Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2009 Critical Use Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide, 72421-72440 [E8-28328]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 230 / Friday, November 28, 2008 / Proposed Rules
[FR Doc. E8–28171 Filed 11–26–08; 8:45
am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–C
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2008–0009; FRL–8746–6]
RIN 2060–AO78
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The
2009 Critical Use Exemption From the
Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing an
exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide to meet the needs of 2009
critical uses. Specifically, EPA is
proposing uses that qualify for the 2009
critical use exemption and the amount
of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or supplied from
existing pre-phaseout inventory for
those uses in 2009. EPA is taking action
under the authority of the Clean Air Act
to reflect a recent consensus decision
taken by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer at the Nineteenth Meeting
of the Parties. EPA is seeking comment
on the list of critical uses and on EPA’s
determination of the amounts of methyl
bromide needed to satisfy those uses.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by
December 29, 2008. Any party
requesting a public hearing must notify
the contact person listed below by 5
p.m. Eastern Standard Time on
December 3, 2008. If a hearing is
requested it will be held on December
15, 2008 and comments will be due to
the Agency January 12, 2009. EPA will
post information regarding a hearing, if
one is requested, on the Ozone
Protection Web site https://www.epa.gov/
ozone/strathome.html. Persons
interested in attending a public hearing
should consult with the contact person
below regarding the location and time of
the hearing.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2008–0009, by one of the
following methods:
• https://www.regulations.gov: Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: a-and-r-Docket@epa.gov.
• Fax: 202–566–1741.
• Mail: Docket EPA–HQ–OAR–2008–
0009, Air and Radiation Docket and
Information Center, U.S. Environmental
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Protection Agency, Mail code: 6102T,
1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC 20460.
• Hand Delivery: Docket EPA–HQ–
OAR–2008–0009, Air and Radiation
Docket at EPA West, 1301 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Room B108, Mail Code
6102T, Washington, DC 20460. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Docket’s normal hours of operation, and
special arrangements should be made
for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2008–
0009. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through https://
www.regulations.gov or e-mail. The
https://www.regulations.gov Web site is
an ‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly
to EPA without going through
www.regulations.gov, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information about this proposed
rule, contact Jeremy Arling by telephone
at (202) 343–9055, or by e-mail at
arling.jeremy@epa.gov or by mail at U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Stratospheric Protection Division,
Stratospheric Program Implementation
Branch (6205J), 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
You may also visit the Ozone Depletion
Web site of EPA’s Stratospheric
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Protection Division at https://
www.epa.gov/ozone/strathome.html for
further information about EPA’s
Stratospheric Ozone Protection
regulations, the science of ozone layer
depletion, and related topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
proposed rule concerns Clean Air Act
(CAA) restrictions on the consumption,
production, and use of methyl bromide
(a Class I, Group VI controlled
substance) for critical uses during
calendar year 2009. Under the Clean Air
Act, methyl bromide consumption
(consumption is defined under the CAA
as production plus imports minus
exports) and production was phased out
on January 1, 2005, apart from allowable
exemptions, such as the critical use
exemption and the quarantine and
preshipment exemption. With this
action, EPA is proposing and seeking
comment on the uses that will qualify
for the 2009 critical use exemption as
well as specific amounts of methyl
bromide that may be produced,
imported, or sold from pre-phaseout
inventory for proposed critical uses in
2009.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
What Should I Consider When Preparing
My Comments?
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout
Regulations for Ozone Depleting
Substances?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import of
Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
B. How Does This Proposed Rule Relate to
Previous Critical Use Exemption Rules?
C. Proposed Critical Uses
D. Proposed Critical Use Amounts
1. Background of Proposed Critical Use
Amounts
2. Calculation of Pre-Phaseout Inventory
a. Supply Chain Factor
b. Estimated Drawdown
3. Approach for Determining Critical Use
Amounts
4. Treatment of Carry Over Material
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
7. Summary of Calculations
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex.
I/4
F. Emissions Minimization
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
I. General Information
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Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this
proposed action are those associated
with the production, import, export,
sale, application, and use of methyl
bromide covered by an approved critical
use exemption. Potentially regulated
categories and entities include
producers, importers, and exporters of
methyl bromide; applicators and
distributors of methyl bromide; users of
methyl bromide, e.g., farmers of
vegetable crops, fruits and nursery
stock; owners of stored food
commodities and structures such as
grain mills and processors; and
agricultural researchers.
This list is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather to provide a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this proposed action. To
determine whether your facility,
company, business, or organization
could be regulated by this proposed
action, you should carefully examine
the regulations promulgated at 40 CFR
part 82, subpart A. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person
listed in the preceding section.
What Should I Consider When
Preparing My Comments?
1. Confidential Business Information.
Do not submit confidential business
information (CBI) to EPA through
https://www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
Clearly mark the part or all of the
information that you claim to be CBI.
For CBI information in a disk or CD–
ROM that you mail to EPA, mark the
outside of the disk or CD–ROM as CBI
and then identify electronically within
the disk or CD–ROM the specific
information that is claimed as CBI. In
addition to one complete version of the
comment that includes information
claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment
that does not contain the information
claimed as CBI must be submitted for
inclusion in the public docket.
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Information so marked will not be
disclosed except in accordance with
procedures set forth in 40 CFR Part 2.
2. Tips for Preparing Your Comments.
When submitting comments, remember
to:
• Identify the rulemaking by docket
number and other identifying
information (subject heading, Federal
Register date, and page number).
• Follow directions—The agency may
ask you to respond to specific questions
or organize comments by referencing a
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part
or section number.
• Explain why you agree or disagree;
suggest alternatives and substitute
language for your requested changes.
• Describe any assumptions and
provide any technical information
and/or data that you used.
• If you estimate potential costs or
burdens, explain how you arrived at
your estimate in sufficient detail to
allow for it to be reproduced.
• Provide specific examples to
illustrate your concerns, and suggest
alternatives.
• Explain your views as clearly as
possible, avoiding the use of profanity
or personal threats.
• Make sure to submit your
comments by the comment period
deadline identified.
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless,
colorless, toxic gas which is used as a
broad-spectrum pesticide and is
controlled under the CAA as a Class I
ozone-depleting substance (ODS).
Methyl bromide is used in the U.S. and
throughout the world as a fumigant to
control a variety of pests such as insects,
weeds, rodents, pathogens, and
nematodes. Information on methyl
bromide can be found at https://
www.epa.gov/ozone/mbr and https://
www.unep.org/ozone.
Methyl bromide is also regulated by
EPA under the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
and other statutes and regulatory
authority, as well as by States under
their own statutes and regulatory
authority. Under FIFRA, methyl
bromide is a restricted use pesticide.
Restricted use pesticides are subject to
certain Federal and State requirements
governing their sale, distribution, and
use. Nothing in this proposed rule
implementing the Clean Air Act is
intended to derogate from provisions in
any other Federal, State, or local laws or
regulations governing actions including,
but not limited to, the sale, distribution,
transfer, and use of methyl bromide. All
entities that would be affected by
provisions of this proposal must
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continue to comply with FIFRA and
other pertinent statutory and regulatory
requirements for pesticides (including,
but not limited to, requirements
pertaining to restricted use pesticides)
when importing, exporting, acquiring,
selling, distributing, transferring, or
using methyl bromide for critical uses.
The regulations in this proposed action
are intended only to implement the
CAA restrictions on the production,
consumption, and use of methyl
bromide for critical uses exempted from
the phaseout of methyl bromide.
III. What Is the Background to the
Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements
of the stratospheric ozone protection
program that limit production and
consumption of ozone-depleting
substances can be found at 40 CFR part
82, subpart A. The regulatory program
was originally published in the Federal
Register on August 12, 1988 (53 FR
30566), in response to the 1987 signing
and subsequent ratification of the
Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Montreal
Protocol). The Montreal Protocol is the
international agreement aimed at
reducing and eliminating the
production and consumption of
stratospheric ozone-depleting
substances. The U.S. was one of the
original signatories to the 1987 Montreal
Protocol and the U.S. ratified the
Protocol on April 12, 1988. Congress
then enacted, and President George
H.W. Bush signed into law, the Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA of
1990) which included Title VI on
Stratospheric Ozone Protection, codified
as 42 U.S.C. Chapter 85, Subchapter VI,
to ensure that the United States could
satisfy its obligations under the
Protocol. EPA issued regulations to
implement this legislation and has since
amended the regulations as needed.
Methyl bromide was added to the
Protocol as an ozone-depleting
substance in 1992 through the
Copenhagen Amendment to the
Protocol. The Parties to the Montreal
Protocol (Parties) agreed that each
industrialized country’s level of methyl
bromide production and consumption
in 1991 should be the baseline for
establishing a freeze in the level of
methyl bromide production and
consumption for industrialized
countries. EPA published a final rule in
the Federal Register on December 10,
1993 (58 FR 65018), listing methyl
bromide as a Class I, Group VI
controlled substance, freezing U.S.
production and consumption at this
1991 baseline level of 25,528,270
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kilograms, and setting forth the
percentage of baseline allowances for
methyl bromide granted to companies in
each control period (each calendar year)
until 2001, when the complete phaseout
would occur. This phaseout date was
established in response to a petition
filed in 1991 under sections 602(c)(3)
and 606(b) of the CAAA of 1990,
requesting that EPA list methyl bromide
as a Class I substance and phase out its
production and consumption. This date
was consistent with section 602(d) of
the CAAA of 1990, which for newly
listed Class I ozone depleting substances
provides that ‘‘no extension [of the
phaseout schedule in section 604] under
this subsection may extend the date for
termination of production of any class I
substance to a date more than 7 years
after January 1 of the year after the year
in which the substance is added to the
list of class I substances.’’
At the Seventh Meeting of the Parties
(MOP) in 1995, the Parties made
adjustments to the methyl bromide
control measures and agreed to
reduction steps and a 2010 phaseout
date for industrialized countries with
exemptions permitted for critical uses.
At that time, the U.S. continued to have
a 2001 phaseout date in accordance
with Section 602(d) of the CAAA of
1990. At the Ninth MOP in 1997, the
Parties agreed to further adjustments to
the phaseout schedule for methyl
bromide in industrialized countries,
with reduction steps leading to a 2005
phaseout.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for
Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses
Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
In October 1998, the U.S. Congress
amended the CAA to prohibit the
termination of production of methyl
bromide prior to January 1, 2005, to
require EPA to bring the U.S. phaseout
of methyl bromide in line with the
schedule specified under the Protocol,
and to authorize EPA to provide certain
exemptions. These amendments were
contained in Section 764 of the 1999
Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act (Pub.
L. 105–277, October 21, 1998) and were
codified in Section 604 of the CAA, 42
U.S.C. 7671c. The amendment that
specifically addresses the critical use
exemption appears at section 604(d)(6),
42 U.S.C. 7671c(d)(6). EPA revised the
phaseout schedule for methyl bromide
production and consumption in a direct
final rulemaking on November 28, 2000
(65 FR 70795), which allowed for the
phased reduction in methyl bromide
consumption specified under the
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Protocol and extended the phaseout to
2005. EPA again amended the
regulations to allow for an exemption
for quarantine and preshipment (QPS)
purposes on July 19, 2001 (66 FR
37751), with an interim final rule and
with a final rule on January 2, 2003 (68
FR 238).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982),
EPA published a final rule that
established the framework for the
critical use exemption; set forth a list of
approved critical uses for 2005; and
specified the amount of methyl bromide
that could be supplied in 2005 from
stocks and new production or import to
meet the needs of approved critical
uses. EPA subsequently published rules
applying the critical use exemption
framework to the 2006, 2007, and 2008
control periods. Under authority of
section 604(d)(6) of the CAA, this action
proposes the uses that will qualify as
approved critical uses in 2009 and the
amount of methyl bromide that may be
produced, imported, or supplied from
inventory to satisfy those uses.
This proposed action reflects Decision
XIX/9, taken at the Nineteenth Meeting
of the Parties in September 2007. In
accordance with Article 2H(5), the
Parties have issued several Decisions
pertaining to the critical use exemption.
These include Decisions IX/6 and Ex.
I/4, which set forth criteria for review of
proposed critical uses. The status of
Decisions is addressed in NRDC v. EPA,
(464 F.3d 1, D.C. Cir. 2006) and in EPA’s
‘‘Supplemental Brief for the
Respondent,’’ filed in NRDC v. EPA and
available in the docket for this action. In
this proposed rule, EPA is honoring
commitments made by the United States
in the Montreal Protocol context.
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption
Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying
applicants of the process for obtaining a
critical use exemption from the methyl
bromide phaseout. The critical use
exemption is designed to permit the
production and import of methyl
bromide for uses that do not have
technically and economically feasible
alternatives. On May 8, 2003, the
Agency published its first notice in the
Federal Register (68 FR 24737)
announcing the availability of the
application for a critical use exemption
and the deadline for submission of the
requisite data. Applicants were
informed that they may apply as
individuals or as part of a group of users
(a ‘‘consortium’’) who face the same
limiting critical conditions (i.e. specific
conditions that establish a critical need
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for methyl bromide). EPA has repeated
this process annually since then.
The criteria for the exemption
initially appeared in Decision IX/6. In
that Decision, the Parties agreed that ‘‘a
use of methyl bromide should qualify as
‘critical’ only if the nominating Party
determines that: (i) The specific use is
critical because the lack of availability
of methyl bromide for that use would
result in a significant market disruption;
and (ii) there are no technically and
economically feasible alternatives or
substitutes available to the user that are
acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and public health and are
suitable to the crops and circumstances
of the nomination.’’ These criteria are
reflected in EPA’s definition of ‘‘critical
use’’ at 40 CFR 82.3.
In response to the annual requests for
critical use exemption applications
published in the Federal Register,
applicants provide data on the technical
and economic feasibility of using
alternatives to methyl bromide.
Applicants also submit data on their use
of methyl bromide, on research
programs into the use of alternatives to
methyl bromide, and on efforts to
minimize use and emissions of methyl
bromide.
EPA’s Office of Pesticide Programs
reviews the data submitted by
applicants, as well as data from
governmental and academic sources, to
establish whether there are technically
and economically feasible alternatives
available for a particular use of methyl
bromide and whether there would be a
significant market disruption if no
exemption were available. In addition,
EPA reviews other parameters of the
exemption applications such as dosage
and emissions minimization techniques
and applicants’ research or transition
plans. This assessment process
culminates in the development of a
document referred to as the critical use
nomination (CUN). The U.S.
Department of State submits the CUN
annually to the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) Ozone
Secretariat. The Methyl Bromide
Technical Options Committee (MBTOC)
and the Technology and Economic
Assessment Panel (TEAP), which are
independent advisory bodies to Parties
to the Montreal Protocol, subsequently
review the CUNs of the various
countries and make recommendations to
the Parties on the nominations. The
Parties then take a Decision to authorize
a critical use exemption for a particular
country. The Decision also identifies
how much methyl bromide may be
supplied for the exempted critical uses.
As required in section 604(d)(6) of the
Clean Air Act, for each exemption
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period, EPA consults with the United
States Department of Agriculture and
other departments and institutions of
the Federal government that have
regulatory authority related to methyl
bromide, and provides an opportunity
for public comment on the amounts of
methyl bromide that the Agency has
determined to be necessary for critical
uses and the uses that the Agency has
determined meet the criteria of the
critical use exemption.
