Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Texas; Attainment Demonstration for the Dallas/Fort Worth 1997 8-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area, 1903-1927 [E9-118]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 9 / Wednesday, January 14, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
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• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by March 16, 2009.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting, Emission inventory
and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
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Dated: November 24, 2008.
Stephen S. Tuber,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 8.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
PART 52—[AMENDED]
[EPA–R06–OAR–2007–0524; FRL–8758–7]
1. The authority citation for Part 52
continues to read as follows:
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Texas;
Attainment Demonstration for the
Dallas/Fort Worth 1997 8-Hour Ozone
Nonattainment Area
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart TT—Utah
2. Section 52.2320 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(68) to read as
follows:
■
§ 52.2320
Identification of plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(68) On September 7, 1999 and
December 1, 2003 the State of Utah
submitted revisions to its State
Implementation Plan (SIP) to
incorporate the requirements of the
Consolidated Emission Reporting Rule
(CERR). The revisions update the State’s
emission reporting rules so that they are
consistent with the revisions EPA made
to the CERR on June 10, 2002.
(i) Incorporation by reference.
(A). Title R307 of the Utah
Administrative Code, Rule 307–221
EMISSION STANDARDS: EMISSION
CONTROLS FOR EXISTING
MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE
LANDFILLS, Rule 307–221–1, Purpose
and Applicability. Effective January 7,
1999. Published in the Utah State
Bulletin, Volume 98, Number 22,
November 15, 1998.
(B). Title R307 of the Utah
Administrative Code, Rule 307–150
EMISSION INVENTORIES, Rule 150–1,
Purpose and General Requirements;
Rule 150–2 Definitions; Rule 150–3
Applicability; Rule 307–150–5 Sources
Identified in R307–150–3(2); Rule 307–
150–6 Sources Identified in R307–150–
3(3); Rule 307–150–7 Sources Identified
in R307–150–3(4). Effective December
31, 2003. Published in the Utah State
Bulletin, Volume 23, Number 23,
December 1, 2003.
(ii) Additional Material.
(A) October 15, 2002 letter from
Richard Long, EPA Region VIII to Rick
Sprott, Director, Utah Division of Air
Quality (UDAQ) notifying UDAQ of the
June 10, 2002 publication of the
Consolidated Emission Reporting Rule
(40 CFR Part 51, Subpart A) and the
need for the State to update its emission
inventory reporting requirements.
[FR Doc. E9–520 Filed 1–13–09; 8:45 am]
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40 CFR Part 52
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; conditional approval
and full approval.
SUMMARY: The EPA is conditionally
approving the Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW)
1997 8-hour ozone State
Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions
submitted on May 30, 2007 and
November 7, 2008, as supplemented on
April 23, 2008. This final conditional
approval action is for the attainment
demonstration SIP, which includes the
2009 attainment Motor Vehicle
Emissions Budgets (MVEBs), the
Reasonably Available Control Measures
(RACM) demonstration, and the failureto-attain contingency measures plan.
The approval is conditioned upon Texas
adopting and submitting to EPA prior to
March 1, 2009, a complete SIP revision
to limit the use of Discrete Emission
Reduction Credits (DERCs), beginning in
March 2009. If the State meets its
commitment to submit the DERC SIP
revision, EPA will undertake additional
rulemaking action on the approvability
of the DERC SIP revision and, if EPA
approves that SIP revision, the
conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration will be converted to a
full approval at that time.
We are fully approving two local
control measures relied upon in the
attainment demonstration, the
Voluntary Mobile Source Emission
Reduction Plan (VMEP) and
Transportation Control Measures
(TCMs). We are also fully approving the
DFW area SIP as meeting the
Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT) requirement for
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for
both the 1-hour and 1997 8-hour ozone
standards. These actions will result in
emissions reductions in the DFW 8-hour
ozone nonattainment area and meet
section 110 and part D of the Act and
EPA’s regulations.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
February 13, 2009.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket No.
EPA–R06–OAR–2007–0524. All
documents in the docket are listed on
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the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., CBI or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733. The file will be made
available by appointment for public
inspection in the Region 6 FOIA Review
Room between the hours of 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. weekdays except for legal
holidays. Contact the person listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
paragraph below or Mr. Bill Deese at
214–665–7253 to make an appointment.
If possible, please make the
appointment at least two working days
in advance of your visit. There will be
a fee of 15 cents per page for making
photocopies of documents. On the day
of the visit, please check in at the EPA
Region 6 reception area at 1445 Ross
Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas.
The State submittal, which is part of
the EPA record, is also available for
public inspection at the State Air
Agency listed below during official
business hours by appointment: Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality,
Office of Air Quality, 12124 Park 35
Circle, Austin, Texas 78753.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Carrie Paige, Air Planning Section
(6PD–L), Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202–2733,
telephone (214) 665–6521; fax number
214–665–7263; e-mail address
paige.carrie@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. What Action Is EPA Taking?
A. What Is EPA Conditionally Approving
in This Action?
B. What Is EPA Fully Approving in This
Action?
III. What Happens if the State Fails To Meet
the Condition?
IV. What Other Elements Must Be Approved
To Allow This Final Conditional
Approval of the Attainment
Demonstration SIP?
V. Comments
A. What Comments Did EPA Receive on
the July 14, 2008 Rulemaking for DFW?
B. General Comments
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C. Comments on the Texas Emissions
Reduction Plan (TERP)
D. Comments on Photochemical Modeling,
Weight of Evidence Analyses, and
Assessment of Demonstration of
Attainment
E. Comments on Discrete Emission
Reduction Credits (DERCs)
F. Comments on Reasonably Available
Control Measures (RACM)
G. Comments on the Failure-to-Attain
Contingency Measures Plan
H. Comments on the Attainment Motor
Vehicle Emission Budgets (MVEBs)
I. Comments on the Voluntary Mobile
Source Emission Reduction Program
(VMEP)
VI. Final Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On July 14, 2008, 73 FR 40203, EPA
proposed conditional approval of the
DFW area’s 1997 8-hour ozone
attainment demonstration SIP revision,
including the attainment MVEBs, RACM
demonstration, and failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan. We
proposed to fully approve two local
control measures relied upon in the
attainment demonstration—the VMEP
and TCMs. We also proposed to fully
approve the DFW area SIP as meeting
the RACT requirement for VOCs for
both the 1-hour ozone standard and the
1997 8-hour ozone standard.
The proposed approval of the
attainment demonstration SIP is
conditioned upon Texas adopting and
submitting to EPA by March 1, 2009, a
complete SIP revision that includes an
enforceable mechanism that would
allow no more than 3.2 tons per day
(tpd) of DERCs to be used in 2009 in the
DFW area. If Texas intends to allow for
more than 3.2 tpd of DERCs to be used
beginning January 1, 2010, then the SIP
revision must also provide appropriate
limits on the use of DERCs and a
detailed justification explaining how the
future adjustments to the allowed DERC
usage will be consistent with continued
attainment of the 8-hour ozone
standard. The justification must provide
sufficient detail such that the public can
be assured that attainment will continue
to be projected in future years. If Texas
meets the commitment to submit the
DERC SIP revision, EPA will undertake
rulemaking to determine whether to
approve the revision and, if approved,
EPA would convert the conditional
approval of the attainment
demonstration to a full approval.
We also proposed that final
conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration SIP was contingent upon
Texas submitting to EPA a complete and
approvable SIP revision for the
attainment demonstration SIP’s failureto-attain contingency measures plan that
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meets section 172(c)(9) of the Act. EPA
specifically identified in the proposal
the elements such submission must
contain. The failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan was
submitted to EPA on November 7, 2008,
and we have determined that the plan
is consistent with the elements
established in our proposed rule (73 FR
40203) and meets section 172(c)(9) of
the Act. Because the State submitted a
complete failure-to-attain contingency
measures plan that relies upon three
VOC SIP rules for Offset Lithographic
Printing, Degassing or Cleaning of
Stationary, Marine, and Transport
Vessels, and Petroleum Dry Cleaning, as
well as fleet turnover from mobile
sources after 2009, EPA can proceed
with a final conditional approval. (See
page 40205, third column, of the
proposed action.)
Our July 14, 2008, proposal provides
a detailed description of the revisions
and the rationale for EPA’s proposed
actions, together with a discussion of
the opportunity to comment. The public
comment period for these actions closed
on August 13, 2008. See the Technical
Support Documents (TSDs) and our
proposed rulemaking at 73 FR 40203 for
more information.
II. What Action Is EPA Taking?
A. What Is EPA Conditionally
Approving in This Action?
EPA is conditionally approving the
DFW 1997 8-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP and, as part of this
attainment demonstration SIP, the 2009
attainment MVEBs, RACM
demonstration, and failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan, submitted
to EPA on May 30, 2007 and November
7, 2008, as supplemented on April 23,
2008.
Our conditional approval is based on
our determination that, the modeling
and weight-of-evidence show that the
DFW area will attain the 8-hour ozone
standard by its attainment date, as a
result of the control strategies relied
upon in this plan. In making this
determination, we have considered the
comments that we have received on our
proposal. We have also considered the
air quality monitoring information
gathered since the proposal, the impact
of the Clean Air Interstate rule (CAIR)
vacatur, and the progress in
implementing control measures. As the
area approaches the attainment date,
recent monitoring data becomes more
important as an indicator of potential
success. The preliminary data from 2008
shows 18 of the 20 monitors had fourth
highs at 84 ppb or below and only two
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monitors were slightly above attainment
levels at 85 ppb.
With more emissions reductions to
occur before the beginning of the 2009
attainment year ozone season, we
believe these data provide strong
support that the area will attain the
standard by its attainment date of June
2010.
As described in the proposed rule, the
condition that must be met for EPA to
fully approve the attainment
demonstration is that the TCEQ must
adopt and submit to EPA a complete SIP
revision by March 1, 2009, that includes
an enforceable mechanism that provides
a 3.2 tpd restriction on the amount of
DERCs available for use in DFW
beginning March 1, 2009. The SIP
revision may provide that the amount of
DERCs available for use beginning
January 1, 2010, could increase above
3.2 tpd if the revision provides an
enforceable mechanism and a
justification that the increase is
consistent with attainment and
maintenance of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. In a letter dated June 13, 2008,
TCEQ committed to meeting this
condition (the letter is in the docket for
this rulemaking).
If Texas intends to allow for more
than 3.2 tpd of DERCs to be used
beginning January 1, 2010, then the SIP
revision must also provide appropriate
limits on the use of DERCs and a
detailed justification explaining how the
future adjustments to the allowed DERC
usage will be consistent with continued
attainment of the 8-hour ozone
standard. The justification must provide
sufficient detail such that the EPA and
the public can be assured that
attainment will continue to be projected
in future years. The justification and
methodology for any increase in
allowable DERC usage must be fully
identified in the TCEQ rulemaking and
SIP submittal process.
The SIP revision submitted by March
1, 2009, must adequately provide for
continued attainment, and include the
justification and/or methodology used
by TCEQ to increase the amount of
DERCs allowed for use in DFW starting
in calendar year 2010. The justification
provided by TCEQ must satisfy section
110(l) of the Act by demonstrating that
the increase will not interfere with
attainment or any other applicable
measure of the Act. The analysis to
satisfy section 110(l) will need to
address both quantity and spatial
allocation impacts of increased DERC
usage on ozone levels.
B. What Is EPA Fully Approving in This
Action?
EPA is fully approving two local
control measures relied upon in the
attainment demonstration: The VMEP
and TCMs. We are also fully approving
the DFW area SIP as meeting the RACT
requirement for VOCs for both the 1hour ozone standard and the 1997 8hour ozone standard.
III. What Happens if the State Fails To
Meet the Condition?
If Texas fails to adopt and submit to
the EPA a complete DERC SIP revision
by March 1, 2009, EPA will issue a letter
to the State converting the conditional
approval of the 1997 8-hour ozone DFW
attainment demonstration SIP to
disapproval. Such disapproval will start
the 18-month clock for sanctions in
accordance with section 179(b) and 40
CFR 52.31 and the 2-year clock for a
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP)
under section 110(c). EPA would
publish in the FR a notice announcing
the disapproval of the SIP and the start
of sanctions and FIP clocks for the DFW
area, and would revise the provisions in
the Code of Federal Regulation (CFR) to
reflect the disapproval of the SIP.
The State proposed the DERC SIP
revision for public review on August 6,
2008 and the comment period closed
September 12, 2008; final adoption of
the revision was on December 10, 2008,
in order to meet the condition to submit
a complete DERC SIP revision to EPA by
March 1, 2009, and implement the
DERC SIP revision by March 1, 2009. As
described in the proposed rule (73 FR
40203), if the State adopts and submits
to EPA by March 1, 2009, a complete
DERC SIP revision, and EPA determines
through rulemaking that the submitted
DERC SIP revision is approvable, we
will simultaneously convert the
conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration SIP to a full approval. If
EPA cannot fully approve the SIP
revision concerning the use of DERCs in
the DFW area, EPA will undertake
rulemaking to disapprove the submitted
1905
DERC SIP revision and to convert the
conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration SIP for the DFW area to
a disapproval. In such case, the 18month clock for sanctions and the 2year clock for a FIP would start on the
effective date of final disapproval.
Today’s final conditional approval of
the attainment demonstration SIP
remains in effect until EPA either
determines that the State has not
submitted a complete DERC SIP revision
by March 1, 2009 or EPA completes
rulemaking action either approving or
disapproving a complete submitted
DERC SIP submission and simultaneous
with action on the DERC SIP submission
takes final action to convert the
conditional approval to a full approval
or disapproval of the attainment
demonstration.
IV. What Other Elements Must Be
Approved To Allow This Final
Conditional Approval of the Attainment
Demonstration SIP?
In our proposal, we discussed the
elements that must be approved if we
are to finalize the conditional approval
of the attainment demonstration. In
order to finalize conditional approval of
the DFW 1997 8-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP, EPA must fully
approve all of the control measures
relied upon in the attainment
demonstration and the DFW RFP Plan
with the RFP MVEBs and RFP
contingency measures. We approved the
DFW RFP Plan with the RFP MVEBs
and RFP contingency measures on
October 7, 2008 at 73 FR 58475.
The State committed to submit a rule
restricting DERC usage by March 1,
2009. In addition, EPA reviewed all
DERC Notice of Intent to Use Forms that
the TCEQ Executive Director approved
as of November 30 for use in 2009, to
ensure that the total amount of DERCs
approved for use beginning on March 1,
2009 does not exceed 3.2 tpd.
Table 1 below lists the status of EPA
action on the control measures relied
upon in the attainment demonstration.
The Table documents that, as of this
final action, all control measures and
reductions relied upon to demonstrate
attainment have been reviewed and
approved by EPA in this or other
Federal Register Actions.
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TABLE 1—STATUS OF EPA REQUIRED ACTION ON CONTROL STRATEGIES BEFORE FINALIZING CONDITIONAL APPROVAL OF
THE ATTAINMENT DEMONSTRATION SIP
Measure
Status
The April 9, 2003 Alcoa Federal Consent Decree ...................................
The DFW Energy Efficiency Measures Program .....................................
NOX rules for IC engines in DFW ............................................................
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Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR 47835).
Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR 47835).
Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR 47835).
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TABLE 1—STATUS OF EPA REQUIRED ACTION ON CONTROL STRATEGIES BEFORE FINALIZING CONDITIONAL APPROVAL OF
THE ATTAINMENT DEMONSTRATION SIP—Continued
Measure
Status
2002 Base Year Emissions Inventory ......................................................
The VOC rules adopted by Texas on 11/15/06 .......................................
1-hour attainment determination ..............................................................
East Texas Combustion Sources (i.e., the rich burn gas-fired engine
rule in the 33 counties east of DFW).
The DFW major source rule .....................................................................
The DFW minor source rule .....................................................................
The DFW gas-fired engine rule ................................................................
The DFW EGUs rule ................................................................................
The DFW non-EGUs rule .........................................................................
The Auxiliary steam boilers rule in the 5 counties ...................................
The Stationary gas turbines rule in the 5 counties ..................................
The Cement kiln rules ..............................................................................
The VMEP and its emission reductions ...................................................
The TCMs and the associated emission reductions ................................
The TERP emission reductions ................................................................
V. Comments
A. What Comments Did EPA Receive on
the July 14, 2008 Proposed Rulemaking
for DFW?
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We received 26 comment letters on
the proposed rulemaking. These
comments are available for review in the
docket for this rulemaking. The
comment letters came from the
following sources:
1. August 6, 2008 letter from Linda Koop,
City of Dallas Councilmember, District 11,
Chair of the Transportation and Environment
Committee.
2. August 12, 2008 letter from Ramon
Alvarez, PhD, for Environmental Defense
Fund.
3. August 12, 2008 letter from Bill Cox,
citizen.
4. August 12, 2008 letter from Margaret
DeMoss, public health consultant and
citizen.
5. August 12, 2008 letter from Ed Soph,
citizen.
6. August 12, 2008 letter from Bob
Fusinato, citizen.
7. August 12, 2008 letter from Ramsey
Sprague, citizen.
8. August 13, 2008 letter from Jon Mamula,
citizen.
9. August 13, 2008 letter from Kerrie
Kimberling, citizen.
10. August 13, 2008 letter from Cindy
Crutch, citizen.
11. August 13, 2008 letter from Becky
Bornhorst, clean air advocate.
12. August 13, 2008 letter from Barbara
Downey, citizen.
13. August 13, 2008 letter from Ricky
Pearce, Ryan Whaley Coldiron Shandy PC,
for Holcim LP.
14. August 13, 2008 letter from Neil
Carman, for Sierra Club, Lone Star Chapter.
15. August 13, 2008 letter from Gina Hall,
citizen.
16. August 13, 2008 letter from Molly
Rooke, citizen.
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Approved
Approved
Approved
Approved
August 15, 2008 (73 FR 47835).
July 17, 2008 (73 FR 40972).
October 16, 2008 (73 FR 61357).
December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73562).
Approved simultaneously in today’s Federal Register.
Approved in this rulemaking.
Approved in this rulemaking.
Approved in this rulemaking as submitted in the DFW 5% IOP Plan
and the DFW 1997 8-hour ozone attainment demonstration SIP.
17. August 13, 2008 letter from Marc
Chytilo, for Downwinders At Risk and the
Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club.
18. August 13, 2008 letter from April
Johnson, citizen.
19. August 13, 2008 letter from Wendi
Hammond, for KIDS 4 Clean Air and Clean
Air Institute of Texas.
20. August 13, 2008 letter from Willem and
Paula Noteboom, citizens.
21. August 13, 2008 letter from Susan
Waskey, citizen.
22. August 13, 2008 letter from Matthew
Kuryla, Baker and Botts for the BCCA Appeal
Group.
23. August 13, 2008 letter from Matthew
Kuryla, Baker and Botts for the 8-Hour Ozone
SIP Coalition.
24. August 13, 2008 letter from Lon
Burnham, State Representative, District 90,
Fort Worth, Texas.
25. August 14, 2008 letter from Anna
Albers, citizen.
26. August 14, 2008 letter from Sandra
Soria, citizen.
B. General Comments
Comment: Several commenters urge
EPA to finalize conditional approval of
the attainment demonstration SIP. One
supports EPA’s proposed rule,
recognizes the efforts of the local
community, and lists some of the clean
air initiatives implemented by the City
of Dallas.
Response: We appreciate the support
expressed in these comment letters. We
applaud the actions taken by the local
community and commend the local
leaders and implementation staff; their
work has and will continue to assist the
area in reducing NOX and VOCs, the
precursors for ambient ozone pollution.
EPA encourages local governments to
continue to be involved in these and
future local emissions reductions
programs.
Comment: Two commenters disagree
with EPA’s position taken in the
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proposal that because the DFW area has
an attainment deadline of June 15, 2010,
air quality monitoring data for the years
2007, 2008, and 2009 would be used to
make an attainment determination.
Rather, using the years 2008, 2009, and
2010 would be most consistent with the
Act’s requirements for attainment
determination. They note that the Act
mandates the attainment determination
be made within 6 months after the
attainment date, including any
extensions thereof, and be based on the
area’s design value as of the attainment
date. Although the Phase 1 Rule defines
the ‘‘attainment year ozone season’’ as
the ozone season immediately preceding
the attainment date, they contend that
that regulatory definition can be read as
requiring controls timely for attainment
in the attainment year, as required by
the statute. They do not see the
definition as relevant to the timing or
content of an attainment determination.
EPA’s regulations do not specify that the
attainment determination is to be
conducted using data from the years
prior to the attainment date, without
considering data from the ozone season
that includes the attainment date. They
believe such a determination would be
inconsistent with the statutory directive
that the attainment determination be
‘‘based on the area’s design value (as of
the attainment date).’’
Response: As an initial matter, EPA
set forth its interpretation on this issue
in the preambles to the proposed and
final Phase 1 Rule. See 68 FR 32802, at
32817 (June 2, 2003) (In ‘‘determining
whether an area actually attains the
NAAQS at the time of the attainment
date, EPA would use the ambient air
quality data for the three ozone seasons
prior to the attainment date. As an
example, if the effective date of the
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nonattainment designations is May 15,
2004, the maximum attainment date for
an area classified marginal would be
May 15, 2007. In this example, EPA
would consider the 8-hour ozone data
for the three previous ozone seasons—
2004, 2005 and 2006.’’); 69 FR 23951, at
23989 (Apr. 30, 2004) (noting that the
ozone seasons from 2007, 2008 and
2009 would be considered for an
attainment date in May 2010). However,
as noted by the commenter, the statute
clearly specifies that a determination of
attainment must be ‘‘based on the area’s
design value (as of the attainment date).
The attainment date for the DFW area is
June 15, 2010 and the design value ‘‘as
of the attainment date’’ must be
determined using the last three full
years of ozone data, i.e., 2007, 2008 and
2009. We see no argument that the
design value ‘‘as of the attainment date’’
could be determined based on air
quality data that would not represent a
complete ozone season and thus be
incomplete as of June 15, 2010.
Comment: We received many
comment letters stating that the plan
does not reflect recommendations made
by the North Texas Clean Air Steering
Committee.
Response: We agree that the plan
submitted by the State does not reflect
all of these recommendations. The
resolutions were submitted to the State
and addressed by the TCEQ in the SIP
package adopted on May 23, 2007,
which is in the docket for this
rulemaking. The U.S. Supreme Court
has consistently held that under the Act,
initial and primary responsibility for
deciding what emissions reductions will
be required from which sources is left
to the discretion of the States. Whitman
v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns, 531 U.S. 457
(2001); Train v. NRDC, 421 U.S. 60
(1975). The State has discretion under
the Act to determine the emissions
reductions measures to be included in
its attainment demonstration and
exercised this authority for this plan.
The State’s role is to determine which
particular emissions reductions
measures are appropriate for the
nonattainment area in order to comply
with the requirements of the Act. As a
matter of law, EPA is required to
approve a SIP revision if it meets the
Act’s requirements, regardless of the
State’s choices. It is not EPA’s role to
rule out the State’s choice of
components of its SIP submittal so long
as the plan is adequate to meet the
standards mandated by EPA. See Train
at 79–80 and Union Electric v. EPA, 427
U.S. 246 (1976). The EPA’s role in
reviewing SIP submittals is to approve
state choices, if they meet the criteria of
the Act. EPA disapproves a SIP
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submittal only if it fails to meet the
statutory requirements. Seabrook v.
Costle, 659 F.2d 1349 (5th Cir. 1981).
Federal inquiry into the reasonableness
of state action is not allowed under the
Act (see, Union Electric Co. v. EPA, 427
U.S. 246, 255–266 (1976); 42 U.S.C.
7410(a)(2)). As provided in the analyses
accompanying this rulemaking, we have
explained why we believe the submitted
plan meets the requirements of the
CAA.
Comment: Many commenters claimed
that the SIP sanctions ozone pollution
levels above the 1997 standard yet this
standard has been determined not to be
protective of human health by the EPA
and is being replaced.
Response: The Act contemplates the
possibility that scientific advances
would require amending the ozone
NAAQS. As such, Section 109(d)(1) of
the Act requires EPA to review the
ozone standard every five years based
on the current science, and make any
revisions that are appropriate in light of
the current science. Today’s actions are
being taken in the context of the ozone
standard that was promulgated on July
18, 1997, based on the best available
scientific evidence at the time.
The 2008 revised 8-hour ozone
standard does not replace the
requirements for ozone nonattainment
areas to meet the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard by their applicable attainment
date. The measures implemented in this
attainment demonstration SIP will assist
the DFW area in progressing toward the
2008 revised 8-hour ozone standard,
ensuring progress continues during the
time between the designations for the
2008 standard and the submission date
for the associated SIP revisions. These
measures cannot be removed from the
SIP. South Coast Air Quality
Management Dist. v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882
(DC Cir. 2006).
Comment: A commenter stated that
TCEQ approved a permit revision
allowing TXI cement kilns in Ellis
County to burn tires as fuel, questioned
whether the change would result in a
decrease in NOX emissions, and
expressed concerns about other
pollutants, which result from tire
burning. TXI said there would be NOX
reductions but they based this by
comparing kilns that were not similar to
the ones TXI would use. TCEQ allows
TXI to self-report, but the checks on the
reporting are poor, and TXI also knows
when the inspectors are coming.
