Partial Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air Quality Implementation Plans; California; San Joaquin Valley; Reasonably Available Control Technology for Ozone, 1417-1427 [2012-139]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by March 12, 2012.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2)).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: December 28, 2011.
Michelle L. Pirzadeh,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 10.
40 CFR part 52 is amended as follows:
PART 52—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart C—Alaska
2. Section 52.73 is amended by adding
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.73
Approval of plan.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) EPA approves as a revision to the
Alaska State Implementation Plan, the
Anchorage Carbon Monoxide
Maintenance Plan (Volume II Sections
II, III.A and III.B of the State Air Quality
Control Plan adopted August 20, 2010,
effective October 29, 2010, and Volume
III of the Appendices adopted August
20, 2010, effective October 29, 2010)
submitted by the Alaska Department of
Environmental Conservation on
September 29, 2010
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2012–341 Filed 1–9–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
1417
EPA is approving in part and
disapproving in part a revision to the
San Joaquin Valley Unified Air
Pollution Control District (SJVUAPCD
or SJV) portion of the California State
Implementation Plan (SIP). This action
was proposed in the Federal Register on
September 9, 2011 and concerns
SJVUAPCD’s ‘‘Reasonably Available
Control Technology (RACT)
Demonstration for Ozone SIP’’ (RACT
SIP) for the 8-hour ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standard. Under
authority of the Clean Air Act as
amended in 1990 (CAA or the Act), this
action directs California to correct
RACT rule deficiencies in the SJV.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is
effective on February 9, 2012.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established docket
number EPA–R09–OAR–2011–0723 for
this action. Generally, documents in the
docket for this action are available
electronically at www.regulations.gov
and in hard copy at EPA Region IX, 75
Hawthorne Street, San Francisco,
California. While all documents in the
docket are listed at
www.regulations.gov, some information
may be publicly available only at the
hard copy location (e.g., copyrighted
material, large maps), and some may not
be publicly available in either location
(e.g., CBI). To inspect the hard copy
materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stanley Tong, EPA Region IX, (415)
947–4122, tong.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
SUMMARY:
40 CFR Part 52
Table of Contents
[EPA–R09–OAR–2011–0723; FRL–9616–5]
I. Proposed Action
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
III. Final Action and CAA Consequences
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Partial Approval and Partial
Disapproval of Air Quality
Implementation Plans; California; San
Joaquin Valley; Reasonably Available
Control Technology for Ozone
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
I. Proposed Action
On September 9, 2011 (76 FR 55842),
EPA proposed to partially approve and
partially disapprove the following
document that was submitted for
incorporation into the California SIP.
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Local agency
Document
Adopted
Submitted
SJVUAPCD ................
Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) Demonstration for Ozone State Implementation Plan (SIP).
04/16/2009
06/18/2009
In our proposed action we divided
SJVUAPCD’s rules into the following
categories and evaluated each rule for
compliance with RACT requirements.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
Group 1: Rules that EPA recently
approved or proposed to approve as
implementing RACT.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Group 2: Rules previously approved
for which we are not aware of more
stringent controls that are reasonably
available.
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
1418
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
Group 3: Rules that EPA has
disapproved or proposed to disapprove,
in full or in part, because SJVUAPCD’s
has failed to demonstrate they fully
satisfy current RACT requirements.
Group 4: Rules for which EPA has not
yet made a RACT determination.
We proposed to approve those
elements of SJVUAPCD’s RACT SIP
demonstration that pertain to the SIP
rules identified in groups 1 and 2,
which EPA has fully approved or
proposed to approve as satisfying the
RACT requirements of CAA sections
182(b)(2) and (f).
Simultaneously, we proposed to
disapprove those elements of the RACT
SIP demonstration that pertain to the
SJVUAPCD rules identified in group 3,
which EPA has either disapproved or
proposed to disapprove in whole or in
part, for failure to satisfy RACT
requirements, and those elements of the
RACT SIP demonstration that pertain to
the rules in group 4, for which EPA has
not yet made a RACT determination.
Our technical support document for
our proposed action stated that a revised
RACT SIP demonstration would not be
necessary if each SIP submittal for the
rules in groups 3 and 4 contains the
necessary supporting analyses to
demonstrate the rule meets RACT.