More on the domestic review process
and methodology employed by the
Office of Pesticide Programs is available
in a detailed memorandum titled
‘‘Development of 2003 Nomination for a
Critical Use Exemption for Methyl
Bromide for the United States of
America,’’ contained in the docket for
this rulemaking. While the particulars of
the data continue to evolve and
administrative matters are further
streamlined, the technical review itself
remains rigorous with careful
consideration of new technical and
economic conditions.
On December 22, 2006, the U.S.
Government (USG) submitted the fifth
Nomination for a Critical Use
Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the
United States of America to the Ozone
Secretariat of the UNEP. This fifth
nomination contained the request for
2009 critical uses. In February 2007,
MBTOC sent questions to the USG
concerning technical and economic
issues in the 2009 nomination. The USG
transmitted preliminary responses to
MBTOC on March 13, 2007. The USG
received a second round of questions
from MBTOC and submitted responses
to those questions in May, 2007. These
documents, together with reports by the
advisory bodies noted above, are in the
public docket for this rulemaking. The
determination in this proposed rule
reflects the analysis contained in those
documents.
B. How Does This Proposed Rule Relate
to Previous Critical Use Exemption
Rules?
The December 23, 2004, Framework
Rule (69 FR 76982) established the
operational framework for the critical
use exemption program in the U.S.,
including definitions, prohibitions,
trading provisions, and recordkeeping
and reporting obligations. The preamble
to the Framework Rule included EPA’s
determinations on key issues for the
critical use exemption program.
Since publishing the Framework Rule,
EPA has annually promulgated
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regulations to exempt from the phaseout
of methyl bromide specific quantities of
production and import for each control
period (each calendar year) and to
indicate which uses meet the criteria for
the exemption program for that year.
See 71 FR 5985 (calendar year 2006), 71
FR 75386 (calendar year 2007), and 72
FR 74118 (calendar year 2008).
Today’s action proposes the uses that
would qualify as critical uses for 2009
and the amounts of Critical Use
Allowances (CUAs) and Critical Stock
Allowances (CSAs) to be allocated for
those uses. The uses that EPA is
proposing to qualify as 2009 critical
uses are the uses which the USG
included in the fifth CUN, and which
were approved by the Parties in
Decision XIX/9. EPA is not proposing to
modify the Framework Rule or the basic
elements of the refined approach to
determining the level of available stocks
finalized in the 2008 CUE rule
published on December 28, 2007.
C. Proposed Critical Uses
In Decision XIX/9, taken in September
2007, the Parties to the Protocol agreed
‘‘to permit, for the agreed critical use
categories for 2009, set forth in table C
of the annex to the present decision for
each Party, subject to the conditions set
forth in the present decision and
decision Ex.I/4 to the extent that those
conditions are applicable, the levels of
production and consumption for 2009
set forth in table D of the annex to the
present decision which are necessary to
satisfy critical uses * * *.’’
The following uses are those set forth
in table C of the annex to Decision XIX/
9: Commodities, NPMA food processing
structures (cocoa beans removed),1 Mills
and processors, Dried cured pork,
Cucurbits, Eggplant—field, Forest
nursery seedlings, Nursery stock—fruit,
nut, flower, Orchard replant,
Ornamentals, Peppers—field,
Strawberry—field, Strawberry runners,
Tomatoes—field, Sweet potato slips.
The agreed critical use levels for 2009
total 4,261,974 kilograms (kg), which is
equivalent to 16.7% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline
of 25,528,270 kg. However, the
maximum amount of allowable new
production and import as set forth in
table D of Decision XIX/9 is 3,961,974
kg (15.5% of baseline), minus available
1 NPMA, National Pest Management Association,
includes both food processing structures and
processed foods. This year’s exemption does not
include cocoa beans.
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stocks. For the reasons described in
section V.D of this preamble, EPA is
proposing to allow limited amounts of
new production or import of methyl
bromide for critical uses for 2009 up to
the amount of 1,617,921 kg (6.3% of
baseline), with 2,576,987 kg (10.1% of
baseline) coming from pre-phaseout
inventory (i.e., stocks).
In this proposed rule, EPA is
proposing to modify 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A, appendix L to reflect the
agreed critical use categories identified
in Decision XIX/9 for the 2009 control
period (calendar year). The Agency is
proposing to amend the table of critical
uses based, in part, on the technical
analysis contained in the 2009 U.S.
nomination that assesses data submitted
by applicants to the critical use
exemption program as well as public
and proprietary data on the use of
methyl bromide and its alternatives.
EPA is seeking comment on the
technical analysis (which is provided in
the docket) and seeks information
regarding changes to the registration or
use of alternatives that may have
transpired after the 2009 U.S.
nomination was written. Such
information has the potential to alter the
technical or economic feasibility of an
alternative and could thus cause EPA to
modify the analysis that underpins
EPA’s determination as to which uses
and what amounts of methyl bromide
qualify for the critical use exemption.
EPA notes that while the Agency may,
in response to comments, reduce the
proposed quantities of critical use
methyl bromide, or decide not to
approve uses authorized by the Parties,
the Agency does not intend to increase
the quantities or add new uses in the
final rule beyond those authorized by
the Parties. Therefore, if there has been
a change in registration of an alternative
that results in that alternative no longer
being available to a particular use, EPA
does not intend to add uses or amounts
of methyl bromide beyond those
identified here to appendix L as part of
this rulemaking. Under such
circumstances, the user should apply to
EPA, requesting that the U.S. nominate
its use for a critical use exemption in
the future. Based on the information
described above, EPA is proposing that
the uses in Table I: Approved Critical
Uses, with the limiting critical
conditions specified, qualify to obtain
and use critical use methyl bromide in
2009.
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TABLE I—APPROVED CRITICAL USES
Column A
Approved Critical Uses
Column B
Column C
Approved Critical User and Location
of Use
Limiting Critical Conditions
That exist, or that the approved critical user reasonably expects could
arise without methyl bromide fumigation:
PRE-PLANT USES
Cucurbits .............................
Eggplant ..............................
(a) Growers in Delaware, Maryland,
and Michigan.
(b) Growers in Georgia and Southeastern U.S. limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia.
(a) Florida growers ............................
(b) Georgia growers ..........................
(c) Michigan growers .........................
Forest Nursery Seedlings ...
Orchard Nursery Seedlings
(a) Growers in Alabama, Arkansas,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and
Virginia.
(b) International Paper and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas.
(c)
Government-owned
seedling
nurseries in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, New
Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, and Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas,
North Carolina, and South Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Oregon and Washington.
(f) Michigan growers ..........................
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry Nursery Consortium limited
to growing locations in Washington, and members of the California Association of Nursery and
Garden Centers representing Deciduous Tree Fruit Growers.
(b) California rose nurseries ..............
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
Orchard Replant ..................
(a) California stone fruit, table and
raising grape, wine grape, walnut,
and almond growers.
Ornamentals ........................
(a) California growers ........................
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Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium collar, crown and root rot.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe weed infestation including purple and yellow nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode or worm infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Medium to heavy clay soils.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Replanted orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
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TABLE I—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
(b) Florida growers ............................
Moderate to severe weed infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation..
Moderate to severe nematode infestation..
Restrictions on alternatives due to
karst topographical features and
soils not supporting seepage irrigation..
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes..
(c) Michigan herbaceous perennial
growers.
Peppers ...............................
(a) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Virginia growers.
(b) Florida growers ............................
(c) Georgia growers ...........................
(d) Michigan growers .........................
Strawberry Fruit ..................
(a) California growers ........................
(b) Florida growers ............................
Strawberry Nurseries ..........
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, New
Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
South Carolina, Tennessee, and
Virginia growers.
(a) California growers ........................
(b) North Carolina and Tennessee
growers.
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Sweet Potato Slips ..............
Tomatoes ............................
(a) California growers ........................
(a) Michigan growers .........................
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia
growers.
(c) Maryland growers .........................
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Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge and other weed infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium root, collar, crown and root rots.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation, or moderate to severe pythium
root and collar rots.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation, crown or root rot.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot or crown rot.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Time to transition to an alternative.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe black root and crown rot.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot.
Moderate to severe root-knot nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow and purple nutsedge infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
High water tables and proximity to environmentally sensitive estuaries
which limit use of 1–3D.
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TABLE I—APPROVED CRITICAL USES—Continued
Column A
Column B
Column C
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
POST-HARVEST USES
Food Processing .................
(a) Rice millers in the U.S. who are
members of the USA Rice Millers
Association.
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities
in the U.S. who are members of
the Pet Food Institute.
(c) Bakeries in the U.S. .....................
(d) Members of the North American
Millers’ Association in the U.S.
Commodities .......................
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Dry Cured Pork Products ....
(e) Members of the National Pest
Management Association treating
facilities, spaces, and equipment
associated with processed food,
cheese, herbs, and spices.
(a) California entities storing walnuts,
beans, dried plums, figs, raisins,
and dates (in Riverside county
only) in California.
(a) Members of the National Country
Ham Association and the Association of Meat Processors, Nahunta
Pork Center (North Carolina), and
Gwaltney and Smithfield Inc.
EPA is proposing to amend the table
in 40 CFR part 82, subpart A, appendix
L, as reflected above. Specifically,
changes made to the table include:
Adding cucurbits grown in Maryland
and Delaware as a critical use under the
limiting critical conditions listed in the
table; moving herbaceous perennials
grown in Michigan from forest nursery
seedlings to ornamentals; adding
‘‘restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation’’ as a
limiting critical condition for Georgia
grown peppers; adding tomatoes grown
in Maryland as a critical use under the
limiting critical conditions listed in the
table; adding ‘‘export to countries which
do not allow the use of sulfuryl
fluoride’’ as a limiting critical condition
for commodities; and revising the
description of NPMA to remove cocoa
beans.
In addition, EPA is proposing
editorial changes to Table I to remove
redundancy and ensure that the limiting
critical conditions are described
uniformly throughout. For example,
within a critical use, all critical users
with the same limiting critical
conditions are to be consolidated into
the same row. EPA also proposes to
move clarifying information from the
table to the preamble to improve
readability. Therefore, EPA clarifies
here that the ‘‘local township limits
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Moderate to severe beetle, weevil, or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle, moth, or cockroach infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Rapid fumigation required to meet a critical market window, such as during the holiday season.
Export to countries which do not allow the use of sulfuryl fluoride.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Red legged ham beetle infestation.
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene’’ are
prohibitions on the use of 1,3dichloropropene products because local
township limits on use of this
alternative have been reached. In
addition, ‘‘pet food’’ under subsection B
of Food Processing refers to domestic
dog and cat food. Finally, ‘‘rapid
fumigation’’ for commodities is when a
buyer provides short (two working days
or fewer) notification for a purchase or
there is a short period after harvest in
which to fumigate and there is limited
silo availability for using alternatives.
EPA does not intend for these edits to
change the effect of any of the limiting
critical conditions, the approved critical
user, location of use, or any other aspect
of the table.
Since the critical use exemption was
first established, many critical users
have transitioned to alternatives and a
variety of sectors that were once critical
uses no longer are. These uses include
ginger, golf courses and turf production,
tobacco, cocoa beans, and pistachios.
The categories listed in Table I above
have been designated critical uses for
2009 in Decision XIX/9 of the Parties.
The amount of methyl bromide
approved for research purposes is
included in the amount of methyl
bromide approved by the Parties for the
commodities for which ‘‘research
purposes’’ is indicated as a limiting
critical condition in the table above. As
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explained in Section V.D.5., EPA is
proposing to issue CSAs to allow the
sale of 22,171 kg of methyl bromide
from existing stocks for research
purposes.
In accordance with Decision XIX/9,
available on the docket for this
rulemaking, EPA is proposing that the
following sectors be allowed to use
critical use methyl bromide for research
purposes: Commodities, cucurbits,
eggplant (field), nursery stock (fruit, nut,
flower), orchard replant, ornamentals,
peppers (field), strawberry (field),
strawberry runners, sweet potato slips,
and tomatoes (field). As discussed
below, EPA allows the use of newly
produced methyl bromide for research
purposes but encourages researchers to
use pre-phaseout inventory. In their
applications to EPA, these sectors
identified research programs that
require the use of methyl bromide.
D. Proposed Critical Use Amounts
Section V.C. of this preamble explains
that Table C of the annex to Decision
XIX/9 lists critical uses and amounts
agreed to by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol. When added together, the
authorized critical use amounts for 2009
total 4,261,974 kilograms (kg), which is
equivalent to 16.7% of the U.S. 1991
methyl bromide consumption baseline
of 25,528,270 kg as defined at 40 CFR
82.3. However, the maximum amount of
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authorized new production or import as
set forth in Table D of the annex to
Decision XIX/9 is 3,961,974 kg (15.5%
of baseline).
EPA is proposing to exempt limited
amounts of new production and import
of methyl bromide for critical uses for
2009 in the amount of 1,617,921 kg
(6.3% of baseline) as shown in Table II.
EPA is also proposing to allow sale of
2,576,987 kg (10.1% of baseline) of
existing inventories for critical uses in
2009. EPA is seeking comment on the
proposed total levels of exempted new
production and import for critical uses
and the amount of material that may be
sold from stocks for critical uses. The
sub-sections below explain EPA’s
reasons for proposing the above critical
use amounts for 2009.
1. Background of Proposed Critical Use
Amounts
The December 23, 2004, Framework
Rule and subsequent CUE rules each
took note of language regarding stocks of
methyl bromide in relevant decisions of
the Parties. In developing this proposed
action, the Agency notes that paragraph
seven of Decision XIX/9 contains the
following language: ‘‘That each Party
which has an agreed critical use renews
its commitment to ensure that the
criteria in paragraph 1 of decision IX/6
are applied when licensing, permitting
or authorizing critical use of methyl
bromide and, in particular, the criterion
laid down in paragraph 1(b)(ii) of
decision IX/6.’’
In the Framework Rule, which
established the architecture of the CUE
program and set out the exempted levels
of critical use for 2005, EPA interpreted
paragraph 5 of Decision Ex. I/3, which
is similar to Decision XIX/9(7), ‘‘as
meaning that the U.S. should not
authorize critical use exemptions
without including provisions addressing
drawdown from stocks for critical uses’’
(69 FR 76987). Consistent with that
interpretation, the Framework Rule (69
FR 52366) established provisions
governing the sale of pre-phaseout
inventories for critical uses, including
the concept of CSAs and a prohibition
on the sale of pre-phaseout inventories
for critical uses in excess of the amount
of CSAs held by the seller. In addition,
EPA noted that pre-phaseout inventories
were further taken into account through
the trading provisions that allow CUAs
to be converted into CSAs. EPA is not
proposing changes to these basic CSA
provisions for calendar year 2009.
Paragraph 5 of Decision XIX/9 further
addresses pre-phaseout inventory of
methyl bromide. The Decision states
‘‘that a Party with a critical use
exemption level in excess of permitted
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levels of production and consumption
for critical uses is to make up any such
differences between those levels by
using quantities of methyl bromide from
stocks that the Party has recognized to
be available.’’ In the August 25, 2004,
proposed Framework Rule (69 FR
52366), EPA proposed to adjust the
authorized level of new production and
consumption for critical uses by the
amount of ‘‘available stocks.’’ The
methodology for determining the
amount of available stocks considered
exports, methyl bromide for feedstock
uses, and the need for a buffer in case
of catastrophic events. However, the
final Framework Rule did not adopt the
proposed methodology for determining
available stocks. Instead, EPA issued
CSAs in an amount equal to the
difference between the total authorized
CUE amount and the amount of new
production or import authorized by the
Parties (Total Authorized CUE
Amount¥Authorized New Production
and Import).