Response: Each cement plant in Ellis
County must comply with both its
permits’ limits and the State’s revised
chapter 117 rules for cement kilns relied
upon in the DFW attainment
demonstration, whichever is stricter. In
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a related rulemaking in today’s Federal
Register, EPA is concurrently approving
the revised chapter 117 rules for cement
kilns. The revised cement kiln rules
establish a NOX source cap for each of
the three cement plants in Ellis County.
We disagree that there will be no
decreases in NOX emissions. The
revised NOX rules for cement kilns
should result in at least 9.7 tpd of
reduction in NOX emissions for the
DFW area regardless of the fuel used
including tires. We note also that all of
the cement plants are required to
operate continuous emissions monitors
for NOX that must meet rigorous quality
assurance and quality control criteria.
Because these stack monitors must
operate continuously, compliance does
not rely solely on periodic inspections.
As a consequence, EPA is confident that
compliance with the NOX limits in these
rules will be well monitored.
The commenter’s concerns regarding
increases of other pollutants besides
NOX, TXI’s reliance upon non-similar
kilns to claim NOX reductions, selfreporting, and TCEQ’s inspection
program are not pertinent to today’s
action; the issue in this action is
whether the State has shown that the
DFW area will attain the 1997 standard
by June 15, 2010.
Comment: The public is
disadvantaged by ‘‘conditional
approval’’ comment periods. Comments
concerning the adequacy of Texas’ plan
depend upon how Texas fulfills the
requisite conditions, but the public will
not know this information until
sometime in the future after the current
comment period has passed. After Texas
adopts and submits its final plans
concerning DERCs and the other
‘‘conditions’’ to EPA, EPA should allow
additional public comment regarding
the adequacy of the DFW SIP attainment
demonstration.
Response: Congress provided for
conditional approval as a type of SIP
processing. The Congress added section
110(k)(4) to the Act in the 1990
amendments to codify the EPA’s
authority to conditionally approve SIPs.
Section 110(k)(4) provides that EPA may
conditionally approve a plan based on
a commitment from the State to adopt
specific enforceable measures by a date
certain, but not later than one year after
the date of the final conditional
approval action. In this case, if the State
submits by March 1, 2009 (the date
certain), a complete DERC SIP revision
submittal (the specific enforceable
measures), EPA must reevaluate the
approvability of the DFW attainment
demonstration SIP, as revised by this
DERC SIP revision submittal. EPA will
perform such an evaluation through
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notice-and-comment rulemaking and
the public will have another
opportunity to comment upon the
adequacy of the DFW plan as affected by
the DERC changes.
Comment: A number of commenters
are concerned that cities within the
DFW nonattainment area continue to be
given more time to attain the standard
instead of requiring them to clean the
air now. If the State had met its
responsibilities to submit a timely and
approvable 1-hour attainment
demonstration SIP, then this SIP would
be incrementally stronger and have been
submitted and implemented sooner.
There is a contention that Texas has not
submitted a complete approvable
attainment demonstration SIP for the
DFW area for over thirty years.
Moreover, monitoring began in the early
1970’s and the DFW area has never
attained the 84 parts per billion (ppb)
standard and remains years from doing
so.
Response: The lack of approvability of
past SIP submittals for the DFW area is
not relevant to the requirement for an
area to submit a 1997 8-hour ozone
attainment demonstration. The State
submitted this SIP revision on May 30,
2007, fifteen days before the June 15,
2007 required submission date. The
State was on schedule to submit this SIP
revision even earlier, but received
requests from several stakeholders for
an expanded timeline that would allow
for a more robust stakeholder discussion
and development of additional technical
support.1
This 8-hour ozone attainment
demonstration was submitted on time
and deemed complete by operation of
law (40 CFR part 51, Appendix V).
Moreover, the attainment date for the
1997 8-hour ozone standard for the
DFW area is June 15, 2010. The State
has not requested additional time for the
area to attain this standard, nor has
additional time been granted. EPA is
finding today that the control measures
relied upon in this plan, in combination
with Federal Measures, and building on
measures already approved in the SIP
will ensure that the DFW area attains
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard by the
applicable attainment date of June 15,
2010.
While past efforts to comply with
CAA requirements have not been
without flaws, we note that there have
been extensive efforts and significant
progress made over the years in the fast
growing DFW area. These past efforts
have built the foundation for the plan
1 See the Settlement Agreement and letters dated
March 22, 2006, March 24, 2006 and April 6, 2006
in the docket for this rulemaking.
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being approved today. They include the
15% Rate of Progress (ROP) plan, the
post-1996 ROP plan, the MVEBs, and
the extensive control measures adopted
by the State and approved by EPA into
the Texas SIP for the DFW area to meet
the 1-hour ozone standard. The control
measures in these approved plans
included among other things:
Reformulated gasoline, enhanced I/M,
and controls on power plants locally
and in the Central and East Texas
Region.
Moreover, we note that the area is
continuing to look for further ways to
address ozone levels and may submit
additional revisions to the SIP in the
future. Three of the largest cities
(Arlington, Dallas and Fort Worth) have
passed ordinances addressing the
purchase of green cement, which may
yield an additional 1 tpd of NOX
reductions; and local city and county
officials have increased their
enforcement of Inspection and
Maintenance rules by performing site
inspections, which will yield additional
reductions through 2009.
The measures discussed above have
resulted in significant improvements in
air quality. The DFW area now is
meeting the 1-hour standard and has
made significant progress toward
meeting the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. As a moderate nonattainment
area, the attainment date for the DFW
area is June 15, 2010 and we believe the
area will meet the attainment date.
Comment: The plan should require
more mass transit and industry to install
the latest in air pollution reduction
equipment. Airplane engines and
related equipment should be less
polluting.
Response: As explained in an earlier
response, the CAA places responsibility
on the State to determine the mix of
controls that will bring an area into
attainment with a particular standard
and EPA is delegated to reviewing
whether the State’s plan will meet the
statutory attainment requirement.
Therefore, EPA does not have the
authority to require the State of Texas to
submit a plan for the DFW area that
requires more mass transit or imposes
the latest in pollution control
equipment on industry.
We note, however, the expansion of
mass transit is ongoing in the DFW area
and can be viewed at https://
www.DART.org. Appendix H of the
DFW SIP submittal identifies emission
reduction measures for airplanes and
related equipment, which are part of the
Voluntary Mobile Source Emission
Reduction Program (VMEP) we are
approving today. These include:
Additional electrification of ground
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support equipment; gate electrification
to eliminate use of aircraft auxiliary
power units; ground tugs for pushback
to minimize use of reverse thrust from
main aircraft engines; de-peaking of
airline flight schedules; and
implementation of airport surface
detection equipment to improve
efficiency during taxi. Furthermore, the
local community has implemented
clean air initiatives that include:
Outreach for the TERP and
AirCheckTexas programs; reducing
environmental impacts by purchasing
hybrids and alternative fueled vehicles
when possible; purchasing 40% of their
electric power from renewable
resources; green building policies;
development of sustainability policies;
developing purchasing policies for
cleaner cement; and passing an
ordinance prohibiting vehicles over
14,000 pounds from idling for more
than 5 minutes.
In addition to the measures in
Appendix H, TCEQ submitted a
Supplement with more accurate and
updated data for Love Field and the
DFW International Airport, including
data on activities and fleet mix. There
were more new aircraft engines and the
related equipment was less polluting
than previously recognized. This
information is provided in the docket
for this rulemaking.
C. Comments on the Texas Emissions
Reduction Plan (TERP)
Comment: Commenters express
significant concerns about whether the
projected emissions reductions from
TERP will occur, as predicted. They
believe that the projections are overly
optimistic. They provide the following
reasons for their concern about the
projections being too optimistic: 1.
Actual TERP reductions have not met
previous projected reductions, and the
methodology for calculating the
projected TERP reductions may not take
into account that in the future, there
will be fewer emissions reductions per
dollar spent (cost-effectiveness
assumption). 2. Although it is clear that
TERP emissions reductions occur, there
does not seem to be a satisfactory way
to confirm the projected reductions will
actually occur or not. 3. EPA relies upon
the State’s assumption that 70% of
TERP funds will be used in the DFW
area, but since there is no mechanism
for ensuring the specified percentage of
funding will be met, the projections are
not enforceable; the projections should
not be relied upon in the attainment
demonstration; the 70% assumption
should be reduced; and the SIP should
include a contingency component to
address a potential shortfall.
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Response: We agree that for the
Increment of Progress SIP revision, the
amount of actual TERP reductions was
less than the projections. Because of this
experience, we worked with the State to
revise the methodology for estimating
emission reductions in this attainment
demonstration SIP. The revised
methodology uses assumptions that are
more conservative. Specifically, the
average project life was increased by
40% and the cost effectiveness was
reduced by slightly more than 51%. The
formula now relies upon the following
assumptions: $6000/ton, 250 days/yr
operation and a 7-year project life.
Using these revised assumptions, the
TERP emission reduction projections
relied upon in the demonstration
modeling and the WOE are greatly
reduced. Increasing the project life has
the effect of reducing the emission
reductions assumed in any given year.
The cut in the revised cost-effectiveness
assumption is intended to address,
among other things, the commenters’
concerns about there being fewer
reductions per dollar spent each
succeeding year.
For comparison, on January 26, 2007,
the cost effectiveness of TERP projects
completed in DFW averaged $3730.24/
ton; by September 23, 2007, DFW
projects averaged $3743.59/ton; and by
April 2, 2008, DFW projects averaged
$3959/ton. California’s experience with
the Carl Moyer program 2 has achieved
emissions reductions at an average cost
of $3900/ton through October 2006. We
believe the revised cost effectiveness of
$6000/ton provides room for the
increase in cost/ton that we are seeing
in the DFW area.
In its May 2007 SIP revision, TCEQ
indicated as a weight of evidence (WOE)
measure that additional TERP
reductions were possible if additional
monies were appropriated by the
legislature for the 2008/2009 legislature.
House Bill 1 signed by the Governor on
July 15, 2007, appropriated to TCEQ,
TERP funds of $297,144,243 for fiscal
years (FYs) 2008/2009. In the April 23,
2008 submittal, relying upon these
additional appropriated monies, TCEQ
projected that the TERP could
potentially achieve an additional 14.2
tpd of NOX emissions reductions. Since
these emissions reductions were not
available early enough to include as
control measures in the modeling, their
impact on the DFW area’s air quality
was instead predicted by EPA, using
sensitivity modeling runs, to estimate
2 The
Carl Moyer Program 2006 Status Report is
in the docket for this rulemaking and can be viewed
at https://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/moyer/status/
2006status_report.pdf.
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the ppb change on the monitors in the
modeling-based weight of evidence
(WOE) analysis.
To achieve the projected additional
14.2 tpd of NOX emissions reductions
from TERP, using the revised TERP
methodology, the Texas legislature
needed to appropriate to the TCEQ,
sufficient FY2008 and FY2009 3 TERP
funds for the TCEQ to allocate a total of
$149,100,000 4 to the DFW area for
TERP Emission Reduction Incentive
Grant (ERIG) projects; this amount does
not include the funds required to
achieve the IOP shortfall.5 TCEQ
received a sufficient amount of TERP
monies to have available $188,475,000
to achieve the IOP SIP shortfall
($39,375,000) and achieve an additional
14.2 tpd ($149,100,000) in 2008 and
2009.
In the April 2008 submittal, the TCEQ
posited that it could achieve the
additional 14.2 tpd of TERP NOX
reductions by spending in the DFW area
50% of the FY2008 TERP funds and
70% of the FY2009 TERP funds.
Whether funds are spent in exactly
these percentages each year however, is
not the issue; the essential point is that
TCEQ enters into TERP grant contracts
worth at least $149,100,000 in the DFW
area for projects to achieve 14.2 tpd in
calendar years 2008 and early 2009.
TCEQ roughly split in half for each
fiscal year, the $297,144,243
appropriated TERP funds—
$148,572,121.50. Of this
$148,572,121.50 ‘‘split,’’ TCEQ used
approximately $40 million for other
TERP programs, including rebate grants
and FY2007 unfunded TERP
applications, including the IOP SIP
shortfall. EPA notes that the IOP
shortfall has now been met. Considering
the factors meant that TCEQ had
approximately $106,000,000 FY2008
TERP monies for the FY2008 to achieve
additional reductions beyond those
considered in the May 2007 SIP
submission through ERIG projects in
TERP-eligible counties. Applications
submitted to TCEQ during the FY2008
round of project applications totaled
approximately $94.5 million for the
DFW area. Of these applications
however, it appears from the draft
September Report that $51,532,511.79
have been selected for funding.6
3 The TCEQ fiscal year runs from September 1
through August 31.
4 Using the revised SIP credit methodology, each
ton costs (6000 × 250 × 7) = $10,500,000. Therefore,
14.2 × 10,500,000 = $149,100,000.
5 Using the revised SIP credit methodology: 3.75
tpd × $10,500,000 = $39,375,000 to correct the IOP
SIP shortfall.
6 Per the TERP Biennial Report to the Texas
Legislature December 2008 draft, dated September
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As a result, to achieve the 14.2 tpd
projection, TCEQ needs to enter into
FY2009 TERP grant contracts worth
$97,567,488.21 ($149,100,000 ¥
51,532,511.79 = $97,567,488.21). In
summary, after accounting for the tpd of
TERP NOX emissions reductions
obtained by the FY2008 grant contracts,
to obtain the remaining tpd of TERP
NOX emissions reductions to achieve a
total of 14.2 tpd as projected as part of
the WOE, the TCEQ would need to enter
into TERP grant contracts with DFWarea applicants worth $149,100,000 for
projects to be completed as early as
possible in calendar 2009. Due to a
number of factors, including Hurricane
Ike, the TCEQ will begin its first round
of requests for funding from FY2009
TERP grant monies in December 2008.
For more information concerning the
timing of FY2009 TERP projects due to
Hurricane Ike, please see the
Supplemental TSD dated December
2008.
TERP has safeguards to ensure that
when funds are provided to grantees,
they must achieve the associated
reductions. Grantees are required to
track usage and report to the TCEQ
every six months; they must meet the
reporting requirements delineated in
their specific grant contract. TERP is
enforceable against the grant recipient.
Over the activity life of each TERP
grant-funded activity, the grant recipient
commits the generated emissions
reductions to the SIP. The recipient is
responsible for achieving the annual
and total NOX emissions reductions
within the eligible areas as defined in
the contract. Recipients will be required
to return all or a pro rata share of the
grant funds to the TCEQ if the emissions
reductions are not achieved.
EPA continues to carefully review the
biennial reports that TCEQ is required
to submit to the Legislature pursuant to
Texas Health and Safety Code, 386.057
and 386.116(d). The draft September
TERP Biennial Report to the Texas
Legislature indicates that 488 projects
have been selected for funding in the
DFW area, totaling $51,532,511.79 to
reduce an estimated 3.72 tpd in NOX
emissions beyond what was included in
the May 2007 modeling. Based upon the
draft September Report, the average
cost/ton for these projects increased to
$6710.13, versus the revised
methodology of $6000/ton. At this rate,
to achieve the 14.2 tpd in NOX
emissions reductions, the TCEQ must be
22, 2008. This draft was prepared using data from
mid-summer. The final report, due in December
2008, will incorporate all of the contracts awarded
or pending to date. See the docket for this
rulemaking.
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able to allocate at least $123 million 7 to
the DFW area for TERP projects early in
calendar 2009. As this report is in draft,
these numbers are subject to change but
it now seems likely that approximately
70% of these TERP emission reductions
will occur before the core ozone season
of 2009. We have evaluated the impact
of this change on the attainment
demonstration modeling and WOE; this
evaluation is in Subsection D, below.
In summary, EPA believes that the
TERP program is achieving significant
reductions in NOX. Consistent with its
experience in implementing the
program, the State has adjusted its
assumptions used in projecting
emission reductions to be more
conservative. EPA believes these revised
assumptions begin to address many of
the commenters concerns. Although
delays in opening the request for
applications mean the reductions based
on FY2009 funds will be delayed, many
reductions can still occur before the
peak of the ozone season. Achieving the
14.2 tpd of reductions from TERP will
require substantial continued efforts.
See also Subsection D below, in
particular the last Response, Comment
MC–15.
D. Comments on Photochemical
Modeling, Weight of Evidence Analyses,
and Assessment of Demonstration of
Attainment
EPA received a number of comments
about the photochemical modeling, the
Weight of Evidence Analyses, and our
proposed determination that the area
would attain the standard by its
attainment date of June 15, 2010. EPA
has reviewed all the comments on these
topics and provided responses below.
The discussion below summarizes our
evaluation of the modeling and
evidence, the comments we received,
and other factors such as the State’s
progress in implementing control
strategies, and recent air quality trends.
EPA believes that as the attainment date
becomes closer, measured air quality
and planned additional emission
reductions become more important as a
predictive tool (compared to modeling)
and the monitoring data should be given
additional weight, more so than in
situations where the attainment date is
still years away. In 2008, the
preliminary data shows 18 of the 20
monitors have measured attainment
levels with fourth high 8-hour values of
84 ppb or less. The remaining two
monitors were only slightly higher than
an attainment level measuring fourth
high values of 85 ppb. EPA believes
7 (6710.13 × 250 × 7) = $11,742,727.50 × 10.4786
= $123,047,344.38.
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additional significant reductions in
emissions will occur before the 2009
ozone season such that the area can
attain the standard based on 2007–2009
ambient data or at least qualify for a 1year extension of the attainment date by
having each monitor’s 4th high ozone
concentration in 2009 below 85 ppb.
We evaluated many factors in our
WOE evaluation. These items included
reductions not included in the modeling
based projections (energy efficiencies),
unquantifiable measures
(AirCheckTexas, Dallas Sustainable
Skyline Initiative, etc.), meteorological
analyses of severity of ozone seasons
(both the base period and recent years
including 2007), most recent monitoring
in 2007 (a 4th high of 89 ppb at two
monitors and the other 18 monitors had
4th high values of 87 ppb or less), the
court’s vacatur of CAIR, progress in
implementing the TERP program, and
progress in implementing the early
compliance incentive on natural gas
compressor engines outside the DFW
area. EPA has also considered
preliminary 2008 ozone monitoring data
(4th high values of 85 ppb at two
monitors and at the other 18 monitors
the value was 84 ppb or less) and
whether that data supports a trend
toward attainment for the area. We
considered that over half of the NOX
estimated emissions reductions between
2007 and 2009 that are estimated to
yield a 3–4 ppb drop in ozone levels in
the DFW area, are slated to occur
between the 2008 ozone season and the
2009 ozone season. We also expect
further ozone reductions in 2009 and
beyond.
After consideration of all of these
analyses, EPA has determined that the
State has demonstrated that the DFW
nonattainment area will attain the 1997
8-hour ozone standard by its attainment
date.
Comment (MC–1): A commenter states
that the WOE analysis underestimates
the impact of emission increases from
facilities outside the DFW
nonattainment area, upon the DFW area.
This underestimate occurs because the
TCEQ issues PSD permits to facilities
outside the DFW area that will affect the
ozone concentration level in the DFW
area and says they should address these
ozone impacts in the DFW attainment
demonstration SIP. The commenter does
not believe that this DFW attainment
demonstration accounts for the impacts
from these sources that have been and
will be permitted outside of the DFW
area. There also appears to be no
correlation or tracking of these
permitted emission increases in relation
to the projected point source emissions
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inventories in this DFW attainment
demonstration.
Response (MC–1): The Texas SIP at
Section 166.160 (a) (which incorporates
40 CFR 52.21(k) by reference) requires a
new source or modification subject to
PSD to demonstrate that emissions from
the facility will not cause or contribute
to a violation of any NAAQS. The Texas
PSD SIP permitting program also
provides for an opportunity for notice
and comment, as well as state court
judicial review, of each permitting
action.
EPA disagrees with the commenter
that this SIP revision does not account
for the impact of potential emissions
increases. In this final action on the
DFW attainment demonstration, we
reviewed the analysis to insure that
sources impacting the DFW
nonattainment area were included in
the baseline and future case modeling
demonstrations. EPA’s modeling
guidance (‘‘Guidance on the Use of
Models and Other Analyses for
Demonstrating Attainment of Air
Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and
Regional Haze’’, EPA–454/B–07–002,
April 2007; and earlier modeling
guidance) and emission inventory
guidance (‘‘Emissions Inventory
Guidance for Implementation of Ozone
and Particulate Matter National
Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) and Regional Haze
Regulations’’, EPA–454/R–05–001,
August, 2005, updated November 2005)
indicate that a combination of specific
projections and general growth
estimates should be utilized to attempt
to obtain a best estimate for the future
year inventory. Future case emissions
must be projected to account for growth
and control throughout the modeling
domain, which includes states outside
of Texas and the attainment areas of
Texas (including the new proposed
sources raised by the commenter). EPA’s
guidance has been that new permitted
sources, including likely to be permitted
sources based on applications that have
been received when the future year EI
is being generated, should be included
in the future year modeling if they are
expected to be emitting in the future
attainment year. As a practical matter,
the focus has usually been to include
expected new very large sources (such
as electric generating units (EGUs)) and
use economic based growth factors to
account for growth in emissions from
other industrial source categories.
Overall, EPA’s guidance is to provide
the best estimate of the future year
emission inventory given the limitations
with estimating emissions several years
in the future. Texas’ emission
projections to the future years are very
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detailed and the methods utilized are
discussed in the MOAAD TSD and in
TCEQ’s DFW SIP submittal, including
Appendix B. In nonattainment areas,
major new sources are required to
obtain offsets larger than the proposed
source so there is a net decrease in
emissions, so no growth is estimated for
these sources in nonattainment areas.
Therefore, within Texas the only areas
that point source growth is estimated is
in the areas that are in attainment and
our discussion will briefly explain the
methodology for future year estimates of
major point sources in attainment areas
of Texas.
For existing EGUs in Texas, the State
used 2005 continuous emission
monitoring data and assumed that there
would be no emissions changes. Texas
projected increases in emissions
because of new EGUs that were
expected to be emitting in 2009 (these
were included in Table 2–8 of Appendix
B of TCEQ’s submittal). For all other
industrial point source emissions (nonEGUs) in Texas’ attainment areas, TCEQ
started with the 1999 reported emission
inventory and projected growth in point
source emissions using point source
growth projections derived from the
Emissions Growth Analysis System
version 4.0 (EGAS 4.0), an EPAapproved methodology. It is worth
noting that the EGAS system for
projecting emissions tends to overstate
future emissions since the system relies
principally on economic growth for the
projections, and does not include
reductions from regulatory or permit
controls.
In conclusion, we have reviewed the
methodologies that TCEQ utilized to
grow EGUs and non-EGUs outside of the
DFW area and conclude that the 2009
level emissions of these sources have
been appropriately estimated using
acceptable methods and contrary to the
commenter’s concerns the attainment
demonstration appropriately accounts
for the potential for new source growth
by 2009.
Comment (MC–2): Commenters state
that ozone exceedances continue to
occur in the DFW area and show there
still is a serious problem. Specifically,
14 exceedances have been measured at
eight of the monitors through August 12,
2008 and eight of which are 90 to 99
ppb. The commenter concluded that
this 2008 monitoring data does not seem
to support the WOE.
Response (MC–2): EPA has reviewed
the ozone monitoring data through
November 1, 2008 in response to this
comment. While a number of
exceedances of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard occurred during the 2008
ozone season by August 12, 2008, it is
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very important to note that the standard
is a statistically based standard. The
statistical nature of the standard allows
each monitor to have up to 3 days with
exceedance levels at each monitor (with
potentially multiple 8-hour exceedances
for each of the three days) and all the
monitors in the area could still have a
4th high value less than 85 ppb
(attainment level). The standard is an
average of the daily 4th high value at a
monitor for each year of a consecutive
3-year period. Therefore, it is even
possible to have a 4th high value for one
or even two years at a specific monitor
be above the standard, but the 3-year
average value to be below 85 ppb and
thus, in attainment.8 Furthermore, each
monitor in the area could have up to 3
exceedances at each monitor on
differing days. Given 20 monitors in the
DFW area, a total of 60 exceedances
could theoretically occur in the DFW
area with all 4th high values at each
monitor still less than 85 ppb. This is a
theoretical worse-case situation but this
demonstrates that having several
exceedances does not automatically
yield a nonattainment determination.
Since the standard is statistically
based, the relevant metric to examine
for determining compliance with the
NAAQS is the annual 4th high values at
each monitor. We therefore evaluated
the recent 4th high values for the DFW
area 8–Hour Ozone Season (March 1–
October 31 for the 85 ppb standard). The
4th high monitoring data from 2008
indicates that the area is near attainment
levels (2008 monitoring data is
preliminary and awaiting QA/QC 9). The
2008 preliminary data shows the DFW
area had 4th high values of 85 ppb at
two monitors and at the other 18
monitors the value was 84 ppb or less.
