Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Texas; Revisions to the New Source Review (NSR) State Implementation Plan (SIP); Flexible Permits, 48480-48495 [E9-22808]
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48480
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 183 / Wednesday, September 23, 2009 / Proposed Rules
thereby left CAIR in place in order to
‘‘temporarily preserve the
environmental values covered by CAIR’’
until EPA replaces it with a rule
consistent with the Court’s opinion. Id.
at 1178. The Court directed EPA to
‘‘remedy CAIR’s flaws’’ consistent with
its July 11, 2008, opinion, but declined
to impose a schedule on EPA for
completing that action. Id.
According to 40 CFR 51.125, each
state submitting a CAIR SIP revision
must provide for emissions reporting
requirements of SO2 and NOX emissions
data. EPA is proposing to approve
revisions to Alabama’s Section 335–3–
1–.14 and addition of Section 335–3–1–
.16 to fulfill this requirement.
Consistent with 40 CFR 51.121, these
rule revisions allow the State to make
the transition from the NOX budget
trading program (NOX SIP Call) to the
CAIR NOX ozone season trading
program, beginning with the 2009 ozone
season. Alabama’s NOX budget trading
program does not apply to any ozone
season after the 2008 ozone season.
This proposed action is consistent
with the Court’s decision in North
Carolina v. EPA discussed above. While
the Court identified several issues with
CAIR, the rule was not vacated because
of the loss of environmental benefit
generated by the rule. As EPA works to
remedy CAIR to satisfy the Court, CAIR
remains in effect, including its trading
programs. Currently, Alabama’s NOX
SIP Call trading program ends after the
2008 ozone season, and so to continue
the environmental benefits of the
trading program, consistent with CAIR
and the Court’s opinion, Alabama must
revise its SIP, as proposed, to transition
into the CAIR NOX trading program.
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IV. Proposed Action
EPA is proposing to approve the
aforementioned revisions, specifically,
Chapter 335–3–1, Sections 335–3–1–.14,
and 335–3–1–.16 into the Alabama SIP.
These revisions were submitted by
ADEM on March 7, 2007, and are
consistent with EPA regulations, policy,
and guidance.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, 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 CAA. Accordingly, this proposed
action merely approves state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
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beyond those imposed by state law. For
that reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; 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.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
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Dated: September 11, 2009.
J. Scott Gordon,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. E9–22904 Filed 9–22–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2005–TX–0032; FRL–8958–
6]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Texas;
Revisions to the New Source Review
(NSR) State Implementation Plan (SIP);
Flexible Permits
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing disapproval
of submittals from the State of Texas,
through the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to revise
the Texas SIP to include a new type of
NSR permitting program, Flexible
Permits (the Texas Flexible Permits
State Program or the Program). EPA
proposes disapproval of the Texas
Flexible Permits State Program because
it does not meet the Minor NSR SIP
requirements nor does it meet the NSR
SIP requirements for a substitute Major
NSR SIP revision. We are proposing
action under section 110, part C, and
part D, of the Federal Clean Air Act (the
Act or CAA). EPA is taking comments
on this proposal and intends to take a
final action.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by
November 23, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R06–
OAR–2005–TX–0032 by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
instructions for submitting comments.
• U.S. EPA Region 6 ‘‘Contact Us’’
Web site: https://epa.gov/region6/
r6coment.htm. Please click on ‘‘6PD’’
(Multimedia) and select ‘‘Air’’ before
submitting comments.
• E-mail: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell at
spruiell.stanley@epa.gov.
• Fax: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell, Air
Permits Section (6PD–R), at fax number
214–665–7263.
• Mail: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell, Air
Permits Section (6PD–R), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 1200, Dallas, Texas 75202–2733.
• Hand or Courier Delivery: Stanley
M. Spruiell, Air Permits Section (6PD–
R), Environmental Protection Agency,
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 183 / Wednesday, September 23, 2009 / Proposed Rules
1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200, Dallas,
Texas 75202–2733. Such deliveries are
accepted only between the hours of 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays except for
legal holidays. Special arrangements
should be made for deliveries of boxed
information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2005–
TX–0032. EPA’s policy is that all
comments received will be included in
the public docket without change and
may be made available online at
https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes
information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Do not submit
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected through https://
www.regulations.gov or e-mail. The
https://www.regulations.gov Web site is
an ‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly
to EPA without going through https://
www.regulations.gov your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index. 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,
will be publicly available only in hard
copy. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Permits Section (6PD–R),
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
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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.
The State submittals, which are also
part of the EPA docket, are also
available for public inspection at the
State Air Agency 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: Mr.
Stanley M. Spruiell, Air Permits Section
(6PD–R), Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202–2733,
telephone (214) 665–7212; fax number
(214) 665–7263; e-mail address
spruiell.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, the
following terms have the meanings
described below:
• ‘‘We,’’ ‘‘us,’’ and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
• ‘‘Act’’ and ‘‘CAA’’ mean the Clean
Air Act.
• ‘‘40 CFR’’ means Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations—Protection
of the Environment.
• ‘‘SIP’’ means State Implementation
Plan established under section 110 of
the Act.
• ‘‘NSR’’ means new source review, a
phrase intended to encompass the
statutory and regulatory programs that
regulate the construction and
modification of stationary sources as
provided under CAA section
110(a)(2)(C), CAA Title I, parts C and D,
and 40 CFR 51.160 through 51.166.
• ‘‘Minor NSR’’ means NSR
established under section 110 of the Act
and 40 CFR 51.160.
• ‘‘NNSR’’ means nonattainment NSR
established under Title I, section 110
and part D of the Act and 40 CFR
51.165.
• ‘‘PSD’’ means prevention of
significant deterioration of air quality
established under Title I, section 110
and part C of the Act and 40 CFR
51.166.
• ‘‘Major NSR’’ means any new or
modified source that is subject to NNSR
and/or PSD.
• ‘‘Program’’ means the SIP revision
submittals from the TCEQ concerning
the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program.
• ‘‘TSD’’ means the Technical
Support Document for this action.
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• ‘‘NAAQS’’ means any national
ambient air quality standard established
under 40 CFR part 50.
Table of Contents
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing?
II. What Are the Other Relevant Proposed
Actions on the Texas Permitting SIP
Revision Submittals?
III. What Has the State Submitted?
IV. Is the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program a Submittal for a Major or Minor
NSR SIP Revision?
A. Description of the Submitted Program
B. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a
Minor NSR SIP Revision?
V. What Is EPA’s Evaluation of the Submitted
Texas Flexible Permits State Program as
a Substitute Major NSR SIP Revision?
A. What Are the Requirements for EPA’s
Review of a Submitted Major NSR SIP
Revision?
B. Does the Submitted Program Prohibit
Circumvention of Major NSR?
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Major NSR SIP Requirements for
Applicability Determinations?
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
CAA and Major NSR Applicability
Determination Criteria?
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Major NSR SIP Requirements for
Enforceability?
F. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Major NSR SIP Public Participation
Requirements?
G. Does the Submitted Program Meet
Section 110(l) of the Act for a Major NSR
SIP Revision?
H. What Is EPA Summary of Whether the
Submitted Program Meets the
Requirements for a Substitute Major NSR
SIP Program?
VI. What Is EPA’s Evaluation of the
Submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program as a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
A. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a
Minor NSR SIP Revision?
B. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Requirements for
Establishing the Emissions Cap?
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Enforcement
Requirements?
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Requirements for
Revision of Existing Major NSR Permits?
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Public Participation
Requirements?
F. Does the Submitted Program Meet
Section 110(l) of the Act for a Minor NSR
SIP Revision?
G. What Is EPA Summary of Whether the
Submitted Program Meets the
Requirements for a Minor NSR SIP
Program?
VII. Proposed Action
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing?
We are proposing to disapprove the
Texas Flexible Permits State Program, as
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submitted by Texas in Title 30 of the
Texas Administrative Code (30 TAC) at
30 TAC Chapter 116—Control of Air
Pollution by Permits for New
Construction or Modification, because it
does not meet certain provisions of the
Act and EPA’s NSR regulations. This
includes the following regulations
under Chapter 116: 30 TAC
116.110(a)(3), 30 TAC Subchapter G—
Flexible Permits, the definitions in 30
TAC 116.13, Flexible Permits, and the
definition in 30 TAC 116.10(11)(F) of
‘‘modification of existing facility.’’ It is
EPA’s position that none of these
identified elements is severable from
each other.
We are proposing to disapprove the
submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program as not meeting the
requirements for a substitute Major NSR
SIP revision. Our grounds for proposing
disapproval as a substitute Major NSR
SIP revision include the following:
• It is not clearly limited to Minor
NSR thereby allowing new major
stationary sources to construct without
a Major NSR permit;
• It has no regulatory provisions
clearly prohibiting the use of this
Program from circumventing the Major
NSR SIP requirements thereby allowing
sources to use a Flexible Permit to avoid
the requirement to obtain
preconstruction permit authorizations
for projects that would otherwise
require a Major NSR preconstruction
permit;
• It does not require that first an
applicability determination be made
whether the construction or
modification is subject to Major NSR
thereby exempting new major stationary
sources and major modifications from
the EPA Major NSR SIP requirements;
• It does not include a demonstration
from the TCEQ showing how the use of
‘‘modification’’ is at least as stringent as
the definition of ‘‘modification’’ in the
EPA Major NSR SIP program;
• It does not include the requirement
to make Major NSR applicability
determinations based on actual
emissions and on emissions increases
and decreases (netting) that occur
within a major stationary source;
• It fails to meet the statutory and
regulatory requirements for a SIP
revision;
• It is not consistent with applicable
statutory and regulatory requirements as
interpreted in EPA policy and guidance
on SIP revisions; and
• It fails to include, among other
things, adequate accountability
provisions, compliance determination
procedures, replicable implementation
procedures, sufficient monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting
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requirements so that issued permits
incorporate emission limitations and
other requirements of the Texas SIP that
ensure protection of the national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS),
and noninterference with the Texas SIP
control strategies and reasonable further
progress (RFP).
We are proposing to disapprove the
submitted Program as not meeting the
Minor NSR SIP requirements. It is not
clearly limited to Minor NSR. It has no
regulatory provisions clearly prohibiting
the use of this Program from
circumventing the Major NSR SIP
requirements. This Program does not
require that first an applicability
determination be made whether the
construction or modification is subject
to Major NSR. The Program does not
ensure that a Major NSR permit’s
requirements are retained.
In addition to the failures to protect
Major NSR SIP requirements, EPA
cannot find that the submitted Program,
as a Minor NSR SIP program, will
ensure protection of the NAAQS, and
noninterference with the Texas SIP
control strategies and RFP. We are
proposing to disapprove this Program as
a Minor NSR SIP revision because it
does not meet certain provisions of the
Act and EPA’s Minor NSR SIP
requirements. Our grounds for
proposing disapproval as a Minor NSR
SIP revision include the following:
• It is not clearly limited to Minor
NSR thereby allowing new major
stationary sources to construct without
a Major NSR permit;
• It has no regulatory provisions
clearly prohibiting the use of this
Program from circumventing the Major
NSR SIP requirements thereby allowing
sources to use a Flexible Permit to avoid
the requirement to obtain
preconstruction permit authorizations
for projects that would otherwise
require a Major NSR preconstruction
permit;
• It does not require that first an
applicability determination be made
whether the construction or
modification is subject to Major NSR
thereby exempting new major stationary
sources and major modifications from
the EPA Major NSR SIP requirements;
• It fails to meet the statutory and
regulatory requirements for a SIP
revision;
• It is not consistent with applicable
statutory and regulatory requirements as
interpreted in EPA policy and guidance
on SIP revisions;
• It lacks replicable, specific,
established implementation procedures
for establishing the emission cap in a
Minor NSR Flexible Permit;
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• It is not an enforceable Minor NSR
permitting program;
• It allows the issuance of Flexible
Permits that do not incorporate
emission limitations and other
requirements of the Texas SIP; and
• It lacks the necessary more
specialized monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting (MRR) requirements
required for this type of Minor NSR
program, as selected by Texas, to ensure
accountability and provide a means to
determine compliance.
We have evaluated the submitted
Texas Flexible Permits State Program,
submitted in a series of packages dating
back to 1994. Based upon our
evaluation, EPA has concluded that the
portions of the submitted SIP revisions
specifically applicable to the Program
do not meet the requirements of the Act
and 40 CFR part 51. All these portions
of the submittals for the Program are not
severable and therefore are not
approvable. As authorized in sections
110(k)(3) and 301(a) of the Act, where
portions of the State submittals are
severable, EPA may approve the
portions of the submittals that meet the
requirements of the Act, take no action
on certain portions of the submittals,
and disapprove the portions of the
submittals that do not meet the
requirements of the Act. When the
deficient provisions are not severable
from all of the submitted provisions,
EPA must propose disapproval of the
submittals, consistent with sections
301(a) and 110(k)(3) of the Act. The
submitted provisions work together to
form the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program and are not severable from each
other. Therefore, EPA is proposing
disapproval of the submitted Program.
Under section 179(a) of the CAA, final
disapproval of a submittal that
addresses a mandatory requirement of
the Act starts a sanctions clock and a
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP)
clock. The provisions in these
submittals relating to the Texas Flexible
Permits State Program were not
submitted to meet a mandatory
requirement of the Act. Therefore, if
EPA takes final action to disapprove this
submitted Program, no sanctions and
FIP clocks will be triggered.
II. What Are the Other Relevant
Proposed Actions on the Texas
Permitting SIP Revision Submittals?
This proposed action should be read
in conjunction with two other proposed
actions appearing elsewhere in today’s
Federal Register, (1) proposed action on
the Texas NSR SIP, including PSD,
NNSR for the 1997 8-Hour Ozone
Standard, NSR Reform, and a Minor
NSR Standard Permit (NSR SIP), and (2)
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proposed action on the Texas NSR SIP,
the Qualified Facilities Program and the
General Definitions.1 On November 26,
2008, EPA proposed limited approval/
limited disapproval of the Texas
submittals relating to public
participation for air permits of new and
modified facilities (73 FR 72001). EPA
believes these actions should be read in
conjunction with each other because the
permits issued under these State
programs are the vehicles for regulating
a significant universe of the air
emissions from sources in Texas and
thus directly impact the ability of the
State to achieve and maintain
attainment of the NAAQS and to protect
the health of the communities where
these sources are located. Our proposal
is based upon our interpretation of the
Texas preconstruction permitting
program which is outlined in each
notice and accompanying technical
support document (TSD). Those
interested in any one of these actions
are encouraged to review and comment
on the other proposed actions as well.
EPA intends to take final action on
the State’s Public Participation SIP
revision submittals in November 2009.
EPA intends to take final action on the
submitted Texas Qualified Facilities
State Program by March 31, 2010, the
submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program by June 30, 2010, and the NSR
SIP on August 31, 2010. These dates are
expected to be mandated under a
Consent Decree (see, Notice of Proposed
Consent Decree and Proposed
Settlement Agreement, 74 FR 38015,
July 30, 2009).
III. What Has the State Submitted?
This notice provides a summary of
our evaluation of Texas’ November 29,
1994 SIP revision submittal, as revised
by severable portions in the March 13,
1996, SIP revision submittal, and
severable portions of the July 22, 1998
SIP revision submittal that repealed and
replaced portions of, as well as revised,
the 1994 submittal and repealed and
replaced all of the 1996 submittal; and
as revised by severable portions in the
October 25, 1999, September 11, 2000,
April 12, 2001, September 4, 2002,
October 4, 2002, and September 25,
2003, SIP revision submittals. We
provide our reasoning in general terms
in this preamble, but provide a more
detailed analysis in the TSD that has
been prepared for this proposed
rulemaking. Because we are proposing
to disapprove this submitted Program
based on the inconsistencies and
deficiencies discussed herein, we have
not attempted to review and discuss all
of the issues that would need to be
addressed for approval of this submitted
Program as a Major NSR SIP revision.