Specifically, we proposed to partially
disapprove SJVUAPCD’s RACT SIP
demonstration because seven rules did
not fully satisfy current RACT
requirements. We have since approved
three of the rules and are awaiting SIP
submittals for the remaining four rules.
The seven rules were:
1. Rule 4352—Solid Fuel Fired
Boilers, Steam Generators, and Process
Heaters—final limited approval/
disapproval October 1, 2010 (75 FR
60623). SJVUAPCD is scheduled to
adopt amendments to Rule 4352 on
December 15, 2011.
2. Rule 4401—Steam Enhanced Crude
Oil Production Wells—final limited
approval/disapproval January 26, 2010,
(75 FR 3996). SJVUAPCD submitted
amendments to EPA on July 28, 2011
and EPA approved them into the SIP on
November 16, 2011, (76 FR 70886).
3. Rule 4402—Crude Oil Production
Sumps—final limited approval/
disapproval July 7, 2011 (76 FR 39777).
SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt
amendments to Rule 4402 on December
15, 2011.
4. Rule 4605—Aerospace Assembly
and Component Coating Operations—
final limited approval/disapproval
January 26, 2010, (75 FR 3996).
SJVUAPCD submitted amendments to
EPA on July 28, 2011 and EPA approved
them into the SIP on November 16,
2011, (76 FR 70886).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
5. Rule 4625—Wastewater
Separators—final limited approval/
disapproval July 7, 2011 (76 FR 39777).
SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt
amendments to Rule 4625 on December
15, 2011.
6. Rule 4682—Polystyrene,
Polyethylene, and Polypropylene
Products Manufacturing—proposed
disapproval July 15, 2011, (76 FR
41745). SJVUAPCD is scheduled to
adopt amendments to Rule 4682 on
December 15, 2011.
7. Rule 4684—Polyester Resin
Operations—final limited approval/
disapproval January 26, 2010, (75 FR
3996). SJVUAPCD submitted
amendments to EPA on August 26, 2011
and EPA approved them on November
18, 2011 (awaiting publication).
We also proposed to partially
disapprove the RACT SIP because we
had not yet made RACT determinations
for the following three rules identified
under group 4:
1. Rule 4566—Organic Material
Composting Operations—adopted
August 18, 2011 and submitted to EPA
on November 18, 2011.
2. Rule 4694—Wine Fermentation and
Storage Tanks—amendments adopted
August 18, 2011 and submitted to EPA
on November 18, 2011.
3. Fumigant Volatile Organic
Compound Regulations—California
Department of Pesticide Regulation—
submitted August 2, 2011. EPA is
currently reviewing the submittal.
Our proposed rule contains more
information on the basis for this
rulemaking and on our evaluation of the
RACT SIP demonstration.
II. Public Comments and EPA
Responses
EPA’s proposed action provided a 30day public comment period. During this
period, we received comments from the
following party.
Paul Cort, Earthjustice; letter dated
October 11, 2011 and received
October 11, 2011.
We have summarized the comments
and provided responses below.
Comment #1:
Earthjustice asserts that EPA’s
analysis of SJVUAPCD’s RACT SIP
demonstration fails to satisfy Clean Air
Act requirements and largely excuses
the District’s ‘‘continued refusal to
adopt the controls necessary to meet the
ozone standards in the Valley.’’
Referencing sections 172(c)(1), 182(b)(2)
and 182(f) of the CAA as the provisions
governing this action, Earthjustice
asserts that the requirement in section
172(c)(1) is not limited to ‘‘major
sources’’ and that ‘‘[o]nly section 182
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
mentions the need to provide for RACT
for all major stationary sources.’’