The 2008 preliminary data indicates the
2006–2008 DV is 91 ppb (down from 95
ppb using 2005–2007 data). For the
monitor that has the highest average
2007 and 2008 4th high values and is
likely to be the controlling monitor (or
one of the highest monitors) for
determining if the area reaches
attainment based on 2007–2009 data,
the monitor’s DV for the 2007–2009
period would have to be less than 85
ppb. For this to occur the monitor
(Denton monitor) would have to have a
4th high value of 82 ppb or less to reach
attainment in 2009. It is important to
8 For example, if the 4th high value for each of
three years was as follows: 2006—87 ppb; 2007—
85 ppb; 2008—81 ppb, the average over the three
year period would be 84 ppb, which is below the
level of the standard.
9 2008 preliminary monitoring data is from EPA’s
AQS and AirNow databases and has to undergo
final Quality Assurance and Quality Control.
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note that this monitor had a preliminary
4th high value in 2008 of only 84 ppb.
In comparison with ozone monitoring
levels in 2007, the preliminary 2008
monitoring data is lower than the 2007
data. Contrary to the commenters
concerns, EPA believes that the 2008
preliminary data is consistent with
achieving attainment, especially
considering that much of the DFW SIP
reductions are still to occur and another
year of fleet turnover will happen. EPA
also believes that even if the area does
not attain the standard based on 2007–
2009 data, it is very likely to qualify for
a one year extension under sections
172(a)(2)(C) and 181(a)(5) of the Act (see
40 CFR 51.907) by having fourth high at
84 ppb or below at every monitor.
Comment (MC–3): Commenters
believe that we should impose a 2009
mid-course review (MCR) obligation
upon the State, triggered by exceedances
at the monitors or a violation of the
standard in 2009.
Response (MC–3): There is no MCR
requirement at this time for the 8-hour
ozone SIP. In our Phase 2
Implementation Rule, we provided that
we would assess the need for MCR for
areas with an attainment date beyond 6
years after the effective date of the area’s
designation (Final Rule To Implement
the 8–Hour Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standard, Phase 2 (70 FR 71612,
71629). The attainment date for DFW is
June 15, 2010, which is not more than
6 years beyond the effective date of the
area’s designation. A mid-course review
is for the purpose of assessing whether
an area is on-track for attainment and
would typically be performed several
years before the attainment year. This is
because a MCR performed several years
before the attainment year would give
the area sufficient time to make
corrections to the plan if it was not
performing as anticipated. A review as
suggested by the commenter would not
be ‘‘mid-course’’ because it would be
performed in the middle of the
attainment year ozone season. At that
point in time, there would be no steps
that the DFW area could take to move
the area back on track to achieve
attainment by the required date.
Comment (MC–4): Commenters stated
that in the DFW area, there are two
monitors critical to the attainment
demonstration, one in Frisco and one in
Denton. The commenters, relying upon
a February 22, 2006 Memorandum from
ENVIRON, state that there is no
measurable impact on these two critical
monitors from the TCEQ’s chosen
controls for the Ellis County cement
plants. The commenters contend that
TCEQ has not performed any analysis
showing that the chosen level of
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controls on the Ellis County cement
plants would assist the DFW area into
coming into compliance with the ozone
standard.
Response (MC–4): As noted in a
previous response, the Act gives the
State the primary authority to determine
the mix of control measures necessary to
demonstrate attainment. One of the
measures that TCEQ selected in support
of its attainment demonstration is
controls at cement plants in Ellis
County. EPA evaluated the plan, as a
whole, and agrees that the State has
demonstrated that the area will attain
the standard by its attainment date.
Thus, EPA does not have authority to
second-guess the mix of controls
selected by the State and, in this case,
its decision to further control the
cement kilns in Ellis County.
Although we cannot second-guess the
controls selected by the State, we note
that we agree with TCEQ that cement
kiln NOX reductions are an important
element of the reductions necessary to
bring the entire DFW area into
attainment and the reductions are
expected to reduce high ozone levels
and the frequency of ozone exceedances
in the DFW area. The record for this
action includes the information that was
evaluated by the State and EPA and that
supports the conclusion that additional
NOX controls on cement kilns are a
critical component to reducing ozone
exceedance levels in the DFW area so
that the area can timely attain the 1997
8-hour ozone standard. It is clear from
evaluating the SIP, its reports and
appendices that TCEQ has performed
numerous analyses concerning the
impact of the cement kilns NOX and
VOC emissions on the ozone
concentrations levels of the DFW area.
Moreover, contrary to the commenters’
assertion, the chosen strategy has an
impact on the Frisco and Denton
monitors, as well as a significant benefit
to the western portion of the
nonattainment area, especially in
Tarrant County. For further details, see
the TCEQ’s Response to Comments
document, the MOAAD TSD, and the
Supplemental TSD.
For the other comments specific to the
cement kiln NOX rule itself, not the
attainment demonstration SIP, we
provide the comments and our
responses in our final rule for the
Control of Emissions of Nitrogen Oxides
from Cement Kilns, concurrently
published in today’s Federal Register.
Comment (MC–5): The commenter
asserted that EPA should not accept
TCEQ’s revised Relative Response
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Factor (RRF) calculation.10 The
commenter indicated that contrary to
the proposal, a 1 ppb difference between
EPA’s RRF guidance and TCEQ’s
revised RRF is significant. The
commenter referred to 73 FR 40211,
stating that TCEQ RRF calculation did
not make significant differences in the
future design values (FDVs) with
truncation. The commenter wrote that
TCEQ’s methodology is merely a paper
exercise to obtain additional emission
credits, and EPA should not approve of
such tactics.
Response (MC–5): We recognize the
TCEQ’s method of projecting the future
design value differs from the method
provided for in EPA’s guidance. EPA’s
guidance for projecting the future design
value is not a legally binding
substantive rule. Therefore, other
methods of design value projections
may be evaluated on a case-by-case
basis and used to determine whether an
area will meet the standard. Whatever
method is used for a specific
demonstration—either that from EPA’s
Guidance or another method—is subject
to comment during the State and EPA
public participation processes and all
substantive concerns about the method
would be addressed in responding to
any comments.
TCEQ shared their RRF method with
EPA during their SIP development
process. EPA reviewed the alternate
RRF method at the time and indicated
to TCEQ that we would utilize both
EPA’s method and TCEQ’s method and
weigh the results in our review of the
modeling projections. We have
continued to follow this approach in our
review of this SIP. For details on how
both the TCEQ and EPA RRF methods
are calculated and results from the two
methods, please see the MOAAD TSD
starting in Chapter 4.
In this specific case, TCEQ’s method
yields projected values that when
compared to values with EPA’s method
are more conservative at some monitors
and less conservative at other monitors.
EPA does not consider the TCEQ RRF
method to be superior to EPA’s method,
just a different way to perform the
calculation and yield another set of
projected results to consider in our
review. We do not believe that either
method is biased towards a particular
result. As described below, and
documented in our MOAAD TSD for
10 The RRF is used to calculate the change in
model projected values between the basecase and
future case modeling projections and determine if
modeling is projecting attainment in the future. For
further explanations of both the EPA guidance
method for calculating RRFs and TCEQ’s RRF
calculation method see Section 4.11 of the MOAAD
TSD.
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this action, we have reviewed
projections using both RRF techniques.
Both the TCEQ projection and the EPA
projection are consistent with the
conclusion that the area will meet the
standard in 2009.
The results for both RRF (EPA and
TCEQ) methods are contained in tables
of the MOAAD TSD that have FDV
projections, including Tables in Chapter
6 (the Summary Chapter). EPA reviewed
the FDVs for all modeling based
projections using both RRF techniques
and for most monitors, the TCEQ RRF
based FDV calculations make minor
differences of only one or two tenths of
a ppb (compared to EPA’s RRF method)
and generally do not change the final
modeling projected value. Specifically,
for the nine monitors that are assessed,
the difference between the two RRF
techniques ranges from minus 0.22 ppb
to +0.19 ppb for 8 of the 9 monitors and
is +0.59 ppb for the other monitor. See
Table 5 of the proposal notice. As the
final step of calculating modeling
projections, EPA guidance recommends
truncating the tenths digit and only
reporting integer ppb values to match
with the monitored attainment
demonstration procedures that truncate
to integer ppb levels. Due to this
truncation procedure, modeling
projection changes of a few tenths do
not generally impact the final FDV
value. There were a few cases where the
different RRF methods yielded a 1 ppb
difference in the final FDV value due to
this truncation process (for the
Midlothian monitor’s data, the different
RRF methods yield modeling values of
82.83 ppb and 83.05 ppb and truncation
yields final FDVs of 82 ppb and 83 ppb).
We continue to believe that the
difference in the results of these two
techniques is small overall. As
discussed in another response below,
we considered the results of both RRF
methods (including the few times that
the truncated FDV differed by 1 ppb)
and determined that both the TCEQ
projection and the EPA projection are
consistent with the conclusion that the
area will meet the standard in 2009.
Comment (MC–6): The commenter
indicated it is unclear whether the
Photochemical Dispersion Modeling
Reanalysis 2009 (PDMR 2009)
evaluation uses TCEQ’s revised RRF or
EPA’s guidance. The commenter
indicated that it appears as though it
uses only TCEQ’s RRF and the public
should be afforded an opportunity to
know the PDMR 2009 FDV under EPA’s
guidance. The commenter asserted that
considering that even with the more
lenient TCEQ revised RRF, the modeling
still projects a worse air quality picture,
and thus the EPA guidance projection
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will most likely be even worse. The
commenter indicated that without this
information, the public is unable to
meaningfully review and comment not
only on the overall demonstration, but
also on whether using the TCEQ revised
RRF is even proper.
Response (MC–6): There were five
tables that included modeling
projections in the proposal notice.
Tables 2, 3, and 5 had projections for
the PDMR 2009 modeling scenario and
were marked as TCEQ RRF in the FDV
columns. The proposal notice included
calculations of modeling projections
using both the TCEQ’s RRF method and
the RRF method from EPA’s guidance
for the modeling run Combo 10 in Table
1. In referring to values in Table 1 of the
proposal notice, EPA stated on page
40211 ‘‘Since the TCEQ RRF calculation
method did not make significant
differences in the FDVs and with the
truncation to whole numbers, we have
used the TCEQ RRFs for the final
assessment with consideration of the
FDVs using EPA’s RRF method. The
results of EPA’s RRF method are
contained in the MOAAD TSD.’’ From
that point forward in the proposal
notice, EPA did not include the results
from EPA’s RRF method in the Federal
Register notice. Tables 2, 3, and 5,
including the analyses of PDMR 2009
only include the TCEQ RRFs as the
commenter indicates. This was done to
try to minimize confusion in the notice.
EPA did note in the proposed notice
that the results from the EPA RRF
method are contained in the MOAAD
TSD. The results for both RRF (EPA and
TCEQ) methods were contained in
tables of the MOAAD TSD that had
Future Design Value projections,
including Tables in Chapter 6 (the
Summary Chapter). EPA reviewed the
FDVs for all modeling based projections
using both RRF techniques.
Examination of the modeling results,
which include some WOE adjustments
contained in Table 6–3 of the MOAAD
TSD, reveals that the TCEQ RRF based
FDV calculation makes only minor
differences of only one or two tenths of
a ppb (compared to EPA’s RRF method)
for most monitors and did not change
the final modeling projected value
except for one monitor.
Comment (MC–7): A commenter
asserted that full credit for the NOX
reductions from gas compressors in 33
East Texas counties seems overly
optimistic. The commenter indicated
that their understanding is that owners
or operators of compressor engines
requested a small portion of the $4
million in incentives. The commenter
remains skeptical that the full
reductions assumed in Combo 10 will
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be achieved by 2009. The commenter
asserted that the attainment modeling
thus overstates the ozone reductions
from the control strategy and indicated
that EPA should consider this effect as
part of the Weight of Evidence analysis,
and should give more weight to the
PDMR 2009.
Several commenters indicated that the
2.4 tpd of NOX reductions from point
sources in the DFW area that have 2010
compliance dates are not likely to be in
place by the beginning of the 2009
ozone season. These commenters also
indicated that EPA assumes too much
by relying on the predictions that early
compliance will occur for certain
control measures with 2010
implementation dates. They claim that
because of this reliance, the attainment
modeling overstates the ozone
reductions from the control strategy.
The commenters indicated that EPA
should consider this effect as part of the
WOE analysis, and should give more
weight to the PDMR 2009. Furthermore,
a commenter wrote that if any control
measure emission reduction will not be
enforceable until after the 2009
compliance date, then those emission
reductions cannot be used to justify
EPA’s approval.
Response (MC–7): Combo 10 modeling
run was the official attainment
demonstration modeling run submitted
by TCEQ to EPA in the SIP revision
submittal. Because of our concerns
stemming from the inclusion of
reductions from measures with 2010
compliance dates, it was not the only
modeling run considered by EPA in our
evaluation of whether the DFW area
would attain the standard by the
deadline. There was another modeling
run available in the TCEQ’s public
record on its proposed action for EPA to
review; in the proposal and TSDs, we
label this additional modeling scenario
the PDMR 2009. We evaluated this
PDMR 2009 modeling run as a worstcase projection of the 2009 modeling
picture because it did not project any
reductions from the rules with 2010
compliance dates. For example, it did
not include the 2.4 tpd of NOX
reductions projected from the major and
minor Point Source rules in the DFW
area and any projected reductions from
the East Texas Compressor Engines
rules that have 2010 compliance dates.
Thus, PDMR 2009 provides an upper
boundary of projected ozone FDVs in
the attainment year.
The Texas legislature made available
to compressor engine owner and
operators $4 million to assist in early
compliance. As the commenter points
out, however, the full $4 million was
not requested by owners and operators
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of compressor engines. Since some
requests were made, some early
compliance should occur, but the
commenter is correct that the level of
reductions in East Texas by the 2009
ozone season is probably closer to the
PDMR 2009 emission reduction level
than the Combo 10 emission reduction
level. As a result of this information,
EPA is putting more weight on the
PDMR 2009 results than on Combo 10.
We have evaluated the modeling
outputs based on an approach that looks
at the PDMR 2009 outputs, which
predict ozone levels that are slightly
worse than what is likely to occur, as
well as the Combo 10 outputs, which
predict ozone levels that are more
optimistic. This evaluation of PDMR
2009 sets the upper bound of model
predictions for the FDV in 2009 and the
Combo 10 run sets the lower bound. In
making our determination that the State
had demonstrated that the DFW area
would attain the 1997 ozone NAAQS by
its attainment date, we consider the
TCEQ’s official attainment
demonstration modeling run (Combo
10), the results from the PDMR 2009
modeling, and information that some
early compliance would occur by the
2009 ozone season as well as other
weight of evidence analyses. The model
projections in Table 6.3 of the MOAAD
TSD give the non-truncated values for
the final modeling with some WOE
adjustments for both the modeling runs
and both RRF techniques. The
difference between the PDMR 2009 and
the Combo 10 run for each monitor is
0.30 ppb or less when using either the
TCEQ or EPA RRF technique. EPA’s
modeling guidance recommends the
truncation of the decimal places and
reporting of only integer values for the
final modeling based projection values.
When the truncation is done to the
MOAAD TSD Table 6.3 values
(Modeling-based assessment with some
WOE elements included), the results are
identical for both the PDMR 2009 and
the Combo 10 modeling runs. Using the
EPA RRF procedure, both runs result
with 7 monitors attaining, one monitor
at 87 ppb, and one monitor at 88 ppb.
Using the TCEQ RRF procedure, both
runs result with 7 monitors attaining,
one monitor at 87 ppb, and one monitor
at 88 ppb.
We have considered both the PDMR
2009 and Combo 10 modeling results
and put less weight on the Combo 10
projections because of concerns over the
inclusion of measures with 2010
compliance dates. As discussed above,
however, when EPA’s procedures for
projecting the future design value are
followed, there is little difference in the
results particularly if one considers that
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a small amount of early compliance will
occur. Therefore, as further discussed in
response to other comments, the
combination of the Modeling
projections and other WOE elements
were considered and support the
conclusion that the area will attain by
the area’s attainment date.
Comment (MC–8): The commenter
indicated that TCEQ intends to reduce
the amount of DERC values included in
the modeling because using the entire
balance of the DERC bank is ‘‘overly
conservative based on past usage of
DERCs.’’ The commenter asserted that
DFW’s past air quality violations
occurred under scenarios of less DERC
usage. The commenter concluded that
this belies a Weight of Evidence (WOE)
‘‘trend’’ of improving air quality because
in the future projection nothing is really
changing from the past when violations
occurred.
Response (MC–8): DERCs are banked
emission credits generated by reducing
emissions beyond required levels that
sources can use to exceed certain
emission limits on a temporary basis.
EPA guidance discusses why emission
credits that are being carried in an
emissions bank ought to be included in
modeled projections. It can be important
because these banked emissions come
back in to the air if the banked credits
are used. As a result, if these banked
emissions are not accounted for in the
future projections, the modeling would
under-predict future ozone levels if
some or all of the banked credits are
used. EPA guidance advises a
conservative approach in which all
banked emissions are included in the
modeled future projections. This
conservative approach assumes that the
entire bank would be depleted during
the attainment year. The TCEQ Bank
held 20.4 tpd of NOX DERCs when
TCEQ reviewed the level of credits in
the bank and included the banked
DERCs in their future year modeling.
After finalizing the future year
modeling, TCEQ reevaluated the
inclusion of all of the banked DERCs in
the future projections. TCEQ believed
that the inclusion of the entire balance
of the DERC bank was overly
conservative based on past usage of
DERCs. They wished to include 3.2 tpd,
rather than 20.4 tpd, of banked DERCs
in the future projections. As discussed
previously, Texas committed to adopt a
restriction on DERC usage to ensure that
no more than 3.2 tpd of banked DERCs
will be used in 2009 and as a result
preventing 17.2 tpd of potential
emissions growth. This approval is
conditioned on TCEQ’s adoption and
submittal of a complete SIP revision.
Consequently, in order for EPA to fully
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approve the SIP, the State will need to
have an enforceable rule in place that
would not allow 17.2 tpd of the 20.4 tpd
banked DERCs currently modeled in the
state’s 2009 Combo 10 and PDMR 2009
modeling, to be used beginning March
1, 2009.
The modeling submitted May 30,
2007 did include 20.4 tpd of banked
DERCs in the 2009 future projections.
Relying upon the State’s commitment to
revise the DERC rule to limit the use of
banked credits to 3.2 tpd in 2009, it is
appropriate to reduce the 2009 future
modeling projections to 3.2 tpd in 2009.
(For the calendar years after 2009, there
will be an enforceable mechanism to
equate to the limit of 3.2 tpd.) EPA
therefore adjusted the modeling
projections in Table 3 of the proposal
(also included in the MOAAD TSD) to
assess the impacts of the revised future
projections. This was done to provide a
modeling projection that reflected the
inclusion of banked DERCs of 3.2 tpd in
2009. This approach is consistent with
what would have been projected if
TCEQ had redone the SIP modeling
with 3.2 tpd for the banked DERCs
instead of the 20.4 tpd that was
included in the Combo 10 and PDMR
2009 modeling. EPA then used the
revised 2009 modeling projections in
conjunction with other modeling based
analysis and WOE considerations in our
review of the entire attainment
demonstration.
The commenter is correct in the
assessment that DERCs have not been
used in the past and past air quality
exceedances did not include any impact
from DERC usage (since DERCs have not
been used in the DFW area). Now, with
the commitment to adopt a restriction
on DERC use, it is not appropriate to
continue with the assumption that all of
the DERCs in the bank will be used in
the attainment year in the future year
modeling.
Because DERC use did not impact
past exceedances (again because DERCs
have not been used in the past), EPA did
not consider the banked DERCs 2009
usage restriction, as part of our
emissions and ambient trends analysis
that we performed in our WOE
evaluation; rather, it is only in the
modeling where it was considered.
Consistent with the commenters
concerns, EPA was careful in our WOE
evaluations and review to not consider
the revised 2009-banked DERCs usage
restriction in our emission trends
analysis and monitoring trends analysis.
For example in Table 5–11 of the
MOAAD TSD, estimating the actual
emission reductions between 2007 and
2009, EPA did not include any
reductions due to the restriction on
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DERC usage. Therefore, EPA believes
that we have appropriately considered
the revised banked DERCs tpd usage
restriction in adjusting assumptions
about possible future emissions growth
in the modeling but consistent with the
commenter’s concerns, we have not
considered it in evaluating emissions
and monitoring trends (analysis
included in the WOE analysis). For a
full discussion of DERCs and
conditional approval, see the DERCs
comments section below.
Comment (MC–9): The commenter
indicated that EPA’s reliance upon the
low 2007 monitor readings is misplaced
since extremely unusual weather, rain
and low temperatures, dominated the
2007 DFW ozone season. The
commenter continued that the first 100+
°F temperature day was not reached
until late August. The commenter
concluded that EPA should not give
TCEQ credit for something achieved
only by the grace of God.
Response (MC–9): We rely on the 2007
monitored air quality levels as part of
our Weight of Evidence analysis. We
investigated the 2007 meteorology to
determine how it compared with the
DFW normal ozone season meteorology.
To help account for all the different
variables that impact the frequency of
ozone we utilized a Meteorological
Adjusted Trends analysis that was done
by EPA personnel at Office of Air
Quality Planning and Standards
(OAQPS) for the DFW area to assess the
ozone conduciveness of the 2007 ozone
season. OAQPS’s analysis utilizes
temperature and precipitation data in
addition to several other factors. The
results of this analysis were included in
our proposal, and indicated that overall
2007 was near the normal meteorology
for DFW’s ozone season. See Chapter 5,
section 5.15 and Chapter 6, section 6.3
in the MOAAD TSD.
The commenter asserts that the 2007
ozone season was biased low due to the
influence of more rain than normal and
less 100 °F days than normal. EPA
reviewed monthly meteorological
National Climatic Data Center 2007 data
for DFW International Airport (for the
DFW ozone season months of March 1–
October 31). We evaluated average
monthly temperature, monthly average
maximum temperature, and monthly
precipitation. Looking at this
temperature information and
precipitation data, EPA’s assessment is
that, while for several months the
precipitation was above average, the
ozone season and the core ozone
months (June–September) were near
normal overall. For more information,
see the Supplemental TSD. Ozone
formation is affected by a number of
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meteorological parameters and just
looking at these three parameters does
not give a complete evaluation of the
ozone conduciveness of the 2007 ozone
season.
The commenter was concerned that
the meteorology was unusually
nonconductive for generation of ozone
exceedances in 2007. In light of this,
EPA also reviewed ozone exceedance
data for 2007, and found that the first
exceedance occurred April 28th, and a
number of exceedance days occurred
starting in late July (7/24) and the last
exceedance occurred on October 4th. In
all, there were 12 days with
exceedances at one or more monitors in
the DFW area in 2007. This is below the
long-term normal trend of
approximately 30 exceedance days per
year. The limitation of just evaluating
the number of exceedance days to
determine if meteorology was normal or
below normal is that exceedance days
are a combination of meteorology and
emissions. Emissions decreases due to
fleet turnover among other things could
also explain part or all of a lower than
normal number of exceedance days in
2007.
Finally, we note that one reason we
evaluate attainment of a NAAQS based
on three years of data is that use of
several years tends to mitigate any
unusual meteorology that occurs during
a specific year. The year 2007 is the first
of the three years of data (2007–2009)
that will be used for determining if the
DFW area reaches attainment in 2009.
The 2007 4th high maximums were all
in the 80s ppb range or less for monitors
that are typically near the area’s design
value. This is significantly lower than
other recent years. Meteorological
Trends analysis indicates that 2007 was
closer to normal than 2005 and 2006.
Therefore, the 2007 data is important
from both a trends perspective as well
as being the first of three years utilized
in determining if the area reaches
attainment in 2009.
Comment (MC–10): The commenter
indicated the DFW emissions inventory
has gaps and that EPA knows that there
are hundreds of industrial sources
involved in the gas well drilling and gas
pipeline operations that were not
modeled by the TCEQ and which TCEQ
assumed to be insignificant. The
commenter asserted that without
modeling these significant sources of
NOX emissions, the attainment
demonstration may be in greater
jeopardy than EPA or TCEQ admits.
Response (MC–10): The TCEQ
projected the future emissions inventory
for the industrial sources involved in
the gas well drilling and gas pipeline
operations with the most recent
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information available at the time of the
emissions inventory development.
Photochemical modeling is a very
complex process and the emissions from
natural gas production in the DFW area
were rapidly changing during the last
two years of modeling and SIP
development and continue to do so.
Improving emission estimates and
projections is one of the elements of
photochemical modeling that always
requires an agency to balance the need
to incorporate new information with the
time available to complete the
photochemical modeling tool for SIP
development, and still meet the
submittal deadline.
