Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; State of California; 2003 State Strategy and 2003 South Coast Plan for One-Hour Ozone and Nitrogen Dioxide, 63408-63419 [E8-25468]
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63408
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 207 / Friday, October 24, 2008 / Proposed Rules
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2008–0677; FRL–8734–2]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; State of
California; 2003 State Strategy and
2003 South Coast Plan for One-Hour
Ozone and Nitrogen Dioxide
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
one state implementation plan (SIP)
revision, and to approve in part and to
disapprove in part a second SIP
revision, submitted by the California Air
Resources Board to provide for
attainment of the one-hour ozone
standard and maintenance of the
nitrogen dioxide standard in the Los
Angeles-South Coast Air Basin. The two
SIP revisions include the 2003 State
Strategy and the 2003 South Coast SIP,
both of which were submitted on
January 9, 2004.
With respect to the 2003 State
Strategy, EPA is proposing to approve
the commitment by the State to develop
and propose near-term defined
measures sufficient to achieve specific
emissions reductions in the South Coast
and to continue implementation of an
existing measure. With respect to the
2003 South Coast SIP, EPA is proposing
to approve certain elements, and to
disapprove other elements. The plan
elements that are proposed for
disapproval are not required under the
Clean Air Act because they represent
revisions to previously-approved SIP
elements, and thus, the disapprovals
will not affect the requirements for the
State to have an approved SIP for these
SIP elements. Therefore, the
disapprovals, if finalized, would not
trigger sanctions clocks nor EPA’s
obligation to promulgate a Federal
implementation plan.
EPA is proposing these actions under
provisions of the Clean Air Act
regarding EPA action on SIP submittals
and plan requirements for
nonattainment areas.
DATE: Any comments must arrive by
November 24, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by docket number EPA–R09–
OAR–2008–0677, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions.
• E-mail: tax.wienke@epa.gov.
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• Mail or deliver: Marty Robin, Office
of Air Planning (AIR–2), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street, San
Francisco, CA 94105.
Instructions: All comments will be
included in the public docket without
change and may be made available
online at www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Information that
you consider CBI or otherwise protected
should be clearly identified as such and
should not be submitted through
www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
www.regulations.gov is an ‘‘anonymous
access’’ system, and EPA will not know
your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send e-mail
directly to EPA, your e-mail address
will be automatically captured and
included as part of the public comment.
If EPA cannot read your comment due
to technical difficulties and cannot
contact you for clarification, EPA may
not be able to consider your comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for
this action is available electronically at
www.regulations.gov and in hard copy
at EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, California. While all
documents in the docket are listed in
the index, some information may be
publicly available only at the hard copy
location (e.g., copyrighted material), and
some may not be publicly available in
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wienke Tax, Air Planning Office (AIR–
2), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region IX, (520) 622–1622,
tax.wienke@epa.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of Today’s Proposed Action
II. Background
A. Introduction
B. 1994 South Coast Ozone SIP and State
Strategy
C. 1999 State Update to the South Coast
Ozone SIP
D. 1997 South Coast AQMP and 1997/1999
South Coast Ozone SIP
E. 2003 State Strategy
F. 2003 South Coast SIP
III. Review of the 2003 State Strategy and
2003 South Coast SIP
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A. Procedural Requirements
B. Base Year and Projected Baseline
Emissions Inventory
C. Control Measures and Contingency
Measures
1. State’s Defined Measures
2. District’s Near-Term Control Measures,
Annual Emissions Reductions
Commitment, and Contingency Measure
3. District’s Black Box Emissions
Reduction Commitment
4. Black Box Emissions Reduction
Assignment to the Federal Government
D. Attainment Demonstration
E. Quantitative Milestones and Reasonable
Further Progress (RFP)
F. Transportation Control Measures To
Offset Growth in Motor Vehicle
Emissions
G. Nitrogen Dioxide Maintenance
Demonstration
H. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
IV. Public Comment and Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Today’s Proposed Action
In today’s action, under the Clean Air
Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’), we are proposing
to approve one state implementation
plan (SIP) revision, and to approve in
part and to disapprove in part, a second
SIP revision, submitted by the California
Air Resources Board (ARB) to provide
for attainment of the one-hour ozone
national ambient air quality standard
(NAAQS) and for maintenance of the
nitrogen dioxide NAAQS in the Los
Angeles-South Coast Air Basin Area
(South Coast).1 The two SIP revisions
include the Final 2003 State and Federal
Strategy (‘‘2003 State Strategy’’) and the
2003 revisions to the SIP for ozone and
nitrogen dioxide in the South Coast Air
Basin (‘‘2003 South Coast SIP’’), both of
which were submitted by ARB on
January 9, 2004. These SIP revisions
were developed in recognition of a need
for additional emissions reductions to
attain the one-hour ozone NAAQS than
had been planned for in the late 1990s,
and to establish new motor vehicle
emissions budgets (MVEBs) for
transportation conformity.
With respect to the 2003 State
Strategy, we are proposing to approve
the commitments by ARB to develop
and propose for adoption 15 near-term
defined control measures, and the
commitment by the California Bureau of
Automotive Repair to develop and
propose one near-term defined control
measure sufficient to achieve specified
emissions reductions in the South
1 The area referred to as ‘‘Los Angles-South Coast
Air Basin’’ (South Coast Air Basin or ‘‘South
Coast’’) includes Orange County, the southwestern
two-thirds of Los Angeles County, southwestern
San Bernardino County, and western Riverside
County. For a precise description of the boundaries
of the Los Angeles-South Coast Air Basin, see 40
CFR 81.305.
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Coast. We are also proposing to approve
the continuation of the existing SIP
pesticide strategy assigned to the
California Department of Pesticide
Regulation.
With respect to the 2003 South Coast
SIP, we are proposing to approve the
base year and projected baseline
emissions inventories, the South Coast
Air Quality Management District’s
(District’s or SCAQMD’s) commitment
to adopt and implement near-term
stationary and mobile source control
measures (with the exception of ‘‘FSS–
05—Mitigation Fee Program for Federal
Sources’’) and commitment to achieve
aggregate emission reductions through a
schedule of rule adoption and
implementation, the District’s
contingency measure (‘‘CTY–01—
Accelerated Implementation of Control
Measures’’), the District’s ‘‘black box’’
emission reduction commitment,2 the
vehicle emissions offset demonstration,
and the nitrogen dioxide maintenance
demonstration and related motor
vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs).
Also, in connection with the 2003
South Coast SIP, we are proposing to
disapprove the District commitment to
adopt one particular control measure
(‘‘FSS–05—Mitigation Fee Program for
Federal Sources’’); the ‘‘black box’’
emissions reduction assignment to EPA;
the revised rate-of-progress and
attainment demonstrations; and the
ozone MVEBs.
The primary rationale for proposing
approval of certain control measures
and the specific SIP elements described
above is that they would strengthen the
SIP by adding to, or updating, SIP
elements previously approved by EPA.
The reasons for proposing disapproval
of the other specified elements of the
2003 South Coast SIP include incorrect
rate-of-progress calculation methods
and the withdrawal by ARB of the state
emissions reductions commitments in
the 2003 State Strategy that were relied
upon in the 2003 South Coast SIP. No
sanctions clocks or Federal
implementation plan (FIP) requirement
would be triggered by our disapprovals,
if finalized, because the plan revisions
that are the subject of the proposed
disapprovals represent revisions to
previously-approved SIP elements that
EPA determined met the CAA
requirements, and thus, the revisions
are not required under the Clean Air
Act.
2 ‘‘Black box’’ commitment refers to the
provisions under CAA section 182(e)(5) that
anticipate development of new control techniques
or improvement of existing control technologies.
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II. Background
A. Introduction
Ground-level ozone is formed when
oxides of nitrogen (NOX), volatile
organic compounds (VOC), and oxygen
react in the presence of sunlight,
generally at elevated temperatures.3
Strategies for reducing smog typically
require reductions in both VOC and
NOX emissions.
Ozone causes serious health problems
by damaging lung tissue and sensitizing
the lungs to other irritants. When
inhaled, even at very low levels, ozone
can cause acute respiratory problems;
aggravate asthma; cause temporary
decreases in lung capacity of 15 to 20
percent in healthy adults, cause
inflammation of lung tissue, lead to
hospital admissions and emergency
room visits; and impair the body’s
immune system defenses, making
people more susceptible to respiratory
illnesses, including bronchitis and
pneumonia. Children are most at risk
from exposure to ozone because they
breathe more air per pound of body
weight than adults; their respiratory
systems are still developing and thus
more susceptible to environmental
threats; and children exercise outdoors
more than adults in the high-ozone
months of summer.
In 1979, under section 109 of the
CAA, EPA established a primary,
health-based NAAQS for ozone: 0.12
parts per million (ppm) averaged over a
1-hour period. See 44 FR 8220 (February
9, 1979). In 1997, EPA revised the ozone
NAAQS by establishing an 8-hour ozone
NAAQS of 0.08 ppm. See 62 FR 38856
(July 18, 1997). Since submittal of the
2003 State Strategy and 2003 South
Coast SIP, EPA has revoked the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS, effective June 15, 2005,
see 69 FR 23951 (April 30, 2004), and
tightened the 8-hour ozone NAAQS to
0.075 ppm, see 73 FR 16436 (March 27,
2008). The nitrogen dioxide NAAQS is
0.053 ppm, annual average. See 40 CFR
50.11.
Despite significant progress over the
years, ozone concentrations in the South
Coast continue to be the highest in the
country. Over the 2005–2007 period, the
expected number of exceedances
relative to the now-revoked 1-hour
ozone NAAQS is 13.3 days per year (at
the Crestline monitor), and the design
value is 0.164 ppm (at Crestline).4 With
3 California plans sometimes use the term
Reactive Organic Gases (ROG) for VOC. These terms
are essentially synonymous. For the sake of
simplicity, we use the term VOC herein to mean
either VOC or ROG.
4 For the 1-hour ozone standard, the expected
number of exceedances refers to the number of days
per calendar year with maximum hourly average
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respect to the 8-hour ozone NAAQS,
over the same period, the design value
is 0.122 ppm.5 In contrast to ozone,
concentrations of nitrogen dioxide
(NO2) in the South Coast continue to be
well below the NO2 NAAQS. For
instance, in 2005, the highest annual
concentrations measured in the South
Coast were less the 60 percent of the
nitrogen dioxide NAAQS based on data
reported in the 2007 South Coast Air
Quality Management District (AQMP)
(June 2007).
B. 1994 South Coast Ozone SIP and
State Strategy
The CAA was substantially amended
in 1990 to establish new planning
requirements and attainment deadlines
for the NAAQS, including 1-hour ozone.
Under section 107(d)(1)(C) of the Act,
areas designated nonattainment prior to
enactment of the 1990 amendments,
including the South Coast, were
designated nonattainment by operation
of law. The South Coast was classified
as extreme nonattainment for 1-hour
ozone, with an attainment deadline no
later than November 15, 2010. The
South Coast was also designated as
‘‘nonattainment’’ for nitrogen dioxide,
respirable particulate matter (PM10), and
carbon monoxide (CO).
The District adopted an ozone plan on
September 9, 1994, as part of the 1994
South Coast Air Quality Management
Plan (‘‘1994 South Coast AQMP’’). ARB
supplemented the District plan with
State measures and submitted it as a
revision to the California SIP on
November 15, 1994. On July 10, 1996,
ARB submitted an extensive revision to
the South Coast control measure
adoption schedule to adjust for slippage
in the plan’s initial implementation. On
January 8, 1997 (62 FR 1150), we
finalized approval of the South Coast
ozone plan, including the ozone
portions of the 1994 South Coast AQMP,
as amended in 1996, and the State
measures (‘‘1994 Ozone SIP’’).6 The
plan also contained ‘‘Federal measures,’’
which the State wished us to adopt and
concentrations above 0.12 ppm averaged over a
three-year period. The standard is attained in an
area when the expected number of exceedances is
equal to or less than 1 at all stations. The design
value for an area, which characterizes the severity
of the air quality problem, is represented by the
highest design value at any individual ozone
monitoring site (i.e., the highest of the fourth
highest 1-hour daily maximums in a given threeyear period with complete monitoring data).
5 The air quality design value for the 8-hour
ozone NAAQS is the 3-year average of the annual
fourth highest daily maximum 8-hour ozone
concentration.
6 We approved some of the State and District
measures in the plan earlier. See particularly 60 FR
43379 (August 21, 1995).
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implement in order to reduce emissions
from mobile sources.7
C. 1999 State Update to the South Coast
Ozone SIP
On July 23, 1999 (64 FR 39923), we
approved an update to the South Coast
portion of the 1994 Ozone SIP, reporting
on implementation of ARB’s control
measures in the 1994 SIP and the
contribution from Federal mobile source
controls undertaken as part of the Public
Consultative Process. We also updated
our own commitment and approved a
new ARB commitment to adopt by
December 31, 2001, control measures
needed to achieve any additional
reductions which were determined to be
appropriate for ARB. Please consult the
final approval document and our
proposed approval (64 FR 30276, June 7,
1999) for more details on the update, the
‘‘Federal measures,’’ and the Public
Consultative Process on national mobile
source measures.
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D. 1997 South Coast AQMP and the
1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP
The South Coast Air Quality
Management District (SCAQMD, or
‘‘District’’) adopted a completely revised
plan on November 8, 1996 (‘‘1997 South
Coast AQMP’’), and ARB submitted the
revision on February 5, 1997. The 1997
South Coast AQMP was not federally
required for ozone, but was adopted by
the District to address, in a
comprehensive fashion, Federal and
State requirements for particulate
matter, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen
dioxide, and State requirements for an
ozone plan update. The 1997 South
Coast AQMP revised the emissions
inventory, modeling, and local control
commitments in the attainment
demonstration, but did not revise the
State SIP commitments adopted in the
1994 Ozone SIP. The 1997 South Coast
AQMP included a maintenance plan
and redesignation request for the
nitrogen dioxide NAAQS, and EPA
approved the plan and redesignation
request in 1998. See 63 FR 39747 (July
24, 1998).
The District amended the ozone
portion of the 1997 South Coast AQMP
on December 10, 1999 (‘‘1999 South
7 In response to this assignment, we established
a Public Consultative Process to identify the best
options for achieving further emissions reductions
from mobile source controls, at least to the extent
they are needed for attainment of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS in the South Coast. In connection with the
establishment of this process, both EPA and ARB
made commitments regarding appropriate future
emissions reductions. Please see EPA’s final
approval of the 1994 ozone SIP for a discussion of
the ‘‘Federal measures,’’ and our rationale, at that
time, for establishing the Public Consultative
Process (62 FR 1152–5, 1184–6).
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Coast AQMP Ozone Amendment’’), and
ARB submitted the plan to us on
February 4, 2000. We approved the
ozone portion of the 1997 South Coast
AQMP, as amended in 1999, on April
10, 2000 (65 FR 18903), and refer to the
amended plan as the 1997/1999 South
Coast Ozone SIP.
