Revised National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit Regulation and Effluent Limitations Guidelines for Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations in Response to the Waterkeeper, 70418-70486 [E8-26620]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 225 / Thursday, November 20, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 9, 122, and 412
[EPA–HQ–OW–2005–0037; FRL–8738–9]
RIN 2040–AE80
Revised National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System Permit Regulation
and Effluent Limitations Guidelines for
Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations in Response to the
Waterkeeper Decision
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act (Clean Water Act
or CWA), EPA is revising the National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permitting requirements and
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards (ELGs) for concentrated
animal feeding operations (CAFOs) in
response to the order issued by the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
in Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v. EPA,
399 F.3d 486 (2d Cir. 2005). This final
rule responds to the court order while
furthering the statutory goal of restoring
and maintaining the nation’s water
quality by ensuring that CAFOs
properly manage manure generated by
their operations.
This final rule revises several aspects
of EPA’s current regulations governing
discharges from CAFOs. EPA is
modifying the requirement to apply for
a permit by specifying that an owner or
operator of a CAFO that discharges or
proposes to discharge must apply for an
NPDES permit. The final rule also
includes an option for an unpermitted
CAFO to certify to the permitting
authority that the CAFO does not
discharge or propose to discharge. In
addition, EPA is clarifying how the
agricultural stormwater discharge
exemption criteria are interpreted for
unpermitted Large CAFOs. EPA is also
requiring CAFOs seeking permit
coverage to submit their nutrient
management plans (NMPs) with their
applications for individual permits or
notices of intent to be authorized under
general permits. Permitting authorities
are required to review the NMPs and
provide the public with an opportunity
for meaningful public review and
comment. Permitting authorities are also
required to incorporate terms of NMPs
as NPDES permit conditions.
Additionally, this action removes the
provision that allowed CAFOs to use a
100-year, 24-hour containment structure
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to fulfill the no discharge requirement
for new source swine, poultry, and veal
calf operations. Instead, this action
authorizes permit writers, upon request
by swine, poultry, and veal calf CAFOs
that are new sources, to establish best
management practice no discharge
effluent limitations when the facility
demonstrates that it has designed an
open containment system that will
comply with the no discharge
requirements.
This final rule also responds to the
court’s remand orders regarding water
quality-based effluent limitations
(WQBELs) and pathogens. EPA is
clarifying that WQBELs may be required
in permits with respect to production
area discharges and discharges from
land application areas that are not
exempt as agricultural stormwater.
Finally, EPA is making the finding that
the best conventional technology (BCT)
limitations established in 2003 also
apply to fecal coliform.
DATES: These final regulations are
effective December 22, 2008. For
judicial review purposes, this final rule
is promulgated as of 1 p.m. Eastern
Daylight Time, on December 4, 2008, as
provided in 40 CFR 23.2.
ADDRESSES: The record for this
rulemaking is available for inspection
and copying at the Water Docket,
located at the EPA Docket Center (EPA/
DC), EPA West 1301 Constitution Ave.,
NW., Washington, DC 20004. The record
is also available via EPA Dockets at
https://www.regulations.gov under
docket number OW–2005–0037. The
rule and key supporting documents are
also available electronically on the
Internet at https://www.epa.gov/npdes/
caforule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information contact Rebecca
Roose, Water Permits Division, Office of
Wastewater Management (4203M),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington,
DC 20460, telephone number: (202)
564–0758, e-mail address:
roose.rebecca@epa.gov. For additional
information specific to New Source
Performance Standards and BCT
Limitations contact Paul Shriner,
Engineering and Analysis Division,
Office of Science and Technology
(4303T), Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, telephone
number: (202) 566–1076, e-mail address:
shriner.paul@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does This Action Apply to Me?
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B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document
and Other Related Information?
C. Under What Legal Authority Is this
Final Rule Issued?
D. What Is the Comment Response
Document?
II. Background
A. The Clean Water Act
B. History of Actions To Address CAFOs
Under the NPDES Permitting Program
C. Ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit
D. What Requirements Still Apply to
CAFOs?
E. EPA’s Response to the Waterkeeper
Decision
III. The Final Rule: Revisions to the 2003
CAFO Rule in Response to Waterkeeper
A. Duty to Apply for a Permit
B. Agricultural Stormwater Exemption
C. Nutrient Management Plans
D. Compliance Dates
E. Water Quality-Based Effluent
Limitations
F. New Source Performance Standards for
Subpart D Facilities
G. BCT Limitations for Fecal Coliform
IV. Impact Analysis
A. Environmental Impacts
B. Administrative Burden Impacts
C. Response to Public Comment on the
Proposal
V. Cross-Media Considerations and
Pathogens
A. Cross-Media Approaches
B. Pathogens and Animal Feeding
Operations
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Congressional Review Act
I. General Information
A. Does This Action Apply to Me?
This action applies to concentrated
animal feeding operations (CAFOs) as
specified in section 502(14) of the Clean
Water Act (CWA), 33 U.S.C. 1362(14)
and defined in the NPDES regulations at
40 CFR 122.23. Table 1.1 provides a list
of standard industrial codes for
operations potentially regulated under
this revised rule. The rule also applies
to States and Tribes with authorized
NPDES Programs.
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TABLE 1.1—OPERATIONS POTENTIALLY REGULATED BY THIS RULE
North American
Industry Classification System
(NAICS)
Category
Examples of regulated entities
Industry ..................
Operators of animal production operations that meet the definition of a CAFO:
Beef cattle feedlots (including veal calves) .........................................................
Beef cattle ranching and farming .........................................................................
Hogs .....................................................................................................................
Sheep and Goats .................................................................................................
General livestock except dairy and poultry ..........................................................
Dairy farms ...........................................................................................................
Broilers, fryers, and roaster chickens ..................................................................
Chicken eggs .......................................................................................................
Turkey and turkey eggs .......................................................................................
Poultry hatcheries ................................................................................................
Poultry and eggs ..................................................................................................
Ducks ...................................................................................................................
Horses and other equines ....................................................................................
This table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this action. This table lists
the types of entities that EPA is now
aware could potentially be regulated by
this action. Other types of entities not
listed in the table could also be
regulated. To determine whether your
facility is regulated under this
rulemaking, you should carefully
examine the applicability criteria in
§ 122.23. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person
listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
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B. How Can I Get Copies of This
Document and Other Related
Information?
1. Docket. EPA has established an
official public docket for this action
under Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OW–
2005–0037. The official public docket
consists of the documents specifically
referenced in this action, any public
comments received, and other
information related to this action.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
(CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly
available docket materials are available
either electronically in
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Water Docket in the EPA Docket
Center, EPA West, 1301 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
excluding legal holidays. The telephone
number for the Public Reading Room is
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(202) 566–1744, and the telephone
number for the Water Docket is (202)
566–2426.
2. Electronic Access. This Federal
Register document and key supporting
documents are also electronically
available on the Internet at https://
www.epa.gov/npdes/agriculture.
C. Under What Legal Authority Is This
Final Rule Issued?
This final rule is issued under the
authority of sections 101, 301, 304, 306,
308, 402, and 501 of the CWA. 33 U.S.C.
1251, 1311, 1314, 1316, 1317, 1318,
1342, and 1361.
D. What Is the Comment Response
Document?
EPA received a large number of
comments on the 2006 proposed rule
(71 FR 37,744–87; June 20, 2006) and
the 2008 supplemental proposal (73 FR
12,321–40; March 7, 2008). EPA
evaluated all of the comments submitted
and prepared a Comment Response
Document containing both the
comments received and the Agency’s
responses to those comments. The
Comment Response Document
complements and supplements this
preamble by providing more detailed
explanations of EPA’s final action. The
Comment Response Document is
available in the Docket.
II. Background
A. The Clean Water Act
Congress enacted the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act (1972), also
known as the Clean Water Act (CWA),
to ‘‘restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the
nation’s waters’’ (CWA section 101(a)).
Among the core provisions, the CWA
establishes the NPDES permit program
to authorize and regulate the discharge
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112112
112111
11221
11241, 11242
11299
11212
11232
11231
11233
11234
11239
11239
11292
Standard Industrial Classification
(SIC)
0211
0212
0213
0214
0219
0241
0251
0252
0253
0254
0259
0259
0272
of pollutants from point sources to
waters of the U.S. (CWA section 402).
Section 502(14) of the CWA specifically
includes CAFOs in the definition of the
term ‘‘point source.’’ Section 502(12)
defines the term ‘‘discharge of a
pollutant’’ to mean ‘‘any addition of any
pollutant to navigable waters from any
point source’’ (emphasis added). EPA
has issued comprehensive regulations
that implement the NPDES program at
40 CFR part 122. The Act also provides
for the development of technologybased and water quality-based effluent
limitations that are imposed through
NPDES permits to control the discharge
of pollutants from point sources. CWA
sections 301(a) and (b).
B. History of Actions To Address CAFOs
Under the NPDES Permitting Program
EPA began regulating discharges of
wastewater and manure from CAFOs in
the 1970s. EPA initially issued national
effluent limitations guidelines and
standards for feedlots on February 14,
1974 (39 FR 5704), and NPDES CAFO
regulations on March 18, 1976 (41 FR
11,458).
In February 2003, EPA issued
revisions to these regulations that
focused on the 5% of the nation’s
animal feeding operations (AFOs) that
presented the highest risk of impairing
water quality and public health (68 FR
7176–7274; February 12, 2003) (‘‘the
2003 CAFO rule’’). The 2003 CAFO rule
required the owners or operators of all
CAFOs1 to seek coverage under an
NPDES permit, unless they
demonstrated no potential to discharge.
1 The Clean Water Act regulates the conduct of
persons, which includes the owners and operators
of CAFOs, rather than the facilities or their
discharges. To improve readability in this preamble,
reference is made to ‘‘CAFOs’’ as well as ‘‘owners’’
and ‘‘operators’’ of CAFOs. No change in meaning
is intended.
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A number of CAFO industry
organizations (American Farm Bureau
Federation, National Pork Producers
Council, National Chicken Council, and
National Turkey Federation (NTF),
although NTF later withdrew its
petition) and several environmental
groups (Waterkeeper Alliance, Natural
Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club,
and American Littoral Society) filed
petitions for judicial review of certain
aspects of the 2003 CAFO rule. This
case was brought before the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit. On
February 28, 2005, the court ruled on
these petitions and upheld most
provisions of the 2003 rule but vacated
and remanded others. Waterkeeper
Alliance, et al. v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486 (2d
Cir. 2005). The court’s decision is
described in detail below.
The revisions to the 2003 CAFO rule
being published today relate directly to
the changes required by the court’s
decision and continue to maintain the
focus on regulating discharges from the
universe of high-risk AFOs.
C. Ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit
The Second Circuit’s decision in
Waterkeeper upheld certain challenged
provisions of the 2003 rule and vacated
or remanded others, as follows.
1. Issues Upheld by the Court
This section discusses provisions of
the 2003 CAFO rule that were
challenged by either industry or
environmental petitioners, but were
upheld by the Waterkeeper Court and
therefore remain unchanged. EPA is not
revising any of these provisions and did
not solicit comment on them.
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(a) Land Application Regulatory
Framework and Interpretation of
‘‘Agricultural Stormwater’’
The Waterkeeper Court upheld EPA’s
authority to regulate, through NPDES
permits, the discharge of manure, litter,
or process wastewater that a CAFO
applies to its land application area. The
court rejected the industry petitioners’
claim that land application runoff must
be channelized before it can be
considered to be a point source
discharge subject to permitting. The
court noted that the CWA expressly
defines the term ‘‘point source’’ to
include ‘‘any * * * concentrated
animal feeding operation * * * from
which pollutants are or may be
discharged,’’ and found that the Act
‘‘not only permits, but demands’’ that
land application discharges be
construed as discharges ‘‘from’’ a CAFO.
399 F.3d at 510.
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The Waterkeeper Court also upheld
EPA’s determination in the 2003 CAFO
rule that precipitation-related
discharges of manure, litter, or process
wastewater from land application areas
under the control of a CAFO qualify as
‘‘agricultural stormwater’’ only where
the CAFO has applied the manure in
accordance with nutrient management
practices that ensure ‘‘appropriate
agricultural utilization’’ of the manure,
litter, or process wastewater nutrients.
EPA’s interpretation of the Act in this
regard was reasonable, the court found,
in light of Congressional intent in
excluding agricultural stormwater from
the meaning of the term ‘‘point source’’
and given the precedent set in an earlier
Second Circuit case, Concerned Area
Residents for the Environment v.
Southview Farm, 34 F.3d 114 (2d Cir.
1994). 399 F.3d at 508–09.
(b) Effluent Guidelines
The court rejected the environmental
organizations’ claim that EPA, in
developing best available technology
effluent limitations guidelines, had
failed to consider the single best
performing CAFO and adopt limitations
that reflected its performance. The court
found that EPA had collected extensive
data on the waste management systems
at CAFOs and had considered
approximately 11,000 public comments
on the proposed CAFO rule. The court
determined that EPA had either adopted
as the basis for its limitations the best
performing technology or declined to do
so for permissible reasons. 399 F.3d at
513.
The court upheld EPA’s decision in
the 2003 rule relating to groundwater
controls. In the 2003 rule, EPA stated
that the Agency believed that
requirements limiting the discharge of
pollutants to surface water via
groundwater that has a direct hydrologic
connection to surface water should be
addressed on a site-specific basis. The
Agency also stated that nothing in the
2003 rule was to be construed to
expand, diminish, or otherwise affect
the jurisdiction of the CWA over
discharges to surface water via
groundwater that has a direct hydrologic
connection to surface water. 399 F.3d at
514–15.
The court upheld the analytic
methodologies that EPA used for
determining whether the technologybased permit requirements for CAFOs
set in the 2003 rule would be
economically achievable by the industry
as a whole. 399 F.3d at 515–18.
2. Issues Vacated by the Court
The following are the elements of the
2003 rule that the Waterkeeper Court
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found to be unlawful and therefore
vacated.
(a) Duty To Apply
The CAFO industry organizations
argued that EPA exceeded its statutory
authority by requiring all CAFOs to
either apply for NPDES permits or
demonstrate that they have no potential
to discharge. The court agreed with the
CAFO industry petitioners on this issue
and therefore vacated the ‘‘duty to
apply’’ provision of the 2003 CAFO
rule.
The court found that the duty to
apply, based on the potential to
discharge, was invalid because the CWA
subjects only actual discharges to
permitting requirements rather than
potential discharges. The court
acknowledged EPA’s policy
considerations for seeking to impose a
duty to apply based on the potential to
discharge but found that the Agency
lacked statutory authority to do so. 399
F.3d at 505.
(b) Nutrient Management Plans (NMPs)
The court concluded that the 2003
CAFO rule impermissibly: (1)
Empowered permitting authorities to
issue permits without any meaningful
review of a CAFO’s NMP, (2) failed to
require that the terms of the nutrient
management plan be included as
effluent limitations in the NPDES
permit, and (3) violated the CWA’s
public participation requirements. The
court agreed with the environmental
petitioners on these three issues.
The court relied on provisions of the
Act that authorize point source
discharges only where NPDES permits
‘‘ensure that every discharge of
pollutants will comply with all
applicable effluent limitations and
standards,’’ citing CWA sections
402(a)(1), (a)(2), and (b). Because the
2003 CAFO rule did not provide for
permitting authority review of a CAFO’s
nutrient management plan before the
permit was issued, the court found that
the rule did not ensure that each
CAFO’s discharges comply with these
CWA provisions. The court also found
that the terms of the NMP themselves
are ‘‘effluent limitations’’ as that term is
defined in the Act and therefore must be
made part of the permit and be
enforceable as required under CWA
sections 301 and 402. The court also
held that as effluent limitations, those
terms must be made available for public
review. 399 F.3d at 499–502.
3. Issues Remanded by the Court
The Waterkeeper Court also remanded
other aspects of the CAFO rule to EPA
‘‘for further clarification and analysis.’’
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(a) Water Quality-Based Effluent Limits
The court agreed with EPA that
agricultural stormwater is excluded
from the meaning of the term ‘‘point
source’’ and therefore is not subject to
water quality-based effluent limitations
in permits. However, the court directed
EPA to ‘‘clarify the statutory and
evidentiary basis for failing to
promulgate water quality-based effluent
limitations for discharges other than
agricultural stormwater discharges as
that term is defined in 40 CFR
122.23(e),’’ and to ‘‘clarify whether
States may develop water quality-based
effluent limitations on their own.’’ 399
F.3d at 524.
(b) New Source Performance
Standards—100-Year Storm Standard
The 2003 CAFO rule set new source
performance standards (NSPS) for
swine, poultry, and veal calf CAFOs at
no discharge. A CAFO in these
categories could fulfill this requirement
by showing that either (1) its production
area was designed to contain all
manure, litter, or process wastewater,
and precipitation from a 100-year, 24hour storm, or (2) it would comply with
‘‘voluntary superior environmental
performance standards’’ based on
innovative technologies, under which a
discharge from the production area
would be allowed if it was accompanied
by an equivalent or greater reduction in
the quantity of pollutants released to
other media (e.g., air emissions). The
court found that EPA had neither
justified in the record nor provided an
adequate opportunity for public
comment for either of these provisions.
As a result, the court remanded these
provisions to EPA to clarify, via a
process that adequately involves the
public, the statutory and evidentiary
basis for them. 399 F.3d at 520–21.
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(c) BCT Effluent Guidelines for
Pathogens
The court held that the 2003 CAFO
rule violated the CWA because EPA had
not made an affirmative finding that the
BCT-based Effluent Limitations
Guidelines (ELGs), i.e., the ‘‘best
conventional technology’’ guidelines for
conventional pollutants such as fecal
coliform, do in fact represent BCT for
pathogens. The court remanded this
issue to EPA for such a finding. 399
F.3d at 519.
D. What Requirements Still Apply to
CAFOs?
The Waterkeeper decision either
upheld or did not address most
provisions of the 2003 CAFO rule. This
section describes certain key portions of
the rule that were not challenged in
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Waterkeeper. These unchallenged
provisions are addressed in this final
rule only to provide background
information and are not in any way
reopened or affected by this rulemaking.
The definitions provided in 40 CFR
122.23(b) of the 2003 CAFO rule remain
in effect and are unchanged. First, an
operation must be defined as an animal
feeding operation (AFO) before it can be
defined as a concentrated animal
feeding operation (CAFO). 40 CFR
122.23. The term ‘‘animal feeding
operation’’ is defined by EPA regulation
as a ‘‘lot or facility’’ where animals
‘‘have been, are or will be stabled or
confined and fed or maintained for a
total of 45 days or more in any 12 month
period and crops, vegetation, forage
growth, or post harvest residues are not
sustained in the normal growing season
over any portion of the lot or facility.’’
Whether an AFO is a CAFO depends
primarily on the number of animals
confined, which is also unchanged.
Large CAFOs are AFOs that confine
more than the threshold number of
animals detailed in 40 CFR 122.23(b)(4).
Medium CAFOs confine fewer animals
than Large CAFOs and also: (1)
Discharge pollutants into waters of the
U.S. through a man-made ditch,
flushing system, or other similar manmade device; or (2) discharge pollutants
into waters of the U.S. which originate
outside of and pass over, across, or
through the facility or otherwise come
into direct contact with the confined
animals. 40 CFR 122.23(b)(6)(ii). The
NPDES permitting authority also may,
on a case-by-case basis, designate any
medium or small AFO, as a CAFO after
conducting an on-site inspection and
finding that the facility ‘‘is a significant
contributor of pollutants to waters of the
United States.’’ 40 CFR 122.23(c). The
permitting authority may not exercise
its authority to designate a small AFO
as a CAFO unless pollutants are
discharged into waters of the U.S.
through a man-made ditch, flushing
system, or other similar man-made
device, or are discharged into waters of
the U.S. which originate outside of the
facility and pass over, across, or through
the facility or otherwise come into
direct contact with the animals confined
in the operation. 40 CFR 122.23(c)(3).
As previously described, the court
upheld EPA’s definition of ‘‘agricultural
stormwater discharge’’ in relation to
discharges from land application areas
under the control of a CAFO in 40 CFR
122.23(e). Discharges of manure, litter,
or process wastewater from land
application areas under the control of a
CAFO are discharges from the CAFO
(i.e., point source discharges) unless
they are agricultural stormwater
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discharges, which are exempt from
permit requirements. Section 122.23(e)
provides that precipitation-related
discharges of manure, litter, or process
wastewater from a CAFO’s land
application areas are agricultural
stormwater discharges, provided that
‘‘the manure, litter, or process
wastewater has been applied in
accordance with site-specific nutrient
management practices that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of
the nutrients in the manure, litter, or
process wastewater, as specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix).’’
The court ruling also did not affect
the nutrient management planning
requirements for permitted CAFOs
established in the 2003 CAFO rule. All
CAFOs that apply for permits must
develop and implement an NMP that
meets the requirements of 40 CFR
122.42(e) and, for Large CAFOs subject
to 40 CFR part 412, subpart C or D, 40
CFR 412.4. The NMP identifies the
necessary actions to ensure that runoff
is eliminated or minimized through
proper and effective manure, litter, or
process wastewater management,
including compliance with the ELGs as
applicable. Permitted CAFOs must
comply with all applicable
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, including those specified
in § 122.42(e).
The court ruling also did not affect
the ELG requirements for Large CAFOs,
with the exception of new source
performance standards (NSPS) for
swine, poultry, and veal calf operations.
ELG requirements ensure the
appropriate storage of manure, litter,
and process wastewater and proper land
application practices. They vary
depending upon the type of animals
confined: Subpart A for horses and
sheep; subpart B for ducks; subpart C for
dairy cattle, heifers, steers, and bulls;
and subpart D for swine, poultry, and
veal calves. 40 CFR part 412.
Additionally, NSPS for beef and dairy
operations were not affected by the
decision and remain unchanged (40 CFR
412.35).
Permitted small and medium CAFOs
are not subject to the ELGs specified in
part 412. Rather, they must comply with
technology-based requirements
developed by the permitting authority
on a case-by-case basis (i.e., best
professional judgment (BPJ)), pursuant
to CWA section 402(a)(1)(B) and as
defined in 40 CFR 125.3(c)(2) and (d).
E. EPA’s Response to the Waterkeeper
Decision
On June 30, 2006, EPA published a
proposed rule to revise the Agency’s
regulations governing discharges from
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CAFO’s in response to the Waterkeeper
decision. 71 FR 37,744. In summary,
EPA proposed to require only owners or
operators of those CAFOs that discharge
or propose to discharge to seek
authorization to discharge under a
permit. Second, EPA proposed to
require CAFOs seeking authorization to
discharge under individual permits to
submit their NMPs with their permit
applications or, under general permits,
with their notices of intent. Permitting
authorities would be required to review
the NMP and provide the public with an
opportunity for meaningful public
review and comment. Permitting
authorities would also be required to
incorporate terms of the NMP as NPDES
permit requirements. Additionally, EPA
proposed a process for modifying a
CAFO’s NPDES permit to incorporate
changes to the NMP during the permit
term by designating permit
modifications in accordance with that
process to be ‘‘minor modifications of
permits’’ under 40 CFR 122.63. The
2006 proposed rule also addressed the
remand of issues for further clarification
and analysis. These issues concerned
clarifications regarding the applicability
of water quality-based effluent
limitations (WQBELs) to CAFO
discharges; NSPS for swine, poultry,
and veal CAFOs; and BCT effluent
limitations guidelines for fecal coliform.
A March 7, 2008, Federal Register
notice supplemented the 2006 proposed
rule by proposing additional options
considered by EPA for inclusion in this
final rule in response to the Second
Circuit’s decision in the Waterkeeper
decision. In that notice, EPA proposed
a voluntary option for a CAFO to certify
that the CAFO does not discharge or
propose to discharge based on an
objective assessment of the CAFO’s
design, construction, operation, and
maintenance. EPA also proposed a
framework for identifying the terms of
the NMP and three alternative
approaches for addressing rates of
application of manure, litter, and
process wastewater when identifying
terms of the NMP to be included in the
permit. In the 2008 supplemental
proposal, EPA sought comment only on
the issues presented in the 2008
supplemental proposal.
In addition to the changes made
through this rulemaking, EPA extended
certain deadlines in the NPDES
permitting requirements and ELGs in
two separate rulemakings in order to
allow the Agency adequate time to
complete this rulemaking in response to
the Waterkeeper decision, in advance of
those deadlines. The principal purpose
of these rulemakings was to provide
additional time for the Agency to
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complete this final rule. Neither of these
date extension rules addressed any of
the substantive issues addressed in this
final rule or promulgated any provisions
in response to the Waterkeeper decision.
The first rule revised dates established
in the 2003 CAFO rule by which
facilities newly defined as CAFOs were
required to seek permit coverage and by
which all CAFOs were required to
develop and implement nutrient
management plans. 71 FR 6978–84
(February 10, 2006). EPA extended the
date by which operations defined as
CAFOs as of April 14, 2003, that were
not defined as CAFOs prior to that date,
were required to seek NPDES permit
coverage, from February 13, 2006, to
July 31, 2007. EPA also amended the
date by which operations that become
defined as CAFOs after April 14, 2003,
due to operational changes that would
not have made them a CAFO prior to
April 14, 2003, and that are not new
sources, were required to seek NPDES
permit coverage, from April 13, 2006, to
July 31, 2007. Finally, EPA extended the
deadline by which CAFOs were
required to develop and implement
nutrient management plans, from
December 31, 2006, to July 31, 2007.
That rulemaking revised all references
to the date by which CAFOs must
develop and implement NMPs as
specified in the 2003 CAFO rule.
As a result of the extensive array of
public comments on the issues raised by
the Waterkeeper decision, EPA was
unable to complete this final rule prior
to July 31, 2007. Thus, EPA published
a second revision of the compliance
dates on July 24, 2007, extending the
dates from July 31, 2007, to February 27,
2009. The preamble to the second date
change rule explained EPA’s belief that
the February 27, 2009, deadlines were
appropriate because they would provide
additional time for States, the regulated
community, and other stakeholders to
adjust to the new regulatory
requirements. See 72 FR 40,245–50. In
the 2008 supplemental rule, EPA
requested comment on further
extending the compliance deadline. For
additional discussion of compliance
dates, see section III.D of this preamble.
III. The Final Rule: Revisions to the
2003 CAFO Rule in Response to
Waterkeeper
This final rule responds to the Second
Circuit Court’s vacature and remand
orders.
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A. Duty To Apply for a Permit
1. Provisions in the 2003 CAFO Rule
(a) Duty To Apply
The 2003 CAFO rule required all
CAFOs to seek authorization to
discharge under an NPDES permit
unless the Director, i.e., the permitting
authority, determined that the CAFO
had no potential to discharge.
(b) ‘‘No Potential To Discharge’’
Determination
The 2003 CAFO rule included a
process for CAFOs to seek a ‘‘no
potential to discharge’’ determination by
the Director. Where the Director
determined, based on information
supplied by the CAFO operator, that a
CAFO had no potential to discharge
manure, litter, or process wastewater to
waters of the U.S., the CAFO operator
had no duty to apply for a permit,
unless circumstances at the facility
changed such that the facility would
have the potential to discharge.
Examples of facilities that possibly
would have qualified for this exemption
included facilities in very arid areas,
facilities that are down slope from
waters of the U.S., and facilities with
completely enclosed operations.
2. Summary of the Second Circuit Court
Decision
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals
vacated the provision that required all
CAFO owners or operators with a
potential to discharge to apply for an
NPDES permit. The court held that the
Clean Water Act (CWA) authorizes EPA
to require permits for the actual
discharge of pollutants, but not for mere
potential discharges. Because the 2003
CAFO rule imposed an obligation on all
CAFOs to either apply for an NPDES
permit or affirmatively demonstrate that
they have no potential to discharge, the
court ruled that it exceeded EPA’s
authority under the CWA. Waterkeeper
Alliance et al. v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486, 506
(2d Cir. 2005).
3. This Final Rule
To address the court’s decision on the
duty to apply, EPA is revising the 2003
CAFO rule in three ways:
• Deleting the requirement that all
CAFOs apply for an NPDES permit to
provide instead that all CAFOs that
‘‘discharge or propose to discharge’’
have a duty to apply when they propose
to discharge;
• Eliminating the procedures for a no
potential to discharge determination;
and
• Establishing a voluntary option for
unpermitted CAFOs to certify that they
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do not discharge or propose to
discharge.
(a) Duty To Seek Permit Coverage
EPA proposed to replace the ‘‘duty to
apply’’ requirement adopted in the 2003
rule, which states that all CAFO owners
or operators must seek coverage under
an NPDES permit unless they
demonstrate ‘‘no potential to discharge’’
(40 CFR 122.21(a)(1) and 40 CFR
122.23(a) and 40 CFR 122.23(d)(1)) with
a modified ‘‘duty to apply’’ provision.
The 2006 proposed rule would have
required that all CAFOs that ‘‘discharge
or propose to discharge’’ seek coverage
under an NPDES permit, which is the
same language that applies generally to
point sources under longstanding
NPDES regulations at § 122.21(a)(1).
This rule adopts the approach in the
2006 proposed rule by replacing the
‘‘duty to apply’’ requirement of the 2003
rule with a requirement that a CAFO
that ‘‘discharges or proposes to
discharge’’ must seek authorization to
discharge under an NPDES permit.
Because a number of commenters
misunderstood, or were confused by,
the term ‘‘propose to discharge,’’ EPA is
providing additional clarification in this
rule and preamble on how operators
should evaluate whether they discharge
or propose to discharge. While
commenters generally agreed that the
changes proposed by EPA were
consistent with the Second Circuit
decision, some commenters thought that
‘‘propose to discharge’’ and ‘‘potential
to discharge’’ were not sufficiently
distinguishable, and that ‘‘proposed’’
discharges could be understood as
contrary to the Waterkeeper court’s
holding that only ‘‘actual’’ discharges
are subject to CWA requirements.
EPA disagrees with these
commenters. Including a duty to apply
for CAFOs that ‘‘propose to discharge’’
is not the same as requiring a permit for
CAFOs with only a ‘‘potential to
discharge.’’ Unlike the 2003 rule, which
categorically required a permit for any
CAFO with a ‘‘potential to discharge,’’
this final rule calls for a case-by-case
evaluation by the CAFO owner or
operator as to whether the CAFO
discharges or proposes to discharge
from its production area or land
application area based on actual design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance. ‘‘Potential’’ connotes the
possibility that there might—as opposed
to will—be a discharge, which, as the
Waterkeeper court held, is not sufficient
under the CWA to trigger NPDES
permitting requirements. In contrast to
the 2003 rule, this rule requires a caseby-case assessment by each CAFO to
determine whether the CAFO in
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question, due to its individual
attributes, discharges or proposes to
discharge. Therefore, revised
§ 122.23(d)(1) requires only CAFOs that
actually discharge to seek permit
coverage and clarifies that a CAFO
proposes to discharge if based on an
objective assessment it is designed,
constructed, operated, or maintained
such that a discharge will occur, not
simply such that it might occur.
Consistent with the Waterkeeper
decision, CAFOs that are required to
seek permit coverage must do so when
they propose to discharge. (See below
for discussion of the provision relating
to when a CAFO must seek permit
coverage, 40 CFR 122.23(f).) Thus, it is
the responsibility of the CAFO owner or
operator to seek authorization to
discharge at the time they propose to
discharge. A CAFO that discharges
without a permit is in violation of the
CWA section 301(a) prohibition on such
discharges and additionally has the
burden of establishing that it did not
propose to discharge prior to the
discharge (unless the permitting
authority has a current, complete
certification from that CAFO as
provided by 40 CFR 122.23(j)(2),
discussed below). If it is determined
that it did, in fact, propose to discharge
prior to the discharge (that is, it was
designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge would
occur), it is also in violation of the
§ 122.23(d)(1) duty to apply. Section
122.23(j)(2) also clarifies how a CAFO
may satisfy the burden of establishing
that it did not propose to discharge.
Under section 301(a) of the CWA,
only those CAFO discharges authorized
by an NPDES permit (or otherwise
authorized by the statute), regardless of
the volume or duration of the discharge,
are allowed. Any discharge from a
CAFO, even one that is unplanned or
accidental, is illegal unless it is
authorized by the terms of a permit or
is agricultural stormwater. While EPA
recognizes that not every discharge
indicates that the CAFO will discharge
in the future, an operator should
certainly consider any unplanned or
accidental discharge that may have
occurred in the past in deciding
whether to seek permit coverage. CAFO
operators must objectively assess
whether a discharge from the CAFO,
including from the production area or
land application areas under the control
of the CAFO, is occurring or will occur
for purposes of determining whether to
obtain permit coverage.
It is well established that ‘‘discharge’’
is not limited to continuous discharges
of pollutants from a point source to
waters of the U.S., but also includes
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70423
intermittent and sporadic discharges.
‘‘Intermittent or sporadic violations do
not cease to be ongoing until the date
when there is no real likelihood of
repetition.’’ Chesapeake Bay
Foundation v. Gwaltney of Smithfield,
890 F.2d 690, 693 (4th Cir. 1989). Such
intermittent, sporadic, even occasional,
discharges may in fact be the norm for
many CAFOs, but they are nonetheless
‘‘discharges’’ under the CWA and are
prohibited unless authorized under the
terms of an NPDES permit. CAFOs that
have had such intermittent or sporadic
discharges in the past would generally
be expected to have such discharges in
the future, and therefore be expected to
obtain a permit, unless they have
modified their design, construction,
operation, or maintenance in such a way
as to prevent all discharges from
occurring.
EPA received a number of comments
concerning past discharges. Some
commenters asserted that a prior
discharge is not, by itself, a sufficient
basis for requiring a permit and
observed that it is quite possible that a
CAFO may have eliminated the cause of
the discharge. EPA agrees that not every
past discharge from a CAFO necessarily
triggers a duty to apply for a permit;
however, a past discharge may indicate
that the CAFO discharges or proposes to
discharge if the conditions that gave rise
to the discharge have not changed or
been corrected. See, e.g., Gwaltney of
Smithfield. Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay
Foundation, 484 U.S. 49, 57 (1987) (‘‘a
reasonable likelihood that a past
polluter will continue to pollute in the
future’’ is a continuous or intermittent
violation); American Canoe Ass’n v.
Murphy Farms, Inc., 412 F.3d. 536 (4th
Cir. 2005) (CWA violation continues
where corrective measures are
insufficient to eliminate real likelihood
of repeated discharges). The same
rationale that led the courts in these
cases to conclude that the point sources
in question were discharging in
violation of the CWA underlies the final
rule’s requirement that CAFOs must
seek permit coverage when they
discharge or propose to discharge (i.e.,
are designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur). Sections 122.23(d)(1) and (f).
An uncorrected past discharge is not
the only indicator that operators should
consider in assessing whether the CAFO
discharges or proposes to discharge.
Other key factors the operator should
consider include the proximity of the
production area to waters of the U.S.,
whether the CAFO is upslope from
waters of the U.S., and climatic
conditions. Similarly, the type of waste
storage system, storage capacity, quality
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of construction, and presence and extent
of built-in safeguards are important
factors. Standard operating procedures
and level of maintenance are also
critical factors for the operator to
consider when assessing whether a
CAFO discharges or proposes to
discharge. Such considerations
contributed to EPA’s decision to include
in this final rule an option for
unpermitted CAFOs to certify that they
do not discharge or propose to discharge
by meeting the criteria in 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2), discussed in detail below.
EPA encourages unpermitted CAFOs
that choose not to certify to consider the
set of criteria for certification eligibility
when deciding whether to seek permit
coverage, and this final rule provides in
§ 122.23(j)(2) that these same criteria
may be used to establish that a CAFO
did not propose to discharge prior to a
discharge occurring.
As a result of the revisions to 40 CFR
122.23(d) and (f), only CAFOs that
discharge or propose to discharge are
required to seek permit coverage, and a
CAFO that proposes to discharge must
seek coverage as soon as it proposes to
discharge in order to avoid having
unpermitted discharges. In the event of
a discharge from an unpermitted CAFO,
the CAFO operator would be in
violation of the CWA prohibition
against discharging without a permit.
Under this final rule, if the CAFO
proposed to discharge prior to the
discharge, the CAFO would also be in
violation of the requirement in
§ 122.23(d)(1) and (f), implementing
sections 308 and 402 of the CWA, that
CAFOs seek permit coverage when they
propose to discharge.
In revised § 122.23(d)(1), EPA is
clarifying that ‘‘a CAFO proposes to
discharge if it is designed, constructed,
operated, or maintained such that a
discharge will occur.’’ EPA intends that
the CAFO operator should make an
objective assessment of the operation to
determine whether the CAFO will
discharge. Such an objective assessment
would take into account not only the
characteristics of the manmade aspects
of the CAFO itself, but climatic,
hydrological, topographical, and other
characteristics beyond the operator’s
control that impact whether the CAFO
will discharge, given the design,
construction, operation and
maintenance of the CAFO.
To assist CAFO operators in making
this objective assessment and to provide
assurance for CAFOs deciding not to
seek permit coverage that they are not
required to obtain permit coverage, EPA
is finalizing a voluntary certification
option, proposed in the 2008
supplemental proposal. This option
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provides a means for a CAFO to certify
that it does not discharge or propose to
discharge. The voluntary certification
provisions are discussed below in
section III.A.3(c) of this preamble.
This rule is consistent with the
Waterkeeper decision because the duty
to apply for a permit only arises when
a CAFO discharges or proposes to
discharge, that is, when it discharges or
is designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur. It is also consistent with
Chesapeake Bay Foundation v.
Gwaltney of Smithfield, discussed
above, which found a violation under
the CWA where it is reasonably likely
that a discharge will occur due to
existing circumstances. This rule
derives from sections 402(a)(3) and 308
of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1342(a)(3), 1318.
Under section 402(a)(3), EPA is required
to establish a permit program that,
among other things, ensures compliance
with all applicable requirements of
sections 301 (requirements for
establishing technology-based and water
quality-based effluent limitations), 306
(requirements for establishing new
source performance standards), 308
(requirements relating to inspections,
monitoring and entry, including
requests for information to determine
compliance status or support
development of effluent limitations) and
402 (NPDES permits).
Section 301(a) prohibits the discharge
of pollutants, except in compliance with
specific provisions in the CWA.
Particularly relevant to CAFOs, section
301(b) provides that ‘‘there shall be
achieved’’ effluent limitations
controlling pollutants discharged from
point sources. Section 308(a) provides
EPA broad authority to require the
owner or operator of any point source
(including CAFOs) to provide
information necessary to develop
effluent limitations, to ‘‘carry out’’
section 402, and to ‘‘carry out’’ the
objectives of the Act, which are set forth
in CWA section 101(a). Under section
501(a) EPA is authorized to prescribe
‘‘such regulations as are necessary to
carry out’’ its functions under the CWA.
Any permit program established to carry
out section 402 must, of necessity,
require point sources that discharge or
propose to discharge to submit
information to allow the permitting
authority to determine prior to issuance
of a permit what effluent limitations
should apply to a discharger and be
included in its permit (including
providing the public and any other
affected State notice and opportunity for
public comment, as required by section
402(b)(3)). It is therefore reasonable for
EPA to require those CAFOs that
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discharge or propose to discharge to
apply for NPDES permit coverage.
Some commenters on the 2006
proposed rule opposed regulating
entities that ‘‘propose’’ to discharge, or
alternatively, suggested that EPA should
clarify that ‘‘propose’’ means ‘‘intend’’
or ‘‘plan.’’ While EPA acknowledges
that ‘‘propose’’ to discharge could be
understood to mean ‘‘intend’’ or ‘‘plan’’
to discharge, under this final rule
‘‘propose to discharge’’ means that the
CAFO is designed, constructed,
operated, or maintained such that it will
discharge. This is consistent with the
Waterkeeper decision because a mere
‘‘potential’’ to discharge is not sufficient
to trigger the revised duty to apply.
Accordingly, as previously discussed,
revised § 122.23(d)(1) clarifies that ‘‘a
CAFO proposes to discharge if it is
designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur.’’ The CAFO’s decision as to
whether to apply for a permit should be
based on an objective assessment of
conditions at that operation. As
discussed below, under this final rule,
a CAFO that is not designed,
constructed, operated, or maintained in
a manner such that the CAFO does or
will discharge is not required to seek
permit coverage under § 122.23(d)(1)
and may choose to take advantage of the
voluntary no discharge certification.
Some commenters on the 2006
proposed rule requested that EPA
specifically state in the regulation that
facilities designed to the 25-year, 24hour design standard have not
‘‘proposed’’ to discharge. One
commenter questioned whether existing
operations should be required to obtain
permit coverage if they have installed
structures and production area BMPs
using Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) standards and if they
have been operating without
discharging. The commenter indicated
that ‘‘since EPA is requiring that a zero
discharge standard be met only for
certain new CAFOs and not existing
CAFOs, it is unreasonable to expect all
existing animal operations that do not
otherwise come under a permit to meet
a zero discharge standard.’’
EPA disagrees that CAFOs designed
for the 25-year, 24-hour storm should be
categorically excluded from the
requirement to apply for a permit
simply based on their design standard.
EPA also believes that it is reasonable to
expect unpermitted CAFOs to meet a
zero discharge standard. The CWA is
very clear that point source discharges
from CAFOs are illegal unless the
operator has applied for and obtained an
NPDES permit. Thus, ‘‘zero discharge’’
is the only standard to which EPA can
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hold unpermitted CAFOs under the
CWA. Large storms and chronic rainfall
events do occur and production areas
built to the 25-year, 24-hour storm
design standard can and do discharge
during precipitation events. Under the
CWA, as previously discussed, a
violation of the prohibition against
discharging without a permit occurs
even if the discharge was not planned
or intended. Conversely, in the event of
a discharge from a permitted CAFO, the
discharge will not violate the CWA if
the CAFO is in compliance with its
permit.
EPA notes that design is only one
aspect for a CAFO to consider when
assessing whether or not to apply for a
permit. Construction, operation, and
maintenance are equally important
components of a CAFO’s operation and
can make the difference between a
CAFO that discharges and one that does
not. With regard to the commenter’s
question about the applicability of
NRCS standards, a CAFO’s decision as
to whether to seek permit coverage
should be based on an objective
assessment of conditions at the
operation, including, but not limited to,
the manure storage design standard.
EPA notes that whether or not a CAFO
is designed according to NRCS
standards may be an important
component of the objective evaluation it
undertakes to assess whether it is
designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur. A CAFO that does not discharge
or propose to discharge is not required
to seek permit coverage under
§ 122.23(d)(1) and may be eligible for no
discharge certification under 40 CFR
122.23(i).
CAFO NPDES permit requirements
include, but are not limited to, best
management practices (BMPs) to
eliminate discharges from the
production area under most
circumstances and to ensure appropriate
agricultural utilization of nutrients in
manure, litter, and process wastewater
that is applied to land under the CAFO’s
control. EPA expects that an
unpermitted CAFO would also need to
implement BMPs in order to ensure that
it does not discharge or propose to
discharge. However, in many, if not
most, cases the BMPs called for will be
more rigorous than those required for
permitted CAFOs, because the operator
of an unpermitted CAFO is never
authorized to discharge under CWA
section 301(a). Permitted CAFOs have
greater flexibility because, in addition to
being authorized to discharge under the
circumstances prescribed by the permit,
other discharges can be excused when
the conditions contained in EPA’s upset
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and/or bypass regulations are met. See
40 CFR 122.41(m) and (n).
In contrast to commenters who
believe that some non-discharging
CAFOs will needlessly go through the
permitting process, other commenters
expressed concern that some CAFOs
that should have permits will not seek
needed permit coverage. They
contended that many CAFOs are
currently discharging without a permit
and objected to having CAFOs make the
determination themselves as to whether
or not they discharge or propose to
discharge, as such an approach would,
in their view, establish a self-permitting
scheme. These commenters further
contended that the administrative
record from the 2003 rule supports the
presumption that all Large CAFOs
actually discharge and, therefore, such
CAFOs should be required to obtain a
permit.
EPA does not agree that the rule
establishes a self-permitting scheme. As
is the case with all point sources, it is
up to the operator to determine whether
or not to apply for a permit in the first
instance, by assessing whether the point
source (CAFO) discharges or proposes to
discharge. Point sources that do not
discharge or propose to discharge are
not subject to CWA permitting
requirements. See § 122.21(a)(1).
Regarding the administrative record for
the 2003 rule, that rule established a
duty to apply for all CAFOs unless the
CAFO could demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the permitting authority
that it had no ‘‘potential to discharge.’’
That provision was vacated by the
Second Circuit, which noted that EPA
did not argue that the administrative
record supported a regulatory
presumption that all Large CAFOs
actually discharge. 399 F.3d at 506,
n.22. Thus, consistent with the
Waterkeeper decision, EPA is
promulgating a rule which requires
those CAFOs that discharge or propose
to discharge, but not CAFOs with a mere
‘‘potential’’ to discharge, to seek permit
coverage on a case-by-case basis. With
regard to the comments that EPA should
establish a categorical presumption that
all Large CAFOs discharge, the Agency
is evaluating various options for
exploring the nature of discharges from
Large CAFOs.
Finally, this rule revises the
regulatory provisions for when a CAFO
must seek permit coverage and the duty
to maintain permit coverage for CAFOs.
The final rule clarifies that those CAFOs
that are required under § 122.23(d)(1) to
seek permit coverage must do so ‘‘when
the CAFO proposes to discharge,’’
unless a later deadline, such as February
27, 2009, is specified for the specific
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70425
category of operation. EPA is
recodifying 40 CFR 122.23(g) as
§ 122.23(f) because the paragraph
codified as § 122.23(f) in the 2003 rule
is being removed. See section III.A.3(b)
of this preamble. Revised § 122.23(f) is
consistent with the revised duty to
apply requirement in § 122.23(d)(1) and
EPA’s authority under sections 301, 308
and 402 of the CWA to require CAFOs
that actually discharge to seek permit
coverage. None of the specific
timeframes for the various categories of
CAFOs in paragraphs (1)–(5) of
§ 122.23(f), as amended by the 2007 date
change rule (72 FR 40,245), is affected
by this rule. The revised language in the
introductory paragraph of § 122.23(f)
simply conforms to the requirements of
§ 122.23(d)(1).
EPA is making corresponding
revisions to the regulatory text requiring
CAFOs to maintain permit coverage.
Due to the fact that § 122.23(f) as
codified in 2003 is being removed, EPA
is recodifying 40 CFR 122.23(h), ‘‘Duty
to Maintain Permit Coverage,’’ as
§ 122.23(g). See section III.A.3(b) of this
preamble. Also, in the 2006 proposed
rule, EPA proposed to revise this
provision to address the Waterkeeper
court’s decision vacating the
requirement for all CAFOs to seek
permit coverage unless they obtained a
no potential to discharge determination.
See 71 FR 37,785. In this final rule (as
in the proposed rule), a CAFO would
not need to reapply based solely on the
fact of having had a permit, if the permit
had been terminated in accordance with
the NPDES provisions at 40 CFR
122.64(b). Since a CAFO that terminated
permit coverage is no longer a permitted
CAFO, it is not subject to the duty to
maintain permit coverage provision.
Consistent with the requirement that
only CAFOs that discharge or propose to
discharge seek NPDES permit coverage,
new § 122.23(g) excludes CAFOs that
will not discharge or propose to
discharge upon expiration of the permit
from the requirement to reapply 180
days in advance of permit expiration.
(b) ‘‘No Potential To Discharge’’
Determination
In this final rule, EPA is deleting the
regulatory provisions adopted in the
2003 CAFO rule allowing CAFOs to
demonstrate that they have no potential
to discharge and authorizing the
Director to make such a determination.
40 CFR 122.23(d)(2) and 122.23(f).
Because EPA is not requiring CAFOs to
seek permit coverage based merely on
potential to discharge, this provision is
no longer relevant to determining
whether or not a facility needs to seek
permit coverage. This final rule is
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unchanged from the 2006 proposed rule
in this respect.
Overall, most commenters supported
eliminating the ‘‘no potential to
discharge’’ provisions in the CAFO
regulations, noting that it is no longer
necessary because only CAFOs that
discharge or propose to discharge must
apply for permits. One State observed
that the ‘‘no potential to discharge’’
criteria could still be useful to CAFOs
in determining whether they need to
apply for a permit. While these criteria
may continue to be useful to CAFO
owners and operators for that purpose,
EPA is eliminating these provisions
from 40 CFR 122.23 of the regulations.
(c) Voluntary No Discharge Certification
In this final rule, the Agency is
adopting a new provision that allows
CAFOs to voluntarily certify that the
CAFO does not discharge or propose to
discharge. As discussed above, EPA
received several hundred comments on
the 2006 proposed rule related to how
a CAFO operator would decide whether
to seek permit coverage under a revised
rule that requires CAFOs that discharge
or propose to discharge to apply for a
permit or submit a Notice of Intent for
coverage under a general permit. Several
commenters were particularly
concerned with the consequences for an
unpermitted CAFO that has an
‘‘accidental discharge’’ because they
understood EPA’s proposal to mean that
a CAFO that does not apply for a permit
and subsequently has a discharge of
pollutants to waters of the U.S. would
be liable for two violations, one
associated with the discharge itself and
another violation for failing to apply for
a permit for authority to discharge. In
response to these comments, in the 2008
supplemental proposal, EPA requested
public comment on an option that
would allow a CAFO that determines,
based on an objective assessment, that it
does not discharge or propose to
discharge to certify to the permitting
authority that it is designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
not to discharge. In the unlikely event
that a properly certified CAFO
discharges (which would constitute a
violation of section 301(a) of the CWA),
the CAFO would not be liable for failing
to apply for a permit prior to the
discharge in accordance with the permit
application requirements of 40 CFR
122.23(d)(1) and (f).
EPA received many comments on the
proposed voluntary certification option.
Commenters were divided, with some
generally supportive and others
generally opposed to the concept of a
voluntary certification option for
unpermitted CAFOs. Those in favor
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stated that certification would assist
CAFOs that do not discharge or propose
to discharge by providing a structured
process for CAFOs to notify the
permitting authority that they are not
required to seek permit coverage. Some
commenters opposed to certification
believe the Agency’s record supports a
regulatory presumption that all CAFOs
discharge, and, therefore, the no
discharge certification process is a
further departure from the decision of
the Waterkeeper court. The majority of
State permitting authorities commenting
on the 2008 supplemental proposal
were opposed to the certification option,
as proposed.
In this final rule, EPA has addressed
both the decision from the Waterkeeper
court that CAFOs with only a potential
to discharge are not subject to NPDES
permitting requirements and the
concerns expressed by commenters that
some CAFOs may be uncertain as to
whether they discharge or propose to
discharge. In the NPDES program, the
first step is for a point source to decide
whether it needs to seek permit
coverage. Generally, the question of
whether a point source needs permit
coverage is easily answered; indeed
other point sources are typically
designed to discharge to waters of the
U.S. After careful consideration of the
comments and in light of the unique
characteristics of CAFOs among point
sources, EPA has concluded that
providing a voluntary option for
unpermitted CAFOs to certify to the
Director that the CAFO does not
discharge or propose to discharge based
on an objective assessment of the
CAFO’s design, construction, operation,
and maintenance is reasonable and
appropriate for CAFOs. However, in
response to comments received on the
proposed certification option, EPA is
clarifying several aspects of the process,
eligibility requirements, and effect of
certification as discussed below. The
Agency is also making several changes
to the proposed option to ensure that
certification will be properly
implemented.
Under this final rule, and as proposed
in the 2008 supplemental proposal, a
CAFO operator may certify that the
CAFO does not discharge or propose to
discharge by signing and submitting a
certification statement to the Director.
The objective assessment necessary for
the CAFO to qualify for certification
takes into account the CAFO’s
production area design and construction
and its operating and maintenance
procedures and practices as described in
its nutrient management plan (NMP) in
accordance with the eligibility criteria,
described in detail below. The
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certification option established by this
rule does not change the requirement
that CAFOs that propose to discharge
must seek permit coverage when they
propose to discharge pursuant to
§ 122.23(f). It does, however, provide a
structured process for CAFOs that wish
to certify to establish by objective means
that they do not discharge or propose to
discharge. EPA believes that such a
structured process is helpful to CAFOs
as they decide whether to seek permit
coverage. A CAFO’s no discharge
certification is not subject to review by
the permitting authority in order for it
to become effective and the permitting
authority is not required to make the
certification available to the public for
comment because the certification is not
a permit application for which review is
required under section 402 of the CWA.
