Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans and Designation of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Texas; Beaumont/Port Arthur Ozone Nonattainment Area: Redesignation to Attainment for the 1997 8-Hour Ozone Standard and Determination of Attainment for the 1-Hour Ozone Standard, 27514-27535 [2010-11694]
Download as PDF
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 94 / Monday, May 17, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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, Nitrogen dioxide,
Ozone, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: May 5, 2010.
W.C. Early,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2010–11679 Filed 5–14–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[EPA–R06–OAR–2008–0932; FRL–9151–7]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans and Designation
of Areas for Air Quality Planning
Purposes; Texas; Beaumont/Port
Arthur Ozone Nonattainment Area:
Redesignation to Attainment for the
1997 8-Hour Ozone Standard and
Determination of Attainment for the 1Hour Ozone Standard
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with PROPOSALS
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
a request from the State of Texas to
redesignate the Beaumont-Port Arthur
(BPA) Texas ozone nonattainment area
to attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. In proposing to approve this
request, EPA also proposes to approve
as a revision to the BPA State
Implementation Plan (SIP), a 1997 8hour ozone maintenance plan with a
2021 Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget
(MVEB). EPA is proposing to determine
that the BPA nonattainment area has
attained the 1997 8-hour ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standard
(NAAQS), based on complete, qualityassured, and certified ambient air
quality monitoring data for the 2005–
2007 and 2006–2008 monitoring
periods, as well as data from 2009 that
are in EPA’s Air Quality System (AQS)
database but not yet certified, that
demonstrate that the area has attained
and is continuing to attain the 1997 8hour ozone NAAQS. EPA also is
proposing to make a determination that
the BPA area is meeting the 1-hour
ozone standard based upon three years
of complete, quality-assured, and
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certified ambient air quality monitoring
data for the 2005–2007 and 2006–2008
monitoring periods, as well as data from
2009 in AQS but not yet certified.
EPA is proposing to approve the BPA
area’s 2002 base year emissions
inventory as part of the BPA SIP and to
conclude that if this action is finalized,
the area is meeting all of its applicable
marginal area requirements for purposes
of redesignation for the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. EPA also is proposing to
approve as part of the BPA SIP, the
Texas Clean-Fuel Vehicle (CFV)
Program Equivalency Demonstration.
EPA is proposing to find that if these
proposed approvals are finalized, the
area will have a fully approved SIP that
meets all of its applicable 1997 8-hour
requirements and 1-hour antibacksliding requirements under section
110 and Part D of the federal Clean Air
Act (CAA or Act) for purposes of
redesignation.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to
approve the post-1996 Rate of Progress
(ROP) plan’s contingency measures, the
substitute control measures for the
failure-to-attain contingency measures,
and the removal from the Texas SIP of
the 1-hour ozone failure-to-attain
contingency measure, a VOC SIP rule
for marine vessel loading, as meeting
the requirements of section 110(l) and
part D of the Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before June 16, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R06–
OAR–2008–0932, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking 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. Guy Donaldson at
donaldson.guy@epa.gov. Please also
send a copy by email to the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section below.
• Fax: Mr. Guy Donaldson, Chief, Air
Planning Section (6PD–L), at fax
number 214–665–7263.
• Mail: Mr. Guy Donaldson, Chief,
Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 1200, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733.
• Hand or Courier Delivery: Mr. Guy
Donaldson, Chief, Air Planning Section
(6PD–L), Environmental Protection
Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200,
Dallas, Texas 75202–2733. Such
deliveries are accepted only between the
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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–2008–
0932. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit through
www.regulations.gov or e-mail,
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected. The
www.regulations.gov Web site is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly
to EPA without going through
www.regulations.gov, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the 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
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733. The file will be made
available by appointment for public
inspection in the Region 6 FOIA Review
Room between the hours of 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. weekdays except for legal
holidays. Contact the person listed in
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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 fee of 15 cents per page for making
photocopies of documents. On the day
of the visit, please check in at the EPA
Region 6 reception area at 1445 Ross
Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas.
The State submittal, which is part of
the EPA record, is also available for
public inspection at the State Air
Agency listed below during official
business hours by appointment: Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality,
Office of Air Quality, 12124 Park 35
Circle, Austin, Texas 78753.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Ellen Belk, Air Planning Section (6PD–
L), Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202–2733, telephone
(214) 665–2164; fax number 214–665–
7263; e-mail address
belk.ellen@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means EPA.
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Table of Contents
I. What are the actions EPA is proposing?
II. What is the background for these actions?
A. What are the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards?
B. What is ozone and why do we regulate
it?
C. What is the background for the BPA area
under the 1-hour ozone NAAQS?
D. What is the background for the BPA area
under the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS?
III. What are the impacts of the court
decisions on EPA’s Phase 1 and 2
implementation rules upon the BPA area
redesignation request?
A. Summary of the Court Decisions
B. Summary of EPA’s Analysis of the
Impact of the Court Decisions on the
BPA Area
1. Requirements Under the Eight-Hour
Ozone Standard
2. Requirements Under the One-Hour
Ozone Standard
IV. What are the CAA criteria for
redesignation?
V. What is EPA’s proposed determination
regarding attainment for the 1997 8-hour
and the 1-hour ozone NAAQS for the
BPA area?
A. Is the BPA area attaining the 1997 8hour ozone NAAQS?
B. Is the BPA area attaining the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS?
VI. Does the BPA area have a fully approved
SIP under section 110(k) for the section
110 and part D requirements of the CAA
applicable for purposes of redesignation?
A. What are the general SIP requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area?
B. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area?
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1. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area under the 1-hour ozone
standard?
2. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area under the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard?
C. Does the BPA area have a fully approved
applicable SIP under section 110(k) of
the CAA for purposes of redesignation?
VII. Are the air quality improvements in the
BPA area due to permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions?
A. Emissions Reductions as Shown by
Emission Inventory Data
B. Impact of Emissions Controls
Implementation: Trend Analysis
C. Permanent and Enforceable Emissions
Controls Implemented
1. Reasonably Available Control
Techniques
2. ROP Plans and Attainment
Demonstration Plan
3. NOX Control Rules
4. Federal Emission Control Measures
5. Additional State and Local Emission
Reductions
6. Controls to Remain in Effect
VIII. Does Texas have a fully approvable 1997
8-hour ozone maintenance plan pursuant
to section 175A of the CAA for the BPA
area?
A. What is required in an ozone
maintenance plan?
B. How did Texas estimate the VOC and
NOX emissions for the attainment year
and the projection years?
C. Has the State demonstrated maintenance
of the ozone standard in the BPA area?
D. Monitoring Network
E. Verification of Continued Attainment
F. What is the maintenance plan’s
contingency plan?
IX. What is EPA’s evaluation of the BPA
area’s motor vehicle emissions budget?
A. What are the transportation
requirements for approvable MVEBs?
B. What is the status of EPA’s adequacy
determination?
C. Is the MVEB approvable?
X. EPA’s Evaluation of the Backfill
Contingency Measures for the 1-Hour
Ozone Failure-To-Attain Contingency
Measures and the State’s Request To
Remove an Unimplemented VOC Rule
From the Texas SIP
XI. Proposed Actions
XII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What are the actions EPA is
proposing?
EPA is proposing several related
actions pursuant to the Act for the BPA
ozone nonattainment area, consisting of
Hardin, Jefferson, and Orange counties.
EPA is proposing to determine that the
BPA area has attained the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS, based on the most recent
three years of complete, quality-assured
monitoring data. EPA is proposing to
find that the BPA area has met the
requirements for redesignation under
section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act, and is
therefore proposing to approve a request
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from the State of Texas to redesignate
the BPA area to attainment of the 1997
8-hour ozone standard. EPA is also
proposing to approve, pursuant to
section 175A of the Act, the area’s 1997
8-hour ozone maintenance plan as a
revision to the Texas SIP; to approve the
plan’s associated 2021 MVEB; and to
approve the 2002 base year emissions
inventory. With the approval of the
2002 base year emissions inventory,
EPA is proposing to find that the BPA
area has satisfied all marginal area
requirements for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. See Section VI.B.2. and the
Technical Support Document (TSD),
Part I.A., for further information on how
the BPA area satisfies all the other
marginal area requirements. In addition,
EPA is proposing to approve the Texas
Clean-Fuel Vehicle (CFV) Program
Equivalency Demonstration as meeting a
serious area anti-backsliding
requirement for the 1-hour ozone
standard. With the approval of the
Texas CFV equivalency determination,
we are proposing to find that the BPA
has satisfied all 1-hour anti-backsliding
requirements for a serious area for the
purposes of redesignation. For further
information on how the area meets the
serious area requirements apart from the
CFV Program, please see Section VI.B.1.
and the TSD, Part II.A. Further, EPA is
proposing to make a determination that
the BPA area is meeting the 1-hour
ozone standard.
Finally, EPA is proposing to approve
the 1-hour ozone post-1996 rate of
progress (ROP) plan’s contingency
measures, substitute measures for the
SIP-approved failure-to-attain
contingency measures, and the removal
from the Texas SIP of the contingency
measure, a VOC SIP rule for marine
vessel loading, as meeting the
requirements of section 110(l) and part
D. Each component of this action is
discussed in greater detail below.
First, EPA is proposing to make a
determination under the Act that the
BPA area has attained the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. The BPA area includes
three counties in Texas: Hardin, Orange,
and Jefferson. This proposed
determination is based on complete,
quality-assured and certified ambient air
quality monitoring data for the 2005–
2007 and 2006–2008 ozone seasons that
demonstrate that the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS has been attained in the area.
Data entered into EPA’s Air Quality
System database (AQS) for 2009, but not
yet certified also show that the area
continues to attain the standard.
As one of the requirements for
approving a redesignation request, EPA
is proposing to approve as a revision to
the Texas SIP, the State’s maintenance
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plan for the BPA area as meeting the
requirements of section 175A. EPA also
is proposing to approve the 2002 base
year emissions inventory for the BPA
area as meeting a requirement of the Act
for a marginal 1997 8-hour ozone area,
section 182(a)(1). Additionally, we are
proposing to approve the Texas CFV
Program Equivalency Demonstration as
meeting the serious area requirements of
the Act for the 1-hour ozone standard.
With the approval of the 2002 base year
emissions inventory and the CFV
Program Equivalency Demonstration,
EPA is proposing to find that the area
has met all the applicable 8-hour ozone
and 1-hour anti-backsliding
requirements of section 110 and part D
of the Act for purposes of redesignation,
and that the BPA area has a fully
approved SIP under section 110(k) for
purposes of redesignation.
Based upon the above, EPA is
proposing to approve a request from the
State of Texas submitted on December
16, 2008, through the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality
(TCEQ), to redesignate the BPA area to
attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. If EPA’s determination that
the area has attained the standard is
made final and the BPA area is
redesignated to attainment with an
approved 8-hour ozone NAAQS
maintenance plan, then under the
provisions of EPA’s ozone
implementation rule, the obligations to
submit and have an approved 1-hour
ozone NAAQS attainment
demonstration and reasonably available
control measures determination (RACM)
and contingency measures no longer
apply. As discussed later, BPA was not
required to have an 8-hour ozone
attainment demonstration because
Texas submitted a redesignation request
before the area’s moderate area SIP
requirements, including an attainment
demonstration, were due (for more
information, please see section VI).
EPA is proposing to determine that
the BPA area is meeting the 1-hour
ozone standard. This determination is
based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ambient air quality monitoring
data for the 2005–2007 and 2006–2008
monitoring periods which demonstrate
that the 1-hour ozone NAAQS has been
attained in the area; this determination
is also consistent with data for 2009 that
are in AQS but not yet certified. The
obligations for the state to submit and
for EPA to approve a 1-hour serious area
attainment demonstration and RACM
determination and contingency
measures will be suspended if EPA’s
proposal to determine that the area has
attained the 1-hour standard is
finalized, and the area will be relieved
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of these obligations upon final
redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. See 40 CFR 51.905(a)(3)(ii).
Even though the obligations to submit
and have approved the 1-hour
contingency measures are suspended
upon a determination that the area is
attaining the 1-hour standard, and
terminated upon the BPA area’s
redesignation to attainment for the 8hour ozone NAAQS, EPA is proposing
to approve the post-1996 ROP plan’s
contingency measures and the backfill
failure-to-attain contingency measures.
EPA is proposing this action on the
contingency measures because the State
is requesting that an existing SIPapproved 1-hour ozone failure-to-attain
contingency measures be removed from
the SIP, and has not indicated that it
wishes to withdraw the contingency
measures SIP revision submittals. EPA
is proposing to approve the removal
from the Texas SIP of the failure-toattain contingency measure, a VOC SIP
rule for marine vessel loading, as
meeting the requirements of section
110(l) and part D.
II. What is the background for these
actions?
A. What are the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards?
Section 109 of the Act requires EPA
to establish NAAQS (or standards) for
pollutants that ‘‘may reasonably be
anticipated to endanger public health
and welfare,’’ and to develop a primary
and secondary standard for each
NAAQS. The primary standard is
designed to protect human health with
an adequate margin of safety, and the
secondary standard is designed to
protect public welfare and the
environment. EPA has set NAAQS for
six common air pollutants, referred to as
criteria pollutants: carbon monoxide,
lead, nitrogen dioxide, ozone,
particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide.
These standards present state and local
governments with the minimum air
quality levels they must meet to comply
with the Act. Also, these standards
provide information to residents of the
United States about the air quality in
their communities. A State’s SIP
addresses these requirements, as
required by section 110 and other
provisions of the Act. The SIP is a set
of air pollution regulations, control
strategies, other means or techniques,
and technical analyses developed by the
state, to ensure that the state meets the
NAAQS.
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B. What is ozone and why do we
regulate it?
Ozone, a gas composed of three
oxygen atoms, at the ground level is
generally not emitted directly by
sources such as from a vehicle’s exhaust
or an industrial smokestack; rather,
ground level ozone is produced by a
chemical reaction between nitrogen
oxides (NOX) and VOCs in the presence
of sunlight and high ambient
temperatures. NOX and VOCs are
referred to as precursors of ozone. Motor
vehicle exhaust and industrial
emissions, gasoline vapors, and
chemical solvents all contain NOX and
VOCs. Urban areas tend to have high
concentrations of ground-level ozone,
but areas without significant industrial
activity and with relatively low
vehicular traffic are also subject to
increased ozone levels because wind
carries ozone and its precursors many
miles from the sources. The Act
establishes a process for air quality
management through the NAAQS.
Repeated exposure to ozone pollution
may cause lung damage. Even at very
low concentrations, ground-level ozone
triggers a variety of health problems
including aggravated asthma, reduced
lung capacity, and increased
susceptibility to respiratory illnesses
like pneumonia and bronchitis. It can
also have detrimental effects on plants
and ecosystems.
C. What is the background for the BPA
area under the 1-hour ozone NAAQS?
On December 11, 2002, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit vacated
EPA’s attainment date extension policy,
which had been applied to extend the
1-hour ozone attainment deadline for
the BPA area without reclassifying the
area. Sierra Club v. EPA, 314 F.3d 735
(5th Cir. 2002). Thereupon, EPA on
March 30, 2004, withdrew the action
extending the attainment deadline for
BPA, finalized its finding that the area
failed to attain the 1-hour ozone
standard by the moderate area deadline,
and reclassified the BPA area by
operation of law, to serious
nonattainment for the 1-hour ozone
standard. See 61 FR 16483. As a result
of its reclassification to serious, the
State was required, among other things,
to submit by April 29, 2005, a new 1hour attainment demonstration SIP with
an attainment date of November 15,
2005 with new MVEBs and a new
RACM analysis, a post-1996 rate of
progress (ROP) plan with associated
MVEBs and contingency measures, a
new clean-fuel vehicle program or
substitute, demonstrate the area met
RACT, implement the EPA-triggered
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failure-to-attain contingency measures,
submit a replacement for, i.e., backfill
for, the triggered failure-to-attain
contingency measures, and to meet the
remaining serious area requirements
under section 182(c) of the Act. The
State submitted the required elements
on November 16, 2004, as revised on
October 15, 2005, and further revised on
December 16, 2008. EPA has approved
all of the 1-hour serious area
requirements for the BPA area, except
for the CFV program, the ROP plan’s
contingency measures, the replacement
failure-to-attain contingency measures,
and the attainment demonstration SIP
with associated MVEBs and RACM
analysis. See Section VI.B.1. for further
details.
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D. What is the background for the BPA
area under the 1997 8-Hour Ozone
NAAQS?
On July 18, 1997, EPA promulgated a
revised 8-hour ozone standard of 0.08
parts per million (ppm), which is more
protective than the previous 1-hour
ozone standard (62 FR 38855).1 The
EPA published the 1997 8-hour ozone
designations and classifications on
April 30, 2004 (69 FR 23858). The BPA
area was designated nonattainment and
initially classified as marginal. The area
includes three counties: Hardin,
Jefferson, and Orange counties (these
constitute the former 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area). The effective date
of designation for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS was June 15, 2004. Under the
marginal nonattainment designation, the
latest attainment date for the BPA area
was June 15, 2007. The BPA did not
monitor attainment of the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS by the June 15, 2007
deadline, based upon complete, qualityassured and certified ambient air quality
monitoring data for the 2004–2006
ozone seasons. The BPA area already
met all of the requirements for a 1997
8-hour ozone marginal area except for
the base year emissions inventory
requirement. See Section VI.B.2. for
further details.
Therefore, EPA determined that the
BPA area had failed to attain the 1997
8-hour ozone standard by the applicable
attainment deadline and the area was
1 On March 27, 2008 (73 FR 16436), EPA
promulgated a revised 8-hour ozone standard of
0.075 ppm. On January 6, 2010, EPA proposed to
set the level of the primary 8-hour ozone standard
within the range of 0.060 to 0.070 ppm, rather than
at 0.075 ppm. EPA anticipates that by August 2010
it will have completed reconsideration of the
standard and thereafter will proceed with
designations. The actions addressed in today’s
proposed rulemaking relate only to redesignation
for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. EPA’s actions
with respect to this new standard do not affect
EPA’s action here.
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reclassified by operation of law as a
moderate 1997 8-hour ozone
nonattainment area, effective April 17,
2008 (73 FR 14391). This determination
was based on ambient air quality data
from the 2004–2006 monitoring period.
More recent air quality data for the
2005–2007 and 2006–2008 monitoring
periods, as well as 2009 data that are in
AQS but not yet certified, however,
indicate that the BPA area is now
attaining the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. See Section V.A.
The deadline for submission of
requirements to meet the area’s new 8hour moderate nonattainment area
classification was January 1, 2009 (73
FR 14391). The TCEQ, on December 16,
2008, submitted a request that EPA
determine that the BPA area has
attained the 1997 8-hour ozone standard
and redesignate it to attainment. The
request included a maintenance plan
with associated MVEBs, the 2002 base
year emission inventory, the Texas CFV
Program Equivalency Demonstration,
and the backfill failure-to-attain
contingency measures. The complete
redesignation request was received by
EPA before the deadline for submittal of
the moderate area SIP requirements for
the BPA area under the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard.
III. What are the impacts of the court
decisions on EPA’s Phase 1 and 2
implementation rules upon the BPA
area redesignation request?
A. Summary of the Court Decisions
This section sets forth EPA’s views on
the effect of the DC Circuit’s rulings on
this proposed redesignation action. For
the reasons set forth below, EPA does
not believe that the Court’s rulings alter
any requirements relevant to this
redesignation action or prevent EPA
from proposing or ultimately finalizing
this redesignation. EPA believes that the
Court’s December 22, 2006, June 8,
2007, and July 10, 2009, decisions
impose no impediment to moving
forward with redesignation of this area
to attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
EPA published a first phase rule
governing implementation of the 1997
8-hour ozone standard (Phase 1 Rule) on
April 30, 2004 (69 FR 23951). The Phase
1 Rule addresses classifications for the
1997 8-hour NAAQS and for revocation
for the 1-hour NAAQS; how antibacksliding principles will ensure
continued progress toward attainment of
the 1997 8-hour NAAQS; attainment
dates; and the timing of emissions
reductions needed for attainment. The
Phase 1 Rule revoked the 1-hour ozone
standard. The Phase 1 Rule also
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provided that 1-hour ozone
nonattainment areas are required to
adopt and implement ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ according to the area’s
classification under the 1-hour ozone
standard for anti-backsliding purposes.
See 40 CFR 51.905(a)(i). On May 26,
2005, we determined that an area’s 1hour designation and classification as of
June 15, 2004 would dictate what 1hour obligations remain as ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ under the Phase 1 Rule.
40 CFR 51.900(f). (70 FR 30592).
On December 22, 2006, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit vacated EPA’s Phase 1 Rule in
South Coast Air Quality Management
Dist. v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (DC Cir.
2006). On June 8, 2007, in response to
several petitions for rehearing, the court
clarified that the Phase 1 rule was
vacated only with regard to those parts
of the rule that had been successfully
challenged. See 489 F.3d 1245 (DC Cir.
2007), cert. denied, 128 S.Ct. 1065
(2008). By limiting the vacatur, the
Court let stand EPA’s revocation of the
1-hour standard and those antibacksliding provisions of the Phase 1
rule that had not been successfully
challenged. The June 8, 2007 opinion
reaffirmed the December 22, 2006
decision that EPA had improperly failed
to retain four measures required for 1hour nonattainment areas under the
anti-backsliding provisions of the
regulations: (1) Nonattainment area new
source review (NSR) requirements based
on an area’s 1-hour nonattainment
classification; (2) section 185 penalty
fees for 1-hour severe or extreme
nonattainment areas that fail to attain
the 1-hour standard by the 1-hour
attainment date; and (3) measures to be
implemented pursuant to section
172(c)(9) or 182(c)(9) of the Act, on the
contingency of an area not making
reasonable further progress toward
attainment of the 1-hour NAAQS or for
failure to attain that NAAQS; and (4) the
court clarified that the Court’s reference
to conformity requirements was limited
to requiring the continued use of 1-hour
motor vehicle emissions budgets until 8hour budgets were available for 8-hour
conformity determinations.