On November 29, 1994, Texas
submitted revisions adding a new
Subchapter G—Flexible Permits, to 30
TAC Chapter 116—Control of Air
Pollution by Permits for New
Construction or Modification, adding a
new 30 TAC 116.13, Flexible Permit
Definitions, to Subchapter A,
Definitions, and a revision to
Subchapter B, New Source Review
Permits, Division 1, Permit Applications
at 30 TAC 116.110(a), authorizing the
use of a Flexible Permit for construction
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of any new facility and modification of
any existing facility. Texas submitted on
March 13, 1996, a severable revision to
Subchapter A, Definitions, in 30 TAC
116.10, General Definitions, which
included, among other things, a
definition for ‘‘modification of existing
facility,’’ at (F) in 30 TAC 116.10
addressing modifications under Flexible
Permits. On July 22, 1998, Texas
submitted severable revisions that
included the repeal of the contents of
the 1996 submittal and some of the
contents of the 1994 submittal. Among
other things, the 1998 submittal
included a new 30 TAC 116.13, Flexible
Permit Definitions, a new 30 TAC
116.10, General Definitions,
‘‘modification of existing facility,’’ at
(9)(F), and a new 30 TAC 116.110 (a).
In the September 4, 2002, SIP submittal,
Texas submitted a redesignation of 30
TAC 116.10(9)(F) to 30 TAC
116.10(11)(F). Texas submitted revisions
to Subchapter G—Flexible Permits—in a
severable portion of the July 22, 1998
SIP revision submittal, and more
revisions to Subchapter G in SIP
revision submittals on October 25, 1999;
September 11, 2000; April 12, 2001;
September 4, 2002; October 4, 2002; and
September 25, 2003.
Tables 1 and 2 below summarize the
changes that are in the SIP revision
submittals. A summary of EPA’s
evaluation of each section and the basis
for this proposal is discussed in sections
V, VI, and VII of this preamble. The TSD
includes a detailed evaluation of the
submittals.
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF EACH SIP SUBMITTAL THAT IS AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION
Date submitted to EPA
Title of SIP submittal
Date of state
adoption
11/29/1994
11/16/1994
Qualified Facilities and Modifications to Existing Facilities.
NSR Rule Revisions; section 112(g)
Rule Review for Chapter 116.
3/13/1996
2/14/1996
7/22/1998
6/17/1998
Public Participation (HB 801) ..........
Air Permits (SB–766)—Phase II ......
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Flexible Permits ...............................
10/25/1999
9/11/2000
9/2/1999
8/9/2000
Emissions Banking and Trading ......
House Bill 3040: Shipyard Facilities
and NSR Maintenance Emissions.
4/12/2001
9/4/2002
3/7/2001
8/21/2002
Air Fees ...........................................
10/4/2002
9/25/2002
1 In that proposed action, the submitted definition
of BACT is not severable from the proposed action
on the PSD SIP revision submittals. EPA may
choose to take final action on the definition of
BACT in the NSR SIP final action rather than in the
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Regulations affected
Revision to 30 TAC 116.110.
Adoption of New 30 TAC 116.13 and New Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.710, 116.711, 116.714, 116.715, 116.716, 116.717, 116.718,
116.720, 116.721, 116.722, 115.730, 116.740, 116.750, and 116.760.
Revision of 30 TAC 116.10 to add new definition of ‘‘modification of existing facility’’ at (F).
Repeal and new 30 TAC 116.10 (9) (F), 116.13 and 116.110(a)(3)
adopted.
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.710, 116.711, 116.714,
116.715, 116.721, 116.730, and 116.750.
Revision to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.740.
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.710, 116.715, 116.721,
116.722, and 116.750.
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.711 and 116.715.
Revision to 30 TAC 116.10, redesignating 30 TAC 116.10(9)(F) to
116.10(11)(F).
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.711 and 116.715.
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.750.
final action on the Qualified Facilities and the
General Definitions. EPA is obligated to take final
action on the submitted definitions in the General
Definitions for those identified as part of the Texas
Qualified Facilities State Program, the Texas
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Flexible Permits State Program, Public
Participation, Permit Renewals (there will be a
proposed action published at a later date), and this
BACT definition as part of the NSR SIP.
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TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF EACH SIP SUBMITTAL THAT IS AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION—Continued
Date submitted to EPA
Title of SIP submittal
Offset Certification, New Source
Review Permitting Processes and
Extensions for Construction.
Date of state
adoption
9/25/2003
8/20/2003
Regulations affected
Revision to Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.715.
TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF EACH REGULATION THAT IS AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION
Section
Date
submitted
Title
Date adopted
by state
Comments
Chapter 116—Control of Air Pollution by Permits for New Construction or Modification
Subchapter A—Definitions
Section 116.10(11)(F) .......
Section 116.13 ..................
General Definitions ..........
3/13/1996
2/14/1996
Flexible Permit Definitions
7/22/1998
9/04/2002
11/29/1994
7/22/1998
6/17/1998
8/21/2002
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
Revised to add new definition of ‘‘modification of existing facility.’’
Repealed and Adopted new 30 TAC 116.10(9)(F).
Redesignated 30 TAC 116.10(11(F).
Initial Adoption.
Repealed and Adopted new 30 TAC 116.13.
Subchapter B—New Source Review Permits
Division 1—Permit Application
Section 116.110 ................
Applicability ......................
11/29/1994
7/22/1998
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
Revised (a) to add reference to Flexible Permits.
Repealed and adopted a new 30 TAC 116.110.
Included reference to Flexible Permits in new 30
TAC 116.110(a)(3).
Subchapter G—Flexible Permits
Section 116.710 ................
Applicability ......................
Section 116.711 ................
Flexible Permit Application.
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Section 116.717 ................
Section 116.718 ................
Section 116.720 ................
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Emission Caps and Individual Limitations.
Implementation Schedule
for Addition Controls.
Significant Emission Increase.
Limitation on Physical and
Operational Changes.
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8/21/2002
11/16/1994
Revised introductory paragraph and paragraphs (1)–
(5);
Added new paragraphs (6) and (11):
Redesignated existing paragraphs (6)–(9) to paragraphs (7)–(10) and existing paragraphs (10)–(11)
to paragraphs (12)–(13); and
Revised paragraphs (8)–(10) as redesignated.
Added new paragraph (12); and
Redesignated existing paragraphs (12)-(13) to paragraphs (13)–(14).
Designated existing as subsection (a);
Added new subsection (b); and
Revised paragraphs (a)(8)–(11) as redesignated.
Initial adoption.
7/22/1998
11/29/1994
6/17/1998
11/16/1994
Revised introductory paragraph.
Initial adoption.
7/22/1998
Section 116.716 ................
3/07/2001
9/4/2002
General and Special Conditions.
6/17/1998
4/12/2001
Section 116.715 ................
8/09/2000
11/16/1994
7/22/1998
Application Review
Schedule.
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
9/11/2000
11/29/1994
Section 116.714 ................
11/29/1994
7/22/1998
6/17/1998
9/11/2000
4/12/2001
9/4/2002
9/25/2003
11/29/1994
8/9/2000
3/7/2001
8/21/2002
8/20/2003
11/16/1994
Revised subsection (a), and paragraphs (c)(3)–(6),
and (9)–(10).
Revised subsection (a).
Revised paragraph (c)(3).
Revised paragraph (c)(9).
Revised paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(9).
Initial adoption.
11/29/1994
11/16/1994
Initial adoption.
11/29/1994
11/16/1994
Initial adoption.
11/29/1994
11/16/1994
Initial adoption.
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Initial adoption.
Revised subsection (a).
Removed subsection (b) and
Redesignated existing subsections (c)–(e) to subsections (b)–(d).
Revised subsections (b)–(d) as redesignated.
Revised subsection (b).
Initial adoption.
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TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF EACH REGULATION THAT IS AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION—Continued
Section
Section 116.721 ................
Date
submitted
Title
Amendments and Alterations.
Date adopted
by state
Comments
11/29/1994
Distance Limitations ........
Section 116.730 ................
Compliance History .........
Section 116.740 ................
Public Notice and Comment.
Section 116.750 ................
Flexible Permit Fee .........
Section 116.760 ................
Flexible Permit Renewal ..
IV. Is the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program Submittal for a Major or
Minor NSR SIP Revision?
A. Description of the Submitted
Program
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This part of today’s action describes
the Program submitted by Texas to EPA
for approval into the State’s SIP. The
submitted Program adds a new permit
option under State law for any person
who plans to construct any new facility
or to engage in the modification of any
existing facility, which may emit air
contaminants into the air. See submitted
30 TAC 116.110(a)(3). Under the
program submitted by Texas, any person
planning the construction of a new
facility or a modification to an existing
facility may satisfy the conditions of 30
TAC Subchapter G—Flexible Permits,
rather than obtaining a NSR SIP case-bycase permit or satisfying the conditions
for a minor NSR SIP Standard Permit or
Permit by Rule.2 See submitted 30 TAC
2 The Texas NSR SIP provides for three types of
NSR permits for construction of new minor sources
and for minor modifications of existing major
stationary sources and minor sources: A case-bycase minor NSR SIP permit (30 TAC 116.110(a)(1)),
satisfying the conditions for a minor NSR SIP
standard permit (30 TAC 116.110(a)(2)), and
satisfying the conditions for a minor NSR SIP
permit by rule (30 TAC 116.110(a)(4)). There are
two types of permits available for minor
modifications to existing permitted major stationary
sources and minor facilities, a case-by-case minor
NSR SIP permit amendment (30 TAC 116.110(b))
and 30 TAC 116.116(b)) and a minor NSR SIP
permit by rule (30 TAC 116.116(d)). A case-by-case
minor NSR SIP permit alteration (30 TAC
116.116(c)) or a minor NSR SIP permit by rule (30
TAC 116.116(d)) are allowed for changes among
which includes a decrease in allowable emissions.
See SIP rule 30 TAC 116.116(c)(1)(A) –(B) for the
changes that may be authorized by a minor NSR SIP
permit amendment/minor NSR SIP permit by rule.
The SIP requires that any issued permit is subject
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Initial adoption.
7/22/1998
9/11/2000
11/29/1994
9/11/2000
11/29/1994
7/22/1998
11/29/1994
6/17/1998
8/9/2000
11/16/1994
8/9/2000
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
11/16/1994
Revised paragraphs (b)(2) and (d)(1)–(2).
Revised subsection (d) and paragraph (d)(1).
Initial adoption.
Revised introductory paragraph.
Initial adoption.
Revised introductory paragraph.
Initial adoption.
7/22/1998
Section 116.722 ................
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
10/25/1999
11/29/1994
7/22/1998
9/11/2000
10/4/2002
11/29/1994
9/2/1999
11/16/1994
6/17/1998
8/9/2000
9/25/2002
11/16/1994
Designated existing text as subsection (a); and
Added new subsection (b).
Revised subsections (a)–(b).
Initial adoption.
Revised subsections (b)–(d).
Revised subsection (d).
Revised subsections (b)–(c).
Initial adoption.
116.110(a)(3). The submitted Program is
one component of Texas’ current
preconstruction permit program, but the
Program is not a part of the federally
approved Texas SIP.
Under the submitted Program, a
Flexible Permit allows for flexibility in
managing operations by staying under
an overall emission cap or individual
unit specific emission limitation. 30
TAC 116.716. Texas adopted the use of
Flexible Permits for construction of new
facilities, modifications of existing
facilities, and grandfathered facilities.3
When Texas adopted its Program in
1994, the State did not have the
statutory authority to impose controls
on or require permits for grandfathered
facilities. In particular, the State
expected this new Program to provide a
mechanism for placing controls on
grandfathered refinery and
petrochemical sites. The Program did
result in grandfathered facilities
voluntarily imposing emission controls
and limiting their emissions using a
Flexible Permit. However, the current
regulatory structure does not fit neatly
within the parameters of the Texas
minor NSR SIP and the Texas major
NSR SIP or within the Federal minor or
major NSR SIP requirements.
The following discussion provides a
summary of some of the specific
components of Texas’ Flexible Permits
State Program. For more information
for review every ten years after the date of issuance.
See 30 TAC 116.311(c).
3 Grandfathered facilities are facilities that were
once exempt from most State air permitting
requirements because the facilities predated the
1971 Texas Clean Air Act that required
preconstruction review and operating permits for
construction of any new source and modification of
any existing source that may emit air contaminants
into the atmosphere of the State.
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about the Program, please see the SIP
revisions submitted by Texas and the
TSD for this proposed action, which are
available in the docket for this action.
Pursuant to the submitted Program,
only one Flexible Permit may be issued
at an account site.4 See submitted 30
TAC 116.710(a)(1). Therefore, a Flexible
Permit cannot cover sources at more
than one account site. See submitted 30
TAC 116.710(a)(4). A person may
qualify for a Flexible Permit for
construction of a new facility 5 at the
account site. 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3) and
30 TAC 116.710(a)(1). A person may
qualify for a Flexible Permit for a
modification of an existing facility at the
account site. 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3) and
116.710(a)(1).
If a person has a Flexible Permit and
wishes to make a change, he can obtain
a minor or major NSR SIP case-by-case
permit amendment (codified in the SIP
at 30 TAC 116.116(b)) or qualify for a
Flexible Permit amendment. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.710(a)(2). In lieu
of either of these two options, the holder
of the Flexible Permit making the
change may qualify for a minor NSR SIP
permit by rule, codified in the SIP at 30
TAC 116.116(d).
4 ‘‘Account’’ for NSR purposes is defined at 30
TAC 101.1(1), second sentence, as ‘‘any
combination of sources under common ownership
or control and located on one or more contiguous
properties, or properties contiguous except for
intervening roads, railroads, rights-of-way,
waterways, or similar divisions.’’ This definition is
approved as part of the Texas SIP (March 30, 2005
(70 FR 16129)).
5 ‘‘Facility’’ is defined in the SIP approved 30
TAC 116.10(6) as ‘‘a discrete or identifiable
structure, device, item, equipment, or enclosure
that constitutes or contains a stationary source,
including appurtenances other than emission
control equipment.’’
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If a person does not have a Flexible
Permit and wishes to make a change but
have only the change covered under a
Flexible Permit, he can obtain a minor
or major NSR SIP case-by-case permit
amendment or qualify for a Flexible
Permit. In lieu of either of these two
options, he may qualify for a minor NSR
SIP permit by rule.
If the holder of a Flexible Permit
wishes to construct a new facility, he
may qualify for a Flexible Permit
amendment. See submitted 30 TAC
116.710(a)(3). This is analogous to the
minor and major NSR SIP process of
using a minor NSR SIP Permit by Rule
or a minor NSR SIP permit, for
authorization to construct a new facility
on the site. See footnote 1 for further
explanation.
Under the approved Texas NSR SIP,
a change to an existing facility is
defined as one that would cause a
change in the method of control of
emissions; a change in the character of
the emissions; or an increase in the
emission rate of any air contaminant. 30
TAC 116.116(b)(1). Such a change is
required under the SIP to be authorized
under a minor or major NSR SIP permit
amendment or a minor NSR SIP permit
by rule. 30 TAC 116.116(b) and (d). If
the change is a decrease in allowable
emissions; or any change from a
representation in an application, general
condition, or special condition in a
permit that does not cause a change in
the method of control of emissions; a
change in the character of emissions; or
an increase in the emission rate of any
air contaminant (30 TAC 116.116(c)(1)),
the change must be authorized by a
minor or major NSR SIP permit
alteration or a minor NSR SIP permit by
rule. 30 TAC 116.116(c) and (d). The
submitted Program at 30 TAC 116.721(a)
has the same first two definitions for a
change to an existing facility: one that
would cause a change in the method of
control of emissions; a change in the
character of the emissions. It, however,
has a different definition for the third
type of change. Rather than the change
being ‘‘an increase in the emission rate,’’
it is a change that is a ‘‘significant
increase in emissions.’’ Submitted 30
TAC 116.718 defines a ‘‘significant
increase in emissions.’’ First, the
increase in emissions must come from a
facility with a Flexible Permit and
second, there is no significant increase
if the increase does not exceed either
the emission cap or individual emission
limitation.
The submitted Subchapter G
establishes an aggregated emission limit,
based upon the application of minor
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NSR SIP BACT 6 at expected maximum
capacity (or the application of a more
stringent required control) for each
covered facility, i.e., an emission cap.
The cap for a specific criteria pollutant
includes each covered facility with its
individually calculated emission rates.
The total sum of the covered facilities’
calculated emission rates is the
emission cap. In other words, the
emission cap is a limit on the potential
to emit (PTE).
