
Agency’s established methodology is a
simple and accurate way to calculate the
carryover amount each year; and
adjusting the established method could
create international confusion about
U.S. reporting, which could jeopardize
international authorizations of new
production to satisfy the critical needs
of U.S. agriculture. EPA expands on
these points below.
Six commenters supported
Chemtura’s request that EPA revise its
carryover calculation procedures to
consider a broader range of information
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
74136
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
sources when determining the carryover
amount from a given control period. The
commenters suggested that EPA
calculate the carryover as the sum of all
critical use methyl bromide that
companies report as being held in
inventory. In its comments, Chemtura
recognizes that this approach would not
fully address the problem of incomplete
reporting, and suggests that a
conservative margin for error could be
achieved by calculating the average
carryover for all reported sales and
applying the average to any remaining
unreported volume. If EPA understands
correctly, the commenters are requesting
an ‘‘inventory approach’’ to calculate
the carryover amount, in which EPA
would calculate carryover as the sum of
critical use methyl bromide inventory
reported in section 2.6 of the annual
Sales of Critical Use Methyl Bromide to
End Users Reports (‘‘sales reports’’), a
sample of which is posted on the docket
for this rulemaking. EPA understands
that the commenter believes the
inventory method would result in a
lower carryover amount and would be
more accurate. However, EPA does not
believe the inventory method would be
as accurate as the established ‘‘sales
method’’ that the Agency uses to report
carryover amounts internationally.
For 2006, the inventory method
would rely on data reported in section
2.6 of the annual sales report forms. In
collaboration with major methyl
bromide producers and distributors, the
reporting forms were updated and
posted on EPA’s Web site in 2006. EPA
posted instructional materials online
with the updated forms, and held
compliance assistance meetings to teach
stakeholders how to use the new forms,
including a session at the Methyl
Bromide Alternatives Outreach (MBAO)
conference in Orlando in November
2006 and a similar session at the MBAO
conference in San Diego in October
2007. If the sales reports are completely
and accurately filled out, section 2.6 is
calculated with information from
sections 2.4A, 2.4B, 2.2, and 2.5. For
companies that hold critical use methyl
bromide for other companies, the
information reported in section 2.7 is an
important cross-check of the
information reported in section 2.6.
However, EPA reviewed the data in
sections 2.4 through 2.7 of the 2006
sales reports, and found several
instances of blank, incomplete or
apparently misreported information in
those sections. EPA made efforts to
contact distributors that filed reports
with significant inconsistencies, and
many of the reports were subsequently
corrected. However, some of the data
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
points remain blank or questionable. On
the other hand, there were far fewer
instances of blank or apparent
misreporting in section 2.2 of the sales
report, which lists sales to end users by
critical use sector. Most importantly, all
instances of blank or apparently
misreported sales in section 2.2 were
corrected after EPA staff contacted the
corresponding reporting entities. Given
EPA’s concerns about the data in
sections 2.4 through 2.7 and the
Agency’s reservations about changing
the carryover calculation method, EPA
has decided to retain the proposed
approach in this final rule.
Six commenters asserted that the
critical use material calculated as
carryover for 2006 is actually
unaccounted sales rather than inventory
held at the end of the year, and contend
that EPA has evidence that this is the
case. As discussed further below, the
commenters claimed to have evidence
that 2006 sales remain unreported, but
did not produce official sales reports to
support their claim.
MBIP stated that EPA should have
been aware of underreporting of critical
use sales and that EPA’s data set for
calculating the carryover set was
deficient. MBIP claimed that
information it received in response to its
Freedom of Information Action (FOIA)
request of May 2007 clearly showed that
some companies filed reports in 2005
and not in 2006. Nonetheless, MBIP
contended, EPA had mistakenly
assumed that 100 percent of the
unreported sales of critical use methyl
bromide are held in inventory. In
response, EPA points out that it made
every reasonable effort to contact
entities that reported in 2005 and not
2006. Although EPA contacted these
entities, some of them still have not
reported 2006 sales for critical uses.
Whether every entity that sold critical
use methyl bromide in 2005 did so in
2006 remains an open question. EPA
has made it clear to MBIP that it would
consider late submissions of official
sales reports from 2006, but MBIP has
been unable to produce suitable
evidence of the unreported sales that
they insist took place during 2006. With
this final rule EPA is making a final
determination of the 2006 carryover
amount.
At the public hearing for this action,
Ameribrom Inc. said that 80 percent of
the 539 metric tons (MT) that EPA
calculated as carryover is actually
methyl bromide that was sold to critical
users but not reported. The commenter
also said that many small distributors
do not understand the reporting
requirements, and some are incapable of
complying with them. The commenter
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
did not provide specific, verifiable
information to support the claim that 80
percent of the carryover is actually
unreported sales. Therefore, EPA will
not change its proposed approach as a
result of Ameribrom’s claims. The
Agency is concerned with Ameribrom’s
statement that some small distributors
did not file required reports. EPA
continues to educate stakeholders about
critical use exemption reporting
requirements through outreach
programs. For example, EPA posts
instructional material on its Web site,
holds informational sessions about
reporting at the annual Methyl Bromide
Alternatives Outreach Conference, and
provides staff contacts to assist with
reporting requirements. Most recently,
EPA provided a letter template to
members of MBIP, including
Ameribrom, that explains the
importance of full reporting, provides
information about how to acquire
official reporting forms, and a contact
person to answer questions. EPA
encouraged MBIP’s members to
customize the letter and send it to all of
their customers.
MBIP stated that an independent
auditor found that approximately 20
methyl bromide suppliers failed to
provide EPA with sales reports, which
accounted for approximately 80 percent
of the calculated carryover. However,
MBIP did not provide the names of
these suppliers, so EPA could not
confirm the veracity of MBIP’s claim.
Thus, as EPA explains above, the
Agency is unwilling to revise its
methodology for determining the
previously calculated 2006 carryover
amount, which was reported
internationally on March 16, 2007. EPA
has taken a number of steps to work
with MBIP and other stakeholders to
encourage full reporting. Full reporting
is in everyone’s interest, and the Agency
will continue to work with industry in
outreach and educational programs
toward that end.
Chemtura asserted that many of the
companies that routinely filed required
reports were the entities most likely to
be holding critical use methyl bromide
inventory—manufacturers and
distributors, and that that EPA’s
contention that ‘‘carryover increased
while allocations and stocks have
plummeted’’ is not credible. Similarly,
EPA MBIP commented that it performed
an audit that revealed that non-reporting
entities were mostly smaller entities that
were unlikely to hold any inventory. Six
commenters requested that EPA
rigorously enforce compliance with the
supplier reporting requirements at 40
CFR 82.13. EPA received comments
from Chemtura and MBIP that stated
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
that the proposed rule’s explanation of
how the carryover is calculated is the
first such explanation given by EPA in
any CUE rule promulgated to date.
MBIP stated that this was their first
opportunity to comment on EPA’s
method of calculation. EPA received a
comment from Chemtura that expressed
the view that EPA lacks authority to
reduce the 2008 CUE amount based on
carryover from a previous year. EPA
responds to all of these comments in the
Response to Comment document
available on the docket for this action.
In this final rule, EPA is not adjusting
the established methodology for
calculating the amount of carryover
critical use methyl bromide, because
doing so could create international
confusion about U.S. reporting, which
could jeopardize international
authorizations of new production to
satisfy the critical needs of U.S.
agriculture. The United States has
important commitments to report
information about methyl bromide for
critical uses. In December 2004 the
Parties agreed to Decision XVI/6, which
adopted an accounting framework for
critical uses of methyl bromide. Each
Party with critical needs submits an
accounting framework annually. The
U.S. submitted its first Accounting
Framework for 2005 critical uses on
May 19, 2006. The U.S. subsequently
revised the accounting framework
agreed to by the Parties slightly because
the amount of pre-phaseout inventory
was being treated as confidential.
For 2005 and 2006, EPA calculated
the carryover amount using the method
described in the proposed rule, and
reported the result internationally in the
U.S. Accounting Framework for critical
uses of methyl bromide. The Parties
expect EPA to reduce new production,
when appropriate, by the amount of
carryover CUE material. A post-hoc
revision of the methodology for the U.S.
Accounting Framework could create
international confusion, and, as
discussed in this preamble, there is not
a compelling reason to change EPA’s
method at this time. Therefore, EPA has
determined that any revision of the
previously reported 2006 carryover
amount must be based upon new data,
not a new method for manipulating old
data.
In this final rule, EPA is continuing
its practice of not permitting entities to
build stocks of methyl bromide
produced or imported after January 1,
2005, under the critical use exemption.
In the proposed rule, EPA explained
that the Agency received official sales
reports under the requirements at 40
CFR 82.13 showing that 6,923,926 kg of
critical use methyl bromide was
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
acquired through production or import
in 2006. The proposed rule stated that
the information reported to EPA also
indicated that 6,384,493 kg of critical
use methyl bromide was sold to endusers in 2006. EPA calculated that the
carryover amount at the end of 2006 was
539,433 kg, which is the difference
between the amount acquired and the
amount sold, and proposed to reduce
2008 CUA allocations accordingly.
However, EPA received five official
2006 sales reports after the submission
deadline, which was 45 days after
December 31, 2006. The late sales
reports were not counted in the
proposed rule, or the 2006 U.S.
Accounting Framework. These late
reports show that an additional 40,199
kg of critical use methyl bromide was
sold to end users in 2006. As a result,
EPA’s official records now show that
6,424,692 kg of methyl bromide was
sold to end users in 2006. Therefore, in
accordance with EPA’s proposed
method for calculating carryover
amounts, EPA calculates that the 2006
carryover amount was 499,234 kg of
critical use methyl bromide. This
amount was calculated as follows:
6,923,926 kg—6,424,692 kg = 499,234
kg. To account for carryover of critical
use methyl bromide, EPA is reducing
the level of new production and import
for critical uses by 499,234 kg.
a. Reporting Requirements To Calculate
Carryover Amounts
In developing this action, EPA
specifically requested comment on
whether requiring producers, importers,
and distributors to report the names of
distributors and third-party applicators
to which they have sold critical-use
methyl bromide would provide valuable
information to EPA, and encourage
complete reporting of sales to end-user
data. EPA sought comment on whether
this would justify the additional burden
of such requirements (72 FR 48970).
EPA received six comments that
supported a petition submitted by
Chemtura to augment the current
reporting and recordkeeping process to
prevent underreporting of methyl
bromide use. The commenters proposed
that EPA modify its reporting system in
a manner that would allow the Agency
to identify non-reporting companies and
the amount of critical use sales
attributable to each company. EPA
could achieve this, the commenters
asserted, by requiring each entity in the
supply chain—from the manufacturer to
the company that sells to the end user—
to report the name of the entity that
purchased the critical use methyl
bromide and how much material it
purchased.
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74137
EPA does not agree that it should
require information that would allow
the Agency to quantify the amount of
critical use sales attributable to each
non-reporting company. Instead of
imposing additional burden on entities
that do report in order to obtain
information about non-reporters, a more
straightforward and practical approach
is to encourage full reporting. EPA,
though, believes it would be beneficial
to acquire the names of all distributors
and third-party applicators with critical
use exemption reporting requirements
under 40 CFR 82.13. Collecting the
names of these entities will facilitate
Agency follow-up with non-reporters,
allowing collection of necessary
information in a more targeted manner
than collecting detailed information
from all entities. In early 2008 EPA will
use its information gathering authority
under section 114 of the Clean Air Act
to ask all entities that sell critical use
methyl bromide to report the names of
all non-end user entities (i.e. producers,
importers, distributors and third-party
applicators) to which they sold critical
use methyl bromide during the 2007
control period.