EPA wishes to emphasize that
submission of a no discharge
certification is voluntary and the
process for obtaining a certification has
been developed with that underlying
principle in mind.
As explained in detail above, under
§ 122.23(d)(1) a CAFO that does not
discharge or propose to discharge is not
required to apply for an NPDES permit.
A certification in accordance with this
final rule documents the CAFO
operator’s basis for making an informed
decision not to seek permit coverage
because the CAFO does not discharge or
propose to discharge. A CAFO that
certifies in accordance with the
requirements of this final rule,
discussed in detail below, is properly
certified so long as the CAFO maintains
its eligibility. EPA believes that
providing a properly certified CAFO
assurance that it is not required by
§ 122.23(d)(1) to seek permit coverage is
reasonable and justified. The threshold
question regarding which CAFOs are
required to seek permit coverage—
whether the CAFO discharges or
proposes to discharge—is the same for
all CAFOs. A CAFO that does not
discharge or propose to discharge can
choose to certify or not. Certification in
accordance with the requirements of 40
CFR 122.23(i) requires a CAFO owner or
operator to undertake and document a
rigorous analysis of the operation’s
structure and design, and to be
committed to operation and
maintenance protocols designed to
ensure no discharge, discussed in detail
below.
EPA is adding subsection (j) 40 CFR
122.23 to clarify the effect of
certification. As provided in new
paragraph (j)(1), a CAFO certified in
accordance with § 122.23(i) is presumed
not to propose to discharge. A CAFO
that is ‘‘certified in accordance with
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§ 122.23(i)’’ has submitted a complete
certification that is in effect pursuant to
40 CFR 122.23(i)(4). In the unlikely
event that such a CAFO does discharge,
it will not be in violation of the
requirement that CAFOs that propose to
discharge seek permit coverage pursuant
to § 122.23(d)(1) and (f), with respect to
that discharge, provided the CAFO
maintained its certification by
continuing to be designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained in accordance
with the eligibility criteria in 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2). This is because meeting the
eligibility criteria at the time of the
discharge establishes that the CAFO did
not propose to discharge. If a certified
CAFO does discharge, and the Director
believes that the CAFO’s certification
was invalid at the time of the discharge
(i.e., not in accordance with the
eligibility criteria in § 122.23(i)(2)), the
presumption means that, in any
enforcement action alleging failure to
seek permit coverage prior to the
discharge, the burden is on the Director
to establish that the CAFO ‘‘proposed to
discharge’’ prior to the discharge. EPA
notes that any unpermitted discharge
from a properly certified CAFO is still
a violation of CWA section 301(a) and
terminates the certification pursuant to
§ 122.23(i)(4). Moreover, if subsequent
to the discharge event the CAFO is
designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur, it must seek permit coverage
under § 122.23(d)(1) and (f). For
additional discussion of past discharges
from unpermitted CAFOs see section
III.C.3(a) of this preamble.
To further clarify the effect of
voluntary certification, EPA is also
including in the final rule a provision
specifically related to uncertified
CAFOs. As provided in 40 CFR
122.23(j)(2) of this final rule, in any
enforcement proceeding for failure to
seek permit coverage under
§ 122.23(d)(1) or (f) that is associated
with a discharge from an unpermitted
CAFO that has not submitted
certification documentation as provided
in 40 CFR 122.23(i)(3) or 40 CFR
122.23(i)(6)(iv), the CAFO would have
the burden to establish that it did not
propose to discharge prior to the
discharge. Also, a CAFO that had
submitted a certification more than five
years prior to the discharge (and not
recertified within the past five years) or
that had withdrawn its certification
pursuant to 40 CFR 122.23(i)(5) prior to
the discharge would also have the
burden to establish that it did not
propose to discharge. EPA’s intent is to
clarify that when an unpermitted CAFO
discharges and the permitting authority
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does not have a current, signed
certification from that CAFO, it is the
CAFO’s responsibility to show that it
was not required to have applied for
permit coverage (i.e., did not propose to
discharge) prior to the discharge.
Section 122.23(j)(2) provides that the
CAFO can satisfy this burden by
establishing that at the time of the
discharge the CAFO’s design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance were all in accordance
with the certification eligibility criteria
of § 122.23(i)(2).
Unlike the 2003 rule that required all
CAFOs to seek permit coverage in order
to operate unless they obtained a
determination of ‘‘no potential to
discharge,’’ the certification provision is
entirely voluntary. The requirement for
a CAFO to apply for a permit is
triggered if a CAFO discharges or
proposes to discharge, regardless of
whether it has certified or not. Any
CAFO operator’s decision as to whether
to seek permit coverage should be made
based on an objective assessment of the
CAFO’s design, construction, operation,
and maintenance, in contrast to the
2003 rule, which required the operator
either to seek permit coverage or prove
to the satisfaction of the Director that
the CAFO had no potential to discharge.
Therefore, under § 122.23(d)(1) and (i),
the operator must evaluate based on
such an objective assessment whether it
discharges or proposes to discharge. If it
does it must seek and obtain permit
coverage; if it does not it may operate
without a permit and decide either (1)
to certify under the provisions at
§ 122.23(i); or (2) to operate without a
permit and without certifying. The
purpose of certification is to provide a
voluntary mechanism for the CAFO to
establish in advance that it does not
discharge or propose to discharge. As
previously discussed, a CAFO that
operates without a permit must be
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained such that no discharge will
occur, because any discharge (other than
agricultural stormwater) is prohibited
from unpermitted CAFOs pursuant to
CWA section 301(a), while permitted
CAFOs are allowed to discharge under
specified conditions and may also have
defenses for upset and bypass. NPDES
permit coverage reduces CAFO operator
risk and provides certainty to CAFO
operators regarding activities and
actions that are necessary to comply
with the CWA. In contrast, certified
CAFOs are not allowed to discharge
under any conditions (other than
discharges of agricultural stormwater),
and are liable for any unpermitted
discharge pursuant to CWA 301(a), but
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70427
they will not additionally be held liable
for a violation of the duty to apply,
provided their certification is valid and
still in effect at the time of discharge.
EPA strongly recommends that all
CAFOs that have any doubt about their
ability to operate under all
circumstances without discharging seek
to obtain NPDES permit coverage, and
believes it is in their interest to do so.
However, in accordance with the
Waterkeeper decision, EPA is requiring
CAFOs to seek permit coverage only if
they discharge or propose to discharge.
The final rule provisions for
certification eligibility and submission,
and conditions for a valid certification
are discussed in detail below.
(i) Certification Eligibility Criteria
EPA is establishing specific eligibility
criteria for CAFO certification at 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2). Meeting these criteria
establishes that the CAFO does not
‘‘discharge or propose to discharge’’ for
purposes of 40 CFR 122.23(d)(1), for as
long as the certification is valid.
Eligibility for certification means
meeting the criteria described below at
the time certification is established and
continuing to meet the eligibility criteria
throughout the period of certification as
new information or situations arise. The
three criteria are as follows: (1) An
objective evaluation which shows that
the CAFO’s production area is designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
so as not to discharge, (2) development
and implementation of an NMP to
ensure no discharge (other than
agricultural stormwater discharges) that,
at a minimum, addresses the elements
set forth in 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1) and 40
CFR 412.37(c), including operation and
maintenance practices for the
production area and land application
areas under the control of the CAFO,
and (3) maintenance of the
documentation required for certification
either on site, at a nearby office, or
where it can be made readily available
to the permitting authority upon
request. A statement that describes the
basis for the CAFO’s certification that it
satisfies these eligibility criteria must be
submitted to the Director, but there is no
requirement for permitting authority
review in order for the certification to be
valid.
The first two criteria concern the
existing physical and operational
conditions at the CAFO. In addition,
meeting these criteria includes making
proper accommodations during the
certification period to address changes
to the operation. For example, if an
increase in animals will cause the CAFO
to exceed the existing storage capacity
for precipitation, manure and process
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wastewater required for no discharge, in
order to remain certified, the CAFO
must remedy the storage capacity
problem prior to bringing the additional
animals to the operation. Operation and
maintenance practices may need to be
modified to accommodate changes to
the CAFO. For example, a reduction in
fields available for land application
would trigger the need to reevaluate the
adequacy of manure storage and
handling protocols. The third eligibility
criterion requires a certified CAFO to
maintain records needed to support the
basis for the certification throughout the
duration of the certification, such as
monitoring and inspection records,
records of maintenance and repairs, and
land application records, including
updated documentation to match
current conditions and circumstances at
the CAFO. Certified CAFOs, like any
other permitted or unpermitted CAFO,
may be asked to send information to the
permitting authority that is relevant to
implementation of the CWA, or
inspected by EPA or authorized State
inspectors. During an inspection the
certified CAFO could be required to
produce the documentation showing
that it meets the eligibility criteria,
including that the CAFO has been and
is being operated and maintained in
accordance with an NMP that has been
updated as necessary.
Commenters offered numerous
perspectives on the proposed eligibility
criteria. Some commenters asserted that
the proposed criteria were too extensive,
stringent, and complex, and therefore
would make it unlikely that selfcertifying CAFOs could accurately
demonstrate their eligibility. These
commenters indicated that, as proposed,
the eligibility criteria would be
expensive to implement and, thus,
would serve as a disincentive for a
CAFO to choose to certify. In response
to these comments, EPA emphasizes
that certification is voluntary, and
CAFOs may choose not to certify. As
noted above, EPA believes that it is
generally in an operator’s best interest to
obtain permit coverage. However, EPA
has provided the certification option for
CAFOs that choose not to seek permit
coverage but would like to establish up
front that they do not discharge or
propose to discharge. The final rule
contains stringent eligibility criteria
because in light of the CWA prohibition
against unpermitted discharges, the
eligibility criteria for certification must
establish that the CAFO does not
discharge or propose to discharge. Only
CAFOs that establish eligibility and
meet all of the certification provisions
in 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2)–(3) will receive
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the benefit of certification, which is that
a validly certified CAFO that discharges
will not be in violation of the
requirement to apply for a permit
pursuant to § 122.23(d)(1) and 40 CFR
122.23(f). As EPA is clarifying in 40 CFR
122.23(j), without a certification, an
unpermitted CAFO that discharges has
the burden of establishing that it did not
propose to discharge in an enforcement
action arising from a discharge from the
CAFO.
In contrast, other commenters
indicated that the proposed criteria do
not ensure that a certified CAFO will
not discharge and, therefore, additional
requirements and procedures should be
imposed for certification eligibility. In
response to these comments, the
certification eligibility criteria in this
final rule have been modified from the
2008 supplemental proposal in order to
clarify what EPA expects of a certified
CAFO. The final rule clarifies that the
CAFO’s NMP must include any
operation and maintenance practices
that are established by the technical
evaluation of production area open
storage structures as necessary to ensure
no discharge. Also, EPA reminds
unpermitted CAFOs considering
certification that many site-specific
factors, such as location and the
facility’s discharge history, must be
taken into account when demonstrating
certification eligibility in accordance
with this final rule. A CAFO in close
proximity to waters of the U.S. or a
conduit to waters of the U.S. may need
to take additional protective measures
for design, construction, operation and
maintenance in order to be able to
demonstrate that it will not discharge. A
CAFO operator who intends to establish
eligibility for certification should be
mindful that, as stated above in the
discussion of revised § 122.23(d)(1), a
CAFO that has discharged in the past
would generally be expected to
discharge in the future, and therefore be
expected to obtain a permit, unless it
has modified the design, construction,
operation or maintenance in such a way
as to prevent any discharges from
occurring.
The first eligibility criterion for valid
certification covers the design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance of the CAFO’s production
area. As proposed, 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2)(i)
of this final rule requires the CAFO to
demonstrate that the CAFO’s production
area is designed, constructed, operated,
and maintained so as not to discharge.
Due to the variations in production area
design based on the type of containment
system used at the operation, EPA
proposed and is finalizing today a rule
with two parts for the first eligibility
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criterion: the first for open manure
storage structures and the second for
any part of the production area not
considered to be open containment.
Consistent with the 2008
supplemental proposal, under the final
rule, any CAFO with an open manure
storage structure seeking to certify that
it does not discharge or propose to
discharge is required to perform a
technical evaluation under 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2)(i)(A). To demonstrate that
the CAFO meets the production area
requirement for certification, this
evaluation must be conducted in
accordance with the elements of the
technical evaluation required for open
storage new source swine, poultry and
veal calf operations seeking to
demonstrate no discharge under 40 CFR
412.46(a)(1)(i)–(viii), as revised by this
action. EPA clarifies that, although this
provision references the new source
performance standard (NSPS) for swine,
poultry and veal calf operations, this
eligibility criterion applies to any
unpermitted CAFO with open manure
storage seeking to certify that it does not
discharge or propose to discharge, not
just new sources in the swine, poultry
and veal calf sectors with open storage.
Elsewhere in this final rule, EPA is
revising the provisions at 40 CFR
412.46(a)(1) to allow such new sources
with open containment to meet the no
discharge requirement for their NPDES
permit using best management practices
based in part on a rigorous site-specific
technical evaluation that includes use of
the most recent versions of the Animal
Waste Management (AWM) software, or
equivalent software, and the Soil Plant
Air Water (SPAW) Hydrology Tool, or
an equivalent model. For a discussion of
the technical evaluation and the AWM
and SPAW modeling tools, see section
III.F of this preamble.
Several commenters expressed the
need for evaluation criteria specific to
beef cattle feedlots, based on their belief
that reliance on swine, poultry, and veal
calf new source provisions is
inappropriate for all animal sectors. As
described in more detail in Section III.F
of this preamble, AWM software is a
planning and design tool for animal
feeding operations that can be used to
estimate the production of manure,
bedding, and process water and
determine the size of storage facilities
necessary to meet no discharge. AWM
(CCE version 2.3.0) currently provides
manure characteristics for eight animal
types with the ability to modify these
characteristics and add animal types as
necessary. The field and pond
hydrologic analyses conducted with the
SPAW model are not specific to any
animal species. Therefore beef and dairy
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operators can use the AWM and SPAW
tools to establish the appropriate design,
construction, operation and
maintenance of their facility to meet the
no discharge requirement of
certification.
EPA also received comments seeking
clarification regarding how the technical
evaluation for new source swine,
poultry and veal calf operations can
apply to existing facilities given that
EPA stated in the preamble to the 2003
CAFO rule that the no discharge
performance standard was not
economically achievable for existing
facilities. While EPA has determined
that the no discharge performance
standard was not appropriate to require
for existing facilities on a national basis
(see 68 FR 7218), EPA acknowledges
that there are existing CAFOs that could
meet the standard. Existing CAFOs that
feel it is not economically achievable to
meet a no-discharge standard always
have the option of applying for a permit.
In order to meet the second part of the
first eligibility criterion, the final rule
requires, in 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2)(i)(B),
that any certifying CAFO must
demonstrate that all of its production
area, as defined at 40 CFR 122.23(b)(8),
not just open containment structures, is
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained such that there will be no
discharge of manure, litter, process
wastewater, or raw materials, such as
feed, to surface waters. For a CAFO
without open containment, this
provision requires a demonstration of
no discharge from the entire production
area. For a CAFO that has an open
containment structure, this provision
requires a demonstration that the
remainder of the production area (other
than the open containment structure
subject to the demonstration in
§ 122.23(i)(2)(i)(A)), also will not
discharge. Because of the special risk of
discharge from open manure storage
structures, greater specificity is
provided regarding the elements of the
demonstration in § 122.23(i)(2)(i)(A);
however, the demonstration in
§ 122.23(i)(2)(i)(B) must be technically
sound and must be adequate to
demonstrate that the production area is
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained for no discharge. This
demonstration must be based on an
evaluation of site-specific
characteristics, including, among others,
the amount of manure generated during
the storage period, the size of the storage
structure, control measures to ensure
diversion of clean water, and seasonal
restrictions on land application. The
preamble to the 2003 rule provides
additional information regarding
production area design for total
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containment and closed manure storage
systems, such as lagoon covers,
underhouse pit storage systems, and
stockpile storage sheds. See 68 FR 7176,
7219–20. Some CAFOs may have a
combination of open manure storage
structures and covered structures, while
others will house all animals and store
all manure, feed and by-products under
cover. In either case, all parts of the
production area must be included in the
demonstrations required under
§ 122.23(i)(2)(i)(A) and (B).
In addition, as proposed under 40
CFR 122.23(i)(2)(i)(C), this final rule
requires any certified unpermitted
CAFO to implement the measures set
forth in 40 CFR 412.37(a) and (b) for the
production area. These additional
measures pertain to operation and
maintenance and include provisions for
visual inspections, depth markers for all
open surface liquid impoundments,
corrective action, mortality handling
and recordkeeping. This final rule also
requires these measures for permitted
new swine, poultry and veal calf
operations to meet a no discharge
standard. Since both these permitted
new source operations and unpermitted
certified CAFOs need to ensure no
discharge from the production area
under the permit and certification
requirements, respectively, it is
appropriate to rely, in part, on those
provisions to establish eligibility criteria
for no discharge certification. The
documents that are necessary to satisfy
the first eligibility criterion, which
addresses the CAFO’s design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance of the entire production
area, include design documentation and
all recordkeeping and operation and
maintenance planning necessary to
address the elements of § 122.23(i)(2)(i),
which includes the measures set forth in
§ 412.37(a) and (b).
In the preamble to the 2008
supplemental proposal, EPA requested
comment on whether a recordkeeping
checklist for use by certified CAFOs
would be a useful tool. EPA suggested
the possibility of making such a
checklist available to all CAFO
operators. Commenters generally
supported the concept of a
recordkeeping checklist that could be
used by certified CAFOs, since the
checklist could be used to document
‘‘expectations for risk management.’’
Commenters added that the checklist
should be developed in concert with the
States. EPA plans to work with States to
develop a checklist and consider
whether State-specific checklists would
also be appropriate.
The second eligibility criterion
requires the CAFO to have developed
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70429
and be implementing an NMP that
addresses, at a minimum, the elements
set forth in § 122.42(e)(1) and 40 CFR
412.37(c), and all site-specific operation
and maintenance practices necessary to
ensure that the CAFO will not
discharge. The NMP must include
provisions regarding nutrient
management in the production area as
well as in all land application areas
under the control of the CAFO where
the CAFO will land-apply manure.
Because operation and maintenance
practices and procedures are critical to
discharge prevention, implementation
of an NMP is an essential component of
any CAFO’s efforts to ensure that it will
not discharge from its production or
land application areas. Furthermore, in
order for any certified CAFO that land
applies to ensure that the only
discharges from the land application
areas are non-point source agricultural
stormwater discharges, the CAFO
would, at a minimum, need to land
apply in accordance with practices that
ensure appropriate agricultural
utilization of nutrients, including
conservation practices and agronomic
rates of application. For detailed
discussion of unpermitted CAFOs and
the agricultural stormwater exemption,
see section III.B of this preamble.
EPA received comments indicating
that the final rule should establish a link
between a facility’s open storage
structure design and the land
application practices outlined in a
CAFO’s NMP. In the 2008 supplemental
proposal, EPA intended that the CAFO’s
NMP would reflect any operation and
maintenance practices related to and
assumed in the technical evaluation
performed for open containment
structures. To clarify this intent, 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2)(ii)(B) of this final rule states
that the operation and maintenance
practices required to be part of the NMP
must include ‘‘any practices or
conditions established by a technical
evaluation pursuant to paragraph
(i)(2)(i)(A),’’ the provision applicable to
CAFOs with open containment. For
example, an existing facility may
develop an NMP and then use AWM
and the SPAW model to evaluate the
adequacy of the designed storage facility
and overall water budgets for the
operation, respectively, which will rely
upon inputs from the CAFO’s NMP such
as the number and type of animals, soil
profiles and planned crop rotations. In
such a scenario, the CAFO may learn
from the technical evaluation that more
frequent lagoon drawdowns are
necessary in order to achieve no
discharge. To be eligible for certification
under the final rule, the CAFO’s NMP
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would then need to be revised to
include the adjusted operation and
maintenance practices resulting from
the technical evaluation. It is these
changed operation and maintenance
practices that EPA is referring to in the
§ 122.23(i)(2)(ii)(B) requirement for the
NMP to address ‘‘any practices or
conditions established by’’ the technical
evaluation required for CAFOs with
open containment structures under the
first eligibility criteria.
Commenters requested that EPA
define what criteria can be used to meet
the NMP eligibility requirement (e.g.,
whether a comprehensive nutrient
management plan (CNMP) would
suffice). As EPA stated in the 2008
supplemental proposal, a CAFO may
rely upon a CNMP 2 for purposes of
certification eligibility, so long as the
minimum NMP requirements of
§ 122.42(e)(1) and § 412.37(c) are met by
the CAFO’s plan, including all
necessary operation and maintenance
protocols.3
As discussed below, 40 CFR
122.23(i)(4) requires the certified CAFO
to at all times be designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained such that it
meets the eligibility criteria to establish
that the operation does not discharge or
propose to discharge. Thus, to maintain
a valid certification, a certified CAFO
must update its NMP if any of the
design specifications, practices, or other
NMP provisions change over time. For
example, if a certified CAFO operator
decides to land-apply manure on a field
that is not included in the NMP, the
CAFO will need to calculate rates of
application in accordance with the
protocols for land application consistent
with 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(viii) and revise
the NMP to include the new field and
the corresponding application rates and
any other land application practices for
the field in accordance with the
protocols. Furthermore, since the
eligibility criteria require the certified
CAFO to implement the ‘‘up-to-date’’
NMP, the CAFO would then need to
land apply in accordance with the
application rates and other practices
incorporated into the NMP for that field.
2 Technical Guidance for Developing
Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plans, USDA
Natural Resources Conservation Service (2003),
available at https://policy.nrcs.usda.gov/
viewerFS.aspx?id=3073.
3 It is common for an operation to have one or
more operation and maintenance plans in order to
properly implement a number of NRCS
conservation practice standards simultaneously.
Also, to the extent that the necessary operation and
maintenance requirements to implement any
provision of the NMP are not included in the NMP
itself, those requirements need to be implemented
and included in an operation and maintenance plan
to be maintained on site or at a nearby location.
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In the 2008 supplemental proposal,
EPA stated that it would encourage
CAFOs seeking certification to consult
with qualified third-party professionals,
but did not propose to require such
consultation. Some commenters
supported EPA’s position, while others
believe that a third-party validation of
the certification by an NRCS-certified
technical service provider and
professional engineer should be a
required element of the eligibility
criteria. Commenters expressed
concerns that many CAFOs do not have
the requisite knowledge to make
technically sound determinations
regarding how to meet the eligibility
criteria for certification. EPA continues
to believe that it is appropriate that the
third-party consultation be
recommended but not required because
certification is voluntary and it is the
CAFO owner or operator who must
certify to the operation’s eligibility.
Because a CAFO’s certification will not
be approved by the permitting authority,
it is up to the CAFO operator to be
certain that the certification is valid in
order to benefit from the presumption
that it does not propose to discharge.
Therefore, EPA recommends
consultation with a qualified thirdparty. As stated in the preamble to the
2008 supplemental proposal, any
professional consulted by the CAFO
should have the requisite training,
experience and expertise to conduct
and/or substantively review the
required analyses, and to advise the
owner or operator as to whether the
CAFO is, in fact, designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained such that it
will not discharge.
The third eligibility criterion for
certification established by this final
rule, 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2)(iii), requires
that the CAFO maintain the
documentation required by the first two
criteria ‘‘either on site or at a nearby
office, or otherwise make such
documentation readily available to the
Director or Regional Administrator upon
request.’’ The 2008 supplemental
proposal included a regulatory
requirement that the NMP and other
documentation of eligibility be
maintained by the CAFO ‘‘on site.’’
Many commenters expressed the need
for the final rule to include regulatory
language allowing all documentation of
the certification eligibility criteria to be
held on-site or made readily available
upon request. These commenters were
primarily concerned that a requirement
to maintain the documentation on site
would be unreasonably burdensome on
facilities that have multiple production
sites with one central office. EPA agrees
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that the documentation necessary to
demonstrate certification eligibility,
including the CAFO’s site-specific NMP,
should be maintained either on site or
at a nearby office, or otherwise made
readily available to the permitting
authority upon request. The final rule
established today includes this revision
to the proposed language, which is also
consistent with the provision
established today applicable to the
agricultural stormwater discharge
exemption for unpermitted CAFOs,
discussed in section III.B of this
preamble. EPA recommends that
operators maintain the necessary
documentation on-site to ensure proper
implementation of all operation and
maintenance procedures.
(ii) Submitting the Certification
Under the certification option
promulgated by this action, a CAFO
seeking to certify that it does not
discharge or propose to discharge is
required to submit the certification to
the permitting authority. Under 40 CFR
122.23(i)(3), the submission to the
Director must include: (1) The CAFO
owner or operator’s name, address and
phone number; (2) information
regarding the CAFO’s location,
including latitude and longitude; (3) a
description of the basis for the CAFO’s
certification that it satisfies the
eligibility requirements of 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2); (4) the certification
statement set forth in 40 CFR
122.23(i)(3)(iv); and (5) an official
signature that meets the signatory
requirements of 40 CFR 122.22.
The signed certification makes the
CAFO legally responsible for its
representations to the Director regarding
the design, construction, operation, and
maintenance of the CAFO. As EPA
noted in the preamble to the 2008
supplemental proposal, the language
regarding legal liability for making a
false statement under the certification
option is consistent with language in 40
CFR 122.26(g) which applies to facilities
seeking to obtain a ‘‘no exposure’’
exclusion from the requirement for an
industrial stormwater discharge permit.
EPA clarifies that under the applicable
signatory requirements in § 122.22,
signing the certification signifies that
the signer is certifying that the
certification was prepared under his/her
direction or supervision in accordance
with a system designed to assure that
qualified personnel properly gathered
and evaluated the information
submitted and that based on the
responsible official’s inquiry of the
person or persons who manage the
system, or those persons directly
responsible for gathering the
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information, the information submitted
is, to the best of their knowledge and
belief, true, accurate and complete.
This final rule makes no changes to
the existing regulations concerning how
CAFOs may make Confidential Business
Information (CBI) claims with respect to
information they must submit to the
permitting authority and how those
claims will be evaluated. A facility may
make a claim of confidentiality under
the existing regulations at 40 CFR part
2, subpart B.
The third item the Agency is requiring
for submission to the Director, as listed
above, is a statement describing the
basis for the CAFO’s certification that it
is designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained in accordance with the
certification eligibility criteria. EPA’s
expectation for what this description
should include is unchanged from the
2008 supplemental proposal. In the
preamble to the 2008 supplemental
proposal, EPA requested public
comment on whether the scope and type
of information included in the
description of eligibility submitted to
the Director should include: (1) The
type and number of animals; (2) the type
and capacity of manure and wastewater
storage and/or containment; (3) storm
size used as the basis for containment
design; (4) whether the CAFO consulted
with a professional engineer or
technical service provider (TSP); (5)
identification of the documents
maintained on site in accordance with
the eligibility criteria; and (6) any
technical standards, tools (e.g. , RUSLE
and Phosphorus Index) and formulas
used to calculate application rates of
manure, litter, and process wastewater.
Commenters expressed differing
viewpoints as to what documentation
must be provided to the Director for the
no discharge certification. Some
commenters felt that the 2008
supplemental proposal would have
required the submission of too much
information, and that CAFOs should
only be required to submit a list of the
documents created to establish a
facility’s eligibility. Some of these stated
that submission of any facility design or
operation specifics is superfluous given
that there is no review by the permitting
authority. In contrast, other commenters
believed that the extent of
documentation to be submitted to the
Director was insufficient to establish
that a facility is designed, operated, and
maintained in a way to ensure that it is
not discharging. Specifically, these
commenters desired that submissions
include all documents associated with
meeting the eligibility criteria for
certification.
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After consideration of these
comments, EPA believes that the list of
information presented in the preamble
to the supplemental proposal balances
the need of the Director to be informed
of critical aspects of the certified
CAFO’s operation with the fact that the
certification is not subject to review by
the Director in order to become
effective. It is reasonable that the
description of the CAFO’s basis for
certification be submitted as part of the
certification, including the type of
information listed above, as proposed in
the supplemental proposal. EPA also
recognizes that depending on sitespecific conditions at a particular
facility, certain information may not be
necessary (e.g. , an operation with no
land application areas would not need
to provide information about
application rates of manure, litter, and
process wastewater). Furthermore, if the
Director is concerned that a CAFO that
discharges or proposes to discharge has
submitted a certification, the Director
has the authority to request additional
information from the CAFO, as
discussed below.
The authority given to the permitting
authority under section 308 of the CWA
to conduct inspections at operations is
not affected by this rule. Section 308
authorizes, among other things, EPA to
require owners or operators of point
sources to establish records, conduct
monitoring activities and inspections,
and make reports, to enable the
permitting authority to determine
whether there is any violation of any
prohibition, or any requirement
established under section 308, 402, or
504 of the CWA. Therefore, any CAFO,
whether it is certified, permitted, or
neither, may be subject to an
information gathering request or
inspection, at the Director’s discretion
and for any of the reasons provided by
section 308 of the CWA. 33 U.S.C. 1318.
Under this final rule, 40 CFR
122.23(i)(4), a ‘‘certification that meets
the requirements of paragraphs (i)(2)
and (i)(3) * * * shall become effective
on the date it is submitted, unless the
Director establishes an effective date of
up to 30 days after the date of
submission.’’ A certification is effective
if the CAFO meets the eligibility criteria
in § 122.23(i)(2) and submits the signed
certification statement and other
required information in accordance with
§ 122.23(i)(3). This rule also requires the
use of certified mail or an equivalent
method of documentation for
identifying the date of submission,
consistent with the supplemental
proposal, in order to notify the Director
that the CAFO has chosen to self-certify.
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70431
EPA notes that under the final
provision, the Director may, but is not
required to, establish that certifications
will become effective after a specified
number of days, not to exceed 30 days,
following submission of the certification
if the Director deems such action
appropriate, as discussed below.
Regardless of whether the permitting
authority chooses to establish an
effective date in accordance with
§ 122.23(i)(4), a certification becomes
effective (either on the date it is
submitted or on the date established by
the Director) without acceptance or
approval by the permitting authority. A
decision by the permitting authority to
delay the effective date would allow the
permitting authority to become aware of
the CAFO’s certification prior to it going
into effect. A delayed effective date of
up to 30 days could provide the
opportunity for the permitting authority
and the CAFO to have a focused
exchange of information before the
certification becomes effective. For
example, as a result of such an exchange
the CAFO may choose to consider
making revisions to its certification to
be assured it has submitted a
certification that meets all the
requirements of § 122.23(i)(2) and (3).
Also, such an exchange could provide
an opportunity for the CAFO to obtain
additional information about
maintaining a valid certification after it
goes into effect. The permitting
authority can also request information
from an unpermitted CAFO, as provided
in section 308 of the CWA, and provide
feedback to the CAFO operator if the
Director believes that the CAFO has not
met the certification requirements.
EPA emphasizes that the final rule
does not require Director review of the
certification. Therefore, if, for example,
the permitting authority establishes that
certifications in that State will become
effective 30 days after submission, a
certification from a CAFO that has met
the eligibility and submission
requirements in § 122.23(i)(2)–(3) will
go into effect on day 30 regardless of
any activities that take place during the
30-day period, so long as the CAFO
maintains eligibility throughout that
period. Similarly, because the
certification is not subject to permitting
authority review and approval, inaction
on the part of the permitting authority
at any time during or after the 30 days
does not indicate that the CAFO either
has or has not met the eligibility and
submission requirements. An effective
date that is no more than 30 days after
submission provides sufficient time for
the permitting authority to receive the
certification and have an exchange with
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the CAFO, but it does not constitute an
unreasonable delay for the CAFO to
obtain a valid certification. Given these
underlying principles, EPA has
determined that it is appropriate to
allow the Director discretion to establish
an effective date that is up to, but not
more than, 30 days after submission.
EPA received comments concerning
the submission process for no discharge
certifications. Numerous commenters
expressed concerns with the lack of any
explicit requirement for Director review
and approval of certifications. Some
commenters asserted that the lack of
review and public participation under
the 2008 supplemental proposal violates
the CWA and the Waterkeeper decision,
and that without such review,
certification provides no assurance of
‘‘no discharge’’ and creates an
impermissible permitting structure
based on self-regulation. Other
commenters indicated that Director
review of key documentation is
necessary to ensure that a facility’s
certification meets applicable criteria.
Some commenters requested that the
documents necessary to meet the
eligibility criteria also be subject to
review by the Director and that approval
of the no discharge certification be made
contingent on such review.
EPA does not agree that the lack of a
requirement for Director review is
contrary to the CWA or the Waterkeeper
decision. The voluntary certification
option is available only to CAFOs that
do not discharge or propose to discharge
and, therefore, are not required to seek
NPDES permit coverage. Neither the
CWA nor the Waterkeeper decision
requires a permitting authority to review
no discharge certifications or to subject
such information to public
participation. Under the CWA, such
requirements apply only to the
permitting process. In addition, EPA
emphasizes that certification is not a
substitute for a permit. Rather, a valid
certification simply allows an
unpermitted CAFO that is designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
not to discharge to establish and
document that it does not discharge or
propose to discharge, in exchange for
the assurance provided by a no
discharge certification that it is not
subject to the regulatory requirement to
seek permit coverage in 40 CFR
122.23(d)(1) and (f). It is the CAFO’s
choice and responsibility to establish
and maintain a valid certification or lose
the benefits afforded by the certification.
Furthermore, as mentioned above, the
final rule allows the permitting
authority to establish an effective date
for certification of up to 30 days after
the date of submission by the CAFO.
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Allowing States the discretion to delay
the effective date of certification
addresses some comments from States
expressing uncertainty about the role of
the permitting authority in the
certification process.
(iii) Limitations on Certification
This rule includes several limitations
on certification related to the term of a
certification, withdrawal of certification,
and recertification after a certification
becomes invalid.
Consistent with the 2008
supplemental proposal, under this final
rule, a no discharge certification will
expire five years after the effective date,
unless the CAFO voluntarily withdraws
the certification or the certification
becomes invalid (i.e., the CAFO has
either discharged or ceases to be
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained in accordance with
certification eligibility criteria) during
the five-year term. See 40 CFR
122.23(i)(4). Some commenters agreed
with the proposed five-year term of
certification, because the limited term of
certification would ensure that the
CAFO reevaluates eligibility. Other
commenters contended that facilities
should recertify on a more frequent
basis, either annually or triennially, to
ensure more frequent reevaluation of
their certification. A number of
commenters did not believe that a term
of certification should be prescribed;
several of these commenters maintained
that if a facility remains in compliance
with the certification criteria and does
not make any significant changes in
operation, the certification should
remain valid indefinitely.
After considering the comments
regarding the appropriate term for
certification, EPA has concluded that
the proposed five-year term is
appropriate. At the end of this term the
certification can be renewed, if desired
by the CAFO. Since CAFOs commonly
alter their operations over time, it is
reasonable for the CAFO to periodically
reevaluate and update its certification
submission. In addition, renewal every
five years does not create an undue
burden on the CAFO or the permitting
authority because CAFOs that have not
had major changes in operations may be
able to use much of the same
documentation as prepared previously,
and permitting authorities are not
required to review and approve the
certification. A shorter term for
certification, such as one or three years,
is not necessary because a properly
certified CAFO needs to evaluate the
facility at regular intervals as part of the
inspection and recordkeeping
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requirements. Thus, a five-year term is
reasonable.
Under 40 CFR 122.23(i)(5) a CAFO
may withdraw its certification at any
time by notifying the Director, by
certified mail or equivalent method of
documentation, that it is withdrawing
its certification. The certification is
effectively withdrawn on the date the
notification is submitted to the Director.
If a CAFO’s certification becomes
invalid as provided in § 122.23(i)(4),
discussed below, § 122.23(i)(5) requires
the CAFO operator to withdraw its
certification within three days of the
date on which the CAFO becomes aware
that the no discharge certification is
invalid. As proposed, this final rule
does not require the CAFO operator to
notify the Director of the reason for
withdrawing the certification because
certification is voluntary.
EPA received a number of comments
concerning the withdrawal of
certification. These comments generally
focused on the need for a certified
CAFO to provide more information
regarding its actions leading to the
withdrawal. Some commenters observed
that in order to withdraw certification,
CAFOs should have to submit the
reasons for such withdrawal to the
Director. EPA believes it is reasonable
for a CAFO to be able to withdrawal its
voluntary certification at any time
without additional explanation. The
decision to certify is voluntary, and
thus, it is appropriate to allow a CAFO
to decide to withdraw its certification
for any reason with no further
explanation. However, certain situations
require the CAFO to withdraw its
certification. This final rule requires
that a CAFO withdraw its certification
by notifying the Director in the event
that the certification is no longer valid,
either because of a discharge or because
the CAFO ceases to meet the eligibility
criteria. See § 122.23(i)(4) and (5).
Notifying the Director that a CAFO is
withdrawing its certification provides
the information necessary for the
Director to maintain an up-to-date
record of certified CAFOs. A CAFO that
fails to withdraw its certification within
three days of becoming aware that the
certification is invalid would be in
violation of this regulatory requirement.
EPA believes these provisions
appropriately balance the voluntary
nature of certification with the value to
the Director of maintaining accurate
records of the universe of certified
CAFOs.
This final rule describes in
§ 122.23(i)(4) the situations that cause a
certification to become invalid. First, in
the unlikely event of a discharge from
a properly certified CAFO, the
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certification would cease to be valid and
would no longer be in effect. Second,
should a CAFO fail to continue to meet
any of the eligibility criteria, the CAFO’s
certification would no longer be valid.
Circumstances that could result in the
certification becoming invalid include,
for example, an increase in animals that
exceeds the capacity of the production
area for manure storage and handling or
a loss of land application areas such that
the assumptions in the NMP concerning
land application would no longer be
appropriate, if the CAFO’s operations,
NMP and certification documentation
were not revised to address these
changed circumstances. EPA
emphasizes that failure by a certified
CAFO to continue to meet the eligibility
requirements in 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2) is
not, in and of itself, a violation of any
regulatory requirement because
certification is strictly voluntary. For
example, failure to implement the
measures set forth in 40 CFR 412.37(a)–
(b), which are required for no discharge
certification eligibility under 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2)(i), is not a violation of
§ 412.37(a)–(b) but renders the
certification invalid. However, failure to
withdraw a certification that has
become invalid is a violation of the
requirement to do so.
As explained in the 2008
supplemental proposal, once a
certification ceases to be valid, the
operator cannot rely on it if a
subsequent enforcement action is
brought for a violation of the duty to
apply for a permit that is triggered after
the certification becomes invalid. In
other words, once a CAFO’s certification
becomes invalid, the CAFO is in the
same position as any other unpermitted
and uncertified CAFO. After
withdrawing the invalid certification,
the operator may be interested in
seeking to recertify that the CAFO does
not discharge or propose to discharge or,
if the CAFO does discharge or propose
to discharge, the CAFO is required to
seek permit coverage, as stated in 40
CFR 122.23(i)(5)(ii).
In the 2008 supplemental proposal,
EPA proposed to allow a previously
certified CAFO to recertify by revising
its operations to address the deficiency
that led to the invalid certification and
submitting a new certification
statement. Under the proposal, if the
certification was rendered invalid by a
discharge, in order to recertify a CAFO
would have to submit to the Director the
information required under 40 CFR
122.23(i)(3) and additional information
describing the discharge and the steps
taken by the CAFO to permanently
address the cause of the discharge. As
proposed, such a recertification
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submission, like the initial submission,
would not be subject to review.
Under this final rule, if a CAFO’s
certification becomes invalid due to a
failure to meet the eligibility criteria, as
opposed to because of a discharge, and
the CAFO wishes to recertify, the owner
or operator would need to make the
changes necessary to establish eligibility
under § 122.23(i)(2). The provisions
applicable to the recertification
submission and effective date would be
the same as for any certification. See
§ 122.23(i)(3) and (4). If the CAFO
wishes to recertify after a discharge has
occurred, the CAFO would need to meet
the additional requirements of 40 CFR
122.23(i)(6), discussed in detail below.
Commenters expressed several
viewpoints with regard to the proposed
provisions for recertification after a
discharge. Some commenters supported
the recertification process as proposed.
These commenters generally recognized
that CAFOs may encounter unusual
circumstances that result in a discharge
and that it is appropriate to allow for
recertification once the conditions that
resulted in the discharge are addressed.
Certain other commenters argued that
subsequent to a discharge any
recertification should be reviewed by
the permitting authority and open to
public comment to ensure a rigorous
assessment of whether recertification is
appropriate. Some commenters asserted
that recertification after a discharge
should not be allowed at all under the
CAFO regulations. Furthermore, some
commenters believe it would be
inequitable for unpermitted CAFOs to
discharge and recertify if other
discharging operators are required to
seek permit coverage. Several of these
commenters asserted that any CAFO
that discharges should be required to
obtain an NPDES permit.
EPA emphasizes that it will be highly
unlikely for a CAFO that is designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
in accordance with the eligibility
criteria in § 122.23(i)(2) to discharge.
Furthermore, EPA maintains its
position, stated in the preamble to the
2008 supplemental proposal, that the
Agency generally considers a recurring
discharge as evidence that a CAFO is
not eligible for certification or
recertification and needs to seek permit
coverage. However, given the possibility
of a discharge from a properly certified
CAFO, albeit remote, EPA believes it is
necessary for the final rule to include
provisions specifically for a CAFO
seeking to recertify after a discharge.
In response to comments, EPA has
established specific criteria in this final
rule that limit a CAFO’s ability to
recertify after a discharge to those
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situations where (1) the certification
was valid at the time of the discharge,
meaning the CAFO continued to be
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained for no discharge in
accordance with all provisions of the
NMP and any operation and
maintenance plans included in the
certification; (2) the operator has made
any necessary changes to the CAFO’s
design, construction, operation and
maintenance to permanently address the
cause of the discharge and ensure that
no discharge from this cause occurs in
the future; and (3) the CAFO has not
previously recertified after a discharge
from the same cause. The first criterion
limits the availability of recertification
after a discharge by excluding CAFOs
that discharge after allowing the
certification to lapse. EPA believes that
a CAFO that certifies under penalty of
law that it is and will continue to be
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained so as not to discharge, that
then fails to satisfy this criterion and
subsequently discharges, should not be
given the opportunity to once again
obtain the benefits of a no discharge
certification. The second criterion
ensures that a CAFO will only recertify
after it has carefully evaluated the cause
of the discharge and taken whatever
action is necessary to ensure that a
discharge from the same cause will not
occur again. Finally, the third criterion
constrains a CAFO from engaging in a
cycle of recertifying after multiple
discharges from the same cause. The
voluntary certification option
established in this rule is not intended
to be a mechanism for discharging
CAFOs to avoid obtaining permit
coverage, a concern cited by several
commenters who opposed the
certification option. On the contrary,
EPA is providing the certification option
to allow CAFOs that meet the eligibility
criteria to establish up front that they do
not discharge or propose to discharge.
The final rule provides that the
CAFO’s recertification will not become
effective until 30 days from the date of
submission. The operator is also
required to submit the following
information for review by the Director:
A description of the discharge,
including the date, time, cause, duration
and approximate volume of the
discharge, and a detailed explanation of
the steps taken by the CAFO to
permanently address the cause of the
discharge. This 30-day review period
provides an opportunity for the Director
to consider the circumstances leading to
the discharge, any actions taken by the
CAFO to permanently address the cause
of the discharge, and any other relevant
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compliance information regarding the
facility. EPA encourages State
permitting authorities to take advantage
of this opportunity to consider such
information. As is true for the general
certification process described above,
when a CAFO seeks to recertify after a
discharge, the Director has the authority
to collect additional information from
the CAFO, assess whether the criteria in
this rule are satisfied, and provide
feedback to the CAFO if he/she believes
that the CAFO has not met the
recertification criteria. For example, the
30-day review period will allow the
Director to assess whether or not the
CAFO has previously recertified after a
discharge from the same cause.
However, as with the initial
certification, the Director is not required
to take any action for a certification to
become effective at the end of the 30day review period and inaction does not
indicate that the CAFO has met the
recertification criteria. After considering
public comments on the 2008
supplemental proposal regarding
recertification after a discharge, EPA has
determined that this 30-day review
period is reasonable and prudent to
allow the Director to review situations
where a previously certified CAFO has
had an actual discharge.
Overall, the limited conditions under
which a CAFO can recertify following a
discharge, the description of the
discharge submitted to the permitting
authority, and the required 30-day
review period prior to the recertification
becoming effective, provide an
opportunity for the Director to
determine whether the CAFO discharges
or proposes to discharge and must seek
coverage under an NPDES permit. For
example, as provided in 40 CFR
122.28(b)(2)(vi), the Director has the
authority to direct that the CAFO be
covered under a general permit if one is
available.
EPA believes the final rule provisions
covering recertification after a discharge
provide an appropriate balance of the
flexibility offered by voluntary
certification and the need for scrutiny of
previously certified CAFOs that have
discharged. Additionally, under the
final rule, any previously certified
CAFO that discharges or proposes to
discharge is subject to the permit
application requirements of 40 CFR
122.23(d)(1) and (f), and therefore must
apply when the CAFO proposes to
discharge. A CAFO that has
permanently addressed the cause of the
discharge such that the CAFO does not
‘‘discharge or propose to discharge’’ is
not required to seek permit coverage
regardless of whether it recertifies. For
further discussion of the effects of a past
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discharge on a CAFO’s permit
application requirements, see the duty
to apply discussion at section III.A.3(a)
of this preamble.
B. Agricultural Stormwater Exemption
1. Provisions in the 2003 CAFO Rule
The discharge of manure, litter, or
process wastewater from a land
application area under the control of a
CAFO is a discharge subject to NPDES
permitting requirements, unless the
discharge is an ‘‘agricultural stormwater
discharge,’’ which is excluded from the
meaning of the term ‘‘point source’’
under 33 U.S.C. 1362(14). In the 2003
CAFO rule, EPA differentiated between
discharges from land application areas
under the control of the CAFO that are
point source discharges and those that
are ‘‘agricultural stormwater discharges’’
exempt from NPDES permit
requirements.
In the 2003 rule, EPA promulgated a
definition of agricultural stormwater for
CAFO land application areas that
referenced 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix).
The referenced regulatory text includes
requirements for edge-of-field buffers or
equivalent measures, testing of manure
and soil, land application at site-specific
agronomic rates, and recordkeeping.
While not explicitly included in the
definition of agricultural stormwater,
technical standards established by the
Director, in accordance with effluent
limitations guidelines (ELGs) in 40 CFR
412.4(c) applied to Large CAFOs’
nutrient management plans for land
application. These more specific
limitations implemented the general
requirements at § 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix),
and because the 2003 rule required all
CAFOs with a potential to discharge to
obtain permits, virtually all Large
CAFOs were required to comply with
them.
2. Summary of the Second Circuit Court
Decision
The Second Circuit upheld EPA’s
definition of agricultural stormwater
established by the 2003 rule. In
addition, ELG requirements of 40 CFR
412.4(c) concerning land application for
Large CAFOs were not challenged. The
court did not, however, specifically
address the applicability of these
requirements to unpermitted Large
CAFOs seeking to claim the agricultural
stormwater exemption for land
application discharges, in light of its
vacature of the duty to apply for all
Large CAFOs. Waterkeeper Alliance et
al. v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486 (2d Cir. 2005).
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3. This Final Rule
As a result of the regulatory revisions
being made by this action in response to
the Waterkeeper decision, which held
that EPA does not have authority to
require facilities with solely a potential
to discharge to obtain permits, Large
CAFOs are not required to seek NPDES
permit coverage unless they discharge
or propose to discharge. For those Large
CAFOs that obtain NPDES permit
coverage, provisions for determining
whether precipitation-related discharges
from their land application areas qualify
for the agricultural stormwater
exemption were promulgated in the
2003 rule and codified at 40 CFR
122.23(e). As explained above, under
the 2003 rule, Large CAFO NPDES
permits must require the development
and implementation of nutrient
management plans for land application
in accordance with the ELG in 40 CFR
part 412. Nutrient management plans for
land application in accordance with 40
CFR 412.4(c) include application rates
and other practices for manure, litter,
and process wastewater developed in
compliance with technical standards, as
well as other requirements. These land
application requirements are then
incorporated into the permit pursuant to
40 CFR 122.42(e)(1). Therefore, for
permitted Large CAFOs that land apply
manure, litter, or process wastewater,
‘‘site-specific nutrient management
practices * * * as specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(iv)–(ix)’’ in § 122.23(e)
include land application rates and other
practices determined in compliance
with technical standards.
The 2003 rule at § 122.23(e) specifies
how Large CAFOs that have NPDES
permits qualify for the agricultural
stormwater exemption. Specifically,
under the existing regulation, the permit
must set forth the site-specific nutrient
management practices that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of
nutrients as specified in 40 CFR
122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix) in order for
precipitation-related discharges from
such land application areas to be
exempt agricultural stormwater
discharges. EPA did not propose to
amend the existing agricultural
stormwater discharge exemption
provision in § 122.23(e), nor has EPA
otherwise reopened the provision.
In this rule, however, EPA is adopting
a new regulatory provision clarifying
what constitutes agricultural stormwater
for unpermitted Large CAFOs. The
Waterkeeper court held that Large
CAFOs with a mere potential to
discharge were not required to obtain
permits. Because the existing
regulations could be construed as
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applying only to Large CAFOs with
NPDES permits, EPA explained in the
preamble to the 2006 proposed rule that
a CAFO with no discharges other than
precipitation-related discharges from its
land application areas would not be
considered to ‘‘discharge’’ if it applies
manure, litter, or process wastewater to
land under its control in accordance
with nutrient management practices that
ensure appropriate agricultural
utilization of the nutrients in the
manure, litter, or process wastewater as
specified § 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix). The
Agency also expressly stated in its 2006
proposal that, for unpermitted Large
CAFOs to qualify for the statutory
agricultural stormwater exemption,
manure, litter, and process wastewater
must be applied in compliance with
technical standards, noting that
technical standards are, in significant
part, intended to ensure the appropriate
agricultural utilization of the nutrients
contained in the manure, litter, or
process wastewater. 71 FR 37,750. EPA
also requested comment on whether to
codify language to require that
unpermitted Large CAFOs that land
apply manure, litter, or process
wastewater must comply with the
technical standards established by the
Director in order to qualify for the
agricultural stormwater discharge
exemption for precipitation-related
discharges from land application areas
under their control.
In the preamble to the 2006 proposed
rule, EPA also discussed the reference to
the documentation requirement found
in 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(ix). EPA noted
that documentation is a crucial element
for determining whether a CAFO is land
applying manure, litter, or process
wastewater in a manner that ensures the
appropriate agricultural utilization of
nutrients such that any runoff from land
application areas under a CAFO’s
control consists only of exempt
agricultural stormwater discharges. 71
FR 37,750.
The provision established in this rule
at § 122.23(e)(1) clarifies that in order
for unpermitted Large CAFOs to have
their precipitation-related discharges
qualify as agricultural stormwater
discharges, they must land apply
manure, litter, or process wastewater
‘‘in accordance with site-specific
nutrient management practices that
ensure appropriate agricultural
utilization of the nutrients in the
manure, litter, or process wastewater, as
specified in § 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix).’’ This
interpretation of the statutory
agricultural stormwater exemption was
upheld by the Second Circuit in the
Waterkeeper decision. In addition, the
new provision established at 40 CFR
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122.23(e)(2) requires unpermitted Large
CAFOs to have nutrient management
planning documentation on site, at a
nearby office, or otherwise make it
readily available upon request to
support assertions that the only
discharges from their land application
areas are precipitation-related
discharges that qualify for the
agricultural stormwater exemption. As
noted above, EPA has not reopened any
aspect of the 2003 CAFO rule applicable
to permitted CAFOs. Rather, the new
provisions clarify how the agricultural
stormwater exemption applies to Large
CAFOs that do not have an NPDES
permit. This is not a new requirement
for unpermitted CAFOs, but rather a
clarification of EPA’s existing
interpretation of the agricultural
stormwater exemption in CWA section
502(14).