EPA published a second rule
governing implementation of the 1997
8-hour ozone standard (Phase 2 Rule) on
November 29, 2005 (70 FR 71612), as
revised on June 8, 2007 (72 FR 31727).
The Phase 2 Rule addresses, among
other things, the Clean Data Policy as
codified in 40 CFR 51.918. The DC
Circuit upheld the Clean Data Policy,
agreeing with the Tenth Circuit that
EPA’s interpretation of the Act was
reasonable. NRDC v. EPA, 571 F.3d
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1245 (DC Cir. 2009). See Sierra Club v.
EPA, 99 F.3d 1551 (10th Cir. 1996).
B. Summary of EPA’s Analysis of the
Impact of the Court Decisions on the
BPA Area
1. Requirements Under the Eight-Hour
Ozone Standard
For the eight-hour ozone standard, the
BPA ozone nonattainment area was
originally classified as marginal
nonattainment under subpart 2 of the
CAA. The June 8, 2007, opinion clarifies
that the Court did not vacate the Phase
1 Rule’s provisions with respect to
classifications for areas under subpart 2.
The Court’s decision, therefore, upholds
EPA’s classifications for those areas
classified under subpart 2 for the eighthour ozone standard, and all eight-hour
ozone requirements for these areas
remain in place.
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2. Requirements Under the One-Hour
Ozone Standard
In its June 8, 2007, decision, the Court
limited its vacatur so as to uphold those
provisions of EPA’s anti-backsliding
requirements that were not successfully
challenged. Therefore, an area must
meet the anti-backsliding requirements,
see 40 CFR 51.900, et seq.; 70 FR 30592,
30604 (May 26, 2005), which apply by
virtue of the area’s classification for the
one-hour ozone NAAQS.
The provisions in 40 CFR 51.905(a)–
(c) explain the applicable 1-hour ozone
anti-backsliding requirements that
remain in effect. Areas must continue to
meet those requirements to be
redesignated. However, the court
vacated the portions of 51.905(e) that
removed the obligations to meet the
additional provisions noted above and
as a result, states also have had to
continue to meet these additional
requirements. We address below how
the 1-hour anti-backsliding obligations
(as interpreted and directed by the
court) are met in the context of a
redesignation action for the 1997 8-hour
NAAQS.
The BPA 1-hour nonattainment area
was reclassified as serious for that
standard on June 15, 2004, so the 1-hour
ozone standard requirements applicable
to the area are those that apply to
nonattainment areas classified as
serious. Pursuant to 40 CFR 51.905(a)–
(c) and the court opinions, the
applicable serious area requirements
include a demonstration that the area
meets serious area Reasonably Available
Control Technology (RACT) for both
VOC and NOX, a revised 1990 base year
emissions inventory, a Post-1996 Rate of
Progress (ROP) Plan with Contingency
Measures and MVEB, a replacement,
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i.e., a backfill, for the failure-to-attain
contingency measures triggered by the
reclassification (this is equivalent to the
requirement to meet the serious area
contingency measure requirement), an
enhanced monitoring program, a cleanfuel vehicle program or an acceptable
substitute, an attainment demonstration
with a reasonably available control
measures (RACM) demonstration,
revised transportation conformity
budgets, and serious area NSR. The
State has submitted each of the required
1-hour serious area plan requirements.
EPA has approved each of the 1-hour
serious area requirements except for the
following: The attainment
demonstration and RACM analysis, the
CFV program or acceptable substitute,
the ROP plan’s contingency measures,
the backfill failure-to-attain contingency
measures, and the serious NSR
requirements. The obligations to have
an approved 1-hour ROP plan’s
contingency measures, backfill failureto-attain contingency measures, and
attainment demonstration with a RACM
demonstration would be suspended by
a determination of attainment of the 1hour ozone standard, and will cease to
apply upon redesignation of the area for
the 8-hour standard. The 1-hour antibacksliding serious Nonattainment New
Source Review (NNSR) will also cease
to apply upon redesignation for the
1997 8-hour ozone standard, and will be
replaced by prevention of significant
deterioration (PSD) SIP.
EPA is proposing to approve the
following outstanding 1-hour ozone
applicable requirement: The Texas CFV
Program Equivalency Demonstration.
EPA also is proposing to approve the
Post-1996 ROP plan’s contingency
measures and the State’s backfill failureto-attain contingency measures. EPA has
taken no action on the submitted
attainment demonstration with the
RACM analysis and serious 1-hour
ozone NSR requirements. In lieu of
nonattainment NSR, the BPA area will
become subject to PSD upon
redesignation.
For the BPA 1-hour ozone serious
nonattainment area, EPA previously
approved VOC and NOX rules into the
Texas SIP, found they met RACT, and
found that the BPA area meets the
serious area VOC and NOX RACT
requirements. EPA also previously
approved the revised 1990 base year
emissions inventory, the post-1996 ROP
plan and MVEB, and the enhanced
monitoring program. In this rulemaking,
EPA is proposing to approve the State’s
CFV Equivalence Demonstration as
meeting the outstanding 1-hour ozone
anti-backsliding serious area
requirement for the area. We also are
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proposing to approve the post-1996 ROP
plan’s contingency measures and the
backfill failure-to-attain contingency
measures. The obligation to submit a 1hour serious area attainment
demonstration and RACM analysis and
contingency measures will be
suspended if EPA’s proposal to
determine that the area has attained the
1-hour standard is finalized, and the
area will be relieved of these obligations
upon final redesignation for the 1997 8hour ozone standard.
IV. What are the CAA criteria for
redesignation?
The Act sets forth the requirements
for redesignating a nonattainment area
to attainment. Specifically, CAA section
107(d)(3)(E) allows for redesignation
providing that (1) the Administrator
determines that the area has attained the
applicable NAAQS; (2) the
Administrator has fully approved the
applicable implementation plan for the
area under CAA section 110(k); (3) the
Administrator determines that the
improvement in air quality is due to
permanent and enforceable reductions
in emissions resulting from
implementation of the applicable SIP
and applicable Federal air pollutant
control regulations and other permanent
and enforceable reductions; (4) the
Administrator has fully approved a
maintenance plan for the area as
meeting the requirements of CAA
section 175A; and (5) the State
containing such area has met all
requirements applicable to the area
under CAA section 110 and part D.
EPA provided guidance on
redesignation in the General Preamble
for the Implementation of Title I of the
CAA Amendments of 1990, on April 16,
1992 (57 FR 13498), and supplemented
this guidance on April 28, 1992 (57 FR
18070). EPA has provided further
guidance on processing redesignation
requests in the following documents:
1. ‘‘Ozone and Carbon Monoxide Design
Value Calculations,’’ Memorandum from Bill
Laxton, June 18, 1990.
2. ‘‘Maintenance Plans for Redesignation of
Ozone and Carbon Monoxide Nonattainment
Areas,’’ Memorandum from G.T. Helms,
Chief, Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs
Branch, April 30, 1992;
3. ‘‘Contingency Measures for Ozone and
Carbon Monoxide (CO) Redesignations,’’
Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief,
Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs Branch,
June 1, 1992;
4. ‘‘Procedures for Processing Requests to
Redesignate Areas to Attainment’’,
Memorandum from John Calcagni, Director,
Air Quality Management Division, September
4, 1992;
5. ‘‘State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Actions Submitted in Response to Clean Air
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Act (ACT) Deadlines,’’ Memorandum from
John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality
Management Division, October 28, 1992;
6. ‘‘Technical Support Documents (TSD’s)
for Redesignation of Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide (CO) Nonattainment Areas’’,
Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief,
Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs Branch,
August 17, 1993;
7. ‘‘State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Requirements for Areas Submitting Requests
for Redesignation to Attainment of the Ozone
and Carbon Monoxide (CO) National
Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) On
or After November 15, 1992’’, Memorandum
from Michael Shapiro, Acting Assistant
Administrator for Air and Radiation,
September 17, 1993;
8. ‘‘Use of Actual Emissions in
Maintenance Demonstrations for Ozone and
CO Nonattainment Areas,’’ Memorandum
from D. Kent Berry, Acting Director, Air
Quality Management Division, November 30,
1993;
9. ‘‘Part D New Source Review (Part D NSR)
Requirements for Areas Requesting
Redesignation to Attainment,’’ Memorandum
from Mary D. Nichols, Assistant
Administrator for Air and Radiation, October
14, 1994; and
10. ‘‘Reasonable Further Progress,
Attainment Demonstration, and Related
Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment
Areas Meeting the Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standard,’’ Memorandum from
John S. Seitz, Director, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, May 10, 1995.
V. What is EPA’s proposed
determination degarding attainment for
the 1997 8-hour and the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS for the BPA area?
A. Is the BPA area attaining the 1997 8hour ozone NAAQS?
For ozone, an area may be considered
to be attaining the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS if there are no violations, as
determined in accordance with 40 CFR
50.10 and Appendix I of part 50, based
on three complete, consecutive calendar
years of quality-assured air quality
monitoring data. This standard is
attained if the 3-year average of the
annual fourth highest daily maximum 8hour average ambient ozone
concentration at each monitor in the
area that is eligible for comparison to
the NAAQS is less than or equal to 0.08
ppm. Based on the rounding convention
described in 40 CFR part 50, Appendix
I, the 1997 8-hour ozone standard is
attained at a monitor if the design value
is 0.084 ppm or below. The data must
be collected and quality-assured in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58, and
recorded in the EPA Air Quality System
(AQS). The monitors generally should
have remained at the same location for
the duration of the monitoring period
required for demonstrating attainment.
For ease of communication, many
reports of ozone concentrations are
given in parts per billion (ppb); ppb =
ppm × 1,000. Thus, 0.084 ppm equals 84
ppb.
EPA reviewed BPA area ozone
monitoring data from ambient ozone
monitoring stations for the ozone
seasons 2005 through 2007, as well as
data for the ozone seasons 2006 through
2008 and data for 2009 in AQS but not
yet certified. The 2005–2007 ozone
season data was relied upon by Texas in
its submittal. Since the State’s
submittal, the 2006–2008 ozone season
data has been quality assured and
recorded in AQS. The design value for
2005–2007 is 0.083 ppm; the design
value for 2006–2008 is 0.081 ppm. The
preliminary design value for the
additional year of 2009, i.e., the 2007–
2009 ozone seasons, is 0.077 ppm. The
data for all three sets of ozone seasons
show that the BPA area is attaining the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
Table 1 provides the design values
based on data from the nine monitors in
the BPA area. Each of the nine
monitoring sites in the BPA area
monitored attainment with the 1997 8hour ozone standard for the 2005–2007
ozone seasons and for the 2006–2008
ozone seasons. (To find the overall
design value for the area for a given
year, simply find the highest design
value from any of the nine monitors for
that year.) The location of each
monitoring site in the BPA area is
shown on the map entitled, ‘‘BPA ozone
and ozone precursor monitoring
network’’ included in the docket
associated with this action.
TABLE 1—BPA AREA FOURTH HIGHEST 8-HOUR OZONE CONCENTRATIONS AND DESIGN VALUES DATA FOR ALL
MONITORS (PPM) 1 2 3 4
4th Highest daily max
Design values three year averages
BPA monitor site
2005
Lamar (48–245–0009) .....................
Port Arthur (48–245–0011) ..............
Sabine Pass (48–245–0101) ...........
Hamshire (48–245–0022) ................
West Orange (48–361–1001) ..........
Mauriceville (48–361–1100) .............
Jefferson Co. Airport (48–245–0018)
SETRPC Port Arthur (48–245–0628)
Nederland (48–245–1035) 4 .............
0.081
0.079
0.082
0.080
0.078
0.076
0.083
0.078
..................
2006
0.085
0.085
0.084
0.081
0.078
0.071
0.084
0.082
0.068
2007
2008
0.080
0.073
0.078
0.077
0.073
0.075
0.082
0.076
0.082
0.072
0.071
0.069
0.070
0.064
0.069
0.078
0.065
0.067
2009
0.071
0.073
0.073
0.070
0.073
0.067
0.071
0.069
0.069
2005–2007
2006–2008
2007–2009
0.082
0.079
0.081
0.079
0.076
0.074
0.083
0.078
..................
0.079
0.076
0.077
0.076
0.071
0.071
0.081
0.074
0.072
0.074
0.072
0.073
0.072
0.070
0.070
0.077
0.070
0.072
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1 Unlike for the 1-hour ozone standard, design value calculations for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard are based on a rolling three-year average
of the annual 4th highest values (40 CFR Part 50, Appendix I).
2 Monitoring site locations for BPA are shown on a map entitled, ‘‘BPA ozone and ozone precursor monitoring network’’ included in the docket.
3 Monitoring data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
4 Monitoring did not begin at the Nederland site until 2006.
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The fourth high values for 8-hour
ozone for 2005 through 2009, and the 3-
year average of these values (i.e., design
value), are summarized in Table 2:
TABLE 2—BPA AREA FOURTH HIGHEST 8-HOUR OZONE CONCENTRATIONS AND DESIGN VALUES DATA SUMMARY
(PPM) 1 2 3
4th highest daily max
Design values three-year averages
BPA area overall
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2005–2007
2006–2008
2007–2009
0.083
0.084
0.082
0.078
0.071
0.083
0.081
0.077
1 Unlike
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for the 1-hour ozone standard, design value calculations for the 8-hour ozone standard are based on a rolling three-year average of
the annual 4th highest values (40 CFR Part 50, Appendix I).
2 Monitoring data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
3 The fourth high data in this table is from the Jefferson Co. Airport monitor site (AQS 48–245–0018).
As shown in Table 2, the 8-hour
ozone design value for 2005–2007, and
also for 2006–2008, which is based on
a three-year average of the fourthhighest daily maximum average ozone
concentration at the monitor recording
the highest concentrations, is below the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The design
values of 0.083 ppm for 2005–2007 and
0.081 ppm for 2006–2008 demonstrate
the area is in attainment of the 1997 8hour ozone NAAQS. Data through 2008
have been quality assured, as recorded
in AQS. Data for 2009 not yet certified
also indicate that the area continues to
attain the 1997 8-hour NAAQS. The
preliminary design value for the BPA
area for 2007–2009 is 0.077 ppm. In
summary, monitoring data for BPA for
the three years 2005 through 2007, as
well as monitoring data for the three
years 2006 through 2008 and
preliminary monitoring data for 2009,
show continued attainment of the 1997
8-hour ozone standard. Preliminary data
for BPA for 2009 is included in the
docket.
In addition, as discussed below with
respect to the maintenance plan, Texas
has committed to continue monitoring
in this area in accordance with 40 CFR
part 58. In summary, EPA is proposing
to determine that complete, qualityassured data for the 2005–2007 and
2006–2008 ozone seasons show that the
BPA 8-hour ozone nonattainment area
has attained the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS and data for 2009 in AQS but
not yet certified show that the area
continues to attain the standard.
Should the area violate the 1997 8hour ozone standard before the
proposed redesignation is finalized,
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EPA will not proceed with final
redesignation.
B. Is the BPA area attaining the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS?
EPA is also proposing to determine
that the BPA 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area is currently
attaining the 1-hour ozone NAAQS.
This determination is based upon three
years of complete, quality-assured and
state- certified ambient air monitoring
data that show the area has monitored
attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS
for the 2006–2008 monitoring period.
Data for 2009 in AQS but not yet
certified indicate that that the area
continues in attainment for the 1-hour
standard.
In 1979, EPA promulgated the revised
1-hour ozone standard of 0.12 parts per
million (ppm) (44 FR 8202, February 8,
1979). For ease of communication, many
reports of ozone concentrations are
given in parts per billion (ppb); ppb =
ppm × 1000. Thus, 0.12 ppm becomes
120 ppb or 124 ppb when rounding is
considered.
An area exceeds the 1-hour ozone
standard each time an ambient air
quality monitor records a 1-hour average
ozone concentration above 0.12 ppm in
any given day. Only the highest 1-hour
ozone concentration at the monitor
during any 24-hour day is considered
when determining the number of
exceedance days at the monitor. An area
violates the ozone standard if, over a
consecutive 3-year period, more than 3
expected exceedances occur at the same
monitor. For more information, please
see ‘‘National 1-hour primary and
secondary ambient air quality standards
for ozone’’ (40 CFR 50.9) and
‘‘Interpretation of the 1-Hour Primary
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and Secondary National Ambient Air
Quality Standards for Ozone’’ (40 CFR
Part 50, Appendix H).
The fourth-highest daily ozone
concentration over a 3-year period is
called the design value (DV). The DV
indicates the severity of the ozone
problem in an area; it is the ozone level
around which a state designs its control
strategy for attaining the ozone
standard. A monitor’s DV is the fourth
highest ambient concentration recorded
at that monitor over the previous 3
years. An area’s DV is the highest of the
design values from the area’s monitors.
The Act, as amended in 1990,
required EPA to designate as
nonattainment any area that was
violating the 1-hour ozone standard,
generally based on air quality
monitoring data from the 1987 through
1989 period (section 107(d)(4) of the
Act; 56 FR 56694, November 6, 1991).
EPA is proposing to determine that
the BPA 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area is currently in attainment of the 1hour standard based on the most recent
3 years of quality-assured air quality
data. Certified ambient air monitoring
data show that the area has monitored
attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS
for the 2005–2007 as well as the 2006–
2008 monitoring period. Also, data in
AQS but not yet certified for 2009 show
that the BPA area has monitored no
exceedances in that year and continues
to meet the 1-hour ozone standard.
Table 3 contains the 1-hour ozone data
for the BPA 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area monitors that show that the area is
currently attaining the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, consistent with 40 CFR Part
50, Appendix H.
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TABLE 3—BEAUMONT-PORT ARTHUR AREA 1-HOUR OZONE DATA 1 2
Number of exceedances
3-year exceedances
BPA Monitor site
Design values (ppb)
2005
Lamar (48–245–0009) ............................................
Port Arthur (48–245–0011) ....................................
Sabine Pass (48–245–0101)2 ................................
Hamshire (48–245–0022) ......................................
West Orange (48–361–1001) ................................
Mauriceville (48–361–1100) ...................................
Jefferson Co. Airport (48–245–0018) ....................
SETRPC Port Arthur (48–245–0628) ....................
Nederland (48–245–1035) .....................................
2006
2007
2008
2009
2005–
2007
2006–
2008
2007–
2009
2005–
2007
2006–
2008
2007–
2009
0
0
1.2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
106
104
107
97
99
96
104
98
106
101
102
97
100
96
102
98
93
98
93
96
95
100
87
99
95
93
1 Monitoring
2 For
data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
the Sabine Pass site in 2005 the actual number of exceedances was 1 and the estimated number of exceedances was 1.2.
EPA proposes to find that the BPA 1hour ozone nonattainment area has
attained the 1-hour ozone standard.
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VI. Does the BPA area have a fully
approved SIP under section 110(k) for
the section 110 and part D requirements
of the CAA applicable for purposes of
redesignation?
As discussed above in Section III, in
evaluating a request for redesignation,
EPA’s long-held position is that those
requirements expressly linked by
statutory language with the attainment
and reasonable further progress
requirements do not apply if EPA
determines that the area is attaining the
standard. Additionally, it is EPA’s
interpretation of CAA section
107(d)(3)(E) that applicable
requirements of the Act that come due
subsequent to the area’s submittal of a
complete redesignation request remain
applicable until a redesignation is
approved, but are not required as a
prerequisite to redesignation. Under this
interpretation, to qualify for
redesignation, states requesting
redesignation to attainment must meet
only the relevant requirements of the
Act that come due prior to the submittal
of a complete redesignation request. See
Sierra Club v. EPA, 375 F.3d 537 (7th
Cir. 2004). See also 68 FR 25424, 25427
(May 12, 2003) (redesignation of St.
Louis, Missouri); September 4, 1992
Calcagni memorandum; September 17,
1993 Michael Shapiro memorandum,
and 60 FR 12459, 12465–66 (March 7,
1995) (redesignation of Detroit-Ann
Arbor, MI).
Therefore, the applicable 1997 8-hour
ozone standard requirements for the
BPA area are those for a marginal, not
a moderate nonattainment area. The
State submitted a complete
redesignation request for BPA on
December 16, 2008, prior to the January
1, 2009 deadline for the submittal of the
area’s moderate area SIP requirements.
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Furthermore, since EPA is proposing to
determine that the area has attained the
1997 8-hour ozone standard, under the
principles enunciated in the General
Preamble and pursuant to 40 CFR
51.918, if that determination is
finalized, then the obligations to submit
requirements related to attainment and
RFP are not applicable for purposes of
redesignation.
The requirements to submit for a
moderate area, certain planning SIPs
related to attainment, including
attainment demonstration requirements
[the reasonably available control
measures (RACM) requirement of
section 172(c)(1) of the Act, the
reasonable further progress (RFP) and
attainment demonstration requirements
of sections 172(c)(2) and (6) and
182(b)(1) of the Act, and the
requirement for contingency measures
of section 172(c)(9) of the Act] would
not be applicable to the area as long as
it continues to attain the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS and would cease to
apply upon redesignation to attainment.
In addition, in the context of
redesignations, EPA has interpreted
requirements related to attainment as
not applicable for purposes of
redesignation. For example, in the
General Preamble EPA stated that:
[T]he section 172(c)(9) requirements are
directed at ensuring RFP and attainment by
the applicable date. These requirements no
longer apply when an area has attained the
standard and is eligible for redesignation.