An emission cap established in a
Flexible Permit enables the holder to
operate facilities with less technical and
administrative effort than would be
required under the minor and major
NSR SIP Permits, minor NSR SIP
Standard Permits, and minor NSR SIP
Permits by Rule, which impose unitspecific mass emission limits. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.716. Under the
submitted 30 TAC 116.716(a), Texas
may establish an emission cap for a
specific pollutant by calculating the
total emissions for all of the facilities
covered by a Flexible Permit, using the
application of minor NSR SIP BACT at
expected maximum capacity for each
covered facility. Nevertheless, where the
existing control for a facility is more
stringent than the application of minor
NSR SIP BACT, e.g., NSPS, NESHAPS,
control strategy rule, then that level of
control for that facility is used in the
calculation methodologies. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.715(c)(9) and
(10). Alternatively, Texas will set an
individual emission limitation in the
same Flexible Permit for each pollutant
6 Texas adopted a revised NSR State rule on July
27, 1972, to add the requirement that a proposed
new facility and proposed modification utilize at
least best available control technology (BACT), with
consideration to the technical practicability and
economical reasonableness of reducing or
eliminating the emissions from the facility. EPA
approved the revised 603.16 into the Texas SIP,
presently codified in the Texas SIP at 30 TAC
116.111(a)(2)(C). For more information, please see
the Federal Register published today concerning
the Texas Qualified Facilities State Program and the
General Definitions. The Federal definition for PSD
BACT is part of the Texas SIP as codified in the SIP
at 30 TAC 116.160(a). (This current SIP rule citation
was adopted by the State on October 10, 2001, and
EPA approved this recodified SIP rule citation on
July 22, 2004 (69 FR 43752).) EPA approved the
Texas PSD program SIP revision submittals,
including the State’s incorporation by reference of
the Federal definition of BACT, in 1992. See
proposal and final approval of the Texas PSD SIP
at 54 FR 52823 (December 22, 1989) and 57 FR
28093 (June 24, 1992). EPA specifically found that
the SIP BACT requirement (now codified in the
Texas SIP at 30 TAC 116.111(a)(2)(C)) did not meet
the Federal PSD BACT definition. To meet the PSD
SIP Federal requirements, Texas chose to
incorporate by reference, the Federal PSD BACT
definition, and submit it for approval by EPA as
part of the Texas PSD SIP. Upon EPA’s approval of
the Texas PSD SIP submittals, both EPA and Texas
interpreted the SIP BACT provision now codified
in the SIP at 30 TAC 116.111(a)(2)(C) as being a
minor NSR SIP requirement for minor NSR permits.
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not covered by an emission cap for the
covered facilities. See submitted 30 TAC
116.716(b). In some cases, a single unit
may be required by a state or federal
rule to meet an emissions limitation,
which does not allow flexibility under
the cap. In these cases, individual
emission limitations are set. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.716(b), second
sentence. Moreover, in the calculation
methodologies for the cap and the
individual emission limitations, an
‘‘Insignificant Emissions Factor’’ (of up
to nine percent) may be included in the
summation. See submitted 30 TAC
116.716(d).
Under the submitted Program, a
pollutant’s cap must be readjusted
downward if one of the facilities under
the Flexible Permit shuts down for
longer than 12 months. See submitted
30 TAC 116.716(c), first sentence. If a
new facility is brought into the Flexible
Permit, the cap must be readjusted to
accommodate its calculated emission
rates. See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(c),
second sentence. The cap must be
readjusted downward for any facility
covered by a Flexible Permit if that
facility becomes subject to any new
State or Federal regulation. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.716(e), first
sentence. A readjustment of the cap
required by any new State or Federal
regulation must be made either at the
time the Flexible Permit is amended or
altered. 30 TAC 116.716(e), second
sentence. If an amendment to a Flexible
Permit is not required to meet the new
regulation, the permittee must submit a
request for a permit alteration within
sixty days of making the change,
describing how compliance with the
new requirement will be demonstrated.
See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(e), third
sentence.
Under submitted 30 TAC 116.717, a
Flexible Permit may include an
implementation schedule for the
installation of additional controls to
meet an emissions cap for a pollutant.
Submitted 30 TAC 116.715(c)(8)
provides that if a schedule to install
additional controls is included in the
Flexible Permit and a facility subject to
such a schedule is taken out of service,
the emission cap contained in the
Flexible Permit will be readjusted
downward for the period the unit is out
of service. Unless a special provision in
the Flexible Permit specifies the method
of readjustment of the emission cap, the
facility must obtain a permit
amendment.
B. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a
Minor NSR SIP Revision?
Our evaluation of Texas’ submitted
SIP revisions is guided by whether the
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submitted Flexible Permits State
Program applies to major NSR or minor
NSR, or both. In correspondence and
other materials, Texas has expressed an
intent that its submitted Flexible
Permits State Program applies only to
construction of minor sources, existing
grandfathered sources, and to minor
modifications. See e.g., 19 Tex. Reg.
7336 (September 20, 1994), 19 Tex. Reg
9366 (November 25, 1994), the Texas
Clean Air Act (TCAA) Section
382.003(9), introductory paragraph and
(A)–(G), January 2001 ‘‘Flexible Permit
Application Guidance’’ by the Air
Permits Division of the TCEQ (see in
particular, NOTE on page 4), Interoffice
Memorandum dated December 31, 1998,
from Victoria Hsu, P.E., Division
Director, NSR Permits, to New Source
Review (NSR) Permit Engineers, entitled
‘‘Flexible Permits and the Plantwide
Applicability Limit (PAL)’’ (see in
particular the last paragraph in ‘‘Federal
Enforceability Policy for Flexible
Permits’’, immediately preceding
‘‘Plantwide Applicability Limit (PAL),’’
and Interoffice Memorandum dated
March 17, 1999, from Johnny
Vermillion, P.E., Technical Specialist,
NSRPD Chemical Section and David
Howell, P.E., Team Leader, NSRPD Core
Section to NSRPD Permit Engineers,
entitled ‘‘Permit Renewals during
Flexible Permit Reviews’’ (see in
particular the first sentence in the
second paragraph). We find, however,
that Texas State law and the regulatory
text submitted by the State is
inconsistent with this expressed intent.
The Texas statutory definition for
‘‘modification of existing facility’’ at
Section 382.003, Health and Safety
Code, was revised by the legislature in
1995 to add, among other things,
subsection (F) addressing modification
of an existing facility through a Flexible
Permit. It provides that increases in
emissions are not modifications if they
are authorized by a Flexible Permit.
This statutory definition for
‘‘modification of existing facility’’ on its
face, however, does not prohibit the use
of a Flexible Permit for a major
modification as defined by the CAA and
EPA’s major NSR SIP regulations. It has
never been explicitly revised to prohibit
major modifications. Furthermore, in
contrast to the statutory prohibition
against the use of a Permit by Rule for
the construction of a major stationary
source added in 1999, there are no
statutory prohibitions against the use of
a Flexible Permit for construction of a
major stationary source. See TCAA
section 382.05196. Finally, Texas State
law does not contain any explicit
prohibition against using a Flexible
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Permit for major modifications,
notwithstanding provisions prohibiting
the use of an Exemption or Permit by
Rule or a Standard Permit for major
modifications, as added in 1999. See
TCAA Section 382.057. There are no
statutory provisions in the TCAA that
clearly limit modifications under the
submitted Program to minor sources
and/or minor modifications and
construction of new sources to minor
sources and/or minor modifications.
Similarly, the regulatory provisions
submitted by Texas also do not prohibit
the use of the submitted Program for
construction of new major stationary
sources and major modifications of
existing major stationary sources and
minor sources. The submitted rules do
not limit the use of the submitted
Program to minor NSR. For example, the
title for the submitted Subchapter G is
‘‘Flexible Permits,’’ not ‘‘Minor NSR
Flexible Permits, and Flexible Permits
for Grandfathered Facilities.’’ The
submitted Subchapter G does not
contain any emissions limitations,
applicability statement, or regulatory
provision restricting the construction to
minor sources and minor modifications
as do the Texas minor NSR SIP rules for
Permits by Rule in Chapter 106 and
Standard Permits in Chapter 116,
Subchapter F. Moreover, unlike the
minor NSR SIP rules for Standard
Permits in 30 TAC 116.610(b) and
Permits by Rule in 30 TAC 106.4(a)(3)
and (4), the submitted rules do not
require that construction of a major
stationary source or a major
modification, as defined in the Major
NSR SIP regulations, must meet the
Major NSR permitting requirements.
If Texas truly intends for the
submitted Flexible Permits State
Program to apply only to minor NSR, at
a minimum Texas must amend
Subchapter G to include additional
provisions that clearly limit its
applicability to minor NSR as it did in
the Texas minor NSR SIP at 30 TAC
Chapter 106 for Permits by Rule and 30
TAC Chapter 116 Subchapter F for
Standard Permits.
Without a clear statement of the
applicability of the Program, the
Program as submitted is confusing to the
public, regulated sources, government
entities, or a court, because it can be
interpreted as an alternative to
evaluating the new source or
modification as a new major stationary
source or major modification under
Major NSR. The submitted Program fails
to limit clearly the use of it to only the
Texas minor NSR SIP requirements.
Because of the overly broad nature of
the regulatory language in the State’s
SIP revision submittal and the lack of
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48487
any Texas statutory prohibitions, we
propose to find that the State has failed
to limit the submitted Program only to
minor NSR.
Consequently, we are compelled to
evaluate this submitted Program as
being a substitute for the Texas Major
NSR SIP. Accordingly, as discussed
below in Section V, we evaluated
whether the submitted Program meets
the requirements for a Major NSR SIP
revision, the general requirements for
regulating construction of any stationary
sources contained in Section
110(a)(2)(C) of the CAA, and the
applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements for an approvable SIP
revision. Below is a summary of our
evaluation of the submitted Program as
a Substitute Major NSR SIP revision
submittal. Section VI contains a
summary of our evaluation of the
submitted Program as a Minor NSR SIP
revision submittal.
V. What Is EPA’s Evaluation of the
Submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program as a Substitute Major NSR SIP
Revision?
A. What Are the Requirements for EPA’s
Review of a Submitted Major NSR SIP
Revision?
Before EPA’s 1980 revised Major NSR
SIP regulations, 45 FR 52676 (August 7,
1980), States were required to adopt and
submit a Major NSR SIP revision where
the State’s provisions and definitions
were identical to or individually more
stringent than the Federal rules. Under
EPA’s 1980 revised Major NSR SIP
regulations, States could submit
provisions in a Major NSR SIP revision
different from those in EPA’s Major NSR
rules, as long as the State provision was
equivalent to a rule identified by EPA as
appropriate for a ‘‘different but
equivalent’’ State rule. If a State chose
to submit definitions that were not
verbatim to the Federal definitions, the
State was required to demonstrate any
different definition has the effect of
being as least as stringent. (Emphasis
added.) See 45 FR 52676, at 52687. The
demonstration requirement was
expanded to explicitly include not just
different definitions but also different
programs in the EPA’s revised Major
NSR regulations, as promulgated on
December 31, 2002 (67 FR 80186) and
reconsidered with minor changes on
November 7, 2003 (68 FR 63021).
Therefore, to be approved as meeting
the 2002 revised Major NSR SIP
requirements, a State submitting a
customized Major NSR SIP revision
must demonstrate why its program and
definitions are in fact at least as
stringent as the Major NSR revised base
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program. (Emphasis added). See 67 FR
80186, at 80241.
Moreover, because there is an existing
Texas Major NSR SIP, the submitted
Program must meet the anti-backsliding
provisions of the Act in section 193 and
meet the requirements in section 110(l)
where EPA may not approve a SIP
revision if it will interfere with any
applicable requirement concerning
attainment and reasonable further
progress or any other applicable
requirement of the Act. Furthermore,
any submitted SIP revision must meet
the applicable SIP regulatory
requirements and the requirements for
SIP elements in section 110 of the Act,
and be consistent applicable statutory
and regulatory requirements as
interpreted in EPA SIP policy and
guidance. These can include, among
other things, enforceability, compliance
assurance, accountability, test methods,
a program element’s replicability, and
whether the submitted rules are vague.
There are four fundamental principles
for the relationship between the SIP and
any implementing instruments, e.g.,
Major NSR permits. These four
principles as applied to the review of a
major or minor NSR SIP revision
include: (1) The baseline emissions from
a permitted source be quantifiable; (2)
the NSR program be enforceable by
specifying clear, unambiguous, and
measurable requirements, including a
legal means for ensuring the sources are
in compliance with the NSR program,
and providing means to determine
compliance; (3) the NSR program’s
measures be replicable by including
sufficiently specific and objective
provisions so that two independent
entities applying the permit program’s
procedures would obtain the same
result; and (4) the Major NSR permit
program be accountable, including
means to track emissions at sources
resulting from the issuance of permits
and permit amendments. See EPA’s
April 16, 1992, ‘‘General Preamble for
the Implementation of Title I of the
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990’’ (57
FR 13498) (‘‘General Preamble’’). In
particular, there is a specific discussion
illustrating the principles and elements
of SIPs that apply to sources in
implementing a SIP’s control strategies
beginning on page 13567 of the General
Preamble.
B. Does the Submitted Program Prohibit
Circumvention of Major NSR?
There is no express provision in the
submitted Subchapter G similar to the
Texas minor NSR SIP provisions for
minor NSR SIP Permits by Rule and
minor NSR SIP Standard Permits that
prohibit circumvention of the Major
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NSR requirements. See 30 TAC 106.4(b)
and 30 TAC 116.610(c). Both the SIPcodified Chapter 106, Subchapter A for
Permits by Rule and the SIP-codified
Chapter 116, Subchapter F for Standard
Permits 7 contain clear regulatory
applicability requirements limiting their
use to minor NSR, clear regulatory
requirements prohibiting their use for
any project that constitutes a new major
stationary source or major modification
subject to Major NSR, and clear
regulatory provisions prohibiting the
use of these minor NSR permits from
circumventing Major NSR. There are no
similar regulatory applicability
requirements prohibiting the use for
Major NSR, and no regulatory
provisions prohibiting circumvention of
Major NSR in the submitted Chapter
116, Subchapter G, for Flexible Permits.
There is no express provision clearly
requiring that this submitted Program
cannot be used to circumvent the
requirements of major NSR. We are
proposing to find that the State failed to
demonstrate that the submitted Program
prevents the circumvention of major
NSR. Therefore, we are proposing to
disapprove the Program as not meeting
the major NSR SIP requirements to
prevent circumvention of Major NSR.
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Major NSR Applicability Determination
Criteria?
Because there is no express provision
in the TCAA and/or in the submitted
Program clearly limiting this Program to
minor NSR, and there is no explicit
provision prohibiting circumvention of
the Major NSR SIP requirements, we
must evaluate the submitted Program
with respect to the criteria for Major
stationary source NSR applicability
determinations. This includes the
absence of a requirement to evaluate if
a project triggers Major NSR pursuant to
the applicability criteria of the
applicable regulations.
We do not find any provisions in the
submitted Program that require a Major
NSR applicability determination for the
changes prior to construction and
modification. The submitted Program’s
rules and definitions are not clear on
their face that first one must determine
the threshold question of whether the
construction or change is a major
stationary source or a major
7 The Texas SIP does not include the State
Pollution Control Project Standard Permit. In a
separate action in today’s Federal Register, EPA is
proposing action upon this individual Standard
Permit. Please see the proposal notice concerning
the Texas NSR SIP submittals for PSD, NNSR for
the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS, NSR Reform, and
a Standard Permit. Those interested in this other
action are encouraged to review and comment on
it as well.
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modification subject to Major NSR. The
construction and modifications that
would be authorized under the
submitted Subchapter G can include
new major stationary sources or major
modifications. The change that could be
a major modification or be a major
stationary source could bypass the
Major NSR SIP requirements, including
the application of PSD BACT or NNSR
LAER control requirements, in the
absence of an express requirement to
perform the Major NSR SIP applicability
review.
The submitted Program fails to
require that the applicability of the
Major NSR requirements be evaluated
prior to considering whether the
construction of a new source or making
a change can be authorized under a
Flexible Permit. We are proposing to
find that the State failed to demonstrate
that the Program requires an evaluation
of Major source NSR applicability based
on the currently approved SIP
provisions or upon the current federal
rules. Therefore, we are proposing to
disapprove the Program as not meeting
the Major NSR SIP requirements that
require the Major NSR applicability
requirements be met.
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
CAA and Major NSR SIP Requirements
for a Major Modification?