Specifically, in our April 2000 final
rule, we approved the baseline and
projected emissions inventories and
attainment demonstration as contained
in the 1997 South Coast AQMP, and we
approved the following elements in the
1999 South Coast AQMP Ozone
Amendment: District commitments to
adopt and implement near-term and
intermediate-term control measures; the
District’s commitment to adopt and
implement ‘‘black box’’ control
measures; the District’s commitment to
achieve overall emissions reductions for
the years 1999–2008; the District’s
commitment to implement those
measures that had been adopted in
regulatory form between 1994 and 1999;
the rate-of-progress plan for the 1999,
2002, 2005, 2008 and 2010 milestone
years; the amendment to the attainment
demonstration in the 1997 South Coast
AQMP for ozone; and the motor vehicle
emissions budgets. Upon the effective
date of our approval of the 1997/1999
South Coast Ozone SIP, this plan
replaced and superseded the 1994
Ozone SIP for the South Coast Air Basin
with the exception of the State control
measures for mobile sources, consumer
products, and pesticides, and EPA’s
commitment to take part in the Public
Consultative Process as discussed in the
previous section of this document.
E. 2003 State Strategy
On October 23, 2003, ARB adopted
the Final 2003 State and Federal
Strategy for the California SIP (‘‘2003
State Strategy’’). The 2003 State Strategy
consists of the Proposed 2003 State and
Federal Strategy for the California SIP
(released August 25, 2003), as modified
by ARB in the resolution approving the
strategy. The modifications to the
proposed strategy are set forth in
attachment A to ARB Board Resolution
03–22. The 2003 State Strategy
identifies ARB’s regulatory agenda to
reduce ozone and particulate matter in
California by 2010 and was submitted to
update and replace the State’s control
measure commitments in the 1994
Ozone SIP, as modified in 1999 for the
South Coast.
As submitted, the 2003 State Strategy
includes four components affecting the
South Coast: (1) State agency
commitments to pursue 20 new defined
near-term control measures to reduce
emissions from mobile sources and
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consumer products, and to continue
implementation of the existing SIP
commitment to reduce VOC emissions
from pesticide use; (2) State agency
annual adoption commitments to
achieve at least 50 tons per day (tpd)
VOC and 59 tpd NOX emissions
reduction in the South Coast in 2010
from these or other near-term
measures; 8 (3) ARB commitment to
identify and adopt strategies by 2008 to
achieve an additional 97 tpd combined
VOC and NOX reductions in the South
Coast through, in part, the evaluation of
21 additional control concepts between
2004–2006 and adoption of those found
to be feasible as SIP measures on a
specified schedule; and (4) ARB’s
‘‘black box’’ commitment to reduce
emissions in the South Coast by 118–
233 tpd of VOC and 0–159 tpd of NOX
by 2010 for ‘‘black box’’ emissions
reductions.9 ARB submitted the 2003
State Strategy to us on January 9, 2004.
On February 18, 2004, EPA found the
2003 State Strategy to be complete.
By letter dated February 13, 2008,
ARB withdrew certain elements of the
2003 State Strategy that relate to the
South Coast. Specifically, ARB
withdrew four specific defined nearterm measures, the State agency annual
adoption commitments described
above,10 the ARB commitment to
identify and adopt strategies by 2008 to
achieve an additional 97 tpd combined
VOC and NOX reductions in the South
8 ARB’s annual adoption commitment represents
a commitment to adopt and implement near-term
measures to achieve, at a minimum, the VOC and
NOX emissions reductions in tpd in the South Coast
in 2010. Each year from 2003 through 2006 has a
separate adoption commitment for VOC and NOX.
For example, ARB’s commitment for 2003 is to
adopt near-term measures in that year that in the
aggregate achieve at least 10 tpd VOC and 11 tpd
NOX emissions reductions in 2010 in the South
Coast. Under this commitment, reductions in excess
of the minimum commitment for a given year may
be applied to the commitment for subsequent years.
9 The range is based on how much of the 97 tpd
commitment is achieved from VOC versus NOX,
and EPA action on a Federal emissions reduction
assignment in the 2003 South Coast AQMP for 18
tpd VOC and 68 tpd NOX by 2010.
10 In ARB’s February 13, 2008 letter, ARB
indicated that it was withdrawing the Commitment
to Reduce Emissions via Adoption Schedule for the
South Coast Air Basin outlined in Section I.D.1,
Table I–6 of the Proposed 2003 State and Federal
Strategy for the California SIP (released August 25,
2003); however, in adopting the 2003 State Strategy,
the ARB Board (via Resolution 03–22) modified the
commitment by increasing the total related
emissions reduction commitment to a total of 50
tpd VOC and 59 tpd NOX in the South Coast in
2010. See table A–5 of attachment A to ARB
Resolution 03–22. ARB clarified, in a letter dated
October 14, 2008, that the reference in the February
13th letter was in error and that it intended to
withdraw the commitment to reduce emissions via
adoption schedule for the South Coast as modified
in Resolution 03–22.
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Coast,11 and ARB’s ‘‘black box’’
commitment described above. For the
South Coast, the remaining component
of the 2003 State Strategy is the State
agency commitments to pursue 16 new
defined near-term control measures (and
to continue implementation of the
existing SIP commitment to reduce VOC
emissions from pesticide use).12 We are
addressing the remaining commitments
for the South Coast in the 2003 State
Strategy in today’s action.
F. 2003 South Coast SIP
On August 1, 2003, the District
approved the 2003 South Coast Air
Quality Management Plan and
submitted the final plan (‘‘2003 South
Coast AQMP’’) to ARB on October 15,
2003. The 2003 South Coast AQMP
includes revisions to the 1997 South
Coast AQMP for PM10, CO, and NO2,
and revisions to the 1997/1999 South
Coast Ozone SIP. Specifically, with
respect to the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, the
2003 South Coast AQMP updates the
emissions inventories, the local control
measure element, including the
transportation control measures (TCMs)
element,13 the ROP and attainment
demonstrations, and the motor vehicle
emissions budgets. With respect to NO2,
the 2003 South Coast AQMP updates
the maintenance plan and related motor
vehicle emissions budget. The ozone
portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP
relies on emission reduction
commitments in the 2003 State Strategy,
described above, and assigns the Federal
Government the responsibility of
achieving 18 tpd VOC and 68 tpd NOX
by 2010 in the South Coast, as the
Federal Government’s share of the
‘‘black box’’ strategy.
The 2003 South Coast AQMP includes
a primary attainment strategy (option 1)
that sets emission targets based on
reductions from local, State, and Federal
elements but also includes an
alternative strategy (option 2) that
excludes reductions from Federal
sources and modifies the attainment
emission targets if EPA does not accept
the District’s primary attainment
strategy. Under option 2, the 2003 South
Coast AQMP relaxes the NOX control
target by 68 tpd NOX and assigns the 18
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11 We
interpret ARB’s withdrawal of the 97 tpd
combined VOC plus NOX element of the long-term
strategy for the South Coast to include withdrawal
of the commitment to evaluate the feasibility of 21
concepts for adoption as SIP measures listed in
attachment A–1 to ARB Resolution 03–22.
12 Certain other components of the 2003 State
Strategy relate to the San Joaquin Valley, and were
proposed for action in a separate rulemaking.
13 By letter dated October 14, 2008, ARB
withdrew the TCM portion of the 2003 South Coast
AQMP.
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tpd (assigned to the Federal Government
under option 1) to ARB.
On October 23, 2003, ARB adopted
the 2003 South Coast AQMP, as
modified in ARB Resolution 03–23
(‘‘2003 South Coast SIP’’). In Resolution
03–23, ARB adopted a modified version
of ‘‘option 1’’ by adopting a backstop
whereby, if EPA were to find the
Federal assignment unacceptable, the
ARB obligates itself to cover the related
18 tpd VOC and 68 tpd NOX emissions
reductions as part of its ‘‘black box’’
commitment. In Resolution 03–23, ARB
also rejected one contingency measure
included in the AQMP (CTY–04—
‘‘Enhanced Oxygenated Fuels Content’’),
and modified the VOC and NOX MVEBs.
On January 9, 2004, ARB submitted
the 2003 South Coast SIP. On February
18, 2004, EPA found the 2003 South
Coast AQMP to be complete. On March
11, 2004, we found the MVEBs in the
2003 South Coast SIP adequate for
transportation conformity purposes. See
69 FR 15325 (March 25, 2004). Since
then, the CO budgets in the 2003 South
Coast SIP have been superseded by final
EPA approval of the 2005 South Coast
CO Maintenance Plan (discussed
below), and the ozone budgets have
been superseded by EPA’s adequacy
determination on 8-hour ozone budgets
in the 2007 South Coast SIP (see 73 FR
28110, May 15, 2008; as corrected on 73
FR 34837, June 18, 2008).
To date, we have taken final action to
approve the PM10 portion of the 2003
South Coast SIP, see 70 FR 69081
(November 14, 2005), but have not taken
action on any other portions of the plan.
With respect to the CO portion of the
plan, while we have not taken action on
the CO portion of the 2003 South Coast
SIP, we have taken action to approve a
later-submitted plan, the 2005 South
Coast CO Maintenance Plan, and have
taken action to approve ARB’s
redesignation request for the South
Coast to ‘‘attainment’’ for CO. See 72 FR
26718 (May 11, 2007). We consider the
submittal and approval of the CO
maintenance plan and redesignation
request to supersede the CO portion of
the 2003 South Coast SIP and plan to
take no further action on CO portion of
the plan.14 Today’s document addresses
14 The principal purpose, other than updating the
CO portion of the 1997 South Coast AQMP, for
developing and submitting the CO portion of the
2003 South Coast SIP was to provide the basis for
a CO maintenance plan. See page 10 of the District’s
Carbon Monoxide Redesignation Request and
Maintenance Plan (February 2005) (‘‘2005 CO
Maintenance Plan’’). That purpose has already been
served by virtue of our approval of the 2005 CO
Maintenance Plan in May 2007. Also, we note that
the 2005 CO Maintenance Plan, which we have now
approved, carries forward emissions estimates and
projections, and a modeled attainment
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63411
the remaining portions of the 2003
South Coast SIP (i.e., the ozone and NO2
portions of the plan).
III. Review of the 2003 State Strategy
and 2003 South Coast SIP
A. Procedural Requirements
CAA section 110(l) requires revisions
to a SIP to be adopted by the state after
reasonable notice and public hearing.
EPA has promulgated specific
requirements for SIP revisions in 40
CFR part 51, subpart F.
The ARB provided the requisite
notice and public comment periods
prior to adoption of the 2003 State
Strategy. Notices for a public hearing to
be held on September 24–25, 2003 (later
postponed to October 23, 2003), and for
the availability of the Draft 2003 State
Strategy, were published on August 25,
2003. At its October 23, 2003 Board
hearing, ARB adopted the 2003 State
Strategy as a revision to the California
SIP, and submitted the revision to EPA
for approval on January 9, 2004.
The SCAQMD provided the requisite
notice and public comment periods
prior to adoption of the 2003 South
Coast AQMP. The Draft 2003 South
Coast AQMP was released for public
comment on February 5, 2003, and
proposed modifications to the draft
plan, as well as responses to comments
on the draft plan, were released for
public comment in June 2003. Notices
for five public hearings held on various
dates in July 2003 and on August 1,
2003, and for the availability of the
revised Draft 2003 South Coast AQMP,
were published on June 6, 2003. At the
August 1, 2003 Governing Board
meeting, the District adopted the 2003
South Coast AQMP and submitted the
plan to ARB shortly thereafter. ARB
adopted the plan, with certain
modifications, as a revision to the
California SIP on October 23, 2003 in
accordance with state law, and
submitted the revision to EPA for
approval on January 9, 2004.
The SIP submittal packages for the
2003 State Strategy and the 2003 South
Coast SIP include evidence of public
notices and hearings, agency responses
to public comments, and evidence of
District and ARB adoptions as described
above. Based on review of these
materials, we find that the State has met
the procedural requirements of CAA
section 110(l) and 40 CFR part 51,
subpart F for submittal of the two SIP
revisions.
demonstration, from the 2003 South Coast AQMP
as further evidence of the supersession of the CO
portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP.
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B. Base Year and Projected Baseline
Emissions Inventory
CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 182(a)(1)
require nonattainment areas to submit a
comprehensive, accurate, and current
inventory of actual emissions from all
sources, in accordance with guidance
provided by the EPA. The inventory is
to represent emissions during the
appropriate season; for example, ozone
precursor (VOC and NOX) inventories
are to represent summer weekday
emissions. See EPA’s General Preamble
for implementation of title I of the CAA
Amendments of 1990, 57 FR 13498
(April 16, 1992) (‘‘General Preamble’’),
at 13502. EPA guidance for 1-hour
ozone SIP emission inventories
includes, in addition to the General
Preamble: ‘‘Procedures for the
Preparation of Emission Inventories for
Carbon Monoxide and Precursors of
Ozone, Volume I: General Guidance for
Stationary Sources,’’ EPA–450/4–91–
016; and ‘‘Procedures for Emission
Inventory Preparation, Volume IV:
Mobile Sources,’’ EPA–450/5–91–026d
Revised.
In 2000, we approved the base and
future year (summer season) emissions
inventories in the 1997 South Coast
AQMP as meeting the requirements of
CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 182(a)(1).
See 65 FR 18903, at 18904 (April 10,
2000). In 1998, we approved the base
and future year (winter season)
emissions inventories in the 1997 South
Coast AQMP for the purposes of the
NO2 maintenance plan. See 63 FR 39747
(July 24, 1998). The 2003 South Coast
AQMP contains revised base and future
year emissions inventories for ozone
precursors, VOC and NOX (summer
season), and for NOX (winter season, for
NO2 planning purposes). The District
describes the basis for the revisions in
the inventories in chapter 3 of the 2003
South Coast AQMP. More detail is
provided in appendix III of the plan.
The emissions inventories in the 2003
South Coast AQMP reflect estimates of
emissions from numerous source
subcategories within four major
categories of sources, i.e., point, area,
off-road, and on-road. The plan presents
annual average day inventories, as well
as planning inventories (summer for
ozone and winter for NO2), for 1995,
1997, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006,
2007, 2008, 2010, and 2020. The plan
also includes a reconstructed emissions
inventory for 1990, the base year for air
quality planning under the CAA
Amendments of 1990.
The inventories reflect updated
demographic data, and vehicle activity
forecasts, as well as updated calculation
methods. The on-road emissions were
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calculated using ARB’s EMFAC2002
emission factors 15 and the
transportation activity data provided by
the Southern California Association of
Governments (SCAG) from their 2001
Regional Transportation Plan. Emissions
estimates from off-road vehicle
categories (e.g., trains, ships,
construction equipment) were
developed using ARB’s OFF-ROAD
emissions model, which calculates
emissions from more than 100 types of
off-road sources.