In the 2006, 2007, and 2008 CUE
Rules, EPA issued a number of CSAs
that represented not only the difference
between the total authorized CUE
amount and the amount of authorized
new production and import but also an
additional amount. In the 2006 CUE
Rule, EPA issued a total of 1,136,008
CSAs, equivalent to 4.4% of baseline.
For that control period, the difference in
the Parties’ decision between the total
CUE amount and the amount of new
production and import was 3.6% of
baseline. In the 2007 rule, EPA added to
the minimum amount (6.3% of baseline)
an additional amount (1.2% of baseline)
for a total of 1,914,600 CSAs (7.5% of
baseline). In the 2008 rule, EPA added
to the minimum amount (3.0% of
baseline) an additional amount (3.8% of
baseline) for a total of 1,729,689 CSAs
(6.8% of baseline). Due to allocating
additional CSAs, EPA reduced the
portion of CUE methyl bromide to come
from new production and import in
each of the 2006–2008 control periods
such that the total amount of methyl
bromide exempted for critical uses did
not exceed the total amount authorized
by the Parties for that year.
As established in these earlier
rulemakings, EPA views the allocation
of additional CSA amounts as an
appropriate exercise of its discretion.
The Agency is not required to allocate
the full amount of authorized new
production and consumption. The
Parties agreed to ‘‘permit’’ a particular
level of production and consumption;
they did not—and could not—mandate
that the U.S. authorize this level of
production and consumption
domestically. Nor does the CAA require
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EPA to exempt the full amount
permitted by the Parties. Section
604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act (CAA)
does not require EPA to exempt any
amount of production and consumption
for critical uses, but instead specifies
that the Agency ‘‘may’’ exempt amounts
for production, importation, and
consumption, thus providing EPA with
substantial discretion in creating critical
use exemptions.
Prior to determining the CSA amount
for a particular year, EPA considers
what portion of ‘‘existing’’ stocks is
‘‘available’’ for critical uses. As
discussed in the 2008 rulemaking, the
Parties to the Protocol recognized in
their Decisions that the level of existing
stocks may differ from the level of
available stocks. For example, Decision
IX/6 states that ‘‘production and
consumption, if any, of methyl bromide
for critical uses should be permitted
only if * * * methyl bromide is not
available in sufficient quantity and
quality from existing stocks.’’ In
addition, Decision XIX/9, as well as
earlier decisions, refers to use of
‘‘quantities of methyl bromide from
stocks that the Party has recognized to
be available.’’ Thus, it is clear that
individual Parties have the ability to
determine their level of available stocks.
Decision XIX/9 further reinforces this
concept by including the phrase ‘‘minus
available stocks’’ as a footnote to the
United States’ authorized level of
production and consumption in Table
D. Section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act
does not require that EPA adjust the
amount of new production and import
to reflect the availability of stocks:
however, as explained in previous
rulemakings, making such an
adjustment is a reasonable exercise of
EPA’s discretion under this provision.
In this action, EPA is not proposing to
change its practice of adjusting the level
of new production and import
authorized by the Parties to reflect the
availability of stocks.
EPA introduced in the 2008 CUE rule
a refined approach for determining the
amount of existing methyl bromide
stocks that is available for critical uses.
(72 FR 74118). That approach involves
the concept of a ‘‘Supply Chain Factor’’
(SCF). The SCF represents EPA’s
technical estimate of the amount of
methyl bromide inventory that would be
adequate to meet a need for critical use
methyl bromide after an unforeseen
domestic production failure. The SCF
appears in the formula finalized in the
2008 CUE rule for calculating the
available stocks. That formula was
expressed as AS = ES ¥ D ¥ SCF,
where AS = available stocks; ES =
existing pre-phaseout stocks of methyl
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bromide held in the United States by
producers, importers, and distributors;
and D = estimated drawdown of existing
stocks. In the 2008 rulemaking, EPA
stated that it would use the refined
approach in 2008 and each year
thereafter as appropriate and feasible
(72 FR 14134). EPA is not proposing any
changes to the concept of a ‘‘Supply
Chain Factor’’ or to the formula
finalized in the 2008 CUE rule for
calculating the available stocks. EPA
finds that this approach continues to be
appropriate and feasible, as it is the
most reasonable, efficient, and
transparent way for the Agency to
continue to facilitate responsible
management of the pre-phaseout
inventory. Therefore the Agency intends
to use the same basic SCF approach in
its calculation of how much sale of
existing stocks and how much
production and import to allow for
critical uses in 2009. The Agency plans,
however, to use more current data as
inputs to some of the underlying
calculations, and is proposing to adopt
a new statistical model for projecting
future inventory of pre-2005 methyl
bromide.
2. Calculation of Available Pre-Phaseout
Inventory
In this action, EPA intends to adjust
the authorized level of new production
and consumption for critical uses to
account for the amount of existing prephaseout inventory that is ‘‘available’’
for critical uses. EPA proposes to
calculate the amount of existing stocks
that is available for critical uses in 2009
based on the Supply Chain Factor and
formula introduced in the 2008 CUE
final rule (72 FR 74118). EPA will allow
sales of the amount of existing prephaseout inventory that the Agency has
determined to be available for critical
uses by issuing an equivalent number of
CSAs on a one-CSA-per-one-kilogramof-methyl-bromide basis.
As described in the 2008 CUE Rule,
EPA calculates the amount of available
stocks as follows: AS2009 = ES2008 ¥
D2008 ¥ SCF2009, where AS2009 is the
available stocks on January 1, 2009;
ES2008 is the existing pre-phaseout
stocks of methyl bromide held in the
United States by producers, importers,
and distributors on January 1, 2008;
D2008 is the estimated drawdown of
existing stocks during calendar year
2008; and SCF2009 is the supply chain
factor for 2009. Using the above method,
EPA calculates that 2,576,987 kg (10.1%
of baseline) of existing pre-phaseout
stocks of methyl bromide will be
‘‘available’’ for critical uses on January
1, 2009. This calculation uses EPA’s
preferred approach to estimating the
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2008 drawdown, as discussed in more
detail below. If EPA were to estimate the
2008 drawdown using the approach
taken in the 2008 CUE rule, the
calculated amount of available stocks
would be 777 MT (3% of baseline). For
the reasons described below, EPA
prefers the approach it is proposing in
today’s action. EPA, however, seeks
comment on the amount of the prephaseout stock that it estimates will be
available for critical uses on January 1,
2009.
In the above formula, ‘‘ES2008’’ refers
to pre-phaseout inventory—i.e., existing
stocks of methyl bromide that was
produced before January 1, 2005, and
that is still held by domestic producers,
distributors, and third-party applicators.
January 1, 2005, was the phaseout date
for production and import of methyl
bromide in the United States. ES2008
does not include critical use methyl
bromide that was produced after
January 1, 2005, and carried over into
subsequent years. EPA addresses the
carryover amount in section V.D.4 of
this preamble. In the 2007 and 2008
CUE rules, EPA deducted the amount
carried over into a new control period
from the amount of allowable new
production for the control periods in
question. In this 2009 CUE proposed
rule, EPA proposes to maintain the carry
over deduction. ‘‘ES2008’’ also does not
include methyl bromide produced (1)
under the quarantine and preshipment
(QPS) exemption, (2) with Article 5
allowances to meet the basic domestic
needs of Article 5 countries, or (3) for
feedstock or transformation purposes.
Methyl bromide produced for QPS uses
or for export to Article 5 countries may
not be sold to domestic entities for
critical uses and, therefore, is separate
from the CUE program. Thus, such
amounts have been removed from the
calculation of the amount of ‘‘available
stocks’’ for critical uses. EPA also
considers all pre-phaseout inventory to
be suitable for both pre-plant and post
harvest uses. Despite prior requests,
EPA has received no data that show that
pre-phaseout inventory is mixed with
chloropicrin and is unsuitable for postharvest uses. Unless the Agency
receives evidence otherwise, it will
assume all pre-2005 inventory is
suitable for all uses. Similarly, EPA
considers inventory methyl bromide to
be available to users in California and
the Southeastern United States. EPA
bases this conclusion on the geographic
distribution of the companies that are
granted CSAs (See Table III). EPA
welcomes comments on the availability
of pre-phaseout inventory based on
geography.
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(a) Supply Chain Factor
EPA’s method for determining the
amount of available stocks for critical
uses includes a supply chain factor
which for 2009 can be expressed as
‘‘SCF2009.’’ The supply chain factor
represents EPA’s technical estimate of
the amount of pre-phaseout inventory
that would be adequate to meet a need
for critical use methyl bromide after an
unforeseen domestic production failure.
For 2009, EPA proposes to use a supply
chain factor equal to 2,352,013 kg in the
Agency’s calculation of the amount of
available stocks. Consistent with the
2008 CUE rule, EPA is proposing a
conservative estimate of the supply
chain factor that considers a supply
disruption during the estimated peak
15-week period of critical use supply.
As described in the 2008 CUE rule, EPA
estimates that in the event of a major
supply disruption, it would take 15
weeks for significant imports of methyl
bromide to reach the U.S. Using
updated numbers on average production
during each quarter of the year, EPA
estimates that critical use production in
the first 15 weeks of each year (the peak
supply period) accounts for 55% of
annual critical use methyl bromide
production. EPA, therefore, estimates
that the peak 15-week shortfall in 2009
could be 2,352,013 kg (55.186% ×
4,261,974 kg).
As EPA stated in the 2008 CUE Rule,
the supply chain factor is not a
‘‘reserve’’ or ‘‘strategic inventory’’ of
methyl bromide. Rather, it is merely an
analytical tool used to provide greater
transparency regarding how the Agency
determines CSA amounts. For further
general discussion of the supply chain
factor, see the final 2008 CUE rule (72
FR 74118). Further detail about the
analysis used to derive the value for the
2009 supply chain factor is provided in
the Technical Support Document
available on the public docket for this
rulemaking.
(b) Estimated Drawdown
In the 2008 CUE rule, EPA estimated
the drawdown of existing stocks, the
D2008 term in the above equation, by
using a simple linear fit estimation of
inventory data from all available years.
In this action, EPA proposes not to
estimate drawdown using a linear fit
projection as done last year but instead
use an exponential projection for 2008.
EPA invites comment on both methods
of estimating the 2008 drawdown as
well as on any alternative method of
estimating drawdown.
EPA’s projections are based on fitting
either an exponential curve (the
agency’s preferred approach for this
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rulemaking) or a linear curve (the
agency’s approach finalized last year) to
reported annual data on pre-phaseout
inventory. Given the small sample size
(5 data observations), the reader should
be cautious about drawing inferences.
However, the Agency believes,
combined with other information, the
exponential curve approach may
present a more reasonable approach to
projecting the drawdown of prephaseout inventory.
EPA is proposing to estimate the
drawdown of inventory in 2008 based
on an exponential projection. Using this
method, EPA projects that the prephaseout methyl bromide inventory,
which was 6,457,806 kg on January 1,
2008, will be drawn down by 1,528,806
kg during 2008. This will result in a prephaseout inventory of 4,929,000 kg on
January 1, 2009. EPA’s proposed
methodology for estimating the
inventory drawdown is described in
more detail in the Technical Support
Document available on the public
docket for this rulemaking.
When EPA looks at the market
conditions that could affect the
drawdown of inventory, EPA believes
that the exponential estimate (1,529 MT)
provides a more reasonable reflection of
market conditions than the linear
estimate (3,329 MT). The exponential
estimate closely matches the drawdown
in 2007, which was 1,213 MT whereas
the linear estimate most closely matches
the drawdown in 2004, which was 3,428
MT and the highest drawdown in EPA’s
data set. EPA believes that the market
conditions in 2008 are different enough
from those in 2004 that the rate of
drawdown during 2008 will be more
like the rate of drawdown of 2007 than
2004. First, the Critical Use Exemption
process did not exist in 2004, as that
was the last year of the methyl bromide
phaseout. EPA believes that the
economics and use patterns prephaseout are different than conditions
after the phaseout. Second, at the
beginning of 2004, the inventory was
16,422 MT, a substantially higher
amount than the estimated inventory at
the end of 2008, regardless of the
drawdown estimate used. Third, the
price of methyl bromide has increased
roughly 30–50% since 2004. Therefore,
today growers face stronger economic
incentive to use alternatives and reduce
application rates than they did in 2004.
Fourth, more alternatives are available,
including sulfuryl fluoride and
iodomethane, reducing the total demand
for methyl bromide. Fifth, sales data
reported to EPA show that less of the
inventory was used for non-critical uses
in 2007 than 2006. In 2006, 1,519 MT
of pre-phaseout inventory was for non-
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critical uses, whereas in 2007, this
dropped to 291 MT.
EPA also considered estimating the
drawdown of inventoried methyl
bromide using the simple linear fit that
EPA has used in all of the previous CUE
rules. Under the linear estimate, the
drawdown in 2008 would be 3,329 MT.
Using the equation discussed above,
AS2009 = ES2008¥D2008¥SCF2009,
‘‘Available Stocks 2009’’ under the
linear method would be 777 MT.
Therefore the CSA amount would be
777 MT, or 3.0% of baseline. Using the
same calculation summarized in Section
V.D.7, new production would be 3,418
MT, or 13.4% of baseline. This value
falls below the 15.5% of baseline
authorized by the Parties in Decision
XIX/9. This amount of new production
is greater than the level allocated in the
2008 CUE Rule, which was 3,084 MT,
or 12.1% of baseline. EPA welcomes
comment on the linear approach and its
potential outcomes for the values of new
production and CSAs.
The goal of EPA’s methodology for the
CSA allocation is to allocate CSAs equal
to ‘‘available stocks’’ such that the
private sector has the flexibility to retain
in inventory the amount needed in case
of a catastrophic supply chain failure
(the Supply Chain Factor). As the
Agency stated in the 2008 CUE Rule and
in Section V.D.3 below, once the
inventory declines below the SCF level,
the Agency will not require any
additional drawdown of stocks beyond
what is required by the Parties to the
Protocol.
EPA invites comment on both the
linear and exponential methods of
estimating 2008 drawdown. EPA also
welcomes comment on any alternative
method of estimating drawdown as well
as the market conditions affecting the
decline in inventory use. Most helpful
to the Agency in determining the
drawdown in 2008 is not an evaluation
of statistical methods but data on
whether inventory during 2008 is being
depleted at rates similar to 2007 or
whether it is being depleted faster than
that.
3. Approach for Determining Critical
Use Amounts
EPA estimates that, as of January 1,
2009, 2,576,987 kg of pre-phaseout
inventory will meet the definition of
‘‘available stocks’’ as calculated using
the approach described in Section
V.D.2. of this preamble. Based on these
calculated figures and the allocation
approach described in this section, and
after making reductions for carry over
and research amounts as explained in
sections V.D.4. and V.D.5. of this
preamble, EPA proposes to allocate
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critical use allowances (CUAs)
permitting 1,617,921 kg of new methyl
bromide production and import for
critical uses in 2009, and to allow sale
of 2,576,987 kg from existing stocks for
critical uses by allocating an equivalent
number of critical stock allowances
(CSAs). EPA seeks comment on the
amount of CUAs and CSAs that the
Agency is proposing to distribute in
2009.