Chemtura commented that EPA’s
reliance on full and accurate reporting
by the regulated community is
unreasonable, because the existing
reporting system does not provide EPA
with any way to verify whether all
entities that should file reports have
done so. NRDC commented that EPA
should require producers, importers,
distributors and third-party applicators
to report the names of distributors and
third-party applicators to which they
have sold any methyl bromide,
including pre-2005 stocks, in order to
get accurate data to track amounts sold
for all purposes (including non-critical
uses). The commenter stated that the
costs of such reporting would be
minimal and would be justified by the
benefits of better tracking of CAA and
Protocol compliance. EPA responds to
these comments in the Response to
Comment document available on the
docket for this action.
b. Apportionment of Carryover
Reductions Among Producers
In previous CUE rules, EPA used the
approach described in the Framework
Rule for applying reductions in CUA
amounts equal to the amount of
carryover CUE material from a previous
year. EPA’s practice to date has been to
apply this reduction to the total
volumes of allowable new production or
import, and then to pro-rate CUA
allocations to each company based on
its 1991 baseline market share. In
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
74138
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
developing this action, EPA proposed to
use the same approach for 2008.
In the proposed rule, EPA explained
that Chemtura’s petition recommended
alternative methods for apportioning
carryover reductions among CUA
holders. EPA encouraged interested
parties to comment on the
recommendations in Chemtura’s
petition and provide any additional
suggestions regarding the
apportionment of carryover among
companies.
Chemtura’s petition requested that
EPA apportion carryover amounts
proportional to the producers’
responsibility for the carryover
originating in their own supply chain.
The petition further stated that EPA’s
process for apportioning carryover
reductions among producers is arbitrary,
capricious, unfair, and perpetuates poor
stewardship. In its comments Chemtura
acknowledged that EPA does not
currently collect information that would
allow the Agency to reduce CUAs on the
basis of carryover originating in each
producer’s supply chain. As discussed
below in more detail, EPA believes that
acquiring credible data of this nature
would impose extra burden on the
regulated community without
producing any discernible
environmental benefit. The extra
reporting that Chemtura proposed could
redistribute the proportional allocation
of CUAs among producers, but it would
not affect the overall amount of critical
use methyl bromide available to critical
users, and therefore, would not help
EPA achieve the primary goal of the
critical use exemption program: to
satisfy critical needs for methyl
bromide. A better solution that does not
impose extra burden on the regulated
community is to continue to strengthen
outreach and educational programs that
facilitate full reporting under existing
requirements.
Chemtura commented that CUE
reductions to account for carryover are
distributed among the four methyl
bromide producers based on a
proportional basis according to their
1991 consumption baselines. The
commenter stated that an equal
allocation of the carryover would be
fairer and that using the 1991 data is
now inconsistent with the available
supply chain information and would
maximize future distortions in the
critical use market. EPA notes that
Chemtura has not objected to EPA’s
framework for distributing CUAs to
producers based on their 1991 market
share, under which Chemtura receives
over 60 percent of the new production
allowances each year. The Proposed
Framework Rule stated that, ‘‘Allocating
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
CUAs based on each company’s 1991
baseline allowances (on a pro-rata basis)
is a better reflection of market share
than simply dividing the number of
allowances by the total number of
entities, and would be less burdensome
than conducting a detailed historical
market share analysis on a [sic] an
annual basis. Using the 1991 historic
baseline method for distributing CUAs
is consistent with how EPA has
allocated methyl bromide production
and consumption allowances for the
past decade under the methyl bromide
phaseout’’ (69 FR 52376). EPA believes
the arguments in the Proposed
Framework Rule still apply. Using the
1991 market shares, which have become
the company-specific baselines for CUA
allocations, provides the best available
estimation of how much carryover is
attributable to each company’s supply
chain. A more detailed method of
estimation would involve additional
burden for respondents.
Chemtura’s petition recommended a
‘‘fault-based’’ system for allocating CUA
reductions to account for carryover
amounts. Chemtura stated that in order
to support the fault-based carryover
allocation process, EPA could modify
the reporting requirements established
at 40 CFR 82.13 to require that
importers, producers, distributors, and
third-party applicators list the producer
of any critical use methyl bromide they
acquired during the year. In its
comments, Chemtura asserted that,
‘‘Identifying the producer of origin for
any given sale or distributor should be
a simple task, as each of the four
producers supplies downstream
customers with methyl bromide
products under different pesticide
registrations, labels, and product names.
Thus, regardless of how many
intermediary distributors a methyl
bromide product may have passed
through before reaching the end user,
that entity can identify the producer by
a review of the label or sales invoice.’’
Whether or not producer of origin
reporting would be a ‘‘simple task,’’ it
would add to the regulatory burden
currently borne by entities in the
distribution chain. Preliminary
estimates, using as a guideline EPA’s
previous estimates under Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) requirements, a
guideline, suggest that the burden
imposed by producer of origin reporting
could require 150 respondent hours per
year, depending on how much EPA
follow-up is necessary to perform
standard data quality assurance
procedures. EPA does not believe the
‘‘fault-based’’ system, or the extra
reporting burden it requires, would
provide any discernible environmental
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
benefit, or help to satisfy critical needs
for methyl bromide. Therefore, while
the Agency may continue to analyze
Chemtura’s proposed reporting
additions as part of the renewal process
for its information collection request
(ICR) under PRA, in this final rule the
Agency is not implementing Chemtura’s
‘‘fault-based’’ system or the additional
reporting that it would require.
Chemtura’s petition asserted that,
‘‘The opt-out system proposed [in the
petition] provides an appropriate
method for apportioning carryover
penalties.’’ Chemtura’s proposed ‘‘optout’’ system would allow producers to
voluntarily submit supply chain data in
exchange for EPA’s removal of the
individual producer from the ‘‘default
penalty pool.’’ In its comments on the
proposed rule, Chemtura asserted that
Ameribrom had acknowledged
responsibility for the majority of the
2008 carryover. Chemtura also
commented that ‘‘EPA has received
ample notice of the flaws in the
framework.’’ Chemtura further
commented that any material that stays
in the distribution system past the end
of a control period should be considered
part of the SCF rather than carryover,
and that no carryover should be
subtracted from CUEs in 2008 and
beyond. EPA responds to these
comments in the Response to Comment
document available on the docket for
this rulemaking.
In this action, EPA is reducing the
total level of new production and
import—i.e., the total number of CUAs
issued—for 2008 by 499,234 kg to reflect
the total level of carryover material
available at the end of 2006. EPA will
continue to consider the level of
available stocks, and may consider
adjusting carryover policies, through a
notice and comment rulemaking
process, if available stocks become very
scarce. However, considering the
current amount of available prephaseout inventory, in this action it is
best to maintain the existing framework
for responding to carryover.
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
Decision XVII/9(7) ‘‘request[ed]
Parties to endeavor to use stocks, where
available, to meet any demand for
methyl bromide for the purposes of
research and development.’’ Consistent
with that Decision, in the 2007 CUE
Rule, EPA reduced the amount of new
production and import by 21,702
kilograms, which was the amount
needed for research, and encouraged
methyl bromide suppliers to sell
inventory to researchers and encouraged
researchers to purchase inventory.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Decision XVIII/15(1) authorized ‘‘the
production and consumption of [methyl
bromide] necessary to satisfy laboratory
and analytical critical uses.’’ Paragraph
2 of that decision stated that methyl
bromide produced under the exemption
for laboratory and analytical uses may
be used as a reference or standard; in
laboratory toxicology studies; to
compare the efficacy of methyl bromide
and its alternatives inside a laboratory;
and as a laboratory agent which is
destroyed in a chemical reaction in the
manner of feedstock. In a separate
notice-and-comment rulemaking titled
the ‘‘Global Essential Laboratory and
Analytical Use Exemption,’’ EPA is
implementing the exemption authorized
in Decision XVIII/15 (72 FR 52332).
More information about that rulemaking
process is available on the docket for
that rule (EPA–HQ–OAR–2007–0384).
In the proposed CUE rule for 2008,
EPA stated that there continues to be a
need for methyl bromide for research
purposes that do not meet the criteria
for laboratory and analytical uses, as
defined in Decision XVIII/15. A
common example is an outdoor field
experiment that requires methyl
bromide as a standard control treatment
with which to compare the trial
alternatives’ results. In the proposed
rule, EPA listed the critical use sectors
that were approved by the Parties to use
methyl bromide for research purposes in
2008 in Section V.C. and with the
phrase ‘‘research purposes’’ listed in
their limiting critical conditions in
Table I of this preamble.
In developing this action, EPA
proposed to allow sale of 15,491 kg of
existing stocks for research purposes in
2008 to account for the amount
authorized for those purposes. EPA
proposed to allow the sale of methyl
bromide from stocks for exempted
research purposes by expending CSAs.
An explanation of what amounts of
methyl bromide and of what sectors
qualify for research purposes can be
found in Section V.C. of this preamble.
The Agency proposed to continue to
encourage methyl bromide suppliers to
sell pre-phaseout inventory to
researchers and to encourage
researchers to purchase pre-phaseout
inventory for research purposes. EPA
sought comment on its proposal to issue
CSAs for sale of pre-phaseout methyl
bromide for exempted research
purposes.
MBIP objected to EPA’s proposal to
issue CSAs for sale of pre-phaseout
inventory for exempted research
purposes. The commenter stated that
existing stocks of pre-2005 inventory are
too low to warrant further drawdown for
research purposes and that new
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
production should be increased by
15,491 kilograms to account for research
needs. The Agency disagrees, and
proposed a detailed analysis of the
amount of available stocks, explained
further in Section V.D.2. of this
preamble, which found more than
1,700,000 kg of pre-phaseout inventory
available for critical uses. Therefore,
EPA is reducing new production by
15,491 kg, and encouraging researchers
to procure methyl bromide from prephaseout inventory.
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
In the 2006 CUE Rule (71 FR 5985),
EPA allocated less methyl bromide for
critical uses than was authorized by the
Parties in order to account for the recent
Federal registration of sulfuryl fluoride.
The allocation reductions in that rule
reflected transition rates that were
included for the first time in the 2007
U.S. CUN. In the 2007 CUE Rule, EPA
explained why a similar reduction was
made in that rule: ‘‘The report of the
Methyl Bromide Technical Options
Committee (MBTOC) indicated that the
MBTOC did not make any reductions in
these [post-harvest] use categories for
the uptake of sulfuryl fluoride in 2007
because the United States Government
indicated that it would do so in its
domestic allocation procedures.
Therefore, EPA is reducing the total
volume of critical use methyl bromide
by 53,703 kilograms to reflect the
continuing transition to sulfuryl
fluoride’’ (75 FR 75390).