Area source emissions were jointly
developed by ARB and the District for
a total of 350 categories. For 1997,
reported data are used for point sources
emitting more than 4 tons per year of
any one of the criteria air contaminants
(i.e., VOC, NOX, SOX, or particulate
matter) except for CO for which the data
reporting threshold is 100 tons per
year). (See Appendix III of 2003 South
Coast AQMP.) The future emission
forecasts are based on demographic and
economic growth projections provided
by SCAG, and take into account
emission reductions resulting from ARB
and District regulations adopted by
October 31, 2002.
The emissions inventory requirements
of CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 182(a)(1)
were met in the 1994 Ozone Plan, and
then, as amended, in the 1997 South
Coast AQMP. Based on our review of
the inventory documentation included
in the 2003 South Coast AQMP, we find
that the emission inventories in the
2003 South Coast AQMP are also
comprehensive, accurate, and current at
the time the SIP was submitted, and
improved relative to those that are in
the approved SIP. Accordingly, we
propose to approve the base and future
year emissions inventories (summer and
winter seasons) in the 2003 South Coast
AQMP as meeting the requirements of
CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 181(a)(1).
C. Control Measures and Contingency
Measures
The CAA requires that SIPs ‘‘shall
include enforceable emission
limitations, and such other control
measures, means or techniques * * *,
as well as schedules and timetables for
compliance, as may be necessary or
appropriate to provide for attainment
15 On April 1, 2003, EPA approved EMFAC2002
for use in SIP development and required its use in
transportation conformity analyses in California (68
FR 15720). On January 18, 2008, we approved an
updated version of EMFAC, EMFAC2007, for use by
California state and local governments to meet CAA
requirements. See 73 FR 3464. We are proposing
approval of the revised emissions inventories that
rely on the earlier version of EMFAC because the
earlier version was the one approved at the time
when the 2003 South Coast SIP was submitted to
EPA.
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* * * by the applicable attainment date
* * *.’’ CAA section 172(c)(6). The
CAA also allows areas classified as
extreme to include ‘‘provisions * * *
which anticipate development of new
control techniques or improvement of
existing control technologies, * * * if
the State demonstrates * * * that—(A)
such provisions are not necessary to
achieve the incremental emission
reductions required during the first 10
years after the date of the enactment of
the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990;
and (B) the State has submitted
enforceable commitments to develop
and adopt contingency measures to be
implemented * * * if the anticipated
technologies do not achieve planned
reductions.’’ CAA section 182(e)(5). The
latter provisions which anticipate
development of new control techniques
or improvement of existing control
technologies are often referred to as the
‘‘black box.’’
1. State’s Defined Measures
In 1997, we approved all of the State’s
control measures contained in the 1994
Ozone SIP that EPA had not previously
approved. See 62 FR 1150 at 1183
(January 8, 1997). EPA’s 1997 approval
included assignment of specific
emissions reductions by nonattainment
area and milestone year for all of the
State control measures, including those
previously approved, under section
110(k)(3), 182(e)(5), and 301(a) of the
CAA. In 1999, we approved a revision
to the State’s commitment to achieve
long-term emissions reductions in the
South Coast at the close of the Public
Consultative Process. See 64 FR 39923,
at 39926–39927 (July 23, 1999).
ARB intended the 2003 State Strategy,
as submitted on January 9, 2004, to
update and entirely replace the State’s
control strategy contained in the 1994
Ozone SIP (as modified in 1999 for the
South Coast); however, as noted
previously, on February 13, 2008, ARB
withdrew key components of the
strategy with respect to the South Coast,
including the near-term annual
emissions reductions commitments,
additional emissions reduction
commitment for the South Coast, and
the ‘‘black box’’ emissions reduction
commitment. Therefore, with these key
components missing, we do not
interpret the remaining component the
2003 State Strategy (i.e., commitment
for near-term defined measures) as
replacing the ozone control strategy, but
rather as a set of new measures to
achieve additional emissions reductions
in the South Coast by the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS attainment date of 2010.
The remaining component of the 2003
State Strategy is a commitment by ARB
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to have its staff submit to the Board and
propose for adoption the control
measures set forth in Table 1.16 Under
the 2003 State Strategy, the ARB staff
proposal for each control measure must,
at a minimum, achieve the estimated
emission reductions set forth in Table 1
of this document (derived from the 2003
State Strategy, ARB Resolution 03–22,
Attachment A–6, Table I–7). Where a
range of estimated emission reductions
is shown, the ARB staff proposal must,
at a minimum, achieve the lower end of
the range of reductions. ARB’s Board
then must take action on or before the
action dates set forth in Table 1, but
such action by the Board may include
any action within its discretion. The
measures themselves are discussed in
detail in sections II and III of the
Proposed 2003 State and Federal
Strategy for California SIP (August 25,
2003). We note that, based on Table 1–
3 in the Final 2007 South Coast AQMP
(June 2007) and further investigation by
EPA as to the status of ARB’s
rulemakings, we believe that ARB staff
proposals were submitted to the Board
for most of the 15 obligations listed in
Table 1 and that ARB has taken action
on such proposals. Similarly we believe
that the Bureau of Automotive Repair
(BAR) has fulfilled its one obligation.
TABLE 1—DEFINED STATE MEASURES TO BE DEVELOPED AND PROPOSED
[Source: 2003 State Strategy, ARB Resolution 03–22, Attachment A–6, Table I–7]
Strategy (agency)
Final action
date
Name
Implementation date
Expected reductions
(south coast 2010)
VOC
LT/MED-DUTY–1 (ARB) ......
LT/MED-DUTY–2 (BAR) ......
ON-RD HVY-DUTY–1 (ARB)
ON-RD HVY-DUTY–3 (ARB)
OFF-RD CI–1 (ARB) ............
OFF-RD LSI–1 (ARB) ..........
OFF-RD LSI–2 (ARB) ..........
SMALL OFF-RD–1 (ARB) ....
SMALL OFF-RD–2 (ARB) ....
MARINE–1 (ARB) ................
MARINE–2 (ARB) ................
FUEL–2 (ARB) .....................
CONS–1 (ARB) ....................
CONS–2 (ARB) ....................
FVR–1 (ARB) .......................
FVR–2 (ARB) .......................
PEST–11 (DPR) ...................
Replace or Update Emission Control Systems on Existing Passenger Vehicles.
Improve Smog Check to Reduce Emissions from Existing Passenger and Cargo Vehicles.
Augment Truck and Bus Highway Inspections with Community-Based Inspections.
Pursue Approaches to Clean Up the Existing and New
Truck/Bus Fleet.
Pursue Approaches to Clean Up the Existing HeavyDuty Off-Road Equipment Fleet (Compression Ignition
Engines).
Set Lower Emission Standards for New Off-Road Gas
Engines(Spark-Ignited Engines 25 hp and Greater).
Clean Up Off-Road Gas Equipment Through Retrofit
Controls and New Emissions Standards (Spark-Ignited
Engines 25 hp and Greater).
Set Lower Emission Standards for New Handheld Small
Engines and Equipment (Spark-Ignited Engines under
25 hp such as Weed Trimmers, Leaf Blowers, and
Chainsaws).
Set Lower Emission Standards for New Non-Handheld
Small Engines and Equipment (Spark-Ignited Engines
under 25 hp such as Lawnmowers).
Pursue Approaches to Clean Up the Existing Harbor
Craft Fleet—Cleaner Engines and Fuels.
Pursue Approaches to Reduce Land-Based Port Emissions—Alternative Fuels, Cleaner Engines, Retrofit
Controls, Electrification, Education Programs, Operational Controls.
Set Low-Sulfur Standards for Diesel Fuel for Trucks/
Buses, Off-Road Equipment, and Stationary Engines.
Set New Consumer Products Limits for 2006 ..................
Set New Consumer Products Limits for 2008–2010 ........
Increase Recovery of Fuel Vapors from Aboveground
Storage Tanks.
Recover Fuel Vapors from Gasoline Dispensing at Marinas.
Implement Existing Pesticide Strategy .............................
NOX
2005
2007–2008
0–20 ........
0–20.
2002–2005
2002–2006
5.6–5.8 .....
8.0–8.4.
2003
2005
0–0.1 .......
0.
2003–2006
2004–2010
1.4–4.5 ....
16–21.
2004–2008
2006–2010
2.3–7.8 ....
8–10.
2004–2005
2007
0 ..............
0.8.
2004
2006–2012
0.8–2.0 .....
2–4.
2003
2005
1.9 ...........
0.2.
2003
2007
6.3–7.4 .....
0.6–1.9.
2003–2005
2005
0.1 ...........
2.7.
2003–2005
2003–2010
0.1 ...........
0.1.
2003
2006
Enabling ...
Enabling.
2003–2004
2006–2008
2003
2006
2008–2010
2007
2.3 ...........
8.5–15 ......
0–0.1 .......
0.
0.
0.
2006–2009
2006–2010
0–0.1 ........
0.
1996–2010
Base-line ..
N/A.
33.3–72.9
38.4–69.1
Potential Range for Defined Near-Term State Measures ...................................................................................................
1 We
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interpret our approval of this measure as maintaining the status quo with respect to the existing pesticide strategy (i.e., the SIP will continue to reflect the strategy as approved by EPA in 1997).
16 In the case of control measure LT/MED–DUTY–
2, the commitment is not ARB’s, but rather, the
Bureau of Automotive Repair’s (BAR’s)
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commitment. BAR’s commitment to adopt the
measure is documented in appendix I–1 of the
Proposed 2003 State and Federal Strategy for the
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California State Implementation Plan (August 25,
2003).
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Assuming that the remaining
component of the 2003 State Strategy
adds to, but does not replace, the
existing SIP ozone strategy, we propose
to approve the State commitments with
respect to the near-term defined
measures listed in table 1 as described
above as strengthening the SIP.17 We
propose to approve the State’s
commitments with respect to the nearterm defined measures, not as fulfilling
any particular requirement under the
CAA, but as a strengthening of the
South Coast portion of the California
SIP. As such, our proposed approval is
made under CAA sections 110(k)(3) and
301(a).
2. District’s Near-Term Control
Measures, Annual Emissions
Reductions Commitment, and
Contingency Measure
In 2000, under CAA section 110(k)(3),
we approved the District’s commitment
to adopt and implement the short- and
intermediate-term control measures in
the 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP
by the dates specified to achieve the
identified emissions reductions, and the
District’s commitment to adopt and
implement control measures to achieve
the identified annual emissions
reduction commitments for 1999 to
2008.18
The 2003 South Coast AQMP includes
an updated list of commitments for
those District control measures that
remain from the 1997/1999 South Coast
Ozone SIP, and a set of new District
commitments to adopt near-term control
measures. See table 2 of this document.
Consistent with the approach in the
1997/1999 South Coast SIP, the District
commits to meet the adoption dates,
implementation dates, and emission
reduction targets shown in table 2
(derived from table 4–1 of the 2003
South Coast AQMP), unless a measure,
in whole or in part, is determined to be
infeasible.
Also consistent with the 1997/1999
South Coast SIP, the District includes in
the 2003 plan an additional enforceable
commitment to achieve aggregate
emission reductions through a schedule
of rule adoption and implementation for
specific years. See table 3 of this
document. Under the 2003 South Coast
AQMP, the District reserves the right to
substitute measures listed in table 2 (of
this document) with other measures,
provided that the given measure is
found to be infeasible and that the
overall equivalent emission reductions
by adoption and implementation dates
shown in tables 3 and 4 (of this
document) are maintained. Based on
table 1–2 of the 2007 South Coast
AQMP (June 2007), we believe that most
of the District’s near-term commitments
with respect to control measures for
which emission reductions targets are
identified have been met.
TABLE 2—DISTRICT’S NEAR-TERM VOC AND NOX CONTROL MEASURES
[Source: 2003 South Coast AQMP, Table 4–1]
Control measure
Reduction target 1 (tons/day)
Title of control measure
Remaining 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone Plan Control Measures
CTS–07 ...................
CTS–10 ...................
FUG–05 ...................
MSC–01 ..................
MSC–03 ..................
PRC–07 ...................
WST–01 2 ................
WST–02 3 ................
FSS–04 4 .................
FLX–01 ....................
Further Emission Reductions from Architectural Coatings and Cleanup Solvents (Rule 1113) (VOC) .......
Miscellaneous Industrial Coatings and Solvent Operations (VOC) ...............................................................
Emission Reductions from Fugitive Emissions Sources (VOC) ....................................................................
Promotion of Lighter Color Roofing and Road Materials and Tree Planting Programs (All Pollutants) .......
Promotion of Catalyst-Surface Coating Technology Programs (All Pollutants) ............................................
Industrial Process Operations (VOC) ............................................................................................................
Emission Reductions from Livestock Waste (VOC) ......................................................................................
Emission Reductions from Composting .........................................................................................................
Emission Charges of $5,000 per Ton of VOC for Stationary Sources Emitting Over 10 Tons per Year
(VOC).
Economic Incentive Programs .......................................................................................................................
8.5
3.0
2.0
TBD
TBD
2.0
4.8
1.2
TBD
TBD
New Control Measures
CMB–10 ..................
MSC–05 ..................
MSC–07 ..................
MSC–08 ..................
FSS–05 5 .................
FSS–06 ...................
FSS–07 ...................
Additional NOX Reductions for RECLAIM (NOX) ..........................................................................................
Truck Stop Electrification (NOX) ....................................................................................................................
Natural Gas Fuel Specifications (NOX) .........................................................................................................
Further Emission Reductions from Large VOC Sources (VOC) ...................................................................
Mitigation Fee Program for Federal Sources (All Pollutants) ........................................................................
Further Emission Reductions from In-Use Off-Road Vehicles and Equipment (VOC, NOX, PM10) .............
Emission Fee Program for Port-related Mobile Sources (All Pollutants) ......................................................
3.0
2.1
TBD
TBD
TBD
TBD
TBD
Total .................
VOC ...............................................................................................................................................................
21.5
NOX ................................................................................................................................................................
5.1
1 The
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emission reductions estimates are based on the 2010 planning inventory in the 2003 South Coast AQMP. The District notes that the actual reductions are subject to change during the rulemaking process based on the latest available emission inventory data.
2 Previously approved in connection with the PM
10 portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. See 70 FR 69081 (November 14, 2005).
3 Previously approved in connection with the PM
10 portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. See 70 FR 69081 (November 14, 2005).
4 The measure is intended to achieve reductions after the 2010 attainment date.
5 Proposed for disapproval herein.
17 In the alternative, if ARB indicates an intention
to replace the existing SIP ozone strategy by the
commitment for near-term measures shown in table
1 of this document, then we propose to disapprove
the set of defined measures on the basis that the
State has not provided a demonstration that
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replacement of the existing SIP ozone strategy by
the set of measures in table 1 would not interfere
with attainment or maintenance of the NAAQS or
any other applicable requirement of the Act. See
CAA section 110(l).
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18 Our approval made enforceable the District’s
commitment to achieve the overall emissions
reduction schedule and creates the possibility of
District control measure adjustments and
substitutions under the approved SIP, so long as the
overall emission reductions obligations are met.