In evaluating Major NSR SIP revision
submittals impacting ‘‘major
modifications,’’ that differ from EPA’s,
our review is primarily guided by
section 111(a)(4) of the Act that
describes when a ‘‘source’’ is to be
considered modified: ‘‘The term
‘modification’ means any physical
change in, or change in the method of
operation of, a stationary source which
increases the amount of any air
pollutant emitted by such source or
which results in the emission of any air
pollutant not previously emitted.’’
Texas did not submit any demonstration
showing how its use of the definition
‘‘modification’’ was at least as stringent
as the definition of ‘‘modification’’ in
EPA’s Major NSR SIP rules.
In conducting our review, we
particularly were mindful of the United
States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit regarding the scope
and requirements of Section 111(a)(4)
for determining whether a change is a
‘‘major modification.’’ See e.g., New
York v. EPA, 413 F.3d 3 (D.C. Cir. 2005)
(‘‘New York I’’) (evaluating EPA’s 2002
revised major NSR rules and
interpreting Section 111(a)(4)). As
discussed below, there are a number of
principles associated with Section
111(a)(4) that the Program appears to
violate. Moreover, the State failed to
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submit a demonstration showing how
its use of ‘‘modification’’ is at least as
stringent as the definition of
‘‘modification’’ in EPA’s Major NSR SIP
rules.
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1. Does the Submitted Program require
an evaluation of Emission Increases
from the Major Stationary Source?
As noted above, Section 111(a) (4)
requires an evaluation of whether a
project has resulted in an increase in
emissions from ‘‘such source.’’ Under
this requirement, an evaluation of
whether a physical change has resulted
in an emission increase must be
evaluated based on whether the project
resulted in an emission increase across
the major stationary source, not by an
evaluation of increases outside the
major stationary source or a subset of
units at the major stationary source. See
Alabama Power v. Costle, 636 F.2d 323,
401–403 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (holding that
Agency appropriately allowed
consideration of emission increases
across the stationary source); Asarco v.
EPA, 578 F.2d 320 (D.C. Cir. 1978)
(holding that EPA inappropriately
allowed a determination if a
modification had occurred based on
emission decreases from outside of the
facility).8 We are concerned that the
submitted Program in certain
circumstances, may allow an emission
increase to be avoided by taking into
account emission decreases outside of
the major stationary source and, in other
circumstances, allow an evaluation of
emissions of a subset of units at a major
stationary source.
First, we are concerned that the
submitted Program violates the
requirements of the Act and the Major
NSR SIP rules, because applicability can
be determined based on decreases
outside of the major stationary source.
This submitted Program establishes an
emissions cap over a group of one or
more emissions points located at an
‘‘account’’ site. 30 TAC 101.1(1). In this
way and as discussed above in B and C,
the submitted Flexible Permits State
Program allows facilities to avoid
triggering Major NSR requirements. The
Texas SIP defines an ‘‘account’’ to
8 While the court’s analysis regarding the scope of
what constitutes a source in these two cases was
rejected by the Supreme Court in Chevron that
decision did not call into question the holding that
once the EPA has defined what constitutes a
‘‘source’’ (facility for Major Stationary Source) that
this is the unit of analysis for applicability. See
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, 467 U.S. 837 (1984).
Given the plain language of Section 111, EPA
agrees that the appropriate unit of analysis for
determining if there is an emission increase is the
‘‘source’’ as section 111(a)(4) provides that a
modification occurs if the project ‘‘increases the
amount * * * emitted by such source.’’
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include an entire company site, which
could include more than one plant and
certainly more than one major stationary
source. SIP rule 30 TAC 101.1(1),
second sentence. Accordingly, under a
Flexible Permit, a single emissions
limitation in the emission cap could
apply to multiple major stationary
sources,9 and if emissions remain below
the emissions limitations in the
emission cap, Major NSR
preconstruction review is not triggered.
By allowing an emission cap to be
established for an account, which can
include multiple major stationary
sources, the submitted SIP revisions
may allow a major stationary source to
net a significant emissions increase
against a decrease occurring outside the
major stationary source, from facilities
on the account’s site that are covered
under the Flexible Permit. This
approach is not consistent with the
Court’s findings in Alabama Power and
Asarco, and it does not meet the CAA’s
definition of modification and the Major
NSR SIP requirements.
Second, we are concerned that the
submitted Program may allow an
emission increase to be determined
based on an evaluation of a subset of
facilities within a major stationary
source. There are no regulatory
provisions addressing how one meets
the applicable major NSR netting
requirements at a site when some of the
units are under a Flexible Permit and
others are not. Under the submitted
Program, not all emission points, units,
facilities, major stationary sources,
minor modifications to an existing
major stationary source, and so forth, at
a site are required to be included in the
site’s Flexible Permit. The submitted
regulations state, ‘‘A person may obtain
a flexible permit * * * for a facility, a
group of facilities, or account * * *’’
See submitted 30 TAC 116.710(a).
Although such a requirement is not
necessarily per se inconsistent with the
CAA and EPA’s Major NSR SIP
requirements, we propose to find that
9 The Federal regulations define a stationary
source as, among other things, all of the pollutant
emitting activities that belong to the same industrial
grouping. An industrial grouping is defined based
on the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC code).
See, e.g. 40 CFR 51.166(b)(5) and (6). If a stationary
source has the potential to emit or actually emits
at certain specified levels then the stationary source
is a ‘‘major stationary source’’ for purposes of major
NSR applicability. See Id. at 166(b)(1). By not
limiting an ‘‘account’’ to pollutant-emitting
activities within the same SIC code, an account can
include pollutant-emitting activity that includes
one or more major stationary sources. While under
certain circumstances it may be appropriate to lump
units/facilities from differing SIC codes into a single
stationary source, this is generally based on an
interdependence of the various units. Texas’s rule
does not require such interdependence.
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the submitted Program lacks the
necessary accountability and
replicability required for an approvable
SIP revision under the Act and EPA’s
interpretations of it, because the
submitted regulations and the
supporting record from the State fail to
explain how physical and operational
changes that occur under a Flexible
Permit emission cap, which may cause
emissions changes outside of the
emission cap, are evaluated for Major
NSR applicability. Likewise, the
submitted regulations and supporting
record fail to explain how physical or
operational changes that occur outside
an emission cap, that cause emissions
changes within the emission cap, are
evaluated for Major NSR applicability.
In essence, neither the submitted
regulations nor the supporting
documentation from Texas explain how
emissions increases are calculated (both
the significant emissions increase from
a project, and a significant net emissions
increase over the contemporaneous
period) for the entire major stationary
source if the major stationary source is
subject to two different permitting
regulations, the Flexible Permit
regulations and the Major NSR SIP
regulations. As a result, the regulated
community may apply these regulations
inconsistently and in a way that fails to
evaluate emissions changes at the entire
major stationary source correctly as
required by the Major NSR SIP
regulations. This approach is not
consistent with the Court’s finding in
Alabama Power, and it does not meet
the CAA’s definition of modification
and the Major NSR SIP requirements.
Therefore, we propose to find that the
State has failed to demonstrate the
approaches are consistent with the
Court’s findings in Alabama Power and
Asarco, meet the Act, and include the
necessary replicability and
accountability for approval as a SIP
revision. Therefore, we are proposing to
disapprove the submitted Program as
not meeting the Major NSR SIP
requirements that require an evaluation
of emission increases from the major
stationary source.
2. Does the Submitted Program require
the Use of Actual Emissions, rather than
Allowables?
Under Section 111(a)(4) of the Act
since the 1977 CAA Amendments, a
comparison of existing actual emissions
before the change and projected actual
(or potential emissions) after the change
in question is required. See New York
I at 38–40. Therefore, to determine
whether a change at a unit will be
subject to Major NSR requires an
evaluation that, after netting, an actual
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to projected actual test or an actual to
potential emissions test (or alternatively
a PAL based on actual emissions) be
used. See 40 CFR 51.165(f) and
51.166(w). EPA lacks the authority to
approve any submitted Program that
does not meet this statutory
requirement. We therefore are proposing
disapproval because the submitted
Program would authorize existing
allowable, rather than actual emissions
to be used to determine applicability in
violation of the Act and the Major NSR
SIP requirements.
Our concerns arise because the
submitted Program fails to show how
the Flexible Permit program procedures,
which use expected maximum capacity
as a component in establishing the level
of control for each covered facility’s
emission limit, assure that a Flexible
Permit’s emission cap is set at a level
that is equivalent to or more stringent
than one based on existing actual
emissions. As discussed previously in
section IV. A, the cap is essentially a
combined PTE for the emissions units
covered by the cap. Subchapter G
establishes an aggregated emission limit,
based upon the application of minor
NSR SIP BACT at expected maximum
capacity (or the application of the
required control that is more stringent
than minor NSR SIP BACT; see
submitted 30 TAC 116.711(3)) for each
covered facility, i.e., an emission cap.
This means the cap is set at a level not
based on actual emissions. Additionally,
there is nothing in the submitted
Program that prevents a proposed
change at a major stationary source with
a Flexible Permit to use allowable,
rather than actual emissions, as a
baseline to calculate the project’s
proposed emissions increase. Thereby
the change could circumvent the major
modification applicability requirements
under the Major NSR rules, rules that
are based upon using actual emissions
to calculate baseline emissions.
We propose to find that the State’s
procedures for establishing a Flexible
Permit emission cap do not meet the
CAA and EPA’s Major NSR SIP
requirements that emissions increases
from facility changes must be measured
in terms of changes from existing
baseline actual emissions and, rather
than source-specific allowable
emissions.
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Major NSR SIP Requirements for
Enforceability?
Any SIP revision to be approved must
have adequate recordkeeping, reporting,
testing, and monitoring requirements to
assure there can be compliance with the
submitted plan and to ensure the plan
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is enforceable, as well as to ensure each
affected entity can be easily identified
and there are means to determine its
compliance. The more intricate a plan,
the greater the need for detailed
requirements. See New York I, 413 F.3d
at 33–36 (remanding EPA’s
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements since they did not provide
adequate assurances that the Major
Source NSR modification requirements
were complied with). There is the
CAA’s requirement in section
110(a)(2)(A) that a SIP revision
submittal must include enforceable
emission limitations and control
measures. There is further discussion in
the General Preamble about EPA’s
interpretation of the Act’s requirements
for enforceability and that submitted
rules must ‘‘specify clear, unambiguous,
and measurable requirements.’’ 57 FR at
13567. The SIPs must contain means to
track emission changes at sources and
provide for corrective action if they do
not achieve the emissions reductions.
There must be legal means for ensuring
compliance with the control measures.
These principles are consistent with the
required ability of both EPA and
citizens to enforce against violations of
both major and minor NSR SIP
requirements because absent such
requirements, compliance cannot be
determined.
We are concerned with the adequacy
of the recordkeeping, reporting,
tracking, and monitoring requirements
in the submitted Program.10 This
submitted Program is an intricate
program and therefore, for approvability
as a Major NSR SIP revision, there is a
greater need for detailed recordkeeping,
reporting, tracking, and monitoring
requirements whether to ensure that a
project triggering the Major NSR SIP
requirements is covered under Major
NSR or to ensure that there are adequate
means for ensuring compliance of each
affected entity. These are needed
additionally to ensure that the issuance
of the Flexible Permits does not cause
or contribute to a NAAQS violation,
violate PSD increments or the Texas
control strategy, or violate any other
CAA requirement. For example, due to
the lack of a program requirement for
records with detailed crosswalks and of
tracking and reporting requirements,
one cannot determine which
grandfathered units on a site are covered
10 EPA’s letter of March 12, 2008, on pages 12 to
13 of the Enclosure provides some examples of, and
concepts on how to establish replicable
recordkeeping, reporting, tracking, and monitoring
requirements up-front in a NSR program without
requiring every director discretion decision to be
adopted and submitted to EPA for approval as a
source-specific SIP revision.
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or not by a Flexible Permit, or which
pre-existing minor NSR permitted units
are covered or not by a Flexible Permit,
much less which permit terms, limits,
and conditions are covered, are not
covered, are retained, or not.
A Texas Flexible Permit may apply to
hundreds of dissimilar units. These
covered emissions units can vary in size
and type of operations as well as having
widely different regulatory requirements
and different applicable testing
requirements. Yet for this submitted
intricate Program, there are no program
requirements for the tracking of existing
SIP permits’ major and minor NSR
terms, limits, and conditions, and
whether such requirements are
incorporated into a Flexible Permit or
they remain outside the coverage of the
Flexible Permit. Minor and Major NSR
SIP permits, as well as minor NSR SIP
Permits by Rule and Standard Permits,
can be incorporated into a Flexible
Permit without any program
requirement in place that ensures the
SIP permits’ terms, limits, and
conditions are included in the Flexible
Permit. There are no program
requirements in the submitted intricate
Program for specific recordkeeping and
monitoring that ensures a holder of a
Flexible Permit maintains sufficient
records and performs sufficient
monitoring such that each term,
limitation, and condition in an existing
SIP permit that is incorporated into the
Flexible Permit and the rationale for
removing any such term, limitation, or
condition from the contents of the
Flexible Permit is available.
EPA therefore is proposing to
disapprove this Program as a Major NSR
SIP revision because it does not meet
the Act’s requirements for an
enforceable program.
F. Does the Submitted Program meet the
Major NSR SIP Public Participation
Requirements?
On November 26, 2008 (73 FR 72001),
EPA proposed limited approval and
limited disapproval of the Chapter 39
public participation rules, including 30
TAC 39.403(b)(8)(A) and (B) for Flexible
Permits. 30 TAC 39.403(b)(8)(A) and (B)
formed the part of the basis for the
proposed limited disapproval. See 73
FR 72008 and 72013. We intend to take
final action on the Chapter 39 rules
prior to final action on this submitted
Program.
In the November 2008 proposal, we
also took no action on submitted 30
TAC 116.740, Public Notice. This
section is in the submitted Subchapter
G and relates to the public participation
requirements for the submitted SIP
revisions for Flexible Permits. We
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proposed no action in the November
2008 proposal on submitted 30 TAC
116.740 because we were still reviewing
the submitted Program, including 30
TAC 116.740. We stated in the
November 2008 proposal that we would
address the submitted 30 TAC 116.740
in a separate action on the submitted
Texas Flexible Permits State Program.
Today, we propose to address 30 TAC
116.740. Because this submitted rule
relates to the public participation
requirements of the submitted Program,
this rule is not severable from the
Program. Because we are proposing to
disapprove the Program, we propose
likewise to disapprove 30 TAC 116.740,
Public Notice, for the Program.
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G. Does the Submitted Program Meet
Section 110(l) of the Act for a Major
NSR SIP Revision?
Section 110(l) of the Act prohibits
EPA from approving any revision of a
SIP if the revision would interfere with
any applicable requirement concerning
attainment and reasonable further
progress, or any other applicable
requirement of the Act.
The State did not provide any
demonstration showing how the
submitted SIP revision would not
interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress, or any other
CAA requirement.
H. What is EPA’s Summary of whether
the Submitted Program Meets the
Requirements for a Substitute Major
NSR SIP Revision?
The submitted Program does not
require that first one must determine
whether a change is subject to major
NSR and that actual emissions be used
as the baseline for determining whether
a change is subject to Major NSR. It does
not prevent circumvention of the Major
NSR SIP requirements. The submitted
Program allows emission decreases from
outside a major stationary source to
count in complying with a cap in a
Flexible Permit, as well as allowing
emission decreases from within a subset
of units within the major stationary
source. Yet the submitted Program lacks
any regulatory provisions ensuring that
netting for Major NSR applicability
purposes is conducted only within the
major stationary source and across the
entire major stationary source. The
Program is an extremely complex
permitting program that lacks
specialized regulatory provisions that
include monitoring, testing,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements specifically to ensure that
compliance can be determined, and that
triggering of Major NSR can be easily
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identified and applicable Major NSR
requirements are met. The Program does
not include any assurances that the
NAAQS, control strategies, reasonable
further progress, and the PSD
increments will not be violated.
These are requirements of the Act and
EPA’s Major NSR SIP requirements that
the submitted Program does not meet.
Furthermore, there is no information to
determine whether the Program would
not interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
RFP, or any other requirement of the
Act, thus violating section 110(l) of the
Act. Consequently, EPA is proposing to
find that the Program does not meet the
requirements for a substitute Major NSR
SIP revision.