EPA is modifying the interpretation
articulated by EPA in the 2006 proposal
of how technical standards apply to
unpermitted CAFOs seeking to have
their precipitation-related discharges
from land application areas qualify for
the agricultural stormwater exemption.
Under this final rule, a precipitationrelated discharge from land application
areas under the control of an
unpermitted Large CAFO constitutes an
agricultural stormwater discharge where
the CAFO has land applied manure,
litter, or process wastewater in
accordance with site-specific nutrient
management practices that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of
the nutrients in the manure, litter, or
process wastewater, as specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix). Nutrient
management practices and rates of
application satisfy the requirements of
40 CFR122.42(e)(1)(viii) when they are
in accordance with technical standards
established by the Director. The form,
source, amount, timing, and method of
application of nutrients are essential
components of the protocols for land
application of manure, litter, or process
wastewater specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(viii). As explained below,
CAFOs that land apply using nutrient
management practices based on
standards other than the technical
standards established by the Director
would have to demonstrate that such
practices ensure the appropriate
agricultural utilization of the nutrients
in the manure, litter, or process
wastewater as specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
Technical standards established by
the Director provide an objective basis
for determining when precipitationrelated discharges from land application
areas are exempt from NPDES permit
requirements. Such technical standards
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70435
are reviewed and determined by the
permitting authority to provide a
technically sound framework for
establishing rates of application that
generally would satisfy the
requirements of § 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
Such technical standards specify the
method or methods for determining
whether land application rates are to be
based on nitrogen or phosphorus, or
whether existing nutrient loads in the
soil preclude land application, and also
address the form, source, amount,
timing, and method of application on
each field to achieve realistic
production goals while minimizing
movement of nitrogen and phosphorus
to surface waters. Thus, technical
standards provide an objective and
reliable framework for developing rates
of application and other practices for
each field, taking into account a range
of critical factors. For purposes of
§ 122.42(e)(1)(viii), rates of application
developed using technical standards
must encompass and include all of the
factors discussed above.
Because the technical standards
established by the Director represent the
permitting authority’s judgment as to
practices that ensure appropriate
agricultural utilization of nutrients, as
discussed above, they provide a sound
basis for determining and documenting
that a precipitation-related discharge
from land application areas will meet
the requirements of § 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
If a facility chooses to take a different
approach and follow other standards,
the facility would need to demonstrate
not only that its practices accorded with
such alternative standards, but also that
the standards provided a reliable,
technically valid basis for meeting the
terms of § 122.42(e)(1)(viii). While
technical standards established by the
Director would have undergone careful
review by the Director to determine
their validity for purposes of applying
the agricultural stormwater exemption,
there may not have been a comparable
review in place for alternative
standards. Thus, the CAFO may have to
demonstrate both the appropriateness of
alternative standards and that its
practices conformed to them in order for
its discharges to qualify for the
agricultural stormwater exemption.
EPA recognizes that there may be
other standards that are developed
besides those established by the Director
that may also provide guidance to
producers regarding appropriate
agronomic nutrient management
practices and the development of rates
of application. Under this rule, owners
and operators of unpermitted CAFOs are
not precluded from relying on such
other standards. However, while other
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standards may provide useful guidance,
in the absence of being reviewed and
established by the Director, it is the
CAFO’s responsibility to demonstrate
that such alternative standards do, in
fact, ‘‘ensure appropriate agricultural
utilization of the nutrients in the
manure, litter, or process wastewater,’’
as required by § 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
In determining whether a CAFO’s
site-specific nutrient management
practices do ‘‘ensure appropriate
utilization of the nutrients’’ in the land
applied manure, litter, or process
wastewater, EPA will evaluate an
unpermitted CAFO’s nutrient
management practices using the
technical standards established by the
Director as a baseline and expects the
same of authorized States. As discussed,
EPA considers the technical standards
established by the Director to be a sound
measure for determining whether the
form, source, amount, timing, and
method of application meet the
requirements of § 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
As noted above, in order for an
unpermitted Large CAFO without an
NPDES permit to establish that the only
precipitation-related discharges from its
land application areas are agricultural
stormwater discharges, it must have
documentation showing that its nutrient
management practices are in accordance
with § 122.23(e)(1). This is not a new
concept, as one of the requirements
specified in § 122.23(e) promulgated in
the 2003 rule is to maintain
documentation as required by 40 CFR
122.42(e)(1)(ix). Section 122.42(e)(1)(ix)
requires specific records to be
maintained to document the
implementation of the elements of
§ 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(viii). As stated in the
preamble to the 2006 proposed rule, the
necessary documentation includes both
the nutrient management planning
documents and the additional
recordkeeping that demonstrates the
actual nutrient management practices
that have been implemented. See 71 FR
37,750. Such documentation is essential
for determining whether precipitationrelated discharges from a land
application area are agricultural
stormwater discharges or point source
discharges.
It is reasonable and appropriate that
unpermitted CAFOs be required to
demonstrate that their nutrient
management practices, including rates
of application, meet the regulatory
definition of agricultural stormwater
promulgated in 2003, and to do so
means maintaining documentation of
their nutrient management practices.
Without adequate documentation, it
would be difficult, if not impossible, to
know whether such precipitation-
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related discharges are unpermitted point
source discharges or are exempt
agricultural stormwater discharges.
Because unpermitted CAFOs are not
subject to the place and time
recordkeeping requirements of
§ 122.42(e)(2), EPA is in this rule
requiring that unpermitted CAFOs that
land apply manure, litter, or process
wastewater maintain on site or at a
nearby office, or otherwise make
available upon request documentation
showing that precipitation-related
discharges from their land application
areas are agricultural stormwater
discharges. The requirement for
documentation is referenced in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(ix), and is authorized by
section 308(a) of the CWA. Section
308(a) gives EPA authority to require
any point source to establish and
maintain records for determining
whether ‘‘any person is in violation’’ of
a prohibition, including the section
301(a) prohibition against point source
discharges unless authorized under an
NPDES permit. Section 308(a)(4)
authorizes EPA to require records,
reports, and other information when
required to carry out provisions of the
CWA, including sections 301 and 402.
The inclusion of this requirement for
unpermitted CAFOs to keep the
documentation on site or to make it
readily available upon request is for the
purpose of giving States and EPA a basis
for determining whether the CAFO’s
land application discharges are within
the statutory exemption for agricultural
stormwater. EPA expects that, in
general, CAFOs will maintain their
nutrient management plans for land
application on site because they set out
the protocols that must be followed in
practice. Documentation of the sitespecific nutrient management practices
that is not produceable to an inspector
at the time of a permitting authority’s
inspection would not be considered to
be made ‘‘readily available’’ and,
further, would raise questions as to
whether it is actually being properly
used by the CAFO.
EPA received comments in support of
its position that a facility need not have
an NPDES permit in order for
precipitation-related discharges from
land application areas to be deemed
agricultural stormwater discharges.
Other commenters disagreed for a
variety of reasons. First, commenters
asserted that the proposal was
inconsistent with the approach EPA
established in the 2003 rule. Second,
some commenters argued that allowing
the CAFO owner or operator to
determine whether its nutrient
management practices meet the
requirements of the rule creates a
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similar ‘‘impermissible self-regulatory
permitting scheme’’ as that struck down
by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
in the Waterkeeper decision. They
argued that these nutrient management
practices must be subject to review and
consideration by the permitting
authority and the public.
EPA does not agree that only CAFOs
with NPDES permits should be allowed
to claim that discharges from their land
application areas are agricultural
stormwater discharges. The question is
whether a precipitation-related
discharge from a CAFO’s land
application area is exempt from
permitting requirements as an
‘‘agricultural stormwater discharge’’ or
whether it is a point source discharge
that requires a permit. As the Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit
reiterated in the Waterkeeper decision,
‘‘a discharge from an area under the
control of a CAFO can be considered
either a CAFO discharge that is subject
to regulation or an agricultural
stormwater discharge that is not subject
to regulation.’’ 399 F.3d 486 at 508
(citing Concerned Area Residents for the
Environment v. Southview Farms, 34
F.3d 114 (2d Cir. 1994)). The assessment
of whether a discharge is exempt as
agricultural stormwater or a point
source discharge subject to permitting
requirements is not part of the
permitting process, but rather precedes
it.
For the same reason, EPA does not
agree that a self-regulatory regime is
created by allowing unpermitted CAFOs
to claim that precipitation-related
discharges from their land application
areas are exempt if they land apply
manure, litter, or process wastewater in
accordance with appropriate nutrient
management practices as required by
§ 122.23(e). In the context of the
agricultural stormwater discharge
exemption, nutrient management
practices are not effluent limitations,
which can only be established and
enforced through NPDES permits.
NPDES permits are authorized by
section 402 of the CWA for the
‘‘discharge of any pollutant’’ under the
terms of that section, including
compliance with effluent limitations.
Section 502(12) defines ‘‘discharge of a
pollutant’’ and ‘‘discharge of pollutants’’
as ‘‘the addition of any pollutant * * *
from any point source.’’ The definition
of ‘‘point source’’ in section 502(14)
expressly excludes ‘‘agricultural
stormwater discharges and return flows
from irrigated agriculture.’’ Therefore,
NPDES permits are necessary for point
source discharges, but not for
agricultural stormwater discharges.
Consequently, the site-specific nutrient
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management practices that a CAFO
must implement in order for
precipitation-related discharges from
areas under the CAFO’s control to be
considered agricultural stormwater
discharges are not effluent limitations.
Rather, they are preconditions for
determining whether the agricultural
stormwater exemption applies for
discharges from land application areas
under the CAFO’s control. Because the
site-specific nutrient management
practices are not effluent limitations,
they are not subject to the requirements
in section 402 for public review and
comment. However, persons who
believe that an unpermitted Large
CAFO’s nutrient management practices
are not sufficient to qualify for the
agricultural stormwater exemption are
free to bring citizen suits under CWA
section 505 alleging that the CAFO is
discharging without a permit.
The Waterkeeper court upheld EPA’s
construction of the definition of point
source as articulated in § 122.23(e) as
reasonable. In this rule, EPA has not in
any way reopened this provision of the
2003 rule. Nor is EPA changing any
aspect of § 122.23(e) with respect to
what is required in order for
precipitation-related discharges from
land under the control of a CAFO where
manure, litter, or process wastewater is
applied to qualify as ‘‘agricultural
stormwater discharges.’’ The approach
taken in this rule is simply to describe
how a CAFO without an NPDES permit
may come within the scope of the
existing language in § 122.23(e).
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C. Nutrient Management Plans
1. Provisions in the 2003 CAFO Rule
Under the 2003 CAFO rule, an NPDES
permit issued to a CAFO must include
a requirement for the permittee to
develop and implement a nutrient
management plan (NMP). At a
minimum, the NMP is required to
include best management practices
(BMPs) and procedures necessary to
achieve effluent limitations and
standards, to the extent applicable,
including the minimum requirements of
40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(i)–(ix). Effluent
limitations for Large CAFOs are set forth
in the effluent limitations guidelines
(ELG) in 40 CFR part 412, which contain
specific NMP requirements applicable
to both the production area and the land
application areas under the control of
Large CAFOs in the cattle, swine,
poultry, and veal calf subcategories. For
small and medium CAFOs, and other
operations not subject to 40 CFR part
412 requirements, effluent limitations,
including those applicable to land
application areas, are established on the
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basis of the best professional judgment
(BPJ) of the permitting authority
pursuant to CWA section 402(a)(1)(B)
and defined in 40 CFR 125.3(c)(2).
2. Summary of the Second Circuit Court
Decision
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit found that the terms of
an NMP are effluent limitations and
vacated the 2003 CAFO rule insofar as
the rule allowed permitting authorities
to issue NPDES permits to CAFOs
without (1) reviewing the terms of the
NMPs; (2) providing for adequate public
participation in the development,
revision, and enforcement of the
nutrient management plans; and (3)
including the terms of the NMP in the
permit. Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v.
EPA, 399 F.3d 486, 498–504 (2d Cir.
2005). The decision did not affect the
substantive requirements for NMPs
established at 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1) and
412.4(c) in the 2003 CAFO rule.
3. This Final Rule
To address the court’s decision, EPA
is revising the 2003 CAFO rule and
other provisions of the NPDES
regulations to provide for:
• Receipt and review of the NMP by
the permitting authority prior to issuing
an individual permit or granting
coverage under a general permit;
• Adequate public participation prior
to issuing an individual permit or
granting coverage under a general
permit;
• Incorporation of the terms of the
NMP into the NPDES permit; and
• The process to address changes to
the NMP once permit coverage is
granted, for both individual and general
permits.
The individual permitting process
already allows for review of NMPs by
the permitting authority and the public,
and incorporation of the terms of the
NMP into the individual permit
consistent with the CWA. This is not the
case, however, for general permits.
Given that fact, in promulgating these
revisions, EPA is devoting particular
attention to the process for issuance of
general permits. Furthermore, EPA
expects most CAFOs to be covered by
general permits.
To effectuate these changes, EPA is
revising 40 CFR 122.21, 122.23, 122.28,
122.42, 122.62, and 122.63. As
mentioned above, EPA extended the
deadlines set in the 2003 CAFO rule for
NMP development and implementation,
as well as for newly defined CAFOs to
seek permit coverage in separate
rulemakings. 71 FR 6978 (February 10,
2006); 72 FR 40,245 (July 24, 2007).
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The preamble discussion that follows
is divided into eight sections to
separately address each of the following
issues:
• CAFO permit application or notice
of intent requirements;
• Procedures for permitting authority
review and public participation prior to
permit coverage;
• Identification of terms of the NMP;
• Process for incorporating terms of
the NMP into a general permit;
• Changes to a permitted CAFO’s
NMP;
• Process for review of changes to an
NMP and for modifying terms of the
NMP incorporated into the permit;
• Annual reporting requirements; and
• EPA nutrient management plan
template.
(a) CAFO Permit Application or Notice
of Intent Requirements for Nutrient
Management Plans
EPA is revising 40 CFR 122.21(i)(1)(x)
to require the applicant to submit, as
part of its permit application or notice
of intent (NOI) to be covered by a
general permit, an NMP developed in
accordance with the provisions of 40
CFR 122.42(e) and, for Large CAFOs
subject to subparts C or D of 40 CFR part
412, the requirements of 40 CFR
412.4(c), as applicable. Although this
change is codified in the section of the
regulations applicable to individual
permit applications (40 CFR
122.21(i)(1)), it also applies to NOIs,
because the regulation governing NOIs
(40 CFR 122.28(b)(2)(ii)) crossreferences the requirements of
§ 122.21(i)(1). EPA revised Application
Form 2B to reflect these changes, and
the revised form is provided as
Appendix A of this notice.
The final rule adopts the approach
that EPA proposed. This approach is
consistent with the Waterkeeper
decision, which left undisturbed the
substantive requirements for nutrient
management plans in the 2003 CAFO
rule but held that such plans must be
submitted to the permitting authority for
public review prior to permit coverage.
These revisions do not change the
required contents of the NMP, but add
a requirement for CAFOs to submit their
NMP as part of their application for an
individual permit or NOI to be covered
under a general permit. This differs
from the requirements of the 2003 rule,
which required that NMPs be submitted
only at the request of the Director.
In the 2006 proposed rule, EPA
proposed requiring an applicant to
submit, as part of its permit application
or NOI, an NMP developed in
accordance with the provisions of 40
CFR 122.42(e)(1) and if applicable, 40
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CFR 412.4(c)(1). The permitting
authority would then make the NMP
available for review prior to issuing an
individual permit or providing coverage
under an NPDES general permit.
Many commenters supported the
proposed requirements to submit NMPs
with the initial permit application or
NOI. One State commented that a CAFO
should be allowed to submit the NOI
information in batches so that the
permitting authority could begin
processing the NOI before a facility has
completed its NMP to prevent delays in
the review and approval process. The
commenter added that authorization to
discharge under the permit could not be
granted until the permitting authority
had received, processed, and reviewed
all required NOI and NMP information
according to the regulations.
Nothing in this rule prohibits
permitting authorities from accepting
permit application information in
batches, provided that the application
information and submission process
satisfies all applicable requirements. For
example, existing NPDES regulations
address, in relevant part, the effective
date of an application and the
processing of a permit. See 40 CFR
124.3. EPA recognizes that early
communication between the owner or
operator of a CAFO and the permitting
authority can help facilitate the
permitting process, and EPA encourages
CAFOs to work closely with their
permitting authorities.
EPA received some comments
suggesting that the Director issue a
general permit that defines the terms of
the NMP and details BMP options for a
range of possible conditions combined
with a requirement for the CAFO to
submit a summarized NMP. The
summarized NMP would include sitespecific facility information needed to
apply the management approach
prescribed by the general permit. One
State recommended that, for general
permits, CAFOs submit a ‘‘universal
NMP’’ with their NOI that contains
decision-making tools used by
producers to determine application
rates, dates, and methods rather than
including site-specific information in
the permit. This would allow for the
public to comment on a generic
‘‘universal NMP’’ and would reduce the
number of comments that the State
regulatory agencies would need to
review and consider if comments were
provided for each individual NMP
submitted for a general permit.
EPA weighed these comments in
deciding what information needed to be
submitted to the Director for review to
comport with the CWA requirements
cited by the Waterkeeper Court. The
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final rule requires any CAFO seeking
coverage under a general permit to
submit with the NOI an NMP that meets
the requirements of § 122.42(e) and
applicable effluent limitations and
standards. EPA did not identify any
other specific regulatory alternatives
that substantially reduce burden while
still providing for meaningful
permitting authority and public review
of site-specific NMPs prior to permit
coverage. Thus, EPA is promulgating an
approach that is consistent with the
Waterkeeper decision and the NPDES
CAFO permit program requirements,
while continuing to allow for the use of
general permits for CAFOs.
EPA also received a comment that
production and land application areas
should have separate permitting
requirements such that a facility that
does not land apply would not need to
submit an NMP that addresses its land
application area. EPA is not revising the
NMP requirements established in the
2003 CAFO rule that added land
application requirements for permitted
CAFOs. Under the NPDES regulations
established in the 2003 rule, permits
issued to CAFOs apply to the entire
facility, including land application
areas. Furthermore, the NMP provisions
address discharges that can originate
either from production areas or from
land application areas. Thus, NMPs
have been designed to be
comprehensive documents required of
all permitted CAFOs. The NMP
provisions at § 122.42(e)(1) must be
included in a CAFO’s NMP ‘‘to the
extent applicable.’’ Thus, if a facility
does not land apply manure, litter, or
process wastewater, the land
application provisions of the regulation
would not be applicable. CAFOs should
note, however, that even facilities that
do not land apply manure, litter, or
process wastewater, but transfer all
manure, litter, or process wastewater to
other persons, are required by 40 CFR
122.42(e)(3) to provide the ‘‘most
current nutrient analysis’’ to the
recipient.
Although EPA is not revising the
substantive requirements of paragraph
(e)(1) in this rule, EPA is modifying the
introductory paragraph to conform to
the procedural requirements
promulgated in this rule. Because this
rule requires an NMP to be submitted as
part of the CAFO’s permit application or
NOI, EPA is removing, from paragraph
(e)(1), the permit condition for
development of an NMP once permit
coverage is granted. EPA is thus revising
§ 122.42(e)(1) simply to require that any
individual or general NPDES permit
issued to a CAFO require the
implementation of an NMP that
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contains best management practices
(BMPs) as specified in 40 CFR
122.42(e)(1)(i)–(ix) and the applicable
effluent limitations and standards.
Applicable effluent limitations include,
for Large CAFOs, the requirements of 40
CFR part 412, and for other CAFOs BAT
requirements set on a best professional
judgment (BPJ) basis.
EPA notes that the definition of
‘‘BMPs’’ in the NPDES regulations (40
CFR 122.2) is very broad and includes
both practices and procedures to be
implemented by a permittee. For this
reason, EPA is also changing the phrase
in the introductory paragraph of
§ 122.42(e)(1) concerning the contents of
an NMP from ‘‘best management
practices and procedures’’ to simply
reference ‘‘best management practices’’
without intending any change in the
actual scope of what must be included
in an NMP.
(b) Procedures for Permitting Authority
Review and Public Participation Prior to
Permit Coverage
This rule promulgates 40 CFR
122.23(h), which provides new general
permit procedures for CAFO general
permits. The provisions of § 122.23(h)
supplement the general permitting
requirements of 40 CFR 122.28 with
specific provisions for review and
incorporation of CAFO NMPs into
general permits for CAFOs. These
provisions implement the decision of
the Waterkeeper courts concerning
public review of NMPs and
incorporation of the terms of the NMP
into CAFO permits, specifically for
CAFOs seeking authorization under a
general permit.
After the permitting authority receives
an application or an NOI from a CAFO,
it is the permitting authority’s
responsibility to review the application
or NOI to ensure that it meets the
requirements of the regulations, and for
general permits, the requirements of the
general permit. This includes
determining whether the nutrient
management plan meets the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)
and, for Large CAFOs subject to 40 CFR
412 subpart C or D, the applicable
requirements of 40 CFR 412.4(c). As part
of that process, the Director must review
the NMP for both completeness and
sufficiency, as required by the
Waterkeeper decision. Also, because the
Waterkeeper decision requires terms of
the NMP to be incorporated as permit
terms, the Director must provide for
adequate public participation in the
process of establishing permit terms
based on each CAFO’s NMP.
The general permit issuance process
and the individual permitting process
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differ in how a permit is developed and
the means by which individual facilities
obtain authorization to discharge. A
general permit covers multiple facilities,
and is made available to facilities
seeking permit coverage after it is
finalized. When the permitting authority
develops a draft general permit, it must
provide the public (including potential
future permittees) an opportunity to
review the permit, submit comments,
and request a hearing. After considering
comments submitted, the permitting
authority then finalizes the general
permit. Facilities may then submit an
NOI seeking coverage under the final
general permit. Typically, the
permitting authority may then, without
the need for further public notice and
comment, either grant coverage under
the general permit, require the facility to
seek coverage under an individual
permit, or deny permit coverage.
Existing regulations establish a right for
any interested person to petition the
Director to require a facility authorized
under a general permit to apply for an
individual permit. See 40 CFR
122.28(b)(3).
For individual permits, the NMP will
be submitted and reviewed as part of the
permit application. The decisionmaking procedures in 40 CFR part 124
apply to the Director’s review of the
application, which includes the NMP.
Part 124 requires review of the
completeness and sufficiency of the
permit application, includes an
opportunity for the CAFO to modify the
plan or provide additional information
to the permitting authority, and requires
a final decision by the Director after an
opportunity for the public to comment
and request a hearing.
Although a review process for data
submitted by applicants, including
NMPs, is already provided for in
existing NPDES regulations that address
issuance of individual permits, such a
process has not previously been
expressly available in the regulations for
CAFO general permits. Following the
Waterkeeper decision, general permits
for CAFOs must include the terms of an
NMP applicable to each specific CAFO
authorized under the permit. Moreover,
Waterkeeper requires that the public
have an opportunity to review each
CAFO-specific NMP and comment on
terms of the NMP to be incorporated
into the permit. Thus, a second round
of public notice and comment is
necessary when providing coverage for
CAFOs under a general permit. To fill
these gaps and address the Waterkeeper
decision, this rule creates new
provisions at § 122.23(h) that establish a
process for permitting authority and
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public review of NMPs for CAFO
general permits.
(i) Permitting Authority Review of
Nutrient Management Plans
As discussed above, the Waterkeeper
court held that NMPs must be reviewed
by the permitting authority before
permit coverage is issued to any CAFO.
Waterkeeper, 399 F.3d at 498–502. The
process for permitting authority review
of NMPs for CAFOs seeking coverage
under a general permit is established by
this final rule at 40 CFR 122.23(h)(1).
Section 122.23(h) requires the Director
to review the NOI submitted by a CAFO
owner or operator to ensure that the NOI
includes the information required by 40
CFR 122.21(i)(1), including an NMP that
meets the requirements of 40 CFR
122.42(e) and applicable effluent
limitations and standards, including
those specified in 40 CFR part 412.
Section 122.23(h)(1) also provides that
if, upon review, the permitting authority
determines that additional information
is necessary to complete the NOI or
clarify, modify, or supplement
previously submitted material, the
Director will notify the CAFO owner or
operator and request that the
appropriate information be provided.
When the NOI is complete, the Director
must then proceed with the public
notification process required by this
rule and discussed below.
In the 2006 proposed rule, EPA
proposed a new regulatory provision to
establish permitting authority review of
NMPs for general permits. This
provision would require the Director to
review the NMP submitted with the NOI
and to take appropriate steps to ensure
that the NMP meets the applicable
requirements of 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)
and, for Large CAFOs, 40 CFR 412.4(c).
Upon review of the NMP, the permitting
authority would request from the CAFO
owner or operator any additional
information needed to complete the NOI
or clarify, modify, or supplement the
submitted material. The permitting
authority would then notify the public
of its receipt of a complete NOI and of
the terms of the NMP proposed to be
incorporated into the general permit.
After allowing time for public comment
and a public hearing, if needed, the
permitting authority would decide
whether to authorize coverage under the
general permit.
Many commenters disagreed with the
proposed modified general permit
process that would add permitting
authority review of the NMP. The
primary concern was that the permitting
authorities may have insufficient
resources to review all NMPs, which
could limit the usefulness of general
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70439
permits. To address this concern, a
number of commenters suggested
variations on the proposed process.
These suggestions are addressed in more
detail below under the corresponding
discussion for the respective stage of the
general permitting process.
The Waterkeeper decision held that
permitting authorities must review the
permit application and the NMP to
ensure that all applicable requirements
have been met. The court made no
distinction between individual or
general permits with regard to this
requirement. Because existing
regulations do not provide for a review
process that addresses the submission
and review of NMPs for inclusion in a
general permit, and given that EPA
expects many CAFOs to be permitted
under general permits, EPA is adopting
provisions at § 122.23(h) that provide
for permitting authority review of the
CAFO NOI and NMP, as well as
opportunity for the public to comment
and request a hearing on the NOI, NMP,
and the terms of the NMP to be
incorporated into the permit.
The procedure for review and notice
of CAFO NOIs and NMPs will impose
some increased burden on permitting
authorities and will add steps to the
process of administering a general
permit. However, EPA has worked to
adapt these new requirements to a twostage review process that comports with
the Waterkeeper decision and the CWA
and adds some flexibility to the parallel
NPDES permit procedure regulations of
40 CFR part 124.
Commenters stated that EPA should
establish a correlation between the
timing of the application process and
permit coverage. These commenters
wanted the regulation to automatically
authorize discharges within 60 days
from the date of application/NOI
submission unless the permitting
authority denied permit coverage within
that period, even if the public review
process was incomplete. They took the
view that CAFOs should not be
penalized by a review process that
could vary in length based on factors
out of the control of the CAFO.
Similarly, some commenters stated that
EPA’s final regulation should provide a
clearly defined process with a limited
length of time for permitting authority
review. Suggestions for a time limit
ranged from 30 to 60 days.
To provide permitting authorities
flexibility to review NMPs of varying
complexity, this action does not require
a specific timeframe for completion of
the permitting authority review process.
This approach is consistent with the
existing NPDES regulations in part 124
for other industries, which similarly do
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not specify a timeframe for automatic
authorization to discharge or for the
completion of the permitting authority
and public review processes.
Commenters expressed concern over
the additional workload that reviewing
individual NMPs would create, and
suggested alternatives to reduce
permitting authority workload,
including: Submission of a ‘‘universal
NMP’’ with permit applications for use
in determining application rates, timing,
and methods rather than including sitespecific information in the permit; and
combining a detailed, clear general
permit with the submission of a
summarized NMP for review.
In developing the 2006 proposed rule
EPA evaluated alternative approaches
for reducing operator and permitting
authority workload. For example, EPA
considered the use of an NMP template
as a voluntary tool to facilitate
completion and review of the NMP by
CAFO applicants and permitting
authorities, respectively. 71 FR 37,752.
Such a template could serve as one of
many tools available to support CAFO
permitting and reduce permitting
authority workloads. See preamble
section III.C.3(h) for a discussion of the
template. EPA also plans to develop
additional tools and guidance to reduce
the burden on both the CAFO operator
and the permitting authority to meet the
requirements of the NPDES regulations.
For example, EPA is developing a
training course that focuses on
development and review of NMPs to
comport with this final rule. EPA plans
to first make the course available to
State and federal permitting authorities
in 2009.
Another possible approach for
minimizing permitting authority
resource expenditures is utilizing a
third-party for NMP review. A few
commenters noted that having
permitting authority staff review NMPs
that have already been prepared by a
State-certified planner is duplicative
and unnecessary. Commenters believe
that, due to their extensive training,
certified planners are in the best
position to review and certify NMPs
coupled with appropriate public agency
oversight. This is one State commenter’s
established NMP review process.
Commenters noted that, in some States,
another State agency (typically the State
agricultural agency) reviews and
approves NMPs. A State commenter
asserted that the final rule would meet
the intent of the Waterkeeper decision if
it allowed NMP review by qualified
professionals meeting educational and
technical training requirements as set
forth by the Director. Such professionals
should be properly trained and subject
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to a quality assurance protocol. One
commenter asserted that this flexibility
is imperative for effective State
programs.
The permitting authority is
responsible for reviewing NMPs and for
ensuring that the terms of the NMP meet
the applicable requirements of the
NPDES process. There is no reason,
however, why a State cannot obtain
assistance and advice from technical
experts, or tailor its review based on the
development or certification of NMPs by
State-certified nutrient management
planners. However, it is the permitting
authorities’ responsibility to ensure that
comments are properly addressed and
the final permit terms are incorporated.
Regarding the increased workload
permitting authorities may experience
due to review of NMPs, EPA notes that
30 out of the 44 States that regulate
CAFOs currently require NMPs to be
submitted with a CAFO’s request for
NPDES permit application coverage.
Further, 28 of these States allow for
public review of these NMPs. Thus,
even though EPA did not specifically
require this in the 2003 CAFO rule, such
a review process already exists for many
State regulatory authorities.
(ii) Public Review of Nutrient
Management Plans
In the Waterkeeper decision, the
Second Circuit held that ‘‘The CAFO
rule deprives the public of the
opportunity for the sort of participation
that the Act guarantees because the Rule
effectively shields the nutrient
management plans [NMPs] from public
scrutiny and comment.’’ 399 F.3d at
503. This rule responds to the
Waterkeeper decision by establishing
public participation requirements that
ensure adequate opportunity for public
review of both a CAFO’s NMP and the
terms of the NMP to be incorporated
into the permit prior to the CAFO
obtaining authorization to discharge
under the permit.
As previously discussed, procedures
for public participation in the issuance
of individual permits are already
established in the NPDES regulations.
See 40 CFR part 124. Because this rule
requires CAFOs to submit their NMP as
part of their permit application (see
discussion at section III.C.3(a) of this
preamble; 40 CFR 122.21 and 122.23)),
the public will have access to the NMP
prior to permit issuance and will also
have full opportunity to comment on
the adequacy of the plan and on the
nutrient management terms in the draft
NPDES permit developed for the
specific CAFO facility. This individual
permit process addresses the court’s
decision in this respect.
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To preserve the option of general
permits for CAFOs and to conform to
the Waterkeeper decision which
requires the terms of each CAFO’s NMP
to be incorporated into the CAFO’s
permit, this rule establishes new
provisions, at 40 CFR 122.23(h), that
require the permitting authority to allow
public review of both the NMP and the
terms of the NMP to be included in a
general permit.
In § 122.23(h), the rule establishes
new general permitting procedures for
CAFOs that require permitting
authorities to incorporate the terms of
site-specific NMPs, which must be
submitted with the NOI, into CAFO
general permits when authorizing
coverage under a general permit. These
procedures require the Director to notify
the public that the permitting authority
is proposing to grant coverage for a
facility under the general permit and
make available for public review and
comment the CAFO’s NOI (including its
NMP) and the draft terms of the NMP to
be incorporated into the permit. The
public will also have an opportunity to
request a hearing on this information
before the CAFO is authorized to
discharge under the general permit.
After making a preliminary
determination that the NOI meets the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.21(i)(1) and
122.42(e), the Director has discretion as
to how best to provide the requisite
public notification in the general permit
context. For example, public
notification may be provided on the
permitting authority’s Web page or
through other electronic means. Another
alternative is to use the notice or fact
sheet for the general permit to establish
a procedure allowing any person to
request notice by mail or electronically
of the receipt of an NOI, the permitting
authority’s proposed action, and the
terms of the NMP proposed to be
incorporated into the permit. These are
appropriate ways to balance the
competing concerns of providing
adequate notification to the public,
providing flexibility to the permitting
authority, and ensuring the practicality
of general permits.
Under this rule, the Director also has
discretion to establish an appropriate
period of time for public review of the
NOI and draft terms of the NMP
proposed to be incorporated into the
permit. Under 40 CFR 122.23(h)(1), the
Director may establish by regulation or
in the general permit an appropriate
period of time for the public to
comment and request a hearing. This
differs from the specifications in 40 CFR
124.10, which sets a 30-day public
notice period for proposed coverage
under individual permits. Having the
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Director set the time period for public
review by regulation or in the general
permit process will allow the public and
other interested parties an opportunity
to comment on the sufficiency of that
time period. Factors the permitting
authority might consider when
establishing an appropriate time period
include the number of NOIs being
publicly noticed at any one time, the
complexity of the material made
available for public review, the expected
level of public interest based on prior
notices of CAFOs seeking coverage, the
opportunity for the public to request an
extension of the comment period for one
or more facilities, and whether
individuals can request and receive
individual notification of CAFOs
seeking authorization to discharge
under the permit in a timely fashion.
As mentioned above, the Director
must also provide an opportunity for the
public to request a hearing. The
procedures for requesting and holding a
hearing on the terms of the NMP to be
incorporated into the general permit are
the same as those for draft individual
permits, which are provided in 40 CFR
124.11 through 40 CFR 124.13. When
granting permit coverage, the Director
must respond to all significant
comments received during the comment
period as provided in 40 CFR 124.17,
and if necessary, require the CAFO
owner or operator to revise their NMP.
Additionally, under the procedures
promulgated in § 122.23(h)(1) of this
rule, if after the public notice period
and the conclusion of any hearings, the
Director decides to authorize discharge
under the permit, the permitting
authority must notify the CAFO and
inform the public. Such notification is
necessary to ensure that the applicant
and interested individuals are aware of
the Director’s final decision on granting
authorization to discharge under the
general permit and incorporating sitespecific NMP terms into the general
permit. Furthermore, the provision
provides notification equivalent to that
required when CAFOs are issued
coverage under individual permits
consistent with this rule revision.
EPA is promulgating 40 CFR
122.23(h)(2), which establishes
additional procedures for EPA-issued
permits. Paragraph (h)(2) requires the
EPA Regional Administrator to notify
each person who has submitted written
comments on the proposal to grant
permit coverage and the draft terms of
the NMP of the final permit decision. A
person affected by the general permit
can either challenge the general permit
in court, or apply for an individual
permit as authorized in 40 CFR 122.28.
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The public notice process described
above also includes providing notice to
other affected States, as required by the
CWA. Section 402(b)(3) of the CWA
provides that the Administrator, in
approving a State program, shall make
sure the State has adequate authority to
ensure notice to ‘‘any other State the
waters of which may be affected.’’
Section 402(b)(5) provides that the
Administrator must ensure that any
State ‘‘whose waters may be affected by
the issuance of a permit may submit
written recommendations to the
permitting State,’’ and that if those
recommendations are rejected, the
permitting State must notify the affected
State in writing of the reasons for the
rejection. The public notice provisions
in this rule provide notification to
affected States as well as to the public
in general. Additionally, the permitting
authority’s response to all significant
comments will include responses to
comments from affected States.
This rule balances several competing
concerns regarding public participation
procedures for general permitting of
CAFOs. First, the final rule maintains
the utility of a general permit program
as a resource-efficient method by which
to authorize multiple CAFOs under an
NPDES permit while meeting the
Second Circuit’s directive to ‘‘provide
for adequate public participation’’ in the
development of site-specific effluent
limitations. Waterkeeper, 399 F.3d at
524. Second, the final rule provides
sufficient flexibility for State permitting
authorities to adopt their own
procedures while ensuring that they
meet the public participation
requirements of the CWA. Because of
the large number of CAFOs that may
seek permit coverage, the Agency
considers it appropriate to have
procedures that allow and encourage
permitting authorities to continue the
use of NPDES general permits as a
means for applying CWA limitations
and standards to CAFOs on a timely
basis. Of course, existing regulations
give the Director authority to require a
facility to apply for an individual permit
instead of allowing coverage under a
general permit (even after coverage
under a general permit has been
granted). The Director may thus choose
not to issue a general permit for CAFOs,
but instead to require all CAFOs seeking
permit coverage to obtain coverage
under individual permits.
The 2006 proposed rule included
procedures for public review of NOIs
and draft terms of the NMP substantially
the same as the procedures promulgated
today in § 122.23(h). EPA solicited
comment on the proposal to give the
Director discretion regarding the means
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of public notification and the length of
the public notice period, and also on the
possibility of fixed minimum time
frames for public review. The Agency
also specifically sought comment on
whether the proposed public
participation process achieved an
appropriate balance between the
competing interests of maintaining the
utility of general permits for CAFOs and
providing adequate public review of
permit terms.
Several commenters expressed
concern that public review of the NMP
would eliminate the use of general
permits, noting that States have limited
resources for accommodating a public
review process. Several commenters
stated that the proposed process
provided inadequate opportunity for
public input. Some believed that the
proposed public participation process is
inconsistent with the general permitting
approach and that only individual
permits are appropriate for CAFOs since
the terms of the NMP constitute sitespecific effluent guidelines. Others felt
that the public participation process
needed to begin before the development
of the NMP to provide an opportunity
for comment on the specific best
management practices (BMPs) to be
included in the plan.
The procedures for public
participation in this final rule preserve
the availability of general permits for
CAFOs. As discussed above, the
changes to the CAFO general permit
process made in this rule are necessary
to meet the requirements of the
Waterkeeper decision. In addition, EPA
has provided flexibility where it could
with regard to how a permitting
authority provides public notice and
makes key information available.
Further, the rule provides permitting
authorities with flexibility to establish
an appropriate time period for public
review. Finally, the rule does not
change any of the existing regulations
that allow a permitting authority to
require an individual permit when
appropriate. Overall, the final rule
maintains the utility of a CAFO general
permit program as a resource-efficient
method for authorizing multiple CAFOs
under an NPDES permit while meeting
the court’s directive to ‘‘provide for
adequate public participation’’ in the
development of site-specific effluent
limitations.
One commenter stated that public
access to the entire NMP will strongly
compel operators to risk noncompliance
by operating without authorization
under a permit. Some commenters were
concerned that sensitive information
will be made available to the public.
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EPA understands the sensitivity of
some information that may be contained
in a CAFO’s NMP. However, public
availability and permitting authority
review of a CAFO’s NMP is not a new
practice; rather, it is one that is
currently employed in many State
NPDES CAFO programs. As stated
above, 30 of the 44 States that permit
CAFOs request that NMPs be submitted
as part of their permit application
process. In most of those States the
permitting authority conducts a
comprehensive technical review of the
NMPs prior to granting authorization to
discharge under the permit. These
NMPs have already been publicly
available in these States for some time.
Moreover, most of these States provide
notice to the public of the availability of
these plans and seek public review,
with some conducting public meetings
as well. Any information submitted to
the permitting authority as part of a
permit application or NOI must be made
available for public review and
comment, unless it is confidential
business information (CBI). See 40 CFR
122.7.
EPA disagrees with commenters who
believe that the permitting process
provides inadequate opportunity for
public input or that such opportunity
should arise earlier in the process. The
final rule provides ample opportunity
for the public to comment on the terms
and conditions of the general permit,
including for each permitted CAFO, the
opportunity to comment on permit
coverage and the terms of the NMP. This
rule requires that the public have access
to the NOI and the NMP when
reviewing and commenting on BMPs
and other terms of the NMP to be
incorporated as enforceable conditions
of the permit.
Several commenters supported
permitting authority discretion on the
method of providing public notice of the
opportunity to comment on an NMP or
request a hearing. One commenter
stated that EPA should allow
applications to be processed jointly so
that the permitting authority could
provide notice to the public of multiple
NMPs at the same time. Another
commenter supported web-based or
other electronic notice. One commenter
suggested that the general permit fact
sheet be utilized to establish a
procedure allowing any person to
request notice by mail or electronically
of the receipt of an NOI, the permitting
authority’s proposed action, and the
terms of the NMP proposed to be
incorporated into the permit. Such an
approach would provide flexibility to
the permitting authority and reduce the
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number of notices that must be
published.
As stated above, this rule allows the
permitting authority discretion as to
how best to provide such public
notification in the general permit
context. For example, public
notification may be provided on the
permitting authority’s Web page or
through other electronic means. The
final rule does not restrict the ability of
a permitting authority to provide notice
of multiple NMPs at one time provided
the all applicable procedural and
substantive permitting requirements are
satisfied. However, notice must be
adequate, and the opportunity to
comment must be meaningful.
Some commenters expressed that EPA
should require a minimum of 30 days
for public review and that the 2006
proposed rule provided permitting
authorities too much discretion. Others
stated that the public participation
process should be limited, with many
suggesting no more than 30 days for an
initial submission. In addition,
commenters requested that EPA limit
the circumstances under which the
comment period could be extended.
EPA believes that the decision as to how
much time should be allowed for public
participation is best decided by the
Director for reasons discussed above,
including that the public will have an
opportunity to comment on the length
of the public notice period when
reviewing either the draft regulations or
draft general permit.
EPA also received comments
suggesting that EPA specify that each
facility would be subject to only one
public hearing on a draft permit; that
the decision to hold a public hearing on
a draft permit and NMP should be based
on a finding of a significant degree of
public interest and limited to issues
germane to permitting; and that public
review of a general permit be limited to
the terms of the NMP that are
incorporated into the permit. Several
commenters were concerned that
without some limitations, the public
review process could be misused. This
rule specifies that permitting authorities
follow the procedures set forth in
§ 124.11–124.13. These protocols are
well established for NPDES permits and
allow the Director to weigh the relevant
circumstances in addressing each of the
issues raised by commenters.
State commenters were generally
supportive of EPA’s proposed approach
and the flexibility it allows for
permitting authorities in the general
permit process. In particular, these
commenters said that establishing
timeframes for public review should be
left to the permitting authority.
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One State suggested that the public
participation aspects of the 2006
proposed rule be limited to only new
Large CAFOs and that NMP terms for
previously authorized Large CAFOs be
made available as part of a modified
annual reporting requirement. The
public participation requirements in
this final rule are applicable to all CAFO
NPDES permits. The Waterkeeper
decision did not distinguish between
new facilities seeking permit coverage
for the first time and existing facilities
seeking permit reissuance for purposes
of public participation in reviewing
CAFO NMPs. Such a distinction would
not make sense given that the Second
Circuit found that the terms of NMPs are
effluent limits that must be included in
the permit and presented for public
review and comment. Providing the
NMP terms to the public only in an
annual report would not address the
Waterkeeper requirement that the
permitting authority must provide for
public notice and the opportunity to
comment on the NMP terms and that the
NMP terms must be enforceable.
EPA regulations applicable to State
NPDES programs specify that where
notice and opportunity for comment
must be provided, a permitting
authority must respond to significant
public comments (§ 124.17). Several
commenters said EPA should
specifically narrow what constitutes a
significant comment warranting a
response by the permitting authority.
Their general position was that
comments must have a technical or
scientific basis, or address errors,
omissions, or misrepresentations in
order to be considered significant. Some
said that comments should be limited
only to issues under the purview of the
CWA, and generalized grievances about
the operation or location should be
identified as insignificant and not
warrant any response by the permitting
authority. Other commenters, namely
State agencies, identified the need to
provide the permitting authority with
flexibility for determining which
comments are significant and warrant a
response. They also indicated that the
permitting authority will have limited
resources for responding to all
comments on a draft permit and NMP.
EPA intends that this final rule be
consistent with existing regulatory
provisions addressing public
participation in the NPDES program and
believes that it provides a reasonable
amount of discretion and flexibility for
permitting authorities to determine and
respond to those comments deemed to
be significant.
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(c) Identification of Terms of the NMP
In the Waterkeeper decision, the
Second Circuit held that because the
terms of the NMP constitute effluent
limitations, the CAFO Rule, ‘‘by failing
to require that the terms of the nutrient
management plans be included in
NPDES permits—violates the CWA and
is otherwise arbitrary and capricious in
violation of the Administrative
Procedure Act.’’ 399 F.3d at 502.
To respond to the Waterkeeper
decision, the Agency is promulgating 40
CFR 122.42(e)(5) in order to specify the
minimum terms of the nutrient
management plan (NMP) that must be
enforceable requirements of a CAFO’s
NPDES permit. As discussed in the
preambles to both the 2006 proposed
rule and 2008 supplemental proposal,
EPA is not revisiting the decisions the
Agency made in 2003 with respect to
the contents of the nutrient management
plan because the Waterkeeper decision
did not affect these requirements. This
rule requires that, based on the
provisions promulgated in 2003 that
define nutrient management plans (40
CFR 122.42(e)(1) and 412.4(c)), the
‘‘terms’’ of the nutrient management
plan become terms and conditions of
the permit, as required by the Second
Circuit decision.
The Waterkeeper court clearly
indicated that the terms of the NMP
must be included in the permit and that
the terms must include ‘‘waste
application rates’’ developed by Large
CAFOs pursuant to their NMPs. 399
F.3d at 502. Paragraph (e)(5) includes
two alternative approaches for
specifying terms of the NMP with
respect to rates of application, which are
needed to satisfy the requirement that
the NMP include ‘‘protocols to land
apply manure, litter, or process
wastewater * * * that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of
the nutrients.’’ 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
For Large CAFOs, use of either of these
alternative approaches also satisfies the
requirements set forth in 40 CFR 412.4
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(i) Background
In the 2006 proposed rule and 2008
supplemental proposal, EPA discussed
how the ‘‘terms’’ of a CAFO’s NMP
could be identified so as to address the
nine minimum required elements in 40
CFR 122.42(e)(1)(i)–(ix)) and 412.4(c)
(for Large CAFOs, as applicable).
The 2006 proposed rule preamble
identified a number of factors that are
necessary to the development of an
NMP and discussed the need to allow a
CAFO some flexibility in managing its
operation. 71 FR 37,753–55. With
respect to portions of the NMP that
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would be incorporated as permit terms,
the Agency also proposed regulatory
language for accommodating changes to
the NMP that involve changes to the
terms during the permit period. 71 FR
37,756.
EPA received many comments on the
NMP issues highlighted in the 2006
proposed rule preamble concerning the
complexity associated with nutrient
management planning, particularly with
respect to land application, and seeking
clarification of what constitutes the
terms of the NMP. In particular,
commenters sought clarification for
terms regarding rates of application,
given the complexity of factors used to
determine rates of application and the
dynamics associated with such factors.
In light of these concerns, EPA in
March 2008, issued a supplemental
proposal that proposed what elements
of the NMP would be terms of the NMP
that would be required to be included
as enforceable terms of a CAFO’s
NPDES permit. EPA received many
comments on the supplemental
proposal that identified the need for
some further revisions to EPA’s
proposed approach concerning the
terms of the NMP.
(ii) Terms of the NMP To Be Included
in the Permit
In this final rule, EPA is promulgating
40 CFR 122.42(e)(5) to identify the
minimum terms of an NMP to be
included in a CAFO’s NPDES permit as
enforceable requirements of the permit.
Paragraph (e)(5) establishes that any
permit issued to a CAFO must require
the CAFO to comply with the terms of
the CAFO’s site-specific nutrient
management plan.
Paragraph (e)(5) states that the terms
of the NMP ‘‘are the information,
protocols, best management practices,
and other conditions’’ identified in a
CAFO’s nutrient management plan and
determined by the permitting authority
to be necessary to meet the requirements
of 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1). For Large CAFOs
subject to the land application
requirements of the effluent limitations
guideline, the terms would include the
best management practices necessary to
meet the requirements of 40 CFR
412.4(c) in addition to the requirements
of 40 CFR part 122. This requirement is
thus broadly applicable to all of the
measures required to be included in a
CAFO’s NMP. EPA believes that this
clarification should address the
concerns of some commenters that the
proposed terms of the NMP were
limited to land application requirements
only.
The ‘‘information, protocols, best
management practices, and other
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conditions’’ that constitute the terms of
a CAFO’s NMP include what the CAFO
operator would be required to do to
properly implement its NMP and
determinative conditions upon which
such actions are based. For example,
both the structural design capacity
necessary to satisfy the storage
requirement of 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(i)
and the associated operational and
maintenance conditions necessary to
ensure adequate storage, would be
considered terms of the NMP. Likewise,
the terms of the NMP would need to
ensure, for example, proper
management of mortalities and
diversion of clean water. However, the
number of animals confined would not
necessarily need to be a term of the
NMP because a CAFO operator would
be required to properly operate and
maintain the CAFO’s storage facilities
regardless of the number of animals or
the volume of manure, litter, or process
wastewater generated.
Some commenters asserted that the
entire NMP should be included in or
expressly referenced by the permit and
that all the elements of a CAFO’s NMP
must be included in a CAFO’s NPDES
permit so as to ensure that the permit
requires the CAFO to comply with every
discharge reduction or prevention
measure in its NMP. These commenters
disagreed with EPA’s interpretation of
Waterkeeper and felt that the 2006
proposed rule put forth a more narrow
meaning of the word ‘‘terms’’ than
intended by the court. They also felt
that the proposed rule provided the
permitting authority too much
discretion for determining what
constitutes the ‘‘terms’’ of the NMP.
The Agency agrees that the
enforceable terms of the NMP must be
clear so as to provide notice, both to the
operator and to the public, about what
is enforceable and to ensure compliance
with the discharge reduction and
prevention measures in the NMP.
However, EPA does not agree that the
all of the information in the NMP
constitutes enforceable terms. By
establishing the information, protocols,
best management practices, and other
conditions or activities necessary to
meet the requirements of 40 CFR part
122 and part 412, this rule ensures that
effluent limitations in the permit will be
fully implemented, consistent with the
NPDES regulations, the effluent
guidelines, and the Waterkeeper
decision. In addition, this approach
preserves NMPs as comprehensive
management tools used to guide a wide
range of practices regarding nutrient
production, storage, and use. Regarding
the degree of discretion afforded to the
Director, the requirements of this final
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rule concerning terms of the NMP and
the opportunity for public review of the
full NMP together with the draft terms
of the NMP to be incorporated into the
permit provides a check on the exercise
of that discretion.
Moreover, whether the NMP has been
properly developed, whether the
information in the NMP is accurate, and
whether calculations are correct and
consistent with applicable requirements
are issues which are properly addressed
when the NMP is reviewed by the
Director and by the public. This is
analogous to the types of calculations
and data submitted in a permit
application and found in the fact sheet
that accompanies a draft NPDES permit
for other types of permitted point
sources.
Other commenters observed that
NMPs do not fit well in this regulatory
context due to their design and the way
in which they have been used by CAFO
operators. Rather, they asserted that
NMPs are developed to guide
management decisions regarding
nutrients and, by necessity, must remain
flexible to address the many conditions
that affect nutrient generation and
management.
The final rule allows for the
incorporation of the key NMP terms in
a regulatory context without
overburdening the permitting process or
completely recasting the NMP itself. As
discussed above, the terms of the NMP
include whatever is contained in the
NMP that is necessary to ensure
compliance with § 122.42(e)(1) and, for
Large CAFOs, 40 CFR 412.4. Additional
content of the NMP that is beyond the
scope of compliance with those
regulatory requirements would not be a
term of the NMP.
Some commenters on the 2006
proposed rule urged EPA to provide
greater clarity, guidance, and certainty
in the final rule on the meaning and
significance of the distinction between
the NMP and the ‘‘terms’’ of the NMP.