Furthermore, section 175A for maintenance
plans * * * provides specific requirements
for contingency measures that effectively
supersede the requirements of section
172(c)(9) for these areas. [General Preamble
for the ‘‘Interpretation of Title I of the Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1990,’’ (General
Preamble) 57 FR 13498, 13564 (April 16,
1992)].
See also Calcagni memorandum dated
Sept. 4, 1992 (‘‘The requirements for
reasonable further progress and other
measures needed for attainment will not
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apply for redesignations because they
only have meaning for areas not
attaining the standard.’’ From the
memorandum, section 4.b.i.).
Today, EPA is also proposing to
approve the 2002 base year emissions
inventory as meeting the marginal area
applicable requirements of part D. In
addition, EPA is proposing to approve
the CFV program Equivalency
Demonstration as meeting the only
outstanding 1-hour ozone antibacksliding obligation for purposes of
redesignation. Furthermore, EPA is
proposing to find that upon final
approval of these two measures, the
BPA area will have a fully approved SIP
under CAA section 110(k) for
redesignation purposes and it will meet
all CAA section 110 and part D
applicable requirements for purposes of
redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard.
A. What are the general SIP
requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area?
EPA’s long-held interpretation of the
Act is that section 110 general SIP
elements not linked to an area’s
nonattainment status and classification
are not applicable for purposes of
redesignation. Section 110(a)(2) of title
I of the Act delineates the general
requirements for a SIP, which include
enforceable emissions limitations and
other control measures, means, or
techniques, provisions for the
establishment and operation of
appropriate devices necessary to collect
data on ambient air quality, and
programs to enforce the limitations.
For example, CAA section 110(a)(2)(d)
requires that SIPs contain certain
measures to prevent sources in a state
from significantly contributing to air
quality problems in another state. To
implement this provision, EPA has
required certain states, but not Texas, to
establish programs to address the
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transport of air pollutants (NOX SIP
Call). Texas submitted a SIP revision to
address interstate transport on May 1,
2008. The purpose of that SIP revision
was to document that emissions from
Texas’ sources that may contribute to
nonattainment in another state have
been mitigated through existing control
strategies. However, CAA section
110(a)(2)(D) requirements for a state are
not linked with a particular
nonattainment area’s designation and
classification in that state. EPA believes
that the requirements linked with a
particular nonattainment area’s
designation and classification are the
relevant measures to evaluate in
reviewing a redesignation request. The
transport SIP submittal requirements,
where applicable, continue to apply to
a state regardless of the designation of
any one particular area in the state.
Thus, we do not believe that these
requirements should be construed to be
applicable requirements for purposes of
redesignation.
Further, EPA believes that the other
CAA section 110 elements not
connected with nonattainment plan
submissions and not linked with an
area’s attainment status are not
applicable requirements for purposes of
redesignation. The State will still be
subject to these requirements after the
area is redesignated. The section 110
and part D requirements, which are
linked with a particular area’s
designation and classification, are the
relevant measures to evaluate in
reviewing a redesignation request.
We have reviewed Texas’s SIP and
have concluded that it meets the general
SIP requirements under section 110 of
the CAA to the extent they are
applicable for purposes of
redesignation. EPA has previously
approved provisions of the Texas SIP
addressing section 110 elements under
the 1-hour ozone standard (40 CFR
52.2270–.2280). Further, in a certified
letter dated April 4, 2008 (a copy of this
letter and the enclosure to the letter are
available in the docket), as well as in a
SIP revision submitted May 1, 2008,
Texas confirmed that the State
continues to meet the section 110
requirements for the 8-hour ozone
standard. EPA has not yet taken
rulemaking action on these submittals;
however, such approval is not necessary
for redesignation.
B. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area?
EPA has reviewed the Texas SIP for
the BPA area with respect to SIP
requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation under part D of the Act for
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both the 1-hour ozone NAAQS and the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. EPA
believes that the Texas SIP for the BPA
area contains approved SIP measures
that meet the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of
redesignation, with the exception of the
requirements for an approved emissions
inventory and the CFV program
Equivalency Demonstration, which we
are proposing to approve in this
rulemaking. Upon final approval of
these requirements, the BPA area will
meet all of the requirements applicable
to the area for purposes of redesignation
under part D of the Act.
The 1-hour and 1997 8-hour ozone
applicable requirements are discussed
in detail below.
1. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area under the 1-hour ozone
standard?
The anti-backsliding provisions at 40
CFR 51.905(a)(1) prescribe one-hour
ozone NAAQS requirements that
continue to apply after revocation of the
one-hour ozone NAAQS for former onehour ozone nonattainment areas.
Section 51.905(a)(1) provides that:
The area remains subject to the
obligations to adopt and implement the
applicable requirements defined in
section 51.900(f), except as provided in
paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section and
except as provided in paragraph (b) of
this section.
Section 51.900(f), as amended by 70
FR 30592, 30604 (May 26, 2005),
provides that: Applicable requirements
means that for an area that the following
requirements, to the extent such
requirements applied to the area for the
area’s classification under section
181(a)(1) of the CAA for the one-hour
NAAQS at the time of designation for
the eight-hour NAAQS, remain in effect:
(1) Reasonably available control
technology (RACT).
(2) Inspection and maintenance
programs (I/M).
(3) Major source applicability cut-offs
for purposes of RACT.
(4) Rate of Progress (ROP) reductions.
(5) Stage II vapor recovery.
(6) Clean-fuel vehicle program under
section 182(c)(4) of the CAA.
(7) Clean fuels for boilers under
section 182(e)(3) of the CAA.
(8) Transportation Control Measures
(TCMs) during heavy traffic hours as
provided under section 182(e)(4) of the
CAA.
(9) Enhanced (ambient) monitoring
under section 182(c)(1) of the CAA.
(10) TCMs under section 182(c)(5) of
the CAA.
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(11) Vehicle Miles Travelled (VMT)
provisions of section 182(d)(1) of the
CAA.
(12) NOX requirements under section
182(f) of the CAA.
(13) Attainment demonstration or
alternative as provided under section
51.905(a)(1)(ii).
In addition to applicable requirements
listed under section 51.900(f), the State
must also comply with the additional 1hour anti-backsliding requirements
discussed in the Court’s decisions in
South Coast Air Quality Management
Dist. v. EPA: (1) NSR requirements
based on the area’s 1-hour ozone
nonattainment classification; (2) section
185 source penalty fees; (3) contingency
measures to be implemented pursuant
to section 172(c)(9) or 182(c)(9) of the
CAA for areas not making reasonable
further progress toward attainment of
the one-hour ozone NAAQS, or for
failure to attain the NAAQS; and, (4)
transportation conformity requirements
for certain types of Federal actions.
Pursuant to 40 CFR 51.905(c), the area
is subject to the obligations set forth in
51.905(a) and 51.900(f). The following
addresses the one-hour ozone SIP
requirements applicable to the BPA area
pursuant to these anti-backsliding
requirements and those discussed in the
Court’s decision in South Coast Air
Quality Management Dist. v. EPA.
Prior to the revocation of the one-hour
ozone standard on June 15, 2005, the
BPA area was classified as a serious
nonattainment area for the one-hour
ozone standard with a compliance date
of November 15, 2007. In reviewing the
State of Texas’ 1997 8-hour ozone
redesignation request for the BPA area,
we assessed whether the area satisfied
the CAA anti-backsliding requirements
under the one-hour ozone standard. We
conclude that the BPA area and the
State of Texas have satisfied all antibacksliding CAA requirements
applicable to a serious one-hour ozone
nonattainment area for purposes of
redesignation, except for the CFV
program or an acceptable substitute
under section 183(c)(4) of the CAA. See
40 CFR 51.905 (6). Today, we are
proposing to approve the State’s
equivalency CFV demonstration. See
below.
The following discusses how the
applicable CAA requirements have been
met in the BPA area. Note that the State
commits to continue to comply with
these requirements unless revised
through SIP revisions approved by the
EPA.
40 CFR 51.905 (1) and (3). RACT and
Major source applicability cut-offs for
purposes of RACT. EPA found that the
BPA area met the serious area VOC and
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NOX RACT requirements for the 1-hour
standard on July 10, 2009 (74 FR 33146).
This action also approved Texas’
changes to the batch process rules and
the shipbuilding and ship repair rules
that lower the threshold for affected
sources of VOC emissions to the serious
area requirements of 50 tons per year
(tpy). This July 10, 2009 approval action
satisfies the 1-hour ozone serious RACT
requirements for the BPA area.
40 CFR 51.905 (2). Inspection and
maintenance programs (I/M). There is
no requirement for the BPA area to have
an I/M program. The Federal I/M
Flexibility Amendments of 1995
determined that urbanized areas with
populations less than 200,000 for 1990
(such as BPA) are not mandated to
participate in the I/M program (60 FR
48033, September 18, 1995).
40 CFR 51.905 (4). Rate of progress
reductions. We approved the post-1996
ROP Plan and its associated MVEB and
a revised 1990 base year emissions
inventory on February 22, 2006 (71 FR
8962) for the BPA serious 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area. This plan covered
the 3-year periods of 1997–1999, 2000–
2002, and 2003–2005, achieving 27
percent reductions no later than
November 15, 2005.
40 CFR 51.905 (5) Stage II vapor
recovery. EPA approved Texas’ Stage II
rules and amendments for the BPA area
on April 15, 1994 (59 FR 17940), and as
revised on March 29, 2005 (70 FR
15769).
40 CFR 51.905 (7) Clean fuels for
boilers under section 182(e)(3) of the
CAA. This is an extreme area
requirement and therefore does not
apply to the BPA serious area.
40 CFR 51.905 (8) Transportation
Control Measures (TCMs) during heavy
traffic hours as provided under section
182(e)(4) of the CAA. This is an extreme
area requirement and therefore does not
apply to the BPA serious area.
40 CFR 51.905 (9) Enhanced
(ambient) monitoring under section
182(c)(1) of the CAA. EPA approved the
Texas SIP revision for enhanced
ambient monitoring on October 4, 1994
(59 FR 50504) as meeting section
182(c)(1) of the CAA. The monitoring
network meets the requirements in 40
CFR Part 58 and section 182(c)(1) for
enhanced monitoring.
40 CFR 51.905 (10) TCMs under
section 182(c)(5) of the CAA. As
required by the Clean Air Act section
176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)), the Southeast
Texas Regional Planning Commission,
the Metropolitan Planning Organization
for the BPA area, demonstrated
conformity of area transportation plans
to the motor vehicle emissions budgets
established in the BPA Rate-of-Progress
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SIP approved by EPA on February 22,
2006 (71 FR 8962). The Federal
Highway Administration determined on
September 25, 2007 that the area
transportation plans conformed to the
budgets established by the SIP. The
current aggregate vehicle mileage,
aggregate vehicle emissions, congestion
levels, and other relevant parameters
were determined, as part of the
conformity analysis, to be consistent
with those used for the area’s
demonstration of progress towards
attainment.
40 CFR 51.905 (11) Vehicle miles
traveled (VMT) provisions of section
182(d)(1) of the CAA. This is a severe
area requirement and therefore does not
apply to the BPA serious area.
40 CFR 51.905 (12) NOX requirements
under section 182(f) of the CAA. These
requirements were satisfied by a
previous EPA action approving a Texas
SIP revision for NOX controls in the
BPA area on March 3, 2000 (65 FR
11468).
40 CFR 51.905 (13) Attainment
demonstration or alternative as
provided under section 51.905(a)(1)(ii).
Texas elected the option to submit an 8hour ozone attainment demonstration
SIP to demonstrate attainment of the 8hour ozone standard by the area’s 8hour ozone attainment date with
associated MVEBs and an RACM
analysis. The SIP was submitted to EPA
on November 16, 2004, as revised on
October 15, 2005. EPA has not acted on
it. As discussed previously, EPA’s longheld position is that an attainment
demonstration with the RACM analysis
is not an applicable requirement for
purposes of evaluating an ozone
redesignation request. (General
Preamble, 57 FR 13564.) See also 40
CFR 51.918. Upon the effective date of
redesignation, the obligation is
terminated. Moreover EPA is proposing
to determine that the area has attained
the 1-hour ozone standard, and for that
reason as well, if the determination is
finalized, the area would not be
obligated to submit a 1-hour attainment
demonstration.
South Coast Anti-Backsliding Measures
NSR. EPA has long held its position
that a fully-approved NSR program is
not an applicable requirement for
purposes of evaluating an ozone
redesignation request. The rationale for
this view is described in a
memorandum from Mary Nichols,
Assistant Administrator for Air and
Radiation dated October 14, 1994, titled,
‘‘Part D New Source Review
Requirements for Areas Requesting
Redesignation to Attainment.’’ The
State’s PSD program becomes effective
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27523
in the area immediately upon
redesignation to attainment.2
Consequently, EPA concludes that an
approved NSR program is not an
applicable requirement for purposes of
redesignation. See the more detailed
explanations of this issue in the
following rulemakings: Detroit,
Michigan (60 FR 12467–12468, March 7,
1995); Cleveland-Akron-Lorain, Ohio
(61 FR 20458, 20469–20470, May 7,
1996); Louisville, Kentucky (66 FR
53665, 53669, October 23, 2001); Grand
Rapids, Michigan (61 FR 31831, 31836–
31837, June 21, 1996).
Section 185 fees. This is a
requirement for severe and extreme
areas only, and therefore does not apply
to the BPA serious area.
Contingency Measures. Sections
172(c)(9) and 182(c)(9) of the CAA
require ozone control plans to contain
measures to be implemented in the
event that any RFP or attainment
milestone in the ozone control plan is
missed. EPA approved the 1-hour ozone
contingency measures for the BPA area
on February 10, 1998 at 63 FR 6659 as
part of EPA’s approval of the BPA area’s
1-hour ozone 15% VOC ROP Plan.
These contingency measures included
the Federal Tier I rules, the Federal
small engine VOC rule, and excess
reductions from the 15% VOC ROP
Plan. When EPA reclassified the BPA
area to serious for the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, these are the contingency
measures that EPA triggered. EPA is
proposing to approve the post-1996 ROP
plan’s associated contingency measures,
submitted to EPA on November 16,
2004. The contingency measures are
federal and state measures already being
implemented that are in excess of those
needed for ROP and are sufficient to
provide the needed contingency
measure reductions. For more
information, please see Section X. and
TSD Part II.E. found in the electronic
docket.
As noted elsewhere in this proposed
rule, it is EPA’s position that
contingency measures are not an
applicable requirement for purposes of
evaluating an ozone redesignation
request. EPA’s long-held position is that
those requirements expressly linked by
statutory language with the attainment
and reasonable further progress do not
apply when an area requesting
redesignation is attaining the standard.
For more detail of the applicable 1hour ozone requirements and EPA’s
approval actions, see Part II.A. of the
2 If the State believes that a rule change is
required, it must adopt and submit it to EPA for
approval as a SIP revision. Upon EPA’s approval of
the SIP revision submittal, PSD applies in the area.
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TSD, which is included in the electronic
docket.
As previously noted, it is EPA’s
position that further EPA action is
required upon one 1-hour ozone serious
area requirement: The CFV program or
substitute. A summary of the Texas
submittals and EPA’s proposed action
follows. More detail on the contents of
the submittals and EPA’s technical
analysis may be found in the TSD, Part
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Clean-Fuel Vehicle Program (Including
Centrally Fueled Fleets Requirements)
(i) What are the Clean-fuel vehicle
program requirements?
The 1990 CAA amendments
established the clean-fuel vehicle (CFV)
program that requires clean alternative
fuels for a ‘‘covered fleet’’ in order to
reduce emissions in certain ozone and
carbon monoxide nonattainment areas.
A ‘‘covered fleet’’ means a fleet that has
ten or more vehicles that are either
centrally fueled or capable of being
centrally fueled. For serious ozone
nonattainment areas, States are required
to either adopt the CFV program
prescribed under CAA part C of title II,
or implement a substitute for the
program that demonstrates equivalent
long-term reductions in ozoneproducing emissions within 1 year after
reclassification (CAA sections 182(c)(4)
and 246(a)(3)). CAA section 246
describes the requirements for Centrally
Fueled Fleets (CFF). EPA may adjust the
compliance deadlines where
compliance with such deadlines would
be infeasible. (CAA section 246(a)(3).)
Currently, the federal CFF program
requires 70% of new light duty vehicles
and trucks and 50% of new heavy-duty
vehicles in a covered fleet to meet
certain prescribed exhaust emission
standards for light duty vehicles, light
duty trucks and heavy-duty vehicles.
(CAA section 246(b)(3).) EPA has
determined that, beginning with the
2006 model years, both the Tier II
conventional vehicle and engine
standards and heavy-duty vehicle and
engine standards are either equivalent to
or more stringent than the applicable
CFV program Low Emission Vehicle
(LEV) standards. See EPA Dear
Manufacturer Letter CCD–05–12 (LDV/
LDT/MDPV/HDV/HDE/LD–AFC) (July
21, 2005).
(ii) What are the CFV program
requirements for the BPA area?
The March 30, 2004, reclassification
of the area to serious nonattainment was
effective April 29, 2004, and required
that a CFV program or substitute that
would achieve equivalent reductions be
submitted to EPA by April 29, 2005.
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(iii) How did the State Meet the CFV
Requirements for BPA?
The State addresses this CFV program
requirement by making an equivalency
demonstration showing that the Federal
Tier II and heavy-duty vehicle and
engine standards are more stringent
than or equivalent to the CFV program
LEV standards, beginning with the 2006
model year. Texas used the 2006 model
year in the equivalency demonstration
because it is the earliest full vehicle
model year that would have been
affected by a CFV program upon
adoption of a program by April 29, 2005
(i.e., the 2006 model year would begin
on September 1, 2005). The
demonstration showed that the resulting
emissions reductions from Tier II and
the heavy-duty vehicle and engine
standards meet or exceed the emissions
reductions that a CFV program would
provide in the BPA nonattainment area
and, therefore, the implementation of
the Tier II and heavy-duty standards
serve as an adequate substitute for a
CFV program.
Specifically, relying upon EPA’s data,
beginning with the 2006 model year,
Texas shows Tier 2 Light-Duty Vehicles
(LDVs), Light-Duty Trucks (LDTs 1–4),
and Medium Duty Passenger Vehicles
(MDPVs) certified to certain Tier 2 bin
standards, to be equivalent to or more
stringent than the CFV program LEV
emission standards. In addition, Texas
demonstrates that Tier 2 LDVs, LDTs 1–
4, and MDPVs certified to other Tier 2
bin standards, are equivalent to or more
stringent than the CFV program LEV
emission standards. Texas performs a
similar analysis, showing that standards
for 2006 and later model years for Otto
cycle and diesel heavy-duty vehicles
ranging from 8501–14,000 Gross Vehicle
Weight Rating are more stringent than
the CFV program LEV emissions
standards for these vehicles.
(iv) What is EPA proposing?
EPA is proposing to approve, under
section 182(c)(4)(B) of the CAA, Texas’
equivalency demonstration that
emissions reductions under Tier II and
the heavy-duty engine and vehicle
standards achieve equivalent or greater
emissions reductions than would be
expected from implementation of the
CFV Program in the BPA nonattainment
area. This approval is supported by the
determination made by EPA that the use
of the 2006 model year as the first
model year vehicles that would be
covered by a CFV program in the
equivalency demonstration is
appropriate. Thus, new vehicles
purchased by fleet operators for Model
Years 2006 and beyond would
necessarily achieve, as required by the
Tier II and heavy-duty engine standards,
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as much or more reductions than if the
State adopted a CFV program as
required by the Act.
The reclassification required the
program to be submitted by April 29,
2005. EPA has determined that starting
the program on April 29, 2005 is
infeasible under CAA section 246(a)(3)
which allows EPA to adjust the
implementation date of a CFV program
where implementation would otherwise
be infeasible. EPA has decided that
implementation of a CFV program in the
BPA nonattainment area would be
infeasible for the following reasons. As
earlier explained, as of July 2005, EPA
had determined that beginning with the
2006 model year the Tier II and heavyduty engine and vehicle standards were
either equivalent or more stringent than
the CFV program LEV standards. Thus,
Texas would have been required to
implement the CFV program for
approximately 4 months (i.e., from April
29, 2005, when the program was due
under the reclassification, to August 31,
2005 when the 2006 model year began).
For model years 2006 and beyond, the
program would have been unnecessary.
EPA believes that it would have been
infeasible for Texas to initiate and
oversee the elaborate record-keeping
and reporting requirements associated
with this program for this 4-month
period only. Additionally, we note that
owners and operators of covered fleet
would likely not have been inclined to
comply with the requirements of a
program with such limited duration.
Please see the TSD: Part II.A. for further
discussion of this requirement.
As noted above, with the exception of
the CFV program, the BPA area
currently has an approved SIP for all the
1-hour ozone anti-backsliding
requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation. EPA is proposing to find
that, if it finalizes approval of the CFV
program Equivalency Demonstration,
the BPA area will meet all 1-hour ozone
anti-backsliding requirements
applicable to the area for purposes of
redesignation under section 110 and
part D.
2. What are the part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the BPA area under the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard?
Part D, subpart 2 applicable SIP
requirements. For the reasons set forth
above, no moderate area requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard
under part D, section 182(b) became due
prior to the submission of the complete
redesignation request, and therefore
none are applicable to the Area for
purposes of redesignation. If EPA
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finalizes its proposed approval of the
area’s emissions inventory under
section 182(a)(1), the area will have met
all the requirements applicable under its
prior marginal classification for
purposes of redesignation.
In addition to the fact that no
moderate area part D requirements
applicable for purposes of redesignation
became due prior to submission of the
redesignation request and therefore are
not applicable, EPA believes it is
reasonable to interpret the conformity
and NSR requirements as not requiring
approval prior to redesignation.