VI. What is EPA’s Evaluation of the
Submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program as a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
We evaluated the submitted Program
using the federal regulations under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(C), which require each
State to include a minor NSR program
in its SIP. EPA regulations require that
a plan include ‘‘legally enforceable
procedures that enable’’ the permitting
agency to determine whether a minor
source will cause or contribute to
violations of applicable portions of the
control strategy, 40 CFR 51.160(a)(1), or
‘‘interference with a national ambient
air quality standard,’’ 40 CFR
51.160(a)(2), and to prevent the source
from doing so. 40 CFR 51.160(b). The
procedures must ‘‘discuss the basis for
determining which facilities will be
subject to review,’’ 40 CFR 51.160(e),
and ‘‘discuss the air quality data and the
dispersion or other air quality modeling
used’’ to assess a source. 40 CFR
51.160(f). Generally, SIPs must be
enforceable (see section 110(a) of the
Act) and must not relax existing SIP
requirements (see section 110(l) of the
Act). Additionally, we reviewed and
compared the Program with any other
applicable SIP statutory and regulatory
requirement.
A. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a
Minor NSR SIP Revision?
There are no statutory and/or
regulatory provisions that clearly
prohibit the use of the Program for
major stationary sources and major
modifications. Nor are there any
statutory and/or regulatory provisions
clearly limiting the use of the Program
to minor sources and/or minor
modifications. There are no provisions
that prohibit the use of the Program for
construction of new major stationary
sources and major modifications of
existing major stationary sources and
minor sources. There are no regulatory
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applicability requirements limiting use
of the Program to minor NSR and no
regulatory requirements prohibiting the
using it for Major NSR, in the submitted
Chapter 116, Subchapter G—Flexible
Permits. There is no express provision
in the submitted Subchapter G requiring
that this submitted Program cannot be
used to circumvent the requirements of
Major NSR. There are no statutory and/
or regulatory provisions clearly
prohibiting circumvention of Major
NSR. The Program further fails to
require that the applicability of the
Major NSR requirements be evaluated
prior to considering whether the
construction of a new source or making
a change can be authorized under a
minor NSR Flexible Permit. The
regulatory provisions in the submitted
Program fail to require that first one
must determine the threshold question
of whether the construction or change is
a major stationary source or a major
modification subject to Major NSR,
based upon an actual emissions
baseline. See section V and the TSD for
additional discussion and information.
B. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Requirements for
Establishing the Emission Cap?
The submitted Program addresses
how the cap is calculated. It, however,
does not describe in sufficient detail the
calculation methodologies and
underlying technical analyses used to
determine a cap. There are not specific,
established, replicable procedures
providing available means to determine
independently, and for different
scenarios, how the State will calculate
a Flexible Permit’s cap and/or
individual emissions limitations for a
company’s site, plants on the site, major
stationary sources on the site, a facility
within a major stationary source on the
site, facilities on the site, a group of
units on the site, for one pollutant but
not another, etc.
While facilities are limited to one
Flexible Permit per site account,
applicants can choose which facilities to
include under a Flexible Permit. To be
approvable, the submitted Program must
include legally enforceable procedures
for ensuring that both the permit
application and the State’s permitting
processes (i.e., the State’s review,
supporting technical information, the
public notice and comment process, the
record, and most importantly the
structuring of each Flexible Permit in
such a manner as to be clear) will
clearly inform the public, other
governmental agencies, or a court,
which facilities are included under the
permit and cap, and which are included
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under the permit but subject to
individual limitations.
The submitted Program’s legally
enforceable procedures must ensure
adequate enforcement of all applicable
limitations for sources under an
emission cap and for sources with
individual emissions limits under a
Flexible Permit. Since a Flexible Permit
may contain an overall emission cap for
all sources per pollutant, combination of
multiple emission caps that cover
groups of facilities, and/or individual
emission limitations for individual
facilities, the submitted Program also
must contain enforceable procedures for
determining what limits each facility is
subject to, as well as enforcing each
source’s obligations regarding each limit
applicable to that source, under the cap,
multiple caps, and/or an individual
limitation, for each pollutant in a
Flexible Permit. Because applicants can
choose to establish caps or individual
emission limitations for just certain
pollutants rather than for all pollutants
emitted from the source(s) included in
the Flexible Permit, the submitted
Program also must contain legally
enforceable procedures for determining
both the cap and individual emissions
limitations for each relevant pollutant
for each source and address how
sources or pollutants not included in
the Flexible Permit will be regulated.
Finally, applicants may choose to
combine grandfathered, existing
permitted, and newer facilities to
maximize flexibility at the site in a
Flexible Permit. This requires that the
submitted Program must contain legally
enforceable procedures to ensure that
both the permit application and the
State’s permitting processes (i.e., the
State’s review, supporting technical
information, the public notice and
comment process, the record, and most
importantly the structuring of each
Flexible Permit in such a manner as to
be clear) clearly identify each covered
point of emissions, which existing
permits and their types (e.g., minor NSR
SIP permit, minor NSR standard permit)
and which of their permitted terms,
limits, conditions and representations in
the permit application, are moved into
the Flexible Permit. The legally
enforceable procedures must also ensure
it is clear which existing permits and
their types and terms, limits, conditions
and representations in the permit
application, are not being moved into
the Flexible Permit.
In sum, the submittal lacks specific,
established, replicable procedures
providing available means to determine
independently how the source or the
State will calculate an emission cap,
determine the coverage of a Flexible
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Permit, establish individual emissions
limitations for each site, a facility on the
site, a group of units on the site, or for
one pollutant but not another. It also is
not clear to EPA what the process is and
how the emission cap is adjusted for the
addition of new facilities. See submitted
30 TAC 116.716(c). Furthermore, the
submitted regulations include a term,
‘‘multiple emission caps,’’ with an
ambiguous meaning. See submitted 30
TAC 116.715(b). It is not clear whether
this term means multiple emission caps
because there is one cap for each
pollutant, or whether there can be more
than one cap for one pollutant.
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Enforcement
Requirements?
Section 110(a)(2)(A)—(C) of the Act
requires that SIP revision submittals be
enforceable. The September 23, 1987,
Memorandum from J. Craig Potter,
Assistant Administrator for Air and
Radiation, and Thomas L. Adams Jr.,
Assistant Administrator for Enforcement
and Compliance Monitoring, entitled
‘‘Review of State Implementation Plans
and Revisions for Enforceability and
Legal Sufficiency’’ provides EPA’s
guidance for interpreting this provision
in the Act. See also the General
Preamble. Submitted rules that are
clearly worded, clear as to who must
comply, and explicit in their
applicability to regulated sources are
appropriate means for achieving the
statutory enforcement requirement.
Specific, objective, and replicable
criteria are to be set forth for
determining whether this new type of
NSR permit will be truly equivalent to
the other minor NSR SIP permits in
terms of being consistent with the levels
specified in the control strategies,
including air quality impacts, etc.
Appropriate testing, recordkeeping,
reporting, and monitoring provisions are
necessary to establish how compliance
will be determined and be sufficient to
ensure that the NAAQS and PSD
increments are protected.
Under this Program as selected by
Texas, there is an option to select which
new facilities and/or new modifications
to include under the umbrella of a
Flexible Permit. Without the
appropriate specialized MRR
requirements, there is no way to
determine for instance, which emission
points are covered, which modifications
of existing non-covered emission points
are covered, etc. Texas also chose to
allow both a cap and an individual
emission limitation to apply to selected
units, or just the cap, or just the
individual emission limitation. Without
the appropriate MRR requirements,
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there is no way to determine if a
covered unit is subject to the cap or an
individual emission limitation, if a unit
is subject to both the cap and a
limitation, or whether a cap or a
limitation applies at what time. Further,
there can be existing units on the site
not covered under the Flexible Permit
cap that may be modified, and use the
provisions of the Flexible Permit
program for the modification. Without
replicable implementation procedures
for establishing the emission cap and
sufficient monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting requirements, EPA cannot
find that the submitted Program, as a
minor NSR SIP program, will ensure
protection of the NAAQS, and
noninterference with the Texas SIP
control strategies and RFP.
EPA proposes to find that the Program
does not meet the requirements of
section 110(a)(2)(A)–(C), which require
that SIP revision submittals be
enforceable.11 There are no specific upfront methodologies in the submitted
Program to be able to determine
compliance. Nor did EPA find the
testing, recordkeeping, reporting, and
monitoring provisions necessary to
establish how compliance will be
determined and to ensure that the
NAAQS are protected. For example, the
Program could allow hundreds of
unrelated emission sources to be subject
to one emission cap and/or individual
emission limitations. Yet the submitted
Program contains no time period for the
cap (e.g., hourly, monthly, and/or
annual limits such as rolling limits).
Submitted 116.117(7) is an illustration
of our concerns. It states that initial
compliance testing with ongoing
compliance by engineering calculations
‘‘may be required.’’ This means that
under the Program, compliance testing
may not be required at all and provides
no guidance for when monitoring will
be required.
Emission units can vary in size and
type or operation, as well as having
widely different regulatory monitoring,
and compliance requirements.
Demonstrating compliance with a cap
covering multiple emission points
requires more detailed information than
point-by-point compliance. To
demonstrate compliance with a unit-byunit emission limit, a source can often
establish a parameter that if not met
indicates the unit is out of compliance.
For example, emissions from an
incinerator may be shown to be in
11 Section 116.117(2) of the submitted Program
provides that emissions will be measured ‘‘as
determined by the executive director.’’ This broad
discretion lacks accountability, replicability and
fails to provide for a full evaluation of the
enforceability of permits issued under the Program.
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compliance if the temperature stays
above a certain level indicating
thorough combustion. Under a cap
program, it is necessary to know the
actual emission rate from each unit so
that the emission unit can be totaled to
show compliance with the cap.
The submitted Program lacks
provisions explicitly addressing the
type of monitoring requirements that are
necessary to ensure that all of the
movement of emissions between the
emission points, units, facilities, plants,
etc., still meet the cap for the pollutant,
still meet the individual emissions
limitations, and still meet any other
applicable state or federal requirement.
In addition, there are no limits on the
types of sources that can be included in
the cap. It is also difficult to quantify
emissions from some units, such as
tanks, fugitive emissions from leaking
valves, or wastewater emissions points
that can be included in a Flexible
Permit under this Program.
Because of the use of the Program to
permit grandfathered facilities in the
past and the continued use for new
construction and modifications, as well
as allowing a meticulous selection of
which facilities and changes to include
in a Flexible Permit, EPA is concerned
with the enforceability of an emissions
cap for each pollutant (combined with
individual emissions limitations or not).
Each pollutant’s cap and individual
emissions limitations may apply to a
very large number of selective emission
sources, with ongoing construction and
modifications being selectively.
Although the submitted Program
requires the same monitoring,
recordkeeping, reporting, and testing
requirements at 30 TAC 116.711(2) and
116.715(c)(4)—(6), as do the SIP rules
codified in Subchapter B of Chapter
116, the underpinnings of the submitted
Program are so complex that EPA
believes that even for a minor NSR SIP
program, there should be more detailed
MRR requirements to ensure that the
emission cap and/or individual
emissions limitations in the issued
Flexible Permits are enforceable.
Without specialized testing,
monitoring, recordkeeping and
reporting requirements, it is difficult for
EPA, Texas or the public to determine
which units are covered by a flexible
permit, which modifications to noncovered units are covered by a flexible
permit, whether a covered unit is
subject to the emission cap or an
individual emission limitation, whether
a unit is subject to both the cap and a
limitation, or whether a cap or a
limitation applies and at what time.
Finally, there are not sufficient
provisions requiring the holder of a
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Flexible Permit to maintain
recordkeeping sufficient to ensure that
all terms and conditions of existing
permits (including representations in
the applications for such permits) that
are incorporated into the Flexible
Permit continue to be met. The
submitted Program lacks adequate
program requirements for the tracking of
existing SIP permits’ major and minor
NSR terms, limits and conditions, and
whether such requirements are
incorporated into a Flexible Permit or
they remain outside the coverage of the
Flexible Permit. Minor and Major NSR
permits, as well as minor NSR SIP
Permits by Rule and Standard Permits,
can be incorporated into a Flexible
Permit without any program
requirement in place that ensures the
SIP permits’ terms and conditions are
included in the Flexible Permit.
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Requirements for
Revision of Existing Major NSR SIP
Permits?
We also are proposing to disapprove
the submitted Program because it would
allow holders of a Flexible Permit to
make de facto amendments of existing
SIP permits, including changes in the
terms and conditions (such as
throughput, fuel type, hours of
operation) of minor and major NSR
permits, without a preconstruction
review by Texas. While we have
recognized that under certain
circumstances changes to PSD permits
may be appropriate, such changes are
generally not allowed without a review
of the new circumstances by the
permitting authority. As EPA has
explained, any time a change to a permit
limit founded in BACT is being
considered, a corresponding
reevaluation (or reopening) of the
original BACT determination may be
necessary. See, ‘‘Request for
Determination on Best Available Control
Technology (BACT) Issues—Ogden
Martin Tulsa Municipal Waste
Incinerator Facility,’’ from Gary
McCutchen, Chief of OAQPS NSR
Section (Nov. 19, 1987).
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the
Minor NSR SIP Public Participation
Requirements?
On November 26, 2008 (73 FR 72001),
EPA proposed limited approval and
limited disapproval of the Chapter 39
public participation rules, including 30
TAC 39.403(b)(8)(A) and (B) for Flexible
Permits. 30 TAC 39.403(b)(8)(A) and (B)
formed a part of the basis for limited
disapproval. We intend to take final
action on the Chapter 39 rules prior to
final action on this submitted Program.
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We also noted in the November 2008
proposal that Texas submitted 30 TAC
116.740—Public Notice. This rule was
submitted November 29, 1994, as part of
the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program under 30 TAC Chapter 116,
Subchapter G. Revisions were submitted
July 22, 1998; and October 25, 1999.
This submitted rule provides that any
person who applies for a Flexible Permit
shall comply with the provisions in
Chapter 39, which relates to Public
Notice. In the November 2008 proposal,
we stated that we were reviewing the
November 29, 1994, and July 22, 1998,
submittals of 30 TAC 116.740 and
would address these in a separate
action. 73 FR 72015. We also indicated
that we were taking no action on 30
TAC 116.740 as submitted October 24,
1999. 74 FR 72006.
In the November 2008 proposal, we
stated that we would address 30 TAC
116.740 in a separate action. Because
this new rule is not severable from the
Texas Flexible Permits State Program,
we are proposing to disapprove the
submitted 30 TAC 116.740.
F. Does the Submitted Program Meet
Section 110(l) of the Act for a Minor
NSR SIP Revision?
Section 110(l) of the Act prohibits
EPA from approving any revision of a
SIP if the revision would interfere with
any applicable requirement concerning
attainment and reasonable further
progress, or any other applicable
requirement of the Act.
The State did not provide any
demonstration showing how the
submitted SIP revision would not
interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress, or any other
CAA requirement.
G. What is EPA’s Summary of Whether
the Submitted Program Meets the
Requirements for a Minor NSR SIP
Revision?
The submitted Program is not clearly
limited to minor NSR and does not
prevent circumvention of the Major NSR
SIP requirements. The submitted
Program does not require that first one
must determine whether a change is
subject to Major NSR and actual
emissions are used as a baseline for
determining whether a change is subject
to Major NSR. It fails to meet the
enforceability requirements as a
program or of an affected entity, and it
cannot assure compliance with the
program or of the affected entity. It is an
extremely complex permitting program
but lacks specialized regulatory
provisions tailoring monitoring, testing,
recordkeeping, and reporting
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requirements specifically to ensure that
compliance can be determined,
enforcement can be taken, and that
triggering of minor (and major) NSR is
easily identified and that the
preconstruction requirements of the Act
are met. The Program lacks
requirements necessary for enforcement
and assurance of compliance. Moreover,
it does not ensure that existing and
future minor NSR SIP permits’ terms
and conditions are retained. The
methodologies for establishing the caps
in the Flexible Permits provide too
much director discretion and lack
replicable procedures. Overall, the
submitted Program fails to include
sufficient enforceable safeguards to
ensure that the NAAQS and control
strategies are protected. Furthermore,
there is no information to determine
whether the submitted Program is as
stringent as the existing Texas minor
NSR SIP, and whether the revisions
would not violate the NAAQS, PSD
increments, the State’s control
strategies, interfere with reasonable
further progress, or otherwise meet any
other requirement of the Act, thus
violating section 110(l) of the Act.