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Based on our review of the District’s
updated strategy in the 2003 South
Coast AQMP for achieving near-term
emissions reductions, and the progress
the District has achieved to date in
implementing the measures, we propose
to approve the District’s commitment to
adopt the near-term measures listed in
table 2 (except for FSS–05, as described
below) and commitment to achieve
aggregate emissions reductions through
the rule and adoption schedule shown
in table 3.
TABLE 3—DISTRICT’S NEAR-TERM VOC AND NOX EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS COMMITMENT TO BE ACHIEVED THROUGH
RULE ADOPTION AND IMPLEMENTATION 1
[Source: 2003 South Coast AQMP, Table 4–8A]
VOC
NOX
Year
Based on
adoption date
Based on
implementation
date
Based on
adoption date
Based on
implementation
date
2002 .................................................................................................
2003 .................................................................................................
2004 .................................................................................................
2005 .................................................................................................
2006 .................................................................................................
2007 .................................................................................................
2008 .................................................................................................
2009 .................................................................................................
2010 .................................................................................................
Total ..........................................................................................
0.6
16.9
2.0
2.0
............................
............................
............................
............................
............................
21.5
............................
0.6
............................
............................
4.8
2.0
12.1
............................
2.0
21.5
............................
............................
3.0
2.1
............................
............................
............................
............................
............................
5.1
............................
............................
............................
............................
............................
2.1
............................
............................
3.0
5.1
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1 In
tons per day based on the 2010 planning inventory in the 2003 South Coast AQMP.
Like the State defined control
measures discussed above, we propose
to approve the District’s updated
strategy for near-term emissions
reductions in the 2003 South Coast
AQMP, not as fulfilling any particular
requirement under the CAA, but as a
strengthening of the South Coast portion
of the California SIP. As such, our
proposed approval is made under CAA
sections 110(k)(3) and 301(a).
One particular District control
measure, FSS–05 (‘‘Mitigation Fee
Program for Federal Sources’’), assigns
to EPA the responsibility of adopting a
mitigation fee program. See page 4–17 of
the 2003 South Coast AQMP. Under this
program, the mitigation fee would be
paid by the owners of such sources as
aircraft, ocean-going vessels, trains, and
pre-empted off-road equipment (that are
under the jurisdiction of EPA) through
EPA rulemaking and/or EPA grants to
the District. The District would then use
the monies collected to implement
strategies for both federal and nonfederal sources to achieve equivalent
reductions for SIP purposes. We
propose to disapprove this particular
control measure on the grounds that
States are not given the authority under
the CAA to assign emission reductions
responsibilities to the Federal
Government. For a detailed discussion
of EPA’s view on ‘‘federal assignments,’’
see EPA’s final rule approving the 1994
Ozone SIP (62 FR 1150, at 1152–1155
(January 8, 1997).
Under the 2003 South Coast AQMP,
the expected progress in meeting the
AQMP attainment goals, measured in
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17:11 Oct 23, 2008
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terms of emission reductions, is verified
through the annual auditing program
called the Reasonable Further Progress
(RFP) program. In the event the RFP
program shows that the implementation
of the plan is not providing adequate
progress and the interim emission
reduction goals have not been met, the
District must take action to bring
forward measures that are scheduled for
later adoption or implementation, or to
implement certain other contingency
measures. See section 2 of appendix IV–
A of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. With
respect to progress towards the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS, the 2003 South Coast
AQMP includes one contingency
measure, CTY–01—Accelerated
Implementation of Control Measures,
that would accelerate the starting
implementation date for the stationary
and mobile source control measures that
have implementation dates on and after
2004. The original and revised (i.e.,
under CTY–01) starting implementation
dates of the stationary and mobile
source control measures affected by the
contingency measure are shown in table
2 of chapter 9 of the 2003 South Coast
AQMP. As noted above, we believe that
most of the District’s near-term
commitments to adopt defined measures
have been met.
Based on our review of contingency
measure strategy, and the progress the
District has achieved to date in
implementing the measures, we propose
to approve CTY–01 (except for the
individual FSS–05, which we are
proposing to disapprove for the reasons
given above) as a strengthening of the
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Sfmt 4702
South Coast portion of the California
SIP.19 As such, our proposed approval
is made under CAA sections 110(k)(3)
and 301(a).
3. District’s Black Box Emissions
Reduction Commitment
In 2000, we approved the District’s
commitment to adopt and implement
the long-term ‘‘black box’’ control
measures in the 1997/1999 South Coast
Ozone Plan by the dates specified to
achieve the identified emissions
reductions under CAA sections
110(k)(3) and 182(e)(5). See 65 FR
18903, at 18905 (April 10, 2000).
In the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP, the
District calculated that the remaining
portion of its ‘‘black box’’ commitment
amounted to 28 tpd of VOC. In the 2003
South Coast AQMP, the District
contends that, after implementation of
its proposed near-term measures, the
District would be exceeding its emission
target in the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP
by about 65 tpd of VOC. As such, the
District’s ‘‘black box’’ commitment in
the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP of 28 tpd
has been fulfilled. Nonetheless, in view
of the magnitude of the reductions now
understood to be needed for attainment
of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS in the
South Coast, the District has adopted an
additional ‘‘black box’’ commitment of
19 We are proposing in this document to
disapprove the rate-of-progress demonstration in
the 2003 South Coast AQMP, but we note that CTY–
01, by its terms, could be triggered under the
District’s RFP program regardless of our action on
the ROP demonstration.
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31 tpd as shown in table 4 of this
document.
TABLE 4—DISTRICT’S BLACK BOX VOC EMISSION REDUCTIONS COMMITMENT TO BE ACHIEVED THROUGH RULE
ADOPTION AND IMPLEMENTATION
[Source: 2003 South Coast AQMP, Table 4–8B]
VOC (2010 planning inventory,
tons/day)
Year
Based on
adoption date
Based on
implementation
date 1
.................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................
4.0
10.0
10.0
7.0
............................
............................
............................
............................
3.0
10.0
11.0
7.0
Total .............................................................................................................................................................
31.0
31.0
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
1 Represents
the final, full implementation date; typically a rule contains multiple implementation dates.
As described in the 2003 South Coast
AQMP (appendix IV–A, section 1, group
8), the District’s ‘‘black box’’
commitment is organized into two tiers.
The first tier targets (but is not limited
to) stationary source categories
including miscellaneous industrial
coatings and solvent operations, fugitive
sources, and industrial process
operations. The second tier targets all
stationary source categories for which
feasible reductions can be identified.
We propose to approve the District’s
new ‘‘black box’’ commitment in the
2003 South Coast AQMP, not as
fulfilling any particular requirement
under the CAA, but as a strengthening
of the South Coast portion of the
California SIP. As such, our proposed
approval is made under CAA sections
110(k)(3) and 301(a).
4. Black Box Emissions Reduction
Assignment to the Federal Government
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Lastly, the 2003 South Coast AQMP
allocates a portion of the ‘‘black box’’ to
the Federal Government. The ‘‘federal
assignment’’ in the 2003 South Coast
AQMP calls for the Federal Government
to achieve emissions reductions of 68
tpd NOX and 18 tpd VOC in the South
Coast by 2010. As discussed above in
connection with District measure FSS–
05, we propose to disapprove this
assignment on the grounds that States
are not given the authority under the
CAA to assign emission reductions
responsibilities to the Federal
Government.
D. Attainment Demonstration
All 1-hour ozone areas classified as
serious or above must demonstrate
attainment ‘‘as expeditiously as
practicable’’ but not later than dates
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specified in CAA section 181(a), which
establishes for extreme areas a deadline
of November 15, 2010. For purposes of
demonstrating attainment, CAA section
182(c)(2)(A) requires serious, severe,
and extreme areas to use photochemical
grid modeling or an analytical method
EPA determines to be as effective.
In 2000, we approved the attainment
demonstration for the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS in the 1997 South Coast AQMP,
as amended by the District in 1999, as
meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 182(c)(2) and (e). See 65 FR
18903, at 18905 (April 10, 2000). The
District revised the 1-hour ozone
attainment demonstration in the 2003
South Coast AQMP in light of updated
emissions inventories that show higher
mobile source emissions than prior
projections and updated modeling that
indicates a lower carrying capacity in
the air basin. The District describes the
methods, assumptions and results of the
modeling effort in chapter 5 of the main
body of the AQMP and provides more
details on the modeling effort in
appendix V.
The 2003 South Coast AQMP’s
modeled attainment demonstration for
1-hour ozone relies upon emission
reductions from the ARB’s control
strategy as set forth in the 2003 State
Strategy, most of which was withdrawn
by ARB on February 13, 2008. As a
result, we need not conduct a detailed
review of the modeling to conclude that
the 2003 South Coast AQMP does not
meet the CAA section 182(c)(2)(A)
requirement for a demonstration of
attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS
by the applicable attainment date (in
this case, 2010). EPA proposes to
disapprove the ozone plan with respect
to the attainment demonstration
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requirements of CAA section
182(c)(2)(A), because of the deficiencies
in the control measure portions of the
plan resulting from the withdrawal of
the State’s emission reduction
commitments in the 2003 State Strategy.
E. Quantitative Milestones and
Reasonable Further Progress (RFP)
CAA section 172(c)(2) requires
nonattainment area plans to provide for
reasonable further progress (RFP) which
is defined in section 171(1) as such
annual incremental reductions in
emissions as are required in part D or
may reasonably be required by the
Administrator in order to ensure
attainment of the relevant NAAQS by
the applicable date.
CAA section 182(c)(2) require that
serious and above area SIPs include
rate-of-progress (ROP) quantitative
milestones that are to be achieved every
3 years after 1996 until attainment. For
ozone areas classified as serious and
above, section 182(c)(2) requires that the
SIP must provide for reductions in
ozone-season, weekday VOC emissions
of at least 3 percent per year net of
growth averaged over each consecutive
3-year period. This is in addition to the
15 percent reduction over the first 6year period required by CAA section
182(b)(1) for areas classified as moderate
and above. The CAA requires that these
milestones be calculated from the 1990
inventory after excluding, among other
things, emission reductions from ‘‘[a]ny
measure related to motor vehicle
exhaust or evaporative emissions
promulgated by the Administrator by
January 1, 1990’’ and emission
reductions from certain federal gasoline
volatility requirements. CAA section
182(b)(1)(B)–(D). EPA has issued
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guidance on meeting 1-hour ozone ROP
requirements. See General Preamble at
13516 and ‘‘Guidance on the Post-1996
Rate-of-Progress Plan and the
Attainment Demonstration,’’ EPA–452/
R–93–015, OAQPS, EPA, February 18,
1994 (corrected).
CAA section 182(c)(2)(C) allows for
NOX reductions which occur after 1990
to be used to meet the post-1996 ROP
emission reduction requirements,
provided that such NOX reductions
meet the criteria outlined in the CAA
and EPA guidance. The criteria require
that: (1) The sum of all creditable VOC
and NOX reductions must meet the 3
percent per year ROP requirement; (2)
the substitution is on a percent-forpercent of adjusted base year emissions
basis for the relevant pollutant; and (3)
the sum of all substituted NOX
reductions cannot be greater than the
cumulative NOX reductions required by
the modeled attainment demonstration.
See General Preamble at 13517 and
‘‘NOX Substitution Guidance,’’ OAQPS,
EPA, December 1993. Our guidance in
the General Preamble states that by
meeting the specific ROP milestones
discussed above, the general RFP
requirements in CAA section 172(c)(2)
will also be satisfied. See the General
Preamble at 13518.
In 2000, we approved the revised ROP
demonstration for the milestone years
1999, 2002, 2005, 2008, and 2010 in the
1999 amendment to the 1997 South
Coast AQMP, as meeting the
requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(2)
and 182(c)(2). See 65 FR 18903, at 18905
(April 10, 2000). The 2003 South Coast
AQMP includes a revised demonstration
for milestone years 2005, 2008, and
2010. See pages 6–6 through 6–9 of the
AQMP. The revised ROP demonstration
in the 2003 South Coast AQMP does not
rely on emissions reductions from any
new control measures in the plan but
relies only on VOC and NOX emission
reductions from existing District and
ARB rules. For the milestone years 2005
and 2008, the ROP demonstration shows
that baseline VOC emission levels are
below the target levels. In 2010,
however, the VOC reductions in the
baseline are insufficient to meet the
target, and thus, the plan relies in part
on NOX substitution.
Our review of the ROP demonstration
in the 2003 South Coast AQMP reveals
a flaw in the calculation method. The
demonstration purports to adjust
emissions for the base year (1990) to
remove the benefit of the pre-1990
Federal motor vehicle control program
(FMVCP) and certain federal gasoline
volatility requirements, as is required
under the CAA, but the adjustment in
the ROP table for NOX (table 6–3b in the
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AQMP) has been set at zero, which
cannot be correct. Given the minimal
explanation for how the adjustment was
determined, we can only presume that
the same calculation method was used
for the VOC table (table 6–3a).
Therefore, we conclude that the
calculation methods used to
demonstrate rate-of-progress for 2005,
2008, and 2010 are incorrect, and on
that basis, we propose to disapprove the
revised rate-of-progress demonstration
in the 2003 South Coast AQMP as
failing to meet the requirements of CAA
sections 172(c)(2) and 182(c)(2).
F. Transportation Control Measures To
Offset Growth in Motor Vehicle
Emissions
Section 182(d)(1)(A) of the CAA
requires nonattainment areas classified
as severe or above to adopt and submit
transportation control measures (TCMs)
sufficient to offset any growth in
emissions from growth in vehicle-milestraveled (VMT) or number of vehicle
trips and to provide for ROP. EPA’s
interpretation of this provision allows
areas to satisfy the requirement if they
demonstrate that emissions from motor
vehicles decline each year through the
attainment year. See the General
Preamble at 13521–13522. The 2003
South Coast SIP refers to the TCMs in
appendix IV–C of the 2003 South Coast
AQMP as the basis for compliance with
the CAA requirement in section
182(d)(1)(A). See page 6–10 of the 2003
South Coast AQMP. As noted in section
II.E of this document, the TCM portion
of the 2003 South Coast AQMP,
including appendix IV–C, was
withdrawn, and thus, it cannot serve as
the basis for meeting the requirement.
However, by letter dated September
10, 2008, the District provided
supplemental motor vehicle emissions
data drawn largely from emissions
inventory estimates presented in
appendix III of the 2003 South Coast
AQMP. See letter from Elaine Chang,
DrPH, Deputy Executive Officer,
SCAQMD, to Matt Haber, Deputy
Director, Air Division, EPA Region IX,
September 10, 2008. Based on the
emission data presented in appendix III
of the South Coast AQMP and the
supplemental information provided by
SCAQMD on September 10th, we find
that baseline motor vehicle emissions in
the South Coast decline each year from
2003 to the attainment year (2010), and
that, as a result, no TCMs need be
included in the plan to offset motor
vehicle emissions for the purposes of
CAA section 182(d)(1)(A). We therefore
propose to approve the 2003 South
Coast SIP, as supplemented on
September 10, 2008, as meeting the
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63417
TCM offset requirement under CAA
section 182(d)(1)(A).