Section 176 Conformity
Requirements. Section 176(c) of the
CAA requires states to establish criteria
and procedures to ensure that Federally
supported or funded projects conform to
the air quality planning goals in the
applicable SIP. The requirement to
determine conformity applies to
transportation plans, programs and
projects developed, funded or approved
under title 23 of the United States Code
(U.S.C.) and the Federal Transit Act
(transportation conformity) as well as to
all other Federally supported or funded
projects (general conformity). State
conformity revisions must be consistent
with Federal conformity regulations
relating to consultation, enforcement
and enforceability that the CAA
required the EPA to promulgate.
EPA believes it is reasonable to
interpret the conformity SIP
requirements as not applying for
purposes of evaluating the redesignation
request under section 107(d) because
state conformity rules are still required
after redesignation and Federal
conformity rules apply where state rules
have not been approved. See, Wall v.
EPA, 265 F.3d 426 (6th Cir. 2001)
(upholding this interpretation). See also,
60 FR 62748 (December 7, 1995, Tampa,
Florida).
NSR Requirements. EPA has also
determined that areas being
redesignated need not comply with the
requirement that a NSR program be
approved prior to redesignation,
provided that the area demonstrates
maintenance of the standard without a
part D NSR program in effect, since PSD
requirements will apply after
redesignation. The rationale for this
view is described in a memorandum
from Mary Nichols, Assistant
Administrator for Air and Radiation,
dated October 14, 1994, entitled ‘‘Part D
New Source Review (Part D NSR)
Requirements for Areas Requesting
Redesignation to Attainment.’’ Texas has
demonstrated that BPA will be able to
maintain the standard without a part D
NSR program in effect, and therefore,
Texas need not have a fully approved
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part D NSR program prior to approval of
the redesignation request. Texas’s PSD
program will become effective in BPA
upon redesignation to attainment
(unless a rule change is necessary; see
footnote 2). See, rulemakings for Detroit,
Michigan (60 FR 12467–12468, March 7,
1995); Cleveland-Akron-Lorrain, Ohio
(61 FR 20458, 20469–70, May 7, 1996);
Louisville, Kentucky (66 FR 53665,
October 23, 2001); Grand Rapids,
Michigan (61 FR 31834–31837, June 21,
1996).
Section 182(a)(1) Inventory
requirements. The marginal
requirements at section 182(a) and 40
CFR 51.915 require that the BPA 8-hour
ozone area meet the emissions inventory
requirements of section 182(a)(1). An
emissions inventory is an estimation of
actual emissions of air pollutants in an
area. The emissions inventory consists
of VOC and NOX emissions, as they are
ozone precursors.
The State submitted a base year
emissions inventory on December 18,
2008 to EPA as part of the SIP revision
for the BPA area. Texas prepared a
comprehensive emissions inventory for
the BPA for the baseline year of 2002.
The 2002 base year emissions inventory
includes all point, area, nonroad mobile,
and on-road mobile source emissions.
Table 4 lists the 2002 emissions
inventory for the BPA area. EPA
reviewed the 2002 base year inventory
and determined that it was developed in
accordance with EPA guidelines. For a
full discussion of our evaluation, please
refer to Part I.B. of the TSD, found in the
electronic docket.
TABLE 4—BPA BASE YEAR EMISSION
INVENTORY
[Tons/day]
27525
information, please see Part II.A. of the
TSD.
Section 182(a)(2)(A) RACT
corrections. EPA approved the Texas
RACT correction rules on March 7, 1995
at 60 FR 12438.
Section 182(a)(2)(B) I/M Program.
There is no requirement for the BPA
area to have an I/M program. The
Federal I/M Flexibility Amendments of
1995 determined that urbanized areas
with populations less than 200,000 for
1990 (such as BPA) are not mandated to
participate in the I/M program (60 FR
48033, September 18, 1995).
Section 182(a)(2)(C) Permit programs
and 182(a)(4) General Offset
requirement. As noted previously, EPA
has determined that areas being
redesignated need not comply with the
requirement that a NSR program be
approved prior to redesignation,
provided that the area demonstrates
maintenance of the standard without a
part D NSR program in effect, since PSD
requirements will apply after
redesignation.
Section 181(a)(3)(B) Emissions
Statements. The emissions statement
rules were approved on August 26, 1994
(59 FR 44036).
Thus, EPA proposes to find that the
area has an approved SIP for all the
1997 8-hour ozone requirements
applicable for purposes of
redesignation, with the exception of the
2002 Base Year Emissions Inventory.
EPA is proposing to find that, upon
EPA’s final approval of the BPA
emissions inventory, the BPA area will
meet all requirements applicable to the
area for purposes of redesignation under
section 110 and part D and have a fully
approved applicable implementation
plan for the area under section 110(k).
C. Does the BPA area have a fully
approved applicable SIP under section
110(k) of the CAA for purposes of
Source type
NOX
VOC
redesignation?
Point ..............................
109.23
43.81
With the exceptions noted above for
Area ..............................
7.54
50.11 the 1-hour ozone CFV program and the
On-road Mobile .............
45.84
13.32
8-hour emissions inventory, EPA has
Non-road Mobile ...........
48.99
13.85
fully approved the applicable Texas SIP
Total ..........................
211.60
121.09 for the BPA area, under section 110(k)
of the CAA for all requirements
EPA is proposing to approve the 2002 applicable for purposes of
redesignation. EPA may rely on prior
Base Year Emissions Inventory
submitted by the State on December 18, SIP approvals in approving a
redesignation request; see Calcagni
2008 as part of the Texas SIP for the
BPA area. With the approval of the 2002 Memorandum at p. 3; Southwestern
Pennsylvania Growth Alliance v.
base year emissions inventory, it is
Browner, 144 F.3d 984, 989–90 (6th Cir.
EPA’s position that the BPA area will
1998); Wall, 265 F.3d 426, plus any
meet all of the requirements for a
additional measures it may approve in
marginal nonattainment area under the
conjunction with a redesignation action.
1997 8-hour ozone standard.
Listed below are the other marginal
See, 68 FR 25426 (May 12, 2003) and
area requirements that have already
citations therein. Following passage of
been met by the BPA area. For further
the CAA of 1970, Texas adopted and
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 94 / Monday, May 17, 2010 / Proposed Rules
submitted, and EPA fully approved at
various times, provisions addressing the
various 1-hour ozone standard SIP
elements applicable in the BPA area
(e.g., 74 FR 33146, 71 FR 8962, 66 FR
26914, 63 FR 6659, 60 FR 12438).
As indicated above, EPA believes that
the section 110 elements not connected
with nonattainment plan submissions
and not linked to the area’s
nonattainment status are not applicable
requirements for purposes of
redesignation. EPA also believes that
since the moderate area part D
requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation did not become due prior
to submission of the redesignation
request, they also are therefore not
applicable requirements for purposes of
redesignation. As set forth above, with
the two exceptions noted, the area has
met all other applicable requirements
for purposes of redesignation under its
prior marginal classification. Once EPA
has finalized approvals of the 1-hour
CFV program Equivalency
Demonstrations and the 8-hour base
year inventory, the area will have met
all applicable requirements for purposes
of redesignation for the 8-hour ozone
standard.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with PROPOSALS
VII. Are the air quality improvements
in the BPA area due to permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions?
EPA proposes to find that Texas has
demonstrated that the observed ozone
air quality improvement in the BPA area
is due to permanent and enforceable
reductions in emissions resulting from
implementation of the SIP, Federal
measures, and other State-adopted
measures.
In making this demonstration, the
State presented several sets of data.
First, the State provided a 2002 Periodic
Emissions Inventory (PEI) for NOX and
VOC in the BPA area, and provided a
comparison between the 2002 PEI and
the 2005 Base EI. Second, the State
analyzed the changes in VOC and NOX
emissions in the BPA area between the
ozone standard violation year 2002 and
one of the years in the period during
which the area attained the standard,
2005. Finally, the State documented the
VOC and NOX emission control
measures that have been implemented
in the BPA area over the past 17 years.
A. Emissions Reductions as Shown by
Emissions Inventory Data
Texas chose 2005 as the base
attainment year, and compared 2002
VOC and NOX emissions when the DV
was 90 ppb, to the attainment year
emissions, to show that emission
reductions have occurred in the area,
and have resulted in the ozone air
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17:12 May 14, 2010
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quality improvement in the area. 2005 is
the first year of the first three-year
period demonstrating attainment. By
2005, NOX emissions were estimated to
have dropped by almost 30% and VOC
emissions by 15% from 2002 levels.
These significant decreases resulted in
the improvement in ozone levels seen at
the monitors.
The emissions for both years were
derived from periodic VOC and NOX
emission inventories, which are
prepared every three years. Based on the
estimated emissions, TCEQ has
documented several emission trends to
show that permanent and enforceable
emission controls in various source
sectors are responsible for significant
downward trends in VOC and NOX
emission totals in the BPA area. For a
discussion of emission inventory
preparation methods, see the discussion
of the preparation of the 2005 base year
emission inventories below.
To demonstrate that VOC and NOX
emissions decreased between one of the
violation years (2002) and an attainment
year (2005), TCEQ has documented
BPA’s VOC and NOX emissions for 2002
and 2005 for all anthropogenic source
sectors. Table 5 lists these emissions for
the 2002 PEI and 2005 EI. Due to
improved reporting and estimating
techniques, flash emissions are better
captured in the 2005 inventory. To
compare values that are alike, VOC area
source emissions for 2005 in Table 5 do
not include flash emissions from
upstream oil and gas production.
TABLE 5—A COMPARISON OF VOC
AND NOX EMISSIONS IN THE BPA
AREA BY SOURCE CATEGORY FROM
THE 2002 PEI AND THE 2005 BASE
EI—Continued
[Tons per average ozone season day]
Emissions source
category
Total ..............................
2002
2005
211.60
149.14
* This figure represents the 2005 base inventory for area sources used in the maintenance plan not including flash emissions from
upstream oil and gas production.
This comparison of emissions in the
BPA area shows that NOX emissions
significantly declined between 2002 and
2005. In addition, VOC emissions in the
BPA area also declined between 2002
and 2005. TCEQ has included this
information as part of its demonstration
that emissions reductions in the BPA
area, for both NOX and VOC between
2002 and 2005, explain the observed
improvement in ozone concentrations.
Further, the reductions between 2002
and 2005 can be attributed to permanent
and enforceable reductions.
The most significant reductions
documented in Table 5 were the
reductions in Point Source NOX. In
2000, Texas adopted additional NOX
control rules to further reduce NOX
emissions from electric utility power
boilers (approximately 50% reduction)
and from industrial boilers and process
heaters (approximately 20 percent
reduction). These reductions occurred
in two stages, with two-thirds of the
reductions occurring by May 1, 2003,
and the remaining one-third by May 1,
TABLE 5—A COMPARISON OF VOC
2005. Federal emission control
AND NOX EMISSIONS IN THE BPA measures for on and off road emissions
AREA BY SOURCE CATEGORY FROM also have had significant impacts on
THE 2002 PEI AND THE 2005 BASE VOC and NOX emissions in the BPA
area.
EI
Based on the 2002 and 2005
[Tons per average ozone season day]
nonattainment area emissions
information provided by TCEQ, EPA
Emissions source
2002
2005
concludes that VOC and NOX emission
category
totals have significantly declined in the
nonattainment area during the 2002–
VOC Emissions (tpd)
2005 period. These emission reductions
Area ..............................
50.11
* 42.59 have contributed to attainment of the
Non-Road Mobile ..........
13.85
4.96 1997 eight-hour ozone standard in this
On-Road Mobile ...........
13.32
11.63 area. EPA concurs with Texas’
Point ..............................
43.81
42.68 conclusions that the emission controls,
emissions inventories, and emissions
Total ..........................
121.09
101.86 trends support the conclusion that
attainment in the area is due to
NOX Emissions (tpd)
permanent and enforceable emission
Area ..............................
7.54
9.06 reductions.
To further demonstrate that
Non-Road Mobile ..........
48.99
25.99
permanent and enforceable emission
On-Road Mobile ...........
45.84
45.60
Point ..............................
109.23
68.49 controls have reduced VOC and NOX
emissions, TCEQ also documented the
trends in NOX and VOC concentrations
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 94 / Monday, May 17, 2010 / Proposed Rules
in the BPA area, which is discussed in
greater detail below.
B. Impact of Emissions Controls
Implementation: Trend Analysis
To assess the impact of emission
control implementation, TCEQ
determined the VOC and NOX ambient
concentration trends at two monitors in
the BPA area from 1991 to 2007. This
included determining or projecting the
VOC emissions for all seventeen years
in this time period. NOX trends during
this period, for both monitors provided
by TCEQ in the analysis, Beaumont
(CAMS 2) and West Orange (CAMS 9),
showed that the 95th percentile of
concentrations decreased at both
monitors, and that the average NOX
concentration remained relatively flat at
Beaumont (CAMS 2) but has decreased
at West Orange (CAMS 9). For VOC
trends in the BPA area, since TCEQ’s
VOC data was limited, TCEQ included
data provided by the SETRPC that show
that average concentrations for both
ethylene and propylene have decreased
in the BPA area. The reduction in
emissions and the corresponding
improvement in ozone air quality over
the assessed period can be attributed to
the implementation of a number of
emission control measures identified in
the first part of this section above.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with PROPOSALS
C. Permanent and Enforceable
Emissions Controls Implemented
The following is a discussion of the
permanent and enforceable emission
controls that have been implemented in
the BPA area. In Texas’ 8-hour ozone
redesignation request, the State
documented all of the emission control
rules or programs that have impacted
VOC or NOX emissions during the
period 1991–2007.
1. Reasonably Available Control
Techniques
Texas notes that a number of VOC and
NOX RACT rules developed in prior
years have continued to provide
additional VOC and NOX emission
reductions during the more recent years.
For VOC controls, with the exception of
the source categories covered by the
most recently published CTGs (see a
discussion of the new CTG RACT source
categories below), Texas has adopted
and implemented VOC RACT rules for
source categories covered by older (prior
to 2006) CTGs and for major non-CTG
sources in Hardin, Jefferson and Orange
Counties. All VOC RACT rules are
contained in Chapter 115 of volume 30
of the Texas Administrative Code (30
TAC 115), and all NOX RACT rules are
contained in Chapter 117 of volume 30
of the TAC (30 TAC 117). All of these
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27527
the following vehicle NOX emission
reductions will occur nationwide:
Passenger cars (light duty vehicles) (77
percent); light duty trucks, minivans,
2. ROP Plans and Attainment
and sports utility vehicles (86 percent);
Demonstration Plan
and, larger sports utility vehicles, vans,
TCEQ states that the BPA are has met
and heavier trucks (69 to 95 percent).
all of the one-hour ozone SIP
VOC emission reductions are expected
obligations, including implementation
to range from 12 to 18 percent,
of the VOC and NOX emission control
depending on vehicle class, over the
programs and rules needed to comply
same period. Although some of the
with Texas’ one-hour ozone attainment
emission reductions occurred by the
demonstration for the BPA area and
attainment years (2005–2007) in the
implementation of all emission control
BPA area, additional emission
measures contained in the various ROP
reductions will occur during the
plans applicable to Hardin, Jefferson
maintenance period. For example, note
and Orange Counties. EPA approved the that the Tier 2 emission standards for
15% ROP Plan on February 10, 1998 (63 passenger vehicles weighing over 8,500
FR 6659). EPA approved the Post-1996
pounds were not implemented until
VOC and NOX ROP Plan on February
2008 or later.
Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine Rule. EPA
22, 2006 (71 FR 8962). The Post-1996
issued this rule in 2000 (October 6,
ROP Plan provided 27 percent
2000, 65 FR 59895; Updated Emissions
reductions.
Standards for 2004 and Later Model
3. NOX Control Rules
Year Highway Heavy Duty Engines and
TCEQ developed NOX emission
Vehicles). This rule includes standards
control rules for electric industrial
limiting the sulfur content of diesel fuel,
boilers, industrial boilers and process
which went into effect in 2004. A
heaters, gas turbines, rich-burn
second phase took effect in 2007, which
stationary gas-fired internal combustion further reduced the highway diesel fuel
engines, nitric acid plants, and adipic
sulfur content to 15 parts per million,
acid plants in compliance with the
leading to additional reductions in
CAA. These rules were adopted in 1993. combustion NOX and VOC emissions
Emission reductions resulted from these (January 18, 2001, 66 FR 5001; Heavy
Duty Engine and Vehicle Standards and
rules beginning in 1999.
TCEQ also adopted VOC rules for
Highway Diesel Fuel Sulfur Control
batch process and industrial wastewater Requirements). This rule is expected to
sources and NOX rules for lean-burn
achieve a 95 percent reduction in NOX
engines. These rules were adopted in
emissions from diesel trucks and busses.
Non-Road Diesel Rule. EPA issued
1999, with emissions reductions
this rule in 2004. This rule applies to
resulting from these rules beginning in
diesel engines used in industries, such
2001.
as construction, agriculture, and mining.
In 2000, Texas adopted additional
NOX control rules to further reduce NOX It is estimated that compliance with this
rule will cut NOX emissions from nonemissions from electric utility power
road diesel engines by up to 90 percent.
boilers (approximately 50% reduction)
This rule is currently achieving
and from industrial boilers and process
emission reductions, but will not be
heaters (approximately 20 percent
fully implemented until 2010.
reduction). These reductions occurred
Locomotives and Marine
in two stages, with two-thirds of the
Compression-Ignition Engines. This EPA
reductions occurring by May 1, 2003,
rule was issued March 14, 2008 and
and the remaining one-third by May 1,
includes new emission standards for
2005.
locomotives and marine diesel engines
4. Federal Emission Control Measures
that will reduce NOX emissions by
about 80 percent compared with engines
TCEQ notes that other Federal
meeting the current standards. These
emission control measures have had
new requirements have three parts:
significant impacts on VOC and NOX
Tightening emission standards for
emissions in the BPA area. These
Federal measures include the following. existing locomotives and large marine
Tier 2 Emission Standards for
engines when they are remanufactured,
Vehicles and Gasoline Sulfur Standards. effective in 2008; establishing Tier III
These emission control requirements
standards for new locomotives and
result in lower VOC and NOX emissions marine diesel engines that were phased
in beginning in 2009; and establishing
from new cars and light duty trucks,
more stringent Tier IV standards for new
including sport utility vehicles. The
locomotives and marine diesel engines
Federal rules were phased in between
that will be phased in beginning in
2004 and 2009. The EPA has estimated
2014.
that, by the end of the phase-in period,
VOC and NOX RACT rules have been
approved by the EPA as revisions of the
Texas SIP.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 94 / Monday, May 17, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Additional Federal programs.
Additional federal programs for
emissions reductions in the BPA area
include Onboard Refueling Vapor
Recover (ORVR) for light-duty vehicles,
and Federal control through Maximum
Achievable Control Technology (MACT)
of Hazardous Air Pollutants emissions.
Table 6 shows the federal emissions
reductions programs in the BPA area for
fuels and motor vehicles:
TABLE 6—BPA FEDERAL EMISSION
REDUCTIONS PROGRAMS
Federal measures
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Æ Tier 2 Fuel and Vehicle Emission Standards.
Æ Onboard Refueling Vapor Recovery
(ORVR) for light-duty vehicles.
Æ Heavy-Duty Engine and Vehicle and Fuel
Standards.
Æ Federal controls on certain nonroad engines.
Æ Federal control through Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) of Hazardous Air Pollutants emissions.
Æ Volatile Organic Compound Emission
Standards for Consumer Products.
Æ Volatile Organic Compound Emission
Standards for Architectural Coatings.
Æ Locomotives and Marine Compression-Ignition Engines.
5. Additional State and Local Emission
Reductions
Several local permanent and
enforceable emission reductions have
occurred through various mechanisms
other than through RACT rules or
through Federal emission control rules/
programs. These State and Local
measures, which are permanent and
enforceable, include the following.
Texas Low Emission Diesel (TxLED)
rule. Texas’ TxLED rule reduces
emissions of NOX and other pollutants
from diesel-powered motor vehicles and
non-road equipment operating within
110 counties in the eastern half of
Texas, including the BPA area. This rule
was originally adopted by TCEQ in 2000
and revised in 2007, with compliance
occurring over a range of years,
beginning in 2005, and continuing
through the beginning of 2008.
Texas Emission Reduction Plan
(TERP). TERP, established in 2001,
includes incentive grant programs to
reduce NOX emissions from internal
combustion engines on mobile sources.
Eligible grant projects include fleet
expansions with cleaner engines,
replacement of old vehicles and
equipment, repower of old engines, and
on-vehicle and on-site infrastructure for
idle reduction, electrification, and
deliver of alternative fuels. TCEQ
explains in its submittal that, as of
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September 2007, the TERP program has
awarded over $19 million for 58 projects
in the BPA area, which are estimated to
reduce NOX emissions by more than 2.7
tons per day by 2009. In the BPA area,
the projects funded thus far have
resulted in NOX reductions of 4,480
tons.
Agreed Orders. Although not relied
upon by the State for showing
attainment or RFP, Agreed Orders have
also been important in reducing NOX
and VOC emissions in the BPA area. In
December 2004, TCEQ adopted
revisions to the BPA SIP to incorporate
Agreed Orders in which six companies
in the BPA area agreed to make
enforceable measures that were not
required. The six companies were ISP
Elastomers; Mobil Chemical Company, a
Division of Exxon Mobil Corporation;
Huntsman Petrochemical Corp. of Port
Arthur and also of Port Neches; Motiva
Enterprises LLC; and Premcor Refining
Group, Inc. The Agreed Orders included
voluntary emissions reductions, air
monitoring improvements, and other
actions.
Table 7 shows the state and local
emissions reductions programs in the
BPA area.