As proposed in the 2008 supplemental
proposal, the final rule establishes more
specific requirements for terms of the
NMP applicable to CAFOs that land
apply manure, litter, and process
wastewater than were included in the
proposed rule. For such CAFOs,
paragraph (e)(5) includes as terms the
fields available for land application,
field-specific rates of application, and
timing limitations for land application.
As stated above, with respect to land
application, the terms of every NMP
must include the fields the CAFO plans
to use for land application. The sitespecific elements of the NMP can only
be properly represented in the NMP by
the inclusion of field-specific
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information that must be made available
for review by the Director and for public
review in determining, for example, the
appropriate conservation practices and
rates of application to be included in the
plan and, ultimately, in the permit.
Compliance with the permit during the
period of coverage would require any
new fields (i.e., fields not addressed
specifically in the terms of the permit)
to first be added to the NMP and the
permit, in accordance with the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.42(e)(6),
discussed below, before they could be
used by the CAFO for land application.
Similarly, as discussed in greater detail
below, field-specific, crop-specific
application rates would be terms of the
NMP, as would certain factors needed to
determine the rates. However,
background information that is fixed
and unchangeable, such as actual
historic yields used in the development
of an NMP, while important for
determining rates of application, would
not need to be terms of the NMP. Such
information is also relevant and
important for public review of the draft
permit, in order to ascertain that the
terms relating to rates of application are
correct and enforceable. In other words,
this is an example of information
necessary for the development of the
NMP, but is not relevant for compliance
or enforcement purposes.
Finally, the terms of the NMP must
include any timing limitations in the
NMP that would make fields
unavailable for land application at
certain times or under certain
conditions.4 Insofar as the NMP
includes such limitations, the resulting
limitations are terms of the NMP and
thus enforceable.
(iii) Rates of Application
40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(viii) requires the
nutrient management plan to include
‘‘protocols to land apply manure, litter,
or process wastewater in accordance
with site-specific nutrient management
practices that ensure appropriate
agricultural utilization of the nutrients
in the manure, litter, or process
wastewater.’’ As EPA noted in the 2006
proposed rule, the Waterkeeper court
focused on rates of application as
perhaps the most important term of the
NMP, in particular the provisions of the
effluent limitations guidelines in 40
4 There are two types of ‘‘timing’’ referred to in
this rule regarding land application. One type
relates specifically to rates of application, i.e., the
availability of nutrients for crop uptake based on
the timing (and method) of application. There are
also timing limitations, such as restrictions on
applying under certain conditions, such as on
saturated or frozen fields, or at certain times of the
year. The latter types of timing restrictions are the
subject of this paragraph.
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CFR 412.4(c), and emphasized their sitespecific nature. 71 FR 37,753. In the
2008 supplemental notice, the Agency
proposed regulatory requirements to
ensure that legally-enforceable fieldand crop-specific application rates are
included in the permit as part of the
protocols for land application required
to be in the NMP under
§ 122.42(e)(1)(viii).
This rule promulgates two alternative
approaches for expressing the terms of
the nutrient management plan with
respect to rates of application. 40 CFR
122.42(2)(5)(i)–(ii). Each approach
provides a means by which a CAFO may
articulate in its NMP annual maximum
rates of application of manure, litter,
and process wastewater by field and
crop for each year of permit coverage
and identify the minimum required
terms of the NMP specific to that
approach. One approach expresses fieldspecific maximum rates of application
in terms of the amount of nitrogen and
phosphorus from manure, litter, and
process wastewater allowed to be
applied. This is called the ‘‘linear
approach.’’ The other approach
expresses the field-specific rate of
application as a narrative rate
prescribing how to calculate the amount
of manure, litter, and process
wastewater allowed to be applied. This
is called the ‘‘narrative rate approach.’’
Each of the approaches requires the
CAFO operator to develop an NMP that
projects for each field and for each year
of permit coverage the crops to be
planted, crop rotation, crop nutrient
needs, expected yield, amount of
nitrogen and phosphorus to be land
applied, and projected amounts of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be applied. However, each approach
is different in identifying which of these
projections would be required to be
‘‘terms of the NMP.’’ In neither
approach is the projected amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be land applied a term of the permit
because these projected amounts must
be adjusted at least once a year.
Several commenters suggested that
the NMP and permitting authority
review of the NMP should focus on how
agronomic rates are developed in the
NMP rather than the specific rate
determined in the NMP, based on the
difficulty of developing accurate
application rates for a five-year term and
because agency review of specific
application rates for each field would be
too burdensome. As discussed above
and in the 2006 proposed rule, the
Waterkeeper court focused on rates of
application as perhaps the most
important term of the NMP and
emphasized their site-specific nature.
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To comply with the decision of the
Waterkeeper court with regard to the
terms of the NMP and to allow
flexibility both for CAFO operators to
develop NMPs in a manner appropriate
for a particular operation as well as for
States to develop regionally-appropriate
program requirements that meet the
needs of a particular agency, EPA in this
final rule is providing two alternatives
for expressing rates and determining the
associated terms of the NMP.
Rates of application are field-specific
and are designed to ensure that crops
receive sufficient nutrients to meet yield
goals, while minimizing the amounts of
nutrients that could be transported from
the field. The discussion that follows
summarizes the basic process for
establishing rates of application in an
NMP, in light of the comments received
in the 2008 supplemental proposal, as
an introduction to the specific
discussion of the two approaches
promulgated in this final rule.
To develop appropriate land
application rates for each field where
land application will occur, CAFOs
must identify the crops to be planted
and the planned crop rotations, or other
uses, and the nitrogen and phosphorus
needs of these crops or other uses. The
NMP also must identify the realistic
yield expected from the crop or crops
planted in the field, in order to calculate
the proper amount of nutrients to apply.
A crop’s nutrient needs are generally
determined in accordance with the
nutrient recommendations for a given
crop (or other planting, such as forage
or pasture) and the per acre realistic
yield goal for that crop. The State land
grant university typically provides these
values or the formulas for calculating
these values. The realistic yield goal can
also be based on historic field-specific
yield data.
Because a CAFO operator could plant
more than one crop on a field in a given
year, the plant available amount of
nitrogen and phosphorus needs to be
calculated with reference to the nutrient
needs of all the crops to be planted on
such field in a given year in order to be
accurate. This includes accounting for
other field uses, such as pasture and
cover crops.
A properly developed NMP must also
evaluate the condition of the fields to be
used for land application. A fieldspecific assessment based on soil test
nutrient levels and other factors
required by the technical standards
established by the Director provides
information needed to determine
whether land application of manure is
appropriate for a site. The capacity of
the field for manure, litter, or process
wastewater application generally
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depends on the capacity of the soil to
retain phosphorus. The phrase
‘‘outcome of the field-specific
assessment of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport from each
field,’’ as used in this rule, reflects the
terminology typically associated with
the use of the phosphorus index, which
is one of three field-specific risk
assessment methods discussed in NRCS
conservation practice standard 590.
However, in this final rule, EPA is using
this phrase to reflect the results of
whichever method is required by the
technical standards established by the
Director, including the soil test
phosphorus method and the phosphorus
threshold method.
One commenter suggested that, for
some States, it may be appropriate to
require that the field-specific
assessment of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport be conducted
on an annual basis. EPA recognizes that
some States require, for example, use of
a phosphorus index that factors into the
calculated risk rating the amount of
manure applied to the field in the
previous year. EPA agrees that, for these
States, it would be appropriate to
require recalculation of the phosphorus
index on an annual basis and
anticipates that such States would
include the appropriate requirements in
technical standards, permits, or other
requirements applicable to CAFOs.
Furthermore, EPA encourages CAFO
operators to reevaluate field-specific
assessments of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport as frequently
as necessary to ensure minimization of
nutrient transport from each field.
Ultimately, the purpose of the fieldspecific assessment of the potential for
nitrogen and phosphorus transport is to
determine the appropriate limiting
nutrient for developing land application
rates, i.e., whether phosphorus or
nitrogen limits the amount of manure,
litter, or process wastewater that can be
applied and the degree to which the
limiting nutrient restricts land
application, or whether land application
is to be avoided altogether. State
technical standards typically allow
nitrogen-based application rates on
fields with a low phosphorus risk rating.
For fields that have a moderate to very
high phosphorus risk rating, State
technical standards generally limit the
amount of phosphorus that may be
added to a field.
In determining rates of application
where phosphorus is the limiting
nutrient, the amount of phosphorus that
may be land applied is based on the
annual phosphorus removal rate for
each crop or other field use. In deciding
how much manure may be land applied,
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70445
the amount of plant available
phosphorus already in the field is not
deducted because State technical
standards identify the rate of
application based on the crop removal
rate. Because soil levels tend to change
incrementally, depending on the
buffering capacity of the soil, and
because a phosphorus-based application
rate doesn’t reduce the amount of
phosphorus already in soil, phosphorusbased rates of application may remain
relatively constant for a period of
several years or longer, so long as the
outcome of the assessment of
phosphorus transport does not change
during that time. However, any multiyear phosphorus application must be
done in accordance with State technical
standards.
In determining rates of application
where nitrogen is the limiting nutrient,
the NMP must consider the total amount
of plant available nitrogen for each crop
from residual nitrogen already in the
field and the nitrogen added for a
particular field. Residual nitrogen is the
nitrogen that remains from prior
applications of manure, litter, process
wastewater, or chemical fertilizer, or
from other sources such as crop residues
and nitrogen fixing legumes. The
addition of nitrogen to a field includes
application of chemical fertilizer as well
as application of manure, litter, or
process wastewater and other materials
such as biosolids.
Crediting for all residual nitrogen in
the field that will be plant available, as
a result of prior additions (e.g., crop
residue, legume credits, and previous
manure applications), should be done in
accordance with the directions provided
in the technical standards established
by the Director (required for all
permitted Large CAFOs). Since organic
forms of nitrogen typically become plant
available when they are converted to
inorganic forms, such as nitrate and
ammonium, crediting generally
identifies the amount of organic
nitrogen likely to be converted to
inorganic forms that will be plant
available. Credits are calculated using
soil test results included in the NMP
and projected applications of nitrogen
from manure, litter, and process
wastewater during intervening years, as
well as other additions, including from
crops (e.g., where crops are plowed
under or residues are left on the field or
where nitrogen-fixing legumes are
grown), and other sources of nitrogen
remaining on the field that would be
plant available during the next growing
season.
EPA expects a complete NMP also to
account for any other additions of plant
available nutrients during the crop year,
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such as chemical fertilizer, irrigation
water (groundwater may have
measurable concentrations of nutrients),
and biosolids, where applied.
The forms of nitrogen and phosphorus
to be factored into calculations for rates
of application are generally identified in
the technical standards established by
the Director or in other documentation
referenced in the State’s technical
standards. Typically, the amount of
plant available phosphorus is
determined based on the amount of
various forms of phosphate added to or
present in the soil and the amount of
organic phosphorus that will mineralize
during the growing season. The amount
of plant available nitrogen is based on
the amount of inorganic nitrogen (e.g.,
nitrate and ammonium-nitrogen) added
to or present in the soil and the amount
of organic nitrogen that will mineralize
during the growing season. The amount
of plant available nitrogen also depends
on losses due to volatilization, which is
calculated using the nitrogen
volatilization rate associated with the
source of nutrients and the timing and
method of land application. As
previously discussed, it is the forms of
nitrogen and phosphorus that will be
available to a given crop that are most
relevant in determining rates of
application. In this final rule, the
appropriate forms of nitrogen and
phosphorus to be factored into these
calculations must be expressed in
chemical forms determined to be
acceptable by the Director, such as in
the permit or in the technical standards
established by the Director.
As discussed above, the NMP must
include calculations projecting for the
length of the permit term the amount of
manure, litter, or process wastewater, in
tons or gallons, to be land applied in
order to meet, but not exceed, crop
nutrient needs (after considering
residual nutrients and other additions of
nutrients and results of the most recent
manure test) based on the outcome of
the field-specific assessment of the
potential for nitrogen and phosphorus
transport, i.e., whether application rates
will be limited by nitrogen or
phosphorus. These calculations must
also take into account, with respect to
each crop to be grown or other
agricultural use, the source and form of
nutrients to be land applied; the method
of application of manure, litter, and
process wastewater; and the timing of
when application will occur. Although
a properly developed NMP addresses all
of these factors, some operators may
have multiple sources of manure, litter,
or process wastewater and may need to
make the determination as to which
source to draw from for land application
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to a particular field in a given year at
some point in time after the NMP has
been developed. The method of
application depends on the source and
form of manure, litter, or process
wastewater; the location of a particular
field and the equipment available for
such field; the soil nutrient status; and
the crop to be planted. For example,
wastewater could be spray-irrigated,
otherwise surface applied, or injected,
whereas poultry litter is most likely to
be surface applied by a manure
spreader.
Whereas one CAFO operator may
wish to follow the planned sequence of
steps for planting crops and applying
manure, litter, and process wastewater
described in the NMP submitted to the
Director, another operator may want or
need to vary from that linear sequence
of events, due to choices made in the
course of normal operations, or in
response to events or circumstances
beyond the CAFO’s control, such as
weather, crop failure, or market
conditions. EPA has addressed this
concern in this final rule by including
two alternative approaches for
determining the terms of an NMP, as
discussed below.
As indicated above, EPA is
promulgating two approaches for
defining the terms of an NMP for rates
of application, rather than the three
approaches that were proposed in the
2008 supplemental notice. While a
number of commenters encouraged EPA
to include all three proposed
approaches in the final rule to allow
operators the greatest number of
alternative options, many commenters
were critical of the matrix approach.
Some commenters suggested EPA
should finalize only the narrative rate
approach because they felt that the
linear and matrix approaches were too
inflexible to be useful. Others suggested
that the inclusion of three approaches
would create a program that is too
complicated for permittees, permitting
authorities, and the public. One
commenter stated that the matrix
approach fails to fully address the
complexity of the decision-making
process facing the CAFO operator.
Several industry commenters found the
matrix approach to be less flexible than
necessary and overly burdensome.
Environmental group commenters found
the matrix approach to be too rigid to
ensure protection of water quality and
not inclusive of critical information. In
reviewing the comments, EPA agrees
that the matrix approach does not
adequately address the complexity of
the nutrient management decisions to be
made by the CAFO operator and that it
could result in over-application of
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manure, litter, or process wastewater. In
addition, EPA agrees that having three
approaches to identifying terms of the
NMP with respect to application rates is
unduly complicated and would be
unnecessarily burdensome. Moreover,
EPA believes that the improvements and
clarifications to the linear and narrative
rate approaches promulgated in this
final rule make inclusion of the matrix
approach unnecessary. In considering
comments that criticized the inability of
the matrix approach, as proposed, to
more directly address the complex
dynamics relating application rates to
crop needs, EPA would have needed to
make adjustments that would have
made the matrix approach either more
like the linear approach or more like the
narrative rate approach. As a result, and
in consideration of comments stating
that including three approaches is
unnecessary and burdensome, EPA has
decided to eliminate the matrix
approach as an option for identifying
the terms of the NMP for rates of
application.
Some industry commenters indicated
that CAFOs should be allowed to choose
from either approach as long as they
maintain the same approach for the fiveyear permit term while another industry
commenter stated that CAFOs should be
allowed to switch approaches during
the permit term. This final rule does not
address the possibility of switching
approaches during a permit term. It is
up to the discretion of the Director
whether such a change would be
allowed. However, because each
approach differs in what are the terms
of the permit, switching approaches
during the permit term would require a
permit modification to include the
terms of the NMP associated with the
selected approach into the permit.
Under both of the approaches, the
terms of the NMP are required to
include specific factors used for the
development of rates of application.
These include:
• The outcome of the field-specific
assessment of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport from each
field;
• The crop or crops to be planted in
each field or any other uses such as
pasture or fallow fields;
• The realistic yield goal for each
crop or use identified for each field; and
• The nitrogen and phosphorus
recommendations from sources
specified by the Director for each crop
or use identified for each field.
Both of the approaches account for
other information necessary for
determining the amount of manure,
litter, and process wastewater to be land
applied. This information relates to: (1)
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Credits for residual nitrogen available in
each successive year during the five
year term of the permit; (2)
consideration of any multi-year
phosphorus application; (3) accounting
for additions of commercial fertilizer
and other additions of nitrogen and
phosphorus during each successive
year; (4) the form (liquid, solid) and
source (e.g., lagoon, compost, process
wastewater) of the material to be land
applied; (5) nitrogen and phosphorus
content of the manure, litter, or process
wastewater; (6) timing of application;
and (7) method of application (e.g.,
spreading, spray, injection). However,
the two approaches differ in the way
they incorporate this information in
expressing the rates of application as
terms of the NMP. The following
sections of the preamble describe the
two approaches and how each approach
accounts for this information.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
(A) Linear Approach—Rates Expressed
in Pounds of Nitrogen and Phosphorus
From Manure, Litter, and Process
Wastewater
The first approach (see 40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(i)) allows the CAFO to
express rates of application as pounds of
nitrogen and phosphorus from manure
or litter, and process wastewater. The
terms of the NMP include maximum
application rates for each year of permit
coverage, for each crop identified in the
NMP, in pounds per acre, per year, for
each field to be used for land
application. In addition, the terms of the
NMP include the following factors:
• The outcome of the field-specific
assessment of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport from each
field;
• The crop or crops to be planted in
each field or any other uses such as
pasture or fallow fields;
• The realistic yield goal for each
crop or use identified for each field;
• The nitrogen and phosphorus
recommendations from sources
specified by the Director for each crop
or use identified for each field;
• Credits for all nitrogen in the field
that will be plant available;
• Consideration of multi-year
phosphorus application;
• Accounting for all other additions
of plant available nitrogen and
phosphorus to the field;
• The form and source of manure,
litter, and process wastewater to be land
applied; and
• The timing and method of land
application.
The terms also include the
methodology by which the NMP
accounts for the amount of nitrogen and
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phosphorus in the manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be applied.
This approach is considered a
‘‘linear’’ approach because it is based on
the use of only those crops included in
the planned crop rotations in the NMP;
the amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus
from manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be land applied according
to the planned schedule for land
application (including source and
method and timing of application); and
the projected values for plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus from other
sources. Under this approach, a single
set of field-specific rates of application
would be established, based on the
predicted sequence of activities the
CAFO plans to follow in implementing
its NMP, and a CAFO would be required
to follow the sequence identified in the
NMP for each field-specific crop
rotation and each planned step for land
application of manure, litter, or process
wastewater.
Under this linear approach, a CAFO
must land apply manure, litter, and
process wastewater in amounts that will
result in application of no more than the
amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus
from manure, litter, and process
wastewater specified for each field in
the NMP, following the schedule and
the methods of application described in
the NMP. When applying manure, litter,
and process wastewater, CAFOs will
need to take into account manure test
results, including for Large CAFOs the
annual manure test results required by
the 2003 final rule, so as to not exceed
the nutrient needs of the crops. Medium
and small CAFOs must apply manure,
litter, and process wastewater consistent
with Best Professional Judgment (BPJ)based requirements established in the
permit for accounting for the nutrient
content of the manure. Large CAFOs
using the linear approach must calculate
the maximum amount of manure, litter,
and process wastewater to be land
applied at least once each year using the
results of the most recent representative
manure, litter, and process wastewater
tests for nitrogen and phosphorus taken
within 12 months of the date of land
application.
The methodology used for translating
the amounts of nutrients in pounds into
the amount of manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be land applied,
in tons or gallons, is a term in the linear
approach. This includes incorporation
of manure test results in determining
such rates.
The final rule differs from the
proposed linear approach with respect
to the expression of the rates of
application. EPA proposed that
application rates in the linear approach
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70447
be expressed in terms of tons or gallons
of manure, litter, and process
wastewater. Several commenters stated
that the application rate under the linear
approach should be expressed in terms
of pounds of nitrogen and phosphorus
rather than tons and gallons of manure
and wastewater. The commenters felt
that this approach would more
accurately account for the actual
nutrient content of the manure and
wastewater being applied. EPA agrees
with the commenters and has changed
the linear approach accordingly to
address this concern. The key advantage
of this change is that it ensures that the
results of manure testing, which for
Large CAFOs is required to be done
annually, are used in determining the
actual amount of manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be applied. EPA
believes that expressing the rate in
terms of pounds of nitrogen and
phosphorus from manure, litter, and
process wastewater provides greater
environmental protection by requiring
operators to adjust the actual amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
applied based on the most current
manure nutrient test results.
The utility of this approach,
nevertheless, hinges on the CAFO
making accurate predictions in the NMP
that are not disrupted by changes to the
CAFO’s operation or by circumstances
beyond the control of the CAFO
operator. Any changes to the terms of
the NMP would constitute a change to
the terms of the permit, which would
require a permit modification. See
discussion in section III.C.3(e) of this
preamble, ‘‘Changes to a Permitted
CAFO’s Nutrient Management Plan.’’
For example, any change to the planned
crop sequence, such as the addition of
a second crop to a field, requires a
permit modification.
On the other hand, the advantage of
this approach is its relative simplicity
for CAFOs with predictable crops and
land application. The linear approach
would be particularly suitable for
operations that consistently plant one
crop or two crops in rotation on the
same fields, using the same source and
form of manure, litter, or process
wastewater, and that land apply on a
regular annual schedule using the same
application method(s).
EPA notes that even under the linear
approach, operators may provide
themselves some flexibility by
specifying more than one field-specific
crop rotation plan in the NMP, with
application rates of nitrogen or
phosphorus specified for each
alternative plan for inclusion in the
permit. This might be practical for
operators who are reasonably confident
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that they will follow one of two or three
potential crop rotations. EPA is
promulgating the other approach for
operators seeking a greater degree of
flexibility.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
(B) Narrative Rate Approach—Rates
Derived From Total Amounts of Plant
Available Nitrogen and Phosphorus
This final rule includes a second
approach that would allow rates of
application to be expressed as a
narrative rate that includes the total
amount of plant available nutrients from
all sources combined with a specific,
quantitative method for calculating the
amount, in tons or gallons, of manure,
litter, and process wastewater allowed
to be land applied. (See 40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(ii).) Unlike the linear
approach, in this quantitative narrative
rate approach, the terms of the NMP
include the maximum amounts of
nitrogen and phosphorus from all
sources of nutrients for each crop or
other field use identified in the NMP, in
chemical forms determined to be
acceptable to the Director, in pounds
per acre, for each field.
As required at 40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(ii)(A), the narrative rate
approach also includes as terms the
following four factors:
• The outcome of the field-specific
assessment of the potential for nitrogen
and phosphorus transport from each
field;
• The crop or crops to be planted in
each field or any other uses such as
pasture or fallow fields;
• The realistic yield goal for each
crop or use identified for each field; and
• The nitrogen and phosphorus
recommendations from sources
specified by the Director for each crop
or use identified for each field.
In addition, this narrative rate
approach includes as a term of the NMP
the methodology by which the NMP
accounts for certain factors when
calculating the amounts of manure,
litter, and process wastewater to be land
applied. A CAFO using the narrative
rate approach is required to apply in
accordance with the resulting
calculations. This final rule requires the
methodology in NMPs developed using
this approach to account for the
following factors:
• Results of soil tests conducted in
accordance with protocols identified in
the nutrient management plan, as
required by 40 CFR 122.42 (e)(1)(vii);
• Credits for all nitrogen in the field
that will be plant available;
• The amount of nitrogen and
phosphorus in the manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be applied;
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• Consideration of multi-year
phosphorus application;
• All other additions of plant
available nitrogen and phosphorus to
the field;
• The form and source of manure,
litter, and process wastewater;
• The timing and method of land
application; and
• Volatilization of nitrogen and
mineralization of organic nitrogen.
The factors listed above are not
themselves required to be terms in the
narrative rate approach, but the
methodology used to account for them
in the CAFO’s permit is a term. Thus,
the CAFO operator will be bound by the
methodology and the way in which
these factors must be accounted for in
calculating the actual amount of
manure, litter, or process wastewater
allowed to be applied to the field. The
terms of the NMP under this approach
do not include the amount of nitrogen
and phosphorus in the manure, litter, or
process wastewater allowed to be landapplied as set forth in the NMP, but they
do include the methodology prescribed
in the NMP for calculating these
amounts. And while the terms of the
NMP do not include the predicted
source, form, timing, and method of
application of manure, litter, or process
wastewater set forth in the NMP, they
include the methodology that accounts
for these factors in determining the
amount of manure, litter, or process
wastewater allowed to be applied. This
allows the actual inputs and results for
these factors to be something other than
what was projected in the NMP during
the period of permit coverage, using the
methodology, while ensuring that the
CAFO meets the requirements of 40 CFR
122.42(e)(1) and, for Large CAFOs, 40
CFR 412.4, by applying in accordance
with the methodology and other terms
of the NMP.
This approach requires that the CAFO
apply manure, litter, or process
wastewater according to the results of
this calculated amount. For example, if
the NMP projected an amount of
manure to be applied based on
incorporation of solid manure, the
operator could apply process
wastewater from the lagoon by spraying
the field instead. In this example, the
methodology must account for factors of
form, source, and method of application
such that these inputs and results can be
other than what was projected in the
NMP and the amount of manure
allowed to be applied will be
predictably and accurately calculated.
In other words, the methodology and
requirement that application be in
accordance with the rate calculated
using that methodology are enforceable
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term that must be complied with at the
time of determining how much, from
which source, in what form is allowed
to be applied to the field using which
method of application.
40 CFR 122.42(e)(5)(ii)(C) clarifies
that the amount of manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be applied as
projected in the NMP submitted with
the permit application or NOI is not a
term of the NMP under the narrative
rate approach. As explained above, the
amount of manure, litter, and process
wastewater is to be calculated using the
methodology included in the NMP and
based on actual amounts of plant
available nitrogen and phosphorus from
all sources at the time of land
application. Other projections that must
be included in the NMP but are not
terms are the CAFO’s planned crop
rotations for each field; credits for all
nitrogen in the field that will be plant
available; consideration of multi-year
phosphorus application; accounting for
all other additions of plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus to the field;
the predicted form, source, and method
of application of manure, litter, and
process wastewater for each crop; and
the timing of application for each field,
insofar as it concerns the calculation of
rates of application (permitting
authorities may establish in permits or
technical standards for nutrient
management land application timing
restrictions, such as prohibitions on
land application to frozen or saturated
ground, that would be permit terms).5
As specified at 40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(ii)(B), NMPs for which
terms are identified using the narrative
rate approach may also include
alternative crops not included in the
planned rotation in the NMP, so long as
the NMP includes for each crop realistic
yield goals, nitrogen and phosphorus
recommendations from sources
specified by the Director, and maximum
amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus
from all sources. The terms and factors
associated with alternative crops would
be the same as the terms and factors
required for the crops included in the
planned rotation in the NMP.
EPA received several comments on
the proposed terms and factors for the
narrative rate approach. Commenters
requested that EPA refer only to ‘‘plant
available’’ nutrients in the narrative rate
approach. Some confusion may have
been caused by EPA’s reference in the
preamble to the 2008 supplemental
proposal to the ‘‘maximum amount of
total nitrogen and phosphorus’’ with
regard to expression of the application
rate under the narrative approach. This
5 See
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language was intended to refer to the
total amounts of nitrogen and
phosphorus, rather than referring to a
specific chemical form (‘‘total nitrogen’’
or ‘‘total phosphorus’’). This has been
corrected in this final rule and preamble
by removing the word ‘‘total.’’ The final
rule refers to plant available forms of
nutrients with regard to determining
credits for nitrogen in the field and
accounting for all other additions of
plant available nitrogen and phosphorus
to the field. Otherwise, the rule requires
expression of application rates in
chemical forms determined to be
acceptable to the Director, such as
indicated in the technical standards
established by the Director, or in the
permit.
One commenter suggested that crop
yields be included as a factor under the
narrative rate approach and that yield
goals should be adjusted for operations
that consistently fail to meet them. This
final rule includes realistic yield goals
as a term under both approaches.
Realistic yield goals will be included in
the NMP and, therefore, will be subject
to review by the permitting authority
and the public. In addition, States may
establish in their technical standards
criteria for deriving realistic yield goals
including criteria for adjusting yield
goals based on actual crop yields. EPA
believes that this is sufficient to ensure
that the yield goals used to calculate
application rates in NMPs are
appropriate. Upon subsequent permit
issuance, the public will have the
opportunity to review yield goals in
light of actual yields reported by the
CAFO in its annual reports (see 40 CFR
122.42(e)(4)(viii)).
The narrative rate approach would
eliminate certain issues associated with
a five-year planning cycle previously
discussed in connection with the linear
approach presented above. A key
difference of the narrative rate
approach, is that it would require
application rates for manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be recalculated at
least annually using the methodology
specified in the NMP (40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(ii)(D)). Unlike the linear
approach, the narrative rate approach
allows CAFOs that may need to adjust
their rates of application of manure,
litter, and process wastewater due to
changes in soil levels of nitrogen and
phosphorus to do so without requiring
the permit to be modified. Therefore, it
is important to ensure that the actual
changes in soil levels of plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus are taken into
account, rather than relying on five-year
projections of fluctuations provided in
the NMP.
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The narrative rate approach requires
an annual determination of soil levels of
nitrogen and phosphorus. For nitrogen,
the annual determination must include
a concurrent calculation of nitrogen that
will be plant available consistent with
the methodology specified in the NMP.
As described above, this methodology
must account for the factors that would
affect soil nitrogen levels on an annual
basis such as the form and timing of
previous land application(s); the actual
amount of nitrogen in the manure, litter,
and process wastewater previously
applied; and volatilization and
mineralization rates for nitrogen. For
phosphorus, the annual determination
must include the results of the most
recent soil test conducted in accordance
with sampling requirements approved
by the Director. As in the case of other
technical determinations to be made by
the Director as part of this final rule, the
Director’s determination concerning
sampling requirements may be made in
the technical standards established by
the Director, in the permit, or by an
equivalent determination made
elsewhere. Many States require
sampling to be done every two or three
years, for most conditions. Some require
more frequent sampling generally, and
others require more frequent sampling
at higher concentrations of soil test
phosphorus. If sampling is conducted
more frequently than required by the
Director, then the determination must
be based on the results of the most
recent test.
EPA proposed that CAFOs using the
narrative rate approach would be
required to test soils annually for
nutrient content and that these data be
used in recalculating the amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to apply annually. Many commenters
opposed annual soil testing for
phosphorus. These commenters stated
that annual testing is inconsistent with
State land grant university guidance, is
unnecessary because phosphorus levels
in the soil do not change significantly
from year to year and that such testing
would be cost-prohibitive for many
operations. A number of commenters
suggested alternative testing frequencies
ranging from three to five years. Several
commenters suggested that annual
phosphorus testing be required only
where the soil phosphorus level is
already high or previous applications
have exceeded the crop phosphorus
removal rate (such as where manure is
applied at a nitrogen-based rate). A few
commenters asked EPA to clarify that
annual soil testing only applies to fields
that will receive manure in the year the
testing is performed. One commenter
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70449
indicated that, under certain
circumstances, manure nutrient testing
should be required more frequently than
annually. Although the supplemental
proposal did not specifically propose to
require annual soil nitrogen testing,
several commenters indicated that such
testing should not be required, citing
limitations in accuracy and
effectiveness of the testing methods
currently available. EPA agrees with
commenters that, in a number of States,
annual soil testing for phosphorus has
been determined to be unnecessary.
EPA recognizes that soil test
requirements vary from State to State,
and may include testing for nitrogen as
well as phosphorus. Based on these
responses from a range of commenters
and the various suggested alternatives,
EPA has replaced the proposed annual
soil testing requirement for the narrative
rate approach with the requirement that
an annual determination of soil nutrient
levels be based on current data and
calculations as described above to
support ‘‘real time’’ calculation of
appropriate application rates. This final
rule does not specify a minimum
frequency for soil phosphorus testing,
but instead requires CAFOs to include
the results of the most recent soil tests
for phosphorus conducted in
accordance with soil testing
requirements approved by the Director.
The annual recalculation of the
amount of manure, litter, and process
wastewater allowed to be applied must
also rely on the results of the most
recent representative manure, litter, and
process wastewater tests taken within
12 months of the date of land
application. These data along with the
annual determination of soil levels of
nitrogen and phosphorus must be used
to calculate, in real time, the amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be applied to supply the remaining
nitrogen and phosphorus needed for the
actual crop being planted on the field.
Commenters requested that the narrative
rate approach express application rates
in terms of pounds of nutrients rather
than tons of manure to allow
appropriate utilization of nutrients in
manure whose nutrient content varies
over time. In practice, the narrative rate
approach requires that amounts of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be land applied be calculated first in
pounds of nutrients and then translated
into tons or gallons of manure, litter,
and process wastewater using current
manure nutrient analyses. The
information presented to the public in
the CAFO’s NMP will include the
projected amounts for the planned crop
rotation, in tons or gallons of manure,
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litter, or process wastewater, since this
is the endpoint of the calculation of the
amount to be applied. As discussed
above, these projected amounts are not
themselves terms, since they will need
to be recalculated each year based on
updated information.
One commenter suggested that EPA
specify that manure tests and plant
tissue tests also be used in the annual
rate recalculation. As described above,
this final rule does require
consideration of recent manure test
results in annual application rate
recalculations. Plant tissue testing may
be an effective tool for determining
nitrogen deficiencies (and the need for
supplemental nitrogen application), as
well as for determining excess nitrogen.
However, plant tissue tests are typically
taken after manure applications have
been made on a field and thus are
unavailable at the time the operator is
determining rates of application. A
CAFO’s NMP may include plant tissue
testing as part of the CAFO’s
methodology so long as it is done
consistently with State technical
standards.
In addition to accounting for the crop
and field information, the methodology
for the annual recalculation of the
amount of manure, litter, and process
wastewater to apply must account for a
number of other variables, including the
form and source of the manure, litter,
and process wastewater and the timing
and method of application, as described
above. The operator may not apply more
than the maximum amount of nitrogen
and phosphorus calculated using the
methodology.
Under this approach, the NMP will
include planned crop rotations for each
field and corresponding projected
amounts, in tons or gallons, of manure,
litter, and process wastewater to be
applied, including all of the calculations
for determining such projected amounts,
for the period of permit coverage. This
will give the permitting authority and
the public an opportunity to review,
prior to permit issuance, the adequacy
of the CAFO’s methodology and the way
the CAFO uses the methodology to
calculate the appropriate amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be applied, based on the operator’s
planned crop rotation at the time of
permit issuance. Again, these planned
crop rotations and projected amounts
are not terms, as they will need to be
recalculated each year based on updated
information; however these projections
will allow the public to see how the
methodology (which is a term) is
applied to a projected set of facts to
calculate the amounts to be land
applied.
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Several commenters expressed
concerns about the enforceability of the
narrative rate approach, citing the lack
of an objective rate and public
availability of supporting information
used to calculate the rate. The narrative
rate approach requires the CAFO to
recalculate the amount projected in the
NMP of manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be land applied, using the
methodology in the NMP, at least once
a year, throughout the period of permit
coverage. In recalculating these
amounts, a CAFO will be required to
use concurrent calculations of credits
for all plant available nitrogen in the
field and the results of the most recent
soil tests for phosphorus in the field.
The CAFO will then calculate the
maximum amount of nitrogen and
phosphorus from manure, litter, and
process wastewater allowed to be
applied, as a portion of the total amount
of nitrogen and phosphorus from all
sources, using the methodology in the
NMP. Under the narrative rate
approach, the CAFO must use the
methodology specified in the NMP
(which is a term) to account for the
amount of nitrogen and phosphorus in
the manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be applied when
calculating the maximum amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
allowed to be applied. To ensure that
such recalculations are made available
to the Director and the public, the
recalculations and the new data from
which they are derived are required to
be reported in the CAFO’s annual report
for the previous twelve months. In other
words, the rate of application would be
an objective, enforceable rate, because
the permit will specify the methodology
required for calculating the amount of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
allowed to be applied, certain values or
sources of information required to be
used in the methodology, and will limit
the total amount of nitrogen and
phosphorus from all sources for each
crop. Failure to comply with the rate
established under the permit would be
a violation of the permit, and the
Director and the public will be able to
determine whether the rate was
complied with from the annual report.
Most commenters who commented on
the narrative rate approach were
supportive of the approach in terms of
its degree of flexibility. Some
commenters suggested that it should be
the only approach adopted in the final
rule. EPA believes that the flexibility of
the narrative rate approach will reduce
the burden on permitting authorities
and CAFO operators by decreasing the
number of substantial changes to the
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permit which require public notice and
comment, arising from changes to the
CAFO’s crop rotations, while ensuring
that all effluent limitations applicable to
a permitted CAFO are incorporated as
terms of the permit, as required by the
Waterkeeper decision.
As many commenters on the 2006
proposed rule pointed out and EPA
recognizes, there may be changes in
field conditions or practices at a CAFO,
including, for example, those that alter
the projected levels of plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus in the soil or
in the manure over the period of permit
coverage. Such changes introduce some
uncertainty in setting application rates
for five years as enforceable terms of the
permit. The narrative rate approach is
designed to accommodate these
concerns by allowing a CAFO to
compensate for changes in soil levels of
plant available nutrients, in manure
nutrient content, or in the timing and
method of application, by adjusting the
application rates accordingly without
the need for a permit modification.
However, the operator will be limited to
the total crop-specific amount of
nitrogen and phosphorus from all
sources and will have to adhere to a
methodology that establishes the way in
which such rates are to be calculated.
Thus, in the second and later years of
the permit term, this approach will
provide an accurate and verifiable
means of achieving realistic production
goals while minimizing transport of
phosphorus and nitrogen from the field.
This will help CAFOs avoid the
possibility of over-application of
nitrogen or phosphorus because of
increased levels of nutrients in the soil,
compared to what was projected at the
time of permit issuance, and,
conversely, the possibility of failing to
meet crop agronomic needs due to
under-application of nitrogen or
phosphorus.
(d) Process for Incorporating Terms of
the Nutrient Management Plan Into a
General Permit
The Agency is also promulgating
procedural requirements for
incorporating the terms of the NMP into
an NPDES general permit, in new
paragraph 40 CFR 122.23(h)(1).
Once the processes for publicly
reviewing the NMP and the terms of the
NMP have been completed, the Director
must address all significant comments
raised and make a final decision
whether to grant coverage under a
general permit. As necessary, the
Director will require a CAFO owner or
operator to revise their NMP to address
issues raised during the review process.
Once the Director determines that the
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process for the development of a
CAFO’s NMP is complete, the Director
must make the final decision whether to
grant permit coverage to the CAFO
under the general permit. If coverage is
granted, the Director must incorporate
the relevant terms of the NMP into the
general permit (as described later) and
inform the CAFO owner or operator and
the public that coverage has been
authorized and of the applicable terms
and conditions of the permit. Once a
CAFO obtains authorization to
discharge under an NPDES permit, the
CAFO must implement the terms and
conditions of the nutrient management
plan as incorporated into the permit, as
of the date of permit coverage
authorization.
The preamble to the 2006 proposed
rule discussed and requested comment
on approaches for the Director to
identify the terms of the NMP to be
incorporated into the permit. These
options ranged from attaching the entire
NMP to the permit to identifying
specific elements to be included in the
permit as terms. Based on comments
received on the proposed rule, EPA is
specifying certain elements of NMPs
with respect to land application as
‘‘terms of the NMP’’ that must be
incorporated into the permit. EPA is
not, however, requiring a single
approach whereby the terms are made
part of the permit, leaving to the
Director the discretion to decide
whether, for example, to attach the
entire NMP to the permit and require
compliance with the terms of the NMP
or to specify the terms of the NMP and
specifically identify each of them in the
permit. Under this final rule,
incorporation of the terms of a
particular CAFO’s NMP into a general
permit is not a permit modification
subject to 40 CFR 122.62. Rather, it is
an extension of the CAFO general
permitting process itself. As discussed
above, EPA intends the process
proposed in 40 CFR 122.23(h) to
generally parallel the procedures in 40
CFR part 124.
Commenters supported an approach
allowing a permitting authority to
incorporate the entire NMP as a
condition of the permit without
distinguishing between the NMP and
the ‘‘terms’’ of the NMP. Some
supported attaching an NMP to the
permit or general permit and requiring
that the CAFO implement that NMP as
a permit condition. As discussed above,
this rule requires that a permit include
the terms of a site-specific NMP.
However, EPA is not prescribing the
manner in which this incorporation
takes place. The permitting authority
may satisfy this requirement by
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incorporating a CAFO’s NMP by
reference into the permit or as described
in the preamble to the 2006 proposed
rule, the permitting authority may
extract the terms of the NMP and attach
them to the permit. Either way, the
terms of the NMP are enforceable terms
of the NPDES permit.
Other commenters sought greater
State discretion in implementing NMP
requirements as permit conditions.
These commenters recognized the
importance of implementing the NMP
provisions but did not want this rule to
interfere with effective existing State
approaches. In addition, these
commenters wanted to preserve the
administrative advantages of using
general permits.
This rule provides some State
discretion by allowing permitting
authorities to determine which NMP
provisions to include as terms of the
permit. The rule specifies what must be
included at a minimum in the permit as
terms of the NMP. However, States have
the authority to adopt additional or
more stringent requirements, under
CWA section 510.
(e) Changes to a Permitted CAFO’s
Nutrient Management Plan
It is well understood that agricultural
operations modify their nutrient
management and farming practices
during the normal course of their
operations. Such alterations may require
changes to a permitted CAFO’s NMP
during the period of permit coverage.
As discussed in the preamble to the
2006 proposed rule, the permit does not
need to be modified for all operating
changes. Because of the way NMPs are
developed and the flexibility provided
by the two options for developing the
terms of the nutrient management plan
at 40 CFR 122.42(e)(5), most routine
changes at a facility should not require
changes to the NMP itself. For example,
a CAFO using the narrative rate
approach would not ordinarily need to
change its NMP when it makes changes
to factors that are not themselves terms
but are accounted for in the
methodology. To minimize the need for
revision, nutrient management plans
should anticipate and accommodate
routine variations inherent in
agricultural operations such as
anticipated changes in crop rotation, as
well as changes in numbers of animals
and volume of manure, litter, or process
wastewater resulting from normal
fluctuations or a facility’s planned
expansion. Typically, an NMP is
developed to accommodate, for
example, normal fluctuations in herd or
flock size, capacity for manure, litter,
and process wastewater storage, the
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fields available for land application and
their capacity for nutrient applications.
Moreover, as discussed in this
preamble, EPA would encourage
operators to develop an NMP that
includes reasonably predictable
alternatives that a CAFO may
implement during the period of permit
coverage. However, unanticipated
changes to a nutrient management plan
may nevertheless be necessary.
The final rule includes 40 CFR
122.42(e)(6), which requires a CAFO to
notify the Director of changes to the
CAFO’s NMP. Section 122.42(e)(6)
excludes the results of calculations
made in accordance with 40 CFR
122.42(e)(5)(i)(B) and 122.42(e)(5)(ii)(D)
from the requirements of paragraph
(e)(6). The results of these calculations,
which are required of Large CAFOs
using the linear approach and all
CAFOs using the narrative rate
approach, must be reported in the
CAFO’s annual report. Thus, there is no
need to provide this information
pursuant to the requirements of
paragraph (e)(6).
In the 2006 proposed rule, EPA
proposed a process that CAFOs and the
permitting authority would need to
follow when a CAFO makes changes to
its NMP. The proposal also included
criteria for determining when a change
to a CAFO’s NMP should be considered
a substantial change. In the 2008
supplemental notice, the Agency
solicited comment on several
modifications to the 2006 proposal
including a list of changes to the NMP
that would constitute a substantial
change.
In this final rule, EPA is including a
list of changes to the NMP that would
constitute a substantial change to the
terms of a facility’s NMP, thus triggering
public notice and permit modification.
Substantial changes include: (1)
Addition of new land application areas
not previously included in the CAFO’s
NMP; (2) any changes to the maximum
field-specific annual rates of application
or to the maximum amounts of nitrogen
and phosphorus derived from all
sources for each crop, as expressed in
accordance with, respectively, the linear
approach or the narrative rate approach;
(3) addition of any crop not included in
the terms of the CAFO’s NMP and
corresponding field-specific rates of
application; and (4) changes to fieldspecific components of the CAFO’s
NMP, where such changes are likely to
increase the risk of nitrogen and
phosphorus transport from the field to
waters of the U.S.
This final rule also makes one
exception to the first type of substantial
change (a land application area being
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added to the nutrient management
plan), where such additional land is
already included in the terms of another
existing NMP incorporated into an
existing NPDES permit. If, under the
revised NMP, the CAFO owner or
operator applies manure, litter, or
process wastewater on such land
application area in accordance with the
existing field-specific terms of the
existing permit, such addition of new
land would not be a substantial change
to the terms of the CAFO owner or
operator’s NMP.
EPA received a number of comments
on the list of substantial changes in the
2006 proposed rule and 2008
supplemental proposal. One commenter
encouraged EPA to state that substantial
changes under the narrative rate
approach only occur when the CAFO
changes the system used to determine
maximum allowable application rates.
EPA agrees that changes in the
methodology may be substantial
changes to the terms of the NMP if they
result in changes to the maximum rates
of application or maximum amounts of
nitrogen and phosphorus derived from
all sources for each crop or if they result
in changes likely to increase the risk of
nutrient transport to waters of the U.S.
However, EPA does not agree that there
are no other changes that are substantial
changes under the narrative rate
approach. EPA believes that the four
substantial changes identified in this
final rule are appropriate for both of the
approaches for determining rates of
application. For example, proper
implementation of the narrative rate
approach depends on identification of
the fields to be used for land
application, so use of a new field for
land application that had not been
previously covered in the facility’s (or
another facility’s) permit terms would
constitute a substantial change. In
addition, under the narrative rate
approach a change to the field-specific
maximum amounts of nitrogen and
phosphorus derived from all sources is
a substantial change to the NMP,
because it defines the upper bounds on
nutrient additions.
Some commenters suggested that EPA
expand the list of substantial changes to
include changes such as the maximum
number of animals allowed for the
CAFO site; production area changes that
alter the volume and composition of
waste; using soil, manure, plant tissue
test results to refine the NMP; and
changes in the status of the receiving
waterbodies. With regard to the number
of animals confined and the volume of
waste generated, EPA has stated that the
number of animals confined at a CAFO
would not necessarily be a term of the
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NMP because a CAFO operator is
required to properly operate and
maintain the CAFO’s storage facilities
regardless of the number of animals or
the volume of manure, litter, or process
wastewater generated. For the same
reasons, EPA believes that changes to
these factors will not necessarily trigger
substantial change to a CAFO’s permit,
although accommodating an increase in
the number of animals or volume of
manure could lead to changes to the
NMP that would constitute substantial
changes to terms of the NMP (and the
permit). With regard to the use of soil
and manure tests, both approaches
discussed above for expressing land
application rates in NMPs and
associated terms allow for consideration
of manure testing on an annual basis;
and the narrative rate approach also
requires consideration of the most
recent soil test results. Finally, NPDES
permits for all types of dischargers,
including CAFOs, typically include
reopener provisions under which the
Director may revise the permit during
the permit term based on factors such as
changes to the status of the receiving
water body. EPA believes that such
standard NPDES provisions are
sufficient to allow permit revisions
necessary to support the criteria and
standards established for receiving
waters.
The Agency believes that the list of
substantial changes included in this
final rule address changes that most
directly affect fundamental components
of the NMP that relate to the land
application of manure, litter, and
process wastewater, which was a
primary focus of the Waterkeeper
decision. First, by identifying the
addition of new land application areas
not originally included in the terms of
the NMP as a substantial change, the
Agency makes clear that the fields to be
used for land application must be
permit terms, as all permitted CAFOs
that land apply manure, litter, and
process wastewater are required to do so
at field-specific agronomic rates. The
identification of land application areas
in the NMP is essential for determining
the effluent limitations applicable to a
particular CAFO, which the
Waterkeeper decision required be made
available for public review and
comment and incorporated into the
permit. Thus, the public must have an
opportunity to comment on the fields
planned for land application during
both the initial permit issuance phase
and any subsequent permit modification
phase. The exception for the addition of
new fields already covered by an
existing NPDES permit is consistent
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with the Waterkeeper decision because
the rates of application for those land
application areas will have already been
publicly reviewed, approved, and
incorporated into a permit as required
by Waterkeeper.
Some commenters supported the
addition of new land application areas
as a substantial change. They also
commented that adding or reducing
land application areas would require a
recalculation of the application rate.
Some commenters were concerned that
the addition of new land application
areas as a substantial change is
counterproductive, severely limits
flexibility for producers to plan, does
not add water quality benefit,
discourages producers from adding land
to their NMP and will hinder a CAFO’s
ability to quickly add more fields to the
NMP. These commenters suggested the
addition of land application areas can
be addressed by requiring producers to
submit this information with their
annual reports. Some commenters also
suggested granting States the flexibility
to define when and what types of land
application area additions would be
considered a substantial change. Some
commenters suggested that only the loss
of land application areas should be
treated as a major modification which
requires public participation. As
discussed above, under Waterkeeper,
the public must have opportunity to
review the fields planned for land
application during both the initial
permit issuance phase and any
subsequent permit modification phase
in order to determine whether fieldspecific rates of application have been
properly developed. For this reason, the
addition of new land application areas
not already addressed under an existing
NMP and permit must be considered a
substantial change and made available
for public review.
The second substantial change is any
change to the field-specific maximum
rates of application. The Waterkeeper
decision makes clear the importance of
these rates as terms of the NMP. Some
commenters indicated this change
should not apply to NMPs developed
using the narrative approach, since the
appropriate application rate should be
calculated using the approved
methodology. This final rule clarifies
that, for the narrative rate approach, a
substantial change is triggered by a
change in the field-specific maximum
amount of nitrogen and phosphorus
derived from all sources.
The third substantial change is the
addition to the NMP of crops or other
uses not previously included in the
CAFO’s NMP, together with the
corresponding maximum field-specific
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rates of application for those crops or
other uses. Because rates of application
are based on the yield goals for each
specific crop, any crops or other uses
newly added to the plan will require
corresponding newly calculated rates of
application. In addition, because the
maximum rates of application must be
made available to the public for review
prior to incorporation as terms of the
permit, consistent with Waterkeeper,
the addition of new crops or other uses
and their corresponding rates of
application is considered a substantial
change.
Finally, any change to site-specific
components of the CAFO’s nutrient
management plan that is likely to
increase the risk of nitrogen and
phosphorus transport to waters of the
U.S. is a substantial change. The Agency
recognizes a number of changes as
potentially triggering this requirement,
including the following examples: (1)
Alternate timing of land application that
would diminish the potential for plant
nutrient uptake; (2) methods of land
application not provided for in the NMP
calculation of amount of manure, litter,
and process wastewater to be applied;
(3) changes to conservation practices;
and (4) changes in the CAFO’s
procedures for handling, storage, or
treatment of manure, litter, and process
wastewater. The actual crop planted,
timing and method of land application,
crop uptake, and conservation practices
utilized with respect to the land
application areas are all key factors that
affect nitrogen and phosphorus runoff
from the land application area. Changes
to any of the planning considerations
listed above can directly (and
measurably) alter the outcome of the
decisions made in an NMP and the
efficacy of that plan in ensuring
appropriate agricultural utilization of
those nutrients that are land applied.
An advantage of the narrative rate
approach is that it reduces the
likelihood that changes to a CAFO’s
operation would result in a substantial
change to the terms of the CAFO’s NMP.
For example, a change to the method or
timing of application would be a
substantial change to the terms of the
NMP for CAFOs using the linear
approach if the Director determines that
it is likely to increase the risk of
nutrient transport to surface waters. For
a CAFO using the narrative rate
approach, a change in the method or
timing of application would not be a
change to the terms of the NMP, and
therefore not a substantial change, so
long as the methodology in the NMP
(itself a permit term) accounts for the
change in method or timing.