TCEQ’s basecase and future year
(2009) SIP modeling did include
estimates for emissions from industrial
sources involved in gas well drilling
and pipeline operations. During the
commissioners meeting when the TCEQ
adopted the DFW attainment
demonstration SIP in May 2007, there
were industry comments indicating
emission estimates from natural gas
compressor engines should be higher
than were in the current modeling.
Although the commissioners moved
forward to adopt and timely submit the
DFW 8-Hour Ozone attainment
demonstration SIP, they also directed
TCEQ staff to research the accuracy of
the emissions inventories for these
sources that were relied on in the
attainment demonstration modeling.
TCEQ staff subsequently conducted an
additional survey to re-evaluate the
number of stationary, gas-fired engines
and other NOX emission sources that are
common at natural gas production and
gathering (P&G) facilities, in the ninecounty DFW area. TCEQ provided that
information to EPA as supplemental
WOE in a letter dated April 23, 2008,
which EPA has considered in its
decision on whether to approve the
attainment demonstration SIP. Details of
this survey, the results, and explanation
of how this information was utilized in
EPA’s review were included in the
proposal package (Proposal FRN,
MOAAD TSD, etc.).
The survey collected data on existing
NOX sources and expected additional
installations by 2009 so that a
comparison to estimated levels in the
2009 SIP modeling could be conducted.
The survey also collected data on when
the NOX emitting sources were
installed. The survey indicated that P&G
operations grew much more rapidly
than projected in the SIP. Based on the
survey results, TCEQ concluded that the
majority of emissions growth would
come from the increase in compressor
engines and not from other facets of
P&G operations. TCEQ therefore
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provided new estimates for the
compressor engines’ emissions growth.
The survey indicated that almost all
of the rapid growth that created the
underestimation of additional engines
and other related NOX sources from
natural gas P&G emission sources had
occurred after the 1999 base year.
Fortunately, TCEQ put in place
regulations that will control rich and
lean burn natural gas fired compressor
engines in the DFW area. TCEQ also
controlled some engines involved with
drilling operations in the Increment of
Progress SIP.
From the modeling perspective, using
the new survey’s results, the
underestimation in the growth of
emissions is greatly mitigated by
TCEQ’s implementation of NOX controls
on emission sources in this industry
group in Chapter 117 rules adopted as
part of the May 30, 2007 SIP
submission. While mitigated to a large
extent, the new survey data indicate that
emissions in the demonstration
modeling, i.e., the 2009 Combo 10
modeling, from these natural gas P&G
sources would add 3.3 tpd based on our
analysis of the TCEQ survey data. Using
modeling sensitivity runs, we accounted
for this approximate increase of 3.3 tpd
in the projected emissions inventory,
and we were able to estimate the effect
on the modeled ozone levels. See Table
4 in the proposal. In considering the
underestimation from a ’real world’
standpoint, it is important to note that
due to TCEQ’s adopted regulations, a
much larger amount of actual reductions
of NOX emissions (estimated as 35.7
tpd) will occur between 2007 and 2009
from the regulations on compressor
engines and these extra reductions will
help reduce DFW area ozone levels.
While these emissions were not fully
accounted for in the initial
photochemical modeling, TCEQ had
developed the emission inventory for
this industry group consistent with
EPA’s guidance. EPA appreciates the
additional survey information that
TCEQ provided and, EPA considered
the emissions in reviewing the
attainment demonstration and found
that TCEQ’s revised emission estimates
were acceptable. This information was
clearly presented as part of the proposed
rulemaking action and the commenter
has not identified any substantive flaws
with that analysis.
Comment (MC–11): The commenter
indicated that the emissions inventory
appears flawed, in part from the
observation that the latest VOC area
source emissions inventory was
unaffected despite the substantial
revisions to the gas drilling/compressor
engine count, as reflected in revised
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NOX area source inventory revisions.
The commenter further indicated that
VOC emissions from the engine stacks,
and fugitive emissions from the piping
and valves that connect the engines,
appear not to have been incorporated
into the emissions inventory, and more
importantly, not to have been
considered in the photochemical
modeling. The commenter asserted that
the absence of these emissions in the
revised inventory placed additional
doubt on to the accuracy of the
photochemical modeling to predict
ozone levels in the western part of the
nonattainment area.
Response (MC–11): The commenter is
correct that the VOCs from P&G
facilities in the DFW area may be
underestimated, since the number of
P&G facilities and related NOX sources
had a large underestimation. As
provided above, there are inherent
uncertainties with emissions
inventories. Unlike the NOX emission
discussed previously, however, the VOC
emissions from natural gas production
are largely compounds that are not
significantly reactive in the formation of
ozone. EPA defines ‘‘Volatile Organic
Compounds’’ (VOCs) per 40 CFR Part
51.100(s) (as amended through January
18, 2007) and specifically lists Methane
and Ethane as organic compounds that
have been determined to have negligible
photochemical reactivity. Methane and
ethane are typically 85–90% or more of
the compounds present in natural gas
from gas wells so emissions from
natural gas production would be
expected to have a small impact on
ozone production. In addition, modeling
sensitivity analyses have shown that
large reductions in all VOC emissions in
the DFW area result in only very small
changes in the area’s ozone
concentration level. Therefore, an
underestimation of P&G VOC emissions
would not change the Combo 10 and
PDMR 2009 modeling projections
significantly. See Section 4.2 of
ENVIRON’s ‘‘Ozone Benefits in DFW
from Emission Controls in the 2009 and
2012 Future Years,’’ September 2006,
included as a reference to Chapter 2 of
the TCEQ TSD.
TCEQ did not collect data on VOC
sources in the 2007 survey that they
conducted of natural gas P&G facilities
in the DFW area. TCEQ focused on NOX
emission sources in their survey since
numerous photochemical modeling
analyses had shown that elevated ozone
levels in the DFW area were much more
sensitive to changes in NOX emissions
than VOC emissions. For these same
reasons, EPA does not believe that
uncertainty in the natural gas P&G VOC
emissions would result in a significant
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change in modeling projections or
change our conclusion that the DFW
area will attain the 1997 ozone standard
by its attainment date.
Comment (MC–12): The commenter
indicated that the Base Case Monitoring
Data is skewed because it relies on the
1999 episode and, focusing on the
Frisco Monitor, misrepresents the
greater and more current problems
associated with monitoring data from
monitoring stations to the northwest
and west. The commenter continued
that the use of this 10-year old base case
set results in under-emphasis of the
effect of the numerous sources,
including the Ellis County cement kilns,
Barnett Shale natural gas and oil
drilling, and EGU’s to the south of the
metroplex which often have their plume
carried in southeasterly winds into
Tarrant County. The commenter
asserted that the 1999 data set is flawed
due to the unusual meteorological
conditions as well as its overall lack of
representativeness and that Texas must
be directed to develop additional base
case data sets for SIP planning efforts.
Response (MC–12): EPA does not
agree with the commenters’ assertions
for several reasons. As discussed in
Section 2.3 of EPA’s MOAAD TSD, EPA
reviewed this 1999 episode and found it
to be acceptable and representative of
the combination of meteorology and
emissions that generate ozone
exceedance levels near the DV of the
area at the time episodes were being
selected for development of this SIP.
The 2009 modeling projections evaluate
ozone levels at all the monitors in the
DFW area and, for this episode, both the
Denton and Frisco monitors had the
highest FDVs; therefore, the emphasis
was not just on the Frisco monitor as the
commenter asserts.
Photochemical grid modeling takes
several years to develop and thus, at the
time of submittal of a SIP, the episodes
are typically several years old. Selection
of episodes to model for SIP planning is
a balance of finding historical periods
with several days of exceedances that
are representative of the conditions that
generate ozone near the design value for
the area and developing acceptable base
case modeling in time to allow for a
timely submittal of an attainment
demonstration. At the time that TCEQ
proposed the DFW attainment
demonstration SIP in December 2006,
the episode was just over 7 years old,
not 10 years old as the commenter
indicated.
Chapter 2 of the MOAAD TSD
included sections that detailed EPA’s
guidance on episode selection, how the
episode was originally chosen and
further discussion and review that
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occurred in 2005 about the adequacy of
this episode and the potential benefits
of other episodes The DFW area
monitors that have been DV monitors or
had values near the area’s DV for the
period 1999–2005 (the period that was
reviewed for potential episodes was
1998–2004) indicates that all of these
monitors have been either north of the
DFW area (Frisco monitor) or in the
northwest sector (Tarrant and Denton
Counties monitors). EPA has done a
detailed review of both TCEQ’s analyses
and EPA’s analyses of the conceptual
model for high ozone in DFW and what
monitors are the DV monitors. In years
when light winds are more
predominantly from the south, the
northern monitors (Denton and Frisco)
are the DV monitors. Other years, the
winds and frequency of light winds are
predominantly from the southeast,
resulting in the Tarrant and Denton
Counties monitors becoming the DV
monitors. The location of the DFW
area’s DV monitor depends on the
distribution of the frequency of wind
directions during ozone conducive
meteorology, but it is consistently on
the downwind side of the DFW area. In
fact, assuming the preliminary
monitoring data through October 31,
2008 does not change, the Denton
monitor will be the DV monitor for the
2006–2008 period. Preliminary data also
indicate that the Denton monitor may be
the DV monitor for the period 2007–
2009 (based on 2007 and 2008
monitoring data). Approximately 70%
of the local NOX emissions that lead to
high ozone levels are emitted from
mobile (On-Road and Nonroad emission
sources) and the highest ozone levels
typically occur downwind of the core
DFW emissions area. Figures 3 & 5 of
TCEQ’s Appendix B of their SIP
submittal illustrate the distribution of
NOX emissions from On-Road and
Nonroad emissions. Modeling,
monitoring, and aircraft flights confirm
that the highest levels of ozone occur
downwind of the core DFW emissions
area. As discussed above, the Frisco and
Denton monitors are often downwind of
the core DFW emissions area. Therefore,
EPA does not agree that this episode,
the control strategy, and the SIP overall
are biased by the Frisco monitor being
one of the highest ozone monitors in the
base year.
The commenter asserted that using
the 1999 episode results in underemphasis of the effect of the numerous
sources, including the Ellis County
cement kilns, Barnett Shale natural gas
and oil drilling, and EGU’s to the south
of the DFW metroplex which often have
their plume carried in southeasterly
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winds into Tarrant County. As
discussed elsewhere in this response
and in EPA’s MOAAD TSD, EPA
conducted a thorough review of EPA’s
episode selection guidance, conceptual
model for high ozone events in DFW,
and episodes available for modeling at
the time of episode selection and EPA
determined that this episode was
appropriate and acceptable. EPA does
not recommend episode selection be
based on trying to target specific
industry/emission sources but should
weigh a number of factors in selecting
episodes for photochemical grid
modeling to be utilized for SIP
development as was done in this
situation.
Afternoon wind from the southeast is
one of the more prevalent wind
directions for high ozone in the DFW
area. In TCEQ’s conceptual model
description for high ozone events in the
DFW area, morning winds out of the
south or southwest often occur and then
transition to out of the southeast or east
in the afternoon. Therefore, the sources
mentioned can impact the Denton and
Frisco monitors for some of the hours of
the day (that contribute to a high 8-hour
ozone value). This episode has two days
with winds from the southeast in the
afternoon (8/17 and 8/22). August 17th
had winds out of the southwest in the
morning that transitioned to winds out
of the southeast in the afternoon.
Forward wind trajectories for the 17th
indicate the emissions from the Ellis
County cement kilns were carried over
the Frisco and Denton monitors. On the
17th, it is also likely that emissions from
the other sources mentioned would also
be carried over the Denton and
potentially Frisco monitors. Even on
days that the winds do not take
emissions from these sources over the
Frisco and Denton monitors, the
modeling still utilizes these emissions
(and changes in these emissions) in
projecting ozone levels in the modeling
domain. Among modeling analyses that
can be impacted by emission reductions
at these sources are changes in ozone
exceedance metrics, such as number of
grid cell 8-hour ozone exceedances
predicted and other metrics that
consider the level of exceedances
predicted for each grid cell.
In summary, EPA has reviewed the
episode and determined that the
episode is representative of the
conditions most often associated with
high eight-hour ozone in the DFW area.
Comment (MC–13): Commenters
indicated that the future case attainment
demonstration modeling included NOX
reductions from Phase I Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR) controls for EGUs
outside of Texas. Commenters indicated
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that since these reductions are now
unlikely to occur, at least on the original
timeframe, the anticipated ozone air
quality benefits will be reduced.
Commenters asserted that EPA should
consider this effect on the modeling and
the WOE analysis.
Response (MC–13): The EPA has
considered the impact of a CAIR vacatur
and determined that even an immediate
vacatur of CAIR would not change our
conclusion that the modeling and
weight of evidence show that the DFW
area will attain the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard by the deadline. The principal
reasons for this conclusion are: (1)
Chapter 117 rules in the Texas SIP
implemented in the entire eastern half
of Texas are equivalent to the Phase I
rules of CAIR; (2) evaluation of controls
already installed in the nearest States
impacted by CAIR, Arkansas and
Louisiana, show that significant
reductions will still be implemented; (3)
many of the more distant states
impacted by the CAIR vacatur are also
subject to the NOX SIP call so much of
CAIR Phase I NOX reductions will
remain in place; and (4) available
modeling shows that loss of CAIR only
has a small impact on the DFW area.
Texas implemented NOX controls on
EGUs in the entire eastern half of Texas
that are approved into the Texas SIP, are
enforceable, and are equivalent to
reductions from CAIR Phase I for East
Texas EGUs. The rules can be found in
Texas Administrative Code Title 30 Part
1 Chapter 117 Subchapter E Division 1
(117.3000–117.3056). Therefore, the
level of NOX reductions from EGUs
within the entire eastern half of Texas
for the 2009 period is not related to the
status of the CAIR rules. With regard to
EGU emissions in the western half of
Texas, EPA has concluded that
emissions from these sources would
rarely be transported to the DFW area
during periods of high ozone in DFW.
Thus, any changes in emissions from
Texas EGUs related to a vacatur of CAIR
are not expected to impact DFW ozone
exceedance levels prior to the
attainment date.
In fact, the main change in emissions
in the DFW photochemical modeling
domain due to a CAIR vacatur is for
CAIR states that were not part of the
NOX SIP call and were outside of Texas.
Of these states, Louisiana and Arkansas
are the closest upwind states to DFW
and would be expected to have the
largest potential impact on ozone level
changes in DFW due to the CAIR
vacatur. We have reviewed EPA’s Clean
Air Market’s Division National Electric
Energy Data System database (July 2008
version) that tracks equipment that has
been installed to meet the CAIR
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requirements for the EGUs in these two
states. Our evaluation of controls
installed at facilities in Arkansas and
Louisiana considered whether installed
controls were integral to operation of
the unit (example: Low NOX Burners),
or if the controls could be shut-off
(Example: Over-fire Air) or potentially
bypassed (SCR). We have also conferred
with Louisiana and Arkansas
Departments of Environmental Quality
in an attempt to confirm the information
in the database.
Our analysis of Louisiana major
EGU’s indicates that most controls are
based on Over-Fire Air or SCR (based on
discussions with LDEQ (September/
October 2008)). However, the Dolette
Hills is the closest large Louisiana coalfired EGU that is outside Texas and has
the highest potential to impact DFW
area ozone levels of any coal-fired EGU
outside of Texas. It is often upwind of
the DFW area when the DFW area has
elevated ozone levels. Low NOX burners
and Over-Fire air have been installed at
the Dolette Hills unit to reduce NOX
emissions. In the absence of CAIR, it is
possible that the utilization of Over-Fire
air could cease, but the Low NOX
burners are integral to the boiler
operation and cannot be bypassed.
Therefore, even if the Over-Fire Air
were not operated there would still be
permanent large NOX reductions on the
order of 2000 to 3000 tpy of NOX (based
on Discussions with LDEQ) compared to
4000 to 5000 tpy of NOX with Over-Fire
Air and Low NOX Burners.
Our analysis of EGUs in Arkansas
indicates that for the coal-fired EGU’s,
most are being controlled with OverFire Air, but one 523 MW unit is being
controlled with Low NOX burners that
have been installed and should remain
installed. For the gas-fired EGUs, most
are being controlled with Dry Low NOX
burners in combination with SCR. The
Low NOX Burners are integral to the
operation. The SCR, however,
conceivably could be turned off. Dry
Low NOX burners can achieve up to a
30% reduction by themselves so
significant reductions will still occur.
Therefore, even with a vacatur of
CAIR, significant reductions will still
occur in Arkansas and Louisiana
including at the closest, upwind plant,
Dolette Hills. As for the reductions in
other States impacted by a CAIR
vacatur, many of these States were part
of the NOX SIP call. The NOX SIP call
reduction requirements remain in place.
States affected by the NOX SIP call
include: Alabama, Connecticut,
Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, Maryland, Maine, Michigan,
Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode
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Island, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia, West Virginia and the District
of Columbia. While some states’ rules
implementing the NOX Budget Trading
Program (established by the NOX SIP
call) have a sunset provision in
anticipation of being replaced by the
CAIR ozone-season trading program,
EPA expects the majority of controls to
remain in place. EPA has asked States
with sunset provisions to move quickly
to address this concern.
We believe that it is reasonable to
consider that the reductions identified
above will occur because the previously
installed controls are integral to the
operation of the EGUs and are not likely
to be bypassed or circumvented or are
required to comply with regulations
implementing the NOX SIP call.
EPA also considered available
modeling evidence in considering the
impact of a CAIR vacatur. First, the
photochemical modeling upon which
the CAIR rule itself was based did not
result in any other State being included
in the CAIR rules because of its impact
on the DFW area. In other words, no
state was included in CAIR because of
its impact on the DFW area.
No modeling exists that directly
evaluates the impact of a CAIR vacatur
on the modeling episodes used in the
final DFW SIP modeling so it is not
possible to directly evaluate the impact
on Combo 10 or PDMR 2009 control
strategy runs. EPA has found two
modeling analyses that help to evaluate
the potential impact of the CAIR vacatur
on DFW ozone levels.
We also have reviewed sensitivity
modeling that evaluated potential CAIR
impacts conducted on an earlier version
of DFW modeling. This modeling was
included in the HARC 35 Project Phase
II Report (‘‘Dallas/Fort Worth CAMx
Modeling: Improved Model Performance
and Transport Assessment Project H35,
Phase 2’’; ENVIRON; August 2005). The
H35 Phase II report evaluated the
impact of the CAIR emission reductions
throughout the Eastern U.S. on DFW
ozone levels in 2010. The report
included a bar chart (Figure 10–4),
showing episode average contributions
to high 8-hour ozone in the DFW 9county NAA by source region and
emissions group. Side-by-side bars show
the subtle changes due to the CAIR EGU
controls. Controls expected from CAIR
reduced episode average high ozone in
the DFW NAA by 0.3 ppb. The episode
peak ozone was also lowered 0.3 ppb
over DFW from the CAIR controls. This
early modeling did not include some of
the later emission inventory and
meteorological refinements, but a new
evaluation with the modeling submitted
with the attainment demonstration
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would not be expected to yield
significantly differing results.
We also looked at some earlier
modeling that was included in Table
4–1 of the H35 Phase I Report (HARC
Project H35, Transport Contributions
From Out-of-State Sources to East Texas
Ozone, February 2005). The H35 Phase
I report indicated that controlling a 25%
NOX reduction on all EGUs in Arkansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri (NOX
SIP call state), Oklahoma (non-CAIR
state), Tennessee (NOX SIP call state),
and the Gulf of Mexico (non-CAIR area)
yielded a 0.1 ppb reduction in ozone on
average 2007 elevated ozone levels
(evaluated levels above 75 ppb and 85
ppb) in DFW area for the DFW’s SIP
episode. While this analysis is for 2007
and conservatively includes 25% NOX
reductions in two NOX SIP call states,
25% reductions in Oklahoma (non-CAIR
state), and 25% reductions in Gulf of
Mexico EGUs; all of which are
additional reductions not related to the
CAIR Phase I rule. The 2007 modeling
analysis is further evidence that the
DFW area is not influenced by out-ofstate EGU emissions at times when
elevated ozone levels occur in DFW.
Both of these modeling analyses
consistently show a picture that out of
state reductions only have a small
impact of 0.1 to 0.3 ppb or less on
model projected design values in the
DFW area. The two CAIR assessment
analyses (EPA—Fall 2008 and H35
Phase II) are conservative because they
remove all CAIR reductions from the
modeling. This does not take into
account that for non-NOX SIP call states,
some CAIR controls will generate
reductions because the controls are
integral to the combustion process and
will not likely be removed (Low NOX
Burners, etc.). These two CAIR
modeling analyses also rely on 2010
EGU projections, which include an
additional year of EGU growth,
compared to the growth that would be
included for a 2009 evaluation. These
modeling evaluations over predict for
NOX during the 2009 ozone season
because many states will still have in
place NOX controls required by the NOX
SIP call.
The worst-case assessment of a 0.1 to
0.3 ppb increase on model projected
FDVs, in itself, is small enough that for
most model projections, no change in
the truncated ppb value would occur.
Given that the actual impact of a vacatur
on emissions would be smaller than in
these worst case analyses, EPA believes
that the status of the CAIR rules should
not impact our decision to approve the
DFW attainment plan.
We have included further discussions
of a vacatur of CAIR on the modeling
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and WOE analysis in a separate
response to comment that addresses
comments on the adequacy of the WOE
analysis and the conclusion of whether
the DFW NAA will reach attainment.
Comment (MC–14): The commenter
indicated that the DFW attainment
demonstration model has considerable
challenges as detailed in the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking. The commenter
noted that model development is a
resource intensive process and the state
simply needs to apply additional
resources to this process. The
commenter stated that throughout the
development of the May 2007 SIP
revision, the State indicated that it had
insufficient resources to improve the
attainment demonstration and
incorporate alternative and more recent
ozone episodes. The commenter
concluded that the State has not
allocated adequate resources to SIP
development, including model
development, to develop models robust
enough to accurately predict ozone
concentrations in the attainment year
and beyond. The commenter then
concluded that as part of any final
action, EPA should advise the state that
failures to program sufficient resources
to meet CAA requirements in the future
will not be accepted as justification of
inadequate or incomplete
demonstrations of attainment.
Response (MC–14): All states and
other entities that conduct
photochemical modeling must address
competing priorities and determine
whether additional work will provide
significant additional value. They must
consider several factors including the
time available for completion of
modeling of episode(s), updating of
emissions inventories, the resources
needed to conduct further refinements
or additional episodes, and the overall
benefit of delaying the project to
conduct additional modeling work.
The commenter is correct that
modeling is a very resource intensive
process. Photochemical modeling
requires creation of very detailed
emission inventories and meteorological
modeling to be used in photochemical
modeling in an attempt to replicate a
historical event when ozone
exceedances have occurred. Once
photochemical modeling has been
created that performs sufficiently well,
the basecase modeling can then be used
in conjunction with future case
modeling of the same meteorological
conditions to test attainment
demonstration strategies. It often takes
many iterations of refinement of
emissions and/or meteorological fields
to result in basecase photochemical
modeling that performs sufficiently in
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accordance with TCEQ’s meteorological
performance metrics and EPA model
performance metrics.
As discussed in the proposal and the
MOAAD TSD, TCEQ did consider and
complete exploratory work on other
episodes. But initial analyses indicated
that the additional episodes would not
give significantly different results
compared to the existing episode. As we
explain in Section 2.3 of the TSD, we
believe in this case, the one episode is
acceptable for control strategy
development. EPA evaluated the
preliminary analyses of other episodes
and concurred that it did not appear
that the additional episodes would alter
the model projections on what was
needed to reach attainment.
EPA believes that the episode
selection is appropriate, and that the
modeling was sufficiently robust. The
demonstration modeling combined with
the WOE analyses are sufficient to show
that the DFW area will attain by the
deadline.
Comment (MC–15): Commenters
indicated that the DFW 8-hr ozone SIP
proposal by TCEQ is significantly
flawed and fails to support the required
attainment demonstration by 2010.
Commenters continued that the DFW
modeling by TCEQ shows that several
ozone monitors in 2010 will still exceed
the rounded-up standard of 84 ppb. A
commenter asserts that the CAA
requires that SIPs show clear attainment
for all ozone monitors in a
nonattainment area and the reason that
the air modeling shows exceedances in
2010 is because the proposed reductions
by TCEQ are inadequate.
Commenters also indicated that
according to Table 5 of the Federal
Register notice, TCEQ’s plan predicts
that 2 monitors in the region would not
meet the 8-hour ozone NAAQS after
implementation of the control strategy
(PDMR 2009) and consideration of
TCEQ’s Weight of Evidence.
Commenters continued that they are
aware that EPA’s ozone implementation
guidance allows a ‘‘Weight of Evidence’’
demonstration to supplement the
modeling analysis required by the CAA
but assert that this analysis fails to
overcome the inadequacy of the TCEQ’s
proposed control strategy to bring the
DFW area into attainment.