In this action, EPA is proposing to
allocate CSAs in an amount equal to the
estimated number of kilograms of
available stocks on January 1, 2009. As
in past years, EPA intends to allocate a
total number of CUAs such that the total
number of CUAs and CSAs is not greater
than the total critical use amount
authorized by the Parties for the year in
question. To account for carry over
amounts of methyl bromide, amounts
for research purposes, or for other
appropriate reasons, including updated
information on alternatives, EPA may
allocate a total number of CUAs and
CSAs that is less than the total critical
use amount authorized by the Parties for
the year in question. As in previous
CUE rules, because the proposed
amount is less than the total amount
authorized by the Parties, the Agency
seeks comment on the reasons for, and
amounts of, each reduction.
EPA recognizes that in a future CUE
allocation rule proposal, the Agency
could estimate, using the method
described in Section V.D.2., that the
amount of available stocks at the
beginning of a future year is less than
the difference between the total critical
use amount authorized by the Parties
and the amount of new production and
imports authorized by the Parties for the
year in question. This scenario can be
described with the following inequality:
Available Stocks < (Total CUE Amount
Authorized¥New Production and
Imports Authorized). Under the
approach introduced in the 2008 CUE
rule, in such a case EPA would propose
to allow the maximum amount of new
production and imports authorized by
the Parties, minus any reductions as
described above and finalized in the
2008 CUE Rule. EPA would also allow
critical users to access a limited amount
of existing stocks by allocating a number
of CSAs equal to the difference between
the total CUE amount authorized by the
Parties and the amount of new
production and imports authorized for
the year in question (CSA = Total CUE
Amount Authorized¥New Production
and Imports Authorized), again minus
any reductions as discussed here. EPA
will continue to collect inventory data
and make critical use allocations on an
annual basis. Similarly, unless the
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hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
Parties approve multi-year critical use
exemptions, EPA intends to continue to
calculate the amount of available stocks
on an annual basis and to explain those
calculations in the annual CUE
allocation rulemaking process.
4. Treatment of Carry Over Material
As described in the December 23,
2004, Framework Rule (69 FR 76997),
EPA is not permitting entities to build
stocks of methyl bromide produced or
imported after January 1, 2005, under
the critical use exemption. Under the
current regulations, quantities of methyl
bromide produced, imported, exported,
or sold to end-users under the critical
use exemption in a calendar year must
be reported to EPA the following year.
These reporting requirements appear at
40 CFR 82.13(f)(3), 82.13(g)(4),
82.13(h)(1), 82.13(bb)(2), and
82.13(cc)(2). EPA uses the reported
information to calculate the amount of
methyl bromide produced or imported
under the critical use exemption, but
not exported or sold to end-users in that
year. An amount equivalent to this
‘‘carry over,’’ whether pre-plant or postharvest, is then deducted from the total
level of allowable new production and
import in the year following the year of
the data report. For example, the
amount of carry over from 2005, which
was reported in 2006, was deducted
from the allowable amount of
production or import for critical uses in
2007. As discussed in section V.D.2.,
carry over material is not included in
EPA’s definition of existing stocks (ES)
as it applies to the proposed formula for
determining the amount of available
stocks (AS). EPA is not including carry
over amounts as part of ES, because
doing so could lead to a doublecounting of carry over amounts, and
thus a double reduction of critical use
allowances (CUAs).
In 2008, 57 entities reported
information to EPA under the reporting
requirements at 40 CFR 82.13 about
critical use methyl bromide production,
imports, exports, sales and/or inventory
holdings in 2007. 4,314,150 kg of
critical use methyl bromide was
acquired through production or import
in 2007. The information reported to
EPA indicates that 4,269,255 kg of
critical use methyl bromide was
exported or sold to end-users in 2007.
EPA calculates that the carry over
amount at the end of 2007 was 44,895
kg, which is the difference between the
reported amount of critical use methyl
bromide acquired in 2007 and the
reported amount of exports or sales of
that material to end users in 2007
(4,314,150 kg¥4,269,255 kg = 44,895
kg). EPA’s calculation of the amount of
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carry over at the end of 2007 is
consistent with the method used in the
final 2008 CUE Rule, and with the
method agreed to by the Parties in
Decision XVI/6, which established the
Accounting Framework for critical use
methyl bromide, for calculating column
L of the U.S. Accounting Framework.
The 2007 U.S. Accounting Framework is
available in the public docket for this
rulemaking.
As a result of stakeholder concerns
regarding the completeness of reporting
and in response to public comment,
EPA stated in the 2008 CUE Rule (72 FR
74137) that:
It would be beneficial to acquire the names
of all distributors and third-party applicators
with critical use exemption reporting
requirements under 40 CFR 82.13. Collecting
the names of these entities will facilitate
Agency follow-up with non-reporters,
allowing collection of necessary information
in a more targeted manner than collecting
detailed information from all entities. In
early 2008 EPA will use its information
gathering authority under section 114 of the
Clean Air Act to ask all entities that sell
critical use methyl bromide to report the
names of all non-end user entities
(i.e.producers, importers, distributors and
third-party applicators) to which they sold
critical use methyl bromide during the 2007
control period.
On January 31, 2008, EPA sent letters
to all producers, distributors, and thirdparty applicators of critical use methyl
bromide that it was aware of asking for
‘‘the name and address of each non-end
user entity (i.e. distributors of methyl
bromide and third-party applicators of
methyl bromide) to which your
company sold critical use methyl
bromide during calendar year 2007.’’ As
a result, EPA received contact
information for distributors and thirdparty applicators that had never
reported sales data to EPA as well as
actual sales reports from some of those
new entities. On March 11, 2008, the
Agency sent a follow-up letter to the
previously unknown entities that had
not reported sales data for 2007 and
reminded them of their reporting
obligations under 40 CFR 82.13. The
Agency has received 18 responses from
previously unknown entities satisfying
the required annual reporting
requirements. The Agency is
considering options to pursue the
remaining unreported data. EPA may
take into account additional reports
received within a reasonable time in
calculating the carry over amount for
the final 2009 rule.
In previous CUE rules, EPA has used
the approach described in the
Framework Rule for implementing carry
over reductions. Consistent with that
approach, EPA is proposing to reduce
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72431
the total level of new production and
import for critical uses by 44,895 kg to
reflect the total level of carry over
material in existence at the end of 2007.
After applying this reduction to the total
volumes of allowable new production or
import, EPA pro-rated CUAs to each
company based on their 1991 baseline
market share.
EPA continues to seek comment on
ways to improve the completeness of
data reporting by affected companies. It
is important for stakeholders to
recognize that the process for
calculating the amount of carry over
CUE material each year relies on sales
to end-user data reported to EPA by
distributors and applicators.
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
As in the 2008 CUE rule, EPA is
proposing to encourage research needs
to be met through the sale of inventory
by deducting the amount needed for
research from the overall critical use
production level and issuing additional
CSAs in that amount.
The use of methyl bromide under the
critical use exemption for research is
distinct from the use of methyl bromide
under the laboratory and analytical use
exemption. Decision XVIII/15(1)
authorizes ‘‘the production and
consumption of [methyl bromide]
necessary to satisfy laboratory and
analytical critical uses.’’ Paragraph 2 of
that Decision states that methyl bromide
produced under the exemption for
laboratory and analytical uses may be
used as a reference or standard; in
laboratory toxicology studies; to
compare the efficacy of methyl bromide
and its alternatives inside a laboratory;
and as a laboratory agent which is
destroyed in a chemical reaction in the
manner of feedstock. On December 27,
2007, EPA promulgated regulations
implementing the exemption authorized
in Decision XVIII/15 (72 FR 73264).
There continues to be a need for
methyl bromide for research purposes
that do not meet the criteria for
laboratory and analytical uses, as
defined in Decision XVIII/15. A
common example is an outdoor field
experiment that requires methyl
bromide as a standard control treatment
with which to compare the trial
alternatives’ results. The critical use
sectors that were approved by the
Parties to use methyl bromide for
research purposes in 2009 are listed in
Section V.C. and have ‘‘research
purposes’’ listed in their limiting critical
conditions in Table I of this preamble.
In this action, EPA is proposing to
allow sale of 22,171 kg of existing stocks
for research purposes in 2009 to account
for the amount authorized for those
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purposes. EPA proposes to allow methyl
bromide sale from stocks for exempted
research purposes by expending CSAs.
An explanation of what amounts of
methyl bromide and of what sectors
qualify for research purposes can be
found in Section V.C. of this preamble.
If EPA adopts this proposal, the Agency
will continue to encourage methyl
bromide suppliers to sell inventory to
researchers and to encourage
researchers to purchase inventory for
research purposes. EPA seeks comment
on its proposal to issue CSAs for sale of
methyl bromide stocks for exempted
research purposes.
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
In the 2006 CUE Rule (71 FR 5985),
EPA allocated less methyl bromide for
critical uses than was authorized by the
Parties in order to account for the recent
registration of sulfuryl fluoride. The
allocation reductions in that rule
reflected transition rates that were
included for the first time in the 2007
U.S. Critical Use Nomination (CUN). In
the 2008 CUE Rule (72 FR 74139), EPA
explained that the transition rates had
already been applied as part of the
international review process for that
year, and therefore it was not necessary
to apply them as part of the Agency’s
domestic rulemaking. EPA did,
however, reduce the total volume of
critical use methyl bromide in the final
CUE rule for 2008 by 27,769 kg to
account for new data indicating the
uptake of two alternatives, sulfuryl
fluoride and iodomethane.
For 2009, EPA is not proposing to
make any further reductions in postharvest or pre-plant critical use
allowances to account for the uptake of
sulfuryl fluoride or any other pre-plant
or post-harvest alternative with the
exception of iodomethane, which is
discussed below. In the 2009 CUN the
Agency applied transition rates for all
critical use sectors. The TEAP report of
August 2007 included reductions in its
recommendations for critical use
categories based on the transition rates
in the 2009 CUN. The TEAP’s
recommendations were then considered
in the Parties’ 2009 authorization
amounts, as listed in Decision XIX/9.
Therefore, transition rates, which
account for the uptake of alternatives,
have already been applied for
authorized 2009 critical use amounts.
Furthermore, the 2010 CUN, which
represents the most recent analysis and
the best available data for methyl
bromide alternatives, does not conclude
that transition rates should be increased
for 2009. As the 2010 CUN reflects, the
United States Government has not
found new information that supports
changing the 2009 transition rates
included in the 2009 CUN and applied
by MBTOC. EPA continues to gather
information about methyl bromide
alternatives through the CUE
application process, and by other
means.
Finally, although the Agency intends
for the final rule to account for use of
iodomethane in the 2009 control period,
this proposed rule does not include a
specific reduction to account for that
use. Because EPA initially registered
iodomethane on a time-limited basis,
which was to expire in October 2008,
EPA did not nominate its use as an
alternative to the TEAP. Thus EPA did
not make any reductions in the 2009 or
2010 CUNs to account for iodomethane
uptake. On October 2, 2008, EPA
renewed the registration of
iodomethane. The Agency will account
for any potential market uptake of
iodomethane in the final rule given that
the alternative’s registration status has
changed. The amount of market uptake
will also depend on how many and
which States have registered
iodomethane for use. Iodomethane is
currently registered for use in 47 states,
including Florida. EPA requests
comment on the amount of estimated
market uptake of iodomethane to
include in the final rule. For reference,
the estimated market uptake for
iodomethane in the 2008 rule was
14,472 kg. At that time, 14 states, which
did not include Florida, had registered
iodomethane for use.
EPA seeks comment on its proposal
not to make further reductions in 2009
to account for the uptake of methyl
bromide alternatives other than
iodomethane, because the Agency has
already accounted for these other
alternatives’ transition rates. EPA
continues to support research and
adoption of methyl bromide
alternatives, and to request information
about the economic and technical
feasibility of all existing and potential
alternatives.
7. Summary of Calculations
The calculations described above for
determining the level of new production
and critical stock allowances are
summarized in the table below:
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
Kilograms
Step 1: Calculate supply chain factor:
U.S. authorization for 2009 ..........................................................................................................................................................
¥Further reduction for uptake of alternatives .............................................................................................................................
= One year’s CUE need ...............................................................................................................................................................
x Percentage of year’s production to recover from production failure .........................................................................................
= Supply Chain Factor .................................................................................................................................................................
Step 2: Calculate available stocks:
Existing pre-phaseout inventory on January 1, 2008 (‘‘ES2008’’) ...............................................................................................
¥Estimated drawdown of inventory during 2008 (‘‘D2008’’) .......................................................................................................
¥Supply Chain Factor .................................................................................................................................................................
= Available stocks (‘‘AS2009’’) = Critical Stock Allowance ..........................................................................................................
Step 3: Calculate carry over:
Reported as produced/imported in 2007 ......................................................................................................................................
¥Reported as sold in 2007 .........................................................................................................................................................
= Carry over .................................................................................................................................................................................
Step 4: Calculate new production:
U.S. authorization for 2009 ..........................................................................................................................................................
¥Critical Stock Allowance (Step 2) .............................................................................................................................................
¥Carryover (Step 3) ....................................................................................................................................................................
¥Amounts Used for Research ....................................................................................................................................................
¥Uptake of alternatives ...............................................................................................................................................................
= New production = Critical Use Allowance .................................................................................................................................
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4,261,974
0
4,261,974
55.186%
2,352,013
6,457,806
1,528,806
2,352,013
2,576,987
4,314,150
4,269,255
44,895
4,261,974
2,576,987
44,895
22,171
0
1,617,921
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 230 / Friday, November 28, 2008 / Proposed Rules
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex.
I/4
Paragraphs 2 and 7 of Decision XIX/
9 request Parties to ensure that the
conditions or criteria listed in Decisions
Ex. I/4 and IX/6, paragraph 1, are
applied to exempted critical uses for the
2009 control period. A discussion of the
Agency’s application of the criteria in
paragraph 1 of Decision IX/6 appears in
sections V.A., V.C., V.D., and V.H. of
this preamble. In section V.C. the
Agency is soliciting comments on the
technical and economic basis for
determining that the uses listed in this
proposed rule meet the criteria of the
critical use exemption (CUE). The
critical use nominations (CUNs) detail
how each proposed critical use meets
the criteria listed in paragraph 1 of
Decision IX/6, apart from the criterion
located at (b)(ii), as well as the criteria
in paragraphs 5 and 6 of Decision Ex.
I/4.
The criterion in Decision IX/
6(1)(b)(ii), which refers to the use of
available stocks of methyl bromide, is
addressed in sections V.D., V.G., and
V.H. of this preamble. The Agency has
previously provided its interpretation of
the criterion in Decision IX/6(1)(a)(i)
regarding the presence of significant
market disruption in the absence of an
exemption, and EPA refers readers to
the 2006 CUE final rule (71 FR 5989) as
well as to the memo on the docket titled
‘‘Development of 2003 Nomination for a
Critical Use Exemption for Methyl
Bromide for the United States of
America’’ for further elaboration.
The remaining considerations,
including the lack of available
technically and economically feasible
alternatives under the circumstance of
the nomination; efforts to minimize use
and emissions of methyl bromide where
technically and economically feasible;
the development of research and
transition plans; and the requests in
Decision Ex. I/4(5) and (6) that Parties
consider and implement MBTOC
recommendations, where feasible, on
reductions in the critical use of methyl
bromide and include information on the
methodology they use to determine
economic feasibility, are all addressed
in the nomination documents.