G. Nitrogen Dioxide Maintenance
Demonstration
In 1998, EPA approved the nitrogen
dioxide maintenance plan that was
included as an element of the 1997
South Coast AQMP. The 2003 South
Coast SIP updates the original
maintenance plan with more current air
monitoring data and emissions
estimates and projections. See page
6–11 of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. In
support of its conclusion that the
updated plan demonstrates maintenance
of the nitrogen dioxide NAAQS,
SCAQMD refers to ambient monitoring
data that continues to show
concentrations below the NAAQS and
to the downward trend in baseline NOX
emissions.
Based on our review of the monitoring
data presented in chapter 2 of the 2003
South Coast AQMP, which show a
maximum concentration in 2001 among
the 23 monitoring stations of less than
80% of the NAAQS, and the emissions
estimates presented in chapter 3, which
show a decline from nearly 1,300 tpd
(winter season) of NOX in 1997, to 1,000
tpd in 2006, to 820 tpd in 2010, we
agree with SCAQMD that the 2003
South Coast AQMP demonstrates
maintenance of the nitrogen dioxide
NAAQS.20 Therefore, we propose to
approve the update of the NO2
maintenance demonstration in the 2003
South Coast SIP.
H. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets
(MVEBs)
Under section 176(c) of the CAA,
transportation plans, programs and
projects in nonattainment or
maintenance areas that are funded or
approved under title 23 U.S.C. and the
Federal Transit Laws (49 U.S.C. Chapter
53) must conform to the applicable SIP.
20 Unlike ozone, which peaks in the South Coast
in the summer and early fall months, NO2 generally
peaks in the late fall and winter months. The use
of a planning inventory (winter season) rather than
an annual-average inventory to update the
maintenance demonstration for the annual NO2
NAAQS is consistent with the original NO2
maintenance demonstration from the 1997 South
Coast AQMP, which we approved in 1998 (63 FR
39747, July 24, 1998). In the 1997 South Coast
AQMP, the District demonstrated maintenance of
the annual NO2 NAAQS using a linear rollback
approach and baseline planning inventories (winter
season) for NOX to project future-year annual NOX
concentrations from baseline annual NOX
concentrations for several key locations in the
South Coast representative of areas with historically
higher NO2 concentrations. Projected future-year
annual NO2 concentrations were then determined
from projected annual NOX concentrations using
average NO2/NOX ratios measured at the key
locations. See chapter 1 of appendix V to the 1997
South Coast AQMP (November 1996).
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In short, a transportation plan and
program are deemed to conform to the
applicable SIP if the emissions resulting
from the implementation of that
transportation plan and program are less
than or equal to the MVEBs established
in the control strategy SIPs for the
attainment year, ROP years,
maintenance year and other analysis
years. See, generally, 40 CFR part 93.
On March 11, 2004, we found the
NOX and VOC MVEBs for ozone, and
the NOX MVEB for nitrogen dioxide, in
the 2003 South Coast SIP to be adequate
for transportation conformity purposes.
Letter from Deborah Jordan, EPA to
Catherine Witherspoon, ARB, March 11,
2004. A table attached to the letter
summarized our adequacy
determination. Our notice of adequacy
for these budgets was published in the
Federal Register on March 25, 2004 at
69 FR 15325 and was effective 15 days
later, on April 9, 2004. We are now
proposing to disapprove the VOC and
NOX MVEBs for 1-hour ozone, and to
approve the NOX MVEB for nitrogen
dioxide, for transportation conformity
purposes.
With respect to ozone, we propose to
disapprove the VOC and NOX budgets
based on our proposed disapprovals of
the 1-hour ozone ROP and attainment
demonstrations as discussed above. As
such, we conclude that the VOC and
NOX MVEBs in the 2003 South Coast
SIP, when considered together with all
other emissions sources, are not
consistent with applicable requirements
for RFP and attainment for the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS because the plan revision
as a whole does not provide for RFP and
attainment. While we are proposing to
disapprove these 1-hour ozone budgets
into the SIP, it should be noted that they
would not be used for future conformity
determinations even if we were to
approve them. This is because EPA has
revoked the 1-hour ozone standard and
transportation conformity
determinations are no longer required
for that air quality standard, and
because we have already found VOC
and NOX MVEBs adequate for the
8-hour ozone standard. See 73 FR 28110
(May 15, 2008), as corrected at 73 FR
34837 (June 18, 2008).
With respect to nitrogen dioxide, we
propose to approve the NOX MVEB of
686 tpd (winter season) for years 2003
and 2010.21 Use of a planning inventory
21 In table 6–7 of the 2003 South Coast AQMP, a
footnote to the NOX MVEB states: ‘‘2003 budget
applicable to future years, including the last year
of maintenance plan (i.e., 2010).’’ We interpret this
language as establishing a MVEB for year 2003 and
for year 2010 and not as establishing a budget for
each intervening year and the years after 2010. An
interpretation otherwise would be unreasonable in
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17:11 Oct 23, 2008
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(winter) in the 2003 South Coast AQMP
as the basis for the updated
maintenance demonstration (and
corresponding NOX MVEB) for the
annual NO2 NAAQS is consistent with
the approach we approved in the
original NO2 maintenance plan from the
1997 South Coast AQMP, as discussed
above. The NOX MVEB is shown in
table 6–7 of the 2003 South Coast
AQMP, and, as shown in that table, the
NOX MVEB for nitrogen dioxide reflects
baseline 2003 motor vehicle emissions
(shown in more detail in table C–5 in
attachment C to appendix III of the 2003
South Coast AQMP), and as reduced
slightly by the emissions reductions
attributed to the District’s adopted
employer-based trip reduction rule
(District rule 2202) and State-adopted
vehicle inspection and maintenance
program (I/M) improvements not
accounted for in the baseline motor
vehicle estimate. The baseline motor
vehicle estimates are based on ARB’s
motor vehicle emissions factor model,
EMFAC2002, which was approved by
EPA on April 1, 2003 (68 FR 15720) and
the most recent planning and vehicle
activity data then available.22
The baseline emissions inventories,
which reflect baseline motor vehicle
emissions as well as baseline emissions
for all other source categories, show a
decline in NOX emissions through 2010,
and even if motor vehicle emissions
estimates in 2010 were equal to the 2003
MVEB of 686 tpd, overall baseline NOX
emissions in 2010 would still be less
than the corresponding estimate for
2003, an attainment year, and thus we
find the NOX MVEB for 2003, when
considered with all other emissions
sources, to be consistent with continued
maintenance of the nitrogen dioxide
NAAQS through 2010.
IV. Public Comment and Final Action
Under section 110(k)(3) of the CAA,
and for the reasons discussed above,
EPA proposes the following action on
the 2003 State Strategy, as submitted on
January 9, 2004:
(1) Approval of commitments by State
agencies to develop and propose 16
near-term defined control measures (15
that it would necessitate a conformity
determination for NO2 by SCAG for each of the
intervening years and for an indeterminate number
of future years.
22 On January 18, 2008, we approved an updated
version of EMFAC, EMFAC2007, for use by
California state and local governments to meet CAA
requirements. See 73 FR 3464. We are proposing
approval of the NOX budgets for NO2 in the 2003
South Coast AQMP despite the fact that they reflect
an earlier-approved version of EMFAC
(EMFAC2002) because the earlier version was the
one approved at the time when the 2003 South
Coast SIP was submitted to EPA.
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for ARB and 1 for BAR) to achieve
specified emissions reductions in the
South Coast as listed in table 1 of this
document and the continuation of the
existing pesticide strategy.
Also under section 110(k)(3) of the
CAA, and for the reasons discussed
above, EPA proposes the following
actions on the 2003 South Coast SIP, as
submitted on January 9, 2004:
(1) Approval of base year and
projected baseline emission inventories
under CAA sections 172(c)(3) and
182(a)(1);
(2) Approval of the District’s
commitment to adopt and implement
near-term control measures as shown in
table 2 of this document (except FSS–
05), the District’s commitment to
achieve emissions reduction through a
schedule of adoption and
implementation as shown in table 3 of
this document, and the District’s
contingency measure CTY–01
(‘‘Accelerated Implementation of
Control Measures’’), as strengthening
the SIP;
(3) Disapproval of District control
measure FSS–05 (‘‘Mitigation Fee
Program for Federal Sources’’) that
assigns control measure responsibility
to the Federal Government;
(4) Approval of District’s ‘‘black box’’
VOC emission reduction commitment of
31 tpd;
(5) Disapproval of the ‘‘black box’’
emission reduction commitment of 68
tpd of NOX and 18 tpd of VOC assigned
to the Federal Government;
(6) Disapproval of the attainment
demonstration because control measures
upon which the demonstration relies
have been withdrawn;
(7) Disapproval of the reasonable
further progress demonstration because
the calculations do not properly account
for the emissions reductions from the
pre-1990 FMVCP and certain federal
gasoline volatility requirements;
(8) Approval of the demonstration
that no TCM offsets are required under
CAA section 182(d)(1)(A) based on
baseline motor vehicle emissions
projections as supplemented by the
District;
(9) Approval of the revised nitrogen
dioxide maintenance demonstration
based on the downward trend in
baseline NOX emissions;
(10) Disapproval of the 1-hour ozone
(VOC and NOX) motor vehicle emissions
budgets in the wake of proposed
disapprovals of the rate-of-progress and
attainment demonstrations; and
(11) Approval of the nitrogen dioxide
motor vehicle emissions budget of 686
tpd (year 2003), winter planning
inventory.
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No sanctions clocks or FIP
requirement would be triggered by our
disapprovals, if finalized, because the
approved SIP already contains the plan
elements that we are proposing to
disapprove. A disapproval of the
revisions to the already-approved
elements would not alter the fact that
the SIP already meets these statutory
requirements.
EPA is soliciting public comments on
the issues discussed in this document
and will accept comments for the next
30 days. These comments will be
considered before taking final action.
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V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
state choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
proposes to approve state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law. For
that reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
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be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this proposed rule does
not have tribal implications as specified
by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Oxides of nitrogen, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
Dated: October 15, 2008.
Wayne Nastri,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. E8–25468 Filed 10–23–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2006–0869, FRL–8721–6]
Revisions to the California State
Implementation Plan, San Diego
County Air Pollution Control District,
San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution
Control District, and Ventura County
Air Pollution Control District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
revisions to the San Diego County Air
Pollution Control District (SDCAPCD),
San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution
Control District (SJVAPCD), and
Ventura County Air Pollution Control
District (VCAPCD) portions of the
California State Implementation Plan
(SIP). The revisions concern the
permitting of air pollution sources. We
are proposing to approve local rules that
regulate these emission sources under
the Clean Air Act as amended in 1990
(CAA or the Act).
DATES: Any comments on this proposal
must arrive by November 24, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by docket number EPA–R09–
PO 00000
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63419
OAR–2006–0869, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
instructions.
• E-mail: R9airpermits@epa.gov.
• Mail or deliver: Gerardo Rios (Air3), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, CA 94105.
Instructions: All comments will be
included in the public docket without
change and may be made available online at https://www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Information that
you consider CBI or otherwise protected
should be clearly identified as such and
should not be submitted through
https://www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
https://www.regulations.gov is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, and EPA
will not know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send email directly to EPA, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the public
comment. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for
this action is available electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov and in hard
copy at EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, California. While
all documents in the docket are listed in
the index, some information may be
publicly available only at the hard copy
location (e.g., copyrighted material), and
some may not be publicly available in
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura Yannayon, Permits Office (AIR–
3), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region IX, (415) 972–3534,
yannayon.laura@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
proposal addresses the following local
rules: SDCAPCD Rule 24, SJVAPCD
Rule 2050, and VCAPCD Rules 11 and
29. In the Rules and Regulations section
of this Federal Register, we are
approving these local rules in a direct
final action without prior proposal
because we believe these SIP revisions
are not controversial. If we receive
adverse comments, however, we will
E:\FR\FM\24OCP1.SGM
24OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 207 (Friday, October 24, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 63408-63419]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-25468]
[[Page 63408]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2008-0677; FRL-8734-2]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; State of
California; 2003 State Strategy and 2003 South Coast Plan for One-Hour
Ozone and Nitrogen Dioxide
AGENCY: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve one state implementation plan
(SIP) revision, and to approve in part and to disapprove in part a
second SIP revision, submitted by the California Air Resources Board to
provide for attainment of the one-hour ozone standard and maintenance
of the nitrogen dioxide standard in the Los Angeles-South Coast Air
Basin. The two SIP revisions include the 2003 State Strategy and the
2003 South Coast SIP, both of which were submitted on January 9, 2004.
With respect to the 2003 State Strategy, EPA is proposing to
approve the commitment by the State to develop and propose near-term
defined measures sufficient to achieve specific emissions reductions in
the South Coast and to continue implementation of an existing measure.
With respect to the 2003 South Coast SIP, EPA is proposing to approve
certain elements, and to disapprove other elements. The plan elements
that are proposed for disapproval are not required under the Clean Air
Act because they represent revisions to previously-approved SIP
elements, and thus, the disapprovals will not affect the requirements
for the State to have an approved SIP for these SIP elements.
Therefore, the disapprovals, if finalized, would not trigger sanctions
clocks nor EPA's obligation to promulgate a Federal implementation
plan.
EPA is proposing these actions under provisions of the Clean Air
Act regarding EPA action on SIP submittals and plan requirements for
nonattainment areas.
DATE: Any comments must arrive by November 24, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments, identified by docket number EPA-R09-OAR-
2008-0677, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. Follow
the online instructions.
E-mail: tax.wienke@epa.gov.
Mail or deliver: Marty Robin, Office of Air Planning (AIR-
2), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, CA 94105.
Instructions: All comments will be included in the public docket
without change and may be made available online at www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information provided, unless the comment
includes Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Information that you
consider CBI or otherwise protected should be clearly identified as
such and should not be submitted through www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
www.regulations.gov is an ``anonymous access'' system, and EPA will not
know your identity or contact information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send e-mail directly to EPA, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured and included as part of the
public comment. If EPA cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for this action is available
electronically at www.regulations.gov and in hard copy at EPA Region
IX, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, California. While all documents
in the docket are listed in the index, some information may be publicly
available only at the hard copy location (e.g., copyrighted material),
and some may not be publicly available in either location (e.g., CBI).