TABLE 7—BPA STATE AND LOCAL
EMISSION REDUCTIONS PROGRAMS
State and local measures
Æ
Æ
Æ
Æ
Texas Low Emission Diesel (TxLED).
Texas Emission Reduction Plan (TERP).
Prevention of Significant Deterioration.
Agreed Orders.
6. Controls To Remain In Effect
Texas commits to maintain all of the
current emission control measures for
VOC and NOX after the BPA area is
redesignated to attainment. Texas,
through TCEQ’s Chief Engineer’s Office,
Air Quality Division, and the Office of
Compliance and Enforcement, has the
legal authority and necessary resources
to actively enforce against any
violations of the State’s air pollution
emission control rules. After the BPA
area is redesignated to attainment,
TCEQ will implement NSR for major
stationary sources and major
modifications through the PSD program.
Summary.
As discussed above, local controls as
well as national emission controls have
contributed to the ozone air quality
improvement in the BPA area. NOX and
VOC emissions have dropped
substantially. Based on the above, EPA
proposes to determine that Hardin,
Jefferson, and Orange Counties and the
State of Texas have met the requirement
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of section 107(d)(3)(E)(iii) of the CAA,
and have demonstrated that the
improvement in air quality is due to
permanent and enforceable emission
reductions.
As noted above, Texas has committed
to retaining all existing emission control
measures that affect ozone levels in the
BPA area after Hardin, Jefferson, and
Orange Counties are redesignated to
attainment of the 1997 eight-hour ozone
NAAQS. All changes in existing rules
subsequently determined to be
necessary must be submitted to the EPA
for approval as SIP revisions.
EPA thus proposes to find that the
improvement in air quality in the BPA
area is due to permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions.
Section 107(d)(3)(E)(iii).
VIII. Does Texas have a fully
approvable 1997 8-hour ozone
maintenance plan pursuant to section
175A of the CAA for the BPA area?
A. What is required in an ozone
maintenance plan?
In conjunction with its request to
redesignate the BPA 1997 8-hour ozone
nonattainment area, the State of Texas
included a SIP revision to provide for
the maintenance of the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS in the BPA area for at
least 10 years after redesignation to
attainment. Section 107(d)(3)(E)(iv).
Section 175A of the CAA sets forth the
required elements of air quality
maintenance plans for areas seeking
redesignation to attainment of a
NAAQS. Under section 175A, a
maintenance plan must demonstrate
continued attainment of the applicable
NAAQS for at least 10 years after the
Administrator approves the
redesignation to attainment. The State
must commit to submit a revised
maintenance plan within eight years
after the redesignation. This revised
maintenance plan must provide for
maintenance of the ozone standard for
an additional 10 years beyond the initial
10 year maintenance period. To address
the possibility of future NAAQS
violations, the maintenance plans must
contain contingency measures, with
schedules of implementation, as EPA
deems necessary, to assure prompt
correction of any future NAAQS
violation. The September 4, 1992,
Calcagni memorandum provides
additional guidance on the content of
maintenance plans.
An ozone maintenance plan should,
at minimum, address the following: (1)
The attainment VOC and NOX emission
inventories; (2) a maintenance
demonstration showing maintenance for
the 10 years of the maintenance period;
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(3) a commitment to maintain the
existing monitoring network; (4) factors
and procedures to be used for
verification of continued attainment;
and, (5) a contingency plan to prevent
and/or correct a future violation of the
NAAQS.
B. How did Texas estimate the VOC and
NOX emissions for the attainment year
and the projection years?
Sections 172(c)(3) and 182(b)(1) of the
CAA require that the SIP include an
inventory of actual emissions from all
sources of relevant pollutants in the
nonattainment area. The emission
inventory for an ozone nonattainment
area contains VOC and NOX emissions
as these pollutants are precursors to
ozone formation. TCEQ prepared a
comprehensive emission inventory for
the BPA area including point, area, onroad, and off-road mobile sources with
the baseline year of 2005.
Texas developed its baseline 2005
Emissions Inventory by updating the
2002 Periodic Emissions Inventory (PEI)
for NOX and VOC in the BPA area.
TCEQ initially submitted the 2002 PEI
to EPA as part of the 2005 Dallas-Fort
Worth 5% increment of progress SIP
revision, but did not provide for public
comment. Since then, Texas updated
the inventory for area and nonroad
emissions categories and provided the
inventory for public comment. The
emissions inventory for 2005 was
included by Texas in its submittal to
EPA on December 16, 2008, as part of
its request to redesignate the BPA to
attainment for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
Texas’ 2005 emissions inventory is
listed in tables 2.5 and 2.6 of Texas’
December 18, 2008, submittal, which is
included in the docket for this action.
The year 2005 was chosen by Texas as
the base year for developing a
comprehensive ozone precursor
emissions inventory for which projected
emissions could be estimated for 2011,
2014, 2017, and 2021. The use of 2005
is an appropriate choice because it is
one of the years in the period that the
area has monitored attainment (2005–
2007). The 2005 base year and projected
year emissions for Hardin, Jefferson and
Orange Counties were determined using
the following procedures:
Area Source Emissions. Area source
emissions for the base year 2005 were
determined using Texas’ 2005 periodic
inventory as the starting point, and then
specific inventory categories and
emissions were reviewed and updated
with current methodologies and local
activity data when it was available.
TCEQ compiled the 2005 area source
emissions inventory from several
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sources of data, including work from
various research contracts, TCEQ’s
research, and the EPA’s National
Emissions Inventory. Area source
emissions for future years were
projected using EPA’s Economic Growth
Analysis (EGAS) 5.0 or other growth
factors, in accordance with EPA
guidance. More information about
calculations related to area source
emissions is available in Chapter 4 and
Appendix B of Texas’ December 16,
2008 submittal, which is included in the
docket.
Point Source Emissions. Point source
VOC and NOX emissions for the base
year 2005 were compiled from Texas’
annual emission database, which is
called the ‘‘State of Texas Air Reporting
System’’ (STARS). TCEQ projected point
source emissions for future years by
applying projection factors, where
applicable, for EGU and non-EGU point
sources, incorporating adjustments for
three refineries, which were permitted
to expand operations, as well as making
adjustments for emissions credits. More
information about calculations related
to point sources is available in Chapter
4 and Appendix E of Texas’ December
16, 2008 submittal which is included in
the docket.
On-road Emissions. Mobile source
emissions were calculated by a
contractor to TCEQ, the Texas
Transportation Institute (TTI), an
objective transportation research entity
within the Texas A&M University
system, using EPA’s MOBILE 6.2.03
emission factor model and traffic data
taken from a travel-demand model for
the three-county BPA area. TCEQ has
provided detailed information to
document the calculation of on-road
mobile source VOC and NOX emissions
for 2005, as well as for the projection
years of 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2021
(Chapter 4 and Appendices C and D of
TCEQ’s December 18, 2008 submittal.)
Non-road Emissions. For the majority
of non-road types of equipments, TCEQ
estimated emissions for the 2005 base
year and 2011 using a model developed
by TCEQ called TexN that utilizes EPA’s
NONROAD MODEL 2005 using county
specific activity data. Since TexN could
only provide projections to 2013, TCEQ
developed non-road emissions
projections for 2014, 2017, and 2021
using EPA’s National Mobile Inventory
Model (NMIM). For aircraft,
locomotives, and commercial marine
vessels, TCEQ estimated VOC and NOX
emissions using growth factors specific
to those industries. More information
about calculations related to non-road
sources is available in Chapter 4 and
Appendix B of Texas’ December 16,
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27529
2008 submittal, which is included in the
docket.
C. Has the State demonstrated
maintenance of the ozone standard in
the BPA area?
As part of its request to redesignate
the BPA 8-hour ozone nonattainment
area, the State of Texas included a SIP
revision to incorporate a maintenance
plan as required under section 175A of
the CAA. The maintenance plan
includes a demonstration based on a
comparison of emissions in the
attainment year (2005) and projected
emissions to demonstrate maintenance
of the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS in the
BPA area for at least 10 years after the
anticipated redesignation year [section
107(d)(3)(E)(iv)]. To demonstrate
maintenance of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard, TCEQ projected VOC and NOX
emissions to 2021 and to several interim
years, 2014, and 2017. These emissions
were compared to the 2005 attainment
year emissions to show that emissions
of NOX and VOC, when considered
together, remain below the attainment
levels for the entire demonstrated
maintenance period.
In the December 18, 2008, ozone
redesignation request, TCEQ graphically
represented and compared the VOC and
NOX emissions for 2005, 2011, 2014,
2017 and 2021 for all major source
sectors, and in total for the BPA
nonattainment area. In its ozone
maintenance demonstration, TCEQ
presented the NOX and VOC emission
totals for the 2005 base year and all
projection years for the BPA area
without the impacts of CAIR.3 TCEQ’s
maintenance demonstration shows that
in 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2021 (without
the impacts of CAIR rules), VOC and
NOX emission totals for the BPA area,
when considered together, are projected
to be below the 2005 VOC and NOX
emissions for the area.
NOX emissions in the BPA area are
projected to decline by 14 percent
between 2005 and 2021. Note that the
projected NOX emission reduction for
2020 did not include NOX emission
reductions resulting from CAIR, but did
include NOX emission reductions
resulting from Texas’ existing NOX
emission control rules that are in the
3 The U.S. Court of Appeals, for the District of
Columbia Circuit has remanded CAIR without
vacatur, directing EPA to revise the CAIR rule. This
leaves the current version of the CAIR rule in
question and raises questions about the future
emission impacts of States’ CAIR-based emission
control rules. As a conservative approach to this
problem, EPA requested that TCEQ remove the
impacts of the State’s CAIR NOX emission control
rules. TCEQ complied, and by the time of the
December 18, 2008, submittal had removed all
emissions impacts due to CAIR in its projections.
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Texas SIP. VOC emissions in the BPA
area are projected to increase by
approximately 6 percent between 2005
and 2021. However, based on
photochemical modeling analyses
showing that the formation of ozone in
the BPA area is more sensitive to NOX
than to VOC emissions, the increase in
VOC emissions is expected to be fully
offset by the decrease in NOX.
Specifically, photochemical modeling
analyses show that for reducing the
ozone design value in the BPA area,
reducing NOX emissions is 3.76 times as
effective as reducing VOC emissions.
This is discussed more fully below.
Based on this analysis, emissions in the
BPA area are expected to remain at
levels consistent with attainment for the
1998 8-hour ozone standard from 2010
through 2021.
The December 23, 2008, remand of
EPA’s CAIR by the U.S. Court of
Appeals led to both the State and EPA
further considering the impact of this
remand on Texas’ ozone maintenance
demonstration for the BPA area. The
CAIR was remanded to EPA, and the
process of developing a replacement
rule is ongoing. The remand of CAIR
does not alter the requirements of the
NOX SIP call. Although Texas is not
subject to the NOX SIP call, Texas,
however, has demonstrated that the
BPA area can maintain the 1997 eighthour ozone standard without any
additional NOX emission reduction
requirements. Regarding the impact of
pollution from other States, all NOX SIP
Call states have SIPs that currently
satisfy their obligations under the SIP
Call, the SIP Call reduction
requirements remain applicable and are
being met, and EPA will continue to
enforce the requirements of the NOX SIP
Call even after any response to the CAIR
Remand. As EPA has noted in other
recent redesignation actions (e.g.,
Columbus Ohio, 74 FR 47404, 47405
(September 15, 2009)) ‘‘EPA believes
that regardless of the status of the CAIR
program, the NOX SIP call requirements
can be relied upon in demonstrating
maintenance.’’ Therefore, EPA believes
that Texas’ demonstration of
maintenance under sections 175A and
107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA remains valid.
Texas has successfully demonstrated
maintenance of the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard between 2005 and 2021. In
addition, VOC and NOX emissions in
the BPA area, when considered together
with Texas’ photochemical modeling
analyses, are projected to decline
between 2005 and 2021. Given the
emissions growth and source control
factors used to project emissions, EPA
and Texas do not anticipate an increase
in the overall combined VOC and NOX
emissions in the BPA area between 2010
and 2021.
The following table provides NOX and
VOC emissions data for the 2005 base
year inventory, as well as projected NOX
and VOC emission inventory data for
the years 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2021 for
the BPA area. Please see Part II.B. of the
TSD for additional emissions inventory
data including projections by source
category.
TABLE 8—BASE YEAR AND PROJECTED NOX AND VOC EMISSIONS IN BPA, NOX EMISSIONS (TPD)
[Without CAIR]
Source category
2005
2011
2014
2017
2021
Point .....................................................................................
Area ......................................................................................
Mobile ...................................................................................
Nonroad ...............................................................................
68.49
9.06
45.60
25.99
77.39
9.95
17.91
27.08
78.84
10.40
12.38
27.88
78.67
10.86
8.66
28.87
80.27
11.47
6.24
30.63
Total ..............................................................................
149.14
132.33
129.50
127.06
128.61
VOC Emissions (TPD) [Without CAIR]
Point .....................................................................................
Area ......................................................................................
Mobile * .................................................................................
Nonroad ** ............................................................................
42.68
151.57
11.63
4.96
48.23
155.77
7.92
4.36
49.77
157.06
6.51
4.23
51.44
158.63
5.58
4.20
53.80
160.77
4.77
4.30
Total ..............................................................................
210.84
216.28
217.57
219.85
223.64
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* Calculated using MOBILE 6.2.03.
** Calculated using NONROAD 2005.
As shown in Table 8 above, total NOX
emissions are projected to decrease and
total VOC emissions are projected to
increase slightly for the area of the 10year period of the maintenance plan.
Emissions projections for future years in
the area indicate a downward trend in
NOX emissions through 2021 as NOX
emissions are projected to decrease by
20.53 tpd, or approximately 14% (from
149.14 tpd to 128.61 tpd). VOC
emissions projections through 2021
show a slight increase in projected
emissions of 12.80 tpd by the year 2021,
or approximately 6% (from 210.84 tpd
to 223.64 tpd). This projected increase
(6%) is relatively small considering that
it occurs over a period of approximately
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sixteen years (as from the 2005
baseline). The slight upward trend in
VOC emissions results from projected
increases for the point and non-point
(area) source emission categories.
Emissions from non-road mobile and
on-road mobile sources are projected to
decrease.
As mentioned above, the projected
14% reduction (20.53 tpd) in NOX
emissions is expected to sufficiently
offset the projected 6% increase (12.80
tpd) in VOC emissions, enabling the
area to continue to maintain the 1997
ozone standard. Photochemical
modeling analyses were submitted
showing that reducing VOC emissions
by 5.53 tpd results in an estimated
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design value reduction of 0.054 ppb. To
reduce the ozone DV by 1 ppb, 102.4
tpd of VOC would need to be reduced.
Reducing NOX emissions by 7.80 tpd
reduces the ozone DV by 0.287 ppb.
This means that a reduction of 27.2 tpd
of NOX emissions would be required to
reduce one ppb in the DV. Thus, NOX
emission reductions are expected to be
3.76 (102.4/27.2) times as effective in
reducing the ozone DV as VOC emission
reductions.
EPA proposes to conclude that TCEQ
has demonstrated maintenance of the
ozone standard during the 10-plus year
maintenance period for the BPA area
through projections of VOC and NOX
emissions that show that when
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considered together the emissions will
remain below the 2005 attainment levels
during the maintenance period. This is
demonstrated without the emission
reductions from CAIR.
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D. Monitoring Network
The State of Texas has committed in
its maintenance plan for the BPA area
to continue operation of an appropriate
ozone monitoring network and to work
with EPA in compliance with 40 CFR
Part 58 with regard to the continued
adequacy of the network, including
whether additional monitoring is
needed, and when monitoring can be
discontinued.
There are five monitoring sites
operated by the TCEQ in the BPA area,
located in Jefferson and Orange
Counties. TCEQ operates these monitors
in accordance with the requirement of
40 CFR Part 58 and the EPA-approved
Quality Assurance Program Plan.
There are four additional monitors
operated by the South East Texas
Regional Planning Commission
(SETRPC). If the SETRPC, however,
removes one of its monitors, the EPA
and Texas will jointly review the
adequacy of the network, including
whether additional monitoring is
needed. In the maintenance plan, Texas
commits to continue operation of the
five ozone monitors it operates in
compliance with 40 CFR part 58
through the end of the maintenance
period (2021). The State also commits to
continue to operate a monitoring
network in accordance with 40 CFR part
58 and to enter data into the Air Quality
System in accordance with Federal
guidelines. The TCEQ will continue to
provide data from the SETRPC monitors
on the Commission’s Web site and in
EPA’s AQS database as long as the
SETRPC participates in the network.
As identified in the maintenance
plan, each of the nine monitoring sites
in the BPA area monitored attainment
with the 1997 8-hour ozone standard
beginning in 2005. Data for each
monitoring site was shown above and
further discussed in Section V.A. Table
1. See the docket for a map of the BPA
monitoring network, and the TSD: Part
I.A. for additional monitoring
information.
E. Verification of Continued Attainment
Texas has the legal authority to
enforce and implement the
requirements of the ozone maintenance
plan for the BPA area. This includes the
authority to adopt, implement, and
enforce any subsequent emissions
control contingency measures
determined to be necessary to correct
future ozone attainment problems.
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Texas will track the progress of the
maintenance plan through continued
ambient ozone monitoring in
accordance with the requirements of 40
CFR Part 58, and by performing future
reviews of actual emissions for the area
using the latest emissions factors,
models, and methodologies. (section 4.2
of TCEQ’s BPA submittal, December 16,
2008). For these periodic updates of the
BPA emissions inventories, Texas will
review the assumptions made for the
purpose of the maintenance
demonstration concerning projected
growth and activity levels.
F. What is the maintenance plan’s
contingency plan?
The section 175(A) maintenance plan
includes contingency provisions to
promptly correct any violation of the
1997 ozone NAAQS that occurs after
redesignation. The contingency plan
provisions are designed to promptly
correct or prevent a violation of the
NAAQS that might occur after
redesignation of an area to attainment.
Section 175A of the CAA requires that
a maintenance plan include such
contingency measures, as EPA deems
necessary to assure that the state will
promptly correct a violation of the
NAAQS that occurs after redesignation.
The maintenance plan should identify
the contingency measures to be adopted,
a schedule and procedure for adoption
and implementation of the contingency
measures, and a time limit for action by
the state. The State should also identify
specific indicators to be used to
determine when the contingency
measures need to be adopted and
implemented. The maintenance plan
must include a requirement that the
state will implement all measures with
respect to control of the pollutant(s) that
were contained in the SIP before
redesignation of the area to attainment.
See section 175A(d) of the CAA.
As required by section 175A of the
CAA, Texas has adopted a contingency
plan for the BPA area to address
possible future ozone air quality
problems.
The contingency measure trigger for
the BPA maintenance plan is based
upon monitoring. The triggering
mechanism for activation of
contingency measures is a monitored
violation of the 1997 ozone standard. In
this maintenance plan, if contingency
measures are triggered, TCEQ has
committed to adopt and implement the
measures as expeditiously as
practicable, but no longer than 18
months following the trigger. In order to
accomplish this, in the submittal Texas
commits to adopt within nine months
(and implement within eighteen
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27531
months) one or more contingency
measures to re-attain the standard in the
event of a violation of the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS in the BPA area. The
measures to be considered include, but
are not limited to the following control
measures:
• Revision to 30 TAC Chapter 117 to
control rich-burn, gas-fired,
reciprocating internal combustion
engines to meet NOX emission
specifications and other requirements to
reduce NOX emissions and ozone air
pollution.
• Inclusion of one or more counties in
the BPA area in 30 TAC Chapter 115
VOC rules for the control of crude and
condensate storage tanks at upstream oil
and gas exploration and productions
sites or midstream pipeline breakout
stations with uncontrolled flash
emissions greater than 25 tpy.
• Inclusion of one or more counties in
the BPA area in 30 TAC Chapter 115
VOC rules for more stringent controls
for tank fittings on floating roof tanks,
such as slotted guidepoles and other
openings in internal and external
floating roofs.
• Inclusion of one or more counties in
the BPA area in 30 TAC Chapter 115
VOC rules limiting emissions from
landings of floating roofs in floating roof
tanks.
• Inclusion of one or more counties in
the BPA area in 30 TAC Chapter 115
VOC rules for control of emissions from
degassing operations for storage tanks
with a nominal capacity of 75,000
gallons or more storing materials with a
true vapor pressure greater than 2.6
pounds per square inch absolute (psia),
or with a nominal capacity of 250,000
gallons or more storing materials with a
true vapor pressure of 0.5 psia or
greater. Degassing vapors from storage
vessels, transport vessels, and marine
vessels would be required to vent to a
control device until the VOC
concentration of the vapors is reduced
to less than 34,000 parts per million by
volume as methane.
• Inclusion of one or more counties in
the BPA area in 30 TAC Chapter 114
rule for TxLED compliant marine diesel.
In addition, the maintenance plan
states that the BPA area may also be
expected to voluntarily implement some
additional local control measures.
These contingency measures and
schedules for implementation satisfy
EPA’s longstanding guidance on the
requirement of section 175(A) for
continued attainment. Continued
attainment in the Beaumont Port Arthur
area will depend, in part, on the air
quality measures discussed previously
(see VI.B. and V.B.4. above). The State
will continue to operate appropriate
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ambient ozone monitoring sites in the
BPA area to verify continued attainment
of the 1997 ozone NAAQS. The air
monitoring results will reveal changes
in the ambient air quality as well as
assist the State in determining which
contingency measures will be most
effective if necessary.
As required by section 175A(b) of the
CAA, Texas commits to submit to the
EPA an updated ozone maintenance
plan eight years after redesignation of
the BPA area to cover an additional tenyear period beyond the initial ten-year
maintenance period. As required by
section 175A(d) of the CAA, Texas has
also committed to retain VOC and NOX
control measures contained in the SIP
prior to redesignation.