Earthjustice quotes from EPA’s 1992
General Preamble (57 FR 13498, 13541
(April 16, 1992)), in which EPA states
that it ‘‘recommends that a State’s
control technology analyses for existing
stationary sources go beyond major
stationary sources in the area and that
States require control technology for
other sources in the area that are
reasonable in light of the area’s
attainment needs and the feasibility of
such controls,’’ and asserts that this
language represents EPA’s interpretation
of the ‘‘interplay’’ of CAA sections
172(c)(1), 182(b)(2), and 182(f). Finally,
Earthjustice argues that EPA’s review of
SJVUAPCD’s RACT demonstration does
not recognize ‘‘the extreme attainment
needs for the Valley’’ and that ‘‘[i]t is
not possible to make the RACT
demonstration for the Valley without
explaining what is needed to attain the
ozone standards in the Valley and using
this attainment need to justify the
thresholds used to accept or eliminate
available control options.’’
Response #1:
We disagree with Earthjustice’s
characterization of the CAA
requirements that apply to our
evaluation of the RACT SIP for SJV. As
explained in our proposed rule and our
August 29, 2011 Technical Support
Document for our proposed action on
the RACT SIP (‘‘2011 RACT SIP TSD’’),
California submitted the SJV RACT SIP
to meet the RACT requirements of
subpart 2, part D of title I of the CAA
(sections 182(b) and 182(f)), and EPA
therefore evaluated the submittal in
accordance with those requirements.
See 76 FR 55842 at 55844 (September 9,
2011) and 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 2–9
and 34–35.
Prior to the 1990 Amendments to the
CAA, all nonattainment areas were
subject to the nonattainment planning
provisions of section 172. Under section
172, the RACT requirement and the
attainment demonstration are addressed
in the same subsection. Specifically,
section 172(c)(1) of the Act requires that
the SIP for each nonattainment area
‘‘shall provide for the implementation of
all reasonably available control
measures as expeditiously as practicable
(including such reductions in emissions
from existing sources in the area as may
be obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available
control technology) and shall provide
for the attainment of the national
primary ambient air quality standards.’’
As part of the 1990 Amendments,
Congress created specific nonattainment
area planning requirements for ozone. In
section 182(b)(2) of the Act, Congress
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
required States with areas classified as
moderate and above to submit a RACT
SIP within two years.1 Separately, in
sections 182(b)(1)(A) and (c)(2)(A),
Congress required States to submit
attainment demonstrations within three
years for moderate areas and within four
years for serious and above areas. Where
these more specific planning obligations
apply, we interpret them to supplant the
similar, but less specific, obligations in
section 172. Furthermore, because
Congress expressly separated the RACT
requirement from the attainment
demonstration obligation, EPA has
treated the RACT requirement as a
technology-based requirement that is
separate from the attainment
demonstration obligation.2 The RACT
requirement in CAA section 182 is a
control mandate that applies
independent of the emission reductions
needed for attainment. See, e.g., EPA’s
Proposed Rule to Implement the 8-Hour
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard, 68 FR 32802 at 32837 (June 2,
2003) (explaining that ‘‘[u]nder subpart
2, RACT requirements for ozone
nonattainment areas apply independent
of the emissions reductions needed to
attain the standard’’). However, as we
have explained, Congress did not
supplant the more general requirement
for areas to demonstrate they have
adopted ‘‘reasonably available control
measures’’ (RACM) consistent with
section 172(c)(1) and we have required
States to address RACM as a component
of the area’s attainment demonstration.
57 FR 13498 at 13560 (April 16, 1992)
(1992 General Preamble); see also 40
CFR 51.912(d) (requiring States to
submit with the attainment
demonstration (where required) for an
ozone nonattainment area ‘‘a SIP
revision demonstrating that it has
adopted all RACM necessary to
demonstrate attainment as expeditiously
1 For the 1997 8-hour ozone standard, EPA’s
regulations required States to submit the RACT SIP
within 27 months after designation as
nonattainment for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
40 CFR 51.912(a)(2).
2 For example, see 40 CFR 51.918 and
Memorandum dated May 10, 1995, from John S.
Seitz, Director, EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards, to Air Division Directors, EPA,
Regions I–X, ‘‘Reasonable Further Progress,
Attainment Demonstration, and Related
Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment Areas
Meeting the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard’’ (explaining that certain SIP requirements
related to attainment of the NAAQS may be
suspended if an ozone nonattainment area subject
to those requirements is in fact attaining the ozone
standard but stating that this interpretation of the
Act does not extend to ‘‘requirements of subpart 2
that are not linked by the language of the Act with
the attainment demonstration and RFP
requirements,’’ such as VOC RACT).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
as practicable and to meet any RFP
requirements’’).