To inspect the hard copy materials, please schedule an appointment
during normal business hours with the contact listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wienke Tax, Air Planning Office (AIR-
2), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IX, (520) 622-1622,
tax.wienke@epa.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of Today's Proposed Action
II. Background
A. Introduction
B. 1994 South Coast Ozone SIP and State Strategy
C. 1999 State Update to the South Coast Ozone SIP
D. 1997 South Coast AQMP and 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP
E. 2003 State Strategy
F. 2003 South Coast SIP
III. Review of the 2003 State Strategy and 2003 South Coast SIP
A. Procedural Requirements
B. Base Year and Projected Baseline Emissions Inventory
C. Control Measures and Contingency Measures
1. State's Defined Measures
2. District's Near-Term Control Measures, Annual Emissions
Reductions Commitment, and Contingency Measure
3. District's Black Box Emissions Reduction Commitment
4. Black Box Emissions Reduction Assignment to the Federal
Government
D. Attainment Demonstration
E. Quantitative Milestones and Reasonable Further Progress (RFP)
F. Transportation Control Measures To Offset Growth in Motor
Vehicle Emissions
G. Nitrogen Dioxide Maintenance Demonstration
H. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets (MVEBs)
IV. Public Comment and Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Today's Proposed Action
In today's action, under the Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act''), we are
proposing to approve one state implementation plan (SIP) revision, and
to approve in part and to disapprove in part, a second SIP revision,
submitted by the California Air Resources Board (ARB) to provide for
attainment of the one-hour ozone national ambient air quality standard
(NAAQS) and for maintenance of the nitrogen dioxide NAAQS in the Los
Angeles-South Coast Air Basin Area (South Coast).\1\ The two SIP
revisions include the Final 2003 State and Federal Strategy (``2003
State Strategy'') and the 2003 revisions to the SIP for ozone and
nitrogen dioxide in the South Coast Air Basin (``2003 South Coast
SIP''), both of which were submitted by ARB on January 9, 2004. These
SIP revisions were developed in recognition of a need for additional
emissions reductions to attain the one-hour ozone NAAQS than had been
planned for in the late 1990s, and to establish new motor vehicle
emissions budgets (MVEBs) for transportation conformity.
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\1\ The area referred to as ``Los Angles-South Coast Air Basin''
(South Coast Air Basin or ``South Coast'') includes Orange County,
the southwestern two-thirds of Los Angeles County, southwestern San
Bernardino County, and western Riverside County. For a precise
description of the boundaries of the Los Angeles-South Coast Air
Basin, see 40 CFR 81.305.
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With respect to the 2003 State Strategy, we are proposing to
approve the commitments by ARB to develop and propose for adoption 15
near-term defined control measures, and the commitment by the
California Bureau of Automotive Repair to develop and propose one near-
term defined control measure sufficient to achieve specified emissions
reductions in the South
[[Page 63409]]
Coast. We are also proposing to approve the continuation of the
existing SIP pesticide strategy assigned to the California Department
of Pesticide Regulation.
With respect to the 2003 South Coast SIP, we are proposing to
approve the base year and projected baseline emissions inventories, the
South Coast Air Quality Management District's (District's or SCAQMD's)
commitment to adopt and implement near-term stationary and mobile
source control measures (with the exception of ``FSS-05--Mitigation Fee
Program for Federal Sources'') and commitment to achieve aggregate
emission reductions through a schedule of rule adoption and
implementation, the District's contingency measure (``CTY-01--
Accelerated Implementation of Control Measures''), the District's
``black box'' emission reduction commitment,\2\ the vehicle emissions
offset demonstration, and the nitrogen dioxide maintenance
demonstration and related motor vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs).
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\2\ ``Black box'' commitment refers to the provisions under CAA
section 182(e)(5) that anticipate development of new control
techniques or improvement of existing control technologies.
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Also, in connection with the 2003 South Coast SIP, we are proposing
to disapprove the District commitment to adopt one particular control
measure (``FSS-05--Mitigation Fee Program for Federal Sources''); the
``black box'' emissions reduction assignment to EPA; the revised rate-
of-progress and attainment demonstrations; and the ozone MVEBs.
The primary rationale for proposing approval of certain control
measures and the specific SIP elements described above is that they
would strengthen the SIP by adding to, or updating, SIP elements
previously approved by EPA. The reasons for proposing disapproval of
the other specified elements of the 2003 South Coast SIP include
incorrect rate-of-progress calculation methods and the withdrawal by
ARB of the state emissions reductions commitments in the 2003 State
Strategy that were relied upon in the 2003 South Coast SIP. No
sanctions clocks or Federal implementation plan (FIP) requirement would
be triggered by our disapprovals, if finalized, because the plan
revisions that are the subject of the proposed disapprovals represent
revisions to previously-approved SIP elements that EPA determined met
the CAA requirements, and thus, the revisions are not required under
the Clean Air Act.
II. Background
A. Introduction
Ground-level ozone is formed when oxides of nitrogen
(NOX), volatile organic compounds (VOC), and oxygen react in
the presence of sunlight, generally at elevated temperatures.\3\
Strategies for reducing smog typically require reductions in both VOC
and NOX emissions.
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\3\ California plans sometimes use the term Reactive Organic
Gases (ROG) for VOC. These terms are essentially synonymous. For the
sake of simplicity, we use the term VOC herein to mean either VOC or
ROG.
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Ozone causes serious health problems by damaging lung tissue and
sensitizing the lungs to other irritants. When inhaled, even at very
low levels, ozone can cause acute respiratory problems; aggravate
asthma; cause temporary decreases in lung capacity of 15 to 20 percent
in healthy adults, cause inflammation of lung tissue, lead to hospital
admissions and emergency room visits; and impair the body's immune
system defenses, making people more susceptible to respiratory
illnesses, including bronchitis and pneumonia. Children are most at
risk from exposure to ozone because they breathe more air per pound of
body weight than adults; their respiratory systems are still developing
and thus more susceptible to environmental threats; and children
exercise outdoors more than adults in the high-ozone months of summer.
In 1979, under section 109 of the CAA, EPA established a primary,
health-based NAAQS for ozone: 0.12 parts per million (ppm) averaged
over a 1-hour period. See 44 FR 8220 (February 9, 1979). In 1997, EPA
revised the ozone NAAQS by establishing an 8-hour ozone NAAQS of 0.08
ppm. See 62 FR 38856 (July 18, 1997). Since submittal of the 2003 State
Strategy and 2003 South Coast SIP, EPA has revoked the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, effective June 15, 2005, see 69 FR 23951 (April 30, 2004), and
tightened the 8-hour ozone NAAQS to 0.075 ppm, see 73 FR 16436 (March
27, 2008). The nitrogen dioxide NAAQS is 0.053 ppm, annual average. See
40 CFR 50.11.
Despite significant progress over the years, ozone concentrations
in the South Coast continue to be the highest in the country. Over the
2005-2007 period, the expected number of exceedances relative to the
now-revoked 1-hour ozone NAAQS is 13.3 days per year (at the Crestline
monitor), and the design value is 0.164 ppm (at Crestline).\4\ With
respect to the 8-hour ozone NAAQS, over the same period, the design
value is 0.122 ppm.\5\ In contrast to ozone, concentrations of nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) in the South Coast continue to be well below the NO2
NAAQS. For instance, in 2005, the highest annual concentrations
measured in the South Coast were less the 60 percent of the nitrogen
dioxide NAAQS based on data reported in the 2007 South Coast Air
Quality Management District (AQMP) (June 2007).
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\4\ For the 1-hour ozone standard, the expected number of
exceedances refers to the number of days per calendar year with
maximum hourly average concentrations above 0.12 ppm averaged over a
three-year period. The standard is attained in an area when the
expected number of exceedances is equal to or less than 1 at all
stations. The design value for an area, which characterizes the
severity of the air quality problem, is represented by the highest
design value at any individual ozone monitoring site (i.e., the
highest of the fourth highest 1-hour daily maximums in a given
three-year period with complete monitoring data).
\5\ The air quality design value for the 8-hour ozone NAAQS is
the 3-year average of the annual fourth highest daily maximum 8-hour
ozone concentration.
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B. 1994 South Coast Ozone SIP and State Strategy
The CAA was substantially amended in 1990 to establish new planning
requirements and attainment deadlines for the NAAQS, including 1-hour
ozone. Under section 107(d)(1)(C) of the Act, areas designated
nonattainment prior to enactment of the 1990 amendments, including the
South Coast, were designated nonattainment by operation of law. The
South Coast was classified as extreme nonattainment for 1-hour ozone,
with an attainment deadline no later than November 15, 2010. The South
Coast was also designated as ``nonattainment'' for nitrogen dioxide,
respirable particulate matter (PM10), and carbon monoxide (CO).
The District adopted an ozone plan on September 9, 1994, as part of
the 1994 South Coast Air Quality Management Plan (``1994 South Coast
AQMP''). ARB supplemented the District plan with State measures and
submitted it as a revision to the California SIP on November 15, 1994.
On July 10, 1996, ARB submitted an extensive revision to the South
Coast control measure adoption schedule to adjust for slippage in the
plan's initial implementation. On January 8, 1997 (62 FR 1150), we
finalized approval of the South Coast ozone plan, including the ozone
portions of the 1994 South Coast AQMP, as amended in 1996, and the
State measures (``1994 Ozone SIP'').\6\ The plan also contained
``Federal measures,'' which the State wished us to adopt and
[[Page 63410]]
implement in order to reduce emissions from mobile sources.\7\
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\6\ We approved some of the State and District measures in the
plan earlier. See particularly 60 FR 43379 (August 21, 1995).
\7\ In response to this assignment, we established a Public
Consultative Process to identify the best options for achieving
further emissions reductions from mobile source controls, at least
to the extent they are needed for attainment of the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS in the South Coast. In connection with the establishment of
this process, both EPA and ARB made commitments regarding
appropriate future emissions reductions. Please see EPA's final
approval of the 1994 ozone SIP for a discussion of the ``Federal
measures,'' and our rationale, at that time, for establishing the
Public Consultative Process (62 FR 1152-5, 1184-6).
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C. 1999 State Update to the South Coast Ozone SIP
On July 23, 1999 (64 FR 39923), we approved an update to the South
Coast portion of the 1994 Ozone SIP, reporting on implementation of
ARB's control measures in the 1994 SIP and the contribution from
Federal mobile source controls undertaken as part of the Public
Consultative Process. We also updated our own commitment and approved a
new ARB commitment to adopt by December 31, 2001, control measures
needed to achieve any additional reductions which were determined to be
appropriate for ARB. Please consult the final approval document and our
proposed approval (64 FR 30276, June 7, 1999) for more details on the
update, the ``Federal measures,'' and the Public Consultative Process
on national mobile source measures.
D. 1997 South Coast AQMP and the 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP
The South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD, or
``District'') adopted a completely revised plan on November 8, 1996
(``1997 South Coast AQMP''), and ARB submitted the revision on February
5, 1997. The 1997 South Coast AQMP was not federally required for
ozone, but was adopted by the District to address, in a comprehensive
fashion, Federal and State requirements for particulate matter, carbon
monoxide, and nitrogen dioxide, and State requirements for an ozone
plan update. The 1997 South Coast AQMP revised the emissions inventory,
modeling, and local control commitments in the attainment
demonstration, but did not revise the State SIP commitments adopted in
the 1994 Ozone SIP. The 1997 South Coast AQMP included a maintenance
plan and redesignation request for the nitrogen dioxide NAAQS, and EPA
approved the plan and redesignation request in 1998. See 63 FR 39747
(July 24, 1998).
The District amended the ozone portion of the 1997 South Coast AQMP
on December 10, 1999 (``1999 South Coast AQMP Ozone Amendment''), and
ARB submitted the plan to us on February 4, 2000. We approved the ozone
portion of the 1997 South Coast AQMP, as amended in 1999, on April 10,
2000 (65 FR 18903), and refer to the amended plan as the 1997/1999
South Coast Ozone SIP.
Specifically, in our April 2000 final rule, we approved the
baseline and projected emissions inventories and attainment
demonstration as contained in the 1997 South Coast AQMP, and we
approved the following elements in the 1999 South Coast AQMP Ozone
Amendment: District commitments to adopt and implement near-term and
intermediate-term control measures; the District's commitment to adopt
and implement ``black box'' control measures; the District's commitment
to achieve overall emissions reductions for the years 1999-2008; the
District's commitment to implement those measures that had been adopted
in regulatory form between 1994 and 1999; the rate-of-progress plan for
the 1999, 2002, 2005, 2008 and 2010 milestone years; the amendment to
the attainment demonstration in the 1997 South Coast AQMP for ozone;
and the motor vehicle emissions budgets. Upon the effective date of our
approval of the 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP, this plan replaced and
superseded the 1994 Ozone SIP for the South Coast Air Basin with the
exception of the State control measures for mobile sources, consumer
products, and pesticides, and EPA's commitment to take part in the
Public Consultative Process as discussed in the previous section of
this document.
E. 2003 State Strategy
On October 23, 2003, ARB adopted the Final 2003 State and Federal
Strategy for the California SIP (``2003 State Strategy''). The 2003
State Strategy consists of the Proposed 2003 State and Federal Strategy
for the California SIP (released August 25, 2003), as modified by ARB
in the resolution approving the strategy. The modifications to the
proposed strategy are set forth in attachment A to ARB Board Resolution
03-22. The 2003 State Strategy identifies ARB's regulatory agenda to
reduce ozone and particulate matter in California by 2010 and was
submitted to update and replace the State's control measure commitments
in the 1994 Ozone SIP, as modified in 1999 for the South Coast.
As submitted, the 2003 State Strategy includes four components
affecting the South Coast: (1) State agency commitments to pursue 20
new defined near-term control measures to reduce emissions from mobile
sources and consumer products, and to continue implementation of the
existing SIP commitment to reduce VOC emissions from pesticide use; (2)
State agency annual adoption commitments to achieve at least 50 tons
per day (tpd) VOC and 59 tpd NOX emissions reduction in the
South Coast in 2010 from these or other near-term measures; \8\ (3) ARB
commitment to identify and adopt strategies by 2008 to achieve an
additional 97 tpd combined VOC and NOX reductions in the
South Coast through, in part, the evaluation of 21 additional control
concepts between 2004-2006 and adoption of those found to be feasible
as SIP measures on a specified schedule; and (4) ARB's ``black box''
commitment to reduce emissions in the South Coast by 118-233 tpd of VOC
and 0-159 tpd of NOX by 2010 for ``black box'' emissions
reductions.\9\ ARB submitted the 2003 State Strategy to us on January
9, 2004. On February 18, 2004, EPA found the 2003 State Strategy to be
complete.
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\8\ ARB's annual adoption commitment represents a commitment to
adopt and implement near-term measures to achieve, at a minimum, the
VOC and NOX emissions reductions in tpd in the South
Coast in 2010. Each year from 2003 through 2006 has a separate
adoption commitment for VOC and NOX. For example, ARB's
commitment for 2003 is to adopt near-term measures in that year that
in the aggregate achieve at least 10 tpd VOC and 11 tpd
NOX emissions reductions in 2010 in the South Coast.
Under this commitment, reductions in excess of the minimum
commitment for a given year may be applied to the commitment for
subsequent years.
\9\ The range is based on how much of the 97 tpd commitment is
achieved from VOC versus NOX, and EPA action on a Federal
emissions reduction assignment in the 2003 South Coast AQMP for 18
tpd VOC and 68 tpd NOX by 2010.