EPA finds that the plan adequately
addresses the five basic components of
a maintenance plan: Attainment
inventory, maintenance demonstration,
monitoring network, verification of
continued attainment, and contingency
plan. The maintenance plan SIP
revision submitted by Texas for BPA
meets the requirements of section 175A
of the Act. Therefore, EPA is proposing
to approve the maintenance plan for the
BPA area for the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard as part of the Texas SIP.
IX. What is EPA’s evaluation of the BPA
area’s motor vehicle emissions budget?
A. What are the transportation
requirements for approvable MVEBs?
A maintenance plan must include a
MVEB for transportation conformity
purposes. ‘‘Conformity’’ to the SIP
means that transportation activities will
not cause new air quality violations,
worsen existing violations, or delay
timely attainment of the NAAQS. It is a
process required by section 176(c) of the
Act for ensuring that the effects of
emissions from all on-road sources are
consistent with attainment or
maintenance of the standard. EPA’s
transportation conformity rules at 40
CFR part 93 require that transportation
plans, and programs, result in emissions
that do not exceed the MVEB
established in the SIP. The maintenance
plan established an MVEB for 2021,
which is the last year of the
maintenance plan.
The MVEB is the level of total
allowable on-road emissions established
by the maintenance plan. Maintenance
plans must include the estimates of
motor vehicle VOC and NOX emissions
that are consistent with maintenance of
attainment, which then act as a budget
or ceiling for the purpose of determining
whether transportation plans, and
programs conform to the maintenance
plan. In this case, the MVEB sets the
maximum level of on-road
transportation emissions that can be
produced, when considered with
emissions from all other sources, which
demonstrates continued maintenance of
attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
B. What is the status of EPA’s adequacy
determination?
When reviewing submitted ‘‘control
strategy’’ SIPs or maintenance plans
containing a MVEB, EPA determines
whether the MVEB contained therein is
‘‘adequate’’ for use in determining
transportation conformity. Once EPA
finds a budget adequate, the budget
must be used by local, state and federal
agencies in determining whether
proposed transportation plans and
programs ‘‘conform’’ to the SIP as
required by section 176(c) of the Act.
EPA’s substantive criteria for
determining ‘‘adequacy’’ of a MVEB are
set out in 40 CFR 93.118(e)(4). The
process for determining the adequacy of
an MVEB was initially outlined in
EPA’s May 14, 1999, guidance,
‘‘Conformity Guidance on
Implementation of March 2, 1999,
Conformity Court Decision.’’ This
guidance was finalized in the
Transportation Conformity Rule
Amendments for the ‘‘New 8-Hour
Ozone and PM2.5 National Ambient Air
Quality Standards and Miscellaneous
Revisions for Existing Areas;
transportation conformity rule
amendments—Response to Court
Decision and Additional Rule Change,’’
on July 1, 2004 (69 FR 40004).
Additional information on the adequacy
process for MVEBs is available in the
proposed rule entitled, ‘‘Transportation
Conformity Rule Amendments:
Response to Court Decision and
Additional Rule Changes,’’ 68 FR 38974,
38984 (June 30, 2003).
As discussed earlier, Texas’
maintenance plan submission includes
NOX and VOC budgets for the year 2021.
EPA reviewed the budgets through the
adequacy process. The availability of
the SIP submission with this 2021
MVEB was announced for public
comment on EPA’s adequacy Web page
on April 15, 2009, at: https://
www.epa.gov/otaq/transp/conform/
adequacy.htm. The EPA public
comment period on the adequacy of the
2021 MVEB for BPA closed on May 15,
2009. EPA did not receive any adverse
comments on the MVEB. On April 1,
2010, EPA made a finding of adequacy
for the 2021 MVEB included in this 8hour ozone maintenance plan (75 FR
16456).
C. Is the MVEB approvable?
Table 9 shows the total projected
transportation emissions for 2021, as
submitted by Texas.
TABLE 9—BEAUMONT/PORT ARTHUR PROJECTED TRANSPORTATION EMISSIONS
[Tons per avg. ozone season day]
Pollutant
2005
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NOX ......................................................................................
VOC .....................................................................................
These transportation emissions are
also represented in Table 8 of this notice
as the ‘‘mobile’’ emissions portion of
emission inventory data for the BPA
area. As shown in Tables 8 and 9,
substantial reductions in both NOX and
VOC transportation emissions are
projected between 2005 and 2021.
Further, as previously stated in this
action, EPA finds that the State has
demonstrated the future combined
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2011
45.60
11.63
17.91
7.92
emissions levels of NOX and VOC in
2011, 2014, 2017, and 2021 are expected
to be similar to or less than the
emissions levels in 2005. The projected
transportation emissions for 2021 were
used by Texas as the basis of the 2021
NOX and VOC MVEB for the BPA area.
These emissions are consistent with the
maintenance plan demonstrating
continued compliance with the 1997
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2014
2017
12.38
6.51
2021
8.66
5.58
6.24
4.77
ozone NAAQS for the 10-year period
following redesignation to attainment.
Under 40 CFR 93.101, the term safety
margin is the amount by which the total
projected emissions from all sources of
a given pollutant are less than the total
emissions that would satisfy the
applicable requirement for reasonable
further progress, attainment, or
maintenance. The attainment level of
emissions is the level of emissions
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during one of the years in which the
area met the NAAQS. The safety margin
can be allocated to the transportation
sector; however, the total emissions
must remain below the attainment level.
Emission projections contained in the
BPA maintenance plan show the 2021
inventory in the BPA area represents a
20.53 tpd decrease in NOX emissions
compared with 2005 (Table 4–2), while
VOC emissions increase by 12.80 tpd
(Table 4–1). Conservatively assuming a
1:1 ratio of NOX/VOC emissions in the
formation of O3, the net total reduction
in NOX emissions is 7.73 tpd (Table 4–
3). Texas has allocated one tpd of the
NOX emission reduction as a safety
margin, which increases the 2021 MVEB
for NOX emissions from 6.24 tpd to 7.24
tpd. This is discussed in greater detail
in Part II.D. of the TSD. EPA finds this
to be an acceptable allocation.
The submitted NOX and VOC MVEB
for the BPA area is defined in Table 10
below.
TABLE 10—BEAUMONT/PORT ARTHUR
NOX AND VOC MVEB
[Summer season tons per day]
Pollutant
NOX ......................................
VOC ......................................
2021
*7.24
4.77
*Includes
an allocation of 1 tpd from the
available NOX safety margin.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Through this rulemaking, EPA is
proposing to approve Texas’ 2021
MVEB for VOCs and NOX for the BPA
area for transportation conformity
purposes, because EPA has determined
that the area maintains the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard with the emissions at
the levels of the budget. The submittal
has met the adequacy criteria in 40 CFR
93.118(e)(4), and EPA has completed a
comprehensive review of the
maintenance plan, concluding that the
overall plan demonstrates maintenance,
is approvable and the budgets are
consistent with the overall plan.
Therefore, the budgets can be proposed
for approval.
X. EPA’s Evaluation of the Backfill
Contingency Measures for the 1-Hour
Ozone Failure-To-Attain Contingency
Measures and the State’s Request To
Remove an Unimplemented VOC Rule
From the Texas SIP
EPA approved the 1-hour ozone
failure-to-attain section 172(c)(9) and
182(c)(9) contingency measures for the
BPA area on February 10, 1998 at 63 FR
6659 as part of EPA’s approval of the
BPA area’s 15% VOC ROP Plan. These
contingency measures included the
Federal Tier I rules, the Federal small
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engine VOC rule, and excess reductions
from the 15% VOC ROP Plan. When
EPA reclassified the BPA area to serious
for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, these are
the contingency measures that EPA
triggered. EPA approved a marine
vessel-loading rule as part of the Texas
SIP for the BPA area on January 26,
1999 (64 FR 3841). As written, it
appears it is triggered upon an EPA
finding of failure to attain, but it was not
included in the SIP-approved
contingency plan for the BPA area. EPA
never approved it specifically as a
section 172(c)(9) contingency measure
nor did EPA approve it as a replacement
for the 1998-approved contingency
measures. In the Federal Register action
for reclassification of the BPA area for
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard to
moderate, EPA refers specifically to the
1998-approved 1-hour contingency
measures as the ones EPA triggered to
be implemented for failure to attain (73
FR 14391, March 18, 2008). Also in the
reclassification Federal Register action,
EPA required the State to submit
additional contingency measures to
replace, i.e., backfill, the triggered
contingency measures for its new
serious area attainment deadline under
section 182(c)(9). The State submitted
two control measures on October 15,
2005, as a SIP revision to replace or
backfill the triggered contingency
measures as required by the
reclassification notice. The proposed 1hour section 182(c)(9) contingency
measures are emissions reductions from:
(1) NOX and VOC reductions from
three companies in the BPA area
through Agreed Orders, and (2) NOX
reductions from the Texas Emissions
Reductions Program (TERP) projects.
EPA approved the Agreed Orders into
the SIP on April 12, 2005 (70 FR 18995).
The TERP program was approved as
part of the Texas SIP on August 19, 2005
at 70 FR 48647 including the
methodology for calculating SIP credits
for the individual TERP control
measures. TERP provides funding to
offset the incremental costs of projects
associated with reducing NOX emissions
from high-emitting internal combustion
engines.
Together, reductions from these two
control measures meet the 3 percent
requirement for the 1-hour backfill
failure-to-attain contingency measures.
The NOX reductions from the Agreed
Orders and the TERP projects were not
relied upon for ROP or attainment
demonstration purposes and have
already been implemented. Please see
the TSD: Part II.E. for additional detail.
EPA is proposing to approve the
substitute control measures for the
backfill failure-to-attain contingency
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measures. Although, as noted in the
discussion above, the 1-hour antibacksliding contingency measure
obligation is suspended upon a final
determination that the area is attaining
the 1-hour ozone standard, and
terminates upon a final redesignation of
the area for the 8-hour ozone standard,
EPA understands that TCEQ
nonetheless wishes EPA to take action
upon the submitted backfill measures.
EPA notes that, after the area is
redesignated to attainment for the 8hour ozone NAAQS, these 1-hour
contingency measures are replaced by
the section 175A Maintenance Plan
contingency measures.
Also, in this SIP revision, TCEQ
submitted a request to remove from the
Texas SIP, the ‘‘contingency’’ measure
marine vessel loading rule (30 TAC
§ 115.219). This Texas marine vessel
rule was approved into the Texas SIP
but was never implemented by the
State. As discussed above, this measure
was not relied upon as part of a
172(c)(9) or 182(c)(9) contingency plans
and was not triggered by the EPA as part
of the reclassification notice.
Texas, in its SIP revision, made clear
that the marine vessel loading rule
should not be a part of the backfill
failure to attain contingency plan
required by the reclassification and that
the two measures used to comprise this
plan were an appropriate substitute for
the marine vessel loading rule. In fact,
Texas’ sensitivity tests in photochemical
modeling runs indicate that reductions
of 1 tpd of NOX are equivalent to
reductions of 3.8 tpd of VOC in
reducing ozone in the BPA area (TCEQ
Attainment Demonstration SIP, received
October 18, 2005, section 5.3.1, p. 5–4).
The two backfill contingency measures
are mostly NOX reductions and would
be expected to be more effective than
the Marine Vessel Loading Rule, a VOC
control in reducing ozone.
The SIP marine-vessel loading rule
was never relied upon for demonstrating
attainment, achieving reasonable further
progress, or as a reasonable available
control measure. It was not relied upon
in the 15% VOC ROP plan or the post1996 ROP plan. It was not relied upon
in any of the submitted attainment
demonstration SIPs. It also is not
required to meet VOC RACT. EPA notes
that since adoption by TCEQ, federal
rules for marine vessel loading have
been adopted and achieve much of the
reductions that would have been
achieved if the State rule had been
triggered.
EPA has evaluated Texas’ request to
remove the marine vessel-loading rule
from its SIP. For the reasons cited
above, whereas the Texas rule was never
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implemented or triggered as a
contingency measure and whereas the
rule is not needed to satisfy any other
statutory requirements, EPA proposes
that the Texas marine vessel-loading
rule be removed from the Texas SIP.
XI. Proposed Actions
EPA is proposing several related
actions under the Act for the BPA ozone
nonattainment area, consisting of
Hardin, Jefferson, and Orange counties.
Consistent with the Act, EPA is
proposing to determine that the BPA
area has attained the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS and to approve a request from
the state of Texas to redesignate the BPA
area to attainment of the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard. This determination is
based on complete, quality-assured, and
certified ambient air quality monitoring
data for the 2005–2007 ozone seasons
and 2006–2008 ozone seasons, as well
as data for 2009 in AQS but not yet
certified, that demonstrate that the 1997
8-hour ozone NAAQS has been attained
in the area. EPA is also proposing to
make a determination that the BPA area
is meeting the 1-hour ozone standard.
This determination is based on
complete, quality-assured, and certified
ambient air quality monitoring data for
2005–2007 ozone seasons and 2006–
2008 ozone seasons, as well as data for
2009 in AQS but not yet certified, that
demonstrate that the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS has been attained in the area.
Finalizing the 1-hour ozone attainment
determination proposal will suspend
the 1-hour anti-backsliding
requirements for a 1-hour attainment
demonstration and RACM analysis and
contingency measures. These
requirements will cease to apply if the
area is redesignated to attainment for
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
EPA is proposing to approve the 2002
base year emissions inventory. We are
proposing to approve the State’s CFV
program equivalency demonstration. We
are proposing to find that the BPA area,
upon final approval of this emissions
inventory and the CFV program
equivalency determination, will meet all
the applicable CAA requirements under
section 110 and Part D for purposes of
redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS including all the applicable
antibacksliding CAA requirements for a
serious 1-hour ozone nonattainment
area. Further, EPA is proposing to
approve into the SIP, as meeting section
175A and 107(d)(3)(E)(iv) of the Act,
Texas’ maintenance plan for the BPA
area for the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
The maintenance plan shows
maintenance of the standard through
2021. Additionally, EPA is proposing to
approve the 2021 MVEB for NOX and
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VOC submitted by Texas for the BPA
area in conjunction with its
redesignation request and maintenance
plan.
Consequently, EPA is proposing to
approve the State’s request to
redesignate the area from nonattainment
to attainment for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. After evaluating Texas’
redesignation request, EPA has
determined that upon final approval of
the above-identified SIP elements and
the maintenance plan, the area will
meet the redesignation criteria set forth
in section 107(d)(3)(E) and section 175A
of the Act. The final approval of this
redesignation request would change the
official designation in 40 CFR part 81
for the BPA area from nonattainment to
attainment for the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. EPA also notes that if EPA’s
proposed determinations of attainment
for the 1-hour and 8-hour ozone NAAQS
are finalized, the requirements to submit
certain planning SIPs related to
attainment, including attainment
demonstration requirements (the RACM
requirement, the RFP and attainment
demonstration requirements, and the
requirement for contingency measures)
are suspended as long as it continues to
attain the NAAQS, and would cease to
apply upon final redesignation.
EPA also is proposing to approve the
Post-1996 ROP Plan’s contingency
measures and backfill failure-to-attain
contingency measures, and the removal
from the Texas SIP under section 110(l)
of a VOC marine vessel loading
contingency measure.
XII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act,
redesignation of an area to attainment
and the accompanying approval of a
maintenance plan under section
107(d)(3)(E) are actions that affect the
status of a geographical area and do not
impose any additional regulatory
requirements on sources beyond those
imposed by state law. A redesignation to
attainment does not in and of itself
create any new requirements, but rather
results in the applicability of
requirements contained in the Clean Air
Act for areas that have been
redesignated to attainment. Moreover,
the Administrator is required to approve
a SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
state choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, these actions merely do
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law and
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the Clean Air Act. For that reason, these
actions:
• Are not ‘‘significant regulatory
actions’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Do not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Are 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.);
• Do 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);
• Do not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Are 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);
• Are not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Do 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
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Ozone, Nitrogen dioxides,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
40 CFR Part 81
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control.
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Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: May 5, 2010.
Lawrence E. Starfield,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 94 (Monday, May 17, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27514-27535]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-11694]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[EPA-R06-OAR-2008-0932; FRL-9151-7]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans and Designation
of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Texas; Beaumont/Port Arthur
Ozone Nonattainment Area: Redesignation to Attainment for the 1997 8-
Hour Ozone Standard and Determination of Attainment for the 1-Hour
Ozone Standard
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve a request from the State of Texas
to redesignate the Beaumont-Port Arthur (BPA) Texas ozone nonattainment
area to attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. In proposing to
approve this request, EPA also proposes to approve as a revision to the
BPA State Implementation Plan (SIP), a 1997 8-hour ozone maintenance
plan with a 2021 Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget (MVEB). EPA is
proposing to determine that the BPA nonattainment area has attained the
1997 8-hour ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS), based
on complete, quality-assured, and certified ambient air quality
monitoring data for the 2005-2007 and 2006-2008 monitoring periods, as
well as data from 2009 that are in EPA's Air Quality System (AQS)
database but not yet certified, that demonstrate that the area has
attained and is continuing to attain the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. EPA
also is proposing to make a determination that the BPA area is meeting
the 1-hour ozone standard based upon three years of complete, quality-
assured, and certified ambient air quality monitoring data for the
2005-2007 and 2006-2008 monitoring periods, as well as data from 2009
in AQS but not yet certified.
EPA is proposing to approve the BPA area's 2002 base year emissions
inventory as part of the BPA SIP and to conclude that if this action is
finalized, the area is meeting all of its applicable marginal area
requirements for purposes of redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. EPA also is proposing to approve as part of the BPA SIP, the
Texas Clean-Fuel Vehicle (CFV) Program Equivalency Demonstration. EPA
is proposing to find that if these proposed approvals are finalized,
the area will have a fully approved SIP that meets all of its
applicable 1997 8-hour requirements and 1-hour anti-backsliding
requirements under section 110 and Part D of the federal Clean Air Act
(CAA or Act) for purposes of redesignation.
Additionally, EPA is proposing to approve the post-1996 Rate of
Progress (ROP) plan's contingency measures, the substitute control
measures for the failure-to-attain contingency measures, and the
removal from the Texas SIP of the 1-hour ozone failure-to-attain
contingency measure, a VOC SIP rule for marine vessel loading, as
meeting the requirements of section 110(l) and part D of the Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before June 16, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R06-
OAR-2008-0932, by one of the following methods:
Federal Rulemaking 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. Guy Donaldson at donaldson.guy@epa.gov. Please
also send a copy by email to the person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section below.
Fax: Mr. Guy Donaldson, Chief, Air Planning Section (6PD-
L), at fax number 214-665-7263.
Mail: Mr. Guy Donaldson, Chief, Air Planning Section (6PD-
L), Environmental Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200,
Dallas, Texas 75202-2733.
Hand or Courier Delivery: Mr. Guy Donaldson, Chief, Air
Planning Section (6PD-L), Environmental Protection Agency, 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-
2008-0932. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Do not submit through www.regulations.gov or e-
mail, information that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected.
The www.regulations.gov Web site is an ``anonymous access'' system,
which means EPA will not know your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an e-
mail comment directly to EPA without going through www.regulations.gov,
your e-mail address will be automatically captured and included as part
of the comment that is placed in the public docket and made available
on the Internet. If you submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends
that you include your name and other contact information in the body of
your comment and with any disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read
your comment due to technical difficulties and cannot contact you for
clarification, EPA may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic
files should avoid the use of special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or viruses. For additional
information about EPA's public docket visit the EPA Docket Center
homepage at https://www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the
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 www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the Air Planning Section
(6PD-L), Environmental Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202-2733. The file will be made available by
appointment for public inspection in the Region 6 FOIA Review Room
between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays except for legal
holidays. Contact the person listed in
[[Page 27515]]
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 fee of 15 cents
per page for making photocopies of documents. On the day of the visit,
please check in at the EPA Region 6 reception area at 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas.
The State submittal, which is part of the EPA record, is also
available for public inspection at the State Air Agency listed below
during official business hours by appointment: Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality, Office of Air Quality, 12124 Park 35 Circle,
Austin, Texas 78753.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Ellen Belk, Air Planning Section
(6PD-L), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-2733, telephone (214) 665-2164; fax
number 214-665-7263; e-mail address belk.ellen@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,''
and ``our'' means EPA.
Table of Contents
I. What are the actions EPA is proposing?
II. What is the background for these actions?
A. What are the National Ambient Air Quality Standards?
B. What is ozone and why do we regulate it?
C. What is the background for the BPA area under the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS?
D. What is the background for the BPA area under the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS?
III. What are the impacts of the court decisions on EPA's Phase 1
and 2 implementation rules upon the BPA area redesignation request?
A. Summary of the Court Decisions
B. Summary of EPA's Analysis of the Impact of the Court
Decisions on the BPA Area
1. Requirements Under the Eight-Hour Ozone Standard
2. Requirements Under the One-Hour Ozone Standard
IV. What are the CAA criteria for redesignation?
V. What is EPA's proposed determination regarding attainment for the
1997 8-hour and the 1-hour ozone NAAQS for the BPA area?
A. Is the BPA area attaining the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS?
B. Is the BPA area attaining the 1-hour ozone NAAQS?
VI. Does the BPA area have a fully approved SIP under section 110(k)
for the section 110 and part D requirements of the CAA applicable
for purposes of redesignation?
A. What are the general SIP requirements applicable for purposes
of redesignation for the BPA area?
B. What are the part D requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area?
1. What are the part D requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area under the 1-hour ozone standard?
2. What are the part D requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area under the 1997 8-hour ozone standard?
C. Does the BPA area have a fully approved applicable SIP under
section 110(k) of the CAA for purposes of redesignation?
VII. Are the air quality improvements in the BPA area due to
permanent and enforceable emissions reductions?