Commenters indicated that the
proposal establishes repeatedly that
ambient air quality is likely to remain
above the artificial rounded-up standard
of 84 ppb (Tables 2, 3 and 5). The
commenters went on to assert that after
disclosing that state WOE calculations
fall short of meeting the attainment goal,
EPA ultimately relies on their
‘‘simplistic’’ analysis concluding that
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15% of the NOX emissions inventory
will be reduced by existing measures
not present in 2007. The commenters
continued that given the degree to
which design values have to fall, from
95 ppb to 84 ppb, and in light of the
2010 attainment date, EPA should
consider that the drop in the NOX and
VOC emissions inventories from 2007 to
2009 are completely insufficient,
according to EPA’s own studies and
guidance, to bring about the drop in DVs
needed to reach attainment. The
commenters further continued that
EPA’s own analysis of the most recent
TCEQ modeling shows that the State
was only able to get all the area’s
predicted DVs below 88 ppb with a nonstandard and non-approved calculation
of RRF factors and EPA’s own analysis
with the proper RRF procedure showed
that monitors were still above the 88
ppb threshold.
A commenter indicated that the WOE
approach by the TCEQ is flawed since
it fails to show attainment by 2010 and
EPA needs to reject it as bad science.
Response (MC–15): We responded to
comments on the TCEQ and EPA RRF
methods in a separate response to
comments above. Overall, EPA
considered both RRF methods and the
results of those methods in our review.
Also, as explained in previous
responses, we considered the results of
modeling from both Combo 10 and
PDMR 2009 modeling runs.
EPA disagrees with the commenter
that the modeling alone must
demonstrate attainment in order for EPA
to approve the attainment
demonstration. EPA discussed both in
the DFW MOAAD TSD and the
proposal, EPA’s guidance on modeling
and WOE usage. As with any predictive
tool, there are inherent uncertainties
associated with photochemical
modeling (emission estimates, emission
projections, meteorological modeling,
chemical reaction equations and
simplifications, etc.). EPA’s guidance
recognizes these limitations and
provides approaches for considering
other analytical evidence to help assess
whether attainment of the NAAQS is
likely. This process is called a WOE
determination. EPA’s modeling
guidance (updated in 1996, 1999, and
2002) discusses various WOE
approaches. This was further updated in
2005 and 2007 for the 1997 8-hour
ozone attainment demonstration
procedures to include a WOE analysis
as an integral part of any attainment
demonstration due to concerns of
modeling uncertainties. This guidance
strongly recommends that all attainment
demonstrations include supplemental
analyses beyond the recommended
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modeling. These supplemental analyses
should provide additional information
such as monitoring data analyses, and
emissions and air quality trends, which
help corroborate the overall conclusion
from the photochemical modeling.
EPA’s modeling guidance specifically
recommends that a WOE analysis be
included as part of any attainment
demonstration SIP where the modeling
results predict FDVs ranging from 82 to
less than 88 ppb (EPA’s 2005 and 2007
A.D. guidance documents). It is
important to note that EPA recommends
a WOE analysis even if the modeling is
demonstrating attainment at all the
monitors. EPA’s interpretation of the
Act to allow a WOE analysis has been
upheld. See 1000 Friends of Maryland v.
Browner, 265 F. 3d 216 (4th Cir. 2001)
and BCCA Appeal Group v. EPA, 355
F.3d 817 (5th Cir. 2003).
In this case, the commenters are
correct that the final modeling based
projections show two monitors above
attainment levels. Prior to conducting
the model based projections, the highest
modeling values were 88/89 ppb
(TCEQ/EPA RRF method), but after
modeling based adjustments were
conducted to account for reduced
airport emissions, DERC usage
limitations, and back-up generator
reductions, the highest value using
either RRF was 88 ppb. EPA specifically
recommends a WOE analysis be
performed when modeling values are
within the range indicated by the DFW
analysis.11
EPA’s guidance (2005 A.D. Guidance)
does indicate that a local 30% NOX
reduction may only yield a 3–4 ppb
change in modeling values. That
assessment was based on coarser
resolution photochemical modeling that
is typically less responsive to emission
changes than the finer grid modeling
that was used in DFW. Here, EPA is
relying on analyses that were done
employing the DFW modeling to
determine the potential change in ozone
due to the additional NOX reductions
that are estimated to occur by 2009.
Relying on these DFW analyses, EPA
estimates that the 25.4% local DFW area
NOX reductions occurring between 2007
and 2009 would reduce ozone
concentrations by approximately 3–4
ppb. As discussed in detail below, EPA
is considering much more than just the
modeling in making our conclusions on
the adequacy of the attainment
demonstration and determining that the
2005–2007 DV of 95 ppb will drop to
attainment levels (84 ppb) in 2009.
11 The modeling guidance does not specifically
preclude the use of WOE when the modeled values
are higher than the recommended WOE range.
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EPA evaluated many factors in the
WOE. These items include reductions
not included in the modeling based
projections (energy efficiencies),
unquantifiable measures
(AirCheckTexas, Dallas Sustainable
Skyline Initiative, etc.), meteorological
analyses of severity of ozone seasons
(the base period and recent years,
including 2007), most recent monitoring
in 2007 (a 4th high of 89 ppb at two
monitors and the other 18 monitors had
4th high values of 87 ppb or less), the
court’s vacatur of CAIR, progress in
implementing the TERP program, and
progress in implementing the early
compliance incentive on natural gas
compressor engines outside the DFW
area. The amount of NOX reductions
quantified in the SIP from the 2007
period that are estimated to occur by
2009 are approximately 15% of the
estimated 2007 EI; these reductions will
come from the existing federal, state,
and local measures. When one includes
the additional reductions due to the
underestimation of emission reductions
from compressor engines, the backup
generators, and the State’s progress in
implementing TERP, there would be a
25.4% reduction in NOX emissions
between 2007 and 2009, which could
yield approximately a 3–4 ppb drop in
ozone based on modeling projections.
In a response above, we concluded
that 2007 had meteorology similar to
normal meteorology. We also examined
whether the 2008 data indicates a trend
toward attainment for the area. We
examined the 2008 preliminary data,
which is awaiting QA/QC. The 2008
preliminary data show that the DFW
area had 4th high values of 85 ppb at
two monitors and at the other 18
monitors, the value was 84 ppb or less.
The 2008 preliminary data indicate the
2006–2008 DV is 91 ppb (down from 95
ppb in using 2005–2007 monitoring
data). For the monitor that has the
highest average 4th high values in 2007
and 2008 and is likely to be the
controlling monitor (or one of the
highest monitors) for determining if the
area reaches attainment based on 2007–
2009 data, the monitor’s DV for the
2007–2009 period would have to be less
than 85 ppb. It is important to note that
this monitor (Denton) had a preliminary
4th high value in 2008 of 84 ppb.
Considering the 2008 preliminary data
with most of the 4th highs of 84 ppb or
less, and that much of the DFW SIP
reductions and another year of fleet
turnover are still to occur, the ambient
air quality trend strongly supports that
the DFW monitors will reach attainment
in 2009. EPA believes that the closer an
area is to its attainment date, the more
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weight should be given to the actual
ambient data and the expected
additional reductions in considering
whether an area will reach attainment.
We have considered modeling using
two emission reduction scenarios
(Combo 10 and PDMR 2009),
recognizing that the actual emission
control level would be somewhere in
between, and two types of RRF
calculations. We have also considered
the impact of additional measures and
reductions documented in the April 23,
2008 letter. With these adjustments, the
modeling is demonstrating significant
reductions of 7–13 ppb in ozone from
the base period, but is still slightly short
of attainment. The modeling predicts
values greater than 84 ppb at two of the
nine monitors, but we believe, after
evaluating additional evidence in a
WOE analysis, that the area will attain
by its attainment date. Specifically, we
considered that the model’s underprediction of high ozone levels may be
biasing the model predictions, and
therefore potentially underestimating
the ozone reduction that could occur
due to the emission reductions achieved
by local and regional rules. We
considered the impact of meteorological
adjustments to the design value
projection, which would further
indicate the future projections may be
too high. We have recognized emission
reduction efforts that have not been
quantified and included in the modeling
and model-based WOE estimates. We
also considered and gave significant
weight to non-modeling evidence of
recent monitoring and projected NOX
emission changes between 2007 and
2009.
We have also considered ambient data
in 2008 and progress in implementing
control measures in making our final
conclusion on the DFW area’s 8-hour
Ozone SIP’s Attainment Demonstration
adequacy. For example, we weighed a
vacatur of the CAIR rules and its
potential impact on the DFW area. As
discussed in detail in a response above,
we concluded that the removal of CAIR
may result in a change in 8-hour ozone
modeling values of 0.1–0.3 ppb. We also
considered that fewer engine controls
were installed using the early
compliance incentive money that was
available.
We have also considered the progress
in implementing the TERP program.
This program has achieved all of the
reductions that were projected in the
May 30, 2007 submissions. These
reductions were included in the
modeling. In its April 2008 letter, Texas
indicated that an additional 14.2 tpd of
emission reductions could be achieved
through the additional funding made
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available by the legislature. EPA relied
on this projection as part of our weight
of evidence evaluation in our proposal.
As discussed in the response to
comments on the TERP reductions,
since our proposal notice, additional
information has become available on the
status of TERP projects and the State’s
progress in meeting its WOE projection
of 14.2 tpd of NOX emissions reductions
in 2008 and early 2009. Recently TCEQ
announced they would be delaying the
2009 TERP grant application cycle, due
to Hurricane Ike. Due to this unfortunate
delay (the grant application cycle
opened December 1, 2008), FY2009
grant money will be issued later than
originally thought. Approval of grants
will not likely occur by the beginning of
the DFW ozone season (March 1, 2009),
but approval of grants should start in
the May to early June timeframe. While
this is not by the beginning of the ozone
season, it is soon enough that reductions
could start occurring before the core
ozone season and therefore additional
reductions can be considered as weight
of evidence.
This is confirmed by an examination
of 2004–2007 and preliminary 2008
monitoring values for the typical design
value monitors (north and northwest
sides of the DFW area) which is
included in the supplemental TSD. It
shows that the 1st to 4th high 8-hour
ozone values (values that are utilized in
setting the area’s DV) are usually set in
the June through September timeframe.
Since the approval of FY2009 grants
should start before or during the
beginning of the core ozone period for
the DFW area, some additional
reductions can be considered as WOE.
At this point, it seems unlikely that the
full 14.2 tpd will be achieved even by
the core ozone season. To evaluate the
impact, we assumed that TCEQ would
achieve approximately 70% of the
originally projected 14.2 tpd;
consequently, there might be a loss in
reductions of approximately 4.2 tpd. See
the Supplemental TSD. Then in looking
at the modeling based WOE, the
increase in projected NOX would yield
approximately an additional 0.10 to 0.22
ppb at the monitors with the highest
FDVs. We have also revised our estimate
of actual reductions between 2007 and
2009 to consider this potential loss in
TERP emission reductions. Rather than
the 26% we considered at proposal, our
new estimate is a 25.4% reduction of
the estimated 2007 emission levels.
Finally, over half of the previously
discussed 25.4% reductions of NOX
emissions (between 2007 and 2009) in
the DFW area are slated to occur
between the 2008 and 2009 ozone
seasons. Due to these large local
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reductions, we expect the 2009 ozone
levels to be lower than 2008 levels.
In summary, EPA has considered a
number of factors. As pointed out by
commenters, some control strategies,
notably CAIR and TERP, are likely not
going to achieve the reductions
originally expected. As discussed above,
we considered the impact of these
factors to be relatively small. We believe
that at this time, with the attainment
date only months away, we should give
considerable weight to the recent air
quality trends and to expected further
reductions that will occur before the
2009 core ozone season. Therefore,
considering all of the factors discussed
above with the elements we considered
in the proposal (available modeling,
evidence, analyses, and adopted control
strategies) and the comments we
received, EPA believes the DFW area
will reach attainment of the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard by its attainment date.
E. Comments on Discrete Emission
Reduction Credits (DERCs)
Comment: A commenter states that
EPA’s conditional approval of the DFW
attainment demonstration does not
provide for adequate public review and
comment on the measures TCEQ has
committed to implement. The
commenter is concerned that the public
will not have the opportunity to review
and comment on the DERC flow control
limit.
Response: Section 110(k)(4) of the Act
authorizes conditional approval of ‘‘a
plan revision based on a commitment of
the State to adopt specific enforceable
measures by a date certain, but not later
than 1 year after the date of approval of
the plan revision.’’ Conditional approval
is authorized when a SIP contains
substantive, but not fully satisfactory,
provisions, and the State commits to
submit specific enforceable measures to
cure the deficiencies. We have proposed
to conditionally approve the DFW
attainment demonstration conditioned
on the TCEQ submitting a complete SIP
revision by March 1, 2009, that includes
an enforceable mechanism providing a
3.2 tpd restriction on the amount of
DERCs available for use in the DFW area
starting March 1, 2009. If the State
wishes to use more than 3.2 tpd of
DERCs in the DFW area after 2009, there
must be an enforceable mechanism that
provides for increases above 3.2 tpd
beginning January 1, 2010 as long as this
increase is consistent with attainment
and maintenance of the standard.
Section 110(a)(2) of the Act and 40
CFR Part 51 require the State to conduct
a 30-day public comment period and
hold a public hearing on a proposed SIP
revision submittal. Further, the State
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must include in the adopted SIP
revision submittal a response to all the
received comments. The TCEQ has
proceeded with a proposed rulemaking
and held a public comment period,
pursuant to the requirements of the Act
and 40 CFR Part 51, from August 6
through September 12, 2008, on the
proposed DERC SIP revision to meet the
condition. Additionally, the State
published the proposal in the Texas
Register and held public hearings on
September 9, 2008, in Dallas, Texas and
on September 10, 2008, in Arlington,
Texas. EPA and others provided
comments.
Upon receipt from the TCEQ of a
complete DERC SIP revision, EPA will
review it and propose action in the
Federal Register. In this notice, we will
provide, as required by the Act, an
opportunity for a 30-day public
comment period.
The public is provided with three
separate opportunities to review and
comment on the DERC SIP revision—
during (1) the comment period for EPA’s
proposed conditional approval of the
DFW attainment demonstration; (2) the
comment period for the State’s proposed
rulemaking; and (3) the comment period
for EPA’s proposed action on the DERC
SIP revision. Thus, EPA finds that there
are ample opportunities for public
review and comment on the DERC SIP
revision.
Comment: A commenter states that
EPA’s conditional approval of the DFW
attainment demonstration relies upon
the DERC rule; yet EPA has only
conditionally approved the DERC rule
into the Texas SIP. The commenter
states that emission credits subject to
the DERC rule should not be relied upon
as part of the attainment demonstration
SIP until EPA fully approves the DERC
rule.
Response: As noted in the previous
response, the Act authorizes conditional
approval based on a State’s commitment
to adopt specific enforceable measures
by a date certain. If the State fulfills its
commitment with respect to the DERC
flow control limit and EPA approves the
submission, we believe the attainment
demonstration will include all
enforceable measures necessary to attain
by the attainment date. The attainment
demonstration cannot be fully approved
until the State submits and EPA
approves the revision to the DERC rule
providing for the 3.2 TPD flow control
limit. In the interim, as provided in the
Act, the plan may be conditionally
approved with a commitment to submit
the necessary DERC rule revision.
As the commenter notes, the DERC
rule is already conditionally approved
(see 71 FR 52703, September 6, 2006).
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In our final conditional approval of the
DERC rule, we stated that a conditional
approval is treated as a full approval
until such time that EPA takes action to
disapprove the rule. Therefore, it is
acceptable for TCEQ to continue
allowing DERCs to be used within the
DFW nonattainment area.
Further, the terms of the 2006 DERC
conditional approval do not directly
impact the DFW attainment
demonstration and its DERC flow
control condition. TCEQ committed to
making the following revisions to the
DERC rule in their September 8, 2005,
commitment letter and to comply with
these commitments during the 2006
DERCs conditional approval period:
1. Revise Title 30 Texas
Administrative Code (30 TAC) § 101.373
to prohibit the future generation of
DERCs from permanent shutdowns and
to allow DERCs generated and banked
from permanent shutdowns prior to
September 30, 2002, to remain available
for use for no more than five years from
the date of this letter.
2. The TCEQ will perform a credit
audit to remove from the emissions
bank all DERCs generated from
permanent shutdowns after September
30, 2002. Even if the shutdown itself
occurred before September 30, 2002, no
DERCs can be generated from that event
after September 30, 2002.
3. Revise 30 TAC §§ 101.302(f),
101.372(f)(7) and 101.372(f)(8) to clarify
that EPA approval is required for
individual transactions involving
emission reductions generated in
another state or nation, as well as those
transactions from one nonattainment
area to another, or from attainment
counties into nonattainment areas. The
TCEQ further understands that the EPA
would require a SIP revision prior to
approving a transaction between
another state or nation, as well as those
transactions between counties not
located within the same nonattainment
area.
4. The TCEQ will revise Form DEC–
1, Notice of Generation and Generator
Certification of Discrete Emission
Credits; Form MDEC–1, Notice of
Generation and Generator Certification
of Mobile Discrete Emission Credits;
and Form DEC–2, Notice of Intent to
Use Discrete Emission Credits, to
include a waiver to the federal statute of
limitations defense for generators, and
users of DERCs and mobile discrete
emission reduction credits (MDERCs).
Please be reminded that there is
currently no applicable state statute of
limitations in the State of Texas. In
addition, the TCEQ will maintain its
current policy of preserving all records
relating to DERC and MDERC generation
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and use for a minimum of five years
after the use strategy has ended.
5. Revise 30 TAC §§ 101.302 and
101.372 to clarify that a proposed
quantification protocol may not be used
if the TCEQ Executive Director receives
a letter from the EPA objecting to the
use of the protocol during the 45-day
adequacy review period or if the EPA
proposes disapproval of the protocol in
the Federal Register.
6. Revise 30 TAC § 101.306 to specify
that Emission Reduction Credits may be
used within the highly reactive volatile
organic compounds Emissions Cap and
Trade program as an annual allocation
of allowances as provided under 30
TAC § 101.399.
TCEQ submitted revisions to the
DERC program on October 24, 2006 to
address the 2006 condition. EPA is
currently reviewing this SIP revision
submittal and will take action at a later
date and in a separate rulemaking on
whether TCEQ’s revisions to the DERC
program adequately satisfied the terms
of the 2006 DERC conditional approval.
In the meantime, the DERC program can
continue to be used in Texas, including
the DFW area. Conditions 1 and 2
pertain to DERCs generated through
permanent shutdowns and provide that
any shutdown DERCs generated prior to
September 30, 2002, in the DFW area
would be available for use until
September 8, 2010. Projected uses of
these pre-September 30, 2002 shutdown
DERCs were appropriately modeled and
accounted for by TCEQ as part of the
overall DERC usage projections in DFW.
Emission reductions subject to
condition 3 do not impact the DFW
attainment demonstration since EPA has
not been contacted about using discrete
emission reductions in the DFW area
that have been generated in another
state, nation, nonattainment area, or
surrounding attainment counties.
Conditions 4 and 5 modify the DERC
rule to align the DERC generation and
use procedures with EPA’s Economic
Incentive Program Guidance. These
conditions do not negatively impact the
projected uses of DERCs that were
accounted for in the DFW attainment
demonstration. Condition 6 only applies
to DERCs used in the Houston/
Galveston/Brazoria ozone
nonattainment area and is therefore not
applicable to the DFW attainment
demonstration.
As discussed previously, TCEQ
submitted revisions to the DERC
program on October 24, 2006 to meet
the 2006 DERC condition. EPA is
currently reviewing these revisions to
the Texas SIP and will take action in a
separate rulemaking. These revisions, as
noted above, have no impact upon the
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DFW area’s attainment demonstration
SIP and its reliance upon DERCs.
Comment: Commenters believe that
the DERC usage limitation should be
required every year rather than allowing
a different approach after 2009.
Commenters also believe that the
enforceable flow control mechanism
lacks specificity, may be backsliding
(contrary to the Act’s requirements) and
may not demonstrate continued
attainment of the 1997 ozone standard
in the DFW area.
Response: Commenters will be able to
address the substance of the DERC flow
control SIP revision and its effect on the
attainment demonstration once it is
submitted to EPA. Until the State adopts
and submits this revision to the DERC
rule, it is premature to speculate about
what the State might choose to do.
However, we note that so long as the
State demonstrates that the adopted rule
will not interfere with attainment by
June 2010 and maintenance of the
NAAQS in the following years, EPA
cannot mandate that the State apply the
same approach in subsequent years that
it chooses to apply in 2009.
In our proposed conditional approval
of the DFW attainment demonstration,
we described the requirements of the
2009 DERC flow control condition and
the enforceable mechanism that must
relate it to the DFW attainment
demonstration. We specifically
recognized that the DERC usage
limitation did not need to be required
every year after 2009. For all years after
2009, the TCEQ will have the option to
retain the 3.2 tpd DERCs usage
restriction or choose to increase the
amount of tpd of DERCs usage, as long
as there is an enforceable and replicable
mechanism in place to ensure the
increase in tpd of DERCs usage as offset
by other measures, continues to ensure
attainment in the area by having the
same impact as if the 3.2 tpd DERCs
usage restriction remained in effect.
This includes the quantity and spatial
allocation impacts of increased tpd of
DERCs usage on the ozone levels.
Therefore there would be no
backsliding, even if the amount of tpd
of DERC usage increased.
In our proposal, we described a
specific enforceable mechanism that
would be acceptable concerning the
substitution of other measures
beginning January 1, 2010, allowing
more than 3.2 tpd of DERCs usage in a
year. As discussed in our DERC
response to comments number 1, the
public will receive three opportunities
to review and comment on the merits
and nature of the 2009 DERCs limit and
the after-2009 enforceable mechanism in
the DFW area—during (1) the comment
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period for EPA’s proposed conditional
approval of the DFW attainment
demonstration, (2) the comment period
for the State’s proposed rulemaking, and
(3) the comment period for EPA’s
proposed action on whether the
condition has been met.
EPA believes that with the public
review and comment opportunities
provided, as well as the specifications
outlined in our proposed conditional
approval rulemaking, there will be
sufficient opportunities to ensure that
EPA has received relevant comments
and information to allow EPA to make
an informed decision on the
acceptability and enforceability of the
TCEQ’s DERCs SIP revision submittal.
Comment: Commenter states that the
DERC emission reductions relied on in
the DFW attainment demonstration are
inadequate.
Response: While EPA appreciates the
effort and time of the commenter, the
commenter has not provided any
substantive description of why the
DERC emission reductions relied on are
inadequate for attainment.
F. Comments on Reasonably Available
Control Measures (RACM)
Comment: Numerous commenters
note that the cement plants in the DFW
area are the largest source of industrial
NOX emissions in the DFW area. They
claim there is available technology that
would reduce NOX emissions by 90%
and the companies should be required
to install Selective Catalytic Reduction
(SCR) as NOX RACM. They also note
that the cement kilns are a large source
of VOC emissions in the area but only
one of ten kilns in Midlothian uses
modern controls to reduce VOC
emissions by 90%. Further, they claim
that all Midlothian kilns should be
required to install this technology, i.e.,
Regenerative Thermal Oxidizers (RTOs),
as VOC RACM. Moreover, EPA needs to
conduct an independent RACM
analysis.
Response: EPA interprets the Act’s
RACM requirement to mean that a
measure is not RACM if it would not
advance the attainment date (57 FR
13498, 13560).12 This interpretation has
been upheld. See Sierra Club v. EPA,
294 F.3d 155 (DC Cir. 2002) and Sierra
Club v. United States EPA, 314 F.3d 735
(5th Cir. 2002). A state must consider all
potentially available measures to
determine whether they are reasonably
available for implementation in the area,
12 See also EPA’s ‘‘Guidance on the Reasonably
Available Control Measures (RACM) Requirement
and Attainment Demonstration Submissions for
Ozone Nonattainment Areas,’’ John S. Seitz,
Director, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, November 30, 1999.
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and whether they would advance the
area’s attainment date. The state may
reject measures as not meeting RACM,
however, if they would not advance the
attainment date, would cause
substantial widespread and long-term
adverse impacts, or would be
economically or technologically
infeasible. Additionally, potential
measures requiring intensive and costly
implementation efforts are not RACM.
Sierra Club v. EPA at 162–163 (DC Cir.
2002); Sierra Club v. EPA, 314 F.3d 735
(5th Cir. 2002); BCCA Appeal Group v.
EPA, 355 F.3d 817 (5th Cir. 2003). To
demonstrate measures that advance
attainment of the ozone standard, the
emission reductions from the measures
must occur no later than the start of the
2008 ozone season—i.e., by March 1,
2008, in order to advance attainment.
Because there are no measures that
could have been adopted and
implemented by a date that has now
passed, we believe it is appropriate to
conclude that additional measures are
not RACM.
EPA expects States to prepare a
reasoned justification for rejection of
any available control measure. The
resulting available control measures
should then be evaluated for
reasonableness considering their
technological and economical
feasibility, and whether they will
advance attainment. In the case of the
DFW SIP, TCEQ performed an analysis
to determine whether all RACM were
included in the SIP.