Some of these criteria are evaluated in
other documents as well. For example,
the U.S. has further considered matters
regarding the adoption of alternatives
and research into methyl bromide
alternatives, criterion (1)(b)(iii) in
Decision IX/6, in the development of the
National Management Strategy
submitted to the Ozone Secretariat in
December 2005 and in ongoing
consultations with industry. The
National Management Strategy
addresses all of the aims specified in
Decision Ex. I/4(3) to the extent feasible
and is available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
F. Emissions Minimization
Decision XIX/9, paragraph 11 states
that Parties shall request critical users to
employ ‘‘emission minimization
techniques such as virtually
impermeable films, barrier film
technologies, deep shank injection and/
or other techniques that promote
environmental protection, whenever
technically and economically feasible.’’
In the judgment of USG scientists, use
of virtually impermeable film (VIF)
tarps allows pest control with lower
application rates in addition to
minimizing emissions. The quantity of
methyl bromide nominated by the U.S.
72433
Government reflects the lower
application rates necessary when using
tarps. Users of methyl bromide should
make every effort to minimize overall
emissions of methyl bromide by
implementing measures such as the
ones listed above, to the extent
consistent with State and local laws and
regulations. The Agency encourages
researchers and users who are
successfully utilizing such techniques to
inform EPA of their experiences as part
of their comments on this proposed rule
and to provide such information with
their critical use applications. In
addition, the Agency welcomes
comments on the implementation of
emission minimization techniques and
whether and how further emissions
could be reduced further.
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
EPA is proposing to allocate 2009
critical use allowances for new
production or import of methyl bromide
up to the amount of 1,617.921 kg (6.3%
of baseline) as shown in Table II below.
EPA is seeking comment on the total
levels of exempted new production or
import for pre-plant and post-harvest
critical uses in 2009. Each critical use
allowance (CUA) is equivalent to 1 kg of
critical use methyl bromide. These
allowances expire at the end of the
control period and, as explained in the
Framework Rule, are not bankable from
one year to the next. This proposal for
allocating the following number of preplant and post-harvest CUAs to the
entities listed below is subject to the
trading provisions at 40 CFR 82.12,
which are discussed in section V.G. of
the preamble to the Framework Rule (69
FR 76982).
TABLE II—PROPOSED ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL USE ALLOWANCES
2009 Critical use
allowances for
pre-plant uses *
(kilograms)
Company
2009 Critical use
allowances for
post-harvest
uses *
(kilograms)
Great Lakes Chemical Corp. A Chemtura Company ..................................................................................
Albemarle Corp ............................................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc ............................................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc ....................................................................................................................................................
888,477
365,362
201,907
6,287
94,733
38,956
21,528
670
Total 2 ....................................................................................................................................................
1,462,032
155,888
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
* For production or import of Class I, Group VI controlled substance exclusively for the Pre-Plant or Post-Harvest uses specified in appendix L
to 40 CFR part 82.
Paragraph six of Decision XIX/9 states
‘‘that Parties shall endeavor to license,
permit, authorize or allocate quantities
of critical-use methyl bromide as listed
2 Due
in tables A and C of the annex to the
present decision.’’ This is similar to
language in Decisions Ex. I/3(4), Ex. II/
1(4), XVII/9(4), and XVIII/13(5)
regarding 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008
critical uses, respectively. The language
from these Decisions calls on Parties to
to rounding, numbers do not add exactly.
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endeavor to allocate critical use methyl
bromide on a sector basis.
EPA’s August 2004 proposed
Framework Rule (69 FR 52366)
proposed several options for allocating
critical use allowances, expressing a
preference for a sector-by-sector
approach. The Agency evaluated the
various options based on their
economic, environmental, and practical
effects. After receiving comments, EPA
determined in the final Framework Rule
(69 FR 76989) that a lump-sum, or
universal, allocation, modified to
include distinct caps for pre-plant and
post-harvest uses, was the most efficient
and least burdensome approach that
would achieve the desired
environmental results, and that a sectorspecific approach would pose
significant administrative and practical
difficulties. Although the approach
adopted in the Framework Rule does
not directly allocate allowances to each
category of use, the Agency anticipates
that reliance on market mechanisms
will achieve similar results indirectly.
The TEAP recommendations are based
on data submitted by the U.S. which in
turn are based on recent use data in the
current methyl bromide market. In other
words, the TEAP recommendations
agreed to by the Parties are based on
current use and the current use patterns
take place in a market where all preplant and post-harvest methyl bromide
uses compete for a lump sum supply of
critical use material. Therefore, the
Agency believes that under a system of
universal allocations, divided into preplant and post-harvest sectors, the
actual critical use will closely follow the
sector breakout listed by the TEAP.
These issues were addressed in previous
rules and EPA is not aware of any
factors that would alter the analysis
performed during the development of
the Framework Rule.
EPA is not proposing to change the
approach adopted in the Framework
Rule for the allocation of CUAs but, in
an endeavor to address Decision XIX/
9(6), EPA will consider additional
comment on the Agency’s allocation of
CUAs in the two groupings (pre-plant
and post-harvest) that the Agency has
employed in the past.
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations
For the reasons described in Section
V.D., EPA is proposing to allocate
critical stock allowances (CSAs) to the
entities listed below in Table III for the
2009 control period in the amount of
2,576,987 kg (10.1% of baseline). This
proposed amount of CSA allowances is
consistent with the approach to
determining available stocks introduced
in the 2008 CUE rule and described in
section V.D.4.
In 2006, the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia
upheld EPA’s treatment of companyspecific methyl bromide inventory
information as confidential. NRDC v.
Leavitt, 2006 WL 667327 (D.D.C. March
14, 2006). EPA’s allocation of CSAs is
based on each company’s proportionate
share of the aggregate inventory.
Therefore, the documentation regarding
company-specific allocation of CSAs is
in the confidential portion of the
rulemaking docket and the individual
CSA allocations are not listed in the
table below. EPA will inform the listed
companies of their CSA allocations in a
letter following publication of the final
rule.
TABLE III—PROPOSED ALLOCATION OF CRITICAL STOCK ALLOWANCES
Company
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Albemarle
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Burnside Services, Inc.
Cardinal Professional Products
Chemtura Corp.
Degesch America, Inc.
Helena Chemical Co.
Total—2,576,987 kilograms
Hendrix & Dail
Hy Yield Bromine
Industrial Fumigation Company
Pacific Ag
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One
Reddick Fumigants
Several companies that receive very
small amounts of CSAs from EPA have
contacted the Agency and requested that
they be permitted to permanently retire
their allowances. Some companies
receive as few as 6 allowances which
allow the holder to sell up to 6
kilograms of methyl bromide to critical
uses. Due to the small allocation and
because they typically do not sell
critical use methyl bromide, some
companies find the allocation of CSAs,
and associated record-keeping and
reporting requirements, to be unduly
burdensome.
In response to this concern, for the
last two rounds of CUE allocation
rulemakings EPA has allowed CSA
holders, on a voluntary basis, to
permanently relinquish their allowances
through written notification to the
Agency. Such companies would not
receive CSA allocations and would be
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Royster-Clark, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident Agricultural Products
UAP Southeast (NC)
UAP Southeast (SC)
Univar
Western Fumigation
excluded from future allocations.
During the comment period for the 2008
CUE Rule, seven companies voluntarily
agreed to permanently relinquish their
allowances. In the final 2008 CUE Rule,
the Agency reallocated all allowances
forfeited by these companies to the
remaining companies on a pro-rata
basis. EPA continues to strongly
encourage CSA holders to take
advantage of this voluntary opportunity
to retire their CSA allocations by
providing written notification to the
Agency during the comment period for
this rulemaking.
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
As discussed above and in the
December 23, 2004, Framework Rule, an
approved critical user may purchase
methyl bromide produced or imported
with CUAs as well as limited
inventories of pre-phaseout methyl
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bromide, the combination of which
constitute the supply of ‘‘critical use
methyl bromide’’ intended to meet the
needs of agreed critical uses. The
Framework Rule established provisions
governing the sale of pre-phaseout
inventories for critical uses, including
the concept of CSAs and a prohibition
on the sale of pre-phaseout inventories
for critical uses in excess of the amount
of CSAs held by the seller. It also
established trading provisions that
allow critical use allowances (CUAs) to
be converted into CSAs. Under this
proposed action, no changes would be
made to those provisions.
EPA believes that the refined
approach for calculating available stocks
that was finalized in the 2008 CUE Rule
reduces the risks of methyl bromide
shortages for critical uses. However, as
in prior years, the Agency will continue
to closely monitor CUA and CSA data.
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Further, as stated in the final 2006 CUE
rule, safety valves continue to exist. If
an inventory shortage occurs, EPA may
consider various options including
authorizing the conversion of a limited
number of CSAs to CUAs through a
rulemaking, bearing in mind the upper
limit on U.S. production/import for
critical uses. In sections V.D. and V.G.
of this preamble, EPA seeks comment
on the amount of critical use methyl
bromide to come from stocks compared
to new production and import.
The aggregate amount of pre-phaseout
methyl bromide reported as being in
inventory at the beginning of 2008 is
6,458 MT. EPA estimates that the
aggregate inventory on January 1, 2009,
will be approximately 4,929 MT. As
explained in detail in the 2008 CUE
final rule, the Agency intends to
continue releasing the aggregate of
methyl bromide stockpile information
reported to the Agency under the
reporting requirements at 40 CFR 82.13
for the end of each control period. EPA
notes that if the number of competitors
in the industry were to decline
appreciably, EPA would revisit the
question of whether the aggregate is
entitled to treatment as confidential
information and whether to release the
aggregate without notice. EPA is not
proposing to change the treatment of
submitted information but welcomes
information concerning the composition
of the industry in this regard. The
aggregate information for 2003 through
2007 is available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
Under Executive Order (EO) 12866
(58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
action proposes a ‘‘significant regulatory
action.’’ This action is likely to result in
a rule that may raise novel legal or
policy issues. Accordingly, EPA
submitted this action to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review under EO 12866 and any
changes made in response to OMB
recommendations have been
documented in the docket for this
action.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose any new
information collection burden. The
application, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements have already
been established under previous Critical
Use Exemption rulemakings and this
action does not propose to change any
of those existing requirements.
However, the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) has previously approved
the information collection requirements
contained in the existing regulations at
40 CFR part 82 under the provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. and has assigned OMB
control numbers 2060–0482 and 2060–
0564. The OMB control numbers for
EPA’s regulations in 40 CFR are listed
in 40 CFR part 9.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The RFA generally requires an agency
to prepare a regulatory flexibility
analysis of any rule subject to noticeand-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
proposed rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small business
that is identified by the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
Code in the Table below; (2) a small
governmental jurisdiction that is a
government of a city, county, town,
school district or special district with a
population of less than 50,000; and (3)
a small organization that is any not-forprofit enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
NAICS Small business
size standard
(in number of
employees or millions
of dollars)
Category
NAICS code
SIC code
Agricultural production
1112—Vegetable and Melon farming .............
1113—Fruit and Nut Tree Farming ................
1114—Greenhouse, Nursery, and Floriculture
Production.
Storage Uses ...............
115114—Postharvest Crop activities (except
Cotton Ginning).
311211—Flour Milling .....................................
311212—Rice Milling ......................................
493110—General Warehousing and Storage
493130—Farm Product Warehousing and
Storage.
115112—Soil Preparation, Planting and Cultivating.
325320—Pesticide and Other Agricultural
Chemical Manufacturing.
0171—Berry Crops .........................................
0172—Grapes.
0173—Tree Nuts .............................................
0175—Deciduous Tree Fruits (except apple
orchards and farms).
0179—Fruit and Tree Nuts, NEC.
0181—Ornamental Floriculture and Nursery
Products.
0831—Forest Nurseries and Gathering of
Forest Products.
.........................................................................
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Distributors and Applicators.
Producers and Importers.
Agricultural producers of minor crops
and entities that store agricultural
commodities are categories of affected
entities that contain small entities. This
proposed rule will only affect entities
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2041—Flour and Other Grain Mill Products.
2044—Rice Milling.
4225—General Warehousing and Storage ....
4221—Farm Product Warehousing and Storage.
0721—Crop Planting, Cultivation, and Protection.
2879—Pesticides and Agricultural Chemicals,
NEC.
that applied to EPA for a de-regulatory
exemption. In most cases, EPA received
aggregated requests for exemptions from
industry consortia. On the exemption
application, EPA asked consortia to
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72435
$0.75 million.
$6.5 million.
$23.5 million.
500 employees.
$6.5 million.
500 employees.
describe the number and size
distribution of entities their application
covered. EPA estimated that 3,218
entities petitioned EPA for an
exemption for the 2005 control period.
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EPA now estimates there to be 2,000
end users of critical use methyl
bromide. Since many applicants did not
provide information on the distribution
of sizes of entities covered in their
applications, EPA estimated that, based
on the above definition, between onefourth and one-third of the entities may
be small businesses. In addition, other
categories of affected entities do not
contain small businesses based on the
above description.
After considering the economic
impacts of this proposed rule on small
entities, EPA certifies that this action
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In determining whether a rule
has a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, the
impact of concern is any significant
adverse economic impact on small
entities, since the primary purpose of
the regulatory flexibility analyses is to
identify and address regulatory
alternatives ‘‘which minimize any
significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.’’ (5
U.S.C. 603–604). Thus, an Agency may
certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities if
the rule relieves a regulatory burden, or
otherwise has a positive economic effect
on all of the small entities subject to the
rule. Since this rule exempts methyl
bromide for approved critical uses after
the phaseout date of January 1, 2005,
this is a de-regulatory action which will
confer a benefit to users of methyl
bromide. EPA believes the estimated deregulatory value for users of methyl
bromide is between $20 million and $30
million annually. We have therefore
concluded that this proposed rule will
relieve regulatory burden for all small
entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA,
EPA generally must prepare a written
statement, including a cost-benefit
analysis, for proposed and final rules
with ‘‘Federal mandates’’ that may
result in expenditures to State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or to the private sector, of $100 million
or more in any one year. Before
promulgating an EPA rule for which a
written statement is needed, section 205
of the UMRA generally requires EPA to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives and
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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
to have meaningful and timely input in
the development of EPA regulatory
proposals with significant Federal
intergovernmental mandates, and
informing, educating, and advising
small governments on compliance with
the regulatory requirements.
This proposed rule contains no
Federal mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for
State, local, or tribal governments or the
private sector. This action is
deregulatory and does not impose any
new requirements on any entities. Thus,
this proposed rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
the UMRA. Further, EPA has
determined that this rule contains no
regulatory requirements that might
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999), requires EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ The phrase ‘‘policies that
have federalism implications’’ is
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’
This proposed 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
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Executive Order 13132. This proposed
rule is expected to primarily affect
producers, suppliers, importers and
exporters and users of methyl bromide.
Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not
apply to this proposed rule.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Executive Order 13175, titled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 9, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ This proposed rule does
not have tribal implications, as specified
in Executive Order 13175. This
proposed rule does not significantly or
uniquely affect the communities of
Indian tribal governments. The
proposed rule does not impose any
enforceable duties on communities of
Indian tribal governments. Thus,
Executive Order 13175 does not apply
to this proposed rule.
G. Executive Order No. 13045:
Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
EPA interprets EO 13045 (62 F.R.