Thus, at this time, we are reviewing
only the RACT demonstration submitted
by the State to determine whether it
meets the technology-based
requirements of section 182(b)(2).
Earthjustice quotes from a portion of
EPA’s 1992 General Preamble that
discusses CAA RACT requirements, but
that discussion addresses the subpart 1
RACT/RACM requirement in CAA
section 172(c)(1), not the more specific
RACT control mandate in CAA section
182(b)(2). See 57 FR 13498 at 13541
(April 16, 1992) (referencing CAA
section 172(c)(1) in support of statement
that RACT applies to ‘‘existing
sources’’). To the extent the commenters
have concerns about whether there are
additional ‘‘reasonably available’’
controls that are necessary to attain the
1997 8-hour ozone standard, the State is
required to address that issue in the
context of the RACM analysis submitted
with its attainment demonstration for
that standard. In a separate action, EPA
has proposed to approve the SIP
submitted by California to provide for
attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in the SJV area (SJV 2007
Ozone Plan). See 76 FR 57846 at 57850–
57853 (September 16, 2011). As part of
that action, EPA will determine whether
the SJV 2007 Ozone Plan satisfies the
CAA section 172(c)(1) requirement to
implement all RACT/RACM necessary
for expeditious attainment of the 1997
8-hour ozone NAAQS in the SJV.
We note that our approach to
evaluating the RACT SIP under CAA
section 182 as a discreet SIP element is
consistent with EPA’s actions on RACT
SIPs for the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS
in other nonattainment areas. See,
e.g.,73 FR 76947 (December 18, 2008)
(final rule approving CAA section 182
RACT SIP for Los Angeles-South Coast,
California); 73 FR 78192 (December 22,
2008) (final rule approving CAA section
182 RACT SIP for Virginia); 74 FR
18148 (April 21, 2009) (final rule
approving CAA section 182 RACT SIP
for Ventura County, California); and 74
FR 22837 (May 15, 2009) (final rule
fully approving RACM analysis but
conditionally approving CAA section
182 RACT SIP for New Jersey).
We further note that contrary to the
implication of the comment, section 182
does not limit RACT to ‘‘major sources.’’
Rather, States are required to adopt
RACT rules for all sources covered by a
control technique guideline (CTG) and
many CTGs apply to sources smaller
than major sources. In addition to
addressing all sources covered by a
CTG, States are also required to adopt
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
1419
RACT rules for ‘‘major stationary
sources.’’ 3
Comment #2:
Earthjustice asserts that EPA or the
District must explain why options for
controlling sources beyond major
sources have not been considered.
Earthjustice references portions of EPA’s
2011 RACT SIP TSD that discuss six
specific SJVUAPCD regulations (Rules
4106, 4601, 4652, 4692, 4902, and 4905)
and states that EPA cannot ‘‘avoid
RACT review’’ for these rules that
regulate non-major sources.
Response #2:
As provided above, the State
submitted the RACT SIP to meet the
requirements in section 182(b)(2) and
(f), which requires VOC RACT for all
sources subject to a CTG and all major
VOC sources and requires NOX RACT
for all major sources of NOX. The
portions of EPA’s 2011 RACT SIP TSD
referenced by Earthjustice discuss six
specific SJVUAPCD regulations that
were not submitted to meet the CAA
section 182 RACT requirement: Rule
4106 (Prescribed Burning and Hazard
Reduction Burning); Rule 4601
(Architectural Coatings); Rule 4652
(Coatings and Ink Manufacturing); Rule
4692 (Commercial Charbroiling); Rule
4902 (Residential Water Heaters); and
Rule 4905 (Natural Gas-Fired, Fan-Type
Residential Central Furnaces). As
explained in the 2011 RACT SIP TSD,
these rules are not subject to the CAA
section 182 RACT control mandate
because they do not apply to any CTG
source category or any major stationary
source of VOC or NOX. See 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 12–13. Therefore, evaluation
of these rules is not a necessary element
of our action on the RACT SIP.