In developing today’s action, EPA
referenced preliminary results of a study
by Dr. Brian D. Adam of Oklahoma State
University, which the Agency is making
available on the public docket for this
rulemaking. The proposed rule stated
that Dr. Adam’s study indicates that the
cost of post-harvest cocoa fumigation
with sulfuryl fluoride is not
substantially greater than the cost of
using methyl bromide for that
fumigation. The proposed rule
explained that in response to the study
results, the National Pest Management
Association (NPMA) withdrew its
nomination request for critical use
methyl bromide for 2009 cocoa
fumigations, and informed EPA that it
does not intend to seek critical use
methyl bromide for 2010 cocoa
fumigations. EPA reiterated NPMA’s
stated need for some critical use methyl
bromide for cocoa in 2008 as the sector
transitions to sulfuryl fluoride, and
explained the situation further. EPA
sought comment on how much of the
53,188 kg of critical use methyl bromide
approved by the Parties for cocoa for
2008 should be allowed by the Agency.
EPA asked that comments on this topic
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74139
recommend specific amounts of critical
use methyl bromide for cocoa in 2008,
and provide detailed justifications for
their recommendations.
EPA received a comment from NPMA
that recognized that the Oklahoma State
University study showed that the cost of
using sulfuryl fluoride to treat postharvest cocoa was not substantially
greater than the cost of using methyl
bromide. However, NPMA’s comment
stated that smaller companies in the
industry needed time to transition to
sulfuryl fluoride. This transition
includes the completion of a
manufacturer’s stewardship program as
well as customer education about nonmethyl bromide treatment.
Additionally, while most states in
which cocoa is processed have a special
24(C) label to allow for higher
Concentration and Time (CT) dosage
allocations for use of sulfuryl fluoride
on cocoa, New York has not approved
this label. Therefore, NPMA requested
that at least 75 percent of the 53,188 kg
of critical use methyl bromide approved
by the Parties be allocated for 2008.
NPMA stated that its application for
2009 had been withdrawn, as the
transition to sulfuryl fluoride should be
complete by that time.
In their 2008 CUE application, NPMA
requested 79,950 kg for 2008 critical
uses. In developing the 2008 critical use
nomination, the USG reduced NPMA’s
original request to account for growth,
because EPA’s framework does not
allow critical users to increase their
critical need based on expansion of their
operations (FR 69 76996). USG also
reduced NPMA’s request to account for
a reduction in the use rate of methyl
bromide from 24 kg/1,000 m3 to 20 kg/
1,000 m3. USG made a further reduction
to account for a transition rate of 16.8%
per year to sulfuryl fluoride. After
accounting for these factors, USG
nominated a total of 53,255 kg for cocoa
bean fumigation in 2008, and the Parties
approved 53,188 kg in Decision XVIII/
13. In light of new information about the
economic feasibility of sulfuryl fluoride
for post-harvest cocoa fumigation, in
this action EPA is approving less critical
use methyl bromide for cocoa
fumigation than the Parties authorized.
The Agency appreciates that NPMA
voluntarily came forward and agreed to
a more rapid transition to methyl
bromide alternatives for cocoa
fumigation. With this final rule, EPA is
approving 39,891 kg of critical use
methyl bromide for this sector, or 75
percent of the amount agreed to by the
Parties in Dec. XVIIII/13. Therefore,
EPA is reducing the total amount
authorized for 2008 critical uses by
13,297 kg to account for increased
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
74140
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
uptake of sulfuryl fluoride for cocoa
fumigation.
NRDC stated that EPA recently
approved the use of iodomethane
(methyl iodide) for field uses, which
will reduce the need for methyl bromide
CUE allocations. The commenter stated
that iodomethane is a drop-in substitute
for methyl bromide and that while it is
more costly per kilogram, less of it is
require to achieve the same efficacy.
The commenter also stated that while
iodomethane poses direct toxicity
issues, the toxicity issues associated
with methyl bromide are worse.
Chemtura requested that EPA assess
the technical and economic feasibility of
iodomethane for no fewer than two
years before factoring its availability
into future CUE decisions. The
commenter stated that the controversial
nature of the registration combined with
the proximity of the registration to the
close of the comment period on the CUE
rule provided reason to delay
considering this alternative when
allocating CUEs. The commenter also
noted that iodomethane was not yet
registered in California because of safety
questions and that there was anecdotal
evidence of efficacy problems with the
chemical. The commenter stated that at
least two growing seasons are necessary
to review and assess viability.
In the proposed rule EPA sought
‘‘information regarding changes to the
registration or use of alternatives that
may have transpired after the 2008 U.S.
nomination was written.’’ The Agency
stated that, ‘‘Such information has the
potential to alter * * *. EPA’s
determination as to which uses and
what amounts of methyl bromide
qualify for the critical use exemption.’’
In this final rule, EPA is following
through with that statement, and
reducing pre-plant critical use amounts
to account for new information about
the uptake of iodomethane.
After considering new information
about iodomethane, EPA estimates that
in 2008 iodomethane will be a
technically and economically feasible
alternative for a limited amount of preplant applications. Iodomethane has
been registered at the federal level for
the period of October 1, 2007 to October
1, 2008 for the following crops:
Strawberry, Pepper, Tomato,
Ornamentals, Nurseries, Trees and
Vines. The pesticide registration process
in the U.S. involves multiple layers of
regulatory review, and State
registrations are required before a
pesticide can be applied. As of
December 11, 2007, the last day that
EPA could reasonably consider
information for this rulemaking,
iodomethane had been registered in the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
following states that are included in
Column B of Table I as locations that
qualify to use pre-plant critical use
methyl bromide for certain uses in 2008:
Georgia, Michigan, Missouri, North
Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Tennessee and Virginia. Therefore, EPA
expects that iodomethane will be a legal
fumigant option in 2008 for some
growers that qualify for critical use
methyl bromide.
To estimate the amount of
iodomethane that will be a technically
and economically feasible methyl
bromide alternative in 2008, EPA
considered a number of factors. The
Agency considered that iodomethane is
currently registered for 10 of 12 months
during 2008, that iodomethane is
expected to cost more than methyl
bromide, and that there are restrictions
on the use of iodomethane such as the
imposition of buffers, that do not apply
to methyl bromide use. The Agency’s
analysis, described in a memo on the
docket for this action, estimates that
iodomethane can feasibly replace 14,472
kg of methyl bromide in 2008.
Therefore, in this action EPA is
reducing the total amount of pre-plant
critical use methyl bromide in 2008 by
14,472 kg to account for the uptake of
iodomethane in 2008.
Besides the issues regarding postharvest cocoa fumigation, and the newly
registered pre-plant fumigant
iodomethane, EPA is not making any
additional reductions in critical use
allowances to account for the uptake of
alternatives. In developing this action,
the Agency explained that in the 2008
CUN that USG applied transition rates
for all critical use sectors. The MBTOC
report of September 2006 included
reductions in its recommendations for
critical use categories based on the
transition rates in the 2008 CUN.
MBTOC’s recommendations were then
considered in the Parties’ 2008
authorization amounts, as listed in
Decision XVIII/13. Therefore, EPA
explained that transition rates, which
account for the uptake of alternatives,
have already been applied for
authorized 2008 critical use amounts.
Furthermore, the Agency stated that the
2009 CUN, which represented the most
recent analysis and the best available
data for methyl bromide alternatives,
did not conclude that transition rates
should be increased for 2008. In
developing this action, EPA sought
comment on its proposal not to make
further reductions in 2008 to account for
the uptake of methyl bromide
alternatives.
FSS stated that post harvest
application requests by NPMA, Pet Food
Institute, and Rice Millers are for
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
applications for which methyl bromide
is not necessary. FSS and Dow stated
that methyl bromide allocations for
these applications should therefore be
significantly reduced or eliminated.
Dow stated that nearly half of the 220
flour mills in the U.S. are fumigated
with sulfuryl fluoride. Dow also stated
that the transition rates for alternatives
used by EPA may apply to farm
applications, but Dow claimed these
transition rates are too low for structural
applications. Additionally, Dow and
FSS asserted that sulfuryl fluoride has
proved successful even after multiple
applications with no return to methyl
bromide, and that fumigation failures
can happen with all materials, including
methyl bromide. The Agency responds
to these comments in a separate
Response to Comments document
available on the docket for this action.
MBIP noted that some fumigation
companies need more time to transition
to sulfuryl fluoride, including the
purchase of new equipment and training
in its use. Specifically, MBIP argued
that allowing CUEs for cocoa in 2008
would enable a smoother transition to
sulfuryl fluoride and would help to
guarantee methyl bromide availability to
guard against unforeseen problems with
the transition.
EPA received extensive comments
from Dow objecting to EPA’s assessment
of the label restriction on 1,3-D product
use near karst topographical features in
Florida. EPA responds to these
comments in detail in the Response to
Comments document available on the
docket for this action.
As discussed above, in this action,
EPA is reducing the proposed critical
use amount for post-harvest cocoa
fumigation by 13,297 kg. EPA is also
reducing the proposed critical use
amount for pre-plant fumigation by
14,472 kg to account for new
information about the fumigant
iodomethane. EPA is not reducing any
of the other proposed critical use
amounts for 2008 to account for the
transition to alternatives, because
uptake of alternatives was already
considered in the 2008 U.S. CUN,
adopted by MBTOC, and reflected in the
2008 CUE authorization amounts that
EPA is finalizing with this action. The
most recent information that EPA
received does not support further
reductions.
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex.
I/4
Paragraphs 2 and 6 of Decision XVIII/
13 requested Parties to ensure that the
conditions or criteria listed in Decisions
Ex. I/4 and IX/6, paragraph 1, are
applied to exempted critical uses for the
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
2008 control period. A discussion of the
Agency’s application of the criteria in
paragraph one of Decision IX/6 appears
in sections V.A., V.C., V.D., and V.G. of
this preamble. The CUNs detail how
each proposed critical use meets the
criteria listed in paragraph 1 of Decision
IX/6, apart from the criterion located at
(b)(ii), as well as the criteria in
paragraphs 5 and 6 of Decision Ex. I/4.
The criterion in Decision IX/
6(1)(b)(ii), which referred to the use of
available stocks of methyl bromide, is
addressed in sections V.D., V.F., and
V.G. of this preamble. The Agency has
previously provided its interpretation of
the criterion in Decision IX/6(1)(a)(i)
regarding the presence of significant
market disruption in the absence of an
exemption, and EPA refers readers to
the 2006 CUE final rule (71 FR 5989) as
well as to the memo on the docket titled
‘‘Development of 2003 Nomination for a
Critical Use Exemption for Methyl
Bromide for the United States of
America’’ for further elaboration.
The remaining considerations,
including the lack of available
technically and economically feasible
alternatives under the circumstance of
the nomination; efforts to minimize use
and emissions of methyl bromide where
technically and economically feasible;
the development of research and
transition plans; and the requests in
Decision Ex. I/4(5) that Parties consider
and implement MBTOC
recommendations, where feasible, on
reductions in the critical use of methyl
bromide and in paragraph 6 for Parties
that submit critical use nominations to
include information on the methodology
they use to determine economic
feasibility, are all addressed in the
nomination documents.