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By letter dated February 13, 2008, ARB withdrew certain elements of
the 2003 State Strategy that relate to the South Coast. Specifically,
ARB withdrew four specific defined near-term measures, the State agency
annual adoption commitments described above,\10\ the ARB commitment to
identify and adopt strategies by 2008 to achieve an additional 97 tpd
combined VOC and NOX reductions in the South
[[Page 63411]]
Coast,\11\ and ARB's ``black box'' commitment described above. For the
South Coast, the remaining component of the 2003 State Strategy is the
State agency commitments to pursue 16 new defined near-term control
measures (and to continue implementation of the existing SIP commitment
to reduce VOC emissions from pesticide use).\12\ We are addressing the
remaining commitments for the South Coast in the 2003 State Strategy in
today's action.
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\10\ In ARB's February 13, 2008 letter, ARB indicated that it
was withdrawing the Commitment to Reduce Emissions via Adoption
Schedule for the South Coast Air Basin outlined in Section I.D.1,
Table I-6 of the Proposed 2003 State and Federal Strategy for the
California SIP (released August 25, 2003); however, in adopting the
2003 State Strategy, the ARB Board (via Resolution 03-22) modified
the commitment by increasing the total related emissions reduction
commitment to a total of 50 tpd VOC and 59 tpd NOX in the
South Coast in 2010. See table A-5 of attachment A to ARB Resolution
03-22. ARB clarified, in a letter dated October 14, 2008, that the
reference in the February 13th letter was in error and that it
intended to withdraw the commitment to reduce emissions via adoption
schedule for the South Coast as modified in Resolution 03-22.
\11\ We interpret ARB's withdrawal of the 97 tpd combined VOC
plus NOX element of the long-term strategy for the South
Coast to include withdrawal of the commitment to evaluate the
feasibility of 21 concepts for adoption as SIP measures listed in
attachment A-1 to ARB Resolution 03-22.
\12\ Certain other components of the 2003 State Strategy relate
to the San Joaquin Valley, and were proposed for action in a
separate rulemaking.
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F. 2003 South Coast SIP
On August 1, 2003, the District approved the 2003 South Coast Air
Quality Management Plan and submitted the final plan (``2003 South
Coast AQMP'') to ARB on October 15, 2003. The 2003 South Coast AQMP
includes revisions to the 1997 South Coast AQMP for PM10, CO, and NO2,
and revisions to the 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP. Specifically,
with respect to the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, the 2003 South Coast AQMP
updates the emissions inventories, the local control measure element,
including the transportation control measures (TCMs) element,\13\ the
ROP and attainment demonstrations, and the motor vehicle emissions
budgets. With respect to NO2, the 2003 South Coast AQMP updates the
maintenance plan and related motor vehicle emissions budget. The ozone
portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP relies on emission reduction
commitments in the 2003 State Strategy, described above, and assigns
the Federal Government the responsibility of achieving 18 tpd VOC and
68 tpd NOX by 2010 in the South Coast, as the Federal
Government's share of the ``black box'' strategy.
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\13\ By letter dated October 14, 2008, ARB withdrew the TCM
portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP.
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The 2003 South Coast AQMP includes a primary attainment strategy
(option 1) that sets emission targets based on reductions from local,
State, and Federal elements but also includes an alternative strategy
(option 2) that excludes reductions from Federal sources and modifies
the attainment emission targets if EPA does not accept the District's
primary attainment strategy. Under option 2, the 2003 South Coast AQMP
relaxes the NOX control target by 68 tpd NOX and
assigns the 18 tpd (assigned to the Federal Government under option 1)
to ARB.
On October 23, 2003, ARB adopted the 2003 South Coast AQMP, as
modified in ARB Resolution 03-23 (``2003 South Coast SIP''). In
Resolution 03-23, ARB adopted a modified version of ``option 1'' by
adopting a backstop whereby, if EPA were to find the Federal assignment
unacceptable, the ARB obligates itself to cover the related 18 tpd VOC
and 68 tpd NOX emissions reductions as part of its ``black
box'' commitment. In Resolution 03-23, ARB also rejected one
contingency measure included in the AQMP (CTY-04--``Enhanced Oxygenated
Fuels Content''), and modified the VOC and NOX MVEBs.
On January 9, 2004, ARB submitted the 2003 South Coast SIP. On
February 18, 2004, EPA found the 2003 South Coast AQMP to be complete.
On March 11, 2004, we found the MVEBs in the 2003 South Coast SIP
adequate for transportation conformity purposes. See 69 FR 15325 (March
25, 2004). Since then, the CO budgets in the 2003 South Coast SIP have
been superseded by final EPA approval of the 2005 South Coast CO
Maintenance Plan (discussed below), and the ozone budgets have been
superseded by EPA's adequacy determination on 8-hour ozone budgets in
the 2007 South Coast SIP (see 73 FR 28110, May 15, 2008; as corrected
on 73 FR 34837, June 18, 2008).
To date, we have taken final action to approve the PM10
portion of the 2003 South Coast SIP, see 70 FR 69081 (November 14,
2005), but have not taken action on any other portions of the plan.
With respect to the CO portion of the plan, while we have not taken
action on the CO portion of the 2003 South Coast SIP, we have taken
action to approve a later-submitted plan, the 2005 South Coast CO
Maintenance Plan, and have taken action to approve ARB's redesignation
request for the South Coast to ``attainment'' for CO. See 72 FR 26718
(May 11, 2007). We consider the submittal and approval of the CO
maintenance plan and redesignation request to supersede the CO portion
of the 2003 South Coast SIP and plan to take no further action on CO
portion of the plan.\14\ Today's document addresses the remaining
portions of the 2003 South Coast SIP (i.e., the ozone and NO2 portions
of the plan).
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\14\ The principal purpose, other than updating the CO portion
of the 1997 South Coast AQMP, for developing and submitting the CO
portion of the 2003 South Coast SIP was to provide the basis for a
CO maintenance plan. See page 10 of the District's Carbon Monoxide
Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan (February 2005) (``2005
CO Maintenance Plan''). That purpose has already been served by
virtue of our approval of the 2005 CO Maintenance Plan in May 2007.
Also, we note that the 2005 CO Maintenance Plan, which we have now
approved, carries forward emissions estimates and projections, and a
modeled attainment demonstration, from the 2003 South Coast AQMP as
further evidence of the supersession of the CO portion of the 2003
South Coast AQMP.
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III. Review of the 2003 State Strategy and 2003 South Coast SIP
A. Procedural Requirements
CAA section 110(l) requires revisions to a SIP to be adopted by the
state after reasonable notice and public hearing. EPA has promulgated
specific requirements for SIP revisions in 40 CFR part 51, subpart F.
The ARB provided the requisite notice and public comment periods
prior to adoption of the 2003 State Strategy. Notices for a public
hearing to be held on September 24-25, 2003 (later postponed to October
23, 2003), and for the availability of the Draft 2003 State Strategy,
were published on August 25, 2003. At its October 23, 2003 Board
hearing, ARB adopted the 2003 State Strategy as a revision to the
California SIP, and submitted the revision to EPA for approval on
January 9, 2004.
The SCAQMD provided the requisite notice and public comment periods
prior to adoption of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. The Draft 2003 South
Coast AQMP was released for public comment on February 5, 2003, and
proposed modifications to the draft plan, as well as responses to
comments on the draft plan, were released for public comment in June
2003. Notices for five public hearings held on various dates in July
2003 and on August 1, 2003, and for the availability of the revised
Draft 2003 South Coast AQMP, were published on June 6, 2003. At the
August 1, 2003 Governing Board meeting, the District adopted the 2003
South Coast AQMP and submitted the plan to ARB shortly thereafter. ARB
adopted the plan, with certain modifications, as a revision to the
California SIP on October 23, 2003 in accordance with state law, and
submitted the revision to EPA for approval on January 9, 2004.
The SIP submittal packages for the 2003 State Strategy and the 2003
South Coast SIP include evidence of public notices and hearings, agency
responses to public comments, and evidence of District and ARB
adoptions as described above. Based on review of these materials, we
find that the State has met the procedural requirements of CAA section
110(l) and 40 CFR part 51, subpart F for submittal of the two SIP
revisions.
[[Page 63412]]
B. Base Year and Projected Baseline Emissions Inventory
CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 182(a)(1) require nonattainment areas to
submit a comprehensive, accurate, and current inventory of actual
emissions from all sources, in accordance with guidance provided by the
EPA. The inventory is to represent emissions during the appropriate
season; for example, ozone precursor (VOC and NOX)
inventories are to represent summer weekday emissions. See EPA's
General Preamble for implementation of title I of the CAA Amendments of
1990, 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992) (``General Preamble''), at 13502.
EPA guidance for 1-hour ozone SIP emission inventories includes, in
addition to the General Preamble: ``Procedures for the Preparation of
Emission Inventories for Carbon Monoxide and Precursors of Ozone,
Volume I: General Guidance for Stationary Sources,'' EPA-450/4-91-016;
and ``Procedures for Emission Inventory Preparation, Volume IV: Mobile
Sources,'' EPA-450/5-91-026d Revised.
In 2000, we approved the base and future year (summer season)
emissions inventories in the 1997 South Coast AQMP as meeting the
requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 182(a)(1). See 65 FR 18903,
at 18904 (April 10, 2000). In 1998, we approved the base and future
year (winter season) emissions inventories in the 1997 South Coast AQMP
for the purposes of the NO2 maintenance plan. See 63 FR
39747 (July 24, 1998). The 2003 South Coast AQMP contains revised base
and future year emissions inventories for ozone precursors, VOC and
NOX (summer season), and for NOX (winter season,
for NO2 planning purposes). The District describes the basis
for the revisions in the inventories in chapter 3 of the 2003 South
Coast AQMP. More detail is provided in appendix III of the plan.
The emissions inventories in the 2003 South Coast AQMP reflect
estimates of emissions from numerous source subcategories within four
major categories of sources, i.e., point, area, off-road, and on-road.
The plan presents annual average day inventories, as well as planning
inventories (summer for ozone and winter for NO2), for 1995,
1997, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, and 2020. The
plan also includes a reconstructed emissions inventory for 1990, the
base year for air quality planning under the CAA Amendments of 1990.
The inventories reflect updated demographic data, and vehicle
activity forecasts, as well as updated calculation methods. The on-road
emissions were calculated using ARB's EMFAC2002 emission factors \15\
and the transportation activity data provided by the Southern
California Association of Governments (SCAG) from their 2001 Regional
Transportation Plan. Emissions estimates from off-road vehicle
categories (e.g., trains, ships, construction equipment) were developed
using ARB's OFF-ROAD emissions model, which calculates emissions from
more than 100 types of off-road sources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ On April 1, 2003, EPA approved EMFAC2002 for use in SIP
development and required its use in transportation conformity
analyses in California (68 FR 15720). On January 18, 2008, we
approved an updated version of EMFAC, EMFAC2007, for use by
California state and local governments to meet CAA requirements. See
73 FR 3464. We are proposing approval of the revised emissions
inventories that rely on the earlier version of EMFAC because the
earlier version was the one approved at the time when the 2003 South
Coast SIP was submitted to EPA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area source emissions were jointly developed by ARB and the
District for a total of 350 categories. For 1997, reported data are
used for point sources emitting more than 4 tons per year of any one of
the criteria air contaminants (i.e., VOC, NOX,
SOX, or particulate matter) except for CO for which the data
reporting threshold is 100 tons per year). (See Appendix III of 2003
South Coast AQMP.) The future emission forecasts are based on
demographic and economic growth projections provided by SCAG, and take
into account emission reductions resulting from ARB and District
regulations adopted by October 31, 2002.
The emissions inventory requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(3) and
182(a)(1) were met in the 1994 Ozone Plan, and then, as amended, in the
1997 South Coast AQMP. Based on our review of the inventory
documentation included in the 2003 South Coast AQMP, we find that the
emission inventories in the 2003 South Coast AQMP are also
comprehensive, accurate, and current at the time the SIP was submitted,
and improved relative to those that are in the approved SIP.
Accordingly, we propose to approve the base and future year emissions
inventories (summer and winter seasons) in the 2003 South Coast AQMP as
meeting the requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(3) and 181(a)(1).
C. Control Measures and Contingency Measures
The CAA requires that SIPs ``shall include enforceable emission
limitations, and such other control measures, means or techniques * *
*, as well as schedules and timetables for compliance, as may be
necessary or appropriate to provide for attainment * * * by the
applicable attainment date * * *.'' CAA section 172(c)(6). The CAA also
allows areas classified as extreme to include ``provisions * * * which
anticipate development of new control techniques or improvement of
existing control technologies, * * * if the State demonstrates * * *
that--(A) such provisions are not necessary to achieve the incremental
emission reductions required during the first 10 years after the date
of the enactment of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990; and (B) the
State has submitted enforceable commitments to develop and adopt
contingency measures to be implemented * * * if the anticipated
technologies do not achieve planned reductions.'' CAA section
182(e)(5). The latter provisions which anticipate development of new
control techniques or improvement of existing control technologies are
often referred to as the ``black box.''
1. State's Defined Measures
In 1997, we approved all of the State's control measures contained
in the 1994 Ozone SIP that EPA had not previously approved. See 62 FR
1150 at 1183 (January 8, 1997). EPA's 1997 approval included assignment
of specific emissions reductions by nonattainment area and milestone
year for all of the State control measures, including those previously
approved, under section 110(k)(3), 182(e)(5), and 301(a) of the CAA. In
1999, we approved a revision to the State's commitment to achieve long-
term emissions reductions in the South Coast at the close of the Public
Consultative Process. See 64 FR 39923, at 39926-39927 (July 23, 1999).
ARB intended the 2003 State Strategy, as submitted on January 9,
2004, to update and entirely replace the State's control strategy
contained in the 1994 Ozone SIP (as modified in 1999 for the South
Coast); however, as noted previously, on February 13, 2008, ARB
withdrew key components of the strategy with respect to the South
Coast, including the near-term annual emissions reductions commitments,
additional emissions reduction commitment for the South Coast, and the
``black box'' emissions reduction commitment. Therefore, with these key
components missing, we do not interpret the remaining component the
2003 State Strategy (i.e., commitment for near-term defined measures)
as replacing the ozone control strategy, but rather as a set of new
measures to achieve additional emissions reductions in the South Coast
by the 1-hour ozone NAAQS attainment date of 2010.