Therefore, we are proposing to find that
the submitted Texas Flexible Permits
State Program does not meet the
requirements for a minor NSR SIP
revision.
VII. Proposed Action
EPA is proposing disapproval of the
Texas Flexible Permits State Program
submitted in a series of SIP revisions,
identified in the Tables in section III of
this preamble. These affected provisions
are addressed in Texas’ November 29,
1994, SIP revision submittal, as revised
by severable portions in the March 13,
1996, SIP revision submittal, and
severable portions of the July 22, 1998,
SIP revision submittal that repealed and
replaced portions of, as well as revised,
the 1994 submittal and repealed and
replaced all of the 1996 submittal; and
as revised by severable portions in the
October 25, 1999, September 11, 2000,
April 12, 2001, September 4, 2002,
October 4, 2002, and September 25,
2003, SIP revision submittals.
EPA is proposing disapproval of the
submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program, as a substitute Major NSR SIP
revision, because it does not meet the
Act and EPA’s regulations and is not
consistent with applicable statutory and
regulatory requirements as interpreted
in EPA guidance and policy. We also are
proposing disapproval of the submitted
Texas Flexible Permits State Program as
a Minor NSR SIP revision because it
does not meet the Act and EPA’s
regulations and is not consistent with
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applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements as interpreted in EPA
guidance and policy.
We will accept comments on this
proposal for the next 60 days. After
review of public comment, we will take
final action on the SIP revision
submittals that are identified herein.
EPA intends to take final action on
the State’s Public Participation SIP
revision submittal in November 2009.
EPA intends to take final action on the
submitted Texas Qualified Facilities
State Program by March 31, 2010, the
submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program by June 30, 2010, and the NSR
SIP by August 31, 2010. These dates are
expected to be mandated under a
Consent Decree (see, Notice of Proposed
Consent Decree and Proposed
Settlement Agreement, 74 FR 38015,
July 30, 2009). Sources are reminded
that they remain subject to the
requirements of the Federally-approved
Texas SIP and subject to potential
enforcement for violations of the SIP
(See EPA’s Revised Guidance on
Enforcement During Pending SIP
Revisions, dated March 1, 1991).
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review
This action is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under the terms of
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and is therefore not
subject to review under the Executive
Order.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., because this
proposed SIP disapproval under section
110 and subchapter I, part D of the
Clean Air Act will not in-and-of itself
create any new information collection
burdens but simply disapproves certain
State requirements for inclusion into the
SIP. Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to conduct
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small not-for-profit enterprises, and
small governmental jurisdictions. For
purposes of assessing the impacts of
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today’s rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small business
as defined by the Small Business
Administration’s (SBA) regulations at 13
CFR 121.201; (2) a small governmental
jurisdiction that is a government of a
city, county, town, school district or
special district with a population of less
than 50,000; and (3) a small
organization that is any not-for-profit
enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
After considering the economic
impacts of today’s proposed rule on
small entities, I certify that this action
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
This rule does not impose any
requirements or create impacts on small
entities. This proposed SIP disapproval
under section 110 and subchapter I, part
D of the Clean Air Act will not in-andof itself create any new requirements
but simply disapproves certain State
requirements for inclusion into the SIP.
Accordingly, it affords no opportunity
for EPA to fashion for small entities less
burdensome compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables or
exemptions from all or part of the rule.
The fact that the Clean Air Act
prescribes that various consequences
(e.g., higher offset requirements) may or
will flow from this disapproval does not
mean that EPA either can or must
conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis
for this action. Therefore, this action
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
We continue to be interested in the
potential impacts of this proposed rule
on small entities and welcome
comments on issues related to such
impacts.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This action contains no Federal
mandates under the provisions of Title
II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 1531–
1538 ‘‘for State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector.’’ EPA
has determined that the proposed
disapproval action does not include a
Federal mandate that may result in
estimated costs of $100 million or more
to either State, local, or tribal
governments in the aggregate, or to the
private sector. This action proposes to
disapprove pre-existing requirements
under State or local law, and imposes
no new requirements. Accordingly, no
additional costs to State, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector,
result from this action.
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E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999), requires EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have
federalism implications’’ is defined in
the Executive Order to include
regulations that have ‘‘substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132, because it
merely disapproves certain State
requirements for inclusion into the SIP
and does not alter the relationship or
the distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean
Air Act. Thus, Executive Order 13132
does not apply to this action.
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination
With Indian Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications, as specified in Executive
Order 13175 (59 FR 22951, November 9,
2000), because the SIP EPA is proposing
to disapprove would not 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. Thus, Executive
Order 13175 does not apply to this
action.
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G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
(62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as
applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under section 5–501 of the Executive
Order has the potential to influence the
regulation. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it is not
an economically significant regulatory
action based on health or safety risks
subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997). This proposed
SIP disapproval under section 110 and
subchapter I, part D of the Clean Air Act
will not in-and-of itself create any new
regulations but simply disapproves
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certain State requirements for inclusion
into the SIP.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This proposed rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355,
May 22, 2001) because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law No.
104–113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272
note) directs EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be
inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications,
test methods, sampling procedures, and
business practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. NTTAA directs EPA
to provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards.
The EPA believes that this action is
not subject to requirements of Section
12(d) of NTTAA because application of
those requirements would be
inconsistent with the Clean Air Act.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629
(Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
EPA lacks the discretionary authority
to address environmental justice in this
proposed action. In reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve or
disapprove state choices, based on the
criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
proposes to disapprove certain State
requirements for inclusion into the SIP
under section 110 and subchapter I, part
D of the Clean Air Act and will not inand-of itself create any new
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48495
requirements. Accordingly, it 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.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: September 8, 2009.
Lawrence E. Starfield,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
[FR Doc. E9–22808 Filed 9–22–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2009–0188; FRL–8960–6]
Determination of Attainment of the
1997 8-Hour Ozone Standard for
Imperial County, CA
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: The EPA is proposing to
determine that the Imperial County,
California moderate 8-hour ozone
nonattainment area has attained the
1997 8-hour National Ambient Air
Quality Standard (NAAQS) for ozone.
The State of California has requested
this determination, which is based upon
three years of certified ambient air
monitoring data that show the area has
monitored attainment of the 8-hour
ozone NAAQS since the 2006–2008
monitoring period. If this proposed
determination is made final, the
requirements for the State to submit
certain reasonable further progress
requirements, an attainment
demonstration, contingency measures
and other planning requirements of the
Clean Air Act related to attainment of
the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS shall be
suspended for so long as the area
continues to attain the 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 23, 2009. Public
comments on this action are requested
and will be considered before taking
final action.
E:\FR\FM\23SEP1.SGM
23SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 183 (Wednesday, September 23, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 48480-48495]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-22808]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2005-TX-0032; FRL-8958-6]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Texas;
Revisions to the New Source Review (NSR) State Implementation Plan
(SIP); Flexible Permits
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing disapproval of submittals from the State of
Texas, through the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to
revise the Texas SIP to include a new type of NSR permitting program,
Flexible Permits (the Texas Flexible Permits State Program or the
Program). EPA proposes disapproval of the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program because it does not meet the Minor NSR SIP requirements nor
does it meet the NSR SIP requirements for a substitute Major NSR SIP
revision. We are proposing action under section 110, part C, and part
D, of the Federal Clean Air Act (the Act or CAA). EPA is taking
comments on this proposal and intends to take a final action.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by November 23, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R06-
OAR-2005-TX-0032 by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
U.S. EPA Region 6 ``Contact Us'' Web site: https://epa.gov/region6/r6coment.htm. Please click on ``6PD'' (Multimedia) and select
``Air'' before submitting comments.
E-mail: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell at
spruiell.stanley@epa.gov.
Fax: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell, Air Permits Section (6PD-R),
at fax number 214-665-7263.
Mail: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell, Air Permits Section (6PD-
R), Environmental Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200,
Dallas, Texas 75202-2733.
Hand or Courier Delivery: Stanley M. Spruiell, Air Permits
Section (6PD-R), Environmental Protection Agency,
[[Page 48481]]
1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200, Dallas, Texas 75202-2733. Such deliveries
are accepted only between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays
except for legal holidays. Special arrangements should be made for
deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-
2005-TX-0032. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be
included in the public docket without change and may be made available
online at https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided, unless the comment includes information claimed
to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit information
that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through https://www.regulations.gov or e-mail. The https://www.regulations.gov Web site
is an ``anonymous access'' system, which means EPA will not know your
identity or contact information unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send an e-mail comment directly to EPA without
going through https://www.regulations.gov your e-mail address will be
automatically captured and included as part of the comment that is
placed in the public docket and made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends that you include your name
and other contact information in the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA
may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form of encryption, and be free of
any defects or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the https://www.regulations.gov index. 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, will be publicly available only in hard copy.
Publicly available docket materials are available either electronically
in https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the Air Permits
Section (6PD-R), 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.
The State submittals, which are also part of the EPA docket, are
also available for public inspection at the State Air Agency 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: Mr. Stanley M. Spruiell, Air Permits
Section (6PD-R), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross
Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-2733, telephone (214) 665-7212;
fax number (214) 665-7263; e-mail address spruiell.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, the following
terms have the meanings described below:
``We,'' ``us,'' and ``our'' refer to EPA.
``Act'' and ``CAA'' mean the Clean Air Act.
``40 CFR'' means Title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations--Protection of the Environment.
``SIP'' means State Implementation Plan established under
section 110 of the Act.
``NSR'' means new source review, a phrase intended to
encompass the statutory and regulatory programs that regulate the
construction and modification of stationary sources as provided under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(C), CAA Title I, parts C and D, and 40 CFR 51.160
through 51.166.
``Minor NSR'' means NSR established under section 110 of
the Act and 40 CFR 51.160.
``NNSR'' means nonattainment NSR established under Title
I, section 110 and part D of the Act and 40 CFR 51.165.
``PSD'' means prevention of significant deterioration of
air quality established under Title I, section 110 and part C of the
Act and 40 CFR 51.166.
``Major NSR'' means any new or modified source that is
subject to NNSR and/or PSD.
``Program'' means the SIP revision submittals from the
TCEQ concerning the Texas Flexible Permits State Program.
``TSD'' means the Technical Support Document for this
action.
``NAAQS'' means any national ambient air quality standard
established under 40 CFR part 50.
Table of Contents
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing?
II. What Are the Other Relevant Proposed Actions on the Texas
Permitting SIP Revision Submittals?
III. What Has the State Submitted?
IV. Is the Texas Flexible Permits State Program a Submittal for a
Major or Minor NSR SIP Revision?
A. Description of the Submitted Program
B. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
V. What Is EPA's Evaluation of the Submitted Texas Flexible Permits
State Program as a Substitute Major NSR SIP Revision?
A. What Are the Requirements for EPA's Review of a Submitted
Major NSR SIP Revision?
B. Does the Submitted Program Prohibit Circumvention of Major
NSR?
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Major NSR SIP
Requirements for Applicability Determinations?
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the CAA and Major NSR
Applicability Determination Criteria?
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Major NSR SIP
Requirements for Enforceability?
F. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Major NSR SIP Public
Participation Requirements?
G. Does the Submitted Program Meet Section 110(l) of the Act for
a Major NSR SIP Revision?
H. What Is EPA Summary of Whether the Submitted Program Meets
the Requirements for a Substitute Major NSR SIP Program?
VI. What Is EPA's Evaluation of the Submitted Texas Flexible Permits
State Program as a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
A. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
B. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Minor NSR SIP
Requirements for Establishing the Emissions Cap?
C. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Minor NSR SIP Enforcement
Requirements?
D. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Minor NSR SIP
Requirements for Revision of Existing Major NSR Permits?
E. Does the Submitted Program Meet the Minor NSR SIP Public
Participation Requirements?
F. Does the Submitted Program Meet Section 110(l) of the Act for
a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
G. What Is EPA Summary of Whether the Submitted Program Meets
the Requirements for a Minor NSR SIP Program?
VII. Proposed Action
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What Action Is EPA Proposing?
We are proposing to disapprove the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program, as
[[Page 48482]]
submitted by Texas in Title 30 of the Texas Administrative Code (30
TAC) at 30 TAC Chapter 116--Control of Air Pollution by Permits for New
Construction or Modification, because it does not meet certain
provisions of the Act and EPA's NSR regulations. This includes the
following regulations under Chapter 116: 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3), 30 TAC
Subchapter G--Flexible Permits, the definitions in 30 TAC 116.13,
Flexible Permits, and the definition in 30 TAC 116.10(11)(F) of
``modification of existing facility.'' It is EPA's position that none
of these identified elements is severable from each other.
We are proposing to disapprove the submitted Texas Flexible Permits
State Program as not meeting the requirements for a substitute Major
NSR SIP revision. Our grounds for proposing disapproval as a substitute
Major NSR SIP revision include the following:
It is not clearly limited to Minor NSR thereby allowing
new major stationary sources to construct without a Major NSR permit;
It has no regulatory provisions clearly prohibiting the
use of this Program from circumventing the Major NSR SIP requirements
thereby allowing sources to use a Flexible Permit to avoid the
requirement to obtain preconstruction permit authorizations for
projects that would otherwise require a Major NSR preconstruction
permit;
It does not require that first an applicability
determination be made whether the construction or modification is
subject to Major NSR thereby exempting new major stationary sources and
major modifications from the EPA Major NSR SIP requirements;
It does not include a demonstration from the TCEQ showing
how the use of ``modification'' is at least as stringent as the
definition of ``modification'' in the EPA Major NSR SIP program;
It does not include the requirement to make Major NSR
applicability determinations based on actual emissions and on emissions
increases and decreases (netting) that occur within a major stationary
source;
It fails to meet the statutory and regulatory requirements
for a SIP revision;
It is not consistent with applicable statutory and
regulatory requirements as interpreted in EPA policy and guidance on
SIP revisions; and
It fails to include, among other things, adequate
accountability provisions, compliance determination procedures,
replicable implementation procedures, sufficient monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements so that issued permits
incorporate emission limitations and other requirements of the Texas
SIP that ensure protection of the national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS), and noninterference with the Texas SIP control
strategies and reasonable further progress (RFP).
We are proposing to disapprove the submitted Program as not meeting
the Minor NSR SIP requirements. It is not clearly limited to Minor NSR.
It has no regulatory provisions clearly prohibiting the use of this
Program from circumventing the Major NSR SIP requirements. This Program
does not require that first an applicability determination be made
whether the construction or modification is subject to Major NSR. The
Program does not ensure that a Major NSR permit's requirements are
retained.
In addition to the failures to protect Major NSR SIP requirements,
EPA cannot find that the submitted Program, as a Minor NSR SIP program,
will ensure protection of the NAAQS, and noninterference with the Texas
SIP control strategies and RFP. We are proposing to disapprove this
Program as a Minor NSR SIP revision because it does not meet certain
provisions of the Act and EPA's Minor NSR SIP requirements. Our grounds
for proposing disapproval as a Minor NSR SIP revision include the
following:
It is not clearly limited to Minor NSR thereby allowing
new major stationary sources to construct without a Major NSR permit;
It has no regulatory provisions clearly prohibiting the
use of this Program from circumventing the Major NSR SIP requirements
thereby allowing sources to use a Flexible Permit to avoid the
requirement to obtain preconstruction permit authorizations for
projects that would otherwise require a Major NSR preconstruction
permit;
It does not require that first an applicability
determination be made whether the construction or modification is
subject to Major NSR thereby exempting new major stationary sources and
major modifications from the EPA Major NSR SIP requirements;
It fails to meet the statutory and regulatory requirements
for a SIP revision;
It is not consistent with applicable statutory and
regulatory requirements as interpreted in EPA policy and guidance on
SIP revisions;
It lacks replicable, specific, established implementation
procedures for establishing the emission cap in a Minor NSR Flexible
Permit;
It is not an enforceable Minor NSR permitting program;
It allows the issuance of Flexible Permits that do not
incorporate emission limitations and other requirements of the Texas
SIP; and
It lacks the necessary more specialized monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting (MRR) requirements required for this type
of Minor NSR program, as selected by Texas, to ensure accountability
and provide a means to determine compliance.