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Because changes to the NMP could
result in a change to a permit term, the
2006 proposed rule provided that
whenever a CAFO makes any change to
its NMP, the owner or operator would
be required to provide the Director with
the revised NMP and identify the
changes from the previous version
submitted. Of course, any change to the
CAFO’s implementation of its NMP that
does not constitute a change to the NMP
itself would not be submitted to the
Director. For example, for CAFOs
following the narrative rate approach,
any change in crop rotation or
substitution of crops in a given rotation
with alternative crops identified in the
NMP for a given field would not be a
change and thus would not need to be
submitted to the Director prior to
implementation.
Some commenters felt that substantial
changes could be addressed by making
those changes part of the annual report.
For example, some commenters
recommended that CAFOs using the
narrative rate approach be required to
include information associated with the
addition of new crops in their annual
reports. The annual report does not
provide sufficient public notice for
making changes to the terms of the
NPDES permit. Those procedures are
detailed below.
(f) Process for Review of Changes to an
NMP and for Modifying Terms of the
NMP Incorporated Into the Permit
When a permitted CAFO operator
revises its NMP, this rule requires the
CAFO operator to submit the revised
NMP to the permitting authority for
review and for the permitting authority
to incorporate any revised terms of the
NMP into the permit. This rule includes
provisions that enable the Director to
determine whether revisions to the
CAFO’s NMP necessitate revisions to
the terms of the NMP incorporated into
the permit, and if so, whether such
changes are substantial or nonsubstantial. This rule identifies several
specific types of changes that must be
considered substantial changes to the
NMP, and this preamble provides
further guidance for distinguishing
between substantial and non-substantial
changes. This final rule also establishes
a streamlined process for formal public
notice and comment that the permitting
authority must follow for permit
modification when a CAFO is seeking to
make substantial changes to the terms of
its NMP. Non-substantial changes to the
terms of the NMP are not subject to
public notice and comment before the
permit is revised. Finally, this rule
establishes provisions for incorporating
both substantial and non-substantial
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70453
revisions to terms of the NMP into the
permit as a minor permit modification.
These procedures apply to all permitted
CAFOs, regardless of whether they are
covered under an individual permit or
under a general permit. These
procedures are discussed in greater
detail, below.
As mentioned above, this final rule
requires that whenever a CAFO makes
any change to its NMP (see discussion
in section III.C.3(e) of this preamble,
‘‘Changes to a Permitted CAFO’s
Nutrient Management Plan’’), the owner
or operator must provide the Director
with the revised NMP and identify the
changes from the previous version
submitted to the permitting authority.
See 40 CFR 122.42(e)(6)(i). 40 CFR
122.24(e)(6)(ii) requires the Director to
then review the revised plan to ensure
that it still meets the requirements of 40
CFR 122.42(e) and applicable effluent
limitations and standards, including
those specified in 40 CFR part 412. This
rule also requires the Director to
determine whether the changes
necessitate revision to the terms of the
NMP that were incorporated into the
permit issued to the CAFO. If not, the
Director must notify the CAFO that the
permit does not need to be modified.
Upon such notification the CAFO may
implement the revised nutrient
management plan.
If, on the other hand, the Director
determines that the changes to the NMP
do require that the terms of the NMP
that were incorporated into the permit
be revised, the Director must next
decide whether or not the change is
substantial. The Director will evaluate
the change based on the provisions in
§ 122.42(e)(6)(iii) discussed above.
Pursuant to 40 CFR 122.42(e)(6)(ii)(A),
for non-substantial changes, the Director
must make the revised nutrient
management plan publicly available and
include it in the permit record, revise
the terms of the nutrient management
plan incorporated into the permit, and
notify the owner or operator and inform
the public of any changes to the terms
of the nutrient management plan that
are incorporated into the permit. Upon
such notification the CAFO may
implement the revised nutrient
management plan.
If the changes to the terms of the NMP
are substantial, the Director will also
modify the permit as necessary by
incorporating revised terms of the NMP,
but only after the public has had the
opportunity to review and comment on
the NMP changes pursuant to the
requirements of 40 CFR
122.24(e)(6)(ii)(B). The process for
public comments, hearing requests, and
the hearing process if a hearing is
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granted must follow the procedures for
draft permits set forth in 40 CFR
124.11–13. The Director must respond
to all significant comments received
during the comment period as provided
in 40 CFR 124.17, and require the CAFO
owner or operator to further revise the
nutrient management plan if necessary.
Once the Director incorporates the
revised terms of the nutrient
management plan into the permit, the
Director must notify the owner or
operator and inform the public. A
permit modification to revise the terms
of the NMP incorporated into the permit
may be appealed in the same manner as
the initial final permit decision.
The Director may establish by
regulation, or in the general permit for
CAFOs authorized under a general
permit, an appropriate period of time for
the public to comment and request a
hearing on the proposed substantial
changes to the terms of the nutrient
management plan incorporated into the
permit that differs from the time period
specified in 40 CFR 124.10. EPA is
providing this discretion to the Director
to allow CAFOs to implement revised
nutrient management practices in
accordance with growing seasons and
other time sensitive circumstances. As
is stated above in section III.C.3(b) of
this preamble regarding public review of
NMPs during the general permit
process, the public will have an
opportunity to comment on the
sufficiency of the time period when the
Director proposes it, either in the
regulations or general permit.
Because the process in
§ 122.42(e)(6)(ii) allows for public
review of substantial changes to the
terms of nutrient management plans and
the underlying data and calculations,
the incorporation of changes to the
permit through this process will be
treated as a minor permit modification,
under 40 CFR 122.63(h), and not require
additional review. EPA considered
requiring that any change to the NMP be
considered a permit modification
subject to procedures under 40 CFR
122.62, but rejected this interpretation
as it would significantly limit
permitting authorities and CAFO
operators’ ability to make necessary and
timely minor changes to NMPs as
discussed above.
Commenters identified several issues
associated with the proposed process for
making substantial changes to NMPs.
Several commenters indicated that the
need for the permitting authority to
review, provide public notice and
comment, and approve substantial
changes to NMPs will likely result in
significant delays which will impact the
operational ability of many CAFOs to
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make timely nutrient management
decisions. Some commenters suggested
that the process for making such
changes be streamlined or time-limited.
Other commenters requested that EPA
provide flexibility to accommodate
existing State criteria and procedures for
determining and addressing substantial
changes. Some State commenters
indicated that they already have
effective procedures in place. Some
commenters simply asserted that the
State Director should have discretion
whether or not to require a permit
modification.
The NPDES regulations at § 122.62
specifically require that any change to
permit terms and conditions requires
permit modification to be subject to
public review and comment procedures,
unless it falls under a minor
modification listed at 40 CFR 122.63. In
this rule, EPA has accounted for the
frequent operational changes unique to
CAFOs which are not typical for other
NPDES-regulated industries. This
tailoring is an effort to balance
environmental protection with the
burden to CAFOs and permitting
authorities as well as the need to allow
other operational changes that would
not trigger the substantial modification
requirements.
The process in this rule for making
changes to NMPs and incorporating
such changes in permits is necessary as
a result of the Waterkeeper decision,
which held that terms of the NMP are
effluent limitations and that the CWA
requires that the terms of each NMP be
incorporated into a corresponding
permit and be subject to public notice
and comment and permitting authority
review. Within this context, EPA has
worked to streamline the process to the
extent possible. This includes
promulgating a process for revising
NMPs that delineates what are
substantial changes to the terms of the
NMP and allows non-substantial
changes to proceed in an expedited
manner. It also includes provisions that
allow a CAFO to develop NMPs with
operational contingencies to minimize
the number of substantial changes that
must be made. As explained herein, the
process and criteria in 40 CFR
122.42(e)(6) are reasonable and
necessary to provide permitting
authorities an effective mechanism to
maintain linkage between the NMP and
the permit in a manner consistent with
the Waterkeeper decision.
Commenters suggested changes to the
process in the 2006 proposed rule.
Several commenters requested that EPA
approve certain substantial changes as
long as the CAFO continues to comply
with all applicable technical
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requirements. Such substantial changes
could include adding a new and
substantially different field or
increasing the animal headcount so as to
exceed the previously identified
‘‘maximum’’ amount of manure in the
NMP. In addition, one commenter
recommended that the permitting
authority inspect the CAFO before
allowing any substantial changes to the
NMP.
The final rule does not expressly
provide that a permitting authority can
pre-approve certain substantial changes,
unless they are specified in an NMP that
encompasses normal fluctuations or
variations, because the Waterkeeper
decision dictates that NMPs must be
subject to permitting authority review
and the terms of the NMP available for
public comment. In addition, EPA does
not believe an inspection is needed
prior to allowing any substantial change
to an NMP. Apart from the burden this
would entail, EPA expects that selfreported information is credible and
notes that there are significant penalties
for submitting false or misleading
information.
Many commenters supported the
proposal that non-substantial changes
would require only that the CAFO
submit a revised NMP and that the
permitting authority would notify the
public of the change without allowing
for public comment. Commenters
encouraged EPA to clarify that, upon
submission, the CAFO may proceed to
implement such changes if the CAFO
believes they are non-substantial. Many
commenters stated that there is a need
to ensure that CAFOs can quickly make
changes to NMPs. One commenter
recommended that EPA allow CAFOs to
accumulate minor changes and submit
them as a group when renewing their
permit. Another commenter suggested
that any changes incurred during a
given year be reported in an annual
NMP update form. EPA decided that,
because the terms of the NMP are
enforceable terms and conditions of the
permit, CAFOs must submit changes to
the NMP to the permitting authority and
receive approval before a change is
made, not annually or at the beginning
of each new permit cycle.
Commenters were generally
unsupportive of the proposed 180-day
temporary approval period for
implementation of certain substantial
changes. Numerous commenters stated
that this would not be helpful to CAFO
owners because they would be hesitant
to invest significant amounts of money
to make substantial changes based only
on a temporary approval, since final
approval would remain subject to an
uncertain regulatory status. Others
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requested clarification regarding what
happens if a change is implemented and
then not approved. Some of these
commenters suggested as an alternative
that EPA require the permitting
authority to process the applications in
fewer than 45 days, and then allow
seven days of public review.
Another commenter stated that the
temporary approval period is
inadequate because 180 days is longer
than the crop growing season. This
commenter observed that the temporary
approval would allow CAFOs to change
their entire land application patterns for
an entire crop season without having
public comment and review by the
permitting agency. This commenter
suggested that CAFOs plan in advance
for any substantial changes and that
only if the substantial changes are the
result of unforeseen circumstances
outside the control of the CAFO, should
it be allowed temporary approval.
Based on comments, EPA reevaluated
the usefulness of the 180-day temporary
approval. In light of the comments, EPA
recognizes that such an approach may
be problematic for both industry and
permitting authorities. Some industry
commenters stated that the 180-day
grace period would be meaningless
because no operator would employ
expensive changes without knowing if
they would be approved. States
commented that any permit
modification must be approved before it
is implemented. There is no
requirement precluding operators from
purchasing new land; rather, practices
on the land cannot be employed until
approved by the permitting authority.
Further, EPA encourages operators to
take advantage of the exception for
substantial changes relating to the
addition of new land application areas
provided in § 122.42(e)(6)(iii)(A). Thus,
EPA has not included the proposed 180day temporary approval period in the
final rule.
Under this final rule, when a CAFO
submits changes to an NMP to the
permitting authority, the Director must
determine whether the changes affect
the terms of the NMP incorporated into
the permit, and if so, whether such
changes are substantial. Depending on
this determination, the process and
timing of modifying a permit will vary.
A CAFO owner or operator must remain
in compliance with his or her permit
and, thus, should work closely with the
permitting authority and should initiate
this coordination as early as possible.
EPA believes that permitting authorities
will be sensitive to the needs of CAFOs
to make a range of changes to NMPs
from time to time and, as a result, will
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be diligent in reviewing and making
determinations regarding such changes.
(g) Annual Reporting Requirements
In the 2006 proposed rule, EPA
discussed the use of annual reports to
balance greater flexibility for CAFO
operators in making cropping decisions
with ensuring appropriate permitting
authority and public oversight of permit
compliance. The preamble solicited
comment as to whether the annual
report requirements should be modified
to require all permitted CAFOs to
submit information in their annual
reports indicating how the CAFO
achieved substantive compliance with
the terms of the NMP as set forth in the
permit. In the 2008 supplemental
proposal, the Agency proposed
additional annual reporting
requirements for CAFOs that relate to
the proposed provisions regarding the
terms of the NMP.
In this action, the Agency is
establishing additional annual report
requirements, in 40 CFR
122.42(e)(4)(viii), mandating all
permitted CAFOs to include in their
annual reports the actual crop(s) planted
and actual yield(s) for each field, the
actual nitrogen and phosphorus content
of the manure, litter, and process
wastewater, and the amount of manure,
litter, or process wastewater applied to
each field during the previous 12
months. The Agency believes that it is
important for the permitting authority to
obtain this information on an annual
basis in order to ensure that the CAFO
has been operating in compliance with
the terms of its permit. The annual
report will inform the Director and the
public how the CAFO has operated,
given the flexibility for the terms of the
NMP incorporated into the permit.
The Agency is also requiring CAFOs
that follow the second (‘‘narrative rate’’)
approach for describing rates of
application in the NMP to submit as
part of their annual report the results of
all soil testing and concurrent
calculations to account for residual
nitrogen and phosphorus in the soil, all
recalculations, and the new data from
which they are derived. The CAFO is
required to report the amounts of
manure, litter, process wastewater and
the amount of chemical fertilizer
applied to each field during the
preceding 12 months. Together with the
total amount of plant available nitrogen
and phosphorus from all sources, the
information that is required to be
included in the annual report provides
the information necessary to determine
that the CAFO was adhering to the
terms of its permit when calculating
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amounts of manure, litter, and process
wastewater to apply.
Many commenters supported the use
of additional annual reporting
requirements to address either nonsubstantial changes or all changes to the
NMP. States also generally supported
such an approach and sought flexibility
regarding the content and use of the
process to address other changes to the
NMP. Another commenter noted that if
CAFOs are allowed to provide
alternative management scenarios in the
original NMP, the CAFO must be
required to submit documentation to the
Director to specify which practices it is
using from the ‘‘menu’’ of combinations
in its NMP. This would allow the
permitting authority and the public to
know what practices the CAFO is
actually implementing at any given
time.
Although EPA recognizes that NMPs
may change throughout the period of
permit coverage, as discussed above in
section III.C.3(e), the annual report
requirements are only appropriate for
use in addressing implementation of
existing NMP provisions and changes to
the NMP contemplated through
flexibilities built into the NMP during
the initial planning process or
subsequent modifications in accordance
with 40 CFR 122.42(e)(6). Because this
rule requires the terms of the NMP to be
incorporated as enforceable terms and
conditions of the permit, an outcome of
the Waterkeeper decision, changes to
the terms of the NMP constitute changes
to the permit and therefore must be
processed according to § 122.42(e)(6), as
discussed above in section III.C.3(e).
Some commenters expressed concern
that CAFOs would be unable to
complete more detailed reports and
provide the information necessary to
document changes to the NMP, and that
some of the reporting requirements
would be redundant. Some commenters
also believed that reporting crop yields
would be overly intrusive and would
not be representative of the NMP
effectiveness. In this rule, EPA has
modified the content of the annual
report to supplement the existing
annual report requirements promulgated
in 2003 so as to allow the public and the
permitting authority to review whether
the CAFO has implemented the NMP in
accordance with the terms and
conditions of its permit. This approach
balances the recognized need to provide
additional flexibility and the need for
CAFOs to provide information
concerning actual rates of application.
The additional information required in
this final rule is a limited burden on
both the CAFO and the permitting
authority that will provide public access
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to information about NMP
implementation throughout the period
of permit coverage. For example, crop
yield goals are a critical factor in
developing rates of application. Other
commenters expressed concern that
facilities might overstate crop yields
goals. As previously mentioned, by
making information about actual crop
yields public, both the Director and the
public will have better information
when evaluating NMPs for subsequent
permit coverage.
(h) EPA Nutrient Management Plan
Template
As described in the 2006 proposed
rule, EPA developed a draft template,
made available in the rulemaking public
record for public comments, which
could be used as a voluntary tool to
facilitate completion of the NMP by
CAFO permit applicants, as well as to
facilitate review by the permitting
authority. As discussed in the proposed
rule, EPA believed that such a template
would help to systematically organize
the information necessary to satisfy the
NMP requirements in the regulation.
Some commenters supported the
concept of a voluntary NMP template
and considered the draft template an
excellent user-friendly model. Other
commenters disagreed, stating that the
detailed information required in the
draft template would be quickly
outdated. Other comments received on
the NMP template include the
following:
• A ‘‘one size fits all’’ template does
not lend itself well to the different
climates and terrains across the country,
and use of the template should not be
required by the regulation;
• The draft template lacked specific
information to ensure that CAFOs are
meeting technical standards and the
ELGs;
• The draft template was too long and
appeared to be more of an inspection
checklist than a basic guideline;
• A concern that some States may
actually adopt the template, once
completed, as the required NMP format;
• The template could be a valuable
tool to clearly differentiate between the
terms of the NMP, for purposes of
incorporation into the permit, and the
background information;
• The template would be more
beneficial if it is standardized through
the use of a computer program which
allows ease and flexibility in making
changes to the NMP; and
• The template could be useful to an
unpermitted CAFO to identify land
application practices needed to qualify
for the agricultural stormwater
exemption.
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States generally agreed with the
concept of using a consistent, stable
template but wanted assurance that it is
strictly a voluntary tool and can be
modified to better address specific State
requirements. Additionally, commenters
stated that the draft template failed to
address all of the regulatory
requirements and should be modified
accordingly by including additional
technical portions. Other commenters
suggested that a template would
unnecessarily micromanage the
structure or content of NMPs and that
States should have the responsibility to
define effective nutrient management
strategies. Other commenters mentioned
the need to keep the template flexible
because NMPs are dynamic documents
that change rapidly, and a plan that is
too detailed will bind the producer to
practices that, if altered, would require
costly revisions and reviews. A few
commenters also indicated that the
format and sequence for providing
information within the draft template
was disjointed and inconsistent with the
nutrient management planning process.
Other State commenters did offer,
however, that the template may be
adequate for most public participation
processes.
After considering public comments,
EPA, in coordination with USDA, has
decided not to utilize the draft template.
Instead, the two agencies have worked
on the development of a planning tool
that would generate a single document
that meets the objectives of both
agencies. The one document would
include the required elements of an
NMP as well as the elements of a
voluntary comprehensive nutrient
management plan (CNMP) developed in
accordance with USDA technical
guidance. A CNMP is a plan much like
the NMP required by EPA’s CAFO
regulations. There are some minor
differences between the scope of the two
documents, such as a CNMP option to
include feed management plans (which
are not required for the NMP) and an
NMP requirement to include chemical
handling plans (which are not part of a
CNMP). However, the EPA and USDA
agree that there is no reason why one
document could not suffice for both the
CNMP and NMP by accommodating
both agencies’ requirements. To that
end, EPA, in partnership with USDA, is
in the process of coordinating the
information necessary to complete an
NMP as well as a CNMP and developing
a software program that could integrate
both sets of planning requirements,
known as Manure Management Planner
(MMP). Of course, even though both
agencies would promote the use of a
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single tool, it would remain the CAFO
operator’s responsibility to provide that
information to the Director in order to
meet the requirements of this rule,
inasmuch as USDA does not make
facility-specific information available to
other agencies or the public. EPA will
encourage the use of the MMP to
facilitate the development and review of
NMPs under the NPDES permit
program.
The MMP software, under
development by a grant from EPA and
USDA to Purdue University, is a
computer program that would provide
permitting authorities and producers
with a mix of programs, not currently
available elsewhere, to assist in CNMP
and/or NMP development. The objective
of this effort is to accelerate the CNMP
and NMP development process by
integrating other software programs
used to calculate manure application
rates. Among these technologies are
RUSLE II, the Phosphorus Index (PI),
and other State-specific risk assessment
tools used in CNMP and NMP
development. In the longer term it is
planned that additional integration will
be achieved with planning,
recordkeeping technologies and
connectivity to the USDA Customer
Service Toolkit. The MMP program
incorporates field-specific data tables
that allow the producer to list the type
of crops planned, crop rotation by
planting season, nutrients available for
each crop based on previous manure
applications, and the rate of application
per crop. These data tables could
provide permitting authorities with
specific information that could be
extracted as terms of the NMP that
would be inserted into a permit. It also
provides producers the flexibility to
comply with the optional approach of
calculating application rates as pounds
of nutrients by developing tables with
expanded crop contingency plans and
related application rates. See section
III.C.3(c) for detailed discussion of
nutrient management plan terms.
EPA and USDA anticipate that the
MMP software can eventually be
tailored to all individual State technical
standards, requirements and
circumstances. At present, the program
has been tailored to approximately 34
States, and is available and ready for use
in those States. EPA and USDA plan on
updating and improving the MMP
software and tailoring it to other States.
When completed, the MMP software
will be a user-friendly program available
without charge. It is strictly a voluntary
tool. There may be some situations at a
livestock operation, such as varying
terrains and unusual cropping
sequences, which the MMP cannot
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accommodate; thus the program may
not, at present, be a good fit for all
operators. Permitting authorities and
producers may still choose to use an
established State NMP software program
or other technical standards methods to
develop and implement their NMP.
More information on MMP can be found
at the Purdue University Web site,
https://www.agry.purdue.edu/mmp/.
EPA and USDA are also developing a
national nutrient management planning
course that will cover how to develop,
review, and implement an NMP and
how to use the MMP software program.
D. Compliance Dates
Following issuance of this rule,
authorized States have up to one year to
revise, as necessary, their NPDES
regulations to adopt the requirements of
this rule, or two years if statutory
changes are needed, as provided in 40
CFR 123.62. States are not required to
adopt the provisions for no discharge
certification in this time period.
As discussed above in section II.E,
EPA has twice extended certain
compliance dates originally established
in the 2003 CAFO rule. Following the
Second Circuit Court’s decision in
Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v. EPA, 399
F.3d 486 (2d Cir. 2005), the Agency
extended dates for newly defined
CAFOs to seek permit coverage and for
all permitted CAFOs to develop and
implement NMPs to July 31, 2007. 71
FR 6978 (February 10, 2006) (hereinafter
the ‘‘2006 date change rule’’).
The 2006 proposed rule did not
anticipate a need to revise the July 31,
2007, compliance dates established by
the 2006 date change rule. However, as
a result of an array of public comment
on the issues raised by the Waterkeeper
decision, EPA was unable to complete
this final rule prior to July 31, 2007.
EPA published a second revision of the
compliance dates on July 24, 2007,
extending the dates from July 31, 2007,
to February 27, 2009. 72 FR 40,245 (July
24, 2007) (hereinafter the ‘‘2007 date
change rule’’). The 2007 date change
rule does not affect the applicable time
for seeking permit coverage for existing
facilities defined as CAFOs prior to the
2003 CAFO rule, nor does it apply to
newly constructed CAFOs not subject to
new source performance standards
(NSPS) or to new source CAFOs subject
to NSPS that discharge or propose to
discharge. The February 27, 2009,
compliance dates also do not affect the
approximately 9,000 CAFOs currently
covered under existing permits.
Furthermore, for Large CAFOs that are
new sources (i.e., those commencing
construction after the effective date of
the 2003 CAFO rule) and are required to
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seek permit coverage under the revised
duty to apply provision in this rule (40
CFR 122.23(d)(1)), the land application
requirements at 40 CFR 412.4(c) apply
immediately because new sources are
subject to the NSPS under 40 CFR
412.35 and 412.46, which do not
include a delayed date for new sources
to come into compliance with § 412.4(c).
The 2003 rule did not delay compliance
with the land application requirements
for new sources. See CWA section
306(e).
EPA received comments on the 2006
proposed rule related to the July 31,
2007, compliance dates in place at that
time. The comments received generally
focused on two issues: (1) That the
permit application date did not allow
enough time for States to revise their
permitting programs, and (2) that the
date did not allow CAFO operators
sufficient time to develop permit
applications and NMPs. Many
commenters stated that it would not be
possible for CAFOs to seek coverage
under an NPDES permit by July 31,
2007, and that the deadline should be
extended. A number of extension
periods were suggested ranging from
several months to up to two years after
promulgation of the final rule.
Rationales for extending the dates
included the need to allow States to
revise their programs to fully reflect
CAFO regulations (which, in turn,
allows CAFOs to know what
requirements apply to them), limited
technical assistance, and the need for
adequate time to develop an NMP in the
period between rule promulgation and
the deadline for seeking permit
coverage. Commenters asserted that
CAFO owners and operators cannot
know the precise requirements for
NMPs, or the associated documentation
and public participation requirements,
until the rule is final. EPA promulgated
the 2007 date change rule with these
comments in mind.
In the 2008 supplemental proposal
(73 FR 12,336) EPA solicited comments
on its intention to not extend the
compliance deadlines beyond February
27, 2009. Some commenters stated that
the deadline should be extended in
order to allow States to adapt their
existing programs. Others noted that
more time would be needed for CAFO
owners and operators to implement
such complex rules and come into
compliance. A number of extension
periods were suggested ranging from
several months to up to two years after
promulgation of the final rule.
Commenters were opposed to an
extension of the deadlines; did not want
to further delay the environmental
benefits; and noted that an extension
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would provide a comparative advantage
to those CAFOs that have not made
capital improvements and promote
interstate discrepancies that undermine
the integrity of State CAFO programs.
In this final rule, EPA is not extending
the February 27, 2009, compliance
deadlines. EPA believes that the time
between publication of this final rule
and February 27, 2009, is adequate for
unpermitted CAFOs that discharge or
propose to discharge to develop an NMP
and seek permit coverage. EPA notes
that most of the technical provisions of
the 2003 CAFO rule (e.g., the
substantive NMP requirements) were
unaffected by the Waterkeeper decision,
and therefore CAFOs have already had
the information they need to develop
NMPs and have not needed to wait for
further EPA action before doing so. In
States where general permits have been
issued and have not expired, eligible
CAFOs may seek permit coverage under
applicable existing general permits.
Where general permits are not available,
CAFOs may seek permit coverage by
submitting an individual permit
application. As mentioned above, 40
CFR 123.62(e) provides that States will
have one year from the promulgation
date of this final rule, or two years if
statutory changes are needed, to adopt
the requirements of this final rule.
During this interim period, EPA expects
States to issue permits that comply with
all technical requirements of the 2003
rule that were unaffected by the
Waterkeeper decision and, absent
regulatory or statutory barriers, to
provide for NMP submission, public
review of NMPs, and incorporation of
the NMP terms into the permit. EPA is
committed to working with States to
implement CAFO permitting
requirements.
The CWA does not allow any CAFO
to discharge without a permit,
regardless of whether a permit
application has been submitted. EPA
and States have a range of tools to help
regulated entities come into compliance
with new rules including outreach,
compliance assistance, compliance
incentives and compliance monitoring.
For new rules EPA generally focuses on
outreach initially. Where EPA becomes
aware of particular instances of
noncompliance, EPA may pursue
appropriate enforcement. Since 2005,
EPA has designated unpermitted CAFOs
subject to the 1976 rule as an
enforcement priority and continues to
focus its efforts on those facilities. With
respect to CAFOs subject to permitting
as of February 27, 2009, EPA would take
into consideration whether a permit
application has been submitted and
whether the entity is operating in
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accordance with its NMP and all other
applicable requirements of the 2003
CAFO rule and this final rule.
E. Water Quality-Based Effluent
Limitations
Water quality-based effluent
limitations (WQBELs) are one of two
fundamental types of limitations
imposed in NPDES permits. The other is
technology-based effluent limitations.
NPDES permits are required to contain
technology-based limitations and, if the
technology-based limitations are
insufficient to meet applicable water
quality standards, more stringent water
quality-based effluent limitations
(WQBELs). CWA section 301(b)(1)(C),
33 U.S.C. 1311(b)(1)(C); and 40 CFR
122.44(d). While technology-based
limitations are calculated taking into
account the availability or effectiveness
of treatment technologies and/or their
associated costs, WQBELs are
established without consideration of
availability or effectiveness of treatment
technologies or the costs that discharges
would incur to meet such limits.
Arkansas v. Oklahoma, 503 U.S. 91
(1992); Westvaco v. EPA, 899 F.2d 1383
(4th Cir. 1990).
The environmental petitioners
challenged the 2003 rule as violating
both the CWA and the Administrative
Procedure Act by failing to promulgate
WQBELs for CAFO discharges and by
being ambiguous as to whether States
may promulgate WQBELs for CAFO
discharges. As explained in II.C.3 above,
the Waterkeeper Court agreed in part
with petitioners, and remanded the rule
for clarification regarding the
applicability of WQBELs for CAFO
discharges that are not exempt as
agricultural stormwater, to explain why
EPA justified its decision not to
promulgate WQBELs for discharges
other than agricultural stormwater, and
to clarify whether the CAFO rule bars
States from requiring WQBELs for such
discharges. Waterkeeper Alliance et al.
v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486, 522–524 (2d Cir.
2005).
As EPA stated in the preamble to the
2006 proposed rule, the only issue that
EPA addressed in the 2003 rule with
respect to WQBELs was their
applicability to agricultural stormwater
discharges. EPA had explained in 2003
that, because agricultural stormwater
discharges are not point source
discharges, agricultural stormwater
discharges cannot be subject to NPDES
permit requirements, including either
technology-based limitations or
WQBELs if technology-based limitations
are insufficient to meet applicable water
quality standards. The Second Circuit
Court of Appeals agreed with EPA.
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However, the court seemed troubled by
certain statements in the 2003 preamble
that it thought might address how
WQBELs apply to other CAFO
discharges. The court therefore
remanded the question of whether or
not, and why, WQBELs are needed to
assure attainment or maintenance of
water quality standards as provided in
section 302(a) of the CWA.
In the preamble to the 2006 proposed
rule, EPA responded to the remand by
clarifying that discharges from CAFOs
that are not exempt from CWA
permitting requirements as agricultural
stormwater discharges are subject to
NPDES requirements, including
WQBELs. EPA clarified the applicability
of WQBELs both with respect to land
application areas under the control of a
CAFO and with respect to discharges
from a CAFO’s production area.
1. Discharges From Land Application
Areas
As explained in section III.B. above,
under the 2003 rule, the agricultural
stormwater discharge exemption applies
only to precipitation-related discharges
from land application areas under the
control of the CAFO where application
of manure, litter, or process wastewater
is in accordance with appropriate
nutrient management practices as
specified in 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix).
Any other discharge from land
application areas under the control of a
CAFO is a point source discharge from
the CAFO. 40 CFR 122.23(e). These
point source discharges from land
application areas are subject to NPDES
permitting requirements, including
WQBELs where necessary to meet
applicable water quality standards.
In most instances, a CAFO that meets
technology-based permit limits
requiring manure to be applied at
appropriate agronomic rates will
eliminate all or most dry weather
discharges. If such discharges remain,
the permit writer will determine the
need for additional WQBELs to meet
applicable water quality standards
based on the circumstances of each
particular case.
Although EPA, in the 2003 rule
preamble, encouraged States to address
water quality protection issues in setting
technical standards for appropriate land
application practices (see Waterkeeper,
399 F.3d at 523, citing 68 FR 7198), EPA
did not intend to change the basic
regulatory scheme of the NPDES
program. With respect to wet weather
discharges, under 40 CFR 122.42(e)(1),
the permit must already include effluent
limitations defining the ‘‘site-specific
nutrient management practices’’
required to be implemented under
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§ 122.23(e) in order for the remaining
wet weather (‘‘precipitation-related’’)
discharges to be ‘‘agricultural
stormwater discharges.’’ As previously
explained, agricultural stormwater
discharges are exempt from the
definition of ‘‘point source’’ of section
502 of the CWA and are therefore not
subject to permitting requirements
under the CWA, including WQBELS.
Thus, any precipitation-related
discharge from land application areas
remaining after compliance with the
technology-based effluent limitations
and permit conditions required
pursuant to § 122.42(e)(1)(vi)–(ix) are
exempt from CWA permitting
requirements as agricultural stormwater,
and these technology-based effluent
limitations constitute the entirety of the
federal NPDES permit requirements
with respect to land application of
manure, litter, and process wastewater.
However, it is possible that a State may
have additional requirements under its
own State regulatory authorities that
would go beyond the scope of the
federal NPDES program. Thus, such
agricultural stormwater discharges,
though not subject to federal NPDES
regulation, could be subject to
additional State requirements, including
additional requirements related to water
quality. 33 U.S.C. 1370 and 40 CFR
123.1 and 123.25. These requirements,
however, would not be viewed as
WQBELs as that term is used under the
CWA. Nor would these State-law
requirements be federally enforceable.
40 CFR 123.1(i)(2).
2. Production Area Discharges
EPA also explained in the preamble to
the 2006 proposed rule that permit
writers may require WQBELs in
appropriate cases to further limit
discharges from CAFO production areas.
As EPA stated in the 2003 rule, the
exclusion for agricultural stormwater
does not apply to discharges from the
CAFO production area. 40 CFR
122.23(e) and 68 FR 7198. Because the
ELGs allow occasional overflow
discharges from properly designed,
operated, and maintained lagoons and
storage ponds, the technology-based
limitations in the ELGs may not be as
stringent as necessary to meet
applicable water quality standards. In
that case, a WQBEL would be
appropriate. 40 CFR 122.44(d). For
example, a facility subject to ELGs in 40
CFR part 412, subpart C is allowed to
discharge from the production area,
provided the production area is
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained to contain all process
wastewater plus any stormwater runoff
resulting from the 25-year, 24-hour
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storm. Thus, WQBELs would be
necessary in a particular permit to
further limit such discharges beyond the
levels that are required under the CAFO
ELGs, if necessary for the discharge to
meet applicable water quality standards.
In the preamble to the 2006 proposed
rule, EPA indicated that for CAFOs in
the swine and poultry sectors subject to
New Source Performance Standards
(NSPS) in part 412, subpart D, permits
could not require WQBELs for
production areas, because the NSPS
already prohibit all production area
discharges from these new sources. 71
FR 37,744, citing 40 CFR 412.46(a).
Some commenters, however, urged EPA
to reconsider its position given a
possibility of a discharge even from
CAFOs subject to a no discharge
standard. Nothing in this rule limits the
Director’s authority to include any more
stringent limitation than the NSPS in a
CAFO’s permit when necessary to meet
applicable water quality standards
pursuant to CWA section 301(b)(1)(C).
Nonetheless, EPA continues to believe
that WQBELs would not be needed for
swine and poultry CAFOs subject to the
no discharge NSPS. The provisions for
implementing the NSPS BMP-based
effluent limitation, based on advanced
modeling, are meant to improve
implementation of this provision by
promoting up-front design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance to ensure that predictable
discharges do not occur. Permitting
authorities have full authority and
responsibility to determine if the
facility’s demonstration is adequate.
Therefore, as a practical matter, EPA
finds it difficult to imagine
circumstances in which such a
limitation would be necessary for
permitted CAFOs subject to this NSPS
no discharge standard.
F. New Source Performance Standards
for Subpart D Facilities
This action responds to the Second
Circuit’s remand of certain aspects of
the 2003 New Source Performance
Standards (NSPS). First, EPA has
deleted the remanded provisions that
authorized two alternatives for
compliance with the NSPS requirement
for no discharge of manure, litter, or
process wastewater into waters of the
U.S. from the production area. Second,
EPA is promulgating a new provision
that would allow a CAFO using an open
surface manure storage structure to
request the NDPES permitting authority
to establish site-specific effluent
limitations for its NPDES permit that
incorporate the NSPS no discharge
requirement. These best management
practices effluent limitations include
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design specifications and operational
parameters and must be based on a
technical evaluation of the adequacy of
the CAFO’s storage structure for
achieving no discharge of manure, litter,
or process wastewater into waters of the
U.S. The new provision prescribes in
detail the elements of that technical
evaluation. A facility designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
in accordance with these effluent
limitations will meet the NSPS
requirement for no discharge.
This provision will have several
positive ancillary effects. Some CAFOs
may be reluctant to use innovative
technologies that incorporate open
storage as part of their manure
management system in view of the no
discharge requirements of Subpart D.
This provision creates an incentive for
the use of innovative technologies to
meet the no discharge requirement by
providing an up-front determination
that the CAFO will meet the no
discharge requirement prior to
potentially expensive construction.
Second, in the case of new source
Subpart D CAFOs that do apply for a
permit, this provision provides for an
up-front determination subject to public
participation as part of the permitting
proceeding, that the CAFO will meet the
no discharge requirement. Finally,
because facilities subject to no discharge
of manure, litter, or process wastewater
pollutants into waters of the U.S. may
choose not to obtain a permit, and
therefore are not eligible for upset and
bypass defenses, the protection afforded
by this provision provides an incentive
for CAFOs to obtain a permit.
1. Background
The 2003 CAFO rule established
NSPS for swine, poultry, and veal calf
CAFOs as ‘‘no discharge of manure,
litter, or process wastewater pollutants
into waters of the U.S. from the
production area.’’ The rule provided
two compliance alternatives that
allowed a CAFO in these categories to
meet this requirement by showing that
either (1) its production area was
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained to contain all manure, litter,
or process wastewater, and precipitation
from the 100-year, 24-hour storm, or (2)
it would comply with ‘‘voluntary
superior environmental performance
standards’’ based on innovative
technologies. The ‘‘voluntary superior
environmental performance standards’’
provision would allow a discharge from
the production area if the discharge was
accompanied by an equivalent or greater
reduction in the quantity of pollutants
released to other media (e.g., air
emissions).
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The Second Circuit Court of Appeals
remanded aspects of the NSPS to the
Agency, holding that there was not
adequate support in the record for the
alternative standards. Specifically, the
court directed EPA to clarify the
statutory and evidentiary basis for
allowing CAFOs to comply with a no
discharge NSPS through either a
production area containment structure
or an alternate performance standard.
With respect to the 100-year storm
standard, the court noted that while
certain studies showed that production
area BMPs would have substantially
prevented the production area
discharges documented in the record,
substantially preventing discharges is
not the same as no discharge. With
respect to the alternative performance
standards, the court held that EPA had
not justified its decision to allow
compliance with the no discharge
standard through an alternative
standard that permits production area
discharges so long as the aggregate
pollution to all media is equivalent to or
lower than that resulting from the
baseline standards. The court further
held that EPA did not provide adequate
notice for either of these provisions
under the CWA’s public participation
requirements. See 33 U.S.C. 1251(e)
(public participation in the
development, revision, and enforcement
of any regulation, standard, effluent
limitation, plan, or program established
by the Administrator or any State under
this Act shall be provided for,
encouraged, and assisted by the
Administrator and the States).
2. This Final Rule
This final rule makes the following
changes to the 2003 NSPS in subpart D.
First, EPA is deleting 40 CFR
412.46(a)(1) that allowed subpart D
CAFOs subject to NSPS to meet the no
discharge standard through the use of a
100-year, 24-hour rain event
containment structure. In a conforming
change, EPA is also modifying 40 CFR
412.37(a)(2) to remove the reference to
such structures from § 412.37(a)(2). EPA
is, however, retaining the requirement
in § 412.37(a)(2) that all open surface
liquid impoundments have a depth
marker. The land application
requirements for new sources remain
unchanged.
The record for the 2003 NSPS showed
that new facilities routinely include
systems and employ practices that result
in no discharge of manure, litter, or
process wastewater pollutants into
waters of the U.S. from the production
areas. Based on this information, EPA
determined that a no discharge standard
represented the best available
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demonstrated control technology for
new sources. EPA now recognizes that
a system that is properly designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
to contain precipitation from the 100year, 24-hour event may still discharge
as a result of multiple unusual and
severe precipitation events. Given the
record information, EPA now agrees that
a system designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained to contain
precipitation from the 100-year, 24-hour
storm event is not necessarily
equivalent to no discharge and has
consequently deleted this provision.
Second, EPA is deleting 40 CFR
412.46(d) to remove the alternative
voluntary superior performance NSPS
for new swine, poultry, and veal calf
sources in light of the Second Circuit
Court of Appeals ruling.
Third, EPA is promulgating a new
provision that authorizes the permitting
authority to develop a site-specific, no
discharge NSPS for new CAFO’s using
open storage containment structures.
Thus, this rule provides that the NPDES
Program Director may establish no
discharge best management practice
effluent limitations based upon a sitespecific evaluation for an individual
CAFO. CAFOs may request permit
writers to establish no discharge best
management practice effluent
limitations on a case-by-case basis when
the facility demonstrates through a
rigorous modeling analysis that it has
designed a containment system that will
comply with the no discharge
requirement. After such site-specific
standards are established, a facility will
be in compliance with the no discharge
requirement if its containment system
has complied with all of the specified
site-specific design, construction,
operation, and maintenance
components of such a system
demonstrated to meet the no discharge
requirement.
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3. EPA’s Decision To Authorize SiteSpecific, No Discharge Effluent
Limitations
In its 2006 proposal, EPA proposed an
alternative no discharge requirement
that would authorize the NPDES
Program Director to establish no
discharge, BMP effluent limitations
based upon a site-specific evaluation for
an individual CAFO. A complete
discussion of the proposal may be found
at 71 FR 37,760–62. Such limitations
would provide an alternate approach for
CAFOs to meet the no discharge
requirement through limitations
designed to ensure no discharge of
manure, litter, or process wastewater
pollutants into waters of the U.S.
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Specifically, EPA proposed to
authorize permit writers, upon request
by a CAFO, to establish no discharge
BMP effluent limitations on a case-bycase basis when a facility demonstrated
through a rigorous modeling analysis
that it could design, construct, operate,
and maintain an open containment
system that would comply with the no
discharge requirement. When a facility
complied with all of the site-specific
design, construction, operation, and
maintenance components of such a
system—all of which are conditions of
its permit—the CAFO would be deemed
to be in compliance with the no
discharge requirement even in the event
of an unanticipated discharge. EPA is
promulgating the provision in
essentially the same form as it was
proposed.
Commenters raised a number of
concerns with this provision.
Commenters asserted that the
alternative provision creates an
exception to the no discharge
requirement. Some commenters viewed
the modeling exercise as an ineffective
substitute for meeting effluent
limitations. Commenters also
questioned the enforceability of the
alternative provision if a new source
would have a discharge.
A number of reasons support EPA’s
decision to promulgate this provision
and should allay commenters’ concerns.
First, the alternative provision requires
a CAFO to demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the permitting authority,
after public notice and comment on the
demonstration, that its open storage
system is a no discharge system. In
order for a new CAFO employing an
open storage system to obtain no
discharge BMP effluent limitations, the
CAFO must demonstrate that the
entirety of its operation including its
production area, site-specific NMP and
other best management practices are
designed to ensure no discharge from
the entire CAFO. Because this
demonstration must be based on the use
of a prescribed model and precipitation
data for 100 years, any showing of no
discharge will necessarily account for a
wide range of circumstances. Given the
stringency of the required modeling
exercise, described more fully below, a
successful no discharge demonstration
means that the site-specific limitations,
in fact, are equivalent to a no discharge
requirement. Moreover, because this
demonstration will be subject to public
participation requirements that apply to
any permitting proceeding, commenters
are assured that there will be an
opportunity for public review of the
assumptions used to support the no
discharge conclusion. Further, the final
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determination will also be subject to
judicial review as would be the case
with any other final permit decision.
Second, the argument that sitespecific no discharge limitations are not
true no discharge limitations reflects a
fundamental misunderstanding on
commenters’ part. Commenters fail to
recognize that the provision allowing
site-specific, no discharge effluent
limitations essentially places a CAFO
with such limitations in the same
position as a CAFO without such
limitations. Commenters have
apparently forgotten that, even in the
absence of a provision like that
promulgated today, permitted facilities
that are subject to no discharge effluent
limitations may discharge and not be
subject to an enforcement action (or
have a defense to any enforcement
action) in certain uncontrollable and
unforeseeable circumstances. The 2003
CAFO rule specifically provided for the
availability of an upset/bypass defense
from an enforcement action. See 40 CFR
412.47(a)(3) (‘‘Provisions for upset/
bypass as provided in 40 CFR
122.41(m)–(n) apply to a new source
subject to this provision.’’).
Thus, EPA NPDES regulations
currently would provide a defense to an
enforcement action, albeit in severely
restricted circumstances, for discharges
from any permitted new source CAFO.
Under the 2003 rule, ‘‘no discharge’’ for
those facilities, in fact, means no
discharge except in certain narrowly
prescribed circumstances. The
demonstration required under this rule
to support the establishment of
alternative site-specific no discharge
limitations is designed to show that
there will be no discharge from the
CAFO except in exactly the
circumstances provided in EPA’s upset/
bypass regulations and described under
the 2003 rule.
Under EPA’s regulations, an ‘‘upset’’
is defined as ‘‘an unintentional and
temporary noncompliance with
technology based permit effluent
limitations because of factors beyond
the reasonable control of the permittee.’’
40 CFR 122.41(n). Under the
regulations, the upset defense to an
enforcement action would not be
available to the extent that the
noncompliance with permit conditions
was due to operational error, an
improperly designed treatment system,
inadequate treatment system, improper
maintenance or careless and improper
operation. 40 CFR 122.41(n)(1).
This rule adopts requirements for an
upfront demonstration that parallel the
conditions under which an upset/
bypass defense would be available in
the event of a discharge from a no
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discharge facility. It provides that,
before a permit writer may establish
site-specific limitations, the permittee
must demonstrate through a rigorous
modeling exercise that its open
containment system would not
discharge. Given the requirement for
evaluation of the system’s adequacy
(size, operational practices,
maintenance conditions and other
factors) using precipitation data for 100
years, such an assessment would
support the conclusion that any
discharge that might occur results from
‘‘factors beyond the reasonable control
of the permittee,’’ the conditions under
which the upset/bypass defense would
be available. Moreover, as noted, all of
the design, construction, operation, and
maintenance components evaluated for
the site-specific permit become permit
conditions. This similarly mirrors the
provisions of the upset regulations
which do provide for a defense only in
the limited circumstances outlined in
§ 122.41(n)(1), e.g., no operational error,
improper design, or other factors as
described above. As a consequence, this
alternative NSPS provision requires an
upfront determination that the CAFO
would only discharge in circumstances
that would parallel those for which an
upset/bypass defense would be
available.
This final rule’s new NSPS provision
allowing site-specific BMP effluent
limitations gives the CAFO complying
with its permit conditions more
certainty that its operations meet its
CWA requirements. The permitting
process has already established that the
discharge is unintentional and beyond
the reasonable control of the permittee.
Therefore, in the extremely unlikely
event of a discharge from a new source
that is complying with a permit
containing these site-specific no
discharge effluent limitations, the CAFO
would already have established in the
permitting process an affirmative
defense with respect to any discharge,
and would not need to rely on
§ 122.41(n).
Establishment of these no discharge,
BMP effluent limitations represents a
determination by the permit writer that
the CAFO will not discharge. The only
time a CAFO under this provision could
potentially discharge would be in an
extreme, rare event not reasonably
foreseeable or under the reasonable
control of CAFO as demonstrated in the
permitting process and explained above.
Fourth, while site-specific BMP
effluent limitations provide greater
certainty to CAFOs, they also provide
the permitting authority and citizens
more specific measures of compliance
than is the case for CAFOs without such
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permit conditions. Unlike a CAFO that
does not discharge or propose to
discharge and therefore chooses not to
seek permit coverage, a CAFO relying
on site-specific BMP effluent limitations
would have a permit and permit terms
that include the design, construction,
operation, and maintenance measures
that formed the basis for the permitting
authority’s determination that the CAFO
will meet no discharge. Because the
elements demonstrating no discharge
are permit conditions established in a
process that provides for public
participation and on-going oversight,
use of this alternative should further
ensure compliance with the no
discharge requirements.
So long as the facility complies with
its BMP effluent limitations (and other
terms of the permit such as monitoring
or recordkeeping requirements), the
CAFO will not be subject to
enforcement action. EPA underscores
for the regulated community that the
protections afforded by this provision
are only available through permits
issued to new source CAFOs. EPA
further wishes to emphasize that the
more general upset and bypass
regulations are only available to
permitted CAFOs, and are otherwise
unaffected by this NSPS provision.
Finally, policy considerations support
the Agency’s adoption of an alternative
no discharge approach. EPA encourages
CAFOs to implement anaerobic
digesters, multi-cell treatment lagoons,
and nitrification/denitrification
technologies. In addition, EPA wants to
encourage the development of
innovative technologies for meeting the
no discharge requirement. To do this,
CAFOs want certainty that the
technologies they develop and
implement will comply with the CWA.
EPA recognizes that the upset and
bypass provisions do not provide
certainty to the operator that any
discharge will be excused. In particular,
CAFOs operating innovative or
advanced technologies may be reluctant
to rely on the standard upset and bypass
provisions. Under the regulation
adopted here, an operator must
demonstrate to the permitting
authority’s satisfaction, after public
comment, that an innovative approach
that includes an open storage system
will be designed, constructed, operated,
and maintained to achieve no discharge.
This demonstration would mean that
this CAFO would not discharge, except
during an event beyond the CAFO’s
reasonable control; an event that could
be excused under the normal upset
provisions. Once this demonstration has
been made, it makes sense to provide
the CAFO with the certainty that would
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eliminate the need for the CAFO to go
through the upset/bypass process in
most circumstances.
In addition, this approach is
consistent with CWA section 101(f),
requiring EPA to use efficient
procedures for decision-making.
Because of this provision, in the rare
occurrence of a catastrophic event, this
provision would relieve permitting
authorities and CAFOs from the typical
procedures necessary to meet the upset/
bypass requirements.
4. Discussion of the New Provisions
The CAFO NSPS provisions adopted
today require an evaluation of the
adequacy of the designed storage facility
using the AWM (Animal Waste
Management) tool and an evaluation of
overall water budgets using SPAW (Soil
Plant Air Water) Field and Pond
Hydrology Tool, or equivalent analytic
tools. EPA has concluded that 100 years
of climate data is an ample time frame
for simulation purposes and will
support a reasonable finding that the
system will not discharge. However,
EPA is aware that 100 years of
continuous rainfall data may not be
available for all CAFOs. Models can be
run using actual rainfall data where
available, and then simulated with a
confidence interval analysis over a
period of 100 years.6
AWM is a planning and design tool
for animal feeding operations that can
be used to estimate the production of
manure, bedding, and process water,
and thus determine the size of needed
storage facilities. AWM accounts for
wastewater, flush water, precipitation,
runoff, and other additions to the waste
stream. AWM can estimate storage
facility sizes using either a defined
storage period or by drawdown dates
specified by the user. A monthly water
and waste budget for each storage
component is generated, in most cases
allowing the CAFO to demonstrate no
discharge from the entire production
area. The procedures and calculations
used in AWM are based on the USDA–
NRCS Agricultural Waste Management
Field Handbook.
The SPAW model consists of two
linked routines. The first routine
develops field hydrologic budgets based
upon daily climatic data, crop data, and
hydraulic characteristics of the soil
profile. The second routine utilizes the
6 Some commenters confused the 100-year
simulation analysis with the requirement in the
2003 final CAFO rule for a system designed to
contain the precipitation associated with the 100year, 24-hour storm design event. Neither the
proposed revisions nor these final requirements for
new sources subject to subpart D refer to the 100year storm event.
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climatic and hydrologic outputs of one
or more farm fields as the input to
hydrologic budgets for downstream
ponds. These daily pond water budgets
can be used to evaluate the
performance, operation or reliability for
many types of ponds such as liquid
waste storage facilities. Water budget
processes may be evaluated by making
daily adjustments to crop canopy cover
and antecedent soil moisture. For each
user-specified soil profile and crop
rotation, SPAW simulates possible
runoff from fields as well as the
irrigation water needs of fields receiving
the manure storage effluent. Hydrologic
groups are used by the model to rate
soils for the potential to release excess
water down grade.
AWM tracks gross nutrients, but does
not track the mass or concentration of
nutrients. Further, the storage period or
drawdown schedule is usually
determined by the individual CAFO.