To evaluate RACM for VOC measures,
the State looked to all available RACM
analyses and guidance for all the types
of source categories in the DFW area
and their potential controls. The State’s
analysis included evaluation of the
potential RACM RTO control
technology for cement kilns in the DFW
area as VOC RACM. The State’s
photochemical modeling, however,
indicated that the implementation of
RTO technology on cement kilns in the
DFW area would not advance
attainment. The State’s analyses
indicated that it would take extremely
large reductions of VOC emissions, over
100 tpd, to reduce the ozone level at the
Denton monitor 13 in the DFW area by
13 To determine whether a measure would be
reasonable to require for implementation, we
calculated the magnitude of emissions reductions
that would advance the attainment date at the
monitors with the highest future design values
(DVs), which are the Denton and Frisco monitors.
Of these two monitors, the Denton monitor has the
higher DV (2005–2007) of 94 ppb, although it
should be noted that the DV for the DFW area for
2005–2007 is 95 ppb. However, considering the
Denton monitor, if implementation of a particular
measure would result in a decrease of 1 ppb at the
Denton monitor in 2008, we would consider such
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1 ppb. Thus only measures that will
provide approximately 100 tpd of VOC
emissions reductions will timely
advance attainment. We were unable to
identify any potential RACM measures
in the State’s submittal that would
provide 100 tpd or more of VOC
reductions; this review also examined
the use of RTO in cement kilns.
In addition to reviewing the State’s
submittal, EPA reviewed the State’s
2005 and 2007 Emissions Inventories for
Point Sources. This review showed that
the cement kilns do not emit sufficient
amounts of VOCs to achieve 100 tpd in
emissions reductions. See the
Supplemental TSD for more details.
Consequently, EPA agrees with the State
that there are no additional RACM for
stationary source VOC emissions in the
DFW area. Based upon this review, EPA
concludes that the use of RTO on
cement kilns would not advance timely
attainment.
While we agree that one of the sources
in the cement kiln source category uses
the RTO technology—TXI #5 (Kiln 5),
we do not extrapolate from this that use
of the RTO technology on the other
cement kilns in the DFW area will
advance attainment of the 1997 ozone
standard. See our previous comments
and the Supplemental TSD for
additional information.
To evaluate RACM for NOX measures,
the TCEQ looked to all available RACM
analyses and guidance for all the types
of source categories in the DFW area
and their potential controls. The State’s
analysis also included evaluation of
Low Temperature Oxidation
Technology (LoTOx), SCR and Selective
Non-Catalytic Reduction (SNCR) as
potential NOX RACM for cement kilns.
The State’s modeling analyses indicate
that reducing on-road mobile and area/
non-road sources of NOX is most
effective in reducing ozone levels at the
Denton and Frisco monitors. Our
evaluation of the State’s analyses found
that reductions of NOX emissions of at
least 40 tpd would have the potential to
advance the attainment date. See pages
2–29 to 2–30 of the TCEQ SIP Narrative.
Thus, only measures that will provide
approximately 40 tpd of NOX emissions
reductions will timely advance
attainment. Neither the State nor EPA
was able to identify any potential RACM
measures that would provide 40 tpd or
more in NOX emissions reductions.
TCEQ had additional sensitivity
modeling performed for cement kilns,
which showed that the most stringent
controls on the kilns would not advance
a measure as having the potential to advance the
attainment date in the DFW area.
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the attainment date. See the
Supplemental TSD for more detail.
The Fifth Circuit in Sierra Club v.
EPA, 314 F.3d 735, 745 (5th Cir. 2002)
impressed upon EPA the duty to (1)
demonstrate that it has examined
relevant data, and (2) provide a
satisfactory explanation for its rejection
of a proposed RACM and why the
proposed RACM, individually and in
combination, would not advance the
area’s attainment date. See Ober, 243
F.3d at 1195 (quoting American Lung
Ass’n v. EPA, 134 F.3d 388, 392–93 (DC
Cir. 1998)). We reviewed the State’s
analysis and discussed our evaluation of
it in the July 2008 TSD and the
December 2008 Supplemental TSD for
this rulemaking; both TSDs are in the
docket for this rulemaking. EPA
evaluated the State’s analysis and
explained in the TSDs why we agree
with the State that no additional
measures are RACM for the DFW area
and therefore the RACM requirement of
the Act is met. We performed an
independent analysis by reviewing all
available data to determine whether
RTO and NOX controls achieving 80–
90% reduction are RACM for cement
kilns in the DFW area; we agree with the
State that additional control measures
would not advance the attainment date.
G. Comments on the Failure-To-Attain
Contingency Measures Plan
Comment: Some commenters merely
state that the contingency measures are
insufficient without providing any
support. Others comment that the four
failure-to-attain contingency measures
are insufficient because they will not
result in demonstrative, verifiable, and
enforceable emission reductions.
Response: Some of the comments
simply allege that the contingency
measures are insufficient and the
commenters provide no support,
rationale or data for their claim. EPA
explained why we believe the
contingency measures are sufficient in
the proposed rule and the commenters
have not substantively questioned EPA’s
rationale. Therefore, no further response
is necessary.
Other commenters claim that the
contingency measures will not result in
demonstrative, verifiable and
enforceable emission reductions. EPA
interpreted sections 172 and 182 of the
Act in the General Preamble (57 FR
13498, 13510) to require States with
moderate or above ozone nonattainment
areas to include contingency measures
to implement additional emission
reductions of 3% of the adjusted base
year inventory in the year following the
year in which the failure has been
identified. The state must specify the
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type of contingency measures and the
quantity of emissions reductions.
Quantifiable contingency measures
are ones that are demonstrative and
verifiable. An EPA-approved
methodology can be used to calculate
projected emissions reductions. The
three VOC control measures in the
contingency plan (Offset Lithographic
Printing; Degassing or Cleaning of
Stationary, Marine, and Transport
Vessels; and Petroleum Dry Cleaning)
rely upon long-established
methodologies for calculation of their
projected emissions reductions. See
EPA’s ‘‘Introduction to Area Source
Emission Inventory Development’’
(Emission Inventory Improvement
Program (EIIP), Volume III, January
2001). The EIIP was developed to
estimate the effect of controls and
acknowledges that regulatory programs
are less than 100 percent effective for
most source categories in most areas of
the country. Specifically, Chapter 4 of
the EIIP document describes the
methodology for calculating an emission
estimate for an area source with
regulations in place that affect any of
the individual sources within the source
category using three factors: control
efficiency, rule effectiveness, and rule
penetration. These factors are used to
develop more accurate emissions
estimates and are defined as follows:
(a) Control efficiency (CE) is the
emission reduction efficiency, and is a
percentage value representing the
amount of a source category’s emissions
that are controlled. These numbers are
often obtained from EPA’s Control
Technique Guidance documents.
(b) Rule effectiveness (RE) is an
adjustment to account for failures and
uncertainties that affect the actual
performance of the control. A default
value of 0.80 is recommended unless
better information is available for a
particular source category.
(c) Rule penetration (RP) is the
percentage of the area source category
that is covered by the applicable
regulation or is expected to be
complying with the regulation. The RP
is calculated by taking the uncontrolled
emissions covered by regulation and
dividing by the total uncontrolled
emissions. Default values are not
feasible for RP because it is highly
category- and location-dependent.
These three factors are multiplied
together to estimate the Controlled Area
source Emissions (CAE).14
14 If an area source is controlled, emissions are
calculated by the following equation: CAE = UAE
[1 ¥ (CE) (RP) (RE)], where UAE = Uncontrolled
Area Emissions estimate, and each of the other
terms is defined above.
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For the DFW contingency measures
plan, Texas estimated emissions for
each source category using EPA’s EIIP
methodology. For Offset Lithographic
Printing, the contingency measures plan
applies to those sources with emissions
below 50 tpy; for Degassing or Cleaning
of Stationary, Marine, and Transport
Vessels, the plan covers sources which
are currently exempt from the State’s
VOC rules for degassing, including
tanks smaller than 1 million gallons;
and for Petroleum Dry Cleaning, the
plan applies to sources using less than
2,000 gallons of solvent per year. These
three contingency measures address
sources that have emissions lower than
the exemptions in the State’s existing
VOC RACT rules approved today as
meeting RACT for both the standards.
The fourth measure relied on is fleet
turnover. Fleet turnover occurs each
year—the model year composition of the
local motor vehicle fleet changes as new
vehicles are purchased and enter the
fleet and old vehicles are scrapped. This
results in a decrease in fleet average
NOX and VOC emissions each year as
older model year vehicles, certified to
less stringent emission standards, leave
the fleet and are replaced by newer
vehicles certified to more stringent
standards. The emission impacts of fleet
turnover are calculated using EPA’s
MOBILE6.2 emission factor model.
MOBILE6.2 calculates emission factors
based on the standards that were in
effect in each of the model years in the
fleet and the relative fraction of each
model year expected in the fleet in a
specific calendar year. The relative
fraction of each model year in the fleet
is based on the local age distribution of
the vehicle fleet, which is a specific
input in MOBILE6.2 supplied by the
state or local agency running the model,
which in this SIP revision is the
NCTCOG.
EPA requires that states use
MOBILE6.2 to estimate motor vehicle
emissions in a SIP or conformity
determination. EPA also specifies in
guidance what types of local inputs are
appropriate for use in a SIP. For
example, EPA does not allow a state or
local agency to project that the motor
vehicle fleet will be newer in the future
than it currently is. In SIPs, EPA accepts
projections of future emissions,
including the benefits of fleet turnover,
calculated using MOBILE6.2 using
inputs that conform to our guidance.
The NCTCOG used the State vehicle
registration database from July 2005;
this conforms to EPA’s guidance, is the
latest available information and
provides a more accurate estimation of
future emissions levels.
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The three VOC measures have been
approved into the SIP and therefore are
enforceable by the EPA, the State and
the public. The fleet turnover measure
is a Federal rule and as such is
enforceable by the EPA, the State and
the public. Today’s action makes the
fleet turnover measure’s projected SIP
credits enforceable by the EPA and the
public. The measures are surplus
because they are not substitutes for
mandatory, required emissions
reductions and they are not being
counted in any other control strategy.15
Finally, the measures are considered
permanent because they continue for as
long as the period in which they are
used in the failure-to-attain contingency
measures plan.
Comment: A commenter states that
EPA may not approve contingency
measures into the SIP that are already
scheduled for implementation and are
mandatory federal measures. Moreover,
the attainment demonstration SIP relies
upon these projected emissions
reductions from fleet turnover. The
emissions factors models used for
projecting the future year’s controlled
emissions inventory include the
improved tailpipe emission. The
emissions reductions will occur
passively and are not available ‘‘to be
undertaken’’ in the likely event of a
failure to attain. Accepting these as
contingency measures violates the letter
of the Act and the intended function of
contingency measures—to step in when
the SIP’s primary control strategy fails.
Texas may not rely on tailpipe
emissions reductions as a contingency
measure.
Response: EPA’s position is that the
Act allows mandatory federal measures
that are already scheduled for
implementation to be used as
contingency measures, as long as their
emission reductions are beyond those
needed for attainment or to meet
reasonable further progress. The
following are some of EPA’s actions on
the 1-hour ozone SIPs, approving the
use of mandatory federal measures as
part of the contingency measures plan:
62 FR 15844, (April 3, 1997); 62 FR
66279, (December 18, 1997); 66 FR
30811 (June 8, 2001); 66 FR 586 and 66
FR 634, (January 3, 2001). In the
preambles for the proposed and final
Phase 2 Rule, we state that Federal
15 EPA approved these three Chapter 115
measures into the DFW 1-hour ozone SIP as part of
the failure-to-attain contingency measures plan.
EPA never triggered them to be implemented upon
a finding of failure to attain the 1-hour standard.
They remain in the DFW SIP and now the State is
relying upon them as part of the 8-hour ozone
failure-to-attain contingency measures plan. They
are not required to meet the VOC RACT
requirement for either standard.
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measures that result in additional
emission reductions beyond those
needed for attainment or ROP in an area
could serve as contingency measures for
a failure to attain or meet the ROP
requirements. (See Phase 2 Rule,
proposed in 68 FR 32802 at 32837 (June
2, 2003), and final in 70 FR 71612 at
71651 (November 29, 2005)). Therefore,
the State’s inclusion of the Federal
Motor Vehicle Control programs
(FMVCP) occurring after the 2009 ozone
season, is acceptable.
The Federal measure in the failure-toattain contingency measures plan is the
projected emissions reductions from the
FMVCP occurring after the 2009 ozone
season, in addition to the alreadyidentified VOC rules described above.
The FMVCP requires controls on both
on- and non-road motor vehicles,
providing emissions reductions as the
fleet is replaced with newer vehicles
(turns over). Only the emissions
reductions projected to occur after 2009
from the FMVCP are relied upon to meet
the 3% of the emissions in the adjusted
1999 base year emissions inventory.
The modeling relies upon emissions
reductions from the FMVCP that will
become effective during the modeling
period from 1999 to 2009. EPA disagrees
that the attainment demonstration SIP
relies upon the projected emissions
reductions from fleet turnover occurring
after 2009. Said another way, we
disagree that the reductions from fleet
turnover used as contingency measures
were relied upon in the demonstration
that the area would attain by 2009.
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H. Comments on the Attainment Motor
Vehicle Emission Budgets (MVEBs)
Comment: Commenters state that the
MVEBs are flawed and are flawed for
multiple reasons. In addition, in the
absence of a competent attainment
demonstration, the MVEBs are not
approvable or adequate.
Response: EPA disagrees with the
commenters that the MVEBs are flawed.
The Commenters provided no data or
rationale for their comments. This
statement, without any further
explanation does not give EPA any
guidance on the alleged inadequacy nor
how the commenter would have EPA
improve upon it. EPA, however, refers
the Commenters to our detailed
response, below.
As discussed elsewhere, we believe
that the plan provides for attainment of
the ozone standard. For further
explanation of how the attainment
demonstration SIP provides for
attainment, please see our responses in
Section V–D above. Furthermore, we
believe the budgets in the plan are
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consistent with the attainment plan and
therefore should be approved.
Further, the budgets in the SIP were
established consistent with the process
in 40 CFR 93.118(e). Under 40 CFR
93.118, budgets cannot be used for
conformity until EPA has either found
the budgets ‘‘adequate’’ or approved the
SIP in which they are contained. On
June 28, 2007, the availability of the
budgets was posted on EPA’s Web site
for public comment. The comment
period closed on July 30, 2007, and we
received no comments. On March 21,
2008, we published a Notice of
Adequacy Determination for the
attainment MVEBs (73 FR 15152) where
we announced that we found the 2009
attainment MVEBs ‘‘adequate.’’ In that
notice we stated that the attainment
MVEBs must be used in future DFW
transportation conformity
determinations.
I. Voluntary Mobile Source Emission
Reduction Programs (VMEP)
Comment: Commenters state that the
Transportation Emission Reduction
Measure (TERM) projects are
inadequate.
Response: The comment letter
provides no support, rationale or data
for its claim that the TERM projects are
inadequate. EPA explained its rationale
for proposing approval of the VMEP
program in the proposed rule and the
commenter fails to identify any defect in
EPA’s analysis. Therefore, no further
response is required.
Comment: A commenter states that
EPA proposes to accept a series of
capacity-increasing traffic projects as
substitute control measures in the event
that the VMEP NOX emissions are not
achieved. The commenter states that the
proposed TERMs involve roadway and
highway capacity expansion to allow
higher vehicle speeds in congested
areas. The commenter further states that
higher vehicle speeds result in
increased NOX emissions and are
counter productive to the stated purpose
of supplying emissions reductions when
VMEP reductions fail, and EPA should
reject the TERM control measures’
inclusion into the SIP.
Response: EPA finds that the State,
through the North Central Texas
Council of Governments (NCTCOG), has
committed to and is responsible for
emissions reductions measures that are
permanent, quantifiable, surplus,
adequately supported, consistent,
enforceable and in accordance with the
Act and EPA guidance. The state,
through the NCTCOG, also commits to
monitor, assess, report, and, in the event
that the NOX reductions are not
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achieved, remedy any shortfall in
emissions reductions.
It should be noted that EPA is not
approving any TERMs, which would
serve as the remedy to a shortfall of the
VMEP at this time. The types of TERMs
the state may use in the case of a
shortfall are traffic signal improvements,
Intelligent Transportation Systems
(ITS), and/or freeway and/or arterial
bottleneck removal. Because the State
did not specifically identify or commit
to using these additional measures, we
did not review them for approvability.
In the event of a shortfall, EPA will
review the additional measures
provided by the State for inclusion into
the SIP. If EPA finds, at that time, that
the measures would cause an increase
in NOX emissions, we would not find
them suitable for use to make up for an
emissions reduction shortfall.
Finally, the State must account for
any such shortfall either by modifying
implementation of the existing program
to address the shortfall, adopting new
measures, or revising the VMEP’s
emissions credits to reflect actual
emissions reductions achieved,
provided overall SIP commitments are
met.16 Additions to the VMEP and
changes to the VMEP credit in an effort
to remedy any shortfall would be made
in the form of a SIP revision. If TCMs
are used to remedy the shortfall, a SIP
revision may not be necessary.17
16 See Richard D. Wilson, Acting Assistant
Administrator for Air and Radiation, dated October
24, 1997, entitled ‘‘Guidance on Incorporating
Voluntary Mobile Source Emission Reduction
Programs in State Implementation Plans (SIPs).’’
17 The state may submit TCMs to EPA under CAA
176(c)(8). The provision states that TCMs that are
specified in an approved implementation plan may
be replaced in the plan with alternate TCMs if the
substitute measures achieve equivalent or greater
emissions reductions than the TCM to be replaced.
The provision also allows new TCMs to be added
to an approved SIP. In order to substitute TCMs the
CAA requires that the substitute TCM provide
equivalent emissions reductions as the TCM that is
being replaced in the approved SIP. The CAA also
requires that, if the time for implementing the
substitute TCM has not passed, the substitute
measures must be implemented in accordance with
a schedule that is consistent with the schedule that
provided for the control measures in the
implementation plan. Substitute and additional
TCMs must be accompanied by evidence of
adequate personnel and funding and authority
under state/local law to implement, monitor and
enforce the control measure; the measures must be
developed in a collaborative process that includes
participation by representatives of all affected
jurisdictions, state agency and state/local
transportation agencies and consultation with the
EPA; there must be reasonable public notice and
opportunity to comment; and the metropolitan
planning organization, State air pollution control
agency and the EPA concur with the equivalency
of the substitute TCMs and on the additional TCM.
Concurrence by the above agencies is required by
the CAA and once the substitute is adopted, the
TCM becomes, by operation of law, a part of the SIP
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VI. Final Action
EPA is conditionally approving the
DFW 1997 8-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP and its 2009
attainment MVEBs, RACM
determination, and failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan, submitted
by the State of Texas on May 30, 2007
and November 7, 2008, as supplemented
on April 23, 2008. EPA is fully
approving two local control measures
relied upon in the attainment
demonstration, the VMEP and TCMs.
We are also fully approving the DFW
area SIP as meeting the RACT
requirement for VOCs for the 1-hour
ozone standard and the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard. These revisions meet
the requirements of the Act and EPA’s
regulations, and are consistent with
EPA’s guidance and policy. We are
taking this action pursuant to section
110 and part D of the Act and EPA’s
regulations.
VII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
state choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
approves state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason,
this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
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and federally enforceable. It should be noted that
consultation with the EPA regional offices serves to
fulfill the requirement for consultation with the
EPA Administrator and concurrence on both TCM
substitutions and additions has been delegated to
the EPA Regional Administrators. (Delegation of
Authority 7–158: Transportation Control Measure
Substitutions and Additions).
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16:42 Jan 13, 2009
Jkt 217001
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by March 16, 2009.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxides, Ozone, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: December 17, 2008.
Richard E. Greene,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
■
40 CFR part 52 is amended as follows:
PART 52—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Subpart SS—Texas
2. In Section 52.2270, the second table
in paragraph (e) entitled ‘‘EPA
Approved Nonregulatory Provisions and
Quasi-Regulatory Measures in the Texas
SIP’’ is amended by adding four new
entries at the end.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 52.2270
Identification of plan.
*
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
*
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*
*
*
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 9 / Wednesday, January 14, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
1927
EPA APPROVED NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES IN THE TEXAS SIP
Applicable
geographic or
nonattainment area
Name of SIP
provision
*
*
Dallas-Fort Worth 1997 8-hour
ozone Attainment Demonstration SIP and its 2009 attainment MVEBs, RACM demonstration, and Failure-to-Attain
Contingency Measures Plan.
Transportation Control Measures
VMEP ...........................................
VOC RACT finding for the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS and the 1997 8hour ozone NAAQS.
EPA approval date
Comments
*
*
*
Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, May 23, 2007, NoJohnson, Kaufman, Parker,
vember 7, 2008.
Rockwall and Tarrant Counties,
TX.
*
January 14, 2009 [Insert FR page number where document begins].
*
Conditional Approval.
Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis,
Johnson, Kaufman, Parker,
Rockwall and Tarrant Counties,
TX.
Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis,
Johnson, Kaufman, Parker,
Rockwall and Tarrant Counties,
TX.
Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis,
Johnson, Kaufman, Parker,
Rockwall and Tarrant Counties,
TX.
January 14, 2009 [Insert FR page number where document begins].
January 14, 2009 [Insert FR page number where document begins].
January 14, 2009 [Insert FR page number where document begins].
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2007–1147; FRL–8758–8]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Texas; Control
of Emissions of Nitrogen Oxides (NOX)
From Cement Kilns
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AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The EPA is finalizing
approval of revisions to the Texas State
Implementation Plan (SIP). We are
approving the rules in 30 TAC Chapter
117 that the State submitted on May 30,
2007, concerning control of emissions of
NOX from cement kilns operating in
Bexar, Comal, Ellis, Hays, and
McLennan Counties. We are approving
the nonsubstantive renumbering of the
rules for all five counties. We also are
approving the substantive changes to
the rules for Ellis County, based on a
determination that the rules for Ellis
County meet the NOX Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
requirements for cement kilns operating
in the Dallas Fort Worth (D/FW) 1997 8hour ozone nonattainment area. We are
taking this action under section 110 and
part D of the Federal Clean Air Act (the
Act, or CAA).
DATES: This rule will be effective on
February 13, 2009.
16:42 Jan 13, 2009
Jkt 217001
May 23, 2007 .............
May 23, 2007 .............
May 23, 2007 .............
The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R06–OAR–2007–0523. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733. The file will be made
available by appointment for public
inspection in the Region 6 FOIA Review
Room between the hours of 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. weekdays except for legal
holidays. Contact the person listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
paragraph below to make an
appointment. If possible, please make
the appointment at least two working
days in advance of your visit. There will
be a 15 cent per page fee for making
photocopies of documents. On the day
of the visit, please check in at the EPA
Region 6 reception area at 1445 Ross
Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas.
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. E9–118 Filed 1–13–09; 8:45 am]
VerDate Nov<24>2008
State submittal/
effective date
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Alan Shar, Air Planning Section (6PD–
L), Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202–2733, telephone
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4700
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(214) 665–6691, fax (214) 665–7263, email address shar.alan@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. What are we approving?
B. Who submitted written comments to us?
C. How are we responding to those written
comments?
D. What sections of the May 30, 2007
submittal will become part of Texas SIP?
E. What sections of the May 30, 2007
submittal will not become a part of
Texas SIP?
F. What Texas Counties will this
rulemaking affect?
G. What are the NOX control emissions
requirements that we approved for Texas
under the 1-hour ozone SIP?
H. What are the NOX control emissions
requirements that we are approving for
Texas under the 8-hour ozone SIP?
I. What are the compliance schedules for
NOX emissions from cement kilns that
we are approving?
II. Final Action
III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
A. What are we approving?
The EPA approved 30 TAC, Chapter
117, NOX cement kilns rules at 69 FR
15681 published on March 26, 2004, as
NOX control emissions requirements for
Texas under the 1-hour ozone SIP. On
May 30, 2007, TCEQ submitted rule
revisions to 30 TAC, Chapter 117,
‘‘Control of Air Pollution from Nitrogen
Compounds,’’ as a revision to the Texas
SIP. On July 11, 2008 (73 FR 39911), we
proposed approval of the May 30, 2007
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 9 (Wednesday, January 14, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1903-1927]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-118]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2007-0524; FRL-8758-7]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Texas; Attainment Demonstration for the Dallas/Fort Worth 1997 8-Hour
Ozone Nonattainment Area
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; conditional approval and full approval.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is conditionally approving the Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW)
1997 8-hour ozone State Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions submitted
on May 30, 2007 and November 7, 2008, as supplemented on April 23,
2008. This final conditional approval action is for the attainment
demonstration SIP, which includes the 2009 attainment Motor Vehicle
Emissions Budgets (MVEBs), the Reasonably Available Control Measures
(RACM) demonstration, and the failure-to-attain contingency measures
plan. The approval is conditioned upon Texas adopting and submitting to
EPA prior to March 1, 2009, a complete SIP revision to limit the use of
Discrete Emission Reduction Credits (DERCs), beginning in March 2009.