Some of these criteria were evaluated
in other documents as well. For
example, the U.S. considered matters
regarding the adoption of alternatives
and research into methyl bromide
alternatives, criterion (1)(b)(iii) in
Decision IX/6, in the development of the
National Management Strategy (NMS)
submitted to the Ozone Secretariat in
December 2005 and in on-going
consultations with industry. The NMS
addresses all of the aims specified in
Decision Ex. I/4(3) to the extent feasible
and is available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
F. Emissions Minimization
In the proposed rule, EPA noted for
the regulated community the reference
to emission minimization techniques in
paragraph 8 of Decision XVIII/13, which
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
stated that Parties shall request critical
users to employ ‘‘emission
minimization techniques such as
virtually impermeable films, barrier film
technologies, deep shank injection and/
or other techniques that promote
environmental protection, whenever
technically and economically feasible.’’
EPA understands that research is being
conducted on the potential to reduce
rates and emissions using newly
available high-barrier films and that
these studies show promising results.
Users of methyl bromide should make
every effort to minimize overall
emissions of methyl bromide by using
measures such as the ones listed above,
to the extent consistent with State and
local laws and regulations. In the
proposed rule, the Agency encouraged
researchers and users who are
successfully utilizing such techniques to
inform EPA of their experiences as part
of their comments and to provide such
information with their critical use
applications. In addition, the Agency
welcomed comments on the
implementation of emissions
minimization techniques and whether
and how further emissions
minimization could be achieved.
At the public hearing for this action
the CSC expressed its opinion that EPA
should create a regulatory incentive for
emissions reduction. NRDC commented
that the most effective way to achieve
further emission minimization is to
require the use of emissions
minimization techniques such as
virtually impermeable films (VIF),
barrier films, and deep shank injection.
NRDC noted that these techniques offer
the concurrent benefit of reducing the
amount of methyl bromide needed for
fumigations. EPA believes that reducing
supply through the phaseout provides
incentives for use minimization and
therefore limits emissions. Other points
discussed by this commenter can be
found in the Response to Comments
document on the docket for this action.
At the public hearing for this action,
West Coast Tomato stated that VIF
keeps methyl bromide in the soil longer
where it is metabolized rather than
escaping into the atmosphere. The
commenter suggested that methyl
bromide that is used in this way should
not be decreased since it is not reaching
the ozone layer. EPA has not fully
reviewed the research that the
commenter is referring to. In compiling
annual critical use nominations, USG
considers the feasibility of VIF, and
other less permeable tarps, because the
use of these technologies can reduce
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74141
required dosage rates and the critical
need for methyl bromide to treat certain
crops. The commenter may be
proposing a different type of exemption
for methyl bromide use that does not
result in emissions to the stratosphere,
but this would require a change in the
Montreal Protocol, which is outside the
scope of the present rulemaking. Until
EPA fully reviews the research that the
commenter refers to, it would be
inappropriate for the Agency to respond
further.
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
A critical use allowance (CUA) is a
privilege granted by EPA, using its
authority under Section 604(d)(6) of the
Clean Air Act, that enables the holder to
produce or import one kilogram of
methyl bromide for an approved critical
use during the specified control period.
These allowances expire at the end of
the control period and, as explained in
the Framework Rule, are not bankable
from one year to the next. The allocation
of 2008 pre-plant and post-harvest
CUAs to the entities listed below is
subject to the trading provisions at 40
CFR 82.12, which are discussed in
section V.G. of the preamble to the
Framework Rule (69 FR 76982).
In the August 27, 2007, proposed rule,
EPA proposed to allow limited amounts
of new production or import of methyl
bromide for critical uses for 2008 up to
the amount of 3,101,076 kg (12.2% of
baseline) as shown in Table II below.
EPA sought comment on the total levels
of exempted new production or import
for pre-plant and post-harvest critical
uses in 2008. For the reasons discussed
in Section V.D. of this preamble, EPA is
adjusting the proposed CUA amounts to
account for late sales reports that
decrease the calculated 2006 carryover
amount and to account for the uptake of
alternatives. Therefore, the total critical
use exemption amount for 2008 is
4,813,452 kg (18.9% of baseline), with
3,083,763 kg (12.1% of baseline) of
critical use allowances allowing new
production or import, and the remaining
amount, 1,729,689 kg (6.8% of baseline),
available through critical stock
allowances (CSAs) that allow critical
users to access pre-phaseout methyl
bromide. EPA is continuing to calculate
company-specific CUA allocations on
the basis of the 1991 baseline
consumption share of the companies
listed in Table II. The updated
calculation spreadsheet is available on
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2006–
1016. Therefore, the CUAs are allocated
as follows:
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74142
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE II.—ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL USE ALLOWANCES
2008 Critical use
allowances for
pre-plant uses*
(kilograms)
Company
2008 Critical use
allowances for
post-harvest uses*
(kilograms)
Chemtura Corp. .......................................................................................................................
Albemarle Corp. .......................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc. .......................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc. ...............................................................................................................................
1,687,407
693,900
383,464
11,940
186,595
76,732
42,404
1,320
Total ..................................................................................................................................
2,776,711
307,052
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
* For production or import of class I, Group VI controlled substances exclusively for the pre-plant or post-harvest uses specified in Appendix L
to this subpart.
Paragraph five of Decision XVIII/13
states ‘‘that Parties shall endeavor to
license, permit, authorize, or allocate
quantities of critical use methyl bromide
as listed in tables A and C of the annex
to the present decision.’’ This is similar
to language in Decisions Ex. I/3(4), Ex.
II/1(4) and VII/9(4) regarding 2005,
2006, and 2007 critical uses,
respectively. The language from these
Decisions called on Parties to endeavor
to allocate critical use methyl bromide
on a sector basis.
In establishing the critical use
exemption program, the Agency
endeavored to allocate directly on a
sector-by-sector basis by analyzing and
proposing this option among others in
the August 2004 Framework Rule notice
(69 FR 52366). EPA solicited comment
on both universal and sector-based
allocation of critical use allowances.
The Agency evaluated the various
options based on their economic,
environmental, and practical effects.
After receiving comments, EPA
determined in the final Framework Rule
(69 FR 76989) that a lump-sum, or
universal, allocation, modified to
include distinct caps for pre-plant and
post-harvest uses, was the most efficient
and least burdensome approach that
would achieve the desired
environmental results, and that a sectorspecific approach would pose
significant administrative and practical
difficulties. Although the approach
adopted in the Framework Rule does
not directly allocate allowances to each
category of use, the Agency anticipates
that reliance on market mechanisms
will achieve similar results indirectly.
The TEAP recommendations were based
on data submitted by the U.S. which in
turn were based on recent historic use
data in the current methyl bromide
market. In other words, the TEAP
recommendations agreed to by the
Parties were based on current use and
the current use patterns take place in a
market where all pre-plant and postharvest methyl bromide uses compete
for a lump sum supply of critical use
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
material. Therefore, the Agency believes
that under a system of universal
allocations, divided into pre-plant and
post-harvest sectors, the actual critical
use will closely follow the sector
breakout listed by the TEAP. These
issues were addressed in the Framework
Rule and EPA is not aware of any factors
that would alter the analysis performed
during the development of previous
CUE allocation rules. A summary of the
options analysis conducted by EPA is
available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
In developing this action, EPA did not
propose to change the approach adopted
in the Framework Rule for the allocation
of CUAs but, in an effort to address
Decision XVIII/13(5), EPA sought
additional comment on the Agency’s
allocation of CUAs in the two groupings
(pre-plant and post-harvest) that the
Agency has employed in the past.
NPMA and Chemtura commented that
the universal system is working well
and believe the concept of the pre-plant/
post-harvest allocations is simple and
easy for stakeholders to understand. The
commenters also noted that the system
has not disrupted the supply chain and
has been easy for distributors to
implement, and discouraged the Agency
from switching to a sector-by-sector
allocation system.
FFVA and a representative of the
walnut, prune and fig industry
commented that the geographical
distribution of methyl bromide has
created shortfalls resulting in the
inability of individual growers to access
or afford material to fumigate their
fields in accordance with their
production schedules. FFVA indicated
that this was particularly noticeable
during the 2005 and 2006 fall
fumigation periods. The other
commenter stated that the universal
system has not worked well for the
above reasons, but believes that a sectorby-sector allocation system would be
equally flawed due to insufficient
allocations in certain sectors and
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
unequal holdings of pre-phaseout
inventory.
CSC stated that EPA should explore a
hybrid between a regional and a lumpsum allocation system. Specifically, the
commenter suggested that EPA consider
creating several large regional areas
(such as the EPA regions) that combine
all of the sectors within each region to
create a regional lump-sum. The
commenter further stated that the
methyl bromide users who most
frequently face difficulty obtaining
methyl bromide are small, minority
growers. The commenter argued that the
allocation of methyl bromide creates a
harm that is disproportionately
distributed. The commenter’s primary
concern does not appear to be human
health and environmental effects on
minority or low-income populations.
Instead, the commenter appears to
believe that EPA’s current allocation
system causes economic harm for these
populations, because they have
difficulty satisfying their critical needs
for methyl bromide.
This final rule creates an exemption
to the phaseout of methyl bromide. The
overall impact of this action is
deregulatory, and has an economic
benefit for growers with critical needs
for methyl bromide. EPA responds
further to this comment in the Response
to Comment document for this action.
EPA agrees with the comments that
supported the existing allocation
system. EPA considered sector-specific,
and other allocation approaches in the
proposed Framework Rule, and decided
that the existing universal allocation
system with pre-plant and post-harvest
allowances was the most effective and
least burdensome system. The
Framework Rule did not establish a
regional approach, as one commenter
suggested. EPA may consider such an
approach for future CUE rules. EPA
does not believe it would be appropriate
to finalize such an approach without
giving other interested parties an
opportunity for comment. EPA responds
to these comments further in the
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Response to Comments document
available on the docket for this action.
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations
and the Confidentiality of Information
About the Aggregate Methyl Bromide
Inventory
Each critical stock allowance (CSA) is
equivalent to one kilogram of critical
use methyl bromide. These allowances
expire at the end of the control period
and, as explained in the Framework
Rule, are not bankable from one year to
the next (69 FR 76990). CSAs are not
used to produce or import methyl
bromide but are rights that enable the
holder to sell pre-phaseout inventories
of methyl bromide for use in approved
critical uses. A CSA is expended when
the entity selling methyl bromide sells
the material, or fumigation services with
the material, to an approved critical user
who certifies that the material is for an
approved critical use. Thus, the
movement of pre-phaseout inventories
or methyl bromide along the supply
chain does not require expenditure of a
CSA.
In developing this action, EPA
proposed to allocate critical stock
allowances (CSAs) to the entities listed
below in Table III for the 2008 control
period in the amount of 1,715,438 kg
(6.8% of U.S. 1991 baseline). EPA’s
proposal was based on the proposed
approach for accounting for available
stocks of methyl bromide, which is
described in Section V.D. of this
preamble. For the reasons discussed in
Section V.D., in this action EPA is
allocating 1,729,689 kg of CSAs to the
entities listed in Table III below. The
amounts are apportioned to each entity
in proportion to inventory held by each
on January 1, 2007.
In 2006, the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia
upheld EPA’s treatment of companyspecific methyl bromide inventory
information as confidential. NRDC v.
Leavitt, 2006 WL 667327 (D.D.C. March
14, 2006). EPA’s allocation of CSAs is
based on each company’s proportionate
share of the aggregate inventory.
Therefore, the documentation regarding
company-specific allocation of CSAs is
in the confidential portion of the
rulemaking docket and the individual
CSA allocations are not listed in the
table below. EPA will inform the listed
companies of their CSA allocations in a
letter following publication of the final
rule.