Therefore, the CAFO’s NMP must be
used as an input to confirm both a water
balance and a nutrient balance has been
achieved by the CAFO. The NSPS
provisions require that each CAFO use
the SPAW tool to assess daily
hydrologic budgets for each field. The
complete modeling demonstration
shows not only that the storage facility
does not discharge, but also that there
is no runoff of process wastewater from
fields during land application activities
consistent with the CAFO’s NMP, which
is necessary to ensure that the open
containment system is operated in a
way to meet the land application
requirements of the rule. In EPA’s view,
the requirement to use the SPAW model
(or an equivalent approved by the
permitting authority) ensures CAFOs
will rely on appropriate operational
measures to achieve no discharge
standards.
The CAFO NSPS provisions require
certain specified information regarding
design, construction, operation, and
maintenance of the system to be
included in the CAFO’s NMP under 40
CFR 122.42(e)(1). This includes the key
user-defined inputs and model system
parameters. CAFOs must submit a sitespecific analysis to the Director. See 40
CFR 412.46(a)(1). These site-specific
design, construction, operation, and
maintenance measures are enforceable
requirements in the CAFO’s permit. As
long as the CAFO complies with these
requirements, the CAFO presumptively
meets the no discharge requirement.
EPA has determined that the final rule
revisions provide a clear and
enforceable standard for the CAFO to
achieve as well as providing assurance
to the public that the proposed system
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complies with the no discharge
requirement.
Under these final amendments to the
NSPS, the Director has the discretion to
require additional information from a
new source subpart D CAFO owner or
operator to support site-specific BMP
effluent limitations. The burden is on
the CAFO to demonstrate that any
proposed system it employs, including
an open system, meets the new source
standard. EPA expects CAFOs will
utilize the most current version of AWM
and SPAW when submitting their
demonstration to the permitting
authority. However, EPA is aware that
other peer-reviewed models and
programs have been or may be
developed that could be determined to
be equivalent to AWM and SPAW.
Therefore the rule gives the Director the
discretion to approve design software or
procedures equivalent to AWM and
SPAW. Once approved by the Director,
the public still would have the
opportunity to comment on the CAFO’s
submitted modeling and demonstration
as discussed earlier.
The information, design, and
evaluation process required of all
CAFOs wishing to avail themselves of
this alternative is intended to allow
CAFOs the flexibility to demonstrate
compliance with the no discharge
requirements for any type of open
storage facility. As a practical
consideration, EPA expects most CAFOs
selecting this compliance alternative
will submit designs for open manure
storage structures accompanied by a
narrow range of acceptable operation
and management practices. However,
for a given type of storage facility design
(for example, an integrator with several
company-owned CAFOs each designed
and constructed in an essentially
identical manner within the same
county), EPA believes it is possible to
conduct a series of assessments that
together fully encompass the range of
operational and management measures
that would be used across multiple
CAFOs with the specified storage
facility design. In this case, SPAW could
be run to validate a wide range of NMP
and storage pond management scenarios
(to continue the above example, the
CAFOs all have the same sets of crops,
soil types, land application equipment,
etc.). This alternative does not change
the requirement for a CAFO to develop
a site-specific NMP. These final
amendments authorize the permitting
authority to determine that any CAFO
using the specified facility type and
submitting an NMP that falls within the
pre-approved range of operational and
management practices would not need
to conduct an individualized
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assessment step (i.e., the validation
using SPAW).
The availability and use of such a
geographical and categorical approach
will require that the permit writer
determine that a number of conditions
are met. First, the assessment must fully
account for all pertinent factors relevant
to determination of the potential for
discharge from an open storage system.
The assessment must also include all
parameters necessary to mirror properly
the range of soil, plant, climatic, and
hydrological conditions within the
geographical area for which the
assessment is intended to be
representative. Second, the permittee
must establish that the parameters
reflected in the general assessment used
to establish no discharge are, in fact,
representative of those parameters for
each CAFO. Finally, the assessment
must reflect the operational and
management practices to be employed
by each CAFO at each individual site.
As with the individual assessment, each
CAFO must have a site-specific NMP
that includes the operational and
management measures utilized in the
geographical assessment.
EPA is eliminating the requirement to
indicate the capacity for a 100-year, 24hour storm for new sources. EPA is
maintaining the requirement to have a
depth marker for all open storage
structures. In EPA’s view, a marker
indicating the storage pond or
containment depth can be an excellent
means of displaying how much storage
a CAFO has, whether it is time to pump
down levels in the lagoon, pond, or
other storage structure, or whether
alternative management steps must be
taken to prevent a full storage structure
and potential overflow. Existing sources
and new sources subject to subpart C
continue to have the requirement for a
depth marker that indicates the 25-year,
24-hour storm event. New sources
subject to subpart D and using an open
storage structure must use the depth
marker to indicate the maximum
volume of manure and process
wastewater the structure is designed to
contain.
While one component of preventing
discharge from an open system is to
provide adequate storage of manure and
wastewater during critical periods,
ensuring adequate physical capacity is
not sufficient. Rather, determining
whether there is adequate storage is
based on a site-specific evaluation of the
CAFO’s entire waste handling system.
Adequate storage has to be based on
climate-specific variables that define the
appropriate storage volume, but of equal
importance are the nutrient
management plan and other
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management decisions that specify
when and how the storage can be
emptied. The link between adequate
storage and land application practices is
one of the most critical considerations
in developing and implementing a sitespecific nutrient management plan. For
example, the amount of land available
for application, the hydraulic
limitations (ability of the land to handle
additional water without the occurrence
of runoff), geology, and soil properties
of the available land base can play an
important role. See Chapter 2 of EPA’s
technical guidance for CAFOs
‘‘Managing Manure Nutrients at
Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations’’ (EPA–821–B–04–00) for
more information. EPA expects these
criteria preclude a CAFO from
withdrawing manure and process
wastewater from liquid storage
structures and subsequently land
applying process wastewater at
inappropriate times. Given these
considerations, EPA is establishing
procedures for approval of site-specific
management practices for open
containment systems with the
expectation that a system can be
designed and operated to meet the no
discharge standard. EPA has concluded
that the design, construction, operation,
and maintenance elements and the
comprehensive analytical assessment
are sufficient to achieve this objective.
G. BCT Limitations for Fecal Coliform
In response to the Second Circuit
remand, EPA is today affirmatively
finding that the best conventional
pollutant control technology (BCT)
limitations it adopted in 2003 do, in
fact, represent the best conventional
control technology limitations for fecal
coliform. After assessing various
conventional pollutant removal
technologies, EPA has determined that
there are no available and economically
achievable technologies that are cost
reasonable that would result in greater
removal of fecal coliform than the
technologies on which EPA based the
2003 best practicable control technology
currently available (BPT) and BCT
effluent limitations guidelines (ELG).
As EPA has explained, establishing
BCT limitations begins by identifying
technology options that provide
additional conventional pollutant
control beyond the level of control
provided by BPT effluent limitations.
Any such candidate technologies are
then evaluated to determine if they meet
the threshold CWA requirements of
‘‘availability’’ and ‘‘economic
achievability.’’ 51 FR 24,974, 24,976;
July 9, 1986. A technology is
economically achievable if its costs may
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be ‘‘reasonably borne’’ by the CAFOs.
Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v. EPA, 399
F.3d 486, 516 (2d Cir. 2005). The Clean
Water Act adds an additional evaluation
step to the effluent limitations
development process for conventional
pollutants. ‘‘In addition to the Clean
Water Act requirement that effluent
limitations be economically achievable,
the cost associated with the BCT
effluent limitations must also be
‘reasonable’ in relation to the effluent
pollutant reductions.’’ 51 FR 24,974. In
determining this, the statute requires
that EPA look at a number of factors
including a comparison of the cost of
effluent reductions for POTWs to that
for direct dischargers using candidate
BCT technologies. Thus, the statute
requires that, not only must the costs of
additional control be costs that CAFOs
may reasonably bear (economically
achievable), but the costs must also be
reasonable relative to the costs for
POTWs to achieve such conventional
pollutant reductions.
EPA evaluated 41 BCT candidate
technologies for this rule and
determined that all but two of them
were either not available (technically
feasible for all CAFOs in a subcategory)
or not economically achievable. For the
remaining two technologies, while their
costs are high and EPA believes it likely
that they are also not economically
achievable, EPA was unable to conduct
its traditional tests for economic
achievability and thus has not
determined in this rule whether or not
they are economically achievable.
However, EPA has determined that
these two technologies, even if
economically achievable, would not be
cost reasonable, and has therefore
rejected them as BCT technologies.
As a result of this assessment, EPA
has concluded that there are no
available and economically achievable
technologies that are cost reasonable
that would provide greater fecal
coliform removal than the BPT
technology. How EPA performed this
assessment and the results of that
assessment supporting EPA’s finding
that the 2003 BPT/BCT limitations
represent BCT technology for
controlling fecal coliform is described in
detail below.
1. The Waterkeeper Decision
As previously noted, the Waterkeeper
court remanded the 2003 CAFO rule’s
BCT standard for further clarification
and analysis with regard to the
appropriate BCT standard for
pathogens.7 EPA’s 2003 rule established
7 As the Second Circuit recognized, the CWA lists
only one pathogen, fecal coliform, as a conventional
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non-numeric effluent limitations based
on BPT and the best available
technology economically achievable
(BAT) as well as BCT limitations. In the
2003 CAFO rule, EPA established BPT
effluent limitations guidelines for Large
beef, dairy, and veal calf (Subpart C),
swine and poultry (Subpart D) CAFOs.
At that time, EPA concluded that
there were no available BCT
technologies on which to base limits for
conventional pollutants that were more
stringent than the BPT limitations, and
EPA therefore established BCT
requirements equal to BPT limitations.
EPA based this determination in part on
the combined pollutant reductions
(Table 7.2 of 68 FR 7239), and in
particular its evaluation of the
reductions in discharges of the
conventional pollutants (TSS, BOD, and
fecal coliform) associated with the
various technology options it
considered. 71 FR 37,763. EPA noted
difficulties in quantifying the loadings
and reductions in discharges of these
pollutants—in particular, in assessing
fecal coliform—and relied primarily on
reductions in sediment discharges as a
surrogate for reductions in TSS in
reaching its BCT determination. EPA
concluded that there were no
technologically feasible candidate BCT
technologies that would achieve greater
TSS removals than the BPT
requirements for either Subpart C or
Subpart D facilities, and no
economically achievable technologies
for Subpart C facilities that would
reduce discharges of BOD.
Consequently, EPA found that there
were no BCT technologies for
establishing limits on conventional
pollutants that would achieve greater
removal than the BPT technology and
established BCT requirements that were
equal to BPT. 68 FR 7224.
While EPA’s assessment of the
effectiveness of various control options
did attempt to measure pathogen
reductions for the final rule, EPA did
not establish any specific BPT or BCT
limitations to control fecal coliform, a
conventional pollutant and pathogen.
The Waterkeeper court remanded the
2003 CAFO rule’s BCT standard for
further clarification and analysis
because EPA had failed to make an
affirmative finding that the BCT
limitations it had adopted in fact
represented the best conventional
pollutant for which BCT limitations are required.
Waterkeeper, 399 F.3d at 518. Section 304(a)(4) of
the CWA provides that EPA may identify additional
pollutants as conventional pollutants. EPA has
identified only one additional pollutant, oil and
grease as a conventional pollutant. Thus, the only
pathogen subject to the Second Circuit remand is
fecal coliform.
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pollutant control technology for
reducing pathogens—specifically, fecal
coliform. 399 F.3d at 519. EPA’s final
rule issued today responds to the court’s
remand.
As EPA proposed, in this final rule
EPA is affirmatively concluding that the
current BCT limitations for
conventional pollutants represent the
best conventional control technology for
fecal coliform and is establishing BCT
limitations for fecal coliform that are
equal to the current BPT/BCT
limitations. These limitations prohibit
the discharge of manure, litter, or
process wastewater into waters of the
U.S. from the production areas of CAFO
except in limited circumstances. A
discharge is allowed only if an existing,
permitted CAFO has a properly
designed, constructed, and operated
storage structure with the capacity to
contain all manure, litter, and process
wastewater associated with the facility
as well as the runoff and direct
precipitation from a 25-year, 24-hour
rainfall event. See 40 CFR 412.31(a).
The current rules also provide that a
Large CAFO that land applies manure,
litter, or process wastewater must do so
in accordance with several BMPs: A
nutrient management plan that includes
the determination of application rates
for manure, litter, and process
wastewater; a field-specific assessment
of the potential for nitrogen and
phosphorus transport from the field to
surface waters; manure and soil
sampling; and setback requirements. See
40 CFR 412.4. EPA is not promulgating
more stringent BCT limitations for fecal
coliform because there is no available,
achievable, and cost reasonable
technology on which to base such
limitations.
2. Background
The CWA requires point sources to
achieve effluent pollutant levels
established by EPA that are attainable
through progressively more stringent
pollutant control technology. The CWA
calls for technology-based control in
two stages. As originally enacted in
1972, the Act required existing point
sources to comply in the first stage with
EPA-established limitations that are
achievable by application of the ‘‘best
practicable control technology currently
available’’ or ‘‘BPT.’’ These limitations
control conventional, toxic, and
nonconventional pollutants. EPA has
typically based BPT limitations on the
average pollutant removal performance
of the best facilities examined by EPA.
The 1972 Act also required existing
point sources to comply in the second
stage with EPA-established limitations
that are achievable by the application of
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‘‘best available technology economically
achievable,’’ or ‘‘BAT.’’ In 1972, these
limitations also controlled conventional,
toxic and non-conventional pollutants.
The 1977 amendments to the CWA
replaced BAT for conventional
pollutants with limitations that
represent ‘‘best conventional pollutant
control technology’’ or ‘‘BCT.’’ Section
304(a)(4) designates the following as
conventional pollutants: Biochemical
oxygen demand (BOD), total suspended
solids (TSS), fecal coliform (FC), pH,
and any additional pollutants defined
by the Administrator as conventional.
The Administrator designated oil and
grease as an additional conventional
pollutant, on July 30, 1979 (44 FR
44,501), but has listed no other
pollutants for regulation as conventional
pollutants.
The decision to amend section 304(a)
of the CWA to require achievement of
BCT, rather than BAT, for control of
conventional pollutants reflected two
factors. The first was Congressional
desire not to require ‘‘treatment for
treatment’s sake’’ and the second,
Congress’s view that BAT control of
conventional pollutants might not be
necessary to achieve the water quality
goals of the Act. S.Rep. No. 370 at 43,
1st Sess. 43 (1977), reprinted in Comm.
on Env. and Public Works, 95th Cong.,
2d Sess., A Legislative History of the
Clean Water Act of 1977 at 676–77
(hereinafter ‘‘Legislative History’’).
The CWA Amendments of 1977 that
require EPA to determine BCT
limitations also specify the factors to be
taken into account in this determination
of BCT. Section 304(b)(4)(B) provides
that the factors to be assessed:
[S]hall include consideration of the
reasonableness of the relationship between
costs of obtaining a reduction in effluents
and the effluent reductions benefits derived,
and a comparison of the cost and level of
reduction of such pollutants from the
discharge from publicly owned treatment
works to the cost and level of reduction of
such pollutants from a class or category of
industrial sources. * * * 33 U.S.C.
1314(b)(4)(B).8
8 As the Conference Report to the 1977
amendments explained:
The cost test for conventional pollutants is a new
test. It is expected to result in a determination of
reasonableness which could be somewhat more
than best practicable technology or could be
somewhat less than best available technology for
other conventional pollutants. The result of the cost
test could be a 1984 requirement which is no more
than that which would result from best practicable
technology but also could result in effluent
reductions equal to that required in the application
of best available technology. Joint Explanatory
Statement of the Committee of Conference, 95th
Cong. 1st Sess., H.R. No. 95–830 at 85, Legislative
History at 269.
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In the words of Senator Muskie, the
Senate Floor Manager and leading
sponsor of the amendments:
The Administrator must determine
whether or not the cost of achieving
reductions of conventional effluent bears a
reasonable relationship to the amount of
effluent reduction achieved. In making this
determination, the Administrator is to
compare the costs of industrial effluent
reduction to the cost of municipal waste
treatment. Legislative History at 458.
Accordingly, EPA developed a ‘‘BCT
Methodology’’ to answer the question of
whether it is ‘‘cost-reasonable’’ for
industry to control two conventional
pollutants, BOD (or oil and grease in the
case of certain metals industries) and
TSS, at a level more stringent than
already required by BPT effluent
limitations. EPA first explained its BCT
methodology when it promulgated BCT
effluent guidelines for 41 industry
subcategories (44 FR 50,732; August 29,
1979).9 The crux of the methodology
was a comparison of the costs of
removing the conventional pollutants
BOD (or oil and grease) and TSS for a
candidate BCT technology within a
particular industry segment, to the costs
of removal for an average-sized POTW.
A number of industries and industry
associations challenged the regulation,
and, in 1981, the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit remanded it to the
Agency, directing EPA to include an
assessment of the cost-effectiveness of
industry conventional pollutant removal
in addition to the POTW test in its
evaluation of cost reasonableness.
American Paper Inst. v. EPA, 660 F. 2d
954 (4th Cir. 1981). EPA proposed a
revised BCT methodology in 1982 (47
FR 49,176) that addressed the industry
cost-effectiveness test (the ‘‘second’’
test), again limited to the conventional
pollutants BOD and TSS. EPA proposed
to base the POTW benchmark on model
plant costs in a 1984 notice (49 FR
37,046). The final BCT methodology,
promulgated as a rule in 1986 (51 FR
24,974), maintained the basic approach
of the 1982 proposed BCT methodology
while also updating POTW removal cost
with new POTW data. EPA again
specifically noted that it had developed
9 As noted above, the 1977 amendments
established a second level of technology-based
controls for conventional pollutants-BCT
limitations. Accordingly, in 1979, pursuant to
Congressional direction, EPA completed its review
of then-existing BAT limitations for conventional
pollutants to determine if they were more stringent
than would be required by BCT technology. EPA
limited its review to limitations for, and
correspondingly developed its BCT methodology to
address, only two categories of conventional
pollutants: BOD (or oil and grease) and TSS. 44 FR
50,732–33. Noting the industries under
consideration do not have fecal coliform discharges,
EPA performed no analysis for fecal coliform.
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3. EPA’s BCT Determination in the 2003
Rule
As previously explained, EPA
established BCT requirements equal to
BPT in the 2003 CAFO rule (see 40 CFR
412.33 and 412.44). For its assessment
of BCT limitations, EPA first considered
whether there were any technically
feasible technologies that would achieve
greater conventional pollutants
removals than the BPT limitations.
Because of the difficulties in quantifying
reductions of conventional pollutant
discharges,10 EPA relied primarily on
sediment discharges (as a surrogate for
TSS) in evaluating potential BCT
requirements. EPA identified no BCT
technology option that achieves
significantly greater TSS removals than
the BPT requirements eventually
promulgated in 2003 with one
exception. This option would have
prohibited any discharge from swine
and poultry CAFOs. Because this option
was not an economically achievable
one, EPA therefore concluded that there
were no BCT technologies on which to
base limits for conventional pollutants
that were more stringent than BPT. EPA
did note that if it had identified
available and economically achievable
technology options that achieve greater
reductions of conventional pollutants
than are achieved by BPT, then EPA
would have evaluated these
technologies applying EPA’s two-part
BCT cost test. 68 FR 7224.
EPA also evaluated pathogen
reductions associated with the 2003
BPT limitations. The BPT limitations
prohibit dry weather discharges from
land application areas, and the BPT
land application requirements
(including technical standards for
timing, form, and rate of application, as
well as the required vegetated buffer,
setback, or equivalent practices) already
minimize discharges from land
application areas. The BPT production
area requirements prohibit discharges,
except for overflows from liquid storage
structures that meet certain design and
operational criteria. EPA used fecal
coliform and fecal streptococcus as
surrogates to estimate the pathogen
reductions achieved by the CAFO rule
requirements. EPA concluded that the
BPT limitations would reduce these two
pathogens by 2.7 x 1022 colony forming
10 For example, EPA could not easily assess fecal
coliform loadings because they vary greatly
depending on site characteristics. Further,
quantifying discharges of other conventional
pollutants is complicated by the challenge of
distinguishing between CAFO and non-CAFO
sources. 71 FR 37,763.
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units (CFU), or a 46 percent reduction
over baseline pollutant loadings. See
Chapter 12 of ‘‘Development Document
for the Final Revisions to the NPDES
and the Effluent Guidelines for CAFOs’’
EPA–821–R–03–001. Other pathogens
would likely be reduced by a similar
degree. EPA projected $0.3 to $3.4
million in improved shellfish harvests
associated with reduced pathogen
discharges from Large CAFOs. 68 FR
7240.
4. This Rule
As noted, EPA has determined that
there are no technically feasible and
economically achievable candidate
technologies for fecal coliform removal
that are cost reasonable and would
achieve greater removals than the 2003
BPT limitations. The following
discussion summarizes the basis for this
final determination.
(a) EPA’s Approach To Establishing BCT
Limitations for Fecal Coliform
As previously explained, the first step
to establishing BCT limitations is to
identify technology options that provide
additional conventional pollutant
control beyond the level of control
provided by the application of BPT
limitations and to evaluate these
technologies for ‘‘availability’’
(including technical feasibility) and
‘‘economic achievability.’’ See 33 U.S.C.
1311(b)(2)(E). Out of 41 candidate
technologies, EPA has identified no
technologies that are both available and
achievable for Subpart D facilities, and
has identified only two available
technologies that might be 11
economically achievable for Subpart C
facilities.
The next step in determining BCT is
to evaluate any candidate technology
that is both technically feasible and
economically achievable for cost
reasonableness. Traditionally, EPA has
evaluated candidate BCT technologies
for cost-reasonableness using a two-part
BCT cost test it developed for two
conventional pollutants, BOD and TSS.
The test is intended to assess whether
there are cost-reasonable technologies
that will achieve greater BOD and TSS
removals than required by the BPT
technology for an industry category by
comparing the incremental cost11 For Subpart C (beef cattle, heifer, and dairy)
facilities, in the 2003 final CAFO rule, EPA rejected
more stringent BAT options on availability, not
economic achievability grounds. Thus, for this final
rule, EPA had no comparison technology that it had
already determined to be not economically
achievable. Thus, while the two available
technologies have high costs relative to BPT and are
likely not economically achievable, EPA was not
able to determine this using its traditional
methodology or the analysis from the 2003 rule.
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effectiveness of candidate BCT
technologies with the incremental costeffectiveness of BOD and TSS removals
at POTWs through advanced secondary
treatment as compared to secondary
treatment. This test makes sense for
BOD and TSS because advanced
secondary treatment is specifically
designed to remove additional BOD and
TSS. However, it is not designed for
additional fecal coliform removal, so the
incremental cost-effectiveness of
advanced secondary treatment in
removing fecal coliform is not a good
benchmark for use in evaluating
candidate BCT technologies for fecal
coliform removal.
The methodology is appropriate for
BOD and TSS because advanced
secondary treatment is specific to the
removal of BOD and TSS. Costs
associated with upgrading a POTW from
secondary to advanced secondary
treatment were based on polymer
addition to the activated sludge basin.
The purpose of the polymer addition
was to enhance removal of BOD and
TSS in the secondary clarifier, and
achieve final effluent concentrations of
20 mg/L BOD5 and 20 mg/L TSS.
Therefore, the cost increment between
secondary and advanced secondary
treatment represents the incremental
cost of removal of additional BOD and
TSS at POTWs. 51 FR 24,981.
Unlike BOD and TSS, advanced
secondary treatment is not designed to
remove additional increments of fecal
coliform beyond secondary treatment.
When both secondary and advanced
secondary treatment systems include
disinfection, the total fecal coliform
removal is nearly the same, over 99
percent. Secondary treatment by itself
(without disinfection) also removes
significant amounts of fecal coliform,
although almost all POTWs include
disinfection at some point in their
treatment train. The polymer addition in
advanced secondary treatment is not
intended for additional fecal coliform
removal since both secondary and
advanced secondary POTWs use
disinfection treatments to prevent fecal
coliform releases to surface water.
Therefore, because the object of the BCT
cost test is to ensure that the costs of
additional removals of conventional
pollutants associated with BCT
limitations do not exceed POTW
conventional removal costs,
distinguishing fecal coliform removals
between advanced secondary treatment
and secondary treatment is not relevant.
Because advance secondary treatment is
not intended to be more effective than
secondary treatment at removing fecal
coliform (and is not added for this
purpose), it is not appropriate to apply
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the same POTW cost test used for
evaluating BOD and TSS BCT
limitations to the evaluation of fecal
coliform limitations.
Given these circumstances, EPA
recognized that if it were to use a
similar numeric BCT cost test to
evaluate fecal coliform removal for BCT,
EPA would have to modify the
traditional BCT cost test to address the
issue that advanced secondary treatment
at POTWs is not designed to remove
fecal coliform. When the Agency
promulgated the BCT methodology
(including descriptions of how to apply
the cost test), EPA envisioned the need
for adjustments to the BCT cost test
methodology in future rulemakings to
account for lack of comparable data or
other industry-specific factors. 51 FR
24,974, 24,976. Moreover, section
304(b)(4)(B) authorizes EPA to consider
other appropriate factors in establishing
BCT.
Accordingly, for the proposal, EPA
suggested a modified BCT cost test.
However, based on comments, EPA has
identified a number of problems with
the proposed test. These problems are
discussed briefly here and described
more fully in the Response to Comments
Document prepared for this rule. First,
although the revised test used a
different cost-effectiveness calculation
from the traditional test, it still relied
indirectly on a comparison of the costeffectiveness of BCT candidate
technologies to the cost-effectiveness of
advanced secondary treatment, even
though, as just noted, advanced
secondary treatment is not designed to
remove fecal coliform. Second, the
revised test did not compare the
incremental cost-effectiveness of the
candidate technologies to the
incremental cost-effectiveness of fecal
coliform removals at POTWs and
therefore did not allow a comparison of
‘‘the cost and level of reduction of [fecal
coliform] from the discharge from
publicly owned treatment works to the
cost and level of reduction of [fecal
coliform] from * * * industry sources
* * *’’ as required by the statute. As a
result, EPA has now determined that it
cannot use the revised test to evaluate
cost reasonableness.
For this final rule, EPA also
considered other possible approaches
for evaluating cost reasonableness. One
approach would have been to identify a
technology that is used at POTWs
specifically for fecal coliform removal
and develop a test similar to the
traditional cost test but based on this
technology. EPA considered
disinfection as one possible benchmark
technology for fecal coliform removal,
but determined that there is significant
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variability in the manner in which
disinfection is used in combination with
other technologies at different POTWs
and it would thus be extremely difficult,
both theoretically and logistically, to
develop a revised benchmark based on
this technology.
Consequently, for the final rule, EPA
has applied a simplified cost
reasonableness test designed to
specifically address fecal coliform. This
approach is consistent with section
304(b)(4) of the CWA and is one EPA
has used in the past. While the
traditional cost test compares reductions
from BCT candidate technologies to
those of POTWs, EPA has, on occasion,
rejected BCT technologies without
comparing them to POTW performance,
even for BOD and TSS. Thus, for
example, where EPA lacked sufficient
data to quantitatively evaluate BOD and
TSS reductions under the traditional
test, EPA rejected more stringent BCT
limitations solely on the basis of an
evaluation of the incremental costs of
further reductions. See 51 FR 24,974,
24,991.
(b) EPA’s Evaluation of Candidate
Technologies for Technical Feasibility
and Economic Achievability
Based on its consideration of
information submitted by commenters
and its own analysis, EPA has
determined that there are only two of 41
candidate technologies that are
technically feasible and may be
economically achievable that provide
greater removals of fecal coliform than
the technologies selected as the basis for
BPT limitations in the 2003 rule. The
discussion below provides the basis for
this conclusion.
In its evaluation of candidate BCT
technologies, EPA reviewed data on
different types of CAFO manure
management systems. These systems
employed treatment technologies, best
management practices (BMPs) for
pollution prevention, and management
practices for the handling, storage,
treatment, and land application of
wastes. Sources of information included
available technical literature, over
11,000 comments submitted by industry
and other public commenters, and
insights gained from conducting over
116 site visits to CAFOs.
In its search for candidate
technologies, EPA initially reexamined
the technology options it had
considered for the 2003 rule because the
Agency concluded that these might
provide more fecal coliform reductions
than the option selected for BPT
limitations. EPA looked at technology
Options 3, 5, 6 and 7 described in the
proposal at 71 FR 37,763 and the
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Technical Development Document.
Options 3, 5, 6, and 7 represented
additional controls beyond the controls
(e.g., nutrient-based land application
rates and production area discharges
only under specified conditions).
Option 3 would have required a
reduction of discharges to ground water
beneath the production area. Option 5
would require total containment of all
manure and process wastewater by
swine and poultry operations. Option 6
would require anaerobic digesters at
swine and dairy facilities. Option 7
would require a national prohibition of
manure application to frozen, snowcovered, or saturated ground.
In addition to the four technologies
reviewed for the 2003 final rule, EPA
looked at an additional 37 technologies
and systems identified either by EPA or
commenters as candidate fecal coliform
BCT technologies. At the outset of
assessment for this rule, EPA rejected all
of these technologies as the basis for
BCT limitations for fecal coliform for
Subpart D CAFOs because they were
either not technically feasible for all
Subpart D CAFOs, or were not
economically achievable. Many of the
rejected technologies were costlier than
Option 5 which EPA in the 2003 final
CAFO rule had earlier determined was
not economically achievable for Subpart
D (i.e., swine, poultry, and veal calf)
facilities. The Waterkeeper court
sustained the Agency’s determination
that CAFOs cannot reasonably bear the
cost associated with Option 5. 399 F.3d
at 516. Option 5 would have cost
Subpart D facilities $167 million. See 68
FR 7218. Of the 19 technologies and
systems approaches identified by
commenters, none of the technologies
costs less than $167 million. The least
costly of these technologies—
gasification recycle, digester based
systems, super soils composting, aerobic
digestion, and ABS—cost 1.3 times the
cost of Option 5. Other technologies
reviewed cost as much as seven times
the total national costs of Option 5.
Having determined that the costs of
Option 5 were unachievable for Subpart
D facilities, EPA did not evaluate further
those treatment technologies that had
similar or greater total costs. After
rejecting the economically unachievable
technologies identified by commenters,
22 technologies remained for further
assessment with respect to technical
feasibility. EPA found that none of these
technologies were technically feasible
for all CAFOs in Subpart D.
For Subpart C facilities, EPA did not
have a previously identified option that
it had already determined to be
economically unachievable against
which to compare the costs of candidate
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BCT technologies. To do an economic
achievability analysis of candidate
technologies for Subpart C, EPA would
have had to conduct an analysis of the
economic conditions of individual
CAFOs in order to estimate potential
closures and evaluate appropriate
financial ratios, as it traditionally does
for economic achievability analysis.
EPA determined that conducting such
an analysis was not practical, and
eventually also determined that it was
not necessary to do so to complete its
evaluation of candidate BCT
technologies for subpart D. Rather, EPA
first evaluated the candidate
technologies for technical feasibility,
and on this basis, rejected 39 of the 41
technologies (the four options
considered for the 2003 rule, 16
identified by EPA and 19 suggested by
commenters) as the basis for BCT
limitation for fecal coliform for Subpart
C. The two remaining technologies were
then evaluated directly for cost
reasonableness, without considering
economic achievability, as explained in
section III.G.4(c) of this preamble.
EPA explained the basis for its
decisions with respect to feasibility of
the other candidate technologies (for
both Subparts C and D) in the proposed
rule, and commenters have not provided
any information that would lead the
Agency to change its conclusions. 71 FR
37,768–71.
In addition, EPA specifically solicited
comment on additional candidate
technologies that might prove feasible
and less costly than the technologies
already evaluated for the proposal. EPA
is aware of technologies that may, on a
site-specific basis, be used to provide
further reductions of conventional
pollutants as compared to the
technologies on which the 2003 BPT/
BCT limitations were based. However,
EPA’s record shows these other
technologies are not available
engineering alternatives for most
CAFOs, and they are therefore not
feasible technology candidates. See
Chapter 8 of the ‘‘Development
Document for the Final Revisions to the
NPDES and the Effluent Guidelines for
CAFOs’’ and the docket accompanying
this action for descriptions of these
additional technologies.
In response to its requests for
additional information, EPA received no
new data that support evaluation of
additional candidate technologies or
warrant revision to EPA’s conclusions
about the costs or performance of the
candidate technologies EPA identified.
Specifically, while some commenters
recommended consideration of
additional digester systems, the costs of
the various digester systems do not vary
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sufficiently to warrant a detailed
analysis of the costs of these
technologies at every type of CAFO. To
date, EPA has not identified less
expensive, and consequently,
economically achievable candidate
technologies than those it had
previously evaluated. Furthermore, EPA
did not further evaluate the systems
approach (combinations of one or more
candidate technologies) recommended
by some commenters because it would
not reduce fecal coliform more than the
99 percent assumed by EPA 12 in its
analysis as the yardstick for
performance of the candidate BCT
technology. While not obtaining
pollutant removals greater than those
already considered by EPA, these
systems would cost more than the cost
of the individual technologies already
reviewed. Therefore, EPA did not
evaluate the suite of candidate
technologies that performed comparably
but were more expensive than the suite
of technologies evaluated here. For the
reasons described in Chapter 8 of the
‘‘Development Document for the Final
Revisions to the NPDES and the Effluent
Guidelines for CAFOs’’ and the proposal
at 71 FR 37,765–8, EPA has determined
that the candidate technologies it
rejected are not technologically feasible
and economically achievable for all
CAFOs across a subcategory and thus
not appropriate technologies for BCT
limitations. The CWA does not
authorize EPA to establish BCT
limitations that are based on
technologies that are not technologically
feasible and economically achievable.
Because only two technologies were
both technically feasible and potentially
economically achievable for Subpart C
facilities (and none were for Subpart D
facilities), EPA is only required to
evaluate these two technologies further
for cost reasonableness.
(c) EPA’s Evaluation of the Remaining
Candidate Technologies for Cost
Reasonableness
The above assessment resulted in only
two remaining candidate technologies
(composting and constructed wetlands)
that are potentially 13 technically
12 In the proposed rule, as a simplifying
assumption all technologies were expected to
achieve a 99 percent reduction in fecal coliform. 71
FR 37,765 and 37,767.
13 EPA believes it is likely that some Subpart C
facilities will have space constraints under either
candidate technology. In this case the technology
would not be feasible for all CAFOs in the
subcategory. However, EPA lacks data regarding
land availability and possible land constraints
beyond an aggregate of data showing the average
acres of cropland at Subpart C facilities. To the
extent CAFOs can take the necessary amount of
land out of crop production to provide the space
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feasible and economically achievable for
fecal coliform control for one
subcategory, the Subpart C (beef and
dairy) subcategory. As discussed above,
EPA did not conduct a new analysis of
economic achievability for these
technologies at Subpart C facilities,
although EPA notes the costs are high
relative to the BPT technology (which
EPA also determined to be BAT).
Specifically, the cost of the BPT
technology for Subpart C was $214
million per year, while the cost of
composting was estimated to be $1.4
billion per year, and the cost of
constructed wetlands was $2.9 billion.
Thus, EPA expects that if it had
conducted a formal economic
achievability analysis, EPA would have
determined that both of these
technologies are not economically
achievable.
However, instead of evaluating these
technologies with respect to economic
achievability, EPA evaluated the cost
reasonableness of the technologies using
the simplified approach described
above. In the past, EPA has adopted
such an approach when it lacked a full
data base to evaluate different BCT
technologies. A simplified approach fits
the circumstances here for two reasons.
First, as noted, EPA has developed no
standardized BCT cost test for fecal
coliform. Second, EPA lacks the data to
provide a comparison of incremental
fecal coliform removals that is the basis
for the BCT cost test for TSS and BOD.
The annual operating costs for
composting would be more than six
times as much as the full BPT level of
control at Subpart C facilities (see
Chapter 4 and Table A–15 of the Final
Cost Methodology, EPA–821–R–03–
004), while constructed wetlands would
cost Subpart C facilities more than an
order of magnitude (13) times the cost
of the BPT level of control (see chapter
15 in the supplement to the TDD). EPA
has determined that these costs are too
high relative to the additional removals.
EPA thus concludes that the
incremental costs of the additional
removals alone support a determination
that these technologies are not cost
reasonable.
To further evaluate this conclusion,
EPA conducted a modeling analysis of
POTW removal costs for fecal coliform.
As discussed above, the available data
do not permit an empirical cost
comparison between CAFO candidate
to install construct wetlands or composting
windrows, EPA does not have the data to estimate
lost revenues associated with such losses of
cropland. Therefore, EPA’s estimated costs of such
candidate technologies are potentially understated.
Nonetheless, EPA analyzed cost reasonableness as
if the technologies are feasible.
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technologies and POTW fecal coliform
performance. However, EPA was able to
model POTW fecal coliform removal
costs using reasonable approximating
assumptions. EPA recognizes that the
resulting calculation lacks the rigor of
the determination of the 1986 POTW
benchmark for TSS and BOD removal
costs.14 What this assessment shows is
that POTW average costs of removals of
fecal coliform are very low (i.e., $0.33
per trillion CFU; see 71 FR 37,772). This
is not surprising, given that most POTW
permits require achievement of fecal
coliform reduction near 99 percent.15 In
contrast, the two technologies being
evaluated for cost reasonableness
(composting and constructed wetlands)
have higher costs for fecal coliform
removal ($0.51 per trillion CFU for
composting, and $1.02 per trillion CFU
for constructed wetlands). (See
supplement to Chapter 15 of the TDD,
showing unit costs of NCSU
technologies as provided by
commenters, total national costs of
employing such technologies at CAFOs,
and a comparison of those costs to the
BPT/BAT level of control.)
Even recognizing the necessary
imprecision associated with EPA’s
calculations, EPA has determined that
this limited POTW cost comparison
further supports its determination that
the costs of these two BCT candidate
technologies are not cost reasonable,
given the lack of hard data on which to
base the determination. This is fully
consistent with EPA’s findings in the
proposed rule that POTWs are very cost
effective at fecal coliform removals. 71
FR 37,772. The assessment confirms
what logic suggests: Given a POTW’s
requirement to virtually eliminate the
extremely high fecal coliform discharges
in its influent (basically raw sewage),
POTWs, on a national basis, achieve
fecal coliform removal on a cheaper
basis than CAFOs.
Finally, EPA notes that Congress
intended the BCT level of control to be
somewhere between the BPT and the
BAT levels of control, as established in
the statute. As noted in the conference
14 EPA made a number of assumptions for its
calculations because it did not have the data to
establish on a national basis the costs to POTWs of
fecal coliform control. Thus, EPA’s assessment used
the cost of advanced secondary treatment as a proxy
for the cost of additional technologies (e.g.,
filtration) that POTWs may employ to achieve high
fecal coliform removals (98 percent) required by
water quality standards of 200 colony forming units
(CFU) per ml. This assumption may overstate the
costs of such technologies, in which case the cost
per trillion CFU removed would be lower.
15 As described in the proposal, POTW influents
are approximately 5 million CFU per 100 ml, and
PCS data shows effluent concentrations of ∼ 20 CFU
per ml.
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report to the 1977 amendments
establishing BPT:
‘‘The result of the cost test could be a 1984
requirement which is no more than that
which would result from best practicable
technology but also could result in effluent
reductions equal to that required in the
application of best available technology.’’
Joint Explanatory Statement of the
Committee of Conference, 95th Cong. 1st
Sess., H.R. No. 95–830 at 85, Legislative
History at 269.
Thus, candidate technologies with
costs between 6 and 13 times the costs
of technologies that have already been
determined to be BAT would not
generally be appropriate as the basis for
BCT.
5. Additional Comments on the
Proposal
The following discussion summarizes
additional significant comments
received by EPA on the proposed CAFO
BCT determination for pathogens. For a
complete response to the issues raised
by commenters, see the Response to
Comment Document.
In calculating the BPT cost per unit of
fecal coliform removal for its costreasonableness assessment, one
commenter noted the cost was
erroneously calculated in units of
dollars per billion colony forming units
(CFU); the units should have been
dollars per trillion CFU in order for the
test to be comparable and consistent
with the remaining BCT cost
calculations. EPA agrees with this
comment and has corrected all
calculations to dollars per trillion CFU.
Some commenters correctly noted
that as part of the BCT cost test for fecal
coliform, EPA calculated the POTW and
industry cost benchmarks as the
difference in average costs of removing
fecal coliform between secondary
treatment and advanced secondary
treatment rather than as the incremental
cost for the upgrade. These commenters
believed that such an approach was
incorrect. As discussed above, EPA
agrees and has not used the revised BCT
cost test for this final rule. In regards to
the BCT options that were selected for
further analysis, some commenters
believe that numerical limits are feasible
for CAFOs and should have been
selected for BCT. They would have
liked to see EPA take a similar approach
to CAFO waste that EPA has taken
regarding human sewage sludge (i.e.,
setting numerical pathogen standards
for use). Some commenters pointed to
the ‘‘sludge rule’’ or ‘‘biosolids’’
program under 40 CFR part 503 as a
possible basis for pathogen standards in
the CAFO rule. EPA notes that the CWA
statutory criteria for sewage sludge
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standards under section 405 of the Act
are health and welfare-based. By
contrast, CWA effluent limitations
require consideration of different
factors. However, the technologies used
to meet the regulations in part 503 may,
in some cases, be used by CAFOs. For
these reasons, EPA included sewage
sludge pollution reduction technologies
such as composting and lime addition
in the suite of BCT candidate
technologies the Agency considered. In
addition, some commenters criticized
EPA’s cost analysis for not including
cost-share from federal sources such as
EQIP, and for not including cost offsets
from sale of treated manure. EPA
considered both of these aspects in the
cost analysis to the 2003 final CAFO
rule, and was upheld on its economic
analysis. 399 F.3d 486. In addition, EPA
considered such cost offsets in a
sensitivity analysis, and concluded that
the cost offsets did not change EPA’s
fundamental conclusions regarding
economic achievability and feasibility.
See Chapter 14 of the TDD for more
information.
By contrast, other commenters found
no fault or shortcomings in the EPA
analysis of the technical feasibility of
conventional technologies in
determining BCT for pathogen removal.
They agree that the candidate
technologies examined by EPA present
insurmountable challenges to many
CAFOs that make them inappropriate as
a basis for BCT. They found no fault
with the cost data or analytical
techniques used by EPA in the BCT cost
test. These commenters also presented
additional economic analysis of the
candidate technologies that has been
published in the ‘‘Phase 3’’ report on the
‘‘Development of Environmentally
Superior Technologies’’ per agreements
between the North Carolina Attorney
General and major pork producers in the
State. These commenters note that the
‘‘Phase 3’’ economic analysis found that
none of the 16 technologies studied
were economically feasible for existing
swine operations in North Carolina,
which is consistent with EPA’s findings
as discussed in detail above. These
commenters also provided State records
of CAFO violations and discharge data
for the past three years to support their
position that EPA has overstated the
frequency of production area overflows.
These additional data may be found in
the record for this final action.
IV. Impact Analysis
A. Environmental Impacts
When EPA issued the revised CAFO
regulations on February 12, 2003, it
estimated annual pollutant reductions
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for the rule at 56 million pounds of
phosphorus, 110 million pounds of
nitrogen, and two billion pounds of
sediment. This final, revised rule will
not change these environmental benefits
since the technical requirements for
CAFOs that discharge are not affected
and all CAFOs, whether covered by
NPDES permits or not, still need to
control nutrient releases from the
production and land application areas
in order to comply with the Clean Water
Act. Under this rule, all CAFOs that do
not apply for permits must be designed,
constructed, operated, and maintained
such that the CAFO does not discharge
or propose to discharge. Therefore, as
was true under the 2003 rule, all
discharges from CAFOs (except
precipitation-related discharges from
land application areas under a CAFO’s
control that qualify as agricultural
stormwater discharges) are required to
be covered by NPDES permits. The
overall magnitude of the benefits will
increase compared to 2003 due to
growth in the industry, but the analysis
for this rule does not recalculate these
effects since the increase is not due to
changes in the CAFO regulations. EPA
is assuming full compliance with the
rule, which is standard Agency
procedure when modeling impacts of a
final rule.
B. Administrative Burden Impacts
Since there is no change in technical
requirements, changes in impacts on
respondents are due exclusively to
changes in the information collection
burden. To determine the administrative
burden for the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) analysis, the Agency first
examined the two key permitting
changes resulting from the Waterkeeper
decision and how they would be
implemented under the final
regulations. These are the change in the
duty to apply for CAFOs and the change
to the nutrient management plan (NMP)
related provisions for CAFO permits.
The 2003 CAFO rule had a universal
duty to apply requirement which
required virtually all CAFOs to obtain
NPDES permit coverage. The supporting
analysis for the 2003 rule estimated that
as a result of this requirement,
approximately 15,500 CAFOs would
ultimately receive NPDES permits. See
the Technical Development Document
for the 2003 rule, Chapter 9.
This final rule changes the duty to
apply requirement so that only CAFOs
that discharge or propose to discharge
are required to seek NPDES coverage. To
derive the number of CAFOs that could
ultimately fall into this category, EPA
first projected total industry size for
2008 based on both U.S. Department of
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Agriculture (USDA) Census of
Agriculture statistics as well as Agencybased sector expertise. This exercise
yielded an estimate of approximately
20,700 total CAFOs for 2008. EPA then
combined the 2008 projections for each
animal sector with information on
standardized operational profiles to
anticipate the number of facilities as of
2008 that might discharge. For example,
when inclement weather precludes land
application or dewatering activities,
open lot type facilities such as beef lots
and dairy operations are more likely to
experience conditions that could result
in a discharge due to the use of open onsite lagoons. Additionally, EPA assumed
that all dairies generate wastewater from
the production area and generally have
uncovered on-site lagoons. Thus, for
purposes of burden estimates, EPA
assumed that all dairies and most beef
feedlots would apply for permits.
Even though the industry grew to
roughly 20,700 CAFOs from 2002 to
2008, the change in the duty to apply
requirement is anticipated to reduce the
number of facilities needing permit
coverage to approximately 15,300
discharging CAFOs. Based on these
updated figures, EPA estimates that
approximately 25 percent of the total
universe of CAFOs would not discharge
and thus would not need NPDES
coverage under this final rule. Although
these facilities may not need to apply
for permits, the administrative burden
analysis performed by EPA under the
PRA nonetheless accounts for the costs
that unpermitted facilities will incur for
the nutrient management planning that
are necessary for demonstrating that the
facility is land applying manure in such
a way as to qualify for the agricultural
stormwater exemption.
These figures may overstate the
numbers of CAFOs needing NPDES
permits in that the estimates of the
number of discharging facilities in each
sector make conservative categorical
assumptions about the likelihood of a
discharge based on broad operational
profiles and do not account for more
subtle stratifications within specific
operational categories. For instance,
although most dairies generate
wastewater from the production area
and have on-site lagoons, there do, in
fact, exist dairies designed to be no
discharge operations.
Based on the updated estimates of the
CAFO universe, EPA’s PRA analysis
projects, as shown in Table 4.1, that
CAFO operators and permitting
authorities will collectively experience
an increase in total annual
administrative burden of approximately
$0.5 million as a result of the EPA
regulations to address the court
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70469
decision. Although the PRA burden to
CAFOs and permitting authorities
declines as a result of the Waterkeeper
court decision to limit permits only to
discharging CAFOs, this burden
reduction is offset by the new NMPrelated requirements for permits and by
the assumption, for purposes of this
PRA analysis, that all unpermitted
CAFOs will certify under the voluntary
no discharge certification option. More
specifically, CAFO operators will
experience a $0.2 million reduction in
net annual administrative burden. This
net result is based on several offsetting
changes. CAFOs that do not seek permit
coverage under this final rule because
they do not discharge or propose to
discharge will save approximately $14
million annually in reduced permitting
costs. However, even though fewer
CAFOs will need to be covered by
NPDES permits, permitted facilities as a
group face an increase in annual
administrative burden of $1.2 million
per year due to the new NMP
requirements.
EPA’s analysis of burden impacts to
CAFOs also accounts for the burden that
unpermitted facilities will incur in
order to be able to qualify for the
agricultural stormwater exemption—a
cost category that EPA estimates will
result in a burden on unpermitted
facilities of $12.2 million annually. In
addition, EPA estimates that the
voluntary certification option for
unpermitted CAFOs could add $0.4
million annually to the PRA burden for
CAFOs. Although certification is
voluntary, EPA elected to cost the PRA
burden associated with this option so as
to provide a complete accounting of all
rule-related impacts. As noted above,
the net result of these impacts is an
administrative burden savings across all
CAFO operators, permitted and
unpermitted, of $0.2 million annually.
Permitting authorities, on the other
hand, are projected to experience a $0.7
million increase in annual
administrative burden. Although the
burden to issue permits declines by $4.2
million annually due to fewer facilities
needing permits, this decline is more
than offset by the added workload
arising from the new NMP-related
requirements. EPA estimates that States
would face an additional PRA burden of
$4.9 million annually specifically as a
result of the new NMP-related
requirements. In addition, States are
projected to face a burden increment of
up to $0.04 million annually to process
the new certifications.
EPA’s estimate of PRA burden
impacts changed from a reduction of
$14.9 million annually for the 2006
proposed rule to an increase of $0.5
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million annually in the final rule. This
change is due principally to the
Agency’s decision, as discussed earlier
in this section, to amend the PRA
analysis to account for the burden
incurred by unpermitted CAFOs for
nutrient management planning, which
is necessary for any unpermitted CAFO
that land applies irrespective of whether
the CAFO is certified under the
voluntary no discharge certification
option.
The PRA burden analysis presented in
this rule accounts both for growth in the
industry and changes in labor rates
since the 2003 rule was issued. In
addition, the changes are based on
annualized impacts and assume a
permit term of five years as stipulated
in the CWA. EPA submitted draft ICRs
with the 2006 proposed rule and 2008
supplemental proposal, and did not
receive any comments from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The
documentation in the public record on
the PRA analysis for this rulemaking
discusses more fully the assumptions
used to estimate the numbers of CAFOs
needing permits and to project the
associated administrative burden.
TABLE 4.1—PRA BURDEN IMPACT CHANGES
[Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding.]
Total baseline
PRA burden:
based on 2003
CAFO rule
requirements 1
CAFOs needing permits
(2008) 2.
CAFOs seeking agricultural stormwater exemption only (2008).
Total CAFOs (2008)
Annualized Costs 3 (in $
millions).
Total amended
PRA burden:
based on final
rule requirements
Net change in
paperwork burden (2003 rule
compared to
final rule)
............................................................
20,685
15,281
........................................
............................................................
n/a
5,404
........................................
CAFOs ...........................
............................................................
Base NPDES Permit .........................
20,685
$54.0
20,685
$40.0
($14.0)
Permitting Authorities ....
New NMP Provisions ........................
Agricultural Stormwater Exemption ...
Certification ........................................
Total CAFO Burden ...........................
Base NPDES Permit .........................
New NMP Provisions ........................
Certification ........................................
Total Permit Authority Burden ...........
n/a
n/a
n/a
$54.0
$16.5
n/a
n/a
$16.5
$1.2
$12.2
$0.4
$53.8
$12.2
$4.9
$0.04
$17.1
$1.2
$12.2
$0.4
($0.2)
($4.2)
$4.9
$0.04
$0.7
All Respondents ............................................................................
1 2003
........................................
$70.5
$71.0
$0.5
baseline impacts adjusted to reflect current labor rates and growth in facilities.
totals are annualized over 5 years in burden calcultions presented below to reflect CWA requirement for NPDES permit renewal every
2 Facility
5 years.
3 Annualized costs represent labor, capital and O&M costs.
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C. Response to Public Comment on the
Proposal
The Agency received a variety of
comments on the impacts analysis
presented for the 2006 proposed rule
and the 2008 supplemental proposal.