19885, April 23, 1997) as applying only
to those regulatory actions that concern
health or safety risks, such that the
analysis required under section 5–501 of
the EO has the potential to influence the
regulation. This action is not subject to
EO 13045 because it does not establish
an environmental standard intended to
mitigate health or safety risks.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This proposed rule is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ as defined in
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001)) because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
This proposed rule does not pertain to
any segment of the energy production
economy nor does it regulate any
manner of energy use. Therefore, we
have concluded that this proposed rule
is not likely to have any adverse energy
effects.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law
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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. NTTAA directs EPA to provide
Congress, through OMB, explanations
when the Agency decides not to use
available and applicable voluntary
consensus standards.
This proposed rulemaking does not
involve technical standards. Therefore,
EPA is not considering the use of any
voluntary consensus standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order (EO) 12898 (59 FR
7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
EPA has determined that this
proposed rule will not have
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on minority or low-income populations,
because it affects the level of
environmental protection equally for all
affected populations without having any
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on any population, including any
minority or low-income population.
Any ozone depletion that results from
this proposed rule will impact all
affected populations equally because
ozone depletion is a global
environmental problem with
environmental and human effects that
are, in general, equally distributed
across geographical regions.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 82
Environmental protection, Ozone
depletion, Chemicals, Exports, Imports.
Dated: November 21, 2008.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, 40 CFR Part 82 is proposed to
be amended as follows:
PART 82—PROTECTION OF
STRATOSPHERIC OZONE
1. The authority citation for part 82
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7601, 7671–
7671q.
2. Section 82.8 is amended by revising
the table in paragraph (c)(1) and
paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
§ 82.8 Grant of essential use allowances
and critical use allowances.
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
*
*
2009 Critical use
allowances for
pre-plant uses *
(kilograms)
Company
2009 Critical use
allowances for
post-harvest
uses *
(kilograms)
Great Lakes Chemical Corp. A Chemtura Company ..................................................................................
Albemarle Corp. ...........................................................................................................................................
Ameribrom, Inc. ...........................................................................................................................................
TriCal, Inc. ...................................................................................................................................................
888,477
365,362
201,907
6,287
94,733
38,956
21,528
670
Total 3 ....................................................................................................................................................
1,462,032
155,888
* For production or import of Class I, Group VI controlled substance exclusively for the Pre-Plant or Post-Harvest uses specified in appendix L
to this subpart.
(2) Allocated critical stock allowances
granted for specified control period. The
following companies are allocated
critical stock allowances for 2009 on a
pro-rata basis in relation to the
inventory held by each.
Company
Hendrix & Dail
Hy Yield Bromine
Industrial Fumigation Company
Burnside Services, Inc
Cardinal Professional Products
Chemtura Corp
Degesch America, Inc
Helena Chemical Co.
Total—2,576,987 kilograms
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Albemarle
Ameribrom, Inc.
Bill Clark Pest Control, Inc.
Pacific Ag
Pest Fog Sales Corp.
Prosource One
Reddick Fumigants
3. Appendix L to Subpart A is revised
to read as follows:
3 Due
Royster-Clark, Inc.
Trical Inc.
Trident. Agricultural. Products.
UAP Southeast (NC).
UAP Southeast (SC).
Univar.
Western Fumigation.
Appendix L to Part 82 Subpart A—
Approved Critical Uses and Limiting
Critical Conditions for Those Uses for
the 2009 Control Period
to rounding, numbers do not add exactly.
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Column A
Approved Critical Uses
Column B
Column C
Approved Critical User and Location
of Use
Limiting Critical Conditions
That exist, or that the approved critical user reasonably expects could
arise without methyl bromide fumigation:
PRE-PLANT USES
Cucurbits .............................
Eggplant ..............................
(a) Growers in Delaware, Maryland,
and Michigan.
(b) Growers in Georgia and Southeastern U.S. limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia.
(a) Florida growers ............................
(b) Georgia growers ..........................
(c) Michigan growers .........................
Forest Nursery Seedlings ...
Orchard Nursery Seedlings
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Orchard Replant ..................
Ornamentals ........................
(a) Growers in Alabama, Arkansas,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and
Virginia.
(b) International Paper and its subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas.
(c)
Government-owned
seedling
nurseries in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, New
Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, and Wisconsin.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Alabama, Arkansas,
North Carolina, and South Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company and its
subsidiaries limited to growing locations in Oregon and Washington.
(f) Michigan growers
(a) Members of the Western Raspberry Nursery Consortium limited
to growing locations in Washington, and members of the California Association of Nursery and
Garden Centers representing Deciduous Tree Fruit Growers.
(b) California rose nurseries ..............
(a) California stone fruit, table and
raising grape, wine grape, walnut,
and almond growers.
(a) California growers ........................
(b) Florida growers ............................
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Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe root knot nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical
features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium collar, crown and root rot.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical
features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe weed infestation including purple and yellow nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation..
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode or worm infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle infestation
Moderate to severe nutsedge infestation
Moderate to severe nematode infestation
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Medium to heavy clay soils.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation .
Replanted orchard soils to prevent orchard replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes
Moderate to severe weed infestation.
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Column A
Column B
Column C
(c) Michigan herbaceous perennial
growers.
Peppers ...............................
(a) Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Virginia growers.
(b) Florida growers ............................
(c) Georgia growers ...........................
(d) Michigan growers .........................
Strawberry Fruit ..................
(a) California growers ........................
(b) Florida growers ............................
Strawberry Nurseries ..........
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, New
Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
South Carolina, Tennessee, and
Virginia growers.
(a) California growers ........................
(b) North Carolina and Tennessee
growers.
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
Sweet Potato Slips ..............
Tomatoes ............................
(a) California growers ........................
(a) Michigan growers .........................
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia
growers.
(c) Maryland growers .........................
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical.
features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
to
to
to
to
to
severe
severe
severe
severe
severe
soilborne disease infestation.
yellow nutsedge and other weed infestation.
yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
nematode infestation.
pythium root, collar, crown and root rots.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical.
features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation, or moderate to severe pythium
root and collar rots.
Moderate to severe southern blight infestation, crown or root rot.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical features and soils
not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot or crown rot.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Time to transition to an alternative.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening primrose infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst topographical.
features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation
Moderate to severe black root and crown rot
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe black root rot.
Moderate to severe root-knot nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow and purple nutsedge infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
High water tables and proximity to environmentally sensitive estuaries
which limit use of 1–3D;
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen infestation.
POST-HARVEST USES
Food Processing .................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
(a) Rice millers in the U.S. who are
members of the USA Rice Millers
Association.
16:53 Nov 26, 2008
Jkt 217001
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Moderate to severe beetle, weevil, or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Fmt 4702
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E:\FR\FM\28NOP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 230 / Friday, November 28, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Column A
Column B
Column C
(b) Pet food manufacturing facilities
in the U.S. who are members of
the Pet Food Institute.
(c) Bakeries in the U.S. .....................
(d) Members of the North American
Millers’ Association in the U.S.
Commodities .......................
Dry Cured Pork Products ....
(e) Members of the National Pest
Management Association treating
facilities, spaces, and equipment
associated with processed food,
cheese, herbs, spices.
(a) California entities storing walnuts,
beans, dried plums, figs, raisins,
and dates (in Riverside county
only) in California.
(a) Members of the National Country
Ham Association and the Association of Meat Processors, Nahunta
Pork Center (North Carolina), and
Gwaltney and Smithfield Inc..
[FR Doc. E8–28328 Filed 11–26–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 225
[Docket No. FRA–2006–26173, Notice No.
2]
RIN 2130–AB82
Miscellaneous Amendments to the
Federal Railroad Administration’s
Accident/Incident Reporting
Requirements
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public hearing and
extension of comment period.
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: By notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) published on
September 9, 2008 (73 FR 52496), FRA
proposed revisions to its regulations
governing railroad accident/incident
recording and reporting. This document
announces a public hearing to provide
interested parties the opportunity to
comment on the NPRM and announces
a thirty (30) day extension of the
comment period, which closed
November 10, 2008, to commence on
the date of the public hearing. This
extension provides interested parties the
opportunity to comment on the NPRM
and to respond to matters that arise at
the public hearing related to the NPRM.
DATES: (1) Public Hearing: A public
hearing will be held on the date and at
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:53 Nov 26, 2008
Jkt 217001
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle, moth, or cockroach infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle infestation
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Moderate to severe beetle or moth infestation.
Presence of sensitive electronic equipment subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
Rapid fumigation required to meet a critical market window, such as during the holiday season.
Export to countries which do not allow the use of sulfuryl fluoride.
A need for methyl bromide for research purposes.
Red legged ham beetle infestation
Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Dermested beetle infestation.
Ham mite infestation.
the location listed below to provide
interested parties the opportunity to
comment on the proposed revisions
contained in the NPRM. A thirty (30)
day extension of the comment period
will commence on the date of the
hearing. The date of the public hearing
is as follows:
Thursday, December 18, 2008, at 8:30
a.m. in Washington, DC.
(2) Extension of Comment Period: The
comment period will reopen Thursday,
December 18, 2008 and written
comments must be received by Friday,
January 16, 2009. Comments received
after that date will be considered to the
extent possible without incurring
additional expenses or delays.
ADDRESSES: (1) Public Hearing: The
public hearing will be held at the
following location:
Washington, DC: Four Points by
Sheraton, 1201 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20005.
(2) Extension of Comment Period:
Comments related to Docket No. FRA–
2006–26173, may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
1. Web site: Comments should be filed
at the Federal eRulemaking Portal,
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
Web site’s online instructions for
submitting comments.
2. Fax: 202–493–2251.
3. Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
W12–140, Washington, DC 20590.
4. Hand Delivery: Room W12–140 on
the Ground level of the West Building,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC between 9 a.m. and 5
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
p.m. Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
(3) Public Hearing Participants:
Written notification of intent to
participate in the public hearing and
copies of oral statements must be
submitted to the FRA Docket Clerk at
FRA Docket Clerk, Office of Chief
Counsel, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., W12–140, Washington, DC
20590 or faxed to (202) 493–2251.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Arnel B. Rivera, Staff Director, U.S.
Department of Transportation, Federal
Railroad Administration, Office of
Safety Analysis, RRS–22, Mail Stop 25,
Federal Railroad Administration, 1200
New Jersey, SE., Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202–493–1331); or Gahan
Christenson, Trial Attorney, Office of
Chief Counsel, Mail Stop 10, Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey, SE., Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202–493–1381).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: FRA has
received written comments submitted
by interested parties related to various
parts of the NPRM and a written request
for a hearing on the NPRM. The purpose
of the public hearing is to permit the
exchange of information and concerns
regarding FRA’s proposed amendments.
The public hearing is meant to allow
interested parties to fully develop and
articulate the issues and concerns they
have with the NPRM so that these
concerns can be fully addressed in any
final rule that is developed. Interested
parties are invited to present oral
statements and proffer evidence at the
hearing. The hearing will be informal
and will be conducted by a
E:\FR\FM\28NOP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 230 (Friday, November 28, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 72421-72440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-28328]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2008-0009; FRL-8746-6]
RIN 2060-AO78
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: The 2009 Critical Use
Exemption From the Phaseout of Methyl Bromide
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing an exemption to the phaseout of methyl
bromide to meet the needs of 2009 critical uses. Specifically, EPA is
proposing uses that qualify for the 2009 critical use exemption and the
amount of methyl bromide that may be produced, imported, or supplied
from existing pre-phaseout inventory for those uses in 2009. EPA is
taking action under the authority of the Clean Air Act to reflect a
recent consensus decision taken by the Parties to the Montreal Protocol
on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer at the Nineteenth Meeting of
the Parties. EPA is seeking comment on the list of critical uses and on
EPA's determination of the amounts of methyl bromide needed to satisfy
those uses.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by December 29, 2008. Any party
requesting a public hearing must notify the contact person listed below
by 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on December 3, 2008. If a hearing is
requested it will be held on December 15, 2008 and comments will be due
to the Agency January 12, 2009. EPA will post information regarding a
hearing, if one is requested, on the Ozone Protection Web site https://
www.epa.gov/ozone/strathome.html. Persons interested in attending a
public hearing should consult with the contact person below regarding
the location and time of the hearing.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2008-0009, by one of the following methods:
https://www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: a-and-r-Docket@epa.gov.
Fax: 202-566-1741.
Mail: Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2008-0009, Air and Radiation
Docket and Information Center, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Mail code: 6102T, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460.
Hand Delivery: Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2008-0009, Air and
Radiation Docket at EPA West, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW., Room B108,
Mail Code 6102T, Washington, DC 20460. Such deliveries are only
accepted during the Docket's normal hours of operation, and special
arrangements should be made for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2008-0009. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes information claimed to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through https://
www.regulations.gov or e-mail. The https://www.regulations.gov Web site
is an ``anonymous access'' system, which means EPA will not know your
identity or contact information unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send an e-mail comment directly to EPA without
going through www.regulations.gov, your e-mail address will be
automatically captured and included as part of the comment that is
placed in the public docket and made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends that you include your name
and other contact information in the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA
may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form of encryption, and be free of
any defects or viruses. For additional information about EPA's public
docket visit the EPA Docket Center homepage at https://www.epa.gov/
epahome/dockets.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about this
proposed rule, contact Jeremy Arling by telephone at (202) 343-9055, or
by e-mail at arling.jeremy@epa.gov or by mail at U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Stratospheric Protection Division, Stratospheric
Program Implementation Branch (6205J), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20460. You may also visit the Ozone Depletion Web site
of EPA's Stratospheric Protection Division at https://www.epa.gov/ozone/
strathome.html for further information about EPA's Stratospheric Ozone
Protection regulations, the science of ozone layer depletion, and
related topics.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This proposed rule concerns Clean Air Act
(CAA) restrictions on the consumption, production, and use of methyl
bromide (a Class I, Group VI controlled substance) for critical uses
during calendar year 2009. Under the Clean Air Act, methyl bromide
consumption (consumption is defined under the CAA as production plus
imports minus exports) and production was phased out on January 1,
2005, apart from allowable exemptions, such as the critical use
exemption and the quarantine and preshipment exemption. With this
action, EPA is proposing and seeking comment on the uses that will
qualify for the 2009 critical use exemption as well as specific amounts
of methyl bromide that may be produced, imported, or sold from pre-
phaseout inventory for proposed critical uses in 2009.
Table of Contents
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
What Should I Consider When Preparing My Comments?
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and
Import of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol?
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
B. How Does This Proposed Rule Relate to Previous Critical Use
Exemption Rules?
C. Proposed Critical Uses
D. Proposed Critical Use Amounts
1. Background of Proposed Critical Use Amounts
2. Calculation of Pre-Phaseout Inventory
a. Supply Chain Factor
b. Estimated Drawdown
3. Approach for Determining Critical Use Amounts
4. Treatment of Carry Over Material
5. Amounts for Research Purposes
6. Methyl Bromide Alternatives
7. Summary of Calculations
E. The Criteria in Decisions IX/6 and Ex. I/4
F. Emissions Minimization
G. Critical Use Allowance Allocations
H. Critical Stock Allowance Allocations
I. Stocks of Methyl Bromide
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
[[Page 72422]]
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
I. General Information
Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this proposed action are those
associated with the production, import, export, sale, application, and
use of methyl bromide covered by an approved critical use exemption.
Potentially regulated categories and entities include producers,
importers, and exporters of methyl bromide; applicators and
distributors of methyl bromide; users of methyl bromide, e.g., farmers
of vegetable crops, fruits and nursery stock; owners of stored food
commodities and structures such as grain mills and processors; and
agricultural researchers.