In developing this action, EPA
explained that several companies that
receive small amounts of CSAs from
EPA have contacted the Agency and
requested that they be permitted to
permanently relinquish their
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
allowances. Due to the small CSA
allocation and because they typically do
not sell critical use methyl bromide,
they find the allocation of CSAs, and
associated recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, to be unduly burdensome.
In response to this concern, in the
proposed 2007 CUE rule EPA proposed
to allow CSA holders, on a voluntary
basis, to permanently relinquish their
allowances through written notification
to the Agency. EPA received no adverse
comments. However, no CSA holders
contacted EPA to take advantage of that
voluntary opportunity. In the 2008
proposed rule EPA again gave CSA
holders the opportunity, on a voluntary
basis, to permanently relinquish their
allowances through written notification
to the Agency. EPA explained that
companies voluntarily relinquishing
their allowances would not receive CSA
allocations and would be excluded from
future allocations, and that all
allowances forfeited by companies
would be reallocated to the remaining
companies on a pro-rata basis.
Seven companies contacted EPA
during the comment period for this
action and volunteered to relinquish
their CSAs. The companies that
contacted the Agency were: Blair Soil
Fumigation, Dodson Brothers, Carolina
Eastern Inc., Harvey Fertilizer & Gas,
J.C. Ehrlich Co., Southern States
Cooperative Inc., and Vanguard
Fumigation Co. With this final rule, EPA
is honoring their requests and removing
these seven companies from Table III
below. Additionally, EPA will not issue
CSAs to these seven companies in
future control periods. EPA has
reallocated their CSAs to the remaining
companies on a pro-rata basis.
TABLE III.—ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL
STOCK ALLOWANCES
Company
Albemarle.
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Burnside Services, Inc.
Cardinal Professional Products.
Chemtura Corp.
Degesch America, Inc.
Helena Chemical Co.
Hendrix & Dail.
Hy Yield Bromine.
Industrial Fumigation Company.
Pacific Ag.
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One.
Reddick Fumigants.
Royster-Clark, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident Agricultural Products.
UAP Southeast (NC).
UAP Southeast (SC).
Univar.
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
74143
TABLE III.—ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL
STOCK ALLOWANCES—Continued
Company
Western Fumigation.
Total—1,729,689 kilograms.
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
As discussed above and in the
December 23, 2004 Framework Rule, an
approved critical user may obtain access
to exempted production and import of
methyl bromide and to limited
inventories of pre-phaseout methyl
bromide, the combination of which
constitute the supply of ‘‘critical use
methyl bromide’’ intended to meet the
needs of agreed critical uses. The
Framework Rule established provisions
governing the sale of pre-phaseout
inventories for critical uses, including
the concept of CSAs and a prohibition
on the sale of pre-phaseout inventories
for critical uses in excess of the amount
of CSAs held by the seller. The
Framework Rule also established
trading provisions that allow critical use
allowances (CUAs) to be converted into
CSAs. Under this action, no significant
changes are being made to those
provisions.
NRDC commented that EPA should
dedicate all pre-phaseout stocks of
methyl bromide to CUEs. The Agency
notes that it has responded to similar
comments in the Final Framework Rule
(69 FR 76988), the Final 2007 CUE Rule
(71 FR 75400), and in response to
NRDC’s late submission of
supplemental comments on the
Proposed 2007 CUE Rule. EPA is not
revisiting this issue in this rulemaking.
The proposed rule explained in detail
how EPA acquired information about
pre-phaseout inventory for 2003 and
after, and how EPA had applied its
regulations on treatment of information
claimed as confidential. In the proposed
rule, EPA noted that it did not receive
any objections to releasing the aggregate
stocks information for calendar year
2006. To simplify the process of
releasing future aggregate stocks
information, EPA proposed to release
the aggregate of methyl bromide
stockpile information reported to the
Agency under the reporting
requirements at 40 CFR 82.13 for the
end of 2007, and each year thereafter.
For the reasons given in a letter that
EPA sent on April 23, 2007, which is
available in the docket, to all entities
which had reported holding prephaseout inventory at the end of 2003,
2004, 2005, or 2006, this aggregate
information is clearly not entitled to
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74144
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
confidential treatment. EPA proposed to
release the aggregate of this stockpile
data in future years without first
notifying entities by letter, as EPA has
done in the past two years. EPA sought
comment on this proposal. In the
proposed rule, the Agency stated that if
it did not receive any comments
opposing its proposal, the aggregate of
methyl bromide stockpile data collected
under the reporting requirements at 40
CFR 82.13 would not be treated as
confidential information and could be
released in future without additional
notice to the competitors.
In its comments MBIP did not object
to EPA’s proposal to release aggregate
stockpile data in future years at this
time. MBIP stated that they reserve the
right to object in the future should the
number of competitors in the industry
dwindle to two or fewer in order to
protect confidentiality. Therefore,
because EPA received no comments
objecting to its proposal at the present
time, for as long as there are a sufficient
number of competitors in the industry,
the aggregate of methyl bromide
stockpile data collected under the
reporting requirements at 40 CFR 82.13
will not be treated as confidential
information and may be released in
future without further notice. However,
if the number of competitors in the
industry were to decline appreciably,
EPA would revisit the question of
whether the aggregate is entitled to
treatment as confidential information
and would not release the aggregate
without notice.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
Under Executive Order (EO) 12866
(58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action,’’ because it raises novel or legal
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order. Accordingly, EPA submitted this
action to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for review under EO
12866 and any changes made in
response to OMB recommendations
have been documented in the docket for
this action.
information; search data sources;
complete and review the collection of
information; and transmit or otherwise
disclose the information.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rulemaking does not impose any
additional information collection
burden. OMB has previously approved
the information collection requirements
contained in the existing regulations at
40 CFR Part 82 under the provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. and has assigned OMB
control number 2060–0564, and EPA
ICR number 2179.03. A copy of the
OMB approved Information Collection
Request (ICR) may be obtained from
Susan Auby, Collection Strategies
Division; U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (2822T); 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460 or by
calling (202) 566–1672.
Burden means the total time, effort, or
financial resources expended by persons
to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose
or provide information to or for a
Federal agency. This includes the time
needed to review instructions; develop,
acquire, install, and utilize technology
and systems for the purposes of
collecting, validating, and verifying
information, processing and
maintaining information, and disclosing
and providing information; adjust the
existing ways to comply with any
previously applicable instructions and
requirements; train personnel to be able
to respond to a collection of
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any
other statute unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities
include small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. For purposes of assessing
the impacts of this action on small
entities, small entity is defined as: (1) A
small business that is identified by the
North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) Code in the Table
below; (2) a small governmental
jurisdiction that is a government of a
city, county, town, school district or
special district with a population of less
than 50,000; and (3) a small
organization that is any not-for-profit
enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
NAICS code
SIC code
Agricultural production ...
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Category
1112—Vegetable and Melon farming ..................
1113—Fruit and Nut Tree Farming .....................
1114—Greenhouse, Nursery, and Floriculture
Production.
0171—Berry Crops ..............................................
0172—Grapes .....................................................
0173—Tree Nuts .................................................
0175—Deciduous Tree Fruits (except apple orchards and farms).
0179—Fruit and Tree Nuts, NEC ........................
0181—Ornamental Floriculture and Nursery
Products.
0831—Forest Nurseries and Gathering of Forest
Products.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
NAICS small
business size
standard
(in number of
employees or
millions of dollars)
$0.75 million.
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
74145
NAICS small
business size
standard
(in number of
employees or
millions of dollars)
Category
NAICS code
SIC code
Storage Uses .................
115114—Postharvest Crop activities (except
Cotton Ginning).
311211—Flour Milling ..........................................
311212—Rice Milling ...........................................
493110—General Warehousing and Storage .....
493130—Farm Product Warehousing and Storage.
115112—Soil Preparation, Planting and Cultivating.
325320—Pesticide and Other Agricultural
Chemical Manufacturing.
2041—Flour and Other Grain Mill Products ........
2044—Rice Milling ...............................................
4221—Farm Product Warehousing and Storage
4225—General Warehousing and Storage .........
$6.5 million.
500 employees.
$23.5 million.
0721—Crop Planting, Cultivation, and Protection
$6.5 million.
2879—Pesticides and Agricultural Chemicals,
NEC.
500 employees.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Distributors and Applicators.
Producers and Importers
Agricultural producers of minor crops
and entities that store agricultural
commodities are categories of affected
entities that contain small entities. This
action will only affect entities that
applied to EPA for a de-regulatory
exemption. In most cases, EPA received
aggregated requests for exemptions from
industry consortia. On the exemption
application, EPA asked consortia to
describe the number and size
distribution of entities their application
covered. EPA estimated that 3,218
entities submitted critical use
applications, either individually or as
members of consortia, for a critical use
exemption for the 2005 control period.
EPA received requests from a
comparable number of entities for the
2006, 2007, and 2008 control periods.
Since many applicants did not provide
information on the distribution of sizes
of entities covered in their applications,
EPA estimated that, based on the above
definition, between one-fourth and onethird of the entities may be small
businesses. In addition, other categories
of affected entities do not contain small
businesses based on the above
description.
After considering the economic
impacts of this final rule on small
entities, EPA certifies that this action
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In determining whether a rule
has a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, the
impact of concern is any significant
adverse economic impact on small
entities, since the primary purpose of
the regulatory flexibility analyses is to
identify and address regulatory
alternatives ‘‘which minimize any
significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.’’ (5
U.S.C. 603-604). Thus, an Agency may
certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
substantial number of small entities if
the rule relieves a regulatory burden, or
otherwise has a positive economic effect
on all of the small entities subject to the
rule. Since this rule exempts methyl
bromide for approved critical uses after
the phaseout date of January 1, 2005,
this is a de-regulatory action which will
confer a benefit to users of methyl
bromide. EPA believes the estimated deregulatory value for users of methyl
bromide is between $20 million and $30
million annually. We have therefore
concluded that this final rule will
relieve regulatory burden for all small
entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA,
EPA generally must prepare a written
statement, including a cost-benefit
analysis, for proposed and final rules
with ‘‘Federal mandates’’ that may
result in expenditures to State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or to the private sector, of $100 million
or more in any one year. Before
promulgating an EPA rule for which a
written statement is needed, section 205
of the UMRA generally requires EPA to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives and
adopt the least costly, most costeffective or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule.
The provisions of section 205 do not
apply when they are inconsistent with
applicable law. Moreover, section 205
allows EPA to adopt an alternative other
than the least costly, most cost-effective
or least burdensome alternative if the
Administrator publishes with the final
rule an explanation why that alternative
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
was not adopted. Before EPA establishes
any regulatory requirements that may
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, including tribal
governments, it must have developed
under section 203 of the UMRA a small
government agency plan. The plan must
provide for notifying potentially
affected small governments, enabling
officials of affected small governments
to have meaningful and timely input in
the development of EPA regulatory
proposals with significant Federal
intergovernmental mandates, and
informing, educating, and advising
small governments on compliance with
the regulatory requirements.
This final rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for
State, local, or tribal governments or the
private sector. This action is
deregulatory and does not impose any
new requirements on any entities. Thus,
this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
the UMRA. Further, EPA has
determined that this rule contains no
regulatory requirements that might
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999), requires EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ The phrase ‘‘policies that
have federalism implications’’ is
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74146
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’
This final rule does not have
federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132. This final rule
is expected to primarily affect
producers, suppliers, importers and
exporters and users of methyl bromide.
Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not
apply to this final rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 9, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ This final rule does not
have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175. This final rule
does not significantly or uniquely affect
the communities of Indian tribal
governments. The final rule does not
impose any enforceable duties on
communities of Indian tribal
governments. Thus, Executive Order
13175 does not apply to this final rule.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045: ’’Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks’’ (62 FR 19885,
April 23, 1997) applies to any rule that:
(1) Is determined to be ‘‘economically
significant’’ as defined under Executive
Order 12866, and (2) concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
EPA has reason to believe may have a
disproportionate effect on children. If
the regulatory action meets both criteria,
the Agency must evaluate the
environmental health or safety effects of
the planned rule on children, and
explain why the planned regulation is
preferable to other potentially effective
and reasonably feasible alternatives
considered by the Agency.
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
as applying only to those regulatory
actions that are based on health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under Section 5–501 of the Order has
the potential to influence the regulation.
This final rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does
not establish an environmental standard
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
intended to mitigate health or safety
risks.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This final rule is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ as defined in Executive
Order 13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use’’ (66
FR 28355 (May 22, 2001)) because it is
not likely to have a significant adverse
effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy. This final rule does not
pertain to any segment of the energy
production economy nor does it regulate
any manner of energy use. Therefore,
EPA has concluded that this final rule
is not likely to have any adverse energy
effects.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law
104–113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272
note) directs EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be
inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications,
test methods, sampling procedures, and
business practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. The NTTAA directs
EPA to provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards. This
rulemaking does not involve technical
standards. Therefore, EPA is not
considering the use of any voluntary
consensus standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order (EO) 12898 (59 FR
7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
EPA has determined that this final
rule will not have disproportionately
high and adverse human health or
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
environmental effects on minority or
low-income populations, because it
affects the level of environmental
protection equally for all affected
populations without having any
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on any population, including any
minority or low-income population.
Any stratospheric ozone depletion that
results from this final rule will impact
all affected populations equally because
ozone depletion is a global
environmental problem with
environmental and human effects that
are, in general, equally distributed
across geographical regions in the U.S.
K. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule
will be effective December 28, 2007.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR part 82
Environmental protection, Ozone
depletion, Chemicals, Exports, Imports.
Dated: December 19, 2007.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the preamble,
40 CFR Part 82 is amended as follows:
I
PART 82—PROTECTION OF
STRATOSPHERIC OZONE
1. The authority citation for part 82
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7601, 7671–
7671q.
2. Section 82.8 is amended by revising
the table in paragraph (c)(1) and
paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
I
§ 82.8 Grant of essential use allowances
and critical use allowances.
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
*
*
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
2008 Critical use
allowances for
pre-plant uses*
(kilograms)
Company
74147
2008 Critical use
allowances for
post-harvest uses*
(kilograms)
Chemtura Corp. .......................................................................................................................
Albemarle Corp. .......................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc. .......................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc. ...............................................................................................................................
1,687,407
693,900
383,464
11,940
186,595
76,732
42,404
1,320
Total ..................................................................................................................................
2,776,711
307,052
*For production or import of class I, Group VI controlled substance exclusively for the pre-plant or post-harvest uses specified in Appendix L of
this subpart.
(2) Allocated critical stock allowances
granted for specified control period. The
following companies are allocated
critical stock allowances for 2008 on a
pro-rata basis in relation to the
inventory held by each.
Company
Albemarle.
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Burnside Services, Inc.
Cardinal Professional Products.
Chemtura Corp.
Company
Company
Degesch America, Inc.
Helena Chemical Co.
Hendrix & Dail.
Hy Yield Bromine.
Industrial Fumigation Company.
Pacific Ag.
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One.
Reddick Fumigants.
Royster-Clark, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident Agricultural Products.
UAP Southeast (NC).
UAP Southeast (SC).
Univar.
Western Fumigation.
Total—1,729,689 kilograms.
3. Appendix L to Subpart A is revised
to read as follows:
I
Appendix L to Part 82 Subpart A—
Approved Critical Uses and Limiting
Critical Conditions for Those Uses for
the 2008 Control Period
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Pre-Plant Uses:
Cucurbits .....................................................
(a) Michigan growers .......................................
(b) Southeastern U.S. limited to growing locations in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Virginia.
(c) Georgia growers .........................................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Eggplant ......................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
(a) Florida growers ...........................................
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74148
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(b) Georgia growers .........................................
(c) Michigan growers .......................................
Forest Nursery Seedlings ............................
(a) Growers in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina,
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Virginia.
(b) International Paper and its subsidiaries
limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, South Carolina, and
Texas.
(c) Public (government-owned) seedling nurseries in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, and South
Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Oregon
and Washington.
(f) Michigan growers ........................................
Orchard Nursery Seedlings .........................
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry Nursery Consortium limited to growing locations
in Washington.
(b) Members of the California Association of
Nursery and Garden Centers representing
Deciduous Tree Fruit Growers.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(c) California rose nurseries ............................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium collar, crown and
root rot.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe weed infestation including
purple and yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode or worm infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Presence of medium to heavy clay soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Presence of medium to heavy clay soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
74149
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
Strawberry Nurseries ...................................
(a) California growers ......................................
(b) North Carolina and Tennessee growers ....
Orchard Replant ..........................................
(a) California stone fruit growers .....................
(b) California table and raisin grape growers ..
(c) California wine grape growers ....................
(d) California walnut growers ...........................
(e) California almond growers .........................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Ornamentals ................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
(a) California growers ......................................
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot.
Moderate to severe root-knot nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow and purple
nutsedge infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Presence of medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits on
use of this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted (non-virgin) orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74150
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
(c) Michigan herbaceous perennials growers ..
Peppers .......................................................
(a) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia growers.
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
(c) Georgia growers .........................................
(d) Michigan growers .......................................
Strawberry Fruit ...........................................
(a) California growers ......................................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
(b) Florida growers ...........................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe weed infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge and
other weed infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium root, collar,
crown and root rots.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation, or
moderate to severe pythium root and collar
rots.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation, crown or root rot.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot or crown
rot.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Time to transition to an alternative.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
74151
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi,
Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia
growers.
Sweet Potato Slips ......................................
(a) California growers ......................................
Tomatoes ....................................................
(a) Michigan growers .......................................
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia growers.
Post-Harvest Uses:
Food Processing .........................................
(a) Rice millers in all locations in the U.S. who
are members of the USA Rice Millers Association.
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities in the
U.S. who are active members of the Pet
Food Institute (for this rule, ‘‘pet food’’ refers to domestic dog and cat food).
(c) Bakeries in the U.S. ...................................
(d) Members of the North American Millers’
Association in the U.S..
Commodities ...............................................
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
Dry Cured Pork Products ............................
(e) Members of the National Pest Management Association treating cocoa beans in
storage and associated spaces and equipment and processed food, cheese, herbs,
spices and spaces and equipment in associated processing facilities.
(a) California entities storing walnuts, beans,
dried plums, figs, raisins, and dates (in Riverside county only) in California.
(a) Members of the National Country Ham Association.
(b) Members of the American Association of
Meat Processors.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe black root and crown rot.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Prohibition on use of 1,3-dichloropropene
products because local township limits for
this alternative have been reached.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematodes.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features, and in Florida, soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe infestation of beetles,
weevils, or moths.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe infestation or beetles,
moths, or cockroaches.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Rapid fumigation is required to meet a critical
market window, such as during the holiday
season, rapid fumigation is required when a
buyer provides short (2 working days or
less) notification for a purchase or there is
a short period after harvest in which to fumigate and there is limited silo availability
for using alternatives.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
74152
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Column A
Column B
Column C
Approved critical uses
Approved critical user and location of use
Limiting critical conditions that either exist, or
that the approved critical user reasonably expects could arise without methyl bromide fumigation
(c) Nahunta Pork Center (North Carolina) .......
(d) Gwaltney of Smithfield Ltd. ........................
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
[FR Doc. E7–25065 Filed 12–27–07; 8:45 am]
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES3
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:49 Dec 27, 2007
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\28DER3.SGM
28DER3
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 248 (Friday, December 28, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 74118-74152]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-25065]
[[Page 74117]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part IV
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 82
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2008 Critical Use Exemption From
the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 248 / Friday, December 28, 2007 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 74118]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-1016; FRL-8510-8]
RIN 2060-A030
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2008 Critical Use
Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is finalizing an exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide to meet the needs of 2008 critical uses. Specifically, EPA is
authorizing uses that qualify for the 2008 critical use exemption and
the amount of methyl bromide that may be produced, imported, or
supplied from existing pre-phaseout inventory for those uses in 2008.
EPA is taking action under the authority of the Clean Air Act to
reflect recent consensus decisions taken by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer at the 18th Meeting
of the Parties.
DATES: This rule is effective on December 28, 2007.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action identified
under Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-1016. All documents in the docket
are listed on the https://www.regulations.gov site. Although listed in
the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g., 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 only through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy. To obtain copies of materials in
hard copy, please call the EPA Docket Center at (202) 564-1744 between
the hours of 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. E.S.T., Monday-Friday, excluding legal
holidays, to schedule an appointment. The EPA Docket Center's Public
Reading Room address is EPA/DC, EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aaron Levy by telephone at (202) 343-
9215, or by e-mail at levy.aaron@epa.gov or by mail at Aaron Levy, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Stratospheric Protection Division,
Stratospheric Program Implementation Branch (6205J), 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC, 20460. You may also visit the Ozone
Depletion Web site of EPA's Stratospheric Protection Division at http:/
/www.epa.gov/ozone/strathome.html for further information about EPA's
stratospheric ozone protection regulations, the science of ozone layer
depletion, and other related topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule concerns Clean Air Act (CAA)
restrictions on the consumption, production, and use of methyl bromide
(a class I, Group VI controlled substance) for critical uses during
calendar year 2008. Under the Clean Air Act, methyl bromide consumption
(consumption is defined under the CAA as production plus imports minus
exports) and production was phased out on January 1, 2005, apart from
allowable exemptions, namely the critical use exemption and the
quarantine and pre-shipment exemption. With this action, EPA is
authorizing the uses that will qualify for the 2008 critical use
exemption as well as specific amounts of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or sold from pre-phaseout inventory for critical
uses in 2008.
Section 553(d) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C.
Chapter 5, generally provides that rules may not take effect earlier
than 30 days after they are published in the Federal Register. EPA is
issuing this final rule under section 307(d) of the Clean Air Act,
which states: ``The provisions of section 553 through 557 * * * of
Title 5 shall not, except as expressly provided in this section, apply
to actions to which this subsection applies.'' CAA section 307(d)(1).
Thus, section 553(d) of the APA does not apply to this rule. EPA is
nevertheless acting consistently with the policies underlying APA
section 553(d) in making this rule effective on December 28, 2007. APA
section 553(d) provides an exception for any action that grants or
recognizes an exemption or relieves a restriction. This final rule
grants an exemption from the phaseout of methyl bromide.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and
Import of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
B. How Does This Final Rulemaking Relate to Previous Critical
Use Exemption Rulemakings?