We have evaluated the submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program, submitted in a series of packages dating back to 1994. Based
upon our evaluation, EPA has concluded that the portions of the
submitted SIP revisions specifically applicable to the Program do not
meet the requirements of the Act and 40 CFR part 51. All these portions
of the submittals for the Program are not severable and therefore are
not approvable. As authorized in sections 110(k)(3) and 301(a) of the
Act, where portions of the State submittals are severable, EPA may
approve the portions of the submittals that meet the requirements of
the Act, take no action on certain portions of the submittals, and
disapprove the portions of the submittals that do not meet the
requirements of the Act. When the deficient provisions are not
severable from all of the submitted provisions, EPA must propose
disapproval of the submittals, consistent with sections 301(a) and
110(k)(3) of the Act. The submitted provisions work together to form
the Texas Flexible Permits State Program and are not severable from
each other. Therefore, EPA is proposing disapproval of the submitted
Program.
Under section 179(a) of the CAA, final disapproval of a submittal
that addresses a mandatory requirement of the Act starts a sanctions
clock and a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) clock. The provisions in
these submittals relating to the Texas Flexible Permits State Program
were not submitted to meet a mandatory requirement of the Act.
Therefore, if EPA takes final action to disapprove this submitted
Program, no sanctions and FIP clocks will be triggered.
II. What Are the Other Relevant Proposed Actions on the Texas
Permitting SIP Revision Submittals?
This proposed action should be read in conjunction with two other
proposed actions appearing elsewhere in today's Federal Register, (1)
proposed action on the Texas NSR SIP, including PSD, NNSR for the 1997
8-Hour Ozone Standard, NSR Reform, and a Minor NSR Standard Permit (NSR
SIP), and (2)
[[Page 48483]]
proposed action on the Texas NSR SIP, the Qualified Facilities Program
and the General Definitions.\1\ On November 26, 2008, EPA proposed
limited approval/limited disapproval of the Texas submittals relating
to public participation for air permits of new and modified facilities
(73 FR 72001). EPA believes these actions should be read in conjunction
with each other because the permits issued under these State programs
are the vehicles for regulating a significant universe of the air
emissions from sources in Texas and thus directly impact the ability of
the State to achieve and maintain attainment of the NAAQS and to
protect the health of the communities where these sources are located.
Our proposal is based upon our interpretation of the Texas
preconstruction permitting program which is outlined in each notice and
accompanying technical support document (TSD). Those interested in any
one of these actions are encouraged to review and comment on the other
proposed actions as well.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In that proposed action, the submitted definition of BACT is
not severable from the proposed action on the PSD SIP revision
submittals. EPA may choose to take final action on the definition of
BACT in the NSR SIP final action rather than in the final action on
the Qualified Facilities and the General Definitions. EPA is
obligated to take final action on the submitted definitions in the
General Definitions for those identified as part of the Texas
Qualified Facilities State Program, the Texas Flexible Permits State
Program, Public Participation, Permit Renewals (there will be a
proposed action published at a later date), and this BACT definition
as part of the NSR SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA intends to take final action on the State's Public
Participation SIP revision submittals in November 2009. EPA intends to
take final action on the submitted Texas Qualified Facilities State
Program by March 31, 2010, the submitted Texas Flexible Permits State
Program by June 30, 2010, and the NSR SIP on August 31, 2010. These
dates are expected to be mandated under a Consent Decree (see, Notice
of Proposed Consent Decree and Proposed Settlement Agreement, 74 FR
38015, July 30, 2009).
III. What Has the State Submitted?
This notice provides a summary of our evaluation of Texas' November
29, 1994 SIP revision submittal, as revised by severable portions in
the March 13, 1996, SIP revision submittal, and severable portions of
the July 22, 1998 SIP revision submittal that repealed and replaced
portions of, as well as revised, the 1994 submittal and repealed and
replaced all of the 1996 submittal; and as revised by severable
portions in the October 25, 1999, September 11, 2000, April 12, 2001,
September 4, 2002, October 4, 2002, and September 25, 2003, SIP
revision submittals. We provide our reasoning in general terms in this
preamble, but provide a more detailed analysis in the TSD that has been
prepared for this proposed rulemaking. Because we are proposing to
disapprove this submitted Program based on the inconsistencies and
deficiencies discussed herein, we have not attempted to review and
discuss all of the issues that would need to be addressed for approval
of this submitted Program as a Major NSR SIP revision.
On November 29, 1994, Texas submitted revisions adding a new
Subchapter G--Flexible Permits, to 30 TAC Chapter 116--Control of Air
Pollution by Permits for New Construction or Modification, adding a new
30 TAC 116.13, Flexible Permit Definitions, to Subchapter A,
Definitions, and a revision to Subchapter B, New Source Review Permits,
Division 1, Permit Applications at 30 TAC 116.110(a), authorizing the
use of a Flexible Permit for construction of any new facility and
modification of any existing facility. Texas submitted on March 13,
1996, a severable revision to Subchapter A, Definitions, in 30 TAC
116.10, General Definitions, which included, among other things, a
definition for ``modification of existing facility,'' at (F) in 30 TAC
116.10 addressing modifications under Flexible Permits. On July 22,
1998, Texas submitted severable revisions that included the repeal of
the contents of the 1996 submittal and some of the contents of the 1994
submittal. Among other things, the 1998 submittal included a new 30 TAC
116.13, Flexible Permit Definitions, a new 30 TAC 116.10, General
Definitions, ``modification of existing facility,'' at (9)(F), and a
new 30 TAC 116.110 (a). In the September 4, 2002, SIP submittal, Texas
submitted a redesignation of 30 TAC 116.10(9)(F) to 30 TAC
116.10(11)(F). Texas submitted revisions to Subchapter G--Flexible
Permits--in a severable portion of the July 22, 1998 SIP revision
submittal, and more revisions to Subchapter G in SIP revision
submittals on October 25, 1999; September 11, 2000; April 12, 2001;
September 4, 2002; October 4, 2002; and September 25, 2003.
Tables 1 and 2 below summarize the changes that are in the SIP
revision submittals. A summary of EPA's evaluation of each section and
the basis for this proposal is discussed in sections V, VI, and VII of
this preamble. The TSD includes a detailed evaluation of the
submittals.
Table 1--Summary of Each SIP Submittal That Is Affected by This Action
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date submitted Date of state
Title of SIP submittal to EPA adoption Regulations affected
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Flexible Permits........................... 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Revision to 30 TAC 116.110.
Adoption of New 30 TAC 116.13 and
New Subchapter G, 30 TAC 116.710,
116.711, 116.714, 116.715,
116.716, 116.717, 116.718,
116.720, 116.721, 116.722,
115.730, 116.740, 116.750, and
116.760.
Qualified Facilities and Modifications to 3/13/1996 2/14/1996 Revision of 30 TAC 116.10 to add
Existing Facilities. new definition of ``modification
of existing facility'' at (F).
NSR Rule Revisions; section 112(g) Rule 7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Repeal and new 30 TAC 116.10 (9)
Review for Chapter 116. (F), 116.13 and 116.110(a)(3)
adopted.
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.710, 116.711, 116.714,
116.715, 116.721, 116.730, and
116.750.
Public Participation (HB 801).............. 10/25/1999 9/2/1999 Revision to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.740.
Air Permits (SB-766)--Phase II............. 9/11/2000 8/9/2000 Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.710, 116.715, 116.721,
116.722, and 116.750.
Emissions Banking and Trading.............. 4/12/2001 3/7/2001 Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.711 and 116.715.
House Bill 3040: Shipyard Facilities and 9/4/2002 8/21/2002 Revision to 30 TAC 116.10,
NSR Maintenance Emissions. redesignating 30 TAC 116.10(9)(F)
to 116.10(11)(F).
Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.711 and 116.715.
Air Fees................................... 10/4/2002 9/25/2002 Revisions to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
116.750.
[[Page 48484]]
Offset Certification, New Source Review 9/25/2003 8/20/2003 Revision to Subchapter G, 30 TAC
Permitting Processes and Extensions for 116.715.
Construction.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2--Summary of Each Regulation That Is Affected by This Action
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date adopted
Section Title Date submitted by state Comments
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chapter 116--Control of Air Pollution by Permits for New Construction or Modification
Subchapter A--Definitions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 116.10(11)(F)............ General Definitions 3/13/1996 2/14/1996 Revised to add new
definition of
``modification of
existing facility.''
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Repealed and Adopted new
30 TAC 116.10(9)(F).
9/04/2002 8/21/2002 Redesignated 30 TAC
116.10(11(F).
Section 116.13................... Flexible Permit 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial Adoption.
Definitions.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Repealed and Adopted new
30 TAC 116.13.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subchapter B--New Source Review Permits
Division 1--Permit Application
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 116.110.................. Applicability...... 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Revised (a) to add
reference to Flexible
Permits.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Repealed and adopted a
new 30 TAC 116.110.
Included reference to
Flexible Permits in new
30 TAC 116.110(a)(3).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subchapter G--Flexible Permits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 116.710.................. Applicability...... 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised subsection (a).
.............. .............. Removed subsection (b)
and
.............. .............. Redesignated existing
subsections (c)-(e) to
subsections (b)-(d).
.............. .............. Revised subsections (b)-
(d) as redesignated.
9/11/2000 8/09/2000 Revised subsection (b).
Section 116.711.................. Flexible Permit 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Application.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised introductory
paragraph and
paragraphs (1)-(5);
.............. .............. Added new paragraphs (6)
and (11):
.............. .............. Redesignated existing
paragraphs (6)-(9) to
paragraphs (7)-(10) and
existing paragraphs
(10)-(11) to paragraphs
(12)-(13); and
.............. .............. Revised paragraphs (8)-
(10) as redesignated.
4/12/2001 3/07/2001 Added new paragraph
(12); and
Redesignated existing
paragraphs (12)-(13) to
paragraphs (13)-(14).
9/4/2002 8/21/2002 Designated existing as
subsection (a);
Added new subsection
(b); and
Revised paragraphs
(a)(8)-(11) as
redesignated.
Section 116.714.................. Application Review 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Schedule.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised introductory
paragraph.
Section 116.715.................. General and Special 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Conditions.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised subsection (a),
and paragraphs (c)(3)-
(6), and (9)-(10).
9/11/2000 8/9/2000 Revised subsection (a).
4/12/2001 3/7/2001 Revised paragraph
(c)(3).
9/4/2002 8/21/2002 Revised paragraph
(c)(9).
9/25/2003 8/20/2003 Revised paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(9).
Section 116.716.................. Emission Caps and 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Individual
Limitations.
Section 116.717.................. Implementation 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Schedule for
Addition Controls.
Section 116.718.................. Significant 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Emission Increase.
Section 116.720.................. Limitation on 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Physical and
Operational
Changes.
[[Page 48485]]
Section 116.721.................. Amendments and 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Alterations.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised paragraphs
(b)(2) and (d)(1)-(2).
9/11/2000 8/9/2000 Revised subsection (d)
and paragraph (d)(1).
Section 116.722.................. Distance 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Limitations.
9/11/2000 8/9/2000 Revised introductory
paragraph.
Section 116.730.................. Compliance History. 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised introductory
paragraph.
Section 116.740.................. Public Notice and 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Comment.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Designated existing text
as subsection (a); and
Added new subsection
(b).
10/25/1999 9/2/1999 Revised subsections (a)-
(b).
Section 116.750.................. Flexible Permit Fee 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
7/22/1998 6/17/1998 Revised subsections (b)-
(d).
9/11/2000 8/9/2000 Revised subsection (d).
10/4/2002 9/25/2002 Revised subsections (b)-
(c).
Section 116.760.................. Flexible Permit 11/29/1994 11/16/1994 Initial adoption.
Renewal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Is the Texas Flexible Permits State Program Submittal for a Major
or Minor NSR SIP Revision?
A. Description of the Submitted Program
This part of today's action describes the Program submitted by
Texas to EPA for approval into the State's SIP. The submitted Program
adds a new permit option under State law for any person who plans to
construct any new facility or to engage in the modification of any
existing facility, which may emit air contaminants into the air. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3). Under the program submitted by Texas,
any person planning the construction of a new facility or a
modification to an existing facility may satisfy the conditions of 30
TAC Subchapter G--Flexible Permits, rather than obtaining a NSR SIP
case-by-case permit or satisfying the conditions for a minor NSR SIP
Standard Permit or Permit by Rule.\2\ See submitted 30 TAC
116.110(a)(3). The submitted Program is one component of Texas' current
preconstruction permit program, but the Program is not a part of the
federally approved Texas SIP.
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\2\ The Texas NSR SIP provides for three types of NSR permits
for construction of new minor sources and for minor modifications of
existing major stationary sources and minor sources: A case-by-case
minor NSR SIP permit (30 TAC 116.110(a)(1)), satisfying the
conditions for a minor NSR SIP standard permit (30 TAC
116.110(a)(2)), and satisfying the conditions for a minor NSR SIP
permit by rule (30 TAC 116.110(a)(4)). There are two types of
permits available for minor modifications to existing permitted
major stationary sources and minor facilities, a case-by-case minor
NSR SIP permit amendment (30 TAC 116.110(b)) and 30 TAC 116.116(b))
and a minor NSR SIP permit by rule (30 TAC 116.116(d)). A case-by-
case minor NSR SIP permit alteration (30 TAC 116.116(c)) or a minor
NSR SIP permit by rule (30 TAC 116.116(d)) are allowed for changes
among which includes a decrease in allowable emissions. See SIP rule
30 TAC 116.116(c)(1)(A) -(B) for the changes that may be authorized
by a minor NSR SIP permit amendment/minor NSR SIP permit by rule.
The SIP requires that any issued permit is subject for review every
ten years after the date of issuance. See 30 TAC 116.311(c).
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Under the submitted Program, a Flexible Permit allows for
flexibility in managing operations by staying under an overall emission
cap or individual unit specific emission limitation. 30 TAC 116.716.
Texas adopted the use of Flexible Permits for construction of new
facilities, modifications of existing facilities, and grandfathered
facilities.\3\ When Texas adopted its Program in 1994, the State did
not have the statutory authority to impose controls on or require
permits for grandfathered facilities. In particular, the State expected
this new Program to provide a mechanism for placing controls on
grandfathered refinery and petrochemical sites. The Program did result
in grandfathered facilities voluntarily imposing emission controls and
limiting their emissions using a Flexible Permit. However, the current
regulatory structure does not fit neatly within the parameters of the
Texas minor NSR SIP and the Texas major NSR SIP or within the Federal
minor or major NSR SIP requirements.
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\3\ Grandfathered facilities are facilities that were once
exempt from most State air permitting requirements because the
facilities predated the 1971 Texas Clean Air Act that required
preconstruction review and operating permits for construction of any
new source and modification of any existing source that may emit air
contaminants into the atmosphere of the State.
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The following discussion provides a summary of some of the specific
components of Texas' Flexible Permits State Program. For more
information about the Program, please see the SIP revisions submitted
by Texas and the TSD for this proposed action, which are available in
the docket for this action.
Pursuant to the submitted Program, only one Flexible Permit may be
issued at an account site.\4\ See submitted 30 TAC 116.710(a)(1).
Therefore, a Flexible Permit cannot cover sources at more than one
account site. See submitted 30 TAC 116.710(a)(4). A person may qualify
for a Flexible Permit for construction of a new facility \5\ at the
account site. 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3) and 30 TAC 116.710(a)(1). A person
may qualify for a Flexible Permit for a modification of an existing
facility at the account site. 30 TAC 116.110(a)(3) and 116.710(a)(1).
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\4\ ``Account'' for NSR purposes is defined at 30 TAC 101.1(1),
second sentence, as ``any combination of sources under common
ownership or control and located on one or more contiguous
properties, or properties contiguous except for intervening roads,
railroads, rights-of-way, waterways, or similar divisions.'' This
definition is approved as part of the Texas SIP (March 30, 2005 (70
FR 16129)).
\5\ ``Facility'' is defined in the SIP approved 30 TAC 116.10(6)
as ``a discrete or identifiable structure, device, item, equipment,
or enclosure that constitutes or contains a stationary source,
including appurtenances other than emission control equipment.''