A. Emissions Reductions as Shown by Emission Inventory Data
B. Impact of Emissions Controls Implementation: Trend Analysis
C. Permanent and Enforceable Emissions Controls Implemented
1. Reasonably Available Control Techniques
2. ROP Plans and Attainment Demonstration Plan
3. NOX Control Rules
4. Federal Emission Control Measures
5. Additional State and Local Emission Reductions
6. Controls to Remain in Effect
VIII. Does Texas have a fully approvable 1997 8-hour ozone
maintenance plan pursuant to section 175A of the CAA for the BPA
area?
A. What is required in an ozone maintenance plan?
B. How did Texas estimate the VOC and NOX emissions
for the attainment year and the projection years?
C. Has the State demonstrated maintenance of the ozone standard
in the BPA area?
D. Monitoring Network
E. Verification of Continued Attainment
F. What is the maintenance plan's contingency plan?
IX. What is EPA's evaluation of the BPA area's motor vehicle
emissions budget?
A. What are the transportation requirements for approvable
MVEBs?
B. What is the status of EPA's adequacy determination?
C. Is the MVEB approvable?
X. EPA's Evaluation of the Backfill Contingency Measures for the 1-
Hour Ozone Failure-To-Attain Contingency Measures and the State's
Request To Remove an Unimplemented VOC Rule From the Texas SIP
XI. Proposed Actions
XII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What are the actions EPA is proposing?
EPA is proposing several related actions pursuant to the Act for
the BPA ozone nonattainment area, consisting of Hardin, Jefferson, and
Orange counties. EPA is proposing to determine that the BPA area has
attained the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS, based on the most recent three
years of complete, quality-assured monitoring data. EPA is proposing to
find that the BPA area has met the requirements for redesignation under
section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act, and is therefore proposing to approve
a request from the State of Texas to redesignate the BPA area to
attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. EPA is also proposing to
approve, pursuant to section 175A of the Act, the area's 1997 8-hour
ozone maintenance plan as a revision to the Texas SIP; to approve the
plan's associated 2021 MVEB; and to approve the 2002 base year
emissions inventory. With the approval of the 2002 base year emissions
inventory, EPA is proposing to find that the BPA area has satisfied all
marginal area requirements for the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. See Section
VI.B.2. and the Technical Support Document (TSD), Part I.A., for
further information on how the BPA area satisfies all the other
marginal area requirements. In addition, EPA is proposing to approve
the Texas Clean-Fuel Vehicle (CFV) Program Equivalency Demonstration as
meeting a serious area anti-backsliding requirement for the 1-hour
ozone standard. With the approval of the Texas CFV equivalency
determination, we are proposing to find that the BPA has satisfied all
1-hour anti-backsliding requirements for a serious area for the
purposes of redesignation. For further information on how the area
meets the serious area requirements apart from the CFV Program, please
see Section VI.B.1. and the TSD, Part II.A. Further, EPA is proposing
to make a determination that the BPA area is meeting the 1-hour ozone
standard.
Finally, EPA is proposing to approve the 1-hour ozone post-1996
rate of progress (ROP) plan's contingency measures, substitute measures
for the SIP-approved failure-to-attain contingency measures, and the
removal from the Texas SIP of the contingency measure, a VOC SIP rule
for marine vessel loading, as meeting the requirements of section
110(l) and part D. Each component of this action is discussed in
greater detail below.
First, EPA is proposing to make a determination under the Act that
the BPA area has attained the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The BPA area
includes three counties in Texas: Hardin, Orange, and Jefferson. This
proposed determination is based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ambient air quality monitoring data for the 2005-2007 and
2006-2008 ozone seasons that demonstrate that the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS has been attained in the area. Data entered into EPA's Air
Quality System database (AQS) for 2009, but not yet certified also show
that the area continues to attain the standard.
As one of the requirements for approving a redesignation request,
EPA is proposing to approve as a revision to the Texas SIP, the State's
maintenance
[[Page 27516]]
plan for the BPA area as meeting the requirements of section 175A. EPA
also is proposing to approve the 2002 base year emissions inventory for
the BPA area as meeting a requirement of the Act for a marginal 1997 8-
hour ozone area, section 182(a)(1). Additionally, we are proposing to
approve the Texas CFV Program Equivalency Demonstration as meeting the
serious area requirements of the Act for the 1-hour ozone standard.
With the approval of the 2002 base year emissions inventory and the CFV
Program Equivalency Demonstration, EPA is proposing to find that the
area has met all the applicable 8-hour ozone and 1-hour anti-
backsliding requirements of section 110 and part D of the Act for
purposes of redesignation, and that the BPA area has a fully approved
SIP under section 110(k) for purposes of redesignation.
Based upon the above, EPA is proposing to approve a request from
the State of Texas submitted on December 16, 2008, through the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), to redesignate the BPA area
to attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. If EPA's determination
that the area has attained the standard is made final and the BPA area
is redesignated to attainment with an approved 8-hour ozone NAAQS
maintenance plan, then under the provisions of EPA's ozone
implementation rule, the obligations to submit and have an approved 1-
hour ozone NAAQS attainment demonstration and reasonably available
control measures determination (RACM) and contingency measures no
longer apply. As discussed later, BPA was not required to have an 8-
hour ozone attainment demonstration because Texas submitted a
redesignation request before the area's moderate area SIP requirements,
including an attainment demonstration, were due (for more information,
please see section VI).
EPA is proposing to determine that the BPA area is meeting the 1-
hour ozone standard. This determination is based on complete, quality-
assured and certified ambient air quality monitoring data for the 2005-
2007 and 2006-2008 monitoring periods which demonstrate that the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS has been attained in the area; this determination is also
consistent with data for 2009 that are in AQS but not yet certified.
The obligations for the state to submit and for EPA to approve a 1-hour
serious area attainment demonstration and RACM determination and
contingency measures will be suspended if EPA's proposal to determine
that the area has attained the 1-hour standard is finalized, and the
area will be relieved of these obligations upon final redesignation for
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. See 40 CFR 51.905(a)(3)(ii).
Even though the obligations to submit and have approved the 1-hour
contingency measures are suspended upon a determination that the area
is attaining the 1-hour standard, and terminated upon the BPA area's
redesignation to attainment for the 8-hour ozone NAAQS, EPA is
proposing to approve the post-1996 ROP plan's contingency measures and
the backfill failure-to-attain contingency measures. EPA is proposing
this action on the contingency measures because the State is requesting
that an existing SIP-approved 1-hour ozone failure-to-attain
contingency measures be removed from the SIP, and has not indicated
that it wishes to withdraw the contingency measures SIP revision
submittals. EPA is proposing to approve the removal from the Texas SIP
of the failure-to-attain contingency measure, a VOC SIP rule for marine
vessel loading, as meeting the requirements of section 110(l) and part
D.
II. What is the background for these actions?
A. What are the National Ambient Air Quality Standards?
Section 109 of the Act requires EPA to establish NAAQS (or
standards) for pollutants that ``may reasonably be anticipated to
endanger public health and welfare,'' and to develop a primary and
secondary standard for each NAAQS. The primary standard is designed to
protect human health with an adequate margin of safety, and the
secondary standard is designed to protect public welfare and the
environment. EPA has set NAAQS for six common air pollutants, referred
to as criteria pollutants: carbon monoxide, lead, nitrogen dioxide,
ozone, particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide. These standards present
state and local governments with the minimum air quality levels they
must meet to comply with the Act. Also, these standards provide
information to residents of the United States about the air quality in
their communities. A State's SIP addresses these requirements, as
required by section 110 and other provisions of the Act. The SIP is a
set of air pollution regulations, control strategies, other means or
techniques, and technical analyses developed by the state, to ensure
that the state meets the NAAQS.
B. What is ozone and why do we regulate it?
Ozone, a gas composed of three oxygen atoms, at the ground level is
generally not emitted directly by sources such as from a vehicle's
exhaust or an industrial smokestack; rather, ground level ozone is
produced by a chemical reaction between nitrogen oxides
(NOX) and VOCs in the presence of sunlight and high ambient
temperatures. NOX and VOCs are referred to as precursors of
ozone. Motor vehicle exhaust and industrial emissions, gasoline vapors,
and chemical solvents all contain NOX and VOCs. Urban areas
tend to have high concentrations of ground-level ozone, but areas
without significant industrial activity and with relatively low
vehicular traffic are also subject to increased ozone levels because
wind carries ozone and its precursors many miles from the sources. The
Act establishes a process for air quality management through the NAAQS.
Repeated exposure to ozone pollution may cause lung damage. Even at
very low concentrations, ground-level ozone triggers a variety of
health problems including aggravated asthma, reduced lung capacity, and
increased susceptibility to respiratory illnesses like pneumonia and
bronchitis. It can also have detrimental effects on plants and
ecosystems.
C. What is the background for the BPA area under the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS?
On December 11, 2002, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit vacated EPA's attainment date extension policy, which had been
applied to extend the 1-hour ozone attainment deadline for the BPA area
without reclassifying the area. Sierra Club v. EPA, 314 F.3d 735 (5th
Cir. 2002). Thereupon, EPA on March 30, 2004, withdrew the action
extending the attainment deadline for BPA, finalized its finding that
the area failed to attain the 1-hour ozone standard by the moderate
area deadline, and reclassified the BPA area by operation of law, to
serious nonattainment for the 1-hour ozone standard. See 61 FR 16483.
As a result of its reclassification to serious, the State was required,
among other things, to submit by April 29, 2005, a new 1-hour
attainment demonstration SIP with an attainment date of November 15,
2005 with new MVEBs and a new RACM analysis, a post-1996 rate of
progress (ROP) plan with associated MVEBs and contingency measures, a
new clean-fuel vehicle program or substitute, demonstrate the area met
RACT, implement the EPA-triggered
[[Page 27517]]
failure-to-attain contingency measures, submit a replacement for, i.e.,
backfill for, the triggered failure-to-attain contingency measures, and
to meet the remaining serious area requirements under section 182(c) of
the Act. The State submitted the required elements on November 16,
2004, as revised on October 15, 2005, and further revised on December
16, 2008. EPA has approved all of the 1-hour serious area requirements
for the BPA area, except for the CFV program, the ROP plan's
contingency measures, the replacement failure-to-attain contingency
measures, and the attainment demonstration SIP with associated MVEBs
and RACM analysis. See Section VI.B.1. for further details.
D. What is the background for the BPA area under the 1997 8-Hour Ozone
NAAQS?
On July 18, 1997, EPA promulgated a revised 8-hour ozone standard
of 0.08 parts per million (ppm), which is more protective than the
previous 1-hour ozone standard (62 FR 38855).\1\ The EPA published the
1997 8-hour ozone designations and classifications on April 30, 2004
(69 FR 23858). The BPA area was designated nonattainment and initially
classified as marginal. The area includes three counties: Hardin,
Jefferson, and Orange counties (these constitute the former 1-hour
ozone nonattainment area). The effective date of designation for the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS was June 15, 2004. Under the marginal
nonattainment designation, the latest attainment date for the BPA area
was June 15, 2007. The BPA did not monitor attainment of the 1997 8-
hour ozone NAAQS by the June 15, 2007 deadline, based upon complete,
quality-assured and certified ambient air quality monitoring data for
the 2004-2006 ozone seasons. The BPA area already met all of the
requirements for a 1997 8-hour ozone marginal area except for the base
year emissions inventory requirement. See Section VI.B.2. for further
details.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ On March 27, 2008 (73 FR 16436), EPA promulgated a revised
8-hour ozone standard of 0.075 ppm. On January 6, 2010, EPA proposed
to set the level of the primary 8-hour ozone standard within the
range of 0.060 to 0.070 ppm, rather than at 0.075 ppm. EPA
anticipates that by August 2010 it will have completed
reconsideration of the standard and thereafter will proceed with
designations. The actions addressed in today's proposed rulemaking
relate only to redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
EPA's actions with respect to this new standard do not affect EPA's
action here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, EPA determined that the BPA area had failed to attain
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard by the applicable attainment deadline
and the area was reclassified by operation of law as a moderate 1997 8-
hour ozone nonattainment area, effective April 17, 2008 (73 FR 14391).
This determination was based on ambient air quality data from the 2004-
2006 monitoring period. More recent air quality data for the 2005-2007
and 2006-2008 monitoring periods, as well as 2009 data that are in AQS
but not yet certified, however, indicate that the BPA area is now
attaining the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. See Section V.A.
The deadline for submission of requirements to meet the area's new
8-hour moderate nonattainment area classification was January 1, 2009
(73 FR 14391). The TCEQ, on December 16, 2008, submitted a request that
EPA determine that the BPA area has attained the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard and redesignate it to attainment. The request included a
maintenance plan with associated MVEBs, the 2002 base year emission
inventory, the Texas CFV Program Equivalency Demonstration, and the
backfill failure-to-attain contingency measures. The complete
redesignation request was received by EPA before the deadline for
submittal of the moderate area SIP requirements for the BPA area under
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
III. What are the impacts of the court decisions on EPA's Phase 1 and 2
implementation rules upon the BPA area redesignation request?
A. Summary of the Court Decisions
This section sets forth EPA's views on the effect of the DC
Circuit's rulings on this proposed redesignation action. For the
reasons set forth below, EPA does not believe that the Court's rulings
alter any requirements relevant to this redesignation action or prevent
EPA from proposing or ultimately finalizing this redesignation. EPA
believes that the Court's December 22, 2006, June 8, 2007, and July 10,
2009, decisions impose no impediment to moving forward with
redesignation of this area to attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
EPA published a first phase rule governing implementation of the
1997 8-hour ozone standard (Phase 1 Rule) on April 30, 2004 (69 FR
23951). The Phase 1 Rule addresses classifications for the 1997 8-hour
NAAQS and for revocation for the 1-hour NAAQS; how anti-backsliding
principles will ensure continued progress toward attainment of the 1997
8-hour NAAQS; attainment dates; and the timing of emissions reductions
needed for attainment. The Phase 1 Rule revoked the 1-hour ozone
standard. The Phase 1 Rule also provided that 1-hour ozone
nonattainment areas are required to adopt and implement ``applicable
requirements'' according to the area's classification under the 1-hour
ozone standard for anti-backsliding purposes. See 40 CFR 51.905(a)(i).
On May 26, 2005, we determined that an area's 1-hour designation and
classification as of June 15, 2004 would dictate what 1-hour
obligations remain as ``applicable requirements'' under the Phase 1
Rule. 40 CFR 51.900(f). (70 FR 30592).
On December 22, 2006, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit vacated EPA's Phase 1 Rule in South Coast Air Quality
Management Dist. v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (DC Cir. 2006). On June 8, 2007,
in response to several petitions for rehearing, the court clarified
that the Phase 1 rule was vacated only with regard to those parts of
the rule that had been successfully challenged. See 489 F.3d 1245 (DC
Cir. 2007), cert. denied, 128 S.Ct. 1065 (2008). By limiting the
vacatur, the Court let stand EPA's revocation of the 1-hour standard
and those anti-backsliding provisions of the Phase 1 rule that had not
been successfully challenged. The June 8, 2007 opinion reaffirmed the
December 22, 2006 decision that EPA had improperly failed to retain
four measures required for 1-hour nonattainment areas under the anti-
backsliding provisions of the regulations: (1) Nonattainment area new
source review (NSR) requirements based on an area's 1-hour
nonattainment classification; (2) section 185 penalty fees for 1-hour
severe or extreme nonattainment areas that fail to attain the 1-hour
standard by the 1-hour attainment date; and (3) measures to be
implemented pursuant to section 172(c)(9) or 182(c)(9) of the Act, on
the contingency of an area not making reasonable further progress
toward attainment of the 1-hour NAAQS or for failure to attain that
NAAQS; and (4) the court clarified that the Court's reference to
conformity requirements was limited to requiring the continued use of
1-hour motor vehicle emissions budgets until 8-hour budgets were
available for 8-hour conformity determinations.
EPA published a second rule governing implementation of the 1997 8-
hour ozone standard (Phase 2 Rule) on November 29, 2005 (70 FR 71612),
as revised on June 8, 2007 (72 FR 31727). The Phase 2 Rule addresses,
among other things, the Clean Data Policy as codified in 40 CFR 51.918.
The DC Circuit upheld the Clean Data Policy, agreeing with the Tenth
Circuit that EPA's interpretation of the Act was reasonable. NRDC v.
EPA, 571 F.3d
[[Page 27518]]
1245 (DC Cir. 2009). See Sierra Club v. EPA, 99 F.3d 1551 (10th Cir.
1996).
B. Summary of EPA's Analysis of the Impact of the Court Decisions on
the BPA Area
1. Requirements Under the Eight-Hour Ozone Standard
For the eight-hour ozone standard, the BPA ozone nonattainment area
was originally classified as marginal nonattainment under subpart 2 of
the CAA. The June 8, 2007, opinion clarifies that the Court did not
vacate the Phase 1 Rule's provisions with respect to classifications
for areas under subpart 2. The Court's decision, therefore, upholds
EPA's classifications for those areas classified under subpart 2 for
the eight-hour ozone standard, and all eight-hour ozone requirements
for these areas remain in place.
2. Requirements Under the One-Hour Ozone Standard
In its June 8, 2007, decision, the Court limited its vacatur so as
to uphold those provisions of EPA's anti-backsliding requirements that
were not successfully challenged. Therefore, an area must meet the
anti-backsliding requirements, see 40 CFR 51.900, et seq.; 70 FR 30592,
30604 (May 26, 2005), which apply by virtue of the area's
classification for the one-hour ozone NAAQS.
The provisions in 40 CFR 51.905(a)-(c) explain the applicable 1-
hour ozone anti-backsliding requirements that remain in effect. Areas
must continue to meet those requirements to be redesignated. However,
the court vacated the portions of 51.905(e) that removed the
obligations to meet the additional provisions noted above and as a
result, states also have had to continue to meet these additional
requirements. We address below how the 1-hour anti-backsliding
obligations (as interpreted and directed by the court) are met in the
context of a redesignation action for the 1997 8-hour NAAQS.
The BPA 1-hour nonattainment area was reclassified as serious for
that standard on June 15, 2004, so the 1-hour ozone standard
requirements applicable to the area are those that apply to
nonattainment areas classified as serious. Pursuant to 40 CFR
51.905(a)-(c) and the court opinions, the applicable serious area
requirements include a demonstration that the area meets serious area
Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) for both VOC and
NOX, a revised 1990 base year emissions inventory, a Post-
1996 Rate of Progress (ROP) Plan with Contingency Measures and MVEB, a
replacement, i.e., a backfill, for the failure-to-attain contingency
measures triggered by the reclassification (this is equivalent to the
requirement to meet the serious area contingency measure requirement),
an enhanced monitoring program, a clean-fuel vehicle program or an
acceptable substitute, an attainment demonstration with a reasonably
available control measures (RACM) demonstration, revised transportation
conformity budgets, and serious area NSR. The State has submitted each
of the required 1-hour serious area plan requirements. EPA has approved
each of the 1-hour serious area requirements except for the following:
The attainment demonstration and RACM analysis, the CFV program or
acceptable substitute, the ROP plan's contingency measures, the
backfill failure-to-attain contingency measures, and the serious NSR
requirements. The obligations to have an approved 1-hour ROP plan's
contingency measures, backfill failure-to-attain contingency measures,
and attainment demonstration with a RACM demonstration would be
suspended by a determination of attainment of the 1-hour ozone
standard, and will cease to apply upon redesignation of the area for
the 8-hour standard. The 1-hour anti-backsliding serious Nonattainment
New Source Review (NNSR) will also cease to apply upon redesignation
for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard, and will be replaced by prevention
of significant deterioration (PSD) SIP.
EPA is proposing to approve the following outstanding 1-hour ozone
applicable requirement: The Texas CFV Program Equivalency
Demonstration. EPA also is proposing to approve the Post-1996 ROP
plan's contingency measures and the State's backfill failure-to-attain
contingency measures. EPA has taken no action on the submitted
attainment demonstration with the RACM analysis and serious 1-hour
ozone NSR requirements. In lieu of nonattainment NSR, the BPA area will
become subject to PSD upon redesignation.
For the BPA 1-hour ozone serious nonattainment area, EPA previously
approved VOC and NOX rules into the Texas SIP, found they met RACT, and
found that the BPA area meets the serious area VOC and NOX RACT
requirements. EPA also previously approved the revised 1990 base year
emissions inventory, the post-1996 ROP plan and MVEB, and the enhanced
monitoring program. In this rulemaking, EPA is proposing to approve the
State's CFV Equivalence Demonstration as meeting the outstanding 1-hour
ozone anti-backsliding serious area requirement for the area. We also
are proposing to approve the post-1996 ROP plan's contingency measures
and the backfill failure-to-attain contingency measures. The obligation
to submit a 1-hour serious area attainment demonstration and RACM
analysis and contingency measures will be suspended if EPA's proposal
to determine that the area has attained the 1-hour standard is
finalized, and the area will be relieved of these obligations upon
final redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
IV. What are the CAA criteria for redesignation?
The Act sets forth the requirements for redesignating a
nonattainment area to attainment. Specifically, CAA section
107(d)(3)(E) allows for redesignation providing that (1) the
Administrator determines that the area has attained the applicable
NAAQS; (2) the Administrator has fully approved the applicable
implementation plan for the area under CAA section 110(k); (3) the
Administrator determines that the improvement in air quality is due to
permanent and enforceable reductions in emissions resulting from
implementation of the applicable SIP and applicable Federal air
pollutant control regulations and other permanent and enforceable
reductions; (4) the Administrator has fully approved a maintenance plan
for the area as meeting the requirements of CAA section 175A; and (5)
the State containing such area has met all requirements applicable to
the area under CAA section 110 and part D.