The remaining component of the 2003 State Strategy is a commitment
by ARB
[[Page 63413]]
to have its staff submit to the Board and propose for adoption the
control measures set forth in Table 1.\16\ Under the 2003 State
Strategy, the ARB staff proposal for each control measure must, at a
minimum, achieve the estimated emission reductions set forth in Table 1
of this document (derived from the 2003 State Strategy, ARB Resolution
03-22, Attachment A-6, Table I-7). Where a range of estimated emission
reductions is shown, the ARB staff proposal must, at a minimum, achieve
the lower end of the range of reductions. ARB's Board then must take
action on or before the action dates set forth in Table 1, but such
action by the Board may include any action within its discretion. The
measures themselves are discussed in detail in sections II and III of
the Proposed 2003 State and Federal Strategy for California SIP (August
25, 2003). We note that, based on Table 1-3 in the Final 2007 South
Coast AQMP (June 2007) and further investigation by EPA as to the
status of ARB's rulemakings, we believe that ARB staff proposals were
submitted to the Board for most of the 15 obligations listed in Table 1
and that ARB has taken action on such proposals. Similarly we believe
that the Bureau of Automotive Repair (BAR) has fulfilled its one
obligation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ In the case of control measure LT/MED-DUTY-2, the
commitment is not ARB's, but rather, the Bureau of Automotive
Repair's (BAR's) commitment. BAR's commitment to adopt the measure
is documented in appendix I-1 of the Proposed 2003 State and Federal
Strategy for the California State Implementation Plan (August 25,
2003).
Table 1--Defined State Measures To Be Developed and Proposed
[Source: 2003 State Strategy, ARB Resolution 03-22, Attachment A-6, Table I-7]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expected reductions (south
Final Implementation coast 2010)
Strategy (agency) Name action date date ------------------------------
VOC NOX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LT/MED-DUTY-1 (ARB).......... Replace or Update 2005 2007-2008 0-20.......... 0-20.
Emission Control
Systems on Existing
Passenger Vehicles.
LT/MED-DUTY-2 (BAR).......... Improve Smog Check to 2002-2005 2002-2006 5.6-5.8....... 8.0-8.4.
Reduce Emissions
from Existing
Passenger and Cargo
Vehicles.
ON-RD HVY-DUTY-1 (ARB)....... Augment Truck and Bus 2003 2005 0-0.1......... 0.
Highway Inspections
with Community-Based
Inspections.
ON-RD HVY-DUTY-3 (ARB)....... Pursue Approaches to 2003-2006 2004-2010 1.4-4.5....... 16-21.
Clean Up the
Existing and New
Truck/Bus Fleet.
OFF-RD CI-1 (ARB)............ Pursue Approaches to 2004-2008 2006-2010 2.3-7.8....... 8-10.
Clean Up the
Existing Heavy-Duty
Off-Road Equipment
Fleet (Compression
Ignition Engines).
OFF-RD LSI-1 (ARB)........... Set Lower Emission 2004-2005 2007 0............. 0.8.
Standards for New
Off-Road Gas
Engines(Spark-
Ignited Engines 25
hp and Greater).
OFF-RD LSI-2 (ARB)........... Clean Up Off-Road Gas 2004 2006-2012 0.8-2.0....... 2-4.
Equipment Through
Retrofit Controls
and New Emissions
Standards (Spark-
Ignited Engines 25
hp and Greater).
SMALL OFF-RD-1 (ARB)......... Set Lower Emission 2003 2005 1.9........... 0.2.
Standards for New
Handheld Small
Engines and
Equipment (Spark-
Ignited Engines
under 25 hp such as
Weed Trimmers, Leaf
Blowers, and
Chainsaws).
SMALL OFF-RD-2 (ARB)......... Set Lower Emission 2003 2007 6.3-7.4....... 0.6-1.9.
Standards for New
Non-Handheld Small
Engines and
Equipment (Spark-
Ignited Engines
under 25 hp such as
Lawnmowers).
MARINE-1 (ARB)............... Pursue Approaches to 2003-2005 2005 0.1........... 2.7.
Clean Up the
Existing Harbor
Craft Fleet--Cleaner
Engines and Fuels.
MARINE-2 (ARB)............... Pursue Approaches to 2003-2005 2003-2010 0.1........... 0.1.
Reduce Land-Based
Port Emissions--
Alternative Fuels,
Cleaner Engines,
Retrofit Controls,
Electrification,
Education Programs,
Operational Controls.
FUEL-2 (ARB)................. Set Low-Sulfur 2003 2006 Enabling...... Enabling.
Standards for Diesel
Fuel for Trucks/
Buses, Off-Road
Equipment, and
Stationary Engines.
CONS-1 (ARB)................. Set New Consumer 2003-2004 2006 2.3........... 0.
Products Limits for
2006.
CONS-2 (ARB)................. Set New Consumer 2006-2008 2008-2010 8.5-15........ 0.
Products Limits for
2008-2010.
FVR-1 (ARB).................. Increase Recovery of 2003 2007 0-0.1......... 0.
Fuel Vapors from
Aboveground Storage
Tanks.
FVR-2 (ARB).................. Recover Fuel Vapors 2006-2009 2006-2010 0-0.1......... 0.
from Gasoline
Dispensing at
Marinas.
PEST-1\1\ (DPR).............. Implement Existing ........... 1996-2010 Base-line..... N/A.
Pesticide Strategy.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Potential Range for Defined Near-Term State Measures............................. 33.3-72.9..... 38.4-69.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ We interpret our approval of this measure as maintaining the status quo with respect to the existing
pesticide strategy (i.e., the SIP will continue to reflect the strategy as approved by EPA in 1997).
[[Page 63414]]
Assuming that the remaining component of the 2003 State Strategy
adds to, but does not replace, the existing SIP ozone strategy, we
propose to approve the State commitments with respect to the near-term
defined measures listed in table 1 as described above as strengthening
the SIP.\17\ We propose to approve the State's commitments with respect
to the near-term defined measures, not as fulfilling any particular
requirement under the CAA, but as a strengthening of the South Coast
portion of the California SIP. As such, our proposed approval is made
under CAA sections 110(k)(3) and 301(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ In the alternative, if ARB indicates an intention to
replace the existing SIP ozone strategy by the commitment for near-
term measures shown in table 1 of this document, then we propose to
disapprove the set of defined measures on the basis that the State
has not provided a demonstration that replacement of the existing
SIP ozone strategy by the set of measures in table 1 would not
interfere with attainment or maintenance of the NAAQS or any other
applicable requirement of the Act. See CAA section 110(l).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. District's Near-Term Control Measures, Annual Emissions Reductions
Commitment, and Contingency Measure
In 2000, under CAA section 110(k)(3), we approved the District's
commitment to adopt and implement the short- and intermediate-term
control measures in the 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone SIP by the dates
specified to achieve the identified emissions reductions, and the
District's commitment to adopt and implement control measures to
achieve the identified annual emissions reduction commitments for 1999
to 2008.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Our approval made enforceable the District's commitment to
achieve the overall emissions reduction schedule and creates the
possibility of District control measure adjustments and
substitutions under the approved SIP, so long as the overall
emission reductions obligations are met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2003 South Coast AQMP includes an updated list of commitments
for those District control measures that remain from the 1997/1999
South Coast Ozone SIP, and a set of new District commitments to adopt
near-term control measures. See table 2 of this document. Consistent
with the approach in the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP, the District
commits to meet the adoption dates, implementation dates, and emission
reduction targets shown in table 2 (derived from table 4-1 of the 2003
South Coast AQMP), unless a measure, in whole or in part, is determined
to be infeasible.
Also consistent with the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP, the District
includes in the 2003 plan an additional enforceable commitment to
achieve aggregate emission reductions through a schedule of rule
adoption and implementation for specific years. See table 3 of this
document. Under the 2003 South Coast AQMP, the District reserves the
right to substitute measures listed in table 2 (of this document) with
other measures, provided that the given measure is found to be
infeasible and that the overall equivalent emission reductions by
adoption and implementation dates shown in tables 3 and 4 (of this
document) are maintained. Based on table 1-2 of the 2007 South Coast
AQMP (June 2007), we believe that most of the District's near-term
commitments with respect to control measures for which emission
reductions targets are identified have been met.
Table 2--District's Near-Term VOC and NOX Control Measures
[Source: 2003 South Coast AQMP, Table 4-1]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduction
Control measure Title of control measure target 1 (tons/
day)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remaining 1997/1999 South Coast Ozone Plan Control Measures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CTS-07........................................ Further Emission Reductions from Architectural 8.5
Coatings and Cleanup Solvents (Rule 1113) (VOC).
CTS-10........................................ Miscellaneous Industrial Coatings and Solvent 3.0
Operations (VOC).
FUG-05........................................ Emission Reductions from Fugitive Emissions 2.0
Sources (VOC).
MSC-01........................................ Promotion of Lighter Color Roofing and Road TBD
Materials and Tree Planting Programs (All
Pollutants).
MSC-03........................................ Promotion of Catalyst-Surface Coating Technology TBD
Programs (All Pollutants).
PRC-07........................................ Industrial Process Operations (VOC)............. 2.0
WST-01 \2\.................................... Emission Reductions from Livestock Waste (VOC).. 4.8
WST-02 \3\.................................... Emission Reductions from Composting............. 1.2
FSS-04 \4\.................................... Emission Charges of $5,000 per Ton of VOC for TBD
Stationary Sources Emitting Over 10 Tons per
Year (VOC).
FLX-01........................................ Economic Incentive Programs..................... TBD
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Control Measures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMB-10........................................ Additional NOX Reductions for RECLAIM (NOX)..... 3.0
MSC-05........................................ Truck Stop Electrification (NOX)................ 2.1
MSC-07........................................ Natural Gas Fuel Specifications (NOX)........... TBD
MSC-08........................................ Further Emission Reductions from Large VOC TBD
Sources (VOC).
FSS-05 \5\.................................... Mitigation Fee Program for Federal Sources (All TBD
Pollutants).
FSS-06........................................ Further Emission Reductions from In-Use Off-Road TBD
Vehicles and Equipment (VOC, NOX, PM10).
FSS-07........................................ Emission Fee Program for Port-related Mobile TBD
Sources (All Pollutants).
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Total..................................... VOC............................................. 21.5
-----------------------------------------------------------------
NOX............................................. 5.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The emission reductions estimates are based on the 2010 planning inventory in the 2003 South Coast AQMP. The
District notes that the actual reductions are subject to change during the rulemaking process based on the
latest available emission inventory data.
\2\ Previously approved in connection with the PM10 portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. See 70 FR 69081
(November 14, 2005).
\3\ Previously approved in connection with the PM10 portion of the 2003 South Coast AQMP. See 70 FR 69081
(November 14, 2005).
\4\ The measure is intended to achieve reductions after the 2010 attainment date.
\5\ Proposed for disapproval herein.
[[Page 63415]]
Based on our review of the District's updated strategy in the 2003
South Coast AQMP for achieving near-term emissions reductions, and the
progress the District has achieved to date in implementing the
measures, we propose to approve the District's commitment to adopt the
near-term measures listed in table 2 (except for FSS-05, as described
below) and commitment to achieve aggregate emissions reductions through
the rule and adoption schedule shown in table 3.
Table 3--District's Near-Term VOC and NOX Emissions Reductions Commitment To Be Achieved Through Rule Adoption
and Implementation 1
[Source: 2003 South Coast AQMP, Table 4-8A]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOC NOX
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Based on Based on
Based on implementation Based on implementation
adoption date date adoption date date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002.................................... 0.6 ................ ................ ................
2003.................................... 16.9 0.6 ................ ................
2004.................................... 2.0 ................ 3.0 ................
2005.................................... 2.0 ................ 2.1 ................
2006.................................... ................ 4.8 ................ ................
2007.................................... ................ 2.0 ................ 2.1
2008.................................... ................ 12.1 ................ ................
2009.................................... ................ ................ ................ ................
2010.................................... ................ 2.0 ................ 3.0
Total............................... 21.5 21.5 5.1 5.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In tons per day based on the 2010 planning inventory in the 2003 South Coast AQMP.
Like the State defined control measures discussed above, we propose
to approve the District's updated strategy for near-term emissions
reductions in the 2003 South Coast AQMP, not as fulfilling any
particular requirement under the CAA, but as a strengthening of the
South Coast portion of the California SIP. As such, our proposed
approval is made under CAA sections 110(k)(3) and 301(a).
One particular District control measure, FSS-05 (``Mitigation Fee
Program for Federal Sources''), assigns to EPA the responsibility of
adopting a mitigation fee program. See page 4-17 of the 2003 South
Coast AQMP. Under this program, the mitigation fee would be paid by the
owners of such sources as aircraft, ocean-going vessels, trains, and
pre-empted off-road equipment (that are under the jurisdiction of EPA)
through EPA rulemaking and/or EPA grants to the District. The District
would then use the monies collected to implement strategies for both
federal and non-federal sources to achieve equivalent reductions for
SIP purposes. We propose to disapprove this particular control measure
on the grounds that States are not given the authority under the CAA to
assign emission reductions responsibilities to the Federal Government.
For a detailed discussion of EPA's view on ``federal assignments,'' see
EPA's final rule approving the 1994 Ozone SIP (62 FR 1150, at 1152-1155
(January 8, 1997).
Under the 2003 South Coast AQMP, the expected progress in meeting
the AQMP attainment goals, measured in terms of emission reductions, is
verified through the annual auditing program called the Reasonable
Further Progress (RFP) program. In the event the RFP program shows that
the implementation of the plan is not providing adequate progress and
the interim emission reduction goals have not been met, the District
must take action to bring forward measures that are scheduled for later
adoption or implementation, or to implement certain other contingency
measures. See section 2 of appendix IV-A of the 2003 South Coast AQMP.
With respect to progress towards the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, the 2003 South
Coast AQMP includes one contingency measure, CTY-01--Accelerated
Implementation of Control Measures, that would accelerate the starting
implementation date for the stationary and mobile source control
measures that have implementation dates on and after 2004. The original
and revised (i.e., under CTY-01) starting implementation dates of the
stationary and mobile source control measures affected by the
contingency measure are shown in table 2 of chapter 9 of the 2003 South
Coast AQMP. As noted above, we believe that most of the District's
near-term commitments to adopt defined measures have been met.
Based on our review of contingency measure strategy, and the
progress the District has achieved to date in implementing the
measures, we propose to approve CTY-01 (except for the individual FSS-
05, which we are proposing to disapprove for the reasons given above)
as a strengthening of the South Coast portion of the California
SIP.\19\ As such, our proposed approval is made under CAA sections
110(k)(3) and 301(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ We are proposing in this document to disapprove the rate-
of-progress demonstration in the 2003 South Coast AQMP, but we note
that CTY-01, by its terms, could be triggered under the District's
RFP program regardless of our action on the ROP demonstration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. District's Black Box Emissions Reduction Commitment
In 2000, we approved the District's commitment to adopt and
implement the long-term ``black box'' control measures in the 1997/1999
South Coast Ozone Plan by the dates specified to achieve the identified
emissions reductions under CAA sections 110(k)(3) and 182(e)(5). See 65
FR 18903, at 18905 (April 10, 2000).
In the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP, the District calculated that the
remaining portion of its ``black box'' commitment amounted to 28 tpd of
VOC. In the 2003 South Coast AQMP, the District contends that, after
implementation of its proposed near-term measures, the District would
be exceeding its emission target in the 1997/1999 South Coast SIP