In a separate action on the SJV 2007
Ozone Plan, EPA is currently evaluating
whether the State and District have
adopted all RACM (including RACT)
necessary for expeditious attainment of
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard in the
Valley, as required by CAA section
172(c)(1). 76 FR 57846 at 57850–57853
(September 16, 2011). The evaluation of
potentially reasonable control options
for sources not subject to the RACT
control mandate in CAA section 182
3 Section 182(b)(2) of the CAA mandates that each
State with an ozone nonattainment area classified
as moderate or above under subpart 2 submit a SIP
revision providing for the implementation of RACT
with respect to three specific types of sources: (1)
Each category of VOC sources in the area covered
by a Control Techniques Guideline (CTG) document
issued between November 15, 1990 and the date of
attainment; (2) all VOC sources in the area covered
by any CTG issued before November 15, 1990; and
(3) all other ‘‘major stationary sources’’ of VOC
located in the area. Section 182(f) provides that the
requirements for major stationary sources of VOC
under subpart 2 shall also apply to major stationary
sources of NOX.
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
1420
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
belongs in the context of this broader
evaluation of the 8-hour ozone
attainment demonstration for the SJV
area. EPA is not ‘‘avoiding’’ review for
these other source categories but, rather,
appropriately evaluating these
additional control options as part of our
separate action on the RACM and
attainment demonstration under section
172(c)(1) and section 182(c)(2).
Comment #3:
Earthjustice asserts that ‘‘EPA cannot
acknowledge feasible control options
that have been left out of District rules
and excuse this failure without
explaining why these options are not
necessary for attainment.’’ In particular,
Earthjustice references portions of EPA’s
2011 RACT SIP TSD discussing four
specific SJVUAPCD regulations (Rules
4320, 4354, 4606, and 4624) and asserts
that EPA has provided ‘‘no numbers or
any suggestion that it has actually
evaluated the potential emission
reductions achievable’’ by these rules.
Earthjustice also asserts that
‘‘[c]onclusory claims that tighter
controls would not provide significant
emission reductions need to be
supported.’’ Finally, Earthjustice
questions what is ‘‘significant’’ in ‘‘an
area that currently has no actual strategy
for meeting the ozone standards,’’ what
the cumulative effect of these potential
rule improvements would be, and
whether emission reductions might be
significant if the rules applied to nonmajor sources.
Response #3:
With respect to Earthjustice’s
assertion that EPA must consider the
SJV area’s attainment needs and the
cumulative effect of potential rule
improvements as part of our action on
the RACT SIP, we disagree for the
reasons provided in Response #1 above.
As to Earthjustice’s statement about the
need to support ‘‘[c]onclusory claims
that tighter controls would not provide
significant emission reductions,’’ we
agree generally that a RACT evaluation
should include adequate support for
rejection of any control option based on
the cost of and amount of incremental
emission reductions it would achieve.4
We disagree, however, that either EPA’s
or the District’s RACT analyses are
‘‘conclusory.’’ As explained in the 2011
RACT SIP TSD, our evaluation of the
4 EPA explained in the preamble to the Phase 2
Ozone Rule that where the incremental emission
reductions that would result from application of a
particular control option are small, the costs
necessary to achieve that small additional
increment of reduction may not be ‘‘reasonable.’’
See 70 FR 71612, 71654 (November 29, 2005). In
contrast, a RACT analysis for uncontrolled sources
would more likely result in a conclusion that RACT
level controls are economically and technically
feasible. Id.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
RACT SIP was based on multiple
sources of information about potentially
available control options, including: (1)
The District’s SIP submittals for specific
rules, including public comments and
the District’s responses to those
comments; (2) the District’s RACT
analysis in the April 16, 2009 RACT
SIP; and (3) EPA’s previous rulemaking
action on each rule, including public
comments and EPA’s responses to those
comments. Our 2011 RACT SIP TSD
references each of the documents we
relied upon and adequately supports
our conclusions with respect to each of
the District rules we evaluated as part of
the RACT SIP.