Several commenters indicated that the
Agency erred in assuming that the
environmental benefits from the 2003
rule would be retained under the
approach adopted in this final rule. The
Agency stands by its position presented
in the 2006 proposed rule, but has
revised the burden analysis to reflect
more fully that all unpermitted CAFOs
do not discharge or propose to discharge
and, therefore, must implement nutrient
management practices to ensure that
any discharge from the CAFO’s land
application area qualifies for the
agricultural stormwater exemption. As a
consequence, as indicated above, the
annual burden reduction realized by
CAFOs under the final revised rule is
shown as approximately $0.2 million as
opposed to the $15.4 million reduction
projected for CAFOs in the 2006
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proposed rule. This revised analysis
also addresses specific comments
suggesting that the Agency should
recognize that operators without permits
will continue to incur costs under the
regulation in order to meet the burden
of proof required to qualify for the
agricultural stormwater exemption.
Other commenters indicated that the
impacts analysis underestimated the
costs to CAFO operators of complying
with the EPA regulations. Careful
review of these statements makes clear
that commenters with this viewpoint
either did not account for the fact that
the impacts analysis presented for this
rulemaking is exclusively an assessment
of the paperwork burden—not the
overall compliance burden—faced by
CAFOs, or did not fully consider that
the costs shown represent average
yearly (annualized) burden rather than
total paperwork-related costs for a fiveyear CAFO NPDES permit.
Other commenters provided specific
information on nutrient management
plan (NMP) development costs, which
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the Agency determined corroborated the
original NMP cost estimates.
One State commenter claimed that the
Agency had underestimated costs to
permitting authorities for managing the
potential public hearings precipitated
by the new requirements for public
notice. This commenter projected that
every public notice regarding NMPs
would result in a public hearing. The
Agency re-examined its assumptions
regarding the incidence of public
hearings, but did not find information to
corroborate the commenter’s projection
either based on past NPDES public
hearing patterns or based on
expectations from other States regarding
the number of hearings likely to be
triggered by NMP-related public notices.
This assumption that public hearings
would not be requested for every NMP
is further confirmed by the experiences
of States that currently require NMPs to
be submitted as part of their permitting
process.
Several commenters indicated that
they believed that the Agency had also
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underestimated the cost to States of
processing voluntary no discharge
certifications. This final rule does not
require permitting authority review of
no discharge certifications. See
discussion of certification submission in
section III.A.3(c) of this preamble. The
Agency notes that the cost analysis it
performed to assess the paperwork
burden associated with the final rule
shows a net paperwork burden
reduction to States on this aspect of the
rule, since the 2003 rule required
permits-which are more burdensome for
permitting authorities to process-from
all CAFOs.
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V. Cross-Media Considerations and
Pathogens
A. Cross-Media Approaches
Since 2003, EPA and CAFO
stakeholders have been interested in
developing a framework to enable
CAFOs to pursue superior
environmental performance across all
media. Today, some CAFOs voluntarily
conduct whole-farm audits to evaluate
releases of pollutants to all media
through Environmental Management
Systems (e.g., ISO 14001 certification),
self-assessment tools, EPA’s
performance track, and State-approved
trade-offs in reducing discharges to
water and emissions to air that
accomplish the best overall level of
protection given State and local
conditions. The development of new
and emerging technologies offers the
potential to achieve equivalent or
greater pollutant reductions relative to
those achieved by the effluent
guidelines and standards. Many of these
are superior from a cross-media
perspective, and EPA encourages
superior cross-media solutions. These
regulations regarding nutrient
management plans may provide an
opportunity for EPA to encourage crossmedia approaches at CAFOs. For
example, the nutrient value in the
animal byproducts provides a valuable
source of fertilizer for crops. However,
inappropriate application can lead to
preventable discharges to water and
emissions to air. Optimal application
technologies and rates reduce potential
water quality and air quality standards
violations.
The fact that EPA has multiple efforts
underway relating to livestock
operations under several environmental
statutes underscores the need to explore
how to leverage existing regulatory
authorities most effectively. For
example, in addition to the regulations
being finalized in this rulemaking, the
Agency has recently undertaken a
National Air Emissions Monitoring
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Study. EPA also proposed a rule that
would exempt animal feeding
operations from certain requirements
relating to reporting of air releases
under hazardous waste laws.
EPA solicited comment in the 2006
proposed rule on the feasibility
(including consideration of legal,
technical, and implementation issues) of
allowing flexibility in how facilities
meet various programmatic
requirements, for instance those of the
Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act
(CWA), in order to achieve greater crossmedia pollutant reductions. EPA
received generalized support for this
type of approach in the comments
submitted in response. EPA will
continue to explore cross-media
considerations as it works together with
CAFOs and stakeholders to build further
experience on this issue.
As an example of the Agency’s work
in this area, in October 2007, EPA
awarded $8 million in federal grants for
providing technical assistance to
livestock operators, including animal
feeding operations, for the prevention of
water discharges and reduction of air
emissions. More recently, EPA’s
Agricultural Advisor announced the
establishment of the Farm, Ranch, and
Rural Communities Federal Advisory
Committee. One of the issues the
committee will focus on will be
identification and development of a
comprehensive environmental strategy
for livestock operations. EPA anticipates
that the committee will offer timely
observations on the opportunities and
challenges of cross-media approaches to
programs for addressing environmental
concerns at livestock operations as its
work progresses.
B. Pathogens and Animal Feeding
Operations
Although this final rule does not
require any new best conventional
pollutant control technology (BCT)
effluent limitations specifically to
control fecal coliform, EPA is
continuing to assess environmental and
human health concerns associated with
the management of manure and
wastewater at CAFOs. Pollutants most
commonly associated with animal waste
include nutrients (including ammonia),
organic matter, solids, odorous
compounds, and various pathogens.
These pollutants, and others, can be
released into the environment through
discharge or runoff if manure and
wastewater are not properly handled
and managed. EPA is interested in
recently initiated studies to assess
potential impacts from pathogens in
livestock manure, especially those
which may pose unique risks such as
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Cryptosporidium and Giardia. These
pathogens may be of concern if they
make their way into drinking water
sources (e.g., lakes, rivers, and streams)
because of their stability in the natural
environment and their resistance to the
most commonly used drinking water
disinfection procedure (i.e.,
chlorination). If proper treatment is not
provided for these pathogens, they have
the potential to cause adverse health
impacts in exposed populations. While
the Agency has a number of on-going
efforts in these areas, research is still in
its early stages. The absence of available
information necessarily limits EPA’s
ability to act with respect to these
potential concerns.
EPA’s Office of Research and
Development (ORD) is actively working
to identify sources of Cryptosporidium.
In collaboration with the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC), EPA Region 3,
and the Potomac River Drinking Water
Source Protection Partnership (DWSPP),
ORD has initiated Cryptosporidium
source tracking studies of the Potomac
River Watershed. The primary objective
of this project is to develop and
implement a monitoring program for
Cryptosporidium source tracking in
order to identify the most significant
sources of this parasite within the
watershed. Once identified, appropriate
source protection efforts, where
available, may be mobilized and
directed to the reduction of these
sources’ contributions. In addition, in
2005 EPA’s Science to Achieve Results
(STAR) program held a solicitation for
proposals entitled, ‘‘Development and
Evaluation of Innovative Approaches for
the Quantitative Assessment of
Pathogens in Drinking Water,’’ and has
funded eleven research grants from this
proposal involving the development and
evaluation of innovative approaches to
quantitatively detect microbial
pathogens in drinking water, including
Cryptosporidium and Giardia. The goal
of the STAR research is to improve the
suite of available detection methods for
known and emerging microbial drinking
water contaminants. EPA expects that
this research will result in methods that
will, among other things, allow
determination of the presence and
quantities of waterborne pathogens;
present a protocol for preparing and
processing water samples for
application of the proposed approach;
and where possible, allow comparison
of the performance of the new detection
methods with existing approved EPA
methods for specific pathogens.
ORD is also collaborating with the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
in their research programs associated
with Cryptosporidium. ORD scientists
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participated in the USDA selection
process for the National Research
Initiative on Watershed Processes and
Water Resources. Grants awarded under
this program will explore the effects of
a number of factors on Cryptosporidium
mobility and contamination of
waterways. These include the use of
buffers and other best management
practices for decreasing loadings of
Cryptosporidium from land application
of wastes and other soluble organic
matter. EPA scientists have begun to
review recently published research on
Cryptosporidium and Giardia oocyst
shedding. The research suggests that
shedding is highest during early life
stages of cattle and zoonotic forms and
may greatly diminish as calves age.
These factors have already led some
veterinarians to recommend that farmers
separate these high shedding young
animals from older animals to decrease
disease spread and economic losses
among herds of cattle and dairy cows.
The research also suggests that the
separation may provide secondary
environmental benefits by helping to
prevent the release of Cryptosporidium
into waterways. As part of their efforts
to protect the New York City water
supply, the New York State Department
of Agriculture has recommended
separation controls in their best
management practice (BMP) guidance to
dairy farmers. Other States, including
California, are considering similar
separation BMPs.
EPA’s ORD will continue to
collaborate and assess the impacts that
these and other research efforts may
have on any future CAFO management
recommendations.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
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A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51,735; October 4, 1993), this action is
a ‘‘significant regulatory action.’’
Accordingly, EPA submitted this action
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review under Executive
Order 12866 and any changes made in
response to OMB recommendations
have been documented in the docket for
this action.
In addition, EPA prepared an analysis
of the potential costs and benefits
associated with this action. This
analysis is contained in section IV of
this preamble above, entitled Impact
Analysis. A copy of the supporting
analysis is available in the docket for
this action.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this rule have been
submitted for approval to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. The information collection
requirements are not enforceable until
OMB approves them. However, the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has previously approved the
information collection requirements
contained in the existing regulations
and has assigned OMB control number
2040–0250. The Information Collection
Request (ICR) document prepared by
EPA was assigned EPA ICR No. 1989.06.
The 2003 CAFO rule had a universal
duty to apply requirement which
required virtually all CAFOs to obtain
NPDES permit coverage. This final
revised rule changes the duty to apply
requirement so that only CAFOs that
discharge or propose to discharge must
to seek NPDES coverage. EPA projects
that CAFO operators and permitting
authorities will collectively experience
a reduction in total annual
administrative burden of 25,500 hours
as a result of the regulatory revisions to
address the court decision. Labor
burden is projected to undergo a net
decrease compared to a net increase in
administrative costs of $0.5 million
annually as discussed in Chapter IV.
This difference arises from the fact that
the PRA analysis performed for the final
rule converts labor hour burden to labor
costs using a higher wage rate for State
permitting authorities than for CAFO
operators.16 The higher wage rate for
State permitting authorities causes the
State labor cost increase to be large
enough to offset the labor cost reduction
experienced by CAFO operators once
labor hours are converted to dollars in
the PRA analysis of annual
administrative impacts.
More specifically, the estimated
reduction in total annual administrative
burden of 25,500 hours is based on a
projected decrease in labor burden to
CAFO operators of approximately
54,100 hours annually and a projected
increase in labor burden to State
permitting authorities of approximately
28,600 hours annually. For CAFOs,
much of the labor burden decrease
derives from the smaller number of
facilities that will need permits, which
results in an annual burden decrease of
more than 703,000 labor hours. This
16 Wage rates for the PRA analysis supporting this
rulemaking were drawn from recent reports filed by
the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics. For further information please refer to the
ICR prepared by EPA for the rulemaking, available
in the record as EPA ICR No. 1989.06.
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burden reduction for CAFOs is offset by
a concomitant increase of 603,200 labor
hours annually at unpermitted facilities
for activities necessary to meet the
agricultural stormwater exemption,
along with an increment of 33,100 hours
annually for permitted facilities to
undertake the NMP-related activities
and 12,600 hours annually for those
CAFOs who elect to pursue the
voluntary certification option.
The annual labor burden increase for
State permitting authorities of 28,600
hours includes an estimated annual
reduction in labor burden of 93,000
hours due to the need to process fewer
permits. However, for State permitting
authorities this burden reduction is
more than offset by an increment in
annual labor burden of 120,700 hours to
address the new NMP-related
requirements combined with a relatively
minor annual burden increase of 900
hours to handle the voluntary
certifications.
Additional details on the assumptions
and parameters of the PRA analysis are
available in the ICR document
referenced above, which is available in
the docket supporting this final
rulemaking. Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b).
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
This final rule responds to OMB or
public comments on the information
collection requirements as discussed in
the Impact Analysis (section IV) in this
preamble.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any
other statute unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities
include small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions.
For purposes of assessing the impacts
of this rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small business
based on Small Business Administration
(SBA) size standards at 13 CFR 121.201;
(2) a small governmental jurisdiction
that is a government of a city, county,
town, school district, or special district
with a population of less than 50,000;
and (3) a small organization that is any
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not-for-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated and
is not dominant in its field.
After considering the economic
impacts of this rule on small entities, I
certify that this action will not have a
significant adverse economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This final rule does not change the
substantive requirements for CAFO
operators or increase the net paperwork
burden faced by facilities compared to
the burden imposed under the 2003
CAFO rule. Some CAFOs will face
increased permitting costs due to the
new NMP provisions, while others will
face reduced costs due to the changes in
the duty to apply. However, these
paperwork cost changes are generally
small and do not rise to the level of a
significant adverse economic impact on
a substantial number of operators.
Additionally, this rule would not affect
small governments as the permitting
authorities are State or federal agencies.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104–4, establishes requirements for
federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under section 202 of UMRA,
EPA generally must prepare a written
statement, including a cost-benefit
analysis, for proposed and final rules
with ‘‘federal mandates’’ that may result
in expenditures to State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
to the private sector, of $100 million or
more in any one year. Before
promulgating an EPA rule for which a
written statement is needed, section 205
of the UMRA generally requires EPA to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives and
adopt the least costly, most costeffective, or least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule. The provisions of section
205 do not apply when they are
inconsistent with applicable law.
Moreover, section 205 allows EPA to
adopt an alternative other than the least
costly, most cost-effective, or least
burdensome alternative if the
Administrator publishes with the final
rule an explanation why that alternative
was not adopted. Before EPA establishes
any regulatory requirements that may
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, including tribal
governments, it must have developed
under section 203 of the UMRA a small
government agency plan. The plan must
provide for notifying potentially
affected small governments, enabling
officials of affected small governments
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to have meaningful and timely input in
the development of EPA regulatory
proposals with significant federal
intergovernmental mandates, and
informing, educating, and advising
small governments on compliance with
the regulatory requirements.
EPA has determined that this rule
does not contain a federal mandate that
may result in expenditures of $100
million or more for State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
the private sector in any one year. The
revised administrative burden EPA
calculated for the final rule constitutes
a reduction of roughly 25,500 labor
hours annually compared to the
administrative burden estimated for the
2003 CAFO rule. This burden reduction
reflects a decrease in annual labor
burden of 54,100 hours for CAFO
operators and an annual labor burden
increase to State permitting authorities
of 28,600 hours. In addition, this
rulemaking is in response to a federal
court decision and is necessary to assure
compliance with applicable law. Thus,
this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
the UMRA.
EPA has determined that this rule
contains no regulatory requirements that
might significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. There are no local
or Tribal governments authorized to
implement the NPDES permit program
and the Agency is unaware of any local
or Tribal governments who are owners
or operators of CAFOs. Thus this rule is
not subject to the requirements of
section 203 of UMRA.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43,255; August 10,
1999), requires EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have
federalism implications’’ is defined in
the Executive Order to include
regulations that have ‘‘substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’
This final rule does not have
federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132. EPA estimates
that the average annual impact on all
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authorized States together is a cost
increase of $0.7 million. EPA does not
consider an annual impact of this
magnitude on States to be a substantial
effect. In addition, EPA does not expect
this rule to have any impact on local
governments. EPA also considered
flexibility as an important factor when
developing this regulation.
Further, the revised regulations will
not alter the basic State-federal scheme
established in the CWA under which
EPA authorizes States to carry out the
NPDES permitting program. EPA
expects the revised regulations to have
little effect on the relationship between,
or the distribution of power and
responsibilities among, the federal and
State governments. Thus, Executive
Order 13132 does not apply to this rule.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between EPA
and State and local governments, EPA
specifically solicited comment on the
proposed rule from State and local
officials. In addition, through a variety
of meetings with State associations
during the rulemaking process, States
have been informed about the issues
related to addressing the court’s
decisions. States provided input during
these meetings. State concerns generally
focused on the process for incorporating
NMPs into permits and the related
public review process, and also on
guidance related to what constitutes a
discharge from a CAFO given that the
proposed rule would have required only
those operations that discharge or
propose to discharge to apply for a
permit. These concerns have been
addressed in such a way as to provide
flexibility and accountability in the new
permit application requirements and
review processes promulgated in this
rule.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled,
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67,249; November 9, 2000), requires
EPA to develop an accountable process
to ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input
by tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’
This rule does not have tribal
implications. There are currently no
tribal governments authorized for the
NPDES program. This rulemaking
provides increased opportunity for the
public and tribal governments to
comment on specific CAFOs’
applications for permit coverage. It will
not have substantial direct effects on
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tribal governments, on the relationship
between the federal government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
federal government and Indian tribes, as
specified in Executive Order 13175.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this rule.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13175,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between EPA
and tribal governments, EPA
specifically solicited comment on the
proposed rule from tribal officials.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 ‘‘Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks’’ (62 FR 19,885;
April 23, 1997) applies to any rule that:
(1) Is determined to be ‘‘economically
significant’’ as defined under Executive
Order 12866, and (2) concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
EPA has reason to believe may have a
disproportionate effect on children. If
the regulatory action meets both criteria,
the Agency must evaluate the
environmental health or safety effects of
the planned rule on children, and
explain why the planned regulation is
preferable to other potentially effective
and reasonably feasible alternatives
considered by the Agency.
This final rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it is not
economically significant as defined in
Executive Order 12866, and because the
Agency does not have reason to believe
the environmental health or safety risks
addressed by this action present a
disproportionate risk to children. The
benefits analysis performed for the 2003
CAFO rule determined that the rule
would result in certain significant
benefits to children’s health. (Please
refer to the Benefits Analysis in the
record for the 2003 CAFO final rule.)
This action does not affect the
environmental benefits of the 2003
CAFO rule.
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H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This rule is not a ‘‘significant energy
action’’ as defined in Executive Order
13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning Regulations
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That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28,355;
May 22, 2001) because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
EPA has concluded that this rule is not
likely to have any adverse energy effects
since CAFOs in general do not figure
significantly in the energy market, and
the regulatory revisions finalized in this
rule are not likely to change existing
energy generation or consumption
profiles for CAFOs.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law
104–113, 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272 note)
directs EPA to use voluntary consensus
standards in its regulatory activities
unless to do so would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (e.g.,
materials specifications, test methods,
sampling procedures, and business
practices) that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards
bodies. The NTTAA directs EPA to
provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards.
This final rule does not change the
technical requirements for land
application from those of the 2003 rule.
Production area requirements are the
same for existing sources and for new
sources as in the 2003 rule. The no
discharge production area requirements
for new sources in this rulemaking,
however, now include an option for
complying with the requirement
through the development of site-specific
design, operation and maintenance
permit conditions that will ensure no
discharge from the site. However, the
specific no discharge conditions
applicable to a specific operator
choosing this option for compliance will
be determined by the permitting
authority on a site-specific BPJ basis.
EPA encourages the use by permitting
authorities of voluntary consensus
standards, such as those that may be
developed by USDA, in establishing the
site-specific technical requirements in
CAFO permits when the permittee
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demonstrates that these standards are
consistent with the achievement of no
discharge from a specific CAFO.
This rule for new source requires that
CAFOs complying with the no discharge
requirement through the development of
site-specific design, maintenance and
operation standards must use prescribed
technical standards in demonstrating
that a specific CAFO’s design, operation
and maintenance will be consistent with
no discharge from its production area.
(In certain circumstances, a CAFO may
use either equivalent evaluation and
simulation procedures or technical
standards developed for a class of
specific facilities within a specified
geographical area if approved by its
permitting authority), EPA has not
required the use of any particular
voluntary consensus standards in this
rule. The use, however, of voluntary
consensus standards such as those that
may be developed by USDA for the
required demonstration that site-specific
design, maintenance and operational
requirements for CAFOs to comply with
the no discharge standard is
encouraged. The decisions as to what
specific best management practices and
technologies must be applied at
individual animal feeding operations
are left to the State or EPA in the
exercise of their NPDES authority.
J. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule
will become effective December 22,
2008.
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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BILLING CODE 6560–50–C
§ 9.1 OMB approvals under the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
List of Subjects
*
40 CFR Part 9
Environmental protection, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
40 CFR Part 122
Administrative practice and
procedure, confidential business
information, hazardous substances,
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, water pollution control.
*
*
*
*
OMB control
No.
40 CFR citation
*
*
*
*
*
EPA Administered Permit Programs: The
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System
*
*
*
*
*
40 CFR Part 412
Environmental protection, feedlots,
livestock, waste treatment and disposal,
water pollution control.
122.21(i) ....................................
*
*
*
*
122.23 (d), (e), (h) ....................
Dated: October 31, 2008.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.
*
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, chapter I of Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations is to be
amended as follows:
*
*
*
2040–0250
*
2040–0250
*
■
PART 122—EPA ADMINISTERED
PERMIT PROGRAMS: THE NATIONAL
POLLUTANT DISCHARGE
ELIMINATION SYSTEM
PART 9—OMB APPROVALS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT
3. The authority citation for part 122
continues to read as follows:
■
1. The authority citation for part 9
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 135 et seq., 136–136y;
15 U.S.C. 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2601–2671;
21 U.S.C. 331j, 346a, 348; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 33
U.S.C. 1251 et seq., 1311, 1313d, 1314, 1318,
1321, 1326, 1330, 1342, 1344, 1345(d) and
(e), 1361; Executive Order 11735, 38 FR
21243, 3 CFR, 1971–1975 Comp. p. 973; 42
U.S.C. 241, 242b, 243, 246, 300f, 300g–1,
300g–2, 300g–3, 300g–4, 300g–5, 300g–6,
300j–1, 300j–2, 300j–3, 300j–4, 300j–9, 1857
et seq., 6901–6992k, 7401–7671q, 7542,
9601–9657, 11023, 11048.
2. In § 9.1 the table is amended by
adding entries in numerical order under
the indicated heading to read as follows:
■
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Authority: The Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C.
1251 et seq.
4. Section 122.21 is amended by
revising the last sentence in paragraph
(a)(1), and revising paragraph (i)(1)(x), to
read as follows:
■
§ 122.21 Application for a permit
(applicable to State programs, see § 123.25).
(a) * * *
(1) * * * The requirements for
concentrated animal feeding operations
are described in § 122.23(d).
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(1) * * *
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(x) A nutrient management plan that
at a minimum satisfies the requirements
specified in § 122.42(e), including, for
all CAFOs subject to 40 CFR part 412,
subpart C or subpart D, the requirements
of 40 CFR 412.4(c), as applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 122.23 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising paragraph (a).
■ b. By revising paragraphs (d)(1) and
(d)(2).
■ c. By adding paragraphs (e)(1) and
(e)(2).
■ d. By revising paragraph (f).
■ e. By revising paragraph (g).
■ f. By revising paragraph (h).
■ g. By adding paragraph (i).
■ h. By adding paragraph (j).
§ 122.23 Concentrated animal feeding
operations (applicable to State NPDES
programs, see § 123.25).
(a) Scope. Concentrated animal
feeding operations (CAFOs), as defined
in paragraph (b) of this section or
designated in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section, are point
sources, subject to NPDES permitting
requirements as provided in this
section. Once an animal feeding
operation is defined as a CAFO for at
least one type of animal, the NPDES
requirements for CAFOs apply with
respect to all animals in confinement at
the operation and all manure, litter, and
process wastewater generated by those
animals or the production of those
animals, regardless of the type of
animal.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Permit Requirement. The owner or
operator of a CAFO must seek coverage
under an NPDES permit if the CAFO
discharges or proposes to discharge. A
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CAFO proposes to discharge if it is
designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will
occur. Specifically, the CAFO owner or
operator must either apply for an
individual NPDES permit or submit a
notice of intent for coverage under an
NPDES general permit. If the Director
has not made a general permit available
to the CAFO, the CAFO owner or
operator must submit an application for
an individual permit to the Director.
(2) Information to submit with permit
application or notice of intent. An
application for an individual permit
must include the information specified
in § 122.21. A notice of intent for a
general permit must include the
information specified in §§ 122.21 and
122.28.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) For unpermitted Large CAFOs, a
precipitation-related discharge of
manure, litter, or process wastewater
from land areas under the control of a
CAFO shall be considered an
agricultural stormwater discharge only
where the manure, litter, or process
wastewater has been land applied in
accordance with site-specific nutrient
management practices that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of
the nutrients in the manure, litter, or
process wastewater, as specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(vi) through (ix).
(2) Unpermitted Large CAFOs must
maintain documentation specified in
§ 122.42(e)(1)(ix) either on site or at a
nearby office, or otherwise make such
documentation readily available to the
Director or Regional Administrator upon
request.
(f) When must the owner or operator
of a CAFO seek coverage under an
NPDES permit? Any CAFO that is
required to seek permit coverage under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section must
seek coverage when the CAFO proposes
to discharge, unless a later deadline is
specified below.
(1) Operations defined as CAFOs prior
to April 14, 2003. For operations
defined as CAFOs under regulations
that were in effect prior to April 14,
2003, the owner or operator must have
or seek to obtain coverage under an
NPDES permit as of April 14, 2003, and
comply with all applicable NPDES
requirements, including the duty to
maintain permit coverage in accordance
with paragraph (g) of this section.
(2) Operations defined as CAFOs as of
April 14, 2003, that were not defined as
CAFOs prior to that date. For all
operations defined as CAFOs as of April
14, 2003, that were not defined as
CAFOs prior to that date, the owner or
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operator of the CAFO must seek to
obtain coverage under an NPDES permit
by February 27, 2009.
(3) Operations that become defined as
CAFOs after April 14, 2003, but which
are not new sources. For a newly
constructed CAFO and for an AFO that
makes changes to its operations that
result in its becoming defined as a
CAFO for the first time after April 14,
2003, but is not a new source, the owner
or operator must seek to obtain coverage
under an NPDES permit, as follows:
(i) For newly constructed operations
not subject to effluent limitations
guidelines, 180 days prior to the time
CAFO commences operation;
(ii) For other operations (e.g.,
resulting from an increase in the
number of animals), as soon as possible,
but no later than 90 days after becoming
defined as a CAFO; or
(iii) If an operational change that
makes the operation a CAFO would not
have made it a CAFO prior to April 14,
2003, the operation has until February
27, 2009, or 90 days after becoming
defined as a CAFO, whichever is later.
(4) New sources. The owner or
operator of a new source must seek to
obtain coverage under a permit at least
180 days prior to the time that the
CAFO commences operation.
(5) Operations that are designated as
CAFOs. For operations designated as a
CAFO in accordance with paragraph (c)
of this section, the owner or operator
must seek to obtain coverage under a
permit no later than 90 days after
receiving notice of the designation.
(g) Duty to Maintain Permit Coverage.
No later than 180 days before the
expiration of the permit, or as provided
by the Director, any permitted CAFO
must submit an application to renew its
permit, in accordance with § 122.21(d),
unless the CAFO will not discharge or
propose to discharge upon expiration of
the permit.
(h) Procedures for CAFOs seeking
coverage under a general permit. (1)
CAFO owners or operators must submit
a notice of intent when seeking
authorization to discharge under a
general permit in accordance with
§ 122.28(b). The Director must review
notices of intent submitted by CAFO
owners or operators to ensure that the
notice of intent includes the information
required by § 122.21(i)(1), including a
nutrient management plan that meets
the requirements of § 122.42(e) and
applicable effluent limitations and
standards, including those specified in
40 CFR part 412. When additional
information is necessary to complete the
notice of intent or clarify, modify, or
supplement previously submitted
material, the Director may request such
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70481
information from the owner or operator.
If the Director makes a preliminary
determination that the notice of intent
meets the requirements of
§§ 122.21(i)(1) and 122.42(e), the
Director must notify the public of the
Director’s proposal to grant coverage
under the permit to the CAFO and make
available for public review and
comment the notice of intent submitted
by the CAFO, including the CAFO’s
nutrient management plan, and the draft
terms of the nutrient management plan
to be incorporated into the permit. The
process for submitting public comments
and hearing requests, and the hearing
process if a request for a hearing is
granted, must follow the procedures
applicable to draft permits set forth in
40 CFR 124.11 through 124.13. The
Director may establish, either by
regulation or in the general permit, an
appropriate period of time for the public
to comment and request a hearing that
differs from the time period specified in
40 CFR 124.10. The Director must
respond to significant comments
received during the comment period, as
provided in 40 CFR 124.17, and, if
necessary, require the CAFO owner or
operator to revise the nutrient
management plan in order to be granted
permit coverage. When the Director
authorizes coverage for the CAFO owner
or operator under the general permit,
the terms of the nutrient management
plan shall become incorporated as terms
and conditions of the permit for the
CAFO. The Director shall notify the
CAFO owner or operator and inform the
public that coverage has been
authorized and of the terms of the
nutrient management plan incorporated
as terms and conditions of the permit
applicable to the CAFO.
(2) For EPA-issued permits only. The
Regional Administrator shall notify each
person who has submitted written
comments on the proposal to grant
coverage and the draft terms of the
nutrient management plan or requested
notice of the final permit decision. Such
notification shall include notice that
coverage has been authorized and of the
terms of the nutrient management plan
incorporated as terms and conditions of
the permit applicable to the CAFO.
(3) Nothing in this paragraph (h) shall
affect the authority of the Director to
require an individual permit under
§ 122.28(b)(3).
(i) No Discharge Certification Option.
(1) The owner or operator of a CAFO
that meets the eligibility criteria in
paragraph (i)(2) of this section may
certify to the Director that the CAFO
does not discharge or propose to
discharge. A CAFO owner or operator
who certifies that the CAFO does not
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discharge or propose to discharge is not
required to seek coverage under an
NPDES permit pursuant to paragraph
(d)(1) of this section, provided that the
CAFO is designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained in accordance
with the requirements of paragraphs
(i)(2) and (3) of this section, and subject
to the limitations in paragraph (i)(4) of
this section.
(2) Eligibility Criteria. In order to
certify that a CAFO does not discharge
or propose to discharge, the owner or
operator of a CAFO must document,
based on an objective assessment of the
conditions at the CAFO, that the CAFO
is designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained in a manner such that the
CAFO will not discharge, as follows:
(i) The CAFO’s production area is
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained so as not to discharge. The
CAFO must maintain documentation
that demonstrates that:
(A) Any open manure storage
structures are designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained to achieve no
discharge based on a technical
evaluation in accordance with the
elements of the technical evaluation set
forth in 40 CFR 412.46(a)(1)(i) through
(viii);
(B) Any part of the CAFO’s
production area that is not addressed by
paragraph (i)(2)(i)(A) of this section is
designed, constructed, operated, and
maintained such that there will be no
discharge of manure, litter, or process
wastewater; and
(C) The CAFO implements the
additional measures set forth in 40 CFR
412.37(a) and (b);
(ii) The CAFO has developed and is
implementing an up-to-date nutrient
management plan to ensure no
discharge from the CAFO, including
from all land application areas under
the control of the CAFO, that addresses,
at a minimum, the following:
(A) The elements of § 122.42(e)(1)(i)
through (ix) and 40 CFR 412.37(c); and
(B) All site-specific operation and
maintenance practices necessary to
ensure no discharge, including any
practices or conditions established by a
technical evaluation pursuant to
paragraph (i)(2)(i)(A) of this section; and
(iii) The CAFO must maintain
documentation required by this
paragraph either on site or at a nearby
office, or otherwise make such
documentation readily available to the
Director or Regional Administrator upon
request.
(3) Submission to the Director. In
order to certify that a CAFO does not
discharge or propose to discharge, the
CAFO owner or operator must complete
and submit to the Director, by certified
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mail or equivalent method of
documentation, a certification that
includes, at a minimum, the following
information:
(i) The legal name, address and phone
number of the CAFO owner or operator
(see § 122.21(b));
(ii) The CAFO name and address, the
county name and the latitude and
longitude where the CAFO is located;
(iii) A statement that describes the
basis for the CAFO’s certification that it
satisfies the eligibility requirements
identified in paragraph (i)(2) of this
section; and
(iv) The following certification
statement: ‘‘I certify under penalty of
law that I am the owner or operator of
a concentrated animal feeding operation
(CAFO), identified as [Name of CAFO],
and that said CAFO meets the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.23(i). I have
read and understand the eligibility
requirements of 40 CFR 122.23(i)(2) for
certifying that a CAFO does not
discharge or propose to discharge and
further certify that this CAFO satisfies
the eligibility requirements. As part of
this certification, I am including the
information required by 40 CFR
122.23(i)(3). I also understand the
conditions set forth in 40 CFR
122.23(i)(4), (5) and (6) regarding loss
and withdrawal of certification. I certify
under penalty of law that this document
and all other documents required for
this certification were prepared under
my direction or supervision and that
qualified personnel properly gathered
and evaluated the information
submitted. Based upon my inquiry of
the person or persons directly involved
in gathering and evaluating the
information, the information submitted
is to the best of my knowledge and
belief true, accurate and complete. I am
aware there are significant penalties for
submitting false information, including
the possibility of fine and imprisonment
for knowing violations.’’; and
(v) The certification must be signed in
accordance with the signatory
requirements of 40 CFR 122.22.
(4) Term of Certification. A
certification that meets the requirements
of paragraphs (i)(2) and (i)(3) of this
section shall become effective on the
date it is submitted, unless the Director
establishes an effective date of up to 30
days after the date of submission.
Certification will remain in effect for
five years or until the certification is no
longer valid or is withdrawn, whichever
occurs first. A certification is no longer
valid when a discharge has occurred or
when the CAFO ceases to meet the
eligibility criteria in paragraph (i)(2) of
this section.
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(5) Withdrawal of Certification. (i) At
any time, a CAFO may withdraw its
certification by notifying the Director by
certified mail or equivalent method of
documentation. A certification is
withdrawn on the date the notification
is submitted to the Director. The CAFO
does not need to specify any reason for
the withdrawal in its notification to the
Director.
(ii) If a certification becomes invalid
in accordance with paragraph (i)(4) of
this section, the CAFO must withdraw
its certification within three days of the
date on which the CAFO becomes aware
that the certification is invalid. Once a
CAFO’s certification is no longer valid,
the CAFO is subject to the requirement
in paragraph (d)(1) of this section to
seek permit coverage if it discharges or
proposes to discharge.
(6) Recertification. A previously
certified CAFO that does not discharge
or propose to discharge may recertify in
accordance with paragraph (i) of this
section, except that where the CAFO has
discharged, the CAFO may only
recertify if the following additional
conditions are met:
(i) The CAFO had a valid certification
at the time of the discharge;
(ii) The owner or operator satisfies the
eligibility criteria of paragraph (i)(2) of
this section, including any necessary
modifications to the CAFO’s design,
construction, operation, and/or
maintenance to permanently address the
cause of the discharge and ensure that
no discharge from this cause occurs in
the future;
(iii) The CAFO has not previously
recertified after a discharge from the
same cause;
(iv) The owner or operator submits to
the Director for review the following
documentation: a description of the
discharge, including the date, time,
cause, duration, and approximate
volume of the discharge, and a detailed
explanation of the steps taken by the
CAFO to permanently address the cause
of the discharge in addition to
submitting a certification in accordance
with paragraph (i)(3) of this section; and
(v) Notwithstanding paragraph (i)(4)
of this section, a recertification that
meets the requirements of paragraphs
(i)(6)(iii) and (i)(6)(iv) of this section
shall only become effective 30 days
from the date of submission of the
recertification documentation.
(j) Effect of certification. (1) An
unpermitted CAFO certified in
accordance with paragraph (i) of this
section is presumed not to propose to
discharge. If such a CAFO does
discharge, it is not in violation of the
requirement that CAFOs that propose to
discharge seek permit coverage pursuant
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to paragraphs (d)(1) and (f) of this
section, with respect to that discharge.
In all instances, the discharge of a
pollutant without a permit is a violation
of the Clean Water Act section 301(a)
prohibition against unauthorized
discharges from point sources.
(2) In any enforcement proceeding for
failure to seek permit coverage under
paragraphs (d)(1) or (f) of this section
that is related to a discharge from an
unpermitted CAFO, the burden is on the
CAFO to establish that it did not
propose to discharge prior to the
discharge when the CAFO either did not
submit certification documentation as
provided in paragraph (i)(3) or (i)(6)(iv)
of this section within at least five years
prior to the discharge, or withdrew its
certification in accordance with
paragraph (i)(5) of this section. Design,
construction, operation, and
maintenance in accordance with the
criteria of paragraph (i)(2) of this section
satisfies this burden.
■ 6. Section 122.28 is amended by
adding a new paragraph (b)(2)(vii), to
read as follows:
§ 122.28 General permits (applicable to
State NPDES programs, see § 123.25).
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(vii) A CAFO owner or operator may
be authorized to discharge under a
general permit only in accordance with
the process described in § 122.23(h).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Section 122.42 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising paragraph (e)
introductory text and paragraph (e)(1)
introductory text.
■ b. By removing the period at the end
of paragraph (e)(4)(vii) and adding in its
place ‘‘; and’’.
■ c. By adding paragraph (e)(4)(viii).
■ d. By adding paragraphs (e)(5) and
(e)(6).
§ 122.42 Additional conditions applicable
to specified categories of NPDES permits
(applicable to State NPDES programs, see
§ 123.25).
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*
*
*
*
*
(e) Concentrated animal feeding
operations (CAFOs). Any permit issued
to a CAFO must include the
requirements in paragraphs (e)(1)
through (e)(6) of this section.
(1) Requirement to implement a
nutrient management plan. Any permit
issued to a CAFO must include a
requirement to implement a nutrient
management plan that, at a minimum,
contains best management practices
necessary to meet the requirements of
this paragraph and applicable effluent
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limitations and standards, including
those specified in 40 CFR part 412. The
nutrient management plan must, to the
extent applicable:
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(viii) The actual crop(s) planted and
actual yield(s) for each field, the actual
nitrogen and phosphorus content of the
manure, litter, and process wastewater,
the results of calculations conducted in
accordance with paragraphs (e)(5)(i)(B)
and (e)(5)(ii)(D) of this section, and the
amount of manure, litter, and process
wastewater applied to each field during
the previous 12 months; and, for any
CAFO that implements a nutrient
management plan that addresses rates of
application in accordance with
paragraph (e)(5)(ii) of this section, the
results of any soil testing for nitrogen
and phosphorus taken during the
preceding 12 months, the data used in
calculations conducted in accordance
with paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(D) of this
section, and the amount of any
supplemental fertilizer applied during
the previous 12 months.
(5) Terms of the nutrient management
plan. Any permit issued to a CAFO
must require compliance with the terms
of the CAFO’s site-specific nutrient
management plan. The terms of the
nutrient management plan are the
information, protocols, best
management practices, and other
conditions in the nutrient management
plan determined by the Director to be
necessary to meet the requirements of
paragraph (e)(1) of this section. The
terms of the nutrient management plan,
with respect to protocols for land
application of manure, litter, or process
wastewater required by paragraph
(e)(1)(viii) of this section and, as
applicable, 40 CFR 412.4(c), must
include the fields available for land
application; field-specific rates of
application properly developed, as
specified in paragraphs (e)(5)(i) through
(ii) of this section, to ensure appropriate
agricultural utilization of the nutrients
in the manure, litter, or process
wastewater; and any timing limitations
identified in the nutrient management
plan concerning land application on the
fields available for land application. The
terms must address rates of application
using one of the following two
approaches, unless the Director
specifies that only one of these
approaches may be used:
(i) Linear approach. An approach that
expresses rates of application as pounds
of nitrogen and phosphorus, according
to the following specifications:
(A) The terms include maximum
application rates from manure, litter,
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70483
and process wastewater for each year of
permit coverage, for each crop identified
in the nutrient management plan, in
chemical forms determined to be
acceptable to the Director, in pounds
per acre, per year, for each field to be
used for land application, and certain
factors necessary to determine such
rates. At a minimum, the factors that are
terms must include: The outcome of the
field-specific assessment of the potential
for nitrogen and phosphorus transport
from each field; the crops to be planted
in each field or any other uses of a field
such as pasture or fallow fields; the
realistic yield goal for each crop or use
identified for each field; the nitrogen
and phosphorus recommendations from
sources specified by the Director for
each crop or use identified for each
field; credits for all nitrogen in the field
that will be plant available;
consideration of multi-year phosphorus
application; and accounting for all other
additions of plant available nitrogen and
phosphorus to the field. In addition, the
terms include the form and source of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be land-applied; the timing and
method of land application; and the
methodology by which the nutrient
management plan accounts for the
amount of nitrogen and phosphorus in
the manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be applied.
(B) Large CAFOs that use this
approach must calculate the maximum
amount of manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be land applied at least
once each year using the results of the
most recent representative manure,
litter, and process wastewater tests for
nitrogen and phosphorus taken within
12 months of the date of land
application; or
(ii) Narrative rate approach. An
approach that expresses rates of
application as a narrative rate of
application that results in the amount,
in tons or gallons, of manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be land applied,
according to the following
specifications:
(A) The terms include maximum
amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus
derived from all sources of nutrients, for
each crop identified in the nutrient
management plan, in chemical forms
determined to be acceptable to the
Director, in pounds per acre, for each
field, and certain factors necessary to
determine such amounts. At a
minimum, the factors that are terms
must include: the outcome of the fieldspecific assessment of the potential for
nitrogen and phosphorus transport from
each field; the crops to be planted in
each field or any other uses such as
pasture or fallow fields (including
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alternative crops identified in
accordance with paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(B)
of this section); the realistic yield goal
for each crop or use identified for each
field; and the nitrogen and phosphorus
recommendations from sources
specified by the Director for each crop
or use identified for each field. In
addition, the terms include the
methodology by which the nutrient
management plan accounts for the
following factors when calculating the
amounts of manure, litter, and process
wastewater to be land applied: Results
of soil tests conducted in accordance
with protocols identified in the nutrient
management plan, as required by
paragraph (e)(1)(vii) of this section;
credits for all nitrogen in the field that
will be plant available; the amount of
nitrogen and phosphorus in the manure,
litter, and process wastewater to be
applied; consideration of multi-year
phosphorus application; accounting for
all other additions of plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus to the field;
the form and source of manure, litter,
and process wastewater; the timing and
method of land application; and
volatilization of nitrogen and
mineralization of organic nitrogen.
(B) The terms of the nutrient
management plan include alternative
crops identified in the CAFO’s nutrient
management plan that are not in the
planned crop rotation. Where a CAFO
includes alternative crops in its nutrient
management plan, the crops must be
listed by field, in addition to the crops
identified in the planned crop rotation
for that field, and the nutrient
management plan must include realistic
crop yield goals and the nitrogen and
phosphorus recommendations from
sources specified by the Director for
each crop. Maximum amounts of
nitrogen and phosphorus from all
sources of nutrients and the amounts of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be applied must be determined in
accordance with the methodology
described in paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(A) of
this section.
(C) For CAFOs using this approach,
the following projections must be
included in the nutrient management
plan submitted to the Director, but are
not terms of the nutrient management
plan: The CAFO’s planned crop
rotations for each field for the period of
permit coverage; the projected amount
of manure, litter, or process wastewater
to be applied; projected credits for all
nitrogen in the field that will be plant
available; consideration of multi-year
phosphorus application; accounting for
all other additions of plant available
nitrogen and phosphorus to the field;
and the predicted form, source, and
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method of application of manure, litter,
and process wastewater for each crop.
Timing of application for each field,
insofar as it concerns the calculation of
rates of application, is not a term of the
nutrient management plan.
(D) CAFOs that use this approach
must calculate maximum amounts of
manure, litter, and process wastewater
to be land applied at least once each
year using the methodology required in
paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section
before land applying manure, litter, and
process wastewater and must rely on the
following data:
(1) A field-specific determination of
soil levels of nitrogen and phosphorus,
including, for nitrogen, a concurrent
determination of nitrogen that will be
plant available consistent with the
methodology required by paragraph
(e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section, and for
phosphorus, the results of the most
recent soil test conducted in accordance
with soil testing requirements approved
by the Director; and
(2) The results of most recent
representative manure, litter, and
process wastewater tests for nitrogen
and phosphorus taken within 12 months
of the date of land application, in order
to determine the amount of nitrogen and
phosphorus in the manure, litter, and
process wastewater to be applied.
(6) Changes to a nutrient management
plan. Any permit issued to a CAFO
must require the following procedures
to apply when a CAFO owner or
operator makes changes to the CAFO’s
nutrient management plan previously
submitted to the Director:
(i) The CAFO owner or operator must
provide the Director with the most
current version of the CAFO’s nutrient
management plan and identify changes
from the previous version, except that
the results of calculations made in
accordance with the requirements of
paragraphs (e)(5)(i)(B) and (e)(5)(ii)(D) of
this section are not subject to the
requirements of paragraph (e)(6) of this
section.
(ii) The Director must review the
revised nutrient management plan to
ensure that it meets the requirements of
this section and applicable effluent
limitations and standards, including
those specified in 40 CFR part 412, and
must determine whether the changes to
the nutrient management plan
necessitate revision to the terms of the
nutrient management plan incorporated
into the permit issued to the CAFO. If
revision to the terms of the nutrient
management plan is not necessary, the
Director must notify the CAFO owner or
operator and upon such notification the
CAFO may implement the revised
nutrient management plan. If revision to
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the terms of the nutrient management
plan is necessary, the Director must
determine whether such changes are
substantial changes as described in
paragraph (e)(6)(iii) of this section.
(A) If the Director determines that the
changes to the terms of the nutrient
management plan are not substantial,
the Director must make the revised
nutrient management plan publicly
available and include it in the permit
record, revise the terms of the nutrient
management plan incorporated into the
permit, and notify the owner or operator
and inform the public of any changes to
the terms of the nutrient management
plan that are incorporated into the
permit.
(B) If the Director determines that the
changes to the terms of the nutrient
management plan are substantial, the
Director must notify the public and
make the proposed changes and the
information submitted by the CAFO
owner or operator available for public
review and comment. The process for
public comments, hearing requests, and
the hearing process if a hearing is held
must follow the procedures applicable
to draft permits set forth in 40 CFR
124.11 through 124.13. The Director
may establish, either by regulation or in
the CAFO’s permit, an appropriate
period of time for the public to
comment and request a hearing on the
proposed changes that differs from the
time period specified in 40 CFR 124.10.
The Director must respond to all
significant comments received during
the comment period as provided in 40
CFR 124.17, and require the CAFO
owner or operator to further revise the
nutrient management plan if necessary,
in order to approve the revision to the
terms of the nutrient management plan
incorporated into the CAFO’s permit.
Once the Director incorporates the
revised terms of the nutrient
management plan into the permit, the
Director must notify the owner or
operator and inform the public of the
final decision concerning revisions to
the terms and conditions of the permit.
(iii) Substantial changes to the terms
of a nutrient management plan
incorporated as terms and conditions of
a permit include, but are not limited to:
(A) Addition of new land application
areas not previously included in the
CAFO’s nutrient management plan.
Except that if the land application area
that is being added to the nutrient
management plan is covered by terms of
a nutrient management plan
incorporated into an existing NPDES
permit in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (e)(5) of this
section, and the CAFO owner or
operator applies manure, litter, or
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process wastewater on the newly added
land application area in accordance
with the existing field-specific permit
terms applicable to the newly added
land application area, such addition of
new land would be a change to the new
CAFO owner or operator’s nutrient
management plan but not a substantial
change for purposes of this section;
(B) Any changes to the field-specific
maximum annual rates for land
application, as set forth in paragraphs
(e)(5)(i) of this section, and to the
maximum amounts of nitrogen and
phosphorus derived from all sources for
each crop, as set forth in paragraph
(e)(5)(ii) of this section;
(C) Addition of any crop or other uses
not included in the terms of the CAFO’s
nutrient management plan and
corresponding field-specific rates of
application expressed in accordance
with paragraph (e)(5) of this section; and
(D) Changes to site-specific
components of the CAFO’s nutrient
management plan, where such changes
are likely to increase the risk of nitrogen
and phosphorus transport to waters of
the U.S.
(iv) For EPA-issued permits only.
Upon incorporation of the revised terms
of the nutrient management plan into
the permit, 40 CFR 124.19 specifies
procedures for appeal of the permit
decision. In addition to the procedures
specified at 40 CFR 124.19, a person
must have submitted comments or
participated in the public hearing in
order to appeal the permit decision.
■ 8. Section 122.62 is amended by
adding paragraph (a)(17) to read as
follows:
§ 122.62 Modification or revocation and
reissuance of permits (applicable to State
programs, see § 123.25)
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(17) Nutrient Management Plans. The
incorporation of the terms of a CAFO’s
nutrient management plan into the
terms and conditions of a general permit
when a CAFO obtains coverage under a
general permit in accordance with
§§ 122.23(h) and 122.28 is not a cause
for modification pursuant to the
requirements of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Section 122.63 is amended by
adding paragraph (h) to read as follows:
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*
§ 122.63
Minor modification of permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Incorporate changes to the terms of
a CAFO’s nutrient management plan
that have been revised in accordance
with the requirements of § 122.42(e)(6).
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Jkt 217001
PART 412—CONCENTRATED ANIMAL
FEEDING OPERATIONS (CAFO) POINT
SOURCE CATEGORY
10. The authority citation for part 412
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1311, 1314, 1316,
1317, 1318, 1342, and 1361.
11. Section 412.37 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 412.37
Additional measures.
(a) * * *
(2) Depth marker. All open surface
liquid impoundments must have a
depth marker which clearly indicates
the minimum capacity necessary to
contain the runoff and direct
precipitation of the 25-year, 24-hour
rainfall event. In the case of new sources
subject to effluent limitations
established pursuant to § 412.46(a)(1) of
this part, all open surface manure
storage structures associated with such
sources must include a depth marker
which clearly indicates the minimum
capacity necessary to contain the
maximum runoff and direct
precipitation associated with the design
storm used in sizing the impoundment
for no discharge.
■ 12. Section 412.46 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1), (d), and (e) to
read as follows:
§ 412.46 New source performance
standards (NSPS).
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) Any CAFO subject to this subpart
may request that the Director establish
NPDES permit best management
practice effluent limitations designed to
ensure no discharge of manure, litter, or
process wastewater based upon a sitespecific evaluation of the CAFO’s open
surface manure storage structure. The
NPDES permit best management
practice effluent limitations must
address the CAFO’s entire production
area. In the case of any CAFO using an
open surface manure storage structure
for which the Director establishes such
effluent limitations, ‘‘no discharge of
manure, litter, or process wastewater
pollutants,’’ as used in this section,
means that the storage structure is
designed, operated, and maintained in
accordance with best management
practices established by the Director on
a site-specific basis after a technical
evaluation of the storage structure. The
technical evaluation must address the
following elements:
(i) Information to be used in the
design of the open manure storage
structure including, but not limited to,
the following: minimum storage periods
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70485
for rainy seasons, additional minimum
capacity for chronic rainfalls, applicable
technical standards that prohibit or
otherwise limit land application to
frozen, saturated, or snow-covered
ground, planned emptying and
dewatering schedules consistent with
the CAFO’s Nutrient Management Plan,
additional storage capacity for manure
intended to be transferred to another
recipient at a later time, and any other
factors that would affect the sizing of
the open manure storage structure.
(ii) The design of the open manure
storage structure as determined by the
most recent version of the National
Resource Conservation Service’s Animal
Waste Management (AWM) software.
CAFOs may use equivalent design
software or procedures as approved by
the Director.
(iii) All inputs used in the open
manure storage structure design
including actual climate data for the
previous 30 years consisting of
historical average monthly precipitation
and evaporation values, the number and
types of animals, anticipated animal
sizes or weights, any added water and
bedding, any other process wastewater,
and the size and condition of outside
areas exposed to rainfall and
contributing runoff to the open manure
storage structure.
(iv) The planned minimum period of
storage in months including, but not
limited to, the factors for designing an
open manure storage structure listed in
paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section.
Alternatively the CAFO may determine
the minimum period of storage by
specifying times the storage pond will
be emptied consistent with the CAFO’s
Nutrient Management Plan.
(v) Site-specific predicted design
specifications including dimensions of
the storage facility, daily manure and
wastewater additions, the size and
characteristics of the land application
areas, and the total calculated storage
period in months.