If the State meets its commitment to submit the DERC SIP revision, EPA
will undertake additional rulemaking action on the approvability of the
DERC SIP revision and, if EPA approves that SIP revision, the
conditional approval of the attainment demonstration will be converted
to a full approval at that time.
We are fully approving two local control measures relied upon in
the attainment demonstration, the Voluntary Mobile Source Emission
Reduction Plan (VMEP) and Transportation Control Measures (TCMs). We
are also fully approving the DFW area SIP as meeting the Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT) requirement for volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) for both the 1-hour and 1997 8-hour ozone standards.
These actions will result in emissions reductions in the DFW 8-hour
ozone nonattainment area and meet section 110 and part D of the Act and
EPA's regulations.
DATES: This final rule is effective on February 13, 2009.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket
No. EPA-R06-OAR-2007-0524. All documents in the docket are listed on
[[Page 1904]]
the www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the Air Planning Section (6PD-
L), Environmental Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202-2733. The file will be made available by
appointment for public inspection in the Region 6 FOIA Review Room
between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays except for legal
holidays. Contact the person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT paragraph below or Mr. Bill Deese at 214-665-7253 to make an
appointment. If possible, please make the appointment at least two
working days in advance of your visit. There will be a fee of 15 cents
per page for making photocopies of documents. On the day of the visit,
please check in at the EPA Region 6 reception area at 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas.
The State submittal, which is part of the EPA record, is also
available for public inspection at the State Air Agency listed below
during official business hours by appointment: Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality, Office of Air Quality, 12124 Park 35 Circle,
Austin, Texas 78753.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Carrie Paige, Air Planning Section
(6PD-L), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-2733, telephone (214) 665-6521; fax
number 214-665-7263; e-mail address paige.carrie@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,''
and ``our'' means EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. What Action Is EPA Taking?
A. What Is EPA Conditionally Approving in This Action?
B. What Is EPA Fully Approving in This Action?
III. What Happens if the State Fails To Meet the Condition?
IV. What Other Elements Must Be Approved To Allow This Final
Conditional Approval of the Attainment Demonstration SIP?
V. Comments
A. What Comments Did EPA Receive on the July 14, 2008 Rulemaking
for DFW?
B. General Comments
C. Comments on the Texas Emissions Reduction Plan (TERP)
D. Comments on Photochemical Modeling, Weight of Evidence
Analyses, and Assessment of Demonstration of Attainment
E. Comments on Discrete Emission Reduction Credits (DERCs)
F. Comments on Reasonably Available Control Measures (RACM)
G. Comments on the Failure-to-Attain Contingency Measures Plan
H. Comments on the Attainment Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets
(MVEBs)
I. Comments on the Voluntary Mobile Source Emission Reduction
Program (VMEP)
VI. Final Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On July 14, 2008, 73 FR 40203, EPA proposed conditional approval of
the DFW area's 1997 8-hour ozone attainment demonstration SIP revision,
including the attainment MVEBs, RACM demonstration, and failure-to-
attain contingency measures plan. We proposed to fully approve two
local control measures relied upon in the attainment demonstration--the
VMEP and TCMs. We also proposed to fully approve the DFW area SIP as
meeting the RACT requirement for VOCs for both the 1-hour ozone
standard and the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
The proposed approval of the attainment demonstration SIP is
conditioned upon Texas adopting and submitting to EPA by March 1, 2009,
a complete SIP revision that includes an enforceable mechanism that
would allow no more than 3.2 tons per day (tpd) of DERCs to be used in
2009 in the DFW area. If Texas intends to allow for more than 3.2 tpd
of DERCs to be used beginning January 1, 2010, then the SIP revision
must also provide appropriate limits on the use of DERCs and a detailed
justification explaining how the future adjustments to the allowed DERC
usage will be consistent with continued attainment of the 8-hour ozone
standard. The justification must provide sufficient detail such that
the public can be assured that attainment will continue to be projected
in future years. If Texas meets the commitment to submit the DERC SIP
revision, EPA will undertake rulemaking to determine whether to approve
the revision and, if approved, EPA would convert the conditional
approval of the attainment demonstration to a full approval.
We also proposed that final conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration SIP was contingent upon Texas submitting to EPA a
complete and approvable SIP revision for the attainment demonstration
SIP's failure-to-attain contingency measures plan that meets section
172(c)(9) of the Act. EPA specifically identified in the proposal the
elements such submission must contain. The failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan was submitted to EPA on November 7, 2008, and
we have determined that the plan is consistent with the elements
established in our proposed rule (73 FR 40203) and meets section
172(c)(9) of the Act. Because the State submitted a complete failure-
to-attain contingency measures plan that relies upon three VOC SIP
rules for Offset Lithographic Printing, Degassing or Cleaning of
Stationary, Marine, and Transport Vessels, and Petroleum Dry Cleaning,
as well as fleet turnover from mobile sources after 2009, EPA can
proceed with a final conditional approval. (See page 40205, third
column, of the proposed action.)
Our July 14, 2008, proposal provides a detailed description of the
revisions and the rationale for EPA's proposed actions, together with a
discussion of the opportunity to comment. The public comment period for
these actions closed on August 13, 2008. See the Technical Support
Documents (TSDs) and our proposed rulemaking at 73 FR 40203 for more
information.
II. What Action Is EPA Taking?
A. What Is EPA Conditionally Approving in This Action?
EPA is conditionally approving the DFW 1997 8-hour ozone attainment
demonstration SIP and, as part of this attainment demonstration SIP,
the 2009 attainment MVEBs, RACM demonstration, and failure-to-attain
contingency measures plan, submitted to EPA on May 30, 2007 and
November 7, 2008, as supplemented on April 23, 2008.
Our conditional approval is based on our determination that, the
modeling and weight-of-evidence show that the DFW area will attain the
8-hour ozone standard by its attainment date, as a result of the
control strategies relied upon in this plan. In making this
determination, we have considered the comments that we have received on
our proposal. We have also considered the air quality monitoring
information gathered since the proposal, the impact of the Clean Air
Interstate rule (CAIR) vacatur, and the progress in implementing
control measures. As the area approaches the attainment date, recent
monitoring data becomes more important as an indicator of potential
success. The preliminary data from 2008 shows 18 of the 20 monitors had
fourth highs at 84 ppb or below and only two
[[Page 1905]]
monitors were slightly above attainment levels at 85 ppb.
With more emissions reductions to occur before the beginning of the
2009 attainment year ozone season, we believe these data provide strong
support that the area will attain the standard by its attainment date
of June 2010.
As described in the proposed rule, the condition that must be met
for EPA to fully approve the attainment demonstration is that the TCEQ
must adopt and submit to EPA a complete SIP revision by March 1, 2009,
that includes an enforceable mechanism that provides a 3.2 tpd
restriction on the amount of DERCs available for use in DFW beginning
March 1, 2009. The SIP revision may provide that the amount of DERCs
available for use beginning January 1, 2010, could increase above 3.2
tpd if the revision provides an enforceable mechanism and a
justification that the increase is consistent with attainment and
maintenance of the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. In a letter dated June
13, 2008, TCEQ committed to meeting this condition (the letter is in
the docket for this rulemaking).
If Texas intends to allow for more than 3.2 tpd of DERCs to be used
beginning January 1, 2010, then the SIP revision must also provide
appropriate limits on the use of DERCs and a detailed justification
explaining how the future adjustments to the allowed DERC usage will be
consistent with continued attainment of the 8-hour ozone standard. The
justification must provide sufficient detail such that the EPA and the
public can be assured that attainment will continue to be projected in
future years. The justification and methodology for any increase in
allowable DERC usage must be fully identified in the TCEQ rulemaking
and SIP submittal process.
The SIP revision submitted by March 1, 2009, must adequately
provide for continued attainment, and include the justification and/or
methodology used by TCEQ to increase the amount of DERCs allowed for
use in DFW starting in calendar year 2010. The justification provided
by TCEQ must satisfy section 110(l) of the Act by demonstrating that
the increase will not interfere with attainment or any other applicable
measure of the Act. The analysis to satisfy section 110(l) will need to
address both quantity and spatial allocation impacts of increased DERC
usage on ozone levels.
B. What Is EPA Fully Approving in This Action?
EPA is fully approving two local control measures relied upon in
the attainment demonstration: The VMEP and TCMs. We are also fully
approving the DFW area SIP as meeting the RACT requirement for VOCs for
both the 1-hour ozone standard and the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
III. What Happens if the State Fails To Meet the Condition?
If Texas fails to adopt and submit to the EPA a complete DERC SIP
revision by March 1, 2009, EPA will issue a letter to the State
converting the conditional approval of the 1997 8-hour ozone DFW
attainment demonstration SIP to disapproval. Such disapproval will
start the 18-month clock for sanctions in accordance with section
179(b) and 40 CFR 52.31 and the 2-year clock for a Federal
Implementation Plan (FIP) under section 110(c). EPA would publish in
the FR a notice announcing the disapproval of the SIP and the start of
sanctions and FIP clocks for the DFW area, and would revise the
provisions in the Code of Federal Regulation (CFR) to reflect the
disapproval of the SIP.
The State proposed the DERC SIP revision for public review on
August 6, 2008 and the comment period closed September 12, 2008; final
adoption of the revision was on December 10, 2008, in order to meet the
condition to submit a complete DERC SIP revision to EPA by March 1,
2009, and implement the DERC SIP revision by March 1, 2009. As
described in the proposed rule (73 FR 40203), if the State adopts and
submits to EPA by March 1, 2009, a complete DERC SIP revision, and EPA
determines through rulemaking that the submitted DERC SIP revision is
approvable, we will simultaneously convert the conditional approval of
the attainment demonstration SIP to a full approval. If EPA cannot
fully approve the SIP revision concerning the use of DERCs in the DFW
area, EPA will undertake rulemaking to disapprove the submitted DERC
SIP revision and to convert the conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration SIP for the DFW area to a disapproval. In such case, the
18-month clock for sanctions and the 2-year clock for a FIP would start
on the effective date of final disapproval.
Today's final conditional approval of the attainment demonstration
SIP remains in effect until EPA either determines that the State has
not submitted a complete DERC SIP revision by March 1, 2009 or EPA
completes rulemaking action either approving or disapproving a complete
submitted DERC SIP submission and simultaneous with action on the DERC
SIP submission takes final action to convert the conditional approval
to a full approval or disapproval of the attainment demonstration.
IV. What Other Elements Must Be Approved To Allow This Final
Conditional Approval of the Attainment Demonstration SIP?
In our proposal, we discussed the elements that must be approved if
we are to finalize the conditional approval of the attainment
demonstration. In order to finalize conditional approval of the DFW
1997 8-hour ozone attainment demonstration SIP, EPA must fully approve
all of the control measures relied upon in the attainment demonstration
and the DFW RFP Plan with the RFP MVEBs and RFP contingency measures.
We approved the DFW RFP Plan with the RFP MVEBs and RFP contingency
measures on October 7, 2008 at 73 FR 58475.
The State committed to submit a rule restricting DERC usage by
March 1, 2009. In addition, EPA reviewed all DERC Notice of Intent to
Use Forms that the TCEQ Executive Director approved as of November 30
for use in 2009, to ensure that the total amount of DERCs approved for
use beginning on March 1, 2009 does not exceed 3.2 tpd.
Table 1 below lists the status of EPA action on the control
measures relied upon in the attainment demonstration. The Table
documents that, as of this final action, all control measures and
reductions relied upon to demonstrate attainment have been reviewed and
approved by EPA in this or other Federal Register Actions.
Table 1--Status of EPA Required Action on Control Strategies Before
Finalizing Conditional Approval of the Attainment Demonstration SIP
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure Status
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The April 9, 2003 Alcoa Federal Consent Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR
Decree. 47835).
The DFW Energy Efficiency Measures Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR
Program. 47835).
NOX rules for IC engines in DFW........ Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR
47835).
[[Page 1906]]
2002 Base Year Emissions Inventory..... Approved August 15, 2008 (73 FR
47835).
The VOC rules adopted by Texas on 11/15/ Approved July 17, 2008 (73 FR
06. 40972).
1-hour attainment determination........ Approved October 16, 2008 (73
FR 61357).
East Texas Combustion Sources (i.e., Approved December 3, 2008 (73
the rich burn gas-fired engine rule in FR 73562).
the 33 counties east of DFW).
The DFW major source rule.............. Approved December 3, 2008 (73
FR 73562).
The DFW minor source rule.............. Approved December 3, 2008 (73
FR 73562).
The DFW gas-fired engine rule.......... Approved December 3, 2008 (73
FR 73562).
The DFW EGUs rule...................... Approved December 3, 2008 (73
FR 73562).
The DFW non-EGUs rule.................. Approved December 3, 2008 (73
FR 73562).
The Auxiliary steam boilers rule in the Approved December 3, 2008 (73
5 counties. FR 73562).
The Stationary gas turbines rule in the Approved December 3, 2008 (73
5 counties. FR 73562).
The Cement kiln rules.................. Approved simultaneously in
today's Federal Register.
The VMEP and its emission reductions... Approved in this rulemaking.
The TCMs and the associated emission Approved in this rulemaking.
reductions.
The TERP emission reductions........... Approved in this rulemaking as
submitted in the DFW 5% IOP
Plan and the DFW 1997 8-hour
ozone attainment demonstration
SIP.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Comments
A. What Comments Did EPA Receive on the July 14, 2008 Proposed
Rulemaking for DFW?
We received 26 comment letters on the proposed rulemaking. These
comments are available for review in the docket for this rulemaking.
The comment letters came from the following sources:
1. August 6, 2008 letter from Linda Koop, City of Dallas
Councilmember, District 11, Chair of the Transportation and
Environment Committee.
2. August 12, 2008 letter from Ramon Alvarez, PhD, for
Environmental Defense Fund.
3. August 12, 2008 letter from Bill Cox, citizen.
4. August 12, 2008 letter from Margaret DeMoss, public health
consultant and citizen.
5. August 12, 2008 letter from Ed Soph, citizen.
6. August 12, 2008 letter from Bob Fusinato, citizen.
7. August 12, 2008 letter from Ramsey Sprague, citizen.
8. August 13, 2008 letter from Jon Mamula, citizen.
9. August 13, 2008 letter from Kerrie Kimberling, citizen.
10. August 13, 2008 letter from Cindy Crutch, citizen.
11. August 13, 2008 letter from Becky Bornhorst, clean air
advocate.
12. August 13, 2008 letter from Barbara Downey, citizen.
13. August 13, 2008 letter from Ricky Pearce, Ryan Whaley
Coldiron Shandy PC, for Holcim LP.
14. August 13, 2008 letter from Neil Carman, for Sierra Club,
Lone Star Chapter.
15. August 13, 2008 letter from Gina Hall, citizen.
16. August 13, 2008 letter from Molly Rooke, citizen.
17. August 13, 2008 letter from Marc Chytilo, for Downwinders At
Risk and the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club.
18. August 13, 2008 letter from April Johnson, citizen.
19. August 13, 2008 letter from Wendi Hammond, for KIDS 4 Clean
Air and Clean Air Institute of Texas.
20. August 13, 2008 letter from Willem and Paula Noteboom,
citizens.
21. August 13, 2008 letter from Susan Waskey, citizen.
22. August 13, 2008 letter from Matthew Kuryla, Baker and Botts
for the BCCA Appeal Group.
23. August 13, 2008 letter from Matthew Kuryla, Baker and Botts
for the 8-Hour Ozone SIP Coalition.
24. August 13, 2008 letter from Lon Burnham, State
Representative, District 90, Fort Worth, Texas.
25. August 14, 2008 letter from Anna Albers, citizen.
26. August 14, 2008 letter from Sandra Soria, citizen.
B. General Comments
Comment: Several commenters urge EPA to finalize conditional
approval of the attainment demonstration SIP. One supports EPA's
proposed rule, recognizes the efforts of the local community, and lists
some of the clean air initiatives implemented by the City of Dallas.
Response: We appreciate the support expressed in these comment
letters. We applaud the actions taken by the local community and
commend the local leaders and implementation staff; their work has and
will continue to assist the area in reducing NOX and VOCs,
the precursors for ambient ozone pollution. EPA encourages local
governments to continue to be involved in these and future local
emissions reductions programs.
Comment: Two commenters disagree with EPA's position taken in the
proposal that because the DFW area has an attainment deadline of June
15, 2010, air quality monitoring data for the years 2007, 2008, and
2009 would be used to make an attainment determination. Rather, using
the years 2008, 2009, and 2010 would be most consistent with the Act's
requirements for attainment determination. They note that the Act
mandates the attainment determination be made within 6 months after the
attainment date, including any extensions thereof, and be based on the
area's design value as of the attainment date. Although the Phase 1
Rule defines the ``attainment year ozone season'' as the ozone season
immediately preceding the attainment date, they contend that that
regulatory definition can be read as requiring controls timely for
attainment in the attainment year, as required by the statute. They do
not see the definition as relevant to the timing or content of an
attainment determination. EPA's regulations do not specify that the
attainment determination is to be conducted using data from the years
prior to the attainment date, without considering data from the ozone
season that includes the attainment date. They believe such a
determination would be inconsistent with the statutory directive that
the attainment determination be ``based on the area's design value (as
of the attainment date).''
Response: As an initial matter, EPA set forth its interpretation on
this issue in the preambles to the proposed and final Phase 1 Rule. See
68 FR 32802, at 32817 (June 2, 2003) (In ``determining whether an area
actually attains the NAAQS at the time of the attainment date, EPA
would use the ambient air quality data for the three ozone seasons
prior to the attainment date. As an example, if the effective date of
the
[[Page 1907]]
nonattainment designations is May 15, 2004, the maximum attainment date
for an area classified marginal would be May 15, 2007. In this example,
EPA would consider the 8-hour ozone data for the three previous ozone
seasons--2004, 2005 and 2006.''); 69 FR 23951, at 23989 (Apr. 30, 2004)
(noting that the ozone seasons from 2007, 2008 and 2009 would be
considered for an attainment date in May 2010). However, as noted by
the commenter, the statute clearly specifies that a determination of
attainment must be ``based on the area's design value (as of the
attainment date). The attainment date for the DFW area is June 15, 2010
and the design value ``as of the attainment date'' must be determined
using the last three full years of ozone data, i.e., 2007, 2008 and
2009. We see no argument that the design value ``as of the attainment
date'' could be determined based on air quality data that would not
represent a complete ozone season and thus be incomplete as of June 15,
2010.
Comment: We received many comment letters stating that the plan
does not reflect recommendations made by the North Texas Clean Air
Steering Committee.
Response: We agree that the plan submitted by the State does not
reflect all of these recommendations. The resolutions were submitted to
the State and addressed by the TCEQ in the SIP package adopted on May
23, 2007, which is in the docket for this rulemaking. The U.S. Supreme
Court has consistently held that under the Act, initial and primary
responsibility for deciding what emissions reductions will be required
from which sources is left to the discretion of the States. Whitman v.
Am. Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457 (2001); Train v. NRDC, 421 U.S. 60
(1975). The State has discretion under the Act to determine the
emissions reductions measures to be included in its attainment
demonstration and exercised this authority for this plan. The State's
role is to determine which particular emissions reductions measures are
appropriate for the nonattainment area in order to comply with the
requirements of the Act. As a matter of law, EPA is required to approve
a SIP revision if it meets the Act's requirements, regardless of the
State's choices. It is not EPA's role to rule out the State's choice of
components of its SIP submittal so long as the plan is adequate to meet
the standards mandated by EPA. See Train at 79-80 and Union Electric v.
EPA, 427 U.S. 246 (1976). The EPA's role in reviewing SIP submittals is
to approve state choices, if they meet the criteria of the Act. EPA
disapproves a SIP submittal only if it fails to meet the statutory
requirements. Seabrook v. Costle, 659 F.2d 1349 (5th Cir. 1981).
Federal inquiry into the reasonableness of state action is not allowed
under the Act (see, Union Electric Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 255-266
(1976); 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)). As provided in the analyses accompanying
this rulemaking, we have explained why we believe the submitted plan
meets the requirements of the CAA.
Comment: Many commenters claimed that the SIP sanctions ozone
pollution levels above the 1997 standard yet this standard has been
determined not to be protective of human health by the EPA and is being
replaced.
Response: The Act contemplates the possibility that scientific
advances would require amending the ozone NAAQS. As such, Section
109(d)(1) of the Act requires EPA to review the ozone standard every
five years based on the current science, and make any revisions that
are appropriate in light of the current science. Today's actions are
being taken in the context of the ozone standard that was promulgated
on July 18, 1997, based on the best available scientific evidence at
the time.
The 2008 revised 8-hour ozone standard does not replace the
requirements for ozone nonattainment areas to meet the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard by their applicable attainment date. The measures
implemented in this attainment demonstration SIP will assist the DFW
area in progressing toward the 2008 revised 8-hour ozone standard,
ensuring progress continues during the time between the designations
for the 2008 standard and the submission date for the associated SIP
revisions. These measures cannot be removed from the SIP. South Coast
Air Quality Management Dist. v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (DC Cir. 2006).
Comment: A commenter stated that TCEQ approved a permit revision
allowing TXI cement kilns in Ellis County to burn tires as fuel,
questioned whether the change would result in a decrease in
NOX emissions, and expressed concerns about other
pollutants, which result from tire burning. TXI said there would be
NOX reductions but they based this by comparing kilns that
were not similar to the ones TXI would use. TCEQ allows TXI to self-
report, but the checks on the reporting are poor, and TXI also knows
when the inspectors are coming.
Response: Each cement plant in Ellis County must comply with both
its permits' limits and the State's revised chapter 117 rules for
cement kilns relied upon in the DFW attainment demonstration, whichever
is stricter. In a related rulemaking in today's Federal Register, EPA
is concurrently approving the revised chapter 117 rules for cement
kilns. The revised cement kiln rules establish a NOX source
cap for each of the three cement plants in Ellis County. We disagree
that there will be no decreases in NOX emissions. The
revised NOX rules for cement kilns should result in at least
9.7 tpd of reduction in NOX emissions for the DFW area
regardless of the fuel used including tires. We note also that all of
the cement plants are required to operate continuous emissions monitors
for NOX that must meet rigorous quality assurance and
quality control criteria. Because these stack monitors must operate
continuously, compliance does not rely solely on periodic inspections.
As a consequence, EPA is confident that compliance with the
NOX limits in these rules will be well monitored.
The commenter's concerns regarding increases of other pollutants
besides NOX, TXI's reliance upon non-similar kilns to claim
NOX reductions, self-reporting, and TCEQ's inspection
program are not pertinent to today's action; the issue in this action
is whether the State has shown that the DFW area will attain the 1997
standard by June 15, 2010.
Comment: The public is disadvantaged by ``conditional approval''
comment periods. Comments concerning the adequacy of Texas' plan depend
upon how Texas fulfills the requisite conditions, but the public will
not know this information until sometime in the future after the
current comment period has passed. After Texas adopts and submits its
final plans concerning DERCs and the other ``conditions'' to EPA, EPA
should allow additional public comment regarding the adequacy of the
DFW SIP attainment demonstration.
Response: Congress provided for conditional approval as a type of
SIP processing. The Congress added section 110(k)(4) to the Act in the
1990 amendments to codify the EPA's authority to conditionally approve
SIPs. Section 110(k)(4) provides that EPA may conditionally approve a
plan based on a commitment from the State to adopt specific enforceable
measures by a date certain, but not later than one year after the date
of the final conditional approval action. In this case, if the State
submits by March 1, 2009 (the date certain), a complete DERC SIP
revision submittal (the specific enforceable measures), EPA must
reevaluate the approvability of the DFW attainment demonstration SIP,
as revised by this DERC SIP revision submittal. EPA will perform such
an evaluation through
[[Page 1908]]
notice-and-comment rulemaking and the public will have another
opportunity to comment upon the adequacy of the DFW plan as affected by
the DERC changes.
Comment: A number of commenters are concerned that cities within
the DFW nonattainment area continue to be given more time to attain the
standard instead of requiring them to clean the air now. If the State
had met its responsibilities to submit a timely and approvable 1-hour
attainment demonstration SIP, then this SIP would be incrementally
stronger and have been submitted and implemented sooner. There is a
contention that Texas has not submitted a complete approvable
attainment demonstration SIP for the DFW area for over thirty years.
Moreover, monitoring began in the early 1970's and the DFW area has
never attained the 84 parts per billion (ppb) standard and remains
years from doing so.
Response: The lack of approvability of past SIP submittals for the
DFW area is not relevant to the requirement for an area to submit a
1997 8-hour ozone attainment demonstration. The State submitted this
SIP revision on May 30, 2007, fifteen days before the June 15, 2007
required submission date. The State was on schedule to submit this SIP
revision even earlier, but received requests from several stakeholders
for an expanded timeline that would allow for a more robust stakeholder
discussion and development of additional technical support.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See the Settlement Agreement and letters dated March 22,
2006, March 24, 2006 and April 6, 2006 in the docket for this
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This 8-hour ozone attainment demonstration was submitted on time
and deemed complete by operation of law (40 CFR part 51, Appendix V).