EPA provided guidance on redesignation in the General Preamble for
the Implementation of Title I of the CAA Amendments of 1990, on April
16, 1992 (57 FR 13498), and supplemented this guidance on April 28,
1992 (57 FR 18070). EPA has provided further guidance on processing
redesignation requests in the following documents:
1. ``Ozone and Carbon Monoxide Design Value Calculations,''
Memorandum from Bill Laxton, June 18, 1990.
2. ``Maintenance Plans for Redesignation of Ozone and Carbon
Monoxide Nonattainment Areas,'' Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief,
Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs Branch, April 30, 1992;
3. ``Contingency Measures for Ozone and Carbon Monoxide (CO)
Redesignations,'' Memorandum from G.T. Helms, Chief, Ozone/Carbon
Monoxide Programs Branch, June 1, 1992;
4. ``Procedures for Processing Requests to Redesignate Areas to
Attainment'', Memorandum from John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality
Management Division, September 4, 1992;
5. ``State Implementation Plan (SIP) Actions Submitted in
Response to Clean Air
[[Page 27519]]
Act (ACT) Deadlines,'' Memorandum from John Calcagni, Director, Air
Quality Management Division, October 28, 1992;
6. ``Technical Support Documents (TSD's) for Redesignation of
Ozone and Carbon Monoxide (CO) Nonattainment Areas'', Memorandum
from G.T. Helms, Chief, Ozone/Carbon Monoxide Programs Branch,
August 17, 1993;
7. ``State Implementation Plan (SIP) Requirements for Areas
Submitting Requests for Redesignation to Attainment of the Ozone and
Carbon Monoxide (CO) National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
On or After November 15, 1992'', Memorandum from Michael Shapiro,
Acting Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, September 17,
1993;
8. ``Use of Actual Emissions in Maintenance Demonstrations for
Ozone and CO Nonattainment Areas,'' Memorandum from D. Kent Berry,
Acting Director, Air Quality Management Division, November 30, 1993;
9. ``Part D New Source Review (Part D NSR) Requirements for
Areas Requesting Redesignation to Attainment,'' Memorandum from Mary
D. Nichols, Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, October
14, 1994; and
10. ``Reasonable Further Progress, Attainment Demonstration, and
Related Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment Areas Meeting the Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard,'' Memorandum from John S.
Seitz, Director, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, May
10, 1995.
V. What is EPA's proposed determination degarding attainment for the
1997 8-hour and the 1-hour ozone NAAQS for the BPA area?
A. Is the BPA area attaining the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS?
For ozone, an area may be considered to be attaining the 1997 8-
hour ozone NAAQS if there are no violations, as determined in
accordance with 40 CFR 50.10 and Appendix I of part 50, based on three
complete, consecutive calendar years of quality-assured air quality
monitoring data. This standard is attained if the 3-year average of the
annual fourth highest daily maximum 8-hour average ambient ozone
concentration at each monitor in the area that is eligible for
comparison to the NAAQS is less than or equal to 0.08 ppm. Based on the
rounding convention described in 40 CFR part 50, Appendix I, the 1997
8-hour ozone standard is attained at a monitor if the design value is
0.084 ppm or below. The data must be collected and quality-assured in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58, and recorded in the EPA Air Quality
System (AQS). The monitors generally should have remained at the same
location for the duration of the monitoring period required for
demonstrating attainment. For ease of communication, many reports of
ozone concentrations are given in parts per billion (ppb); ppb = ppm x
1,000. Thus, 0.084 ppm equals 84 ppb.
EPA reviewed BPA area ozone monitoring data from ambient ozone
monitoring stations for the ozone seasons 2005 through 2007, as well as
data for the ozone seasons 2006 through 2008 and data for 2009 in AQS
but not yet certified. The 2005-2007 ozone season data was relied upon
by Texas in its submittal. Since the State's submittal, the 2006-2008
ozone season data has been quality assured and recorded in AQS. The
design value for 2005-2007 is 0.083 ppm; the design value for 2006-2008
is 0.081 ppm. The preliminary design value for the additional year of
2009, i.e., the 2007-2009 ozone seasons, is 0.077 ppm. The data for all
three sets of ozone seasons show that the BPA area is attaining the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
Table 1 provides the design values based on data from the nine
monitors in the BPA area. Each of the nine monitoring sites in the BPA
area monitored attainment with the 1997 8-hour ozone standard for the
2005-2007 ozone seasons and for the 2006-2008 ozone seasons. (To find
the overall design value for the area for a given year, simply find the
highest design value from any of the nine monitors for that year.) The
location of each monitoring site in the BPA area is shown on the map
entitled, ``BPA ozone and ozone precursor monitoring network'' included
in the docket associated with this action.
Table 1--BPA Area Fourth Highest 8-hour Ozone Concentrations and Design Values Data for All Monitors (ppm) 1 2 3 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4th Highest daily max Design values three year averages
BPA monitor site -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2005-2007 2006-2008 2007-2009
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lamar (48-245-0009)..................................... 0.081 0.085 0.080 0.072 0.071 0.082 0.079 0.074
Port Arthur (48-245-0011)............................... 0.079 0.085 0.073 0.071 0.073 0.079 0.076 0.072
Sabine Pass (48-245-0101)............................... 0.082 0.084 0.078 0.069 0.073 0.081 0.077 0.073
Hamshire (48-245-0022).................................. 0.080 0.081 0.077 0.070 0.070 0.079 0.076 0.072
West Orange (48-361-1001)............................... 0.078 0.078 0.073 0.064 0.073 0.076 0.071 0.070
Mauriceville (48-361-1100).............................. 0.076 0.071 0.075 0.069 0.067 0.074 0.071 0.070
Jefferson Co. Airport (48-245-0018)..................... 0.083 0.084 0.082 0.078 0.071 0.083 0.081 0.077
SETRPC Port Arthur (48-245-0628)........................ 0.078 0.082 0.076 0.065 0.069 0.078 0.074 0.070
Nederland (48-245-1035) \4\............................. .......... 0.068 0.082 0.067 0.069 .......... 0.072 0.072
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Unlike for the 1-hour ozone standard, design value calculations for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard are based on a rolling three-year average of the
annual 4th highest values (40 CFR Part 50, Appendix I).
\2\ Monitoring site locations for BPA are shown on a map entitled, ``BPA ozone and ozone precursor monitoring network'' included in the docket.
\3\ Monitoring data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
\4\ Monitoring did not begin at the Nederland site until 2006.
[[Page 27520]]
The fourth high values for 8-hour ozone for 2005 through 2009, and
the 3-year average of these values (i.e., design value), are summarized
in Table 2:
Table 2--BPA Area Fourth Highest 8-Hour Ozone Concentrations and Design Values Data Summary (ppm) 1 2 3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4th highest daily max Design values three-year averages
BPA area overall ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2005-2007 2006-2008 2007-2009
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0.083 0.084 0.082 0.078 0.071 0.083 0.081 0.077
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Unlike for the 1-hour ozone standard, design value calculations for the 8-hour ozone standard are based on a rolling three-year average of the
annual 4th highest values (40 CFR Part 50, Appendix I).
\2\ Monitoring data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
\3\ The fourth high data in this table is from the Jefferson Co. Airport monitor site (AQS 48-245-0018).
As shown in Table 2, the 8-hour ozone design value for 2005-2007,
and also for 2006-2008, which is based on a three-year average of the
fourth-highest daily maximum average ozone concentration at the monitor
recording the highest concentrations, is below the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. The design values of 0.083 ppm for 2005-2007 and 0.081 ppm for
2006-2008 demonstrate the area is in attainment of the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. Data through 2008 have been quality assured, as recorded
in AQS. Data for 2009 not yet certified also indicate that the area
continues to attain the 1997 8-hour NAAQS. The preliminary design value
for the BPA area for 2007-2009 is 0.077 ppm. In summary, monitoring
data for BPA for the three years 2005 through 2007, as well as
monitoring data for the three years 2006 through 2008 and preliminary
monitoring data for 2009, show continued attainment of the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard. Preliminary data for BPA for 2009 is included in the
docket.
In addition, as discussed below with respect to the maintenance
plan, Texas has committed to continue monitoring in this area in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58. In summary, EPA is proposing to
determine that complete, quality- assured data for the 2005-2007 and
2006-2008 ozone seasons show that the BPA 8-hour ozone nonattainment
area has attained the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS and data for 2009 in AQS
but not yet certified show that the area continues to attain the
standard.
Should the area violate the 1997 8-hour ozone standard before the
proposed redesignation is finalized, EPA will not proceed with final
redesignation.
B. Is the BPA area attaining the 1-hour ozone NAAQS?
EPA is also proposing to determine that the BPA 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area is currently attaining the 1-hour ozone NAAQS. This
determination is based upon three years of complete, quality-assured
and state- certified ambient air monitoring data that show the area has
monitored attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS for the 2006-2008
monitoring period. Data for 2009 in AQS but not yet certified indicate
that that the area continues in attainment for the 1-hour standard.
In 1979, EPA promulgated the revised 1-hour ozone standard of 0.12
parts per million (ppm) (44 FR 8202, February 8, 1979). For ease of
communication, many reports of ozone concentrations are given in parts
per billion (ppb); ppb = ppm x 1000. Thus, 0.12 ppm becomes 120 ppb or
124 ppb when rounding is considered.
An area exceeds the 1-hour ozone standard each time an ambient air
quality monitor records a 1-hour average ozone concentration above 0.12
ppm in any given day. Only the highest 1-hour ozone concentration at
the monitor during any 24-hour day is considered when determining the
number of exceedance days at the monitor. An area violates the ozone
standard if, over a consecutive 3-year period, more than 3 expected
exceedances occur at the same monitor. For more information, please see
``National 1-hour primary and secondary ambient air quality standards
for ozone'' (40 CFR 50.9) and ``Interpretation of the 1-Hour Primary
and Secondary National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone'' (40
CFR Part 50, Appendix H).
The fourth-highest daily ozone concentration over a 3-year period
is called the design value (DV). The DV indicates the severity of the
ozone problem in an area; it is the ozone level around which a state
designs its control strategy for attaining the ozone standard. A
monitor's DV is the fourth highest ambient concentration recorded at
that monitor over the previous 3 years. An area's DV is the highest of
the design values from the area's monitors.
The Act, as amended in 1990, required EPA to designate as
nonattainment any area that was violating the 1-hour ozone standard,
generally based on air quality monitoring data from the 1987 through
1989 period (section 107(d)(4) of the Act; 56 FR 56694, November 6,
1991).
EPA is proposing to determine that the BPA 1-hour ozone
nonattainment area is currently in attainment of the 1-hour standard
based on the most recent 3 years of quality-assured air quality data.
Certified ambient air monitoring data show that the area has monitored
attainment of the 1-hour ozone NAAQS for the 2005-2007 as well as the
2006-2008 monitoring period. Also, data in AQS but not yet certified
for 2009 show that the BPA area has monitored no exceedances in that
year and continues to meet the 1-hour ozone standard. Table 3 contains
the 1-hour ozone data for the BPA 1-hour ozone nonattainment area
monitors that show that the area is currently attaining the 1-hour
ozone NAAQS, consistent with 40 CFR Part 50, Appendix H.
[[Page 27521]]
Table 3--Beaumont-Port Arthur Area 1-Hour Ozone Data 1 2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of exceedances 3-year exceedances Design values (ppb)
BPA Monitor site ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2005-2007 2006-2008 2007-2009 2005-2007 2006-2008 2007-2009
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lamar (48-245-0009)........................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 106 106 98
Port Arthur (48-245-0011)..................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 104 101 93
Sabine Pass (48-245-0101)\2\.................. 1.2 0 0 0 0 0.4 0 0 107 102 96
Hamshire (48-245-0022)........................ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 97 97 95
West Orange (48-361-1001)..................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 99 100 100
Mauriceville (48-361-1100).................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 96 96 87
Jefferson Co. Airport (48-245-0018)........... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 104 102 99
SETRPC Port Arthur (48-245-0628).............. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 98 98 95
Nederland (48-245-1035)....................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 93 93
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Monitoring data for 2009 are in AQS but not yet certified (as of March 26, 2010).
\2\ For the Sabine Pass site in 2005 the actual number of exceedances was 1 and the estimated number of exceedances was 1.2.
EPA proposes to find that the BPA 1-hour ozone nonattainment area
has attained the 1-hour ozone standard.
VI. Does the BPA area have a fully approved SIP under section 110(k)
for the section 110 and part D requirements of the CAA applicable for
purposes of redesignation?
As discussed above in Section III, in evaluating a request for
redesignation, EPA's long-held position is that those requirements
expressly linked by statutory language with the attainment and
reasonable further progress requirements do not apply if EPA determines
that the area is attaining the standard. Additionally, it is EPA's
interpretation of CAA section 107(d)(3)(E) that applicable requirements
of the Act that come due subsequent to the area's submittal of a
complete redesignation request remain applicable until a redesignation
is approved, but are not required as a prerequisite to redesignation.
Under this interpretation, to qualify for redesignation, states
requesting redesignation to attainment must meet only the relevant
requirements of the Act that come due prior to the submittal of a
complete redesignation request. See Sierra Club v. EPA, 375 F.3d 537
(7th Cir. 2004). See also 68 FR 25424, 25427 (May 12, 2003)
(redesignation of St. Louis, Missouri); September 4, 1992 Calcagni
memorandum; September 17, 1993 Michael Shapiro memorandum, and 60 FR
12459, 12465-66 (March 7, 1995) (redesignation of Detroit-Ann Arbor,
MI).
Therefore, the applicable 1997 8-hour ozone standard requirements
for the BPA area are those for a marginal, not a moderate nonattainment
area. The State submitted a complete redesignation request for BPA on
December 16, 2008, prior to the January 1, 2009 deadline for the
submittal of the area's moderate area SIP requirements. Furthermore,
since EPA is proposing to determine that the area has attained the 1997
8-hour ozone standard, under the principles enunciated in the General
Preamble and pursuant to 40 CFR 51.918, if that determination is
finalized, then the obligations to submit requirements related to
attainment and RFP are not applicable for purposes of redesignation.
The requirements to submit for a moderate area, certain planning
SIPs related to attainment, including attainment demonstration
requirements [the reasonably available control measures (RACM)
requirement of section 172(c)(1) of the Act, the reasonable further
progress (RFP) and attainment demonstration requirements of sections
172(c)(2) and (6) and 182(b)(1) of the Act, and the requirement for
contingency measures of section 172(c)(9) of the Act] would not be
applicable to the area as long as it continues to attain the 1997 8-
hour ozone NAAQS and would cease to apply upon redesignation to
attainment.
In addition, in the context of redesignations, EPA has interpreted
requirements related to attainment as not applicable for purposes of
redesignation. For example, in the General Preamble EPA stated that:
[T]he section 172(c)(9) requirements are directed at ensuring
RFP and attainment by the applicable date. These requirements no
longer apply when an area has attained the standard and is eligible
for redesignation. Furthermore, section 175A for maintenance plans *
* * provides specific requirements for contingency measures that
effectively supersede the requirements of section 172(c)(9) for
these areas. [General Preamble for the ``Interpretation of Title I
of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990,'' (General Preamble) 57 FR
13498, 13564 (April 16, 1992)].
See also Calcagni memorandum dated Sept. 4, 1992 (``The requirements
for reasonable further progress and other measures needed for
attainment will not apply for redesignations because they only have
meaning for areas not attaining the standard.'' From the memorandum,
section 4.b.i.).
Today, EPA is also proposing to approve the 2002 base year
emissions inventory as meeting the marginal area applicable
requirements of part D. In addition, EPA is proposing to approve the
CFV program Equivalency Demonstration as meeting the only outstanding
1-hour ozone anti-backsliding obligation for purposes of redesignation.
Furthermore, EPA is proposing to find that upon final approval of these
two measures, the BPA area will have a fully approved SIP under CAA
section 110(k) for redesignation purposes and it will meet all CAA
section 110 and part D applicable requirements for purposes of
redesignation for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
A. What are the general SIP requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area?
EPA's long-held interpretation of the Act is that section 110
general SIP elements not linked to an area's nonattainment status and
classification are not applicable for purposes of redesignation.
Section 110(a)(2) of title I of the Act delineates the general
requirements for a SIP, which include enforceable emissions limitations
and other control measures, means, or techniques, provisions for the
establishment and operation of appropriate devices necessary to collect
data on ambient air quality, and programs to enforce the limitations.
For example, CAA section 110(a)(2)(d) requires that SIPs contain
certain measures to prevent sources in a state from significantly
contributing to air quality problems in another state. To implement
this provision, EPA has required certain states, but not Texas, to
establish programs to address the
[[Page 27522]]
transport of air pollutants (NOX SIP Call). Texas submitted
a SIP revision to address interstate transport on May 1, 2008. The
purpose of that SIP revision was to document that emissions from Texas'
sources that may contribute to nonattainment in another state have been
mitigated through existing control strategies. However, CAA section
110(a)(2)(D) requirements for a state are not linked with a particular
nonattainment area's designation and classification in that state. EPA
believes that the requirements linked with a particular nonattainment
area's designation and classification are the relevant measures to
evaluate in reviewing a redesignation request. The transport SIP
submittal requirements, where applicable, continue to apply to a state
regardless of the designation of any one particular area in the state.
Thus, we do not believe that these requirements should be construed to
be applicable requirements for purposes of redesignation.
Further, EPA believes that the other CAA section 110 elements not
connected with nonattainment plan submissions and not linked with an
area's attainment status are not applicable requirements for purposes
of redesignation. The State will still be subject to these requirements
after the area is redesignated. The section 110 and part D
requirements, which are linked with a particular area's designation and
classification, are the relevant measures to evaluate in reviewing a
redesignation request.
We have reviewed Texas's SIP and have concluded that it meets the
general SIP requirements under section 110 of the CAA to the extent
they are applicable for purposes of redesignation. EPA has previously
approved provisions of the Texas SIP addressing section 110 elements
under the 1-hour ozone standard (40 CFR 52.2270-.2280). Further, in a
certified letter dated April 4, 2008 (a copy of this letter and the
enclosure to the letter are available in the docket), as well as in a
SIP revision submitted May 1, 2008, Texas confirmed that the State
continues to meet the section 110 requirements for the 8-hour ozone
standard. EPA has not yet taken rulemaking action on these submittals;
however, such approval is not necessary for redesignation.
B. What are the part D requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area?
EPA has reviewed the Texas SIP for the BPA area with respect to SIP
requirements applicable for purposes of redesignation under part D of
the Act for both the 1-hour ozone NAAQS and the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. EPA believes that the Texas SIP for the BPA area contains
approved SIP measures that meet the part D requirements applicable for
purposes of redesignation, with the exception of the requirements for
an approved emissions inventory and the CFV program Equivalency
Demonstration, which we are proposing to approve in this rulemaking.
Upon final approval of these requirements, the BPA area will meet all
of the requirements applicable to the area for purposes of
redesignation under part D of the Act.
The 1-hour and 1997 8-hour ozone applicable requirements are
discussed in detail below.
1. What are the part D requirements applicable for purposes of
redesignation for the BPA area under the 1-hour ozone standard?
The anti-backsliding provisions at 40 CFR 51.905(a)(1) prescribe
one-hour ozone NAAQS requirements that continue to apply after
revocation of the one-hour ozone NAAQS for former one-hour ozone
nonattainment areas. Section 51.905(a)(1) provides that:
The area remains subject to the obligations to adopt and implement
the applicable requirements defined in section 51.900(f), except as
provided in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section and except as
provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
Section 51.900(f), as amended by 70 FR 30592, 30604 (May 26, 2005),
provides that: Applicable requirements means that for an area that the
following requirements, to the extent such requirements applied to the
area for the area's classification under section 181(a)(1) of the CAA
for the one-hour NAAQS at the time of designation for the eight-hour
NAAQS, remain in effect:
(1) Reasonably available control technology (RACT).
(2) Inspection and maintenance programs (I/M).
(3) Major source applicability cut-offs for purposes of RACT.
(4) Rate of Progress (ROP) reductions.
(5) Stage II vapor recovery.
(6) Clean-fuel vehicle program under section 182(c)(4) of the CAA.
(7) Clean fuels for boilers under section 182(e)(3) of the CAA.
(8) Transportation Control Measures (TCMs) during heavy traffic
hours as provided under section 182(e)(4) of the CAA.
(9) Enhanced (ambient) monitoring under section 182(c)(1) of the
CAA.
(10) TCMs under section 182(c)(5) of the CAA.
(11) Vehicle Miles Travelled (VMT) provisions of section 182(d)(1)
of the CAA.
(12) NOX requirements under section 182(f) of the CAA.
(13) Attainment demonstration or alternative as provided under
section 51.905(a)(1)(ii).
In addition to applicable requirements listed under section
51.900(f), the State must also comply with the additional 1-hour anti-
backsliding requirements discussed in the Court's decisions in South
Coast Air Quality Management Dist. v. EPA: (1) NSR requirements based
on the area's 1-hour ozone nonattainment classification; (2) section
185 source penalty fees; (3) contingency measures to be implemented
pursuant to section 172(c)(9) or 182(c)(9) of the CAA for areas not
making reasonable further progress toward attainment of the one-hour
ozone NAAQS, or for failure to attain the NAAQS; and, (4)
transportation conformity requirements for certain types of Federal
actions.
Pursuant to 40 CFR 51.905(c), the area is subject to the
obligations set forth in 51.905(a) and 51.900(f). The following
addresses the one-hour ozone SIP requirements applicable to the BPA
area pursuant to these anti-backsliding requirements and those
discussed in the Court's decision in South Coast Air Quality Management
Dist. v. EPA.
Prior to the revocation of the one-hour ozone standard on June 15,
2005, the BPA area was classified as a serious nonattainment area for
the one-hour ozone standard with a compliance date of November 15,
2007. In