(vi) An evaluation of the adequacy of
the designed manure storage structure
using the most recent version of the Soil
Plant Air Water (SPAW) Hydrology
Tool. The evaluation must include all
inputs to SPAW including but not
limited to daily precipitation,
temperature, and evaporation data for
the previous 100 years, user-specified
soil profiles representative of the
CAFO’s land application areas, planned
crop rotations consistent with the
CAFO’s Nutrient Management Plan, and
the final modeled result of no overflows
from the designed open manure storage
structure. For those CAFOs where 100
years of local weather data for the
CAFO’s location is not available, CAFOs
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may use a simulation with a confidence
interval analysis conducted over a
period of 100 years. The Director may
approve equivalent evaluation and
simulation procedures.
(vii) The Director may waive the
requirement of (a)(1)(vi) for a sitespecific evaluation of the designed
manure storage structure and instead
authorize a CAFO to use a technical
evaluation developed for a class of
specific facilities within a specified
geographical area.
(viii) Waste management and storage
facilities designed, constructed,
operated, and maintained consistent
with the analysis conducted in
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (a)(1)(vii) of
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this section and operated in accordance
with the additional measures and
records required by § 412.47(a) and (b),
will fulfill the requirements of this
section.
(ix) The Director has the discretion to
request additional information to
support a request for effluent limitations
based on a site-specific open surface
manure storage structure.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Any source subject to this subpart
that commenced discharging after April
14, 1993, and prior to April 14, 2003,
which was a new source subject to the
standards specified in § 412.15, revised
as of July 1, 2002, must continue to
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achieve those standards for the
applicable time period specified in 40
CFR 122.29(d)(1). Thereafter, the source
must achieve the standards specified in
§ 412.43(a) and (b).
(e) Any source subject to this subpart
that commenced discharging after April
14, 2003, and prior to January 20, 2009,
which was a new source subject to the
standards specified in § 412.46(a)
through (d) in the July 1, 2008, edition
of 40 CFR part 439, must continue to
achieve those standards for the
applicable time period specified in 40
CFR 122.29(d)(1).
[FR Doc. E8–26620 Filed 11–19–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 225 (Thursday, November 20, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 70418-70486]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-26620]
[[Page 70417]]
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Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Parts 9, 122, and 412
Revised National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit
Regulation and Effluent Limitations Guidelines for Concentrated Animal
Feeding Operations in Response to the Waterkeeper Decision; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 225 / Thursday, November 20, 2008 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 70418]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 9, 122, and 412
[EPA-HQ-OW-2005-0037; FRL-8738-9]
RIN 2040-AE80
Revised National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit
Regulation and Effluent Limitations Guidelines for Concentrated Animal
Feeding Operations in Response to the Waterkeeper Decision
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (Clean Water Act
or CWA), EPA is revising the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System (NPDES) permitting requirements and Effluent Limitations
Guidelines and Standards (ELGs) for concentrated animal feeding
operations (CAFOs) in response to the order issued by the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit in Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v. EPA,
399 F.3d 486 (2d Cir. 2005). This final rule responds to the court
order while furthering the statutory goal of restoring and maintaining
the nation's water quality by ensuring that CAFOs properly manage
manure generated by their operations.
This final rule revises several aspects of EPA's current
regulations governing discharges from CAFOs. EPA is modifying the
requirement to apply for a permit by specifying that an owner or
operator of a CAFO that discharges or proposes to discharge must apply
for an NPDES permit. The final rule also includes an option for an
unpermitted CAFO to certify to the permitting authority that the CAFO
does not discharge or propose to discharge. In addition, EPA is
clarifying how the agricultural stormwater discharge exemption criteria
are interpreted for unpermitted Large CAFOs. EPA is also requiring
CAFOs seeking permit coverage to submit their nutrient management plans
(NMPs) with their applications for individual permits or notices of
intent to be authorized under general permits. Permitting authorities
are required to review the NMPs and provide the public with an
opportunity for meaningful public review and comment. Permitting
authorities are also required to incorporate terms of NMPs as NPDES
permit conditions. Additionally, this action removes the provision that
allowed CAFOs to use a 100-year, 24-hour containment structure to
fulfill the no discharge requirement for new source swine, poultry, and
veal calf operations. Instead, this action authorizes permit writers,
upon request by swine, poultry, and veal calf CAFOs that are new
sources, to establish best management practice no discharge effluent
limitations when the facility demonstrates that it has designed an open
containment system that will comply with the no discharge requirements.
This final rule also responds to the court's remand orders
regarding water quality-based effluent limitations (WQBELs) and
pathogens. EPA is clarifying that WQBELs may be required in permits
with respect to production area discharges and discharges from land
application areas that are not exempt as agricultural stormwater.
Finally, EPA is making the finding that the best conventional
technology (BCT) limitations established in 2003 also apply to fecal
coliform.
DATES: These final regulations are effective December 22, 2008. For
judicial review purposes, this final rule is promulgated as of 1 p.m.
Eastern Daylight Time, on December 4, 2008, as provided in 40 CFR 23.2.
ADDRESSES: The record for this rulemaking is available for inspection
and copying at the Water Docket, located at the EPA Docket Center (EPA/
DC), EPA West 1301 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20004. The
record is also available via EPA Dockets at https://www.regulations.gov
under docket number OW-2005-0037. The rule and key supporting documents
are also available electronically on the Internet at https://
www.epa.gov/npdes/caforule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information contact
Rebecca Roose, Water Permits Division, Office of Wastewater Management
(4203M), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, telephone number: (202) 564-0758, e-mail address:
roose.rebecca@epa.gov. For additional information specific to New
Source Performance Standards and BCT Limitations contact Paul Shriner,
Engineering and Analysis Division, Office of Science and Technology
(4303T), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, telephone number: (202) 566-1076, e-mail address:
shriner.paul@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does This Action Apply to Me?
B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document and Other Related
Information?
C. Under What Legal Authority Is this Final Rule Issued?
D. What Is the Comment Response Document?
II. Background
A. The Clean Water Act
B. History of Actions To Address CAFOs Under the NPDES
Permitting Program
C. Ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
D. What Requirements Still Apply to CAFOs?
E. EPA's Response to the Waterkeeper Decision
III. The Final Rule: Revisions to the 2003 CAFO Rule in Response to
Waterkeeper
A. Duty to Apply for a Permit
B. Agricultural Stormwater Exemption
C. Nutrient Management Plans
D. Compliance Dates
E. Water Quality-Based Effluent Limitations
F. New Source Performance Standards for Subpart D Facilities
G. BCT Limitations for Fecal Coliform
IV. Impact Analysis
A. Environmental Impacts
B. Administrative Burden Impacts
C. Response to Public Comment on the Proposal
V. Cross-Media Considerations and Pathogens
A. Cross-Media Approaches
B. Pathogens and Animal Feeding Operations
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Congressional Review Act
I. General Information
A. Does This Action Apply to Me?
This action applies to concentrated animal feeding operations
(CAFOs) as specified in section 502(14) of the Clean Water Act (CWA),
33 U.S.C. 1362(14) and defined in the NPDES regulations at 40 CFR
122.23. Table 1.1 provides a list of standard industrial codes for
operations potentially regulated under this revised rule. The rule also
applies to States and Tribes with authorized NPDES Programs.
[[Page 70419]]
Table 1.1--Operations Potentially Regulated by this Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North American Standard
Industry Industrial
Category Examples of regulated entities Classification Classification
System (NAICS) (SIC)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry............................... Operators of animal production
operations that meet the
definition of a CAFO:
Beef cattle feedlots (including 112112 0211
veal calves).
Beef cattle ranching and farming 112111 0212
Hogs............................ 11221 0213
Sheep and Goats................. 11241, 11242 0214
General livestock except dairy 11299 0219
and poultry.
Dairy farms..................... 11212 0241
Broilers, fryers, and roaster 11232 0251
chickens.
Chicken eggs.................... 11231 0252
Turkey and turkey eggs.......... 11233 0253
Poultry hatcheries.............. 11234 0254
Poultry and eggs................ 11239 0259
Ducks........................... 11239 0259
Horses and other equines........ 11292 0272
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this
action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware
could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities
not listed in the table could also be regulated. To determine whether
your facility is regulated under this rulemaking, you should carefully
examine the applicability criteria in Sec. 122.23. If you have
questions regarding the applicability of this action to a particular
entity, consult the person listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
B. How Can I Get Copies of This Document and Other Related Information?
1. Docket. EPA has established an official public docket for this
action under Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2005-0037. The official public
docket consists of the documents specifically referenced in this
action, any public comments received, and other information related to
this action. Although listed in the index, some information is not
publicly available, e.g., Confidential Business Information (CBI) or
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain
other material, such as copyrighted material, will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically in www.regulations.gov or in hard copy
at the Water Docket in the EPA Docket Center, EPA West, 1301
Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC. The Public Reading Room is open
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202)
566-1744, and the telephone number for the Water Docket is (202) 566-
2426.
2. Electronic Access. This Federal Register document and key
supporting documents are also electronically available on the Internet
at https://www.epa.gov/npdes/agriculture.
C. Under What Legal Authority Is This Final Rule Issued?
This final rule is issued under the authority of sections 101, 301,
304, 306, 308, 402, and 501 of the CWA. 33 U.S.C. 1251, 1311, 1314,
1316, 1317, 1318, 1342, and 1361.
D. What Is the Comment Response Document?
EPA received a large number of comments on the 2006 proposed rule
(71 FR 37,744-87; June 20, 2006) and the 2008 supplemental proposal (73
FR 12,321-40; March 7, 2008). EPA evaluated all of the comments
submitted and prepared a Comment Response Document containing both the
comments received and the Agency's responses to those comments. The
Comment Response Document complements and supplements this preamble by
providing more detailed explanations of EPA's final action. The Comment
Response Document is available in the Docket.
II. Background
A. The Clean Water Act
Congress enacted the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (1972),
also known as the Clean Water Act (CWA), to ``restore and maintain the
chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters''
(CWA section 101(a)). Among the core provisions, the CWA establishes
the NPDES permit program to authorize and regulate the discharge of
pollutants from point sources to waters of the U.S. (CWA section 402).
Section 502(14) of the CWA specifically includes CAFOs in the
definition of the term ``point source.'' Section 502(12) defines the
term ``discharge of a pollutant'' to mean ``any addition of any
pollutant to navigable waters from any point source'' (emphasis added).
EPA has issued comprehensive regulations that implement the NPDES
program at 40 CFR part 122. The Act also provides for the development
of technology-based and water quality-based effluent limitations that
are imposed through NPDES permits to control the discharge of
pollutants from point sources. CWA sections 301(a) and (b).
B. History of Actions To Address CAFOs Under the NPDES Permitting
Program
EPA began regulating discharges of wastewater and manure from CAFOs
in the 1970s. EPA initially issued national effluent limitations
guidelines and standards for feedlots on February 14, 1974 (39 FR
5704), and NPDES CAFO regulations on March 18, 1976 (41 FR 11,458).
In February 2003, EPA issued revisions to these regulations that
focused on the 5% of the nation's animal feeding operations (AFOs) that
presented the highest risk of impairing water quality and public health
(68 FR 7176-7274; February 12, 2003) (``the 2003 CAFO rule''). The 2003
CAFO rule required the owners or operators of all CAFOs\1\ to seek
coverage under an NPDES permit, unless they demonstrated no potential
to discharge.
[[Page 70420]]
A number of CAFO industry organizations (American Farm Bureau
Federation, National Pork Producers Council, National Chicken Council,
and National Turkey Federation (NTF), although NTF later withdrew its
petition) and several environmental groups (Waterkeeper Alliance,
Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, and American Littoral
Society) filed petitions for judicial review of certain aspects of the
2003 CAFO rule. This case was brought before the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit. On February 28, 2005, the court ruled on these
petitions and upheld most provisions of the 2003 rule but vacated and
remanded others. Waterkeeper Alliance, et al. v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486 (2d
Cir. 2005). The court's decision is described in detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Clean Water Act regulates the conduct of persons, which
includes the owners and operators of CAFOs, rather than the
facilities or their discharges. To improve readability in this
preamble, reference is made to ``CAFOs'' as well as ``owners'' and
``operators'' of CAFOs. No change in meaning is intended.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The revisions to the 2003 CAFO rule being published today relate
directly to the changes required by the court's decision and continue
to maintain the focus on regulating discharges from the universe of
high-risk AFOs.
C. Ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
The Second Circuit's decision in Waterkeeper upheld certain
challenged provisions of the 2003 rule and vacated or remanded others,
as follows.
1. Issues Upheld by the Court
This section discusses provisions of the 2003 CAFO rule that were
challenged by either industry or environmental petitioners, but were
upheld by the Waterkeeper Court and therefore remain unchanged. EPA is
not revising any of these provisions and did not solicit comment on
them.
(a) Land Application Regulatory Framework and Interpretation of
``Agricultural Stormwater''
The Waterkeeper Court upheld EPA's authority to regulate, through
NPDES permits, the discharge of manure, litter, or process wastewater
that a CAFO applies to its land application area. The court rejected
the industry petitioners' claim that land application runoff must be
channelized before it can be considered to be a point source discharge
subject to permitting. The court noted that the CWA expressly defines
the term ``point source'' to include ``any * * * concentrated animal
feeding operation * * * from which pollutants are or may be
discharged,'' and found that the Act ``not only permits, but demands''
that land application discharges be construed as discharges ``from'' a
CAFO. 399 F.3d at 510.
The Waterkeeper Court also upheld EPA's determination in the 2003
CAFO rule that precipitation-related discharges of manure, litter, or
process wastewater from land application areas under the control of a
CAFO qualify as ``agricultural stormwater'' only where the CAFO has
applied the manure in accordance with nutrient management practices
that ensure ``appropriate agricultural utilization'' of the manure,
litter, or process wastewater nutrients. EPA's interpretation of the
Act in this regard was reasonable, the court found, in light of
Congressional intent in excluding agricultural stormwater from the
meaning of the term ``point source'' and given the precedent set in an
earlier Second Circuit case, Concerned Area Residents for the
Environment v. Southview Farm, 34 F.3d 114 (2d Cir. 1994). 399 F.3d at
508-09.
(b) Effluent Guidelines
The court rejected the environmental organizations' claim that EPA,
in developing best available technology effluent limitations
guidelines, had failed to consider the single best performing CAFO and
adopt limitations that reflected its performance. The court found that
EPA had collected extensive data on the waste management systems at
CAFOs and had considered approximately 11,000 public comments on the
proposed CAFO rule. The court determined that EPA had either adopted as
the basis for its limitations the best performing technology or
declined to do so for permissible reasons. 399 F.3d at 513.
The court upheld EPA's decision in the 2003 rule relating to
groundwater controls. In the 2003 rule, EPA stated that the Agency
believed that requirements limiting the discharge of pollutants to
surface water via groundwater that has a direct hydrologic connection
to surface water should be addressed on a site-specific basis. The
Agency also stated that nothing in the 2003 rule was to be construed to
expand, diminish, or otherwise affect the jurisdiction of the CWA over
discharges to surface water via groundwater that has a direct
hydrologic connection to surface water. 399 F.3d at 514-15.
The court upheld the analytic methodologies that EPA used for
determining whether the technology-based permit requirements for CAFOs
set in the 2003 rule would be economically achievable by the industry
as a whole. 399 F.3d at 515-18.
2. Issues Vacated by the Court
The following are the elements of the 2003 rule that the
Waterkeeper Court found to be unlawful and therefore vacated.
(a) Duty To Apply
The CAFO industry organizations argued that EPA exceeded its
statutory authority by requiring all CAFOs to either apply for NPDES
permits or demonstrate that they have no potential to discharge. The
court agreed with the CAFO industry petitioners on this issue and
therefore vacated the ``duty to apply'' provision of the 2003 CAFO
rule.
The court found that the duty to apply, based on the potential to
discharge, was invalid because the CWA subjects only actual discharges
to permitting requirements rather than potential discharges. The court
acknowledged EPA's policy considerations for seeking to impose a duty
to apply based on the potential to discharge but found that the Agency
lacked statutory authority to do so. 399 F.3d at 505.
(b) Nutrient Management Plans (NMPs)
The court concluded that the 2003 CAFO rule impermissibly: (1)
Empowered permitting authorities to issue permits without any
meaningful review of a CAFO's NMP, (2) failed to require that the terms
of the nutrient management plan be included as effluent limitations in
the NPDES permit, and (3) violated the CWA's public participation
requirements. The court agreed with the environmental petitioners on
these three issues.
The court relied on provisions of the Act that authorize point
source discharges only where NPDES permits ``ensure that every
discharge of pollutants will comply with all applicable effluent
limitations and standards,'' citing CWA sections 402(a)(1), (a)(2), and
(b). Because the 2003 CAFO rule did not provide for permitting
authority review of a CAFO's nutrient management plan before the permit
was issued, the court found that the rule did not ensure that each
CAFO's discharges comply with these CWA provisions. The court also
found that the terms of the NMP themselves are ``effluent limitations''
as that term is defined in the Act and therefore must be made part of
the permit and be enforceable as required under CWA sections 301 and
402. The court also held that as effluent limitations, those terms must
be made available for public review. 399 F.3d at 499-502.
3. Issues Remanded by the Court
The Waterkeeper Court also remanded other aspects of the CAFO rule
to EPA ``for further clarification and analysis.''
[[Page 70421]]
(a) Water Quality-Based Effluent Limits
The court agreed with EPA that agricultural stormwater is excluded
from the meaning of the term ``point source'' and therefore is not
subject to water quality-based effluent limitations in permits.
However, the court directed EPA to ``clarify the statutory and
evidentiary basis for failing to promulgate water quality-based
effluent limitations for discharges other than agricultural stormwater
discharges as that term is defined in 40 CFR 122.23(e),'' and to
``clarify whether States may develop water quality-based effluent
limitations on their own.'' 399 F.3d at 524.
(b) New Source Performance Standards--100-Year Storm Standard
The 2003 CAFO rule set new source performance standards (NSPS) for
swine, poultry, and veal calf CAFOs at no discharge. A CAFO in these
categories could fulfill this requirement by showing that either (1)
its production area was designed to contain all manure, litter, or
process wastewater, and precipitation from a 100-year, 24-hour storm,
or (2) it would comply with ``voluntary superior environmental
performance standards'' based on innovative technologies, under which a
discharge from the production area would be allowed if it was
accompanied by an equivalent or greater reduction in the quantity of
pollutants released to other media (e.g., air emissions). The court
found that EPA had neither justified in the record nor provided an
adequate opportunity for public comment for either of these provisions.
As a result, the court remanded these provisions to EPA to clarify, via
a process that adequately involves the public, the statutory and
evidentiary basis for them. 399 F.3d at 520-21.
(c) BCT Effluent Guidelines for Pathogens
The court held that the 2003 CAFO rule violated the CWA because EPA
had not made an affirmative finding that the BCT-based Effluent
Limitations Guidelines (ELGs), i.e., the ``best conventional
technology'' guidelines for conventional pollutants such as fecal
coliform, do in fact represent BCT for pathogens. The court remanded
this issue to EPA for such a finding. 399 F.3d at 519.
D. What Requirements Still Apply to CAFOs?
The Waterkeeper decision either upheld or did not address most
provisions of the 2003 CAFO rule. This section describes certain key
portions of the rule that were not challenged in Waterkeeper. These
unchallenged provisions are addressed in this final rule only to
provide background information and are not in any way reopened or
affected by this rulemaking.
The definitions provided in 40 CFR 122.23(b) of the 2003 CAFO rule
remain in effect and are unchanged. First, an operation must be defined
as an animal feeding operation (AFO) before it can be defined as a
concentrated animal feeding operation (CAFO). 40 CFR 122.23. The term
``animal feeding operation'' is defined by EPA regulation as a ``lot or
facility'' where animals ``have been, are or will be stabled or
confined and fed or maintained for a total of 45 days or more in any 12
month period and crops, vegetation, forage growth, or post harvest
residues are not sustained in the normal growing season over any
portion of the lot or facility.''
Whether an AFO is a CAFO depends primarily on the number of animals
confined, which is also unchanged. Large CAFOs are AFOs that confine
more than the threshold number of animals detailed in 40 CFR
122.23(b)(4). Medium CAFOs confine fewer animals than Large CAFOs and
also: (1) Discharge pollutants into waters of the U.S. through a man-
made ditch, flushing system, or other similar man-made device; or (2)
discharge pollutants into waters of the U.S. which originate outside of
and pass over, across, or through the facility or otherwise come into
direct contact with the confined animals. 40 CFR 122.23(b)(6)(ii). The
NPDES permitting authority also may, on a case-by-case basis, designate
any medium or small AFO, as a CAFO after conducting an on-site
inspection and finding that the facility ``is a significant contributor
of pollutants to waters of the United States.'' 40 CFR 122.23(c). The
permitting authority may not exercise its authority to designate a
small AFO as a CAFO unless pollutants are discharged into waters of the
U.S. through a man-made ditch, flushing system, or other similar man-
made device, or are discharged into waters of the U.S. which originate
outside of the facility and pass over, across, or through the facility
or otherwise come into direct contact with the animals confined in the
operation. 40 CFR 122.23(c)(3).
As previously described, the court upheld EPA's definition of
``agricultural stormwater discharge'' in relation to discharges from
land application areas under the control of a CAFO in 40 CFR 122.23(e).
Discharges of manure, litter, or process wastewater from land
application areas under the control of a CAFO are discharges from the
CAFO (i.e., point source discharges) unless they are agricultural
stormwater discharges, which are exempt from permit requirements.
Section 122.23(e) provides that precipitation-related discharges of
manure, litter, or process wastewater from a CAFO's land application
areas are agricultural stormwater discharges, provided that ``the
manure, litter, or process wastewater has been applied in accordance
with site-specific nutrient management practices that ensure
appropriate agricultural utilization of the nutrients in the manure,
litter, or process wastewater, as specified in Sec. 122.42(e)(1)(vi)-
(ix).''
The court ruling also did not affect the nutrient management
planning requirements for permitted CAFOs established in the 2003 CAFO
rule. All CAFOs that apply for permits must develop and implement an
NMP that meets the requirements of 40 CFR 122.42(e) and, for Large
CAFOs subject to 40 CFR part 412, subpart C or D, 40 CFR 412.4. The NMP
identifies the necessary actions to ensure that runoff is eliminated or
minimized through proper and effective manure, litter, or process
wastewater management, including compliance with the ELGs as
applicable. Permitted CAFOs must comply with all applicable
recordkeeping and reporting requirements, including those specified in
Sec. 122.42(e).
The court ruling also did not affect the ELG requirements for Large
CAFOs, with the exception of new source performance standards (NSPS)
for swine, poultry, and veal calf operations. ELG requirements ensure
the appropriate storage of manure, litter, and process wastewater and
proper land application practices. They vary depending upon the type of
animals confined: Subpart A for horses and sheep; subpart B for ducks;
subpart C for dairy cattle, heifers, steers, and bulls; and subpart D
for swine, poultry, and veal calves. 40 CFR part 412. Additionally,
NSPS for beef and dairy operations were not affected by the decision
and remain unchanged (40 CFR 412.35).
Permitted small and medium CAFOs are not subject to the ELGs
specified in part 412. Rather, they must comply with technology-based
requirements developed by the permitting authority on a case-by-case
basis (i.e., best professional judgment (BPJ)), pursuant to CWA section
402(a)(1)(B) and as defined in 40 CFR 125.3(c)(2) and (d).
E. EPA's Response to the Waterkeeper Decision
On June 30, 2006, EPA published a proposed rule to revise the
Agency's regulations governing discharges from
[[Page 70422]]
CAFO's in response to the Waterkeeper decision. 71 FR 37,744. In
summary, EPA proposed to require only owners or operators of those
CAFOs that discharge or propose to discharge to seek authorization to
discharge under a permit. Second, EPA proposed to require CAFOs seeking
authorization to discharge under individual permits to submit their
NMPs with their permit applications or, under general permits, with
their notices of intent. Permitting authorities would be required to
review the NMP and provide the public with an opportunity for
meaningful public review and comment. Permitting authorities would also
be required to incorporate terms of the NMP as NPDES permit
requirements. Additionally, EPA proposed a process for modifying a
CAFO's NPDES permit to incorporate changes to the NMP during the permit
term by designating permit modifications in accordance with that
process to be ``minor modifications of permits'' under 40 CFR 122.63.
The 2006 proposed rule also addressed the remand of issues for further
clarification and analysis. These issues concerned clarifications
regarding the applicability of water quality-based effluent limitations
(WQBELs) to CAFO discharges; NSPS for swine, poultry, and veal CAFOs;
and BCT effluent limitations guidelines for fecal coliform.
A March 7, 2008, Federal Register notice supplemented the 2006
proposed rule by proposing additional options considered by EPA for
inclusion in this final rule in response to the Second Circuit's
decision in the Waterkeeper decision. In that notice, EPA proposed a
voluntary option for a CAFO to certify that the CAFO does not discharge
or propose to discharge based on an objective assessment of the CAFO's
design, construction, operation, and maintenance. EPA also proposed a
framework for identifying the terms of the NMP and three alternative
approaches for addressing rates of application of manure, litter, and
process wastewater when identifying terms of the NMP to be included in
the permit. In the 2008 supplemental proposal, EPA sought comment only
on the issues presented in the 2008 supplemental proposal.
In addition to the changes made through this rulemaking, EPA
extended certain deadlines in the NPDES permitting requirements and
ELGs in two separate rulemakings in order to allow the Agency adequate
time to complete this rulemaking in response to the Waterkeeper
decision, in advance of those deadlines. The principal purpose of these
rulemakings was to provide additional time for the Agency to complete
this final rule. Neither of these date extension rules addressed any of
the substantive issues addressed in this final rule or promulgated any
provisions in response to the Waterkeeper decision. The first rule
revised dates established in the 2003 CAFO rule by which facilities
newly defined as CAFOs were required to seek permit coverage and by
which all CAFOs were required to develop and implement nutrient
management plans. 71 FR 6978-84 (February 10, 2006). EPA extended the
date by which operations defined as CAFOs as of April 14, 2003, that
were not defined as CAFOs prior to that date, were required to seek
NPDES permit coverage, from February 13, 2006, to July 31, 2007. EPA
also amended the date by which operations that become defined as CAFOs
after April 14, 2003, due to operational changes that would not have
made them a CAFO prior to April 14, 2003, and that are not new sources,
were required to seek NPDES permit coverage, from April 13, 2006, to
July 31, 2007. Finally, EPA extended the deadline by which CAFOs were
required to develop and implement nutrient management plans, from
December 31, 2006, to July 31, 2007. That rulemaking revised all
references to the date by which CAFOs must develop and implement NMPs
as specified in the 2003 CAFO rule.
As a result of the extensive array of public comments on the issues
raised by the Waterkeeper decision, EPA was unable to complete this
final rule prior to July 31, 2007. Thus, EPA published a second
revision of the compliance dates on July 24, 2007, extending the dates
from July 31, 2007, to February 27, 2009. The preamble to the second
date change rule explained EPA's belief that the February 27, 2009,
deadlines were appropriate because they would provide additional time
for States, the regulated community, and other stakeholders to adjust
to the new regulatory requirements. See 72 FR 40,245-50. In the 2008
supplemental rule, EPA requested comment on further extending the
compliance deadline. For additional discussion of compliance dates, see
section III.D of this preamble.
III. The Final Rule: Revisions to the 2003 CAFO Rule in Response to
Waterkeeper
This final rule responds to the Second Circuit Court's vacature and
remand orders.
A. Duty To Apply for a Permit
1. Provisions in the 2003 CAFO Rule
(a) Duty To Apply
The 2003 CAFO rule required all CAFOs to seek authorization to
discharge under an NPDES permit unless the Director, i.e., the
permitting authority, determined that the CAFO had no potential to
discharge.
(b) ``No Potential To Discharge'' Determination
The 2003 CAFO rule included a process for CAFOs to seek a ``no
potential to discharge'' determination by the Director. Where the
Director determined, based on information supplied by the CAFO
operator, that a CAFO had no potential to discharge manure, litter, or
process wastewater to waters of the U.S., the CAFO operator had no duty
to apply for a permit, unless circumstances at the facility changed
such that the facility would have the potential to discharge. Examples
of facilities that possibly would have qualified for this exemption
included facilities in very arid areas, facilities that are down slope
from waters of the U.S., and facilities with completely enclosed
operations.
2. Summary of the Second Circuit Court Decision
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the provision that
required all CAFO owners or operators with a potential to discharge to
apply for an NPDES permit. The court held that the Clean Water Act
(CWA) authorizes EPA to require permits for the actual discharge of
pollutants, but not for mere potential discharges. Because the 2003
CAFO rule imposed an obligation on all CAFOs to either apply for an
NPDES permit or affirmatively demonstrate that they have no potential
to discharge, the court ruled that it exceeded EPA's authority under
the CWA. Waterkeeper Alliance et al. v. EPA, 399 F.3d 486, 506 (2d Cir.
2005).
3. This Final Rule
To address the court's decision on the duty to apply, EPA is
revising the 2003 CAFO rule in three ways:
Deleting the requirement that all CAFOs apply for an NPDES
permit to provide instead that all CAFOs that ``discharge or propose to
discharge'' have a duty to apply when they propose to discharge;
Eliminating the procedures for a no potential to discharge
determination; and
Establishing a voluntary option for unpermitted CAFOs to
certify that they
[[Page 70423]]
do not discharge or propose to discharge.
(a) Duty To Seek Permit Coverage
EPA proposed to replace the ``duty to apply'' requirement adopted
in the 2003 rule, which states that all CAFO owners or operators must
seek coverage under an NPDES permit unless they demonstrate ``no
potential to discharge'' (40 CFR 122.21(a)(1) and 40 CFR 122.23(a) and
40 CFR 122.23(d)(1)) with a modified ``duty to apply'' provision. The
2006 proposed rule would have required that all CAFOs that ``discharge
or propose to discharge'' seek coverage under an NPDES permit, which is
the same language that applies generally to point sources under
longstanding NPDES regulations at Sec. 122.21(a)(1).
This rule adopts the approach in the 2006 proposed rule by
replacing the ``duty to apply'' requirement of the 2003 rule with a
requirement that a CAFO that ``discharges or proposes to discharge''
must seek authorization to discharge under an NPDES permit. Because a
number of commenters misunderstood, or were confused by, the term
``propose to discharge,'' EPA is providing additional clarification in
this rule and preamble on how operators should evaluate whether they
discharge or propose to discharge. While commenters generally agreed
that the changes proposed by EPA were consistent with the Second
Circuit decision, some commenters thought that ``propose to discharge''
and ``potential to discharge'' were not sufficiently distinguishable,
and that ``proposed'' discharges could be understood as contrary to the
Waterkeeper court's holding that only ``actual'' discharges are subject
to CWA requirements.
EPA disagrees with these commenters. Including a duty to apply for
CAFOs that ``propose to discharge'' is not the same as requiring a
permit for CAFOs with only a ``potential to discharge.'' Unlike the
2003 rule, which categorically required a permit for any CAFO with a
``potential to discharge,'' this final rule calls for a case-by-case
evaluation by the CAFO owner or operator as to whether the CAFO
discharges or proposes to discharge from its production area or land
application area based on actual design, construction, operation, and
maintenance. ``Potential'' connotes the possibility that there might--
as opposed to will--be a discharge, which, as the Waterkeeper court
held, is not sufficient under the CWA to trigger NPDES permitting
requirements. In contrast to the 2003 rule, this rule requires a case-
by-case assessment by each CAFO to determine whether the CAFO in
question, due to its individual attributes, discharges or proposes to
discharge. Therefore, revised Sec. 122.23(d)(1) requires only CAFOs
that actually discharge to seek permit coverage and clarifies that a
CAFO proposes to discharge if based on an objective assessment it is
designed, constructed, operated, or maintained such that a discharge
will occur, not simply such that it might occur. Consistent with the
Waterkeeper decision, CAFOs that are required to seek permit coverage
must do so when they propose to discharge. (See below for discussion of
the provision relating to when a CAFO must seek permit coverage, 40 CFR
122.23(f).) Thus, it is the responsibility of the CAFO owner or
operator to seek authorization to discharge at the time they propose to
discharge. A CAFO that discharges without a permit is in violation of
the CWA section 301(a) prohibition on such discharges and additionally
has the burden of establishing that it did not propose to discharge
prior to the discharge (unless the permitting authority has a current,
complete certification from that CAFO as provided by 40 CFR
122.23(j)(2), discussed below). If it is determined that it did, in
fact, propose to discharge prior to the discharge (that is, it was
designed, constructed, operated, or maintained such that a discharge
would occur), it is also in violation of the Sec. 122.23(d)(1) duty to
apply. Section 122.23(j)(2) also clarifies how a CAFO may satisfy the
burden of establishing that it did not propose to discharge.
Under section 301(a) of the CWA, only those CAFO discharges
authorized by an NPDES permit (or otherwise authorized by the statute),
regardless of the volume or duration of the discharge, are allowed. Any
discharge from a CAFO, even one that is unplanned or accidental, is
illegal unless it is authorized by the terms of a permit or is
agricultural stormwater. While EPA recognizes that not every discharge
indicates that the CAFO will discharge in the future, an operator
should certainly consider any unplanned or accidental discharge that
may have occurred in the past in deciding whether to seek permit
coverage. CAFO operators must objectively assess whether a discharge
from the CAFO, including from the production area or land application
areas under the control of the CAFO, is occurring or will occur for
purposes of determining whether to obtain permit coverage.
It is well established that ``discharge'' is not limited to
continuous discharges of pollutants from a point source to waters of
the U.S., but also includes intermittent and sporadic discharges.
``Intermittent or sporadic violations do not cease to be ongoing until
the date when there is no real likelihood of repetition.'' Chesapeake
Bay Foundation v. Gwaltney of Smithfield, 890 F.2d 690, 693 (4th Cir.
1989). Such intermittent, sporadic, even occasional, discharges may in
fact be the norm for many CAFOs, but they are nonetheless
``discharges'' under the CWA and are prohibited unless authorized under
the terms of an NPDES permit. CAFOs that have had such intermittent or
sporadic discharges in the past would generally be expected to have
such discharges in the future, and therefore be expected to obtain a
permit, unless they have modified their design, construction,
operation, or maintenance in such a way as to prevent all discharges
from occurring.
EPA received a number of comments concerning past discharges. Some
commenters asserted that a prior discharge is not, by itself, a
sufficient basis for requiring a permit and observed that it is quite
possible that a CAFO may have eliminated the cause of the discharge.
EPA agrees that not every past discharge from a CAFO necessarily
triggers a duty to apply for a permit; however, a past discharge may
indicate that the CAFO discharges or proposes to discharge if the
conditions that gave rise to the discharge have not changed or been
corrected. See, e.g., Gwaltney of Smithfield. Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay
Foundation, 484 U.S. 49, 57 (1987) (``a reasonable likelihood that a
past polluter will continue to pollute in the future'' is a continuous
or intermittent violation); American Canoe Ass'n v. Murphy Farms, Inc.,
412 F.3d. 536 (4th Cir. 2005) (CWA violation continues where corrective
measures are insufficient to eliminate real likelihood of repeated
discharges). The same rationale that led the courts in these cases to
conclude that the point sources in question were discharging in
violation of the CWA underlies the final rule's requirement that CAFOs
must seek permit coverage when they discharge or propose to discharge
(i.e., are designed, constructed, operated, or maintained such that a
discharge will occur). Sections 122.23(d)(1) and (f).
An uncorrected past discharge is not the only indicator that
operators should consider in assessing whether the CAFO discharges or
proposes to discharge. Other key factors the operator should consider
include the proximity of the production area to waters of the U.S.,
whether the CAFO is upslope from waters of the U.S., and climatic
conditions. Similarly, the type of waste storage system, storage
capacity, quality
[[Page 70424]]
of construction, and presence and extent of built-in safeguards are
important factors. Standard operating procedures and level of
maintenance are also critical factors for the operator to consider when
assessing whether a CAFO discharges or proposes to discharge. Such
considerations contributed to EPA's decision to include in this final
rule an option for unpermitted CAFOs to certify that they do not
discharge or propose to discharge by meeting the criteria in 40 CFR
122.23(i)(2), discussed in detail below. EPA encourages unpermitted
CAFOs that choose not to certify to consider the set of criteria for
certification eligibility when deciding whether to seek permit
coverage, and this final rule provides in Sec. 122.23(j)(2) that these
same criteria may be used to establish that a CAFO did not propose to
discharge prior to a discharge occurring.
As a result of the revisions to 40 CFR 122.23(d) and (f), only
CAFOs that discharge or propose to discharge are required to seek
permit coverage, and a CAFO that proposes to discharge must seek
coverage as soon as it proposes to discharge in order to avoid having
unpermitted discharges. In the event of a discharge from an unpermitted
CAFO, the CAFO operator would be in violation of the CWA prohibition
against discharging without a permit. Under this final rule, if the
CAFO proposed to discharge prior to the discharge, the CAFO would also
be in violation of the requirement in Sec. 122.23(d)(1) and (f),
implementing sections 308 and 402 of the CWA, that CAFOs seek permit
coverage when they propose to discharge.
In revised Sec. 122.23(d)(1), EPA is clarifying that ``a CAFO
proposes to discharge if it is designed, constructed, operated, or
maintained such that a discharge will occur.'' EPA intends that the
CAFO operator should make an objective assessment of the operation to
determine whether the CAFO will discharge. Such an objective assessment
would take into account not only the characteristics of the manmade
aspects of the CAFO itself, but climatic, hydrological, topographical,
and other characteristics beyond the operator's control that impact
whether the CAFO will discharge, given the design, construction,
operation and maintenance of the CAFO.
To assist CAFO operators in making this objective assessment and to
provide assurance for CAFOs deciding not to seek permit coverage that
they are not required to obtain permit coverage, EPA is finalizing a
voluntary certification option, proposed in the 2008 supplemental
proposal. This option provides a means for a CAFO to certify that it
does not discharge or propose to discharge. The voluntary certification
provisions are discussed below in section III.A.3(c) of this preamble.
This rule is consistent with the Waterkeeper decision because the
duty to apply for a permit only arises when a CAFO discharges or
proposes to discharge, that is, when it discharges or is designed,
constructed, operated, or maintained such that a discharge will occur.
It is also consistent with Chesapeake Bay Foundation v. Gwaltney of
Smithfield, discussed above, which found a violation under the CWA
where it is reasonably likely that a discharge will occur due to
existing circumstances. This rule derives from sections 402(a)(3) and
308 of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1342(a)(3), 1318. Under section 402(a)(3),
EPA is required to establish a permit program that, among other things,
ensures compliance with all applicable requirements of sections 301
(requirements for establishing technology-based and water quality-based
effluent limitations), 306 (requirements for establishing new source
performance standards), 308 (requirements relating to inspections,
monitoring and entry, including requests for information to determine
compliance status or support development of effluent limitations) and
402 (NPDES permits).
Section 301(a) prohibits the discharge of pollutants, except in
compliance with specific provisions in the CWA. Particularly relevant
to CAFOs, section 301(b) provides that ``there shall be achieved''
effluent limitations controlling pollutants discharged from point
sources. Section 308(a) provides EPA broad authority to require the
owner or operator of any point source (including CAFOs) to provide
information necessary to develop effluent limitations, to ``carry out''
section 402, and to ``carry out'' the objectives of the Act, which are
set forth in CWA section 101(a). Under section 501(a) EPA is authorized
to prescribe ``such regulations as are necessary to carry out'' its
functions under the CWA. Any permit program established to carry out
section 402 must, of necessity, require point sources that discharge or
propose to discharge to submit information to allow the permitting
authority to determine prior to issuance of a permit what effluent
limitations should apply to a discharger and be included in its permit
(including providing the public and any other affected State notice and
opportunity for public comment, as required by section 402(b)(3)). It
is therefore reasonable for EPA to require those CAFOs that discharge
or propose to discharge to apply for NPDES permit coverage.
Some commenters on the 2006 proposed rule opposed regulating
entities that ``propose'' to discharge, or alternatively, suggested
that EPA should clarify that ``propose'' means ``intend'' or ``plan.''
While EPA acknowledges that ``propose'' to discharge could be
understood to mean ``intend'' or ``plan'' to discharge, under this
final rule ``propose to discharge'' means that the CAFO is designed,
constructed, operated, or maintained such that it will discharge. This
is consistent with the Waterkeeper decision because a mere
``potential'' to discharge is not sufficient to trigger the revised
duty to apply. Accordingly, as previously discussed, revised Sec.
122.23(d)(1) clarifies that ``a CAFO proposes to discharge if it is
designed, constructed, operated, or maintained such that a discharge
will occur.'' The CAFO's decision as to whether to apply for a permit
should be based on an objective assessment of conditions at that
operation. As discussed below, under this final rule, a CAFO that is
not designed, constructed, operated, or maintained in a manner such
that the CAFO does or will discharge is not required to seek permit
coverage under Sec. 122.23(d)(1) and may choose to take advantage of
the voluntary no discharge certification.
Some commenters on the 2006 proposed rule requested that EPA
specifically state in the regulation that facilities designed to the
25-year, 24-hour design standard have not ``proposed'' to discharge.
One commenter questioned whether existing operations should be required
to obtain permit coverage if they have installed structures and
production area BMPs using Natural Resources Conservation Service
(NRCS) standards and if they have been operating without discharging.
The commenter indicated that ``since EPA is requiring that a zero
discharge standard be met only for certain new CAFOs and not existing
CAFOs, it is unreasonable to expect all existing animal operations that
do not otherwise come under a permit to meet a zero discharge
standard.''
EPA disagrees that CAFOs designed for the 25-year, 24-hour storm
should be categorically excluded from the requirement to apply for a
permit simply based on their design standard. EPA also believes that it
is reasonable to expect unpermitted CAFOs to meet a zero discharge
standard. The CWA is very clear that point source discharges from CAFOs
are illegal unless the operator has applied for and obtained an NPDES
permit. Thus, ``zero discharge'' is the only standard to which EPA can
[[Page 70425]]
hold unpermitted CAFOs under the CWA. Large storms and chronic rainfall
events do occur and production areas built to the 25-year, 24-hour
storm design standard can and do discharge during precipitation events.
Under the CWA, as previously discussed, a violation of the prohibition
against discharging without a permit occurs even if the discharge was
not planned or intended. Conversely, in the event of a discharge from a
permitted CAFO, the discharge will not violate the CWA if the CAFO is
in compliance with its permit.
EPA notes that design is only one aspect for a CAFO to consider
when assessing whether or not to apply for a permit. Construction,
operation, and maintenance are equally important components of a CAFO's
operation and can make the difference between a CAFO that discharges
and one that does not. With regard to the commenter's question about
the applicability of NRCS standards, a CAFO's decision as to whether to
seek permit coverage should be based on an objective assessment of
conditions at the operation, including, but not limited to, the manure
storage design standard. EPA notes that whether or not a CAFO is
designed according to NRCS standards may be an important component of
the objective evaluation it undertakes to assess whether it is
designed, constructed, operated, or maintained such that a discharge
will occur. A CAFO that does not discharge or propose to discharge is
not required to seek permit coverage under Sec. 122.23(d)(1) and may
be eligible for no discharge certification under 40 CFR 122.23(i).
CAFO NPDES permit requirements include, but are not limited to,
best management practices (BMPs) to eliminate discharges from the
production area under most circumstances and to ensure appropriate
agricultural utilization of nutrients in manure, litter, and process
wastewater that is applied to land under the CAFO's control. EPA
expects that an unpermitted CAFO would also need to implement BMPs in
order to ensure that it does not discharge or propose to discharge.
However, in many, if not most, cases the BMPs called for will be more
rigorous than those required for permitted CAFOs, because the operator
of an unpermitted CAFO is never authorized to discharge under CWA
section 301(a). Permitted CAFOs have greater flexibility because, in
addition to being authorized to discharge under the circumstances
prescribed by the permit, other discharges can be excused when the
conditions contained in EPA's upset and/or bypass regulations are met.
See 40 CFR 122.41(m) and (n).
In contrast to commenters who believe that some non-discharging
CAFOs will needlessly go through the permitting process, other
commenters expressed concern that some CAFOs that should have permits
will not seek needed permit coverage. They contended that many CAFOs
are currently discharging without a permit and objected to having CAFOs
make the determination themselves as to whether or not they discharge
or propose to discharge, as such an approach would, in their view,
establish a self-permitting scheme. These commenters further contended
that the administrative record from the 2003 rule supports the
presumption that all Large CAFOs actually discharge and, therefore,
such CAFOs should be required to obtain a permit.
EPA does not agree that the rule establishes a self-permitting
scheme. As is the case with all point sources, it is up to the operator
to determine whether or not to apply for a permit in the first
instance, by assessing whether the point source (CAFO) discharges or
proposes to discharge. Point sources that do not discharge or propose
to discharge are not subject to CWA permitting requirements. See Sec.
122.21(a)(1). Regarding the administrative record for the 2003 rule,
that rule established a duty to apply for all CAFOs unless the CAFO
could demonstrate to the satisfaction of the permitting authority that
it had no ``potential to discharge.'' That provision was vacated by the
Second Circuit, which noted that EPA did not argue that the
administrative record supported a regulatory presumption that all Large
CAFOs actually discharge. 399 F.3d at 506, n.22. Thus, consistent with
the Waterkeeper decision, EPA is promulgating a rule which requires
those CAFOs that discharge or propose to discharge, but not CAFOs with
a mere ``potential'' to discharge, to seek permit coverage on a case-
by-case basis. With regard to the comments that EPA should establish a
categorical presumption that all Large CAFOs discharge, the Agency is
evaluating various options for exploring the nature of discharges from
Large CAFOs.
Finally, this rule revises the regulatory provisions for when a
CAFO must seek permit coverage and the duty to maintain permit coverage
for CAFOs. The final rule clarifies that those CAFOs that are required
under Sec. 122.23(d)(1) to seek permit coverage must do so ``when the
CAFO proposes to discharge,'' unless a later deadline, such as February
27, 2009, is specified for the specific category of operation. EPA is
recodifying 40 CFR 122.23(g) as Sec. 122.23(f) because the paragraph
codified as Sec. 122.23(f) in the 2003 rule is being removed. See
section III.A.3(b) of this preamble. Revised Sec. 122.23(f) is
consistent with the revised duty to apply requirement in Sec.
122.23(d)(1) and EPA's authority under sections 301, 308 and 402 of the
CWA to require CAFOs that actually discharge to seek permit coverage.
None of the specific timeframes for the various categories of CAFOs in
paragraphs (1)-(5) of Sec. 122.23(f), as amended by the 2007 date
change rule (72 FR 40,245), is affected by this rule. The revised
language in the introductory paragraph of Sec. 122.23(f) simply
conforms to the requirements of Sec. 122.23(d)(1).
EPA is making corresponding revisions to the regulatory text
requiring CAFOs to maintain permit coverage. Due to the fact that Sec.
122.23(f) as codified in 2003 is being removed, EPA is recodifying 40
CFR 122.23(h), ``Duty to Maintain Permit Coverage,'' as Sec.
122.23(g). See section III.A.3(b) of this preamble. Also, in the 2006
proposed rule, EPA proposed to revise this provision to address the
Waterkeeper court's decision vacating the requirement for all CAFOs to
seek permit coverage unless they obtained a no potential to discharge
determination. See 71 FR 37,785. In this final rule (as in the proposed
rule), a CAFO would not need to reapply based solely on the fact of
having had a permit, if the permit had been terminated in accordance
with the NPDES provisions at 40 CFR 122.64(b). Since a CAFO that
terminated permit coverage is no longer a permitted CAFO, it is not
subject to the duty to maintain permit coverage provision. Consistent
with the requirement that only CAFOs that discharge or propose to
discharge seek NPDES permit coverage, new Sec. 122.23(g) excludes
CAFOs that will not discharge or propose to discharge upon expiration
of the permit from the requirement to reapply 180 days in advance of
permit expiration.
(b) ``No Potential To Discharge'' Determination
In this final rule, EPA is deleting the regulatory provisions
adopted in the 2003 CAFO rule allowing CAFOs to demonstrate that they
have no potential to discharge and authorizing the Director to make
such a determination. 40 CFR 122.23(d)(2) and 122.23(f). Because EPA is
not requiring CAFOs to seek permit coverage based merely on potential
to discharge, this provision is no longer relevant to determining
whether or not a facility needs to seek permit coverage. This final
rule is
[[Page 70426]]
unchanged from the 2006 proposed rule in this respect.
Overall, most commenters supported eliminating the ``no potential
to discharge'' provisions in the CAFO regulations, noting that it is no
longer necessary because only CAFOs that discharge or propose to
discharge must apply for permits. One State observed that the ``no
potential to discharge'' criteria could still be useful to CAFOs in
determining whether they need to apply for a permit. While these
criteria may continue to be useful to CAFO owners and operators for
that purpose, EPA is eliminating these provisions from 40 CFR 122.23 of
the regulations.
(c) Voluntary No Discharge Certification
In this final rule, the Agency is adopting a new provision that
allows CAFOs to voluntarily certify that the CAFO does not discharge or
propose to discharge. As discussed above, EPA received several hundred
comments on the 2006 proposed rule related to how a CAFO operator would
decide whether to seek permit coverage under a revised rule that
requires CAFOs that discharge or propose to discharge to apply for a
permit or submit a Notice of Intent for coverage under a general
permit. Several commenters were particularly concerned with the
consequences for an unpermitted CAFO that has an ``accidental
discharge'' because they understood EPA's proposal to mean that a CAFO
that does not apply for a permit and subsequently has a discharge of
pollutants to waters of the U.S. would be liable for two violations,
one associated with the discharge itself and another violation for
failing to apply for a permit for authority to discharge. In response
to these comments, in the 2008 supplemental proposal, EPA requested
public comment on an option that would allow a CAFO that determines,
based on an objective assessment, that it does not discharge or propose
to discharge to certify to the permitting authority that it is
designed, constructed, operated, and maintained not to discharge. In
the unlikely event that a properly certified CAFO discharges (which
would constitute a violation of section 301(a) of the CWA), the CAFO
would not be liable for failing to apply for a permit prior to the
discharge in accordance with the permit application requirements of 40
CFR 122.23(d)(1) and (f).
EPA received many comments on the proposed voluntary certification
option. Commenters were divided, with some generally supportive and
others generally opposed to the concept of a voluntary certification
option for unpermitted CAFOs. Those in favor stated that certification
would assist CAFOs that do not discharge or propose to discharge by
providing a structured process for CAFOs to notify the permitting
authority that they are not required to seek permit coverage. Some
commenters opposed to certification believe the Agency's record
supports a regulatory presumption that all CAFOs discharge, and,
therefore, the no discharge certification process is a further
departure from the decision of the Waterkeeper court. The majority of
State permitting authorities commenting on the 2008 supplemental
proposal were opposed to the certification option, as proposed.
In this final rule, EPA has addressed both the decision from the
Waterkeeper court that CAFOs with only a potential to discharge are not
subject to NPDES permitting requirements and the concerns expressed by
commenters that some CAFOs may be uncertain as to whether they
discharge or propose to discharge. In the NPDES program, the first step
is for a point source to decide whether it needs to seek permit
coverage. Generally, the question of whether a point source needs
permit coverage is easily answered; indeed other point sources are
typically designed to discharge to waters of the U.S. After careful
consideration of the comments and in light of the unique
characteristics of CAFOs among point sources, EPA has concluded that
providing a voluntary option for unpermitted CAFOs to certify to the
Director that the CAFO does not discharge or propose to discharge based
on an objective assessment of the CAFO's design, construction,
operation, and maintenance is reasonable and appropriate for CAFOs.
However, in response to comments received on the proposed certification
option, EPA is clarifying several aspects of the process, eligibility
requirements, and effect of certification as discussed below. The
Agency is also making several changes to the proposed option to ensure
that certification will be properly implemented.
Under this final rule, and as proposed in the 2008 supplemental
proposal, a CAFO operator may certify that the CAFO does not discharge
or propose to discharge by signing and submitting a certification
statement to the Director. T