This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather to provide a
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this
proposed action. To determine whether your facility, company, business,
or organization could be regulated by this proposed action, you should
carefully examine the regulations promulgated at 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A. If you have questions regarding the applicability of this
action to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the
preceding section.
What Should I Consider When Preparing My Comments?
1. Confidential Business Information. Do not submit confidential
business information (CBI) to EPA through https://www.regulations.gov or
e-mail. Clearly mark the part or all of the information that you claim
to be CBI. For CBI information in a disk or CD-ROM that you mail to
EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD-ROM as CBI and then identify
electronically within the disk or CD-ROM the specific information that
is claimed as CBI. In addition to one complete version of the comment
that includes information claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment that
does not contain the information claimed as CBI must be submitted for
inclusion in the public docket. Information so marked will not be
disclosed except in accordance with procedures set forth in 40 CFR Part
2.
2. Tips for Preparing Your Comments. When submitting comments,
remember to:
Identify the rulemaking by docket number and other
identifying information (subject heading, Federal Register date, and
page number).
Follow directions--The agency may ask you to respond to
specific questions or organize comments by referencing a Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) part or section number.
Explain why you agree or disagree; suggest alternatives
and substitute language for your requested changes.
Describe any assumptions and provide any technical
information and/or data that you used.
If you estimate potential costs or burdens, explain how
you arrived at your estimate in sufficient detail to allow for it to be
reproduced.
Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns, and
suggest alternatives.
Explain your views as clearly as possible, avoiding the
use of profanity or personal threats.
Make sure to submit your comments by the comment period
deadline identified.
II. What Is Methyl Bromide?
Methyl bromide is an odorless, colorless, toxic gas which is used
as a broad-spectrum pesticide and is controlled under the CAA as a
Class I ozone-depleting substance (ODS). Methyl bromide is used in the
U.S. and throughout the world as a fumigant to control a variety of
pests such as insects, weeds, rodents, pathogens, and nematodes.
Information on methyl bromide can be found at https://www.epa.gov/ozone/
mbr and https://www.unep.org/ozone.
Methyl bromide is also regulated by EPA under the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and other statutes
and regulatory authority, as well as by States under their own statutes
and regulatory authority. Under FIFRA, methyl bromide is a restricted
use pesticide. Restricted use pesticides are subject to certain Federal
and State requirements governing their sale, distribution, and use.
Nothing in this proposed rule implementing the Clean Air Act is
intended to derogate from provisions in any other Federal, State, or
local laws or regulations governing actions including, but not limited
to, the sale, distribution, transfer, and use of methyl bromide. All
entities that would be affected by provisions of this proposal must
continue to comply with FIFRA and other pertinent statutory and
regulatory requirements for pesticides (including, but not limited to,
requirements pertaining to restricted use pesticides) when importing,
exporting, acquiring, selling, distributing, transferring, or using
methyl bromide for critical uses. The regulations in this proposed
action are intended only to implement the CAA restrictions on the
production, consumption, and use of methyl bromide for critical uses
exempted from the phaseout of methyl bromide.
III. What Is the Background to the Phaseout Regulations for Ozone
Depleting Substances?
The current regulatory requirements of the stratospheric ozone
protection program that limit production and consumption of ozone-
depleting substances can be found at 40 CFR part 82, subpart A. The
regulatory program was originally published in the Federal Register on
August 12, 1988 (53 FR 30566), in response to the 1987 signing and
subsequent ratification of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer (Montreal Protocol). The Montreal Protocol is
the international agreement aimed at reducing and eliminating the
production and consumption of stratospheric ozone-depleting substances.
The U.S. was one of the original signatories to the 1987 Montreal
Protocol and the U.S. ratified the Protocol on April 12, 1988. Congress
then enacted, and President George H.W. Bush signed into law, the Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA of 1990) which included Title VI on
Stratospheric Ozone Protection, codified as 42 U.S.C. Chapter 85,
Subchapter VI, to ensure that the United States could satisfy its
obligations under the Protocol. EPA issued regulations to implement
this legislation and has since amended the regulations as needed.
Methyl bromide was added to the Protocol as an ozone-depleting
substance in 1992 through the Copenhagen Amendment to the Protocol. The
Parties to the Montreal Protocol (Parties) agreed that each
industrialized country's level of methyl bromide production and
consumption in 1991 should be the baseline for establishing a freeze in
the level of methyl bromide production and consumption for
industrialized countries. EPA published a final rule in the Federal
Register on December 10, 1993 (58 FR 65018), listing methyl bromide as
a Class I, Group VI controlled substance, freezing U.S. production and
consumption at this 1991 baseline level of 25,528,270
[[Page 72423]]
kilograms, and setting forth the percentage of baseline allowances for
methyl bromide granted to companies in each control period (each
calendar year) until 2001, when the complete phaseout would occur. This
phaseout date was established in response to a petition filed in 1991
under sections 602(c)(3) and 606(b) of the CAAA of 1990, requesting
that EPA list methyl bromide as a Class I substance and phase out its
production and consumption. This date was consistent with section
602(d) of the CAAA of 1990, which for newly listed Class I ozone
depleting substances provides that ``no extension [of the phaseout
schedule in section 604] under this subsection may extend the date for
termination of production of any class I substance to a date more than
7 years after January 1 of the year after the year in which the
substance is added to the list of class I substances.''
At the Seventh Meeting of the Parties (MOP) in 1995, the Parties
made adjustments to the methyl bromide control measures and agreed to
reduction steps and a 2010 phaseout date for industrialized countries
with exemptions permitted for critical uses. At that time, the U.S.
continued to have a 2001 phaseout date in accordance with Section
602(d) of the CAAA of 1990. At the Ninth MOP in 1997, the Parties
agreed to further adjustments to the phaseout schedule for methyl
bromide in industrialized countries, with reduction steps leading to a
2005 phaseout.
IV. What Is the Legal Authority for Exempting the Production and Import
of Methyl Bromide for Critical Uses Authorized by the Parties to the
Montreal Protocol?
In October 1998, the U.S. Congress amended the CAA to prohibit the
termination of production of methyl bromide prior to January 1, 2005,
to require EPA to bring the U.S. phaseout of methyl bromide in line
with the schedule specified under the Protocol, and to authorize EPA to
provide certain exemptions. These amendments were contained in Section
764 of the 1999 Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 105-277, October 21, 1998) and were
codified in Section 604 of the CAA, 42 U.S.C. 7671c. The amendment that
specifically addresses the critical use exemption appears at section
604(d)(6), 42 U.S.C. 7671c(d)(6). EPA revised the phaseout schedule for
methyl bromide production and consumption in a direct final rulemaking
on November 28, 2000 (65 FR 70795), which allowed for the phased
reduction in methyl bromide consumption specified under the Protocol
and extended the phaseout to 2005. EPA again amended the regulations to
allow for an exemption for quarantine and preshipment (QPS) purposes on
July 19, 2001 (66 FR 37751), with an interim final rule and with a
final rule on January 2, 2003 (68 FR 238).
On December 23, 2004 (69 FR 76982), EPA published a final rule that
established the framework for the critical use exemption; set forth a
list of approved critical uses for 2005; and specified the amount of
methyl bromide that could be supplied in 2005 from stocks and new
production or import to meet the needs of approved critical uses. EPA
subsequently published rules applying the critical use exemption
framework to the 2006, 2007, and 2008 control periods. Under authority
of section 604(d)(6) of the CAA, this action proposes the uses that
will qualify as approved critical uses in 2009 and the amount of methyl
bromide that may be produced, imported, or supplied from inventory to
satisfy those uses.
This proposed action reflects Decision XIX/9, taken at the
Nineteenth Meeting of the Parties in September 2007. In accordance with
Article 2H(5), the Parties have issued several Decisions pertaining to
the critical use exemption. These include Decisions IX/6 and Ex. I/4,
which set forth criteria for review of proposed critical uses. The
status of Decisions is addressed in NRDC v. EPA, (464 F.3d 1, D.C. Cir.
2006) and in EPA's ``Supplemental Brief for the Respondent,'' filed in
NRDC v. EPA and available in the docket for this action. In this
proposed rule, EPA is honoring commitments made by the United States in
the Montreal Protocol context.
V. What Is the Critical Use Exemption Process?
A. Background of the Process
Starting in 2002, EPA began notifying applicants of the process for
obtaining a critical use exemption from the methyl bromide phaseout.
The critical use exemption is designed to permit the production and
import of methyl bromide for uses that do not have technically and
economically feasible alternatives. On May 8, 2003, the Agency
published its first notice in the Federal Register (68 FR 24737)
announcing the availability of the application for a critical use
exemption and the deadline for submission of the requisite data.
Applicants were informed that they may apply as individuals or as part
of a group of users (a ``consortium'') who face the same limiting
critical conditions (i.e. specific conditions that establish a critical
need for methyl bromide). EPA has repeated this process annually since
then.
The criteria for the exemption initially appeared in Decision IX/6.
In that Decision, the Parties agreed that ``a use of methyl bromide
should qualify as `critical' only if the nominating Party determines
that: (i) The specific use is critical because the lack of availability
of methyl bromide for that use would result in a significant market
disruption; and (ii) there are no technically and economically feasible
alternatives or substitutes available to the user that are acceptable
from the standpoint of environment and public health and are suitable
to the crops and circumstances of the nomination.'' These criteria are
reflected in EPA's definition of ``critical use'' at 40 CFR 82.3.
In response to the annual requests for critical use exemption
applications published in the Federal Register, applicants provide data
on the technical and economic feasibility of using alternatives to
methyl bromide. Applicants also submit data on their use of methyl
bromide, on research programs into the use of alternatives to methyl
bromide, and on efforts to minimize use and emissions of methyl
bromide.
EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs reviews the data submitted by
applicants, as well as data from governmental and academic sources, to
establish whether there are technically and economically feasible
alternatives available for a particular use of methyl bromide and
whether there would be a significant market disruption if no exemption
were available. In addition, EPA reviews other parameters of the
exemption applications such as dosage and emissions minimization
techniques and applicants' research or transition plans. This
assessment process culminates in the development of a document referred
to as the critical use nomination (CUN). The U.S. Department of State
submits the CUN annually to the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) Ozone Secretariat. The Methyl Bromide Technical Options
Committee (MBTOC) and the Technology and Economic Assessment Panel
(TEAP), which are independent advisory bodies to Parties to the
Montreal Protocol, subsequently review the CUNs of the various
countries and make recommendations to the Parties on the nominations.
The Parties then take a Decision to authorize a critical use exemption
for a particular country. The Decision also identifies how much methyl
bromide may be supplied for the exempted critical uses. As required in
section 604(d)(6) of the Clean Air Act, for each exemption
[[Page 72424]]
period, EPA consults with the United States Department of Agriculture
and other departments and institutions of the Federal government that
have regulatory authority related to methyl bromide, and provides an
opportunity for public comment on the amounts of methyl bromide that
the Agency has determined to be necessary for critical uses and the
uses that the Agency has determined meet the criteria of the critical
use exemption.
More on the domestic review process and methodology employed by the
Office of Pesticide Programs is available in a detailed memorandum
titled ``Development of 2003 Nomination for a Critical Use Exemption
for Methyl Bromide for the United States of America,'' contained in the
docket for this rulemaking. While the particulars of the data continue
to evolve and administrative matters are further streamlined, the
technical review itself remains rigorous with careful consideration of
new technical and economic conditions.
On December 22, 2006, the U.S. Government (USG) submitted the fifth
Nomination for a Critical Use Exemption for Methyl Bromide for the
United States of America to the Ozone Secretariat of the UNEP. This
fifth nomination contained the request for 2009 critical uses. In
February 2007, MBTOC sent questions to the USG concerning technical and
economic issues in the 2009 nomination. The USG transmitted preliminary
responses to MBTOC on March 13, 2007. The USG received a second round
of questions from MBTOC and submitted responses to those questions in
May, 2007. These documents, together with reports by the advisory
bodies noted above, are in the public docket for this rulemaking. The
determination in this proposed rule reflects the analysis contained in
those documents.
B. How Does This Proposed Rule Relate to Previous Critical Use
Exemption Rules?
The December 23, 2004, Framework Rule (69 FR 76982) established the
operational framework for the critical use exemption program in the
U.S., including definitions, prohibitions, trading provisions, and
recordkeeping and reporting obligations. The preamble to the Framework
Rule included EPA's determinations on key issues for the critical use
exemption program.
Since publishing the Framework Rule, EPA has annually promulgated
regulations to exempt from the phaseout of methyl bromide specific
quantities of production and import for each control period (each
calendar year) and to indicate which uses meet the criteria for the
exemption program for that year. See 71 FR 5985 (calendar year 2006),
71 FR 75386 (calendar year 2007), and 72 FR 74118 (calendar year 2008).
Today's action proposes the uses that would qualify as critical
uses for 2009 and the amounts of Critical Use Allowances (CUAs) and
Critical Stock Allowances (CSAs) to be allocated for those uses. The
uses that EPA is proposing to qualify as 2009 critical uses are the
uses which the USG included in the fifth CUN, and which were approved
by the Parties in Decision XIX/9. EPA is not proposing to modify the
Framework Rule or the basic elements of the refined approach to
determining the level of available stocks finalized in the 2008 CUE
rule published on December 28, 2007.
C. Proposed Critical Uses
In Decision XIX/9, taken in September 2007, the Parties to the
Protocol agreed ``to permit, for the agreed critical use categories for
2009, set forth in table C of the annex to the present decision for
each Party, subject to the conditions set forth in the present decision
and decision Ex.I/4 to the extent that those conditions are applicable,
the levels of production and consumption for 2009 set forth in table D
of the annex to the present decision which are necessary to satisfy
critical uses * * *.''
The following uses are those set forth in table C of the annex to
Decision XIX/9: Commodities, NPMA food processing structures (cocoa
beans removed),\1\ Mills and processors, Dried cured pork, Cucurbits,
Eggplant--field, Forest nursery seedlings, Nursery stock--fruit, nut,
flower, Orchard replant, Ornamentals, Peppers--field, Strawberry--
field, Strawberry runners, Tomatoes--field, Sweet potato slips. The
agreed critical use levels for 2009 total 4,261,974 kilograms (kg),
which is equivalent to 16.7% of the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide
consumption baseline of 25,528,270 kg. However, the maximum amount of
allowable new production and import as set forth in table D of Decision
XIX/9 is 3,961,974 kg (15.5% of baseline), minus available stocks. For
the reasons described in section V.D of this preamble, EPA is proposing
to allow limited amounts of new production or import of methyl bromide
for critical uses for 2009 up to the amount of 1,617,921 kg (6.3% of
baseline), with 2,576,987 kg (10.1% of baseline) coming from pre-
phaseout inventory (i.e., stocks).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ NPMA, National Pest Management Association, includes both
food processing structures and processed foods. This year's
exemption does not include cocoa beans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this proposed rule, EPA is proposing to modify 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A, appendix L to reflect the agreed critical use categories
identified in Decision XIX/9 for the 2009 control period (calendar
year). The Agency is proposing to amend the table of critical uses
based, in part, on the technical analysis contained in the 2009 U.S.
nomination that assesses data submitted by applicants to the critical
use exemption program as well as public and proprietary data on the use
of methyl bromide and its alternatives. EPA is seeking comment on the
technical analysis (which is provided in the docket) and seeks
information regarding changes to the registration or use of
alternatives that may have transpired after the 2009 U.S. nomination
was written. Such information has the potential to alter the technical
or economic feasibility of an alternative and could thus cause EPA to
modify the analysis that underpins EPA's determination as to which uses
and what amounts of methyl bromide qualify for the critical use
exemption. EPA notes that while the Agency may, in response to
comments, reduce the proposed quantities of critical use methyl
bromide, or decide not to approve uses authorized by the Parties, the
Agency does not intend to increase the quantities or add new uses in
the final rule beyond those authorized by the Parties. Therefore, if
there has been a change in registration of an alternative that results
in that alternative no longer being available to a particular use, EPA
does not intend to add uses or amounts of methyl bromide beyond those
identified here to appendix L as part of this rulemaking. Under such
circumstances, the user should apply to EPA, requesting that the U.S.
nominate its use for a critical use exemption in the future. Based on
the information described above, EPA is proposing that the uses in
Table I: Approved Critical Uses, with the limiting critical conditions
specified, qualify to obtain and use critical use methyl bromide in
2009.