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If a person has a Flexible Permit and wishes to make a change, he
can obtain a minor or major NSR SIP case-by-case permit amendment
(codified in the SIP at 30 TAC 116.116(b)) or qualify for a Flexible
Permit amendment. See submitted 30 TAC 116.710(a)(2). In lieu of either
of these two options, the holder of the Flexible Permit making the
change may qualify for a minor NSR SIP permit by rule, codified in the
SIP at 30 TAC 116.116(d).
[[Page 48486]]
If a person does not have a Flexible Permit and wishes to make a
change but have only the change covered under a Flexible Permit, he can
obtain a minor or major NSR SIP case-by-case permit amendment or
qualify for a Flexible Permit. In lieu of either of these two options,
he may qualify for a minor NSR SIP permit by rule.
If the holder of a Flexible Permit wishes to construct a new
facility, he may qualify for a Flexible Permit amendment. See submitted
30 TAC 116.710(a)(3). This is analogous to the minor and major NSR SIP
process of using a minor NSR SIP Permit by Rule or a minor NSR SIP
permit, for authorization to construct a new facility on the site. See
footnote 1 for further explanation.
Under the approved Texas NSR SIP, a change to an existing facility
is defined as one that would cause a change in the method of control of
emissions; a change in the character of the emissions; or an increase
in the emission rate of any air contaminant. 30 TAC 116.116(b)(1). Such
a change is required under the SIP to be authorized under a minor or
major NSR SIP permit amendment or a minor NSR SIP permit by rule. 30
TAC 116.116(b) and (d). If the change is a decrease in allowable
emissions; or any change from a representation in an application,
general condition, or special condition in a permit that does not cause
a change in the method of control of emissions; a change in the
character of emissions; or an increase in the emission rate of any air
contaminant (30 TAC 116.116(c)(1)), the change must be authorized by a
minor or major NSR SIP permit alteration or a minor NSR SIP permit by
rule. 30 TAC 116.116(c) and (d). The submitted Program at 30 TAC
116.721(a) has the same first two definitions for a change to an
existing facility: one that would cause a change in the method of
control of emissions; a change in the character of the emissions. It,
however, has a different definition for the third type of change.
Rather than the change being ``an increase in the emission rate,'' it
is a change that is a ``significant increase in emissions.'' Submitted
30 TAC 116.718 defines a ``significant increase in emissions.'' First,
the increase in emissions must come from a facility with a Flexible
Permit and second, there is no significant increase if the increase
does not exceed either the emission cap or individual emission
limitation.
The submitted Subchapter G establishes an aggregated emission
limit, based upon the application of minor NSR SIP BACT \6\ at expected
maximum capacity (or the application of a more stringent required
control) for each covered facility, i.e., an emission cap. The cap for
a specific criteria pollutant includes each covered facility with its
individually calculated emission rates. The total sum of the covered
facilities' calculated emission rates is the emission cap. In other
words, the emission cap is a limit on the potential to emit (PTE).
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\6\ Texas adopted a revised NSR State rule on July 27, 1972, to
add the requirement that a proposed new facility and proposed
modification utilize at least best available control technology
(BACT), with consideration to the technical practicability and
economical reasonableness of reducing or eliminating the emissions
from the facility. EPA approved the revised 603.16 into the Texas
SIP, presently codified in the Texas SIP at 30 TAC 116.111(a)(2)(C).
For more information, please see the Federal Register published
today concerning the Texas Qualified Facilities State Program and
the General Definitions. The Federal definition for PSD BACT is part
of the Texas SIP as codified in the SIP at 30 TAC 116.160(a). (This
current SIP rule citation was adopted by the State on October 10,
2001, and EPA approved this recodified SIP rule citation on July 22,
2004 (69 FR 43752).) EPA approved the Texas PSD program SIP revision
submittals, including the State's incorporation by reference of the
Federal definition of BACT, in 1992. See proposal and final approval
of the Texas PSD SIP at 54 FR 52823 (December 22, 1989) and 57 FR
28093 (June 24, 1992). EPA specifically found that the SIP BACT
requirement (now codified in the Texas SIP at 30 TAC
116.111(a)(2)(C)) did not meet the Federal PSD BACT definition. To
meet the PSD SIP Federal requirements, Texas chose to incorporate by
reference, the Federal PSD BACT definition, and submit it for
approval by EPA as part of the Texas PSD SIP. Upon EPA's approval of
the Texas PSD SIP submittals, both EPA and Texas interpreted the SIP
BACT provision now codified in the SIP at 30 TAC 116.111(a)(2)(C) as
being a minor NSR SIP requirement for minor NSR permits.
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An emission cap established in a Flexible Permit enables the holder
to operate facilities with less technical and administrative effort
than would be required under the minor and major NSR SIP Permits, minor
NSR SIP Standard Permits, and minor NSR SIP Permits by Rule, which
impose unit-specific mass emission limits. See submitted 30 TAC
116.716. Under the submitted 30 TAC 116.716(a), Texas may establish an
emission cap for a specific pollutant by calculating the total
emissions for all of the facilities covered by a Flexible Permit, using
the application of minor NSR SIP BACT at expected maximum capacity for
each covered facility. Nevertheless, where the existing control for a
facility is more stringent than the application of minor NSR SIP BACT,
e.g., NSPS, NESHAPS, control strategy rule, then that level of control
for that facility is used in the calculation methodologies. See
submitted 30 TAC 116.715(c)(9) and (10). Alternatively, Texas will set
an individual emission limitation in the same Flexible Permit for each
pollutant not covered by an emission cap for the covered facilities.
See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(b). In some cases, a single unit may be
required by a state or federal rule to meet an emissions limitation,
which does not allow flexibility under the cap. In these cases,
individual emission limitations are set. See submitted 30 TAC
116.716(b), second sentence. Moreover, in the calculation methodologies
for the cap and the individual emission limitations, an ``Insignificant
Emissions Factor'' (of up to nine percent) may be included in the
summation. See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(d).
Under the submitted Program, a pollutant's cap must be readjusted
downward if one of the facilities under the Flexible Permit shuts down
for longer than 12 months. See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(c), first
sentence. If a new facility is brought into the Flexible Permit, the
cap must be readjusted to accommodate its calculated emission rates.
See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(c), second sentence. The cap must be
readjusted downward for any facility covered by a Flexible Permit if
that facility becomes subject to any new State or Federal regulation.
See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(e), first sentence. A readjustment of the
cap required by any new State or Federal regulation must be made either
at the time the Flexible Permit is amended or altered. 30 TAC
116.716(e), second sentence. If an amendment to a Flexible Permit is
not required to meet the new regulation, the permittee must submit a
request for a permit alteration within sixty days of making the change,
describing how compliance with the new requirement will be
demonstrated. See submitted 30 TAC 116.716(e), third sentence.
Under submitted 30 TAC 116.717, a Flexible Permit may include an
implementation schedule for the installation of additional controls to
meet an emissions cap for a pollutant. Submitted 30 TAC 116.715(c)(8)
provides that if a schedule to install additional controls is included
in the Flexible Permit and a facility subject to such a schedule is
taken out of service, the emission cap contained in the Flexible Permit
will be readjusted downward for the period the unit is out of service.
Unless a special provision in the Flexible Permit specifies the method
of readjustment of the emission cap, the facility must obtain a permit
amendment.
B. Is the Submitted Program Clearly a Minor NSR SIP Revision?
Our evaluation of Texas' submitted SIP revisions is guided by
whether the
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submitted Flexible Permits State Program applies to major NSR or minor
NSR, or both. In correspondence and other materials, Texas has
expressed an intent that its submitted Flexible Permits State Program
applies only to construction of minor sources, existing grandfathered
sources, and to minor modifications. See e.g., 19 Tex. Reg. 7336
(September 20, 1994), 19 Tex. Reg 9366 (November 25, 1994), the Texas
Clean Air Act (TCAA) Section 382.003(9), introductory paragraph and
(A)-(G), January 2001 ``Flexible Permit Application Guidance'' by the
Air Permits Division of the TCEQ (see in particular, NOTE on page 4),
Interoffice Memorandum dated December 31, 1998, from Victoria Hsu,
P.E., Division Director, NSR Permits, to New Source Review (NSR) Permit
Engineers, entitled ``Flexible Permits and the Plantwide Applicability
Limit (PAL)'' (see in particular the last paragraph in ``Federal
Enforceability Policy for Flexible Permits'', immediately preceding
``Plantwide Applicability Limit (PAL),'' and Interoffice Memorandum
dated March 17, 1999, from Johnny Vermillion, P.E., Technical
Specialist, NSRPD Chemical Section and David Howell, P.E., Team Leader,
NSRPD Core Section to NSRPD Permit Engineers, entitled ``Permit
Renewals during Flexible Permit Reviews'' (see in particular the first
sentence in the second paragraph). We find, however, that Texas State
law and the regulatory text submitted by the State is inconsistent with
this expressed intent.
The Texas statutory definition for ``modification of existing
facility'' at Section 382.003, Health and Safety Code, was revised by
the legislature in 1995 to add, among other things, subsection (F)
addressing modification of an existing facility through a Flexible
Permit. It provides that increases in emissions are not modifications
if they are authorized by a Flexible Permit. This statutory definition
for ``modification of existing facility'' on its face, however, does
not prohibit the use of a Flexible Permit for a major modification as
defined by the CAA and EPA's major NSR SIP regulations. It has never
been explicitly revised to prohibit major modifications. Furthermore,
in contrast to the statutory prohibition against the use of a Permit by
Rule for the construction of a major stationary source added in 1999,
there are no statutory prohibitions against the use of a Flexible
Permit for construction of a major stationary source. See TCAA section
382.05196. Finally, Texas State law does not contain any explicit
prohibition against using a Flexible Permit for major modifications,
notwithstanding provisions prohibiting the use of an Exemption or
Permit by Rule or a Standard Permit for major modifications, as added
in 1999. See TCAA Section 382.057. There are no statutory provisions in
the TCAA that clearly limit modifications under the submitted Program
to minor sources and/or minor modifications and construction of new
sources to minor sources and/or minor modifications.
Similarly, the regulatory provisions submitted by Texas also do not
prohibit the use of the submitted Program for construction of new major
stationary sources and major modifications of existing major stationary
sources and minor sources. The submitted rules do not limit the use of
the submitted Program to minor NSR. For example, the title for the
submitted Subchapter G is ``Flexible Permits,'' not ``Minor NSR
Flexible Permits, and Flexible Permits for Grandfathered Facilities.''
The submitted Subchapter G does not contain any emissions limitations,
applicability statement, or regulatory provision restricting the
construction to minor sources and minor modifications as do the Texas
minor NSR SIP rules for Permits by Rule in Chapter 106 and Standard
Permits in Chapter 116, Subchapter F. Moreover, unlike the minor NSR
SIP rules for Standard Permits in 30 TAC 116.610(b) and Permits by Rule
in 30 TAC 106.4(a)(3) and (4), the submitted rules do not require that
construction of a major stationary source or a major modification, as
defined in the Major NSR SIP regulations, must meet the Major NSR
permitting requirements.
If Texas truly intends for the submitted Flexible Permits State
Program to apply only to minor NSR, at a minimum Texas must amend
Subchapter G to include additional provisions that clearly limit its
applicability to minor NSR as it did in the Texas minor NSR SIP at 30
TAC Chapter 106 for Permits by Rule and 30 TAC Chapter 116 Subchapter F
for Standard Permits.
Without a clear statement of the applicability of the Program, the
Program as submitted is confusing to the public, regulated sources,
government entities, or a court, because it can be interpreted as an
alternative to evaluating the new source or modification as a new major
stationary source or major modification under Major NSR. The submitted
Program fails to limit clearly the use of it to only the Texas minor
NSR SIP requirements. Because of the overly broad nature of the
regulatory language in the State's SIP revision submittal and the lack
of any Texas statutory prohibitions, we propose to find that the State
has failed to limit the submitted Program only to minor NSR.
Consequently, we are compelled to evaluate this submitted Program
as being a substitute for the Texas Major NSR SIP. Accordingly, as
discussed below in Section V, we evaluated whether the submitted
Program meets the requirements for a Major NSR SIP revision, the
general requirements for regulating construction of any stationary
sources contained in Section 110(a)(2)(C) of the CAA, and the
applicable statutory and regulatory requirements for an approvable SIP
revision. Below is a summary of our evaluation of the submitted Program
as a Substitute Major NSR SIP revision submittal. Section VI contains a
summary of our evaluation of the submitted Program as a Minor NSR SIP
revision submittal.
V. What Is EPA's Evaluation of the Submitted Texas Flexible Permits
State Program as a Substitute Major NSR SIP Revision?
A. What Are the Requirements for EPA's Review of a Submitted Major NSR
SIP Revision?
Before EPA's 1980 revised Major NSR SIP regulations, 45 FR 52676
(August 7, 1980), States were required to adopt and submit a Major NSR
SIP revision where the State's provisions and definitions were
identical to or individually more stringent than the Federal rules.
Under EPA's 1980 revised Major NSR SIP regulations, States could submit
provisions in a Major NSR SIP revision different from those in EPA's
Major NSR rules, as long as the State provision was equivalent to a
rule identified by EPA as appropriate for a ``different but
equivalent'' State rule. If a State chose to submit definitions that
were not verbatim to the Federal definitions, the State was required to
demonstrate any different definition has the effect of being as least
as stringent. (Emphasis added.) See 45 FR 52676, at 52687. The
demonstration requirement was expanded to explicitly include not just
different definitions but also different programs in the EPA's revised
Major NSR regulations, as promulgated on December 31, 2002 (67 FR
80186) and reconsidered with minor changes on November 7, 2003 (68 FR
63021). Therefore, to be approved as meeting the 2002 revised Major NSR
SIP requirements, a State submitting a customized Major NSR SIP
revision must demonstrate why its program and definitions are in fact
at least as stringent as the Major NSR revised base
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program. (Emphasis added). See 67 FR 80186, at 80241.
Moreover, because there is an existing Texas Major NSR SIP, the
submitted Program must meet the anti-backsliding provisions of the Act
in section 193 and meet the requirements in section 110(l) where EPA
may not approve a SIP revision if it will interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and reasonable further progress or
any other applicable requirement of the Act. Furthermore, any submitted
SIP revision must meet the applicable SIP regulatory requirements and
the requirements for SIP elements in section 110 of the Act, and be
consistent applicable statutory and regulatory requirements as
interpreted in EPA SIP policy and guidance. These can include, among
other things, enforceability, compliance assurance, accountability,
test methods, a program element's replicability, and whether the
submitted rules are vague. There are four fundamental principles for
the relationship between the SIP and any implementing instruments,
e.g., Major NSR permits. These four principles as applied to the review
of a major or minor NSR SIP revision include: (1) The baseline
emissions from a permitted source be quantifiable; (2) the NSR program
be enforceable by specifying clear, unambiguous, and measurable
requirements, including a legal means for ensuring the sources are in
compliance with the NSR program, and providing means to determine
compliance; (3) the NSR program's measures be replicable by including
sufficiently specific and objective provisions so that two independent
entities applying the permit program's procedures would obtain the same
result; and (4) the Major NSR permit program be accountable, including
means to track emissions at sources resulting from the issuance of
permits and permit amendments. See EPA's April 16, 1992, ``General
Preamble for the Implementation of Title I of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990'' (57 FR 13498) (``General Preamble''). In
particular, there is a specific discussion illustrating the principles
and elements of SIPs that apply to sources in implementing a SIP's
control strategies beginning on page 13567 of the General Preamble.
B. Does the Submitted Program Prohibit Circumvention of Major NSR?
There is no express provision in the submitted Subchapter G similar
to the Texas minor NSR SIP provisions for minor NSR SIP Permits by Rule
and minor NSR SIP Standard Permits that prohibit circumvention of the
Major NSR requirements. See 30 TAC 106.4(b) and 30 TAC 116.610(c). Both
the SIP-codified Chapter 106, Subchapter A for Permits by Rule and the
SIP-codified Chapter 116, Subchapter F for Standard Permits \7\ contain
clear regulatory applicability requirements limiting their use to minor
NSR, clear regulatory requirements prohibiting their use for any
project that constitutes a new major stationary source or major
modification subject to Major NSR, and clear regulatory provisions
prohibiting the use of these minor NSR permits from circumventing Major
NSR. There are no similar regulatory applicability requirements
prohibiting the use for Major NSR, and no regulatory provisions
prohibiting circumvention of Major NSR in the submitted Chapter 116,
Subchapter G, for Flexible Permits.
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\7\ The Texas SIP does not include the