Moreover, the attainment date for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard for
the DFW area is June 15, 2010. The State has not requested additional
time for the area to attain this standard, nor has additional time been
granted. EPA is finding today that the control measures relied upon in
this plan, in combination with Federal Measures, and building on
measures already approved in the SIP will ensure that the DFW area
attains the 1997 8-hour ozone standard by the applicable attainment
date of June 15, 2010.
While past efforts to comply with CAA requirements have not been
without flaws, we note that there have been extensive efforts and
significant progress made over the years in the fast growing DFW area.
These past efforts have built the foundation for the plan being
approved today. They include the 15% Rate of Progress (ROP) plan, the
post-1996 ROP plan, the MVEBs, and the extensive control measures
adopted by the State and approved by EPA into the Texas SIP for the DFW
area to meet the 1-hour ozone standard. The control measures in these
approved plans included among other things: Reformulated gasoline,
enhanced I/M, and controls on power plants locally and in the Central
and East Texas Region.
Moreover, we note that the area is continuing to look for further
ways to address ozone levels and may submit additional revisions to the
SIP in the future. Three of the largest cities (Arlington, Dallas and
Fort Worth) have passed ordinances addressing the purchase of green
cement, which may yield an additional 1 tpd of NOX
reductions; and local city and county officials have increased their
enforcement of Inspection and Maintenance rules by performing site
inspections, which will yield additional reductions through 2009.
The measures discussed above have resulted in significant
improvements in air quality. The DFW area now is meeting the 1-hour
standard and has made significant progress toward meeting the 1997 8-
hour ozone standard. As a moderate nonattainment area, the attainment
date for the DFW area is June 15, 2010 and we believe the area will
meet the attainment date.
Comment: The plan should require more mass transit and industry to
install the latest in air pollution reduction equipment. Airplane
engines and related equipment should be less polluting.
Response: As explained in an earlier response, the CAA places
responsibility on the State to determine the mix of controls that will
bring an area into attainment with a particular standard and EPA is
delegated to reviewing whether the State's plan will meet the statutory
attainment requirement. Therefore, EPA does not have the authority to
require the State of Texas to submit a plan for the DFW area that
requires more mass transit or imposes the latest in pollution control
equipment on industry.
We note, however, the expansion of mass transit is ongoing in the
DFW area and can be viewed at https://www.DART.org. Appendix H of the
DFW SIP submittal identifies emission reduction measures for airplanes
and related equipment, which are part of the Voluntary Mobile Source
Emission Reduction Program (VMEP) we are approving today. These
include: Additional electrification of ground support equipment; gate
electrification to eliminate use of aircraft auxiliary power units;
ground tugs for pushback to minimize use of reverse thrust from main
aircraft engines; de-peaking of airline flight schedules; and
implementation of airport surface detection equipment to improve
efficiency during taxi. Furthermore, the local community has
implemented clean air initiatives that include: Outreach for the TERP
and AirCheckTexas programs; reducing environmental impacts by
purchasing hybrids and alternative fueled vehicles when possible;
purchasing 40% of their electric power from renewable resources; green
building policies; development of sustainability policies; developing
purchasing policies for cleaner cement; and passing an ordinance
prohibiting vehicles over 14,000 pounds from idling for more than 5
minutes.
In addition to the measures in Appendix H, TCEQ submitted a
Supplement with more accurate and updated data for Love Field and the
DFW International Airport, including data on activities and fleet mix.
There were more new aircraft engines and the related equipment was less
polluting than previously recognized. This information is provided in
the docket for this rulemaking.
C. Comments on the Texas Emissions Reduction Plan (TERP)
Comment: Commenters express significant concerns about whether the
projected emissions reductions from TERP will occur, as predicted. They
believe that the projections are overly optimistic. They provide the
following reasons for their concern about the projections being too
optimistic: 1. Actual TERP reductions have not met previous projected
reductions, and the methodology for calculating the projected TERP
reductions may not take into account that in the future, there will be
fewer emissions reductions per dollar spent (cost-effectiveness
assumption). 2. Although it is clear that TERP emissions reductions
occur, there does not seem to be a satisfactory way to confirm the
projected reductions will actually occur or not. 3. EPA relies upon the
State's assumption that 70% of TERP funds will be used in the DFW area,
but since there is no mechanism for ensuring the specified percentage
of funding will be met, the projections are not enforceable; the
projections should not be relied upon in the attainment demonstration;
the 70% assumption should be reduced; and the SIP should include a
contingency component to address a potential shortfall.
[[Page 1909]]
Response: We agree that for the Increment of Progress SIP revision,
the amount of actual TERP reductions was less than the projections.
Because of this experience, we worked with the State to revise the
methodology for estimating emission reductions in this attainment
demonstration SIP. The revised methodology uses assumptions that are
more conservative. Specifically, the average project life was increased
by 40% and the cost effectiveness was reduced by slightly more than
51%. The formula now relies upon the following assumptions: $6000/ton,
250 days/yr operation and a 7-year project life. Using these revised
assumptions, the TERP emission reduction projections relied upon in the
demonstration modeling and the WOE are greatly reduced. Increasing the
project life has the effect of reducing the emission reductions assumed
in any given year. The cut in the revised cost-effectiveness assumption
is intended to address, among other things, the commenters' concerns
about there being fewer reductions per dollar spent each succeeding
year.
For comparison, on January 26, 2007, the cost effectiveness of TERP
projects completed in DFW averaged $3730.24/ton; by September 23, 2007,
DFW projects averaged $3743.59/ton; and by April 2, 2008, DFW projects
averaged $3959/ton. California's experience with the Carl Moyer program
\2\ has achieved emissions reductions at an average cost of $3900/ton
through October 2006. We believe the revised cost effectiveness of
$6000/ton provides room for the increase in cost/ton that we are seeing
in the DFW area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The Carl Moyer Program 2006 Status Report is in the docket
for this rulemaking and can be viewed at https://www.arb.ca.gov/
msprog/moyer/status/2006status_report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its May 2007 SIP revision, TCEQ indicated as a weight of
evidence (WOE) measure that additional TERP reductions were possible if
additional monies were appropriated by the legislature for the 2008/
2009 legislature. House Bill 1 signed by the Governor on July 15, 2007,
appropriated to TCEQ, TERP funds of $297,144,243 for fiscal years (FYs)
2008/2009. In the April 23, 2008 submittal, relying upon these
additional appropriated monies, TCEQ projected that the TERP could
potentially achieve an additional 14.2 tpd of NOX emissions
reductions. Since these emissions reductions were not available early
enough to include as control measures in the modeling, their impact on
the DFW area's air quality was instead predicted by EPA, using
sensitivity modeling runs, to estimate the ppb change on the monitors
in the modeling-based weight of evidence (WOE) analysis.
To achieve the projected additional 14.2 tpd of NOX
emissions reductions from TERP, using the revised TERP methodology, the
Texas legislature needed to appropriate to the TCEQ, sufficient FY2008
and FY2009 \3\ TERP funds for the TCEQ to allocate a total of
$149,100,000 \4\ to the DFW area for TERP Emission Reduction Incentive
Grant (ERIG) projects; this amount does not include the funds required
to achieve the IOP shortfall.\5\ TCEQ received a sufficient amount of
TERP monies to have available $188,475,000 to achieve the IOP SIP
shortfall ($39,375,000) and achieve an additional 14.2 tpd
($149,100,000) in 2008 and 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The TCEQ fiscal year runs from September 1 through August
31.
\4\ Using the revised SIP credit methodology, each ton costs
(6000 x 250 x 7) = $10,500,000. Therefore, 14.2 x 10,500,000 =
$149,100,000.
\5\ Using the revised SIP credit methodology: 3.75 tpd x
$10,500,000 = $39,375,000 to correct the IOP SIP shortfall.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the April 2008 submittal, the TCEQ posited that it could achieve
the additional 14.2 tpd of TERP NOX reductions by spending
in the DFW area 50% of the FY2008 TERP funds and 70% of the FY2009 TERP
funds. Whether funds are spent in exactly these percentages each year
however, is not the issue; the essential point is that TCEQ enters into
TERP grant contracts worth at least $149,100,000 in the DFW area for
projects to achieve 14.2 tpd in calendar years 2008 and early 2009.
TCEQ roughly split in half for each fiscal year, the $297,144,243
appropriated TERP funds--$148,572,121.50. Of this $148,572,121.50
``split,'' TCEQ used approximately $40 million for other TERP programs,
including rebate grants and FY2007 unfunded TERP applications,
including the IOP SIP shortfall. EPA notes that the IOP shortfall has
now been met. Considering the factors meant that TCEQ had approximately
$106,000,000 FY2008 TERP monies for the FY2008 to achieve additional
reductions beyond those considered in the May 2007 SIP submission
through ERIG projects in TERP-eligible counties. Applications submitted
to TCEQ during the FY2008 round of project applications totaled
approximately $94.5 million for the DFW area. Of these applications
however, it appears from the draft September Report that $51,532,511.79
have been selected for funding.\6\
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\6\ Per the TERP Biennial Report to the Texas Legislature
December 2008 draft, dated September 22, 2008. This draft was
prepared using data from mid-summer. The final report, due in
December 2008, will incorporate all of the contracts awarded or
pending to date. See the docket for this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result, to achieve the 14.2 tpd projection, TCEQ needs to
enter into FY2009 TERP grant contracts worth $97,567,488.21
($149,100,000 - 51,532,511.79 = $97,567,488.21). In summary, after
accounting for the tpd of TERP NOX emissions reductions
obtained by the FY2008 grant contracts, to obtain the remaining tpd of
TERP NOX emissions reductions to achieve a total of 14.2 tpd
as projected as part of the WOE, the TCEQ would need to enter into TERP
grant contracts with DFW-area applicants worth $149,100,000 for
projects to be completed as early as possible in calendar 2009. Due to
a number of factors, including Hurricane Ike, the TCEQ will begin its
first round of requests for funding from FY2009 TERP grant monies in
December 2008. For more information concerning the timing of FY2009
TERP projects due to Hurricane Ike, please see the Supplemental TSD
dated December 2008.
TERP has safeguards to ensure that when funds are provided to
grantees, they must achieve the associated reductions. Grantees are
required to track usage and report to the TCEQ every six months; they
must meet the reporting requirements delineated in their specific grant
contract. TERP is enforceable against the grant recipient. Over the
activity life of each TERP grant-funded activity, the grant recipient
commits the generated emissions reductions to the SIP. The recipient is
responsible for achieving the annual and total NOX emissions
reductions within the eligible areas as defined in the contract.
Recipients will be required to return all or a pro rata share of the
grant funds to the TCEQ if the emissions reductions are not achieved.
EPA continues to carefully review the biennial reports that TCEQ is
required to submit to the Legislature pursuant to Texas Health and
Safety Code, 386.057 and 386.116(d). The draft September TERP Biennial
Report to the Texas Legislature indicates that 488 projects have been
selected for funding in the DFW area, totaling $51,532,511.79 to reduce
an estimated 3.72 tpd in NOX emissions beyond what was
included in the May 2007 modeling. Based upon the draft September
Report, the average cost/ton for these projects increased to $6710.13,
versus the revised methodology of $6000/ton. At this rate, to achieve
the 14.2 tpd in NOX emissions reductions, the TCEQ must be
[[Page 1910]]
able to allocate at least $123 million \7\ to the DFW area for TERP
projects early in calendar 2009. As this report is in draft, these
numbers are subject to change but it now seems likely that
approximately 70% of these TERP emission reductions will occur before
the core ozone season of 2009. We have evaluated the impact of this
change on the attainment demonstration modeling and WOE; this
evaluation is in Subsection D, below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ (6710.13 x 250 x 7) = $11,742,727.50 x 10.4786 =
$123,047,344.38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In summary, EPA believes that the TERP program is achieving
significant reductions in NOX. Consistent with its
experience in implementing the program, the State has adjusted its
assumptions used in projecting emission reductions to be more
conservative. EPA believes these revised assumptions begin to address
many of the commenters concerns. Although delays in opening the request
for applications mean the reductions based on FY2009 funds will be
delayed, many reductions can still occur before the peak of the ozone
season. Achieving the 14.2 tpd of reductions from TERP will require
substantial continued efforts. See also Subsection D below, in
particular the last Response, Comment MC-15.
D. Comments on Photochemical Modeling, Weight of Evidence Analyses, and
Assessment of Demonstration of Attainment
EPA received a number of comments about the photochemical modeling,
the Weight of Evidence Analyses, and our proposed determination that
the area would attain the standard by its attainment date of June 15,
2010. EPA has reviewed all the comments on these topics and provided
responses below.
The discussion below summarizes our evaluation of the modeling and
evidence, the comments we received, and other factors such as the
State's progress in implementing control strategies, and recent air
quality trends. EPA believes that as the attainment date becomes
closer, measured air quality and planned additional emission reductions
become more important as a predictive tool (compared to modeling) and
the monitoring data should be given additional weight, more so than in
situations where the attainment date is still years away. In 2008, the
preliminary data shows 18 of the 20 monitors have measured attainment
levels with fourth high 8-hour values of 84 ppb or less. The remaining
two monitors were only slightly higher than an attainment level
measuring fourth high values of 85 ppb. EPA believes additional
significant reductions in emissions will occur before the 2009 ozone
season such that the area can attain the standard based on 2007-2009
ambient data or at least qualify for a 1-year extension of the
attainment date by having each monitor's 4th high ozone concentration
in 2009 below 85 ppb.
We evaluated many factors in our WOE evaluation. These items
included reductions not included in the modeling based projections
(energy efficiencies), unquantifiable measures (AirCheckTexas, Dallas
Sustainable Skyline Initiative, etc.), meteorological analyses of
severity of ozone seasons (both the base period and recent years
including 2007), most recent monitoring in 2007 (a 4th high of 89 ppb
at two monitors and the other 18 monitors had 4th high values of 87 ppb
or less), the court's vacatur of CAIR, progress in implementing the
TERP program, and progress in implementing the early compliance
incentive on natural gas compressor engines outside the DFW area. EPA
has also considered preliminary 2008 ozone monitoring data (4th high
values of 85 ppb at two monitors and at the other 18 monitors the value
was 84 ppb or less) and whether that data supports a trend toward
attainment for the area. We considered that over half of the
NOX estimated emissions reductions between 2007 and 2009
that are estimated to yield a 3-4 ppb drop in ozone levels in the DFW
area, are slated to occur between the 2008 ozone season and the 2009
ozone season. We also expect further ozone reductions in 2009 and
beyond.
After consideration of all of these analyses, EPA has determined
that the State has demonstrated that the DFW nonattainment area will
attain the 1997 8-hour ozone standard by its attainment date.
Comment (MC-1): A commenter states that the WOE analysis
underestimates the impact of emission increases from facilities outside
the DFW nonattainment area, upon the DFW area. This underestimate
occurs because the TCEQ issues PSD permits to facilities outside the
DFW area that will affect the ozone concentration level in the DFW area
and says they should address these ozone impacts in the DFW attainment
demonstration SIP. The commenter does not believe that this DFW
attainment demonstration accounts for the impacts from these sources
that have been and will be permitted outside of the DFW area. There
also appears to be no correlation or tracking of these permitted
emission increases in relation to the projected point source emissions
inventories in this DFW attainment demonstration.
Response (MC-1): The Texas SIP at Section 166.160 (a) (which
incorporates 40 CFR 52.21(k) by reference) requires a new source or
modification subject to PSD to demonstrate that emissions from the
facility will not cause or contribute to a violation of any NAAQS. The
Texas PSD SIP permitting program also provides for an opportunity for
notice and comment, as well as state court judicial review, of each
permitting action.
EPA disagrees with the commenter that this SIP revision does not
account for the impact of potential emissions increases. In this final
action on the DFW attainment demonstration, we reviewed the analysis to
insure that sources impacting the DFW nonattainment area were included
in the baseline and future case modeling demonstrations. EPA's modeling
guidance (``Guidance on the Use of Models and Other Analyses for
Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and
Regional Haze'', EPA-454/B-07-002, April 2007; and earlier modeling
guidance) and emission inventory guidance (``Emissions Inventory
Guidance for Implementation of Ozone and Particulate Matter National
Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and Regional Haze Regulations'',
EPA-454/R-05-001, August, 2005, updated November 2005) indicate that a
combination of specific projections and general growth estimates should
be utilized to attempt to obtain a best estimate for the future year
inventory. Future case emissions must be projected to account for
growth and control throughout the modeling domain, which includes
states outside of Texas and the attainment areas of Texas (including
the new proposed sources raised by the commenter). EPA's guidance has
been that new permitted sources, including likely to be permitted
sources based on applications that have been received when the future
year EI is being generated, should be included in the future year
modeling if they are expected to be emitting in the future attainment
year. As a practical matter, the focus has usually been to include
expected new very large sources (such as electric generating units
(EGUs)) and use economic based growth factors to account for growth in
emissions from other industrial source categories. Overall, EPA's
guidance is to provide the best estimate of the future year emission
inventory given the limitations with estimating emissions several years
in the future. Texas' emission projections to the future years are very
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detailed and the methods utilized are discussed in the MOAAD TSD and in
TCEQ's DFW SIP submittal, including Appendix B. In nonattainment areas,
major new sources are required to obtain offsets larger than the
proposed source so there is a net decrease in emissions, so no growth
is estimated for these sources in nonattainment areas. Therefore,
within Texas the only areas that point source growth is estimated is in
the areas that are in attainment and our discussion will briefly
explain the methodology for future year estimates of major point
sources in attainment areas of Texas.
For existing EGUs in Texas, the State used 2005 continuous emission
monitoring data and assumed that there would be no emissions changes.
Texas projected increases in emissions because of new EGUs that were
expected to be emitting in 2009 (these were included in Table 2-8 of
Appendix B of TCEQ's submittal). For all other industrial point source
emissions (non-EGUs) in Texas' attainment areas, TCEQ started with the
1999 reported emission inventory and projected growth in point source
emissions using point source growth projections derived from the
Emissions Growth Analysis System version 4.0 (EGAS 4.0), an EPA-
approved methodology. It is worth noting that the EGAS system for
projecting emissions tends to overstate future emissions since the
system relies principally on economic growth for the projections, and
does not include reductions from regulatory or permit controls.
In conclusion, we have reviewed the methodologies that TCEQ
utilized to grow EGUs and non-EGUs outside of the DFW area and conclude
that the 2009 level emissions of these sources have been appropriately
estimated using acceptable methods and contrary to the commenter's
concerns the attainment demonstration appropriately accounts for the
potential for new source growth by 2009.
Comment (MC-2): Commenters state that ozone exceedances continue to
occur in the DFW area and show there still is a serious problem.
Specifically, 14 exceedances have been measured at eight of the
monitors through August 12, 2008 and eight of which are 90 to 99 ppb.
The commenter concluded that this 2008 monitoring data does not seem to
support the WOE.
Response (MC-2): EPA has reviewed the ozone monitoring data through
November 1, 2008 in response to this comment. While a number of
exceedances of the 1997 8-hour ozone standard occurred during the 2008
ozone season by August 12, 2008, it is very important to note that the
standard is a statistically based standard. The statistical nature of
the standard allows each monitor to have up to 3 days with exceedance
levels at each monitor (with potentially multiple 8-hour exceedances
for each of the three days) and all the monitors in the area could
still have a 4th high value less than 85 ppb (attainment level). The
standard is an average of the daily 4th high value at a monitor for
each year of a consecutive 3-year period. Therefore, it is even
possible to have a 4th high value for one or even two years at a
specific monitor be above the standard, but the 3-year average value to
be below 85 ppb and thus, in attainment.\8\ Furthermore, each monitor
in the area could have up to 3 exceedances at each monitor on differing
days. Given 20 monitors in the DFW area, a total of 60 exceedances
could theoretically occur in the DFW area with all 4th high values at
each monitor still less than 85 ppb. This is a theoretical worse-case
situation but this demonstrates that having several exceedances does
not automatically yield a nonattainment determination.
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\8\ For example, if the 4th high value for each of three years
was as follows: 2006--87 ppb; 2007--85 ppb; 2008--81 ppb, the
average over the three year period would be 84 ppb, which is below
the level of the standard.
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Since the standard is statistically based, the relevant metric to
examine for determining compliance with the NAAQS is the annual 4th
high values at each monitor. We therefore evaluated the recent 4th high
values for the DFW area 8-Hour Ozone Season (March 1-October 31 for the
85 ppb standard). The 4th high monitoring data from 2008 indicates that
the area is near attainment levels (2008 monitoring data is preliminary
and awaiting QA/QC \9\). The 2008 preliminary data shows the DFW area
had 4th high values of 85 ppb at two monitors and at the other 18
monitors the value was 84 ppb or less. The 2008 preliminary data
indicates the 2006-2008 DV is 91 ppb (down from 95 ppb using 2005-2007
data). For the monitor that has the highest average 2007 and 2008 4th
high values and is likely to be the controlling monitor (or one of the
highest monitors) for determining if the area reaches attainment based
on 2007-2009 data, the monitor's DV for the 2007-2009 period would have
to be less than 85 ppb. For this to occur the monitor (Denton monitor)
would have to have a 4th high value of 82 ppb or less to reach
attainment in 2009. It is important to note that this monitor had a
preliminary 4th high value in 2008 of only 84 ppb.
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\9\ 2008 preliminary monitoring data is from EPA's AQS and
AirNow databases and has to undergo final Quality Assurance and
Quality Control.
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In comparison with ozone monitoring levels in 2007, the preliminary
2008 monitoring data is lower than the 2007 data. Contrary to the
commenters concerns, EPA believes that the 2008 preliminary data is
consistent with achieving attainment, especially considering that much
of the DFW SIP reductions are still to occur and another year of fleet
turnover will happen. EPA also believes that even if the area does not
attain the standard based on 2007-2009 data, it is very likely to
qualify for a one year extension under sections 172(a)(2)(C) and
181(a)(5) of the Act (see 40 CFR 51.907) by having fourth high at 84
ppb or below at every monitor.
Comment (MC-3): Commenters believe that we should impose a 2009
mid-course review (MCR) obligation upon the State, triggered by
exceedances at the monitors or a violation of the standard in 2009.
Response (MC-3): There is no MCR requirement at this time for the
8-hour ozone SIP. In our Phase 2 Implementation Rule, we provided that
we would assess the need for MCR for areas with an attainment date
beyond 6 years after the effective date of the area's designation
(Final Rule To Implement the 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard, Phase 2 (70 FR 71612, 71629). The attainment date for DFW is
June 15, 2010, which is not more than 6 years beyond the effective date
of the area's designation. A mid-course review is for the purpose of
assessing whether an area is on-track for attainment and would
typically be performed several years before the attainment year. This
is because a MCR performed several years before the attainment year
would give the area sufficient time to make corrections to the plan if
it was not performing as anticipated. A review as suggested by the
commenter would not be ``mid-course'' because it would be performed in
the middle of the attainment year ozone season. At that point in time,
there would be no steps that the DFW area could take to move the area
back on track to achieve attainment by the required date.
Comment (MC-4): Commenters stated that in the DFW area, there are
two monitors critical to the attainment demonstration, one in Frisco
and one in Denton. The commenters, relying upon a February 22, 2006
Memorandum from ENVIRON, state that there is no measurable impact on
these two critical monitors from the TCEQ's chosen controls for the
Ellis County cement plants. The commenters contend that TCEQ has not
performed any analysis showing that the chosen level of
[[Page 1912]]
controls on the Ellis County cement plants would assist the DFW area
into coming into compliance with the ozone standard.
Response (MC-4): As noted in a previous response, the Act gives the
State the primary authority to determine the mix of control measures
necessary to demonstrate attainment. One of the measures that TCEQ
selected in support of its attainment demonstration is controls at
cement plants in Ellis County. EPA evaluated the plan, as a whole, and
agrees that the State has demonstrated that the area will attain the
standard by its attainment date. Thus, EPA does not have authority to
second-guess the mix of controls selected by the State and, in this
case, its decision to further control the cement kilns in Ellis County.
Although we cannot second-guess the controls selected by the State,
we note that we agree with TCEQ that cement kiln NOX
reductions are an important element of the reductions necessary to
bring the entire DFW area into attainment and the reductions are
expected to reduce high ozone levels and the frequency of ozone
exceedances in the DFW area. The record for this action includes the
information that was evaluated by the State and EPA and that supports
the conclusion that additional NOX controls on cement kilns
are a critical component to reducing ozone exceedance levels in the DFW
area so that the area can timely attain the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
It is clear from evaluating the SIP, its reports and appendices that
TCEQ has performed numerous analyses concerning the impact of the
cement kilns NOX and VOC emissions on the ozone
concentrations levels of the DFW area. Moreover, contrary to the
commenters' assertion, the chosen strategy has an impact on the Frisco
and Denton monitors, as well as a significant benefit to the western
portion of the nonattainment area, especially in Tarrant County. For
further details, see the TCEQ's Response to Comments document, the
MOAAD TSD, and the Supplemen