C. Critical Uses
D. Critical Use Amounts
1. Background of Critical Use Amounts
2. Calculation of Available Stocks
3. Adjusting New Production and Import Amounts to Account for
Available Stocks
4. Treatment of Carryover Material
a. Reporting Requirements to Calculate Carryover Amounts
b. Apportionment of Carryover Reductions Among Producers
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex. I/4
F. Emissions Minimization
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations and the Confidentiality
of Information About the Aggregate Methyl Bromide Inventory
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this action are those associated
with the production, import, export, sale, application, and use of
methyl bromide covered by an approved critical use exemption.
Potentially regulated categories and entities include:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Examples of regulated entities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry......................... Producers, Importers, and Exporters
of methyl bromide; Applicators and
Distributors of methyl bromide;
Users of methyl bromide, e.g.,
farmers of vegetable crops, fruits,
and seedlings; Owners of stored food
commodities and structures such as
grain mills and processors; and
Agricultural researchers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 74119]]
The above table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather to
provide a guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated
by this action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is
aware could potentially be regulated by this action. To determine
whether your facility, company, business, or organization is regulated
by this action, you should carefully examine the regulations
promulgated at 40 CFR Part 82, Subpart A. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action to a particular entity,
consult the person listed in the preceding section.
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless, colorless, toxic gas which is used
as a broad-spectrum pesticide and is controlled under the CAA as a
class I ozone-depleting substance (ODS). Methyl bromide is used in the
U.S. and throughout the world as a fumigant to control a variety of
pests such as insects, weeds, rodents, pathogens, and nematodes.
Additional characteristics and details about the uses of methyl bromide
can be found in the proposed rule on the phaseout schedule for methyl
bromide published in the Federal Register on March 18, 1993 (58 FR
15014), and the final rule published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 1993 (58 FR 65018). Information on methyl bromide can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr and https://www.ozone.unep.org or
by contacting the Stratospheric Ozone Hotline at 1-800-296-1996.
Because it is a pesticide, methyl bromide is also regulated by EPA
under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
and other statutes and regulatory authority, as well as by States under
their own statutes and regulatory authorities. Under FIFRA, methyl
bromide is a restricted use pesticide. Restricted use pesticides are
subject to certain Federal and State requirements governing their sale,
distribution, and use. Nothing in this final rule implementing the
Clean Air Act is intended to derogate from provisions in any other
Federal, State, or Local laws or regulations governing actions
including, but not limited to, the sale, distribution, transfer, and
use of methyl bromide. All entities that are affected by provisions of
this action must continue to comply with FIFRA and other pertinent
statutory and regulatory requirements for pesticides (including, but
not limited to, requirements pertaining to restricted use pesticides)
when importing, exporting, acquiring, selling, distributing,
transferring, or using methyl bromide for critical uses. The
regulations in this final rule are intended only to implement the CAA
restrictions on the production, consumption, and use of methyl bromide
for critical uses exempted from the phaseout of methyl bromide.
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements of the stratospheric ozone
protection program that limit production and consumption of ozone-
depleting substances can be found at 40 CFR Part 82, Subpart A. The
regulatory program was originally published in the Federal Register on
August 12, 1988 (53 FR 30566), in response to the 1987 signing and
subsequent ratification of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Protocol). The Protocol is the international
agreement aimed at reducing and eliminating the production and
consumption of stratospheric ozone depleting substances. The U.S. was
one of the original signatories to the 1987 Montreal Protocol and the
U.S. ratified the Protocol on April 12, 1988. Congress then enacted,
and President George H.W. Bush signed into law, the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990 (CAAA of 1990) which included Title VI on
Stratospheric Ozone Protection, codified as 42 U.S.C. Chapter 85,
Subchapter VI, to ensure that the United States could satisfy its
obligations under the Protocol. EPA issued regulations to implement
this legislation and has made several amendments to the regulations
since that time.
Methyl bromide was added to the Protocol as an ozone depleting
substance in 1992 through the Copenhagen Amendment to the Protocol. The
Parties to the Montreal Protocol (Parties) agreed that each
industrialized country's level of methyl bromide production and
consumption in 1991 should be the baseline for establishing a freeze in
the level of methyl bromide production and consumption for
industrialized countries. EPA published a final rule in the Federal
Register on December 10, 1993 (58 FR 65018), listing methyl bromide as
a class I, Group VI controlled substance, freezing U.S. production and
consumption at this 1991 level of 25,528,270 kilograms, and, in 40 CFR
82.7, EPA also set forth the percentage of baseline allowances for
methyl bromide granted to companies in each control period (each
calendar year) until 2001, when the complete phaseout would occur. This
phaseout date was established in response to a petition filed in 1991
under sections 602(c)(3) and 606(b) of the CAAA of 1990, requesting
that EPA list methyl bromide as a class I substance and phase out its
production and consumption. This date was consistent with section
602(d) of the CAAA of 1990, which for newly listed class I ozone
depleting substances provides that ``no extension [of the phaseout
schedule in section 604] under this subsection may extend the date for
termination of production of any class I substance to a date more than
7 years after January 1 of the year after the year in which the
substance is added to the list of class I substances.'' EPA based its
action on scientific assessments and actions by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol to freeze the level of methyl bromide production and
consumption for industrialized countries at the Fourth Meeting of the
Parties (MOP) in 1992 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
At the Seventh MOP in 1995, the Parties made adjustments to the
methyl bromide control measures and agreed to reduction steps and a
2010 phaseout date for industrialized countries with exemptions
permitted for critical uses. At that time, the U.S. continued to have a
2001 phaseout date in accordance with the CAAA of 1990 language. At the
Ninth MOP in 1997, the Parties agreed to further adjustments to the
phaseout schedule for methyl bromide in industrialized countries, with
reduction steps leading to a 2005 phaseout.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
In October 1998, the U.S. Congress amended the CAA to prohibit the
termination of production of methyl bromide prior to January 1, 2005,
to require EPA to bring the U.S. phaseout of methyl bromide in line
with the schedule specified under the Protocol, and to authorize EPA to
provide exemptions for critical uses. These amendments were contained
in section 764 of the 1999 Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 105-277, October 21, 1998) and
were codified in section 604 of the CAA, 42 U.S.C. 7671c. The amendment
that specifically addresses the critical use exemption appears at
section 604(d)(6), 42 U.S.C. 7671c(d)(6). EPA revised the phaseout
schedule for methyl bromide production and consumption in a direct
final rulemaking on November 28, 2000 (65 FR 70795), which allowed for
the phased reduction in methyl bromide consumption and extended the
phaseout to 2005. EPA again amended the revised phaseout to allow for
an
[[Page 74120]]
exemption for quarantine and preshipment purposes on July 19, 2001 (66
FR 37751), with an interim final rule and with a final rule on January
2, 2003 (68 FR 238).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982), EPA published a final rule
titled ``Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Process for Exempting
Critical Uses From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide'' (the ``Framework
Rule'') in the Federal Register that established the framework for the
critical use exemption; set forth a list of approved critical uses for
2005; and specified the amount of methyl bromide that could be supplied
in 2005 from stocks and new production or import to meet the needs of
approved critical uses. EPA then promulgated a supplemental rule on
December 13, 2005 that added critical uses to the exemption program for
2005 and allocated additional stock allowances (70 FR 73604). EPA
published a final rule on February 6, 2006, to exempt production and
import of methyl bromide for 2006 critical uses and indicated which
uses met the criteria for the exemption program for that year (71 FR
5985). EPA published another final rule on December 14, 2006, to exempt
production and import of methyl bromide for critical uses in 2007 and
indicated which uses met the criteria for critical uses for that year
(71 FR 75386). Under authority of section 604(d)(6) of the CAA, this
action lists the uses that qualify as approved critical uses in 2008
and the amount of methyl bromide that may be produced, imported, or
supplied from inventory to satisfy those uses.
This action reflects Decision XVIII/13, taken at the Eighteenth
Meeting of the Parties in October 2006. In accordance with Article
2H(5) of the Montreal Protocol, the Parties have issued several
Decisions pertaining to the critical use exemption. These include
Decisions IX/6 and Ex. I/4, which set forth criteria for review of
proposed critical uses (see Section V.E. of this preamble). The status
of Decisions is addressed in NRDC v. EPA, (464 F.3d 1, DC Cir. 2006)
and in EPA's ``Supplemental Brief for the Respondent,'' filed in NRDC
v. EPA and available in the docket for this action. In this final rule,
EPA is honoring commitments made by the United States in the Montreal
Protocol context.
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying applicants of the process for
obtaining a critical use exemption from the methyl bromide phaseout. On
May 8, 2003, the Agency published its first notice in the Federal
Register (68 FR 24737) announcing the availability of the application
for a critical use exemption and the deadline for submission of the
requisite data. Applicants were informed that they may apply as
individuals or as part of a group of users (a ``consortium'') who face
the same limiting critical conditions (i.e. specific conditions that
establish a critical need for methyl bromide). EPA has repeated this
process annually since then. The critical use exemption is designed to
permit production and import of methyl bromide for uses that do not
have technically and economically feasible alternatives.
The criteria for the exemption initially appeared in Decision IX/6
of the Parties to the Protocol. In that Decision, the Parties agreed
that ``a use of methyl bromide should qualify as `critical' only if the
nominating Party determines that: (i) The specific use is critical
because the lack of availability of methyl bromide for that use would
result in a significant market disruption; and (ii) there are no
technically and economically feasible alternatives or substitutes
available to the user that are acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and public health and are suitable to the crops and
circumstances of the nomination.'' These criteria are reflected in
EPA's definition of ``critical use'' at 40 CFR 82.3.
In response to the annual requests for critical use exemption
applications published in the Federal Register, applicants provide data
on the technical and economic feasibility of using alternatives to
methyl bromide. Applicants also submit data on their use of methyl
bromide, on research programs into the use of alternatives to methyl
bromide, and on efforts to minimize use and emissions of methyl
bromide.
EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs reviews the data submitted by
applicants, as well as data from governmental and academic sources, to
establish whether there are technically and economically feasible
alternatives available for a particular use of methyl bromide and
whether there would be a significant market disruption if no exemption
were available. In addition, EPA reviews other parameters of the
exemption applications such as dosage and emissions minimization
techniques and applicants' research or transition plans. This
assessment process culminates in the development of a document referred
to as the critical use nomination, or CUN. The U.S. Department of State
submits the CUN annually to the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) Ozone Secretariat. The CUNs of various countries are
subsequently reviewed by the Methyl Bromide Technical Options Committee
(MBTOC) and the Technical and Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP), which
are independent advisory bodies to Parties to the Montreal Protocol.
These bodies make recommendations to the Parties on the nominations.
The Parties then take a Decision to authorize a critical use exemption
for a particular country. The Decision also identifies how much methyl
bromide may be supplied for the exempted critical uses. As required in
section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act, for each exemption period, EPA
consults with the United States Department of Agriculture and other
departments and institutions of the Federal government that have
regulatory authority related to methyl bromide, and provides an
opportunity for public comment on the amounts of methyl bromide that
the Agency has determined to be necessary for critical uses and the
uses that the Agency has determined meet the criteria of the critical
use exemption.
For more information on the domestic review process and methodology
employed by the Office of Pesticide Programs, please refer to a
detailed memo titled ``Development of 2003 Nomination for a Critical
Use Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the United States of America''
available on the docket for this rulemaking. While the particulars of
the data continue to evolve and administrative matters are further
streamlined, the technical review itself has remained the same since
the inception of the exemption program.