[[Page 72425]]
Table I--Approved Critical Uses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column A Column B Column C
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approved Critical Uses Approved Critical User Limiting Critical Conditions
and Location of Use That exist, or that the approved critical
user reasonably expects could arise without
methyl bromide fumigation:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRE-PLANT USES
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cucurbits............................. (a) Growers in Delaware, Moderate to severe soilborne disease
Maryland, and Michigan. infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Growers in Georgia Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
and Southeastern U.S. infestation.
limited to growing Moderate to severe soilborne disease
locations in Alabama, infestation.
Arkansas, Kentucky, Moderate to severe root knot nematode
Louisiana, Mississippi, infestation.
North Carolina, South A need for methyl bromide for research
Carolina, Tennessee, and purposes.
Virginia.
Eggplant.............................. (a) Florida growers...... Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Georgia growers...... Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe pythium collar, crown and
root rot.
Moderate to severe southern blight
infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(c) Michigan growers..... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
Forest Nursery Seedlings.............. (a) Growers in Alabama, Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
Arkansas, Georgia, infestation.
Louisiana, Mississippi, Moderate to severe soilborne disease
North Carolina, infestation.
Oklahoma, South Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Virginia.
(b) International Paper Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
and its subsidiaries infestation.
limited to growing Moderate to severe soilborne disease
locations in Alabama, infestation.
Arkansas, Georgia, South
Carolina, and Texas.
(c) Government-owned Moderate to severe weed infestation including
seedling nurseries in purple and yellow nutsedge infestation.
Illinois, Indiana, Moderate to severe Canada thistle
Kentucky, Maryland, infestation.
Missouri, New Jersey, Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Moderate to severe soilborne disease
Virginia, and Wisconsin. infestation.
(d) Weyerhaeuser Company Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
and its subsidiaries infestation.
limited to growing Moderate to severe soilborne disease
locations in Alabama, infestation.
Arkansas, North Moderate to severe nematode or worm
Carolina, and South infestation.
Carolina.
(e) Weyerhaeuser Company Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge
and its subsidiaries infestation.
limited to growing Moderate to severe soilborne disease
locations in Oregon and infestation.
Washington.
(f) Michigan growers..... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe Canada thistle
infestation.
Moderate to severe nutsedge infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Orchard Nursery Seedlings............. (a) Members of the Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Western Raspberry Medium to heavy clay soils.
Nursery Consortium Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
limited to growing dichloropropene.
locations in Washington, A need for methyl bromide for research
and members of the purposes.
California Association
of Nursery and Garden
Centers representing
Deciduous Tree Fruit
Growers.
(b) California rose Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
nurseries.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
Orchard Replant....................... (a) California stone Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
fruit, table and raising Moderate to severe soilborne disease
grape, wine grape, infestation.
walnut, and almond Replanted orchard soils to prevent orchard
growers. replant disease.
Medium to heavy soils.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
dichloropropene.
Ornamentals........................... (a) California growers... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
[[Page 72426]]
(b) Florida growers......
Moderate to severe weed
infestation..
Moderate to severe
soilborne disease
infestation..
Moderate to severe
nematode infestation..
Restrictions on
alternatives due to
karst topographical
features and soils not
supporting seepage
irrigation..
A need for methyl bromide
for research purposes..
(c) Michigan herbaceous Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
perennial growers. Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow nutsedge and other
weed infestation.
Peppers............................... (a) Alabama, Arkansas, Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
Kentucky, Louisiana, infestation.
Mississippi, North Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Carolina, South Moderate to severe pythium root, collar,
Carolina, Tennessee, and crown and root rots.
Virginia growers. A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Florida growers...... Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(c) Georgia growers...... Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation, or
moderate to severe pythium root and collar
rots.
Moderate to severe southern blight
infestation, crown or root rot.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(d) Michigan growers..... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
Strawberry Fruit...................... (a) California growers... Moderate to severe black root rot or crown
rot.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
dichloropropene.
Time to transition to an alternative.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Florida growers...... Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Carolina geranium or cut-leaf evening
primrose infestation.
Restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not
supporting seepage irrigation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(c) Alabama, Arkansas, Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
Georgia, Illinois, infestation.
Kentucky, Louisiana, Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Maryland, Mississippi, Moderate to severe black root and crown rot.
Missouri, New Jersey, A need for methyl bromide for research
North Carolina, Ohio, purposes.
South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia
growers.
Strawberry Nurseries.................. (a) California growers... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
infestation.
Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) North Carolina and Moderate to severe black root rot.
Tennessee growers. Moderate to severe root-knot nematode
infestation.
Moderate to severe yellow and purple nutsedge
infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
Sweet Potato Slips.................... (a) California growers... Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
dichloropropene.
Tomatoes.............................. (a) Michigan growers..... Moderate to severe soilborne disease
infestation.
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen
infestation.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(b) Alabama, Arkansas, Moderate to severe yellow or purple nutsedge
Florida, Georgia, infestation
Kentucky, Louisiana, Moderate to severe soilborne disease
Mississippi, North infestation.
Carolina, South Moderate to severe nematode infestation.
Carolina, Tennessee, and Local township limits prohibiting 1,3-
Virginia growers. dichloropropene.
A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
(c) Maryland growers..... High water tables and proximity to
environmentally sensitive estuaries which
limit use of 1-3D.
[[Page 72427]]
Moderate to severe fungal pathogen
infestation.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POST-HARVEST USES
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Food Processing....................... (a) Rice millers in the Moderate to severe beetle, weevil, or moth
U.S. who are members of infestation.
the USA Rice Millers Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
Association. subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
(b) Pet food Moderate to severe beetle, moth, or cockroach
manufacturing facilities infestation.
in the U.S. who are Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
members of the Pet Food subject to corrosion.
Institute. Time to transition to an alternative.
(c) Bakeries in the U.S.. Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
(d) Members of the North Moderate to severe beetle infestation.
American Millers' Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
Association in the U.S. subject to corrosion.
Time to transition to an alternative.
(e) Members of the Moderate to severe beetle or moth
National Pest Management infestation.
Association treating Presence of sensitive electronic equipment
facilities, spaces, and subject to corrosion.
equipment associated Time to transition to an alternative.
with processed food,
cheese, herbs, and
spices.
Commodities........................... (a) California entities Rapid fumigation required to meet a critical
storing walnuts, beans, market window, such as during the holiday
dried plums, figs, season.
raisins, and dates (in Export to countries which do not allow the
Riverside county only) use of sulfuryl fluoride.
in California. A need for methyl bromide for research
purposes.
Dry Cured Pork Products............... (a) Members of the Red legged ham beetle infestation.
National Country Ham Cheese/ham skipper infestation.
Association and the Dermested beetle infestation.
Association of Meat Ham mite infestation.
Processors, Nahunta Pork
Center (North Carolina),
and Gwaltney and
Smithfield Inc.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA is proposing to amend the table in 40 CFR part 82, subpart A,
appendix L, as reflected above. Specifically, changes made to the table
include: Adding cucurbits grown in Maryland and Delaware as a critical
use under the limiting critical conditions listed in the table; moving
herbaceous perennials grown in Michigan from forest nursery seedlings
to ornamentals; adding ``restrictions on alternatives due to karst
topographical features and soils not supporting seepage irrigation'' as
a limiting critical condition for Georgia grown peppers; adding
tomatoes grown in Maryland as a critical use under the limiting
critical conditions listed in the table; adding ``export to countries
which do not allow the use of sulfuryl fluoride'' as a limiting
critical condition for commodities; and revising the description of
NPMA to remove cocoa beans.
In addition, EPA is proposing editorial changes to Table I to
remove redundancy and ensure that the limiting critical conditions are
described uniformly throughout. For example, within a critical use, all
critical users with the same limiting critical conditions are to be
consolidated into the same row. EPA also proposes to move clarifying
information from the table to the preamble to improve readability.
Therefore, EPA clarifies here that the ``local township limits
prohibiting 1,3-dichloropropene'' are prohibitions on the use of 1,3-
dichloropropene products because local township limits on use of this
alternative have been reached. In addition, ``pet food'' under
subsection B of Food Processing refers to domestic dog and cat food.
Finally, ``rapid fumigation'' for commodities is when a buyer provides
short (two working days or fewer) notification for a purchase or there
is a short period after harvest in which to fumigate and there is
limited silo availability for using alternatives. EPA does not intend
for these edits to change the effect of any of the limiting critical
conditions, the approved critical user, location of use, or any other
aspect of the table.
Since the critical use exemption was first established, many
critical users have transitioned to alternatives and a variety of
sectors that were once critical uses no longer are. These uses include
ginger, golf courses and turf production, tobacco, cocoa beans, and
pistachios.
The categories listed in Table I above have been designated
critical uses for 2009 in Decision XIX/9 of the Parties. The amount of
methyl bromide approved for research purposes is included in the amount
of methyl bromide approved by the Parties for the commodities for which
``research purposes'' is indicated as a limiting critical condition in
the table above. As explained in Section V.D.5., EPA is proposing to
issue CSAs to allow the sale of 22,171 kg of methyl bromide from
existing stocks for research purposes.
In accordance with Decision XIX/9, available on the docket for this
rulemaking, EPA is proposing that the following sectors be allowed to
use critical use methyl bromide for research purposes: Commodities,
cucurbits, eggplant (field), nursery stock (fruit, nut, flower),
orchard replant, ornamentals, peppers (field), strawberry (field),
strawberry runners, sweet potato slips, and tomatoes (field). As
discussed below, EPA allows the use of newly produced methyl bromide
for research purposes but encourages researchers to use pre-phaseout
inventory. In their applications to EPA, these sectors identified
research programs that require the use of methyl bromide.
D. Proposed Critical Use Amounts
Section V.C. of this preamble explains that Table C of the annex to
Decision XIX/9 lists critical uses and amounts agreed to by the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol. When added together, the authorized critical
use amounts for 2009 total 4,261,974 kilograms (kg), which is
equivalent to 16.7% of the U.S. 1991 methyl bromide consumption
baseline of 25,528,270 kg as defined at 40 CFR 82.3. However, the
maximum amount of
[[Page 72428]]
authorized new production or import as set forth in Table D of the
annex to Decision XIX/9 is 3,961,974 kg (15.5% of baseline).
EPA is proposing to exempt limited amounts of new production and
import of methyl bromide for critical uses for 2009 in the amount of
1,617,921 kg (6.3% of baseline) as shown in Table II. EPA is also
proposing to allow sale of 2,576,987 kg (10.1% of baseline) of existing
inventories for critical uses in 2009. EPA is seeking comment on the
proposed total levels of exempted new production and import for
critical uses and the amount of material that may be sold from stocks
for critical uses. The sub-sections below explain EPA's reasons for
proposing the above critical use amounts for 2009.
1. Background of Proposed Critical Use Amounts
The December 23, 2004, Framework Rule and subsequent CUE rules each
took note of language regarding stocks of methyl bromide in relevant
decisions of the Parties. In developing this proposed action, the
Agency notes that paragraph seven of Decision XIX/9 contains the
following language: ``That each Party which has an agreed critical use
renews its commitment to ensure that the criteria in paragraph 1 of
decision IX/6 are applied when licensing, permitting or authorizing
critical use of methyl bromide and, in particular, the criterion laid
down in paragraph 1(b)(ii) of decision IX/6.''
In the Framework Rule, which established the architecture of the
CUE program and set out the exempted levels of critical use for 2005,
EPA interpreted paragraph 5 of Decision Ex. I/3, which is similar to
Decision XIX/9(7), ``as meaning that the U.S. should not authorize
critical use exemptions without including provisions addressing
drawdown from stocks for critical uses'' (69 FR 76987). Consistent with
that interpretation, the Framework Rule (69 FR 52366) established
provisions governing the sale of pre-phaseout inventories for critical
uses, including the concept of CSAs and a prohibition on the sale of
pre-phaseout inventories for critical uses in excess of the amount of
CSAs held by the seller. In addition, EPA noted that pre-phaseout
inventories were further taken into account through the trading
provisions that allow CUAs to be converted into CSAs. EPA is not
proposing changes to these basic CSA provisions for calendar year 2009.
Paragraph 5 of Decision XIX/9 further addresses pre-phaseout
inventory of methyl bromide. The Decision states ``that a Party with a
critical use exemption level in excess of permitted levels of
production and consumption for critical uses is to make up any such
differences between those levels by using quantities of methyl bromide
from stocks that the Party has recognized to be available.'' In the
August 25, 2004, proposed Framework Rule (69 FR 52366), EPA proposed to
adjust the authorized level of new production and consumption for
critical uses by the amount of ``available stocks.'' The methodology
for determining the amount of available stocks considered exports,
methyl bromide for feedstock uses, and the need for a buffer in case of
catastrophic events. However, the final Framework Rule did not adopt
the proposed methodology for determining available stocks. Instead, EPA
issued CSAs in an amount equal to the difference between the total
authorized CUE amount and the amount of new production or import
authorized by the Parties (Total Authorized CUE Amount-Authorized New
Production and Import).
In the 2006, 2007, and 2008 CUE Rules, EPA issued a number of CSAs
that represented not only the difference between the total authorized
CUE amount and the amount of authorized new production and import but
also an additional amount. In the 2006 CUE Rule, EPA issued a total of
1,136,008 CSAs, equivalent to 4.4% of baseline. For that control
period, the difference in the Parties' decision between the total CUE
amount and the amount of new production and import was 3.6% of
baseline. In the 2007 rule, EPA added to the minimum amount (6.3% of
baseline) an additional amount (1.2% of baseline) for a total of
1,914,600 CSAs (7.5% of baseline). In the 2008 rule, EPA added to the
minimum amount (3.0% of baseline) an additional amount (3.8% of
baseline) for a total of 1,729,689 CSAs (6.8% of baseline). Due to
allocating additional CSAs, EPA reduced the portion of CUE methyl
bromide to come from new production and import in each of the 2006-2008
control periods such that the total amount of methyl bromide exempted
for critical uses did not exceed the total amount authorized by the
Parties for that year.
As established in these earlier rulemakings, EPA views the
allocation of additional CSA amounts as an appropriate exercise of its
discretion. The Agency is not required to allocate the full amount of
authorized new production and consumption. The Parties agreed to
``permit'' a particular level of production and consumption; they did
not--and could not--mandate that the U.S. authorize this level of
production and consumption domestically. Nor does the CAA require EPA
to exempt the full amount permitted by the Parties. Section 604(d)(6)
of the Clean Air Act (CAA) does not require EPA