On January 24, 2006, the U.S. Government (USG) submitted the fourth
Nomination for a Critical Use Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the
United States of America to the Ozone Secretariat of the UNEP. This
fourth nomination contained the request for 2008 critical uses. In
March 2006, MBTOC sent questions to the USG concerning technical and
economic issues in the nomination. In April 2006, the USG transmitted
responses to MBTOC's requests for clarification. The USG received
MBTOC's second round of questions in June 2006, and sent responses to
MBTOC in August 2006. These documents, together with reports by the
advisory bodies noted above, can be accessed in the public docket for
this rulemaking. The determination in this final rule reflects the
analysis contained in those documents.
[[Page 74121]]
B. How Does This Final Rulemaking Relate to Previous Critical Use
Exemption Rulemakings?
The December 23, 2004, Framework Rule (69 FR 76982) established the
operational framework for the critical use exemption program in the
U.S., including trading provisions and recordkeeping and reporting
obligations. The Framework Rule defined the terms ``critical use
allowances'' (CUAs) and ``critical stock allowances'' (CSAs) at 40 CFR
82.3. Today's action authorizes the uses that will qualify as critical
uses for 2008 and the amounts of CUAs and CSAs that will be allocated
for those uses. The uses that EPA is authorizing as 2008 critical uses
are the uses which the USG included in the fourth CUN, and which were
approved by the Parties in Decision XVIII/13. In this action, EPA is
also refining its approach for determining the amount of CSAs to
allocate in 2008 and each year thereafter. EPA discusses the refined
approach in detail in Section V.D. of this preamble.
C. Critical Uses
In Decision XVIII/13, taken in October 2006, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed as follows: ``for the agreed critical-use categories
for 2008, set forth in table C of the annex to the present decision for
each Party to permit, subject to the conditions set forth in the
present decision and decision Ex.I/4, to the extent that those
conditions are applicable, the levels of production and consumption for
2008 set forth in table D of the annex to the present decision which
are necessary to satisfy critical uses * * *''
The following uses are those set forth in table C of the annex to
Decision XVIII/13: Commodities, Cocoa beans (NPMA \1\ subset), NPMA
food processing structures (cocoa beans removed), Mills and processors,
Smokehouse ham, Cucurbits--field, Eggplant--field, Forest nursery,
Nursery stock--fruit, nut, flower, Orchard replant, Ornamentals,
Peppers--field, Strawberry--field, Strawberry runners, Tomatoes--field,
and Sweet potato slips. The agreed critical-use levels for 2008 total
5,355,946 kilograms (kg), which is equivalent to 21.0% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline of 25,528,270 kg. However, the
maximum amount of allowable new production and import as set forth in
table D of Decision XVIII/13 is 4,595,040 kg (18.0% of baseline). For
the reasons described in Section V.D. of this preamble, EPA is allowing
up to 3,083,763 kg (12.1% of baseline) of new production or import of
methyl bromide for critical uses for 2008, with 1,729,689 kg (6.8% of
baseline) coming from stocks. To clarify, while the Parties require
only 760,906 kg of stockpile use if the entire U.S. allotment is
utilized, EPA is allowing use of 1,729,689 kg of pre-phaseout inventory
for critical uses and reducing allowable production accordingly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ NPMA stands for National Pest Management Association.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this final rule, EPA is amending columns B and C of Appendix L
to 40 CFR art 82, subpart A to reflect the agreed critical-use
categories identified in Decision XVIII/13 for the 2008 control period
(calendar year). The Agency is amending the table of critical uses
based, in part, on the technical analysis contained in the 2008 U.S.
nomination that assesses data submitted by applicants to the critical
use exemption program as well as public and proprietary data on the use
of methyl bromide and its alternatives. EPA sought comment on the
analysis contained in the 2008 nomination and, in particular, any
information regarding changes to the registration or use of
alternatives that may have transpired after the 2008 nomination was
submitted. The Agency stated that such information has the potential to
alter the technical or economic feasibility of an alternative and could
thus cause EPA to modify the analysis that underpins EPA's
determination as to which uses and what amounts of methyl bromide
qualify for the critical use exemption. Based on Decision XIII/13 and
the 2008 U.S. CUN, EPA is determining that the uses in Table I:
Approved Critical Uses, with the limiting critical conditions
specified, qualify to obtain and use critical use methyl bromide in
2008.
Table I.--Approved Critical Uses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column A Column B Column C
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Limiting critical
conditions that
either exist, or
Approved critical that the approved
Approved critical uses user and location of critical user
use reasonably expects
could arise without
methyl bromide
fumigation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pre-Plant Uses:
Cucurbits............... (a) Michigan growers Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Southeastern Moderate to severe
U.S. limited to yellow or purple
growing locations nutsedge
in Alabama, infestation.
Louisiana, Moderate to severe
Mississippi, North soilborne disease
Carolina, South infestation.
Carolina, Moderate to severe
Tennessee, and root knot nematode
Virginia. infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) Georgia growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
root knot nematode
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
[[Page 74122]]
Eggplant................ (a) Florida growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features and soils
not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Georgia growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
pythium collar,
crown and root rot.
Moderate to severe
southern blight
infestation.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) Michigan growers Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
Forest Nursery Seedlings (a) Growers in Moderate to severe
Alabama, Arkansas, yellow or purple
Georgia, Louisiana, nutsedge
Mississippi, North infestation.
Carolina, Oklahoma, Moderate to severe
South Carolina, soilborne disease
Tennessee, Texas, infestation.
and Virginia. Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
(b) International Moderate to severe
Paper and its yellow or purple
subsidiaries nutsedge
limited to growing infestation.
locations in Moderate to severe
Alabama, Arkansas, soilborne disease
Georgia, South infestation.
Carolina, and Texas.
(c) Public Moderate to severe
(government-owned) weed infestation
seedling nurseries including purple
in Illinois, and yellow nutsedge
Indiana, Kentucky, infestation.
Maryland, Missouri, Moderate to severe
New Jersey, Ohio, Canada thistle
Pennsylvania, West infestation.
Virginia, and Moderate to severe
Wisconsin. nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Moderate to severe
Company and its yellow or purple
subsidiaries nutsedge
limited to growing infestation.
locations in Moderate to severe
Alabama, Arkansas, soilborne disease
North Carolina, and infestation.
South Carolina. Moderate to severe
nematode or worm
infestation.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Moderate to severe
Company and its yellow nutsedge
subsidiaries infestation.
limited to growing Moderate to severe
locations in Oregon soilborne disease
and Washington. infestation.
(f) Michigan growers Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
Canada thistle
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Orchard Nursery (a) Members of the Moderate to severe
Seedlings. Western Raspberry nematode
Nursery Consortium infestation.
limited to growing Presence of medium
locations in to heavy clay
Washington. soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits on use of
this alternative
have been reached.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
[[Page 74123]]
(b) Members of the Moderate to severe
California nematode
Association of infestation.
Nursery and Garden Presence of medium
Centers to heavy clay
representing soils.
Deciduous Tree Prohibition on use
Fruit Growers. of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits on use of
this alternative
have been reached.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) California rose Moderate to severe
nurseries. nematode
infestation.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits on use of
this alternative
have been reached.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
Strawberry Nurseries.... (a) California Moderate to severe
growers. soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) North Carolina Moderate to severe
and Tennessee black root rot.
growers. Moderate to severe
root-knot nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
yellow and purple
nutsedge
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
Orchard Replant......... (a) California stone Moderate to severe
fruit growers. nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Replanted (non-
virgin) orchard
soils to prevent
orchard replant
disease.
Presence of medium
to heavy soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits on use of
this alternative
have been reached.
(b) California table Moderate to severe
and raisin grape nematode
growers. infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Replanted (non-
virgin) orchard
soils to prevent
orchard replant
disease.
Medium to heavy
soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
(c) California wine Moderate to severe
grape growers. nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Replanted (non-
virgin) orchard
soils to prevent
orchard replant
disease.
Medium to heavy
soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
(d) California Moderate to severe
walnut growers.. nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Replanted (non-
virgin) orchard
soils to prevent
orchard replant
disease.
Medium to heavy
soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
[[Page 74124]]
(e) California Moderate to severe
almond growers. nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Replanted (non-
virgin) orchard
soils to prevent
orchard replant
disease.
Medium to heavy
soils.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
Ornamentals............. (a) California Moderate to severe
growers. soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Florida growers. Moderate to severe
weed infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features and soils
not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) Michigan Moderate to severe
herbaceous nematode
perennials growers. infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
yellow nutsedge and
other weed
infestation.
Peppers................. (a) Alabama, Moderate to severe
Arkansas, Kentucky, yellow or purple
Louisiana, nutsedge
Mississippi, North infestation.
Carolina, South Moderate to severe
Carolina, nematode
Tennessee, and infestation.
Virginia growers. Moderate to severe
pythium root,
collar, crown and
root rots.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Florida growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features and soils
not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) Georgia growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation, or
moderate to severe
pythium root and
collar rots.
Moderate to severe
southern blight
infestation, crown
or root rot.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(d) Michigan growers Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
[[Page 74125]]
Strawberry Fruit........ (a) California Moderate to severe
growers. black root rot or
crown rot.
Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Prohibition on use
of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
Time to transition
to an alternative.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Florida growers. Moderate to severe
yellow or purple
nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe
nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Carolina geranium or
cut-leaf evening
primrose
infestation.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features and soils
not supporting
seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(c) Alabama, Moderate to severe
Arkansas, Georgia, yellow or purple
Illinois, Kentucky, nutsedge
Louisiana, infestation.
Maryland, Moderate to severe
Mississippi, nematode
Missouri, New infestation.
Jersey, North Moderate to severe
Carolina, Ohio, black root and
South Carolina, crown rot.
Tennessee, and A need for methyl
Virginia growers. bromide for
research purposes.
Sweet Potato Slips...... (a) California Prohibition on use
growers. of 1,3-
dichloropropene
products because
local township
limits for this
alternative have
been reached.
Tomatoes................ (a) Michigan growers Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe
fungal pathogen
infestation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
(b) Alabama, Moderate to severe
Arkansas, Florida, yellow or purple
Georgia, Kentucky, nutsedge
Louisiana, North infestation.
Carolina, South Moderate to severe
Carolina, soilborne disease
Tennessee, and infestation.
Virginia growers. Moderate to severe
nematodes.
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features, and in
Florida, soils not
supporting seepage
irrigation.
A need for methyl
bromide for
research purposes.
Post-Harvest Uses:
Food Processing......... (a) Rice millers in Moderate to severe
all locations in infestation of
the U.S. who are beetles, weevils,
members of the USA or moths.
Rice Millers Presence of
Association. sensitive
electronic
equipment subject
to corrosion.
Time to transition
to an alternative.
(b) Pet food Moderate to severe
manufacturing infestation or
facilities in the beetles, moths, or
U.S. who are active cockroaches.
members of the Pet Presence of
Food Institute (for sensitive
this rule, ``pet electronic
food'' refers to equipment subject
domestic dog and to corrosion.
cat food). Time to transition
to an alternative.
(c) Bakeries in the Presence of
U.S.. sensitive
electronic
equipment subject
to corrosion.