In support of its challenge to EPA’s
evaluation of the RACT SIP, Earthjustice
refers generally to statements in EPA’s
2011 RACT SIP TSD identifying issues
that EPA considered with respect to four
specific SJVUAPCD rules (Rules 4320,
4354, 4606, and 4624). For the most
part, these portions of the 2011 RACT
SIP TSD summarize issues that EPA
considered as part of its recent actions
on these rules. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD
at 14, 17, and 19 (referencing previous
EPA rulemaking actions on Rules 4320,
4606, and 4624). However, some
portions of the 2011 RACT SIP TSD
referenced by Earthjustice describe
additional information that EPA
considered as part of its evaluation of
the RACT SIP. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD
at 15 (referencing, with respect to Rule
4354, previous EPA rulemaking action
and SJVUAPCD’s statements in RACT
SIP demonstration). We note as a
threshold matter that Earthjustice’s
generalized assertions fail to identify
any specific deficiency in any of these
rules or to provide any new information
that EPA did not evaluate in our
previous rulemaking actions. A
commenter bears the burden of bringing
to an agency’s attention at least some
particulars of an alleged defect in a
rulemaking. See International Fabricare
Inst. v. EPA, 972 F. 2d 384, 391 (DC Cir.
1992). Nonetheless, in response to these
comments, we have conducted further
evaluation of Rules 4320, 4354, 4606,
and 4624 and discuss these evaluations
below. For the reasons provided in our
2011 RACT SIP TSD, as further
discussed in the previous rulemaking
actions referenced therein and as further
explained below, we disagree with
Earthjustice’s assertion that EPA has
failed to explain the bases for our
approvals with respect to these
particular source categories.
Comment 3a (Rule 4320—Advanced
Emission Reduction Options for Boilers,
Steam Generators, and Process Heaters
Greater than 5.0 MMBtu/hr):
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Earthjustice asserts that EPA’s 2011
RACT SIP TSD indicates more stringent
control options for this rule are
available but fails to explain why these
options should not be required for all
sources as RACT.
Response 3a:
We did not propose to approve Rule
4320 as satisfying RACT under CAA
section 182. In the Technical Support
Document for EPA’s proposed action on
this rule (75 FR 68294, November 5,
2010), EPA stated that section 5.3.3 of
Rule 4320, which requires operators of
units for which annual fees are paid to
‘‘certify that the units meet federal
RACT control measures at the time the
annual fee is provided,’’ is not sufficient
to ensure implementation of RACT by
covered sources. See Technical Support
Document, ‘‘San Joaquin Valley Unified
Air Pollution Control District’s Rule
4320, Advanced Emission Reduction
Options for Boilers, Steam Generators
and Process Heaters Greater than 5.0
MMbtu/hr,’’ August 19, 2010 (Rule 4320
TSD).5 EPA also noted, however, that
EPA had approved Rule 4306 as
satisfying RACT for this source category.
See Rule 4320 TSD at 6 (referencing 75
FR 1715, January 13, 2010) (final rule
approving Rule 4306). EPA further
explained that ‘‘[b]ecause sources have
a separate obligation to comply with
Rule 4306 (which does not allow
payment of fees in lieu of compliance),
the necessary regulatory framework is in
place to ensure that RACT will be
implemented for this source category’’
and that ‘‘[i]f, in the future, the District
intends to rely on Rule 4320 to
implement RACT, the District would
need to modify Rule 4320 to delete the
provision which allows sources to pay
fees in lieu of compliance or otherwise
ensure RACT implementation.’’ Rule
4320 TSD at 6. Accordingly, we noted
in our 2011 RACT SIP TSD that ‘‘EPA
approved Rule 4320 only as SIPstrengthening (not as meeting RACT)
but determined that the source category
covered by this rule is subject to RACT
requirements under SIP-approved Rule
4306.’’ 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 14.
Moreover, we disagree with the
comment that EPA’s 2011 RACT SIP
TSD indicated more stringent control
options were available under Rule 4320.
EPA’s 2011 RACT SIP TSD simply
noted that EPA had not approved Rule
4320 as satisfying RACT requirements
because of the option it provided to pay
fees in lieu of compliance with control
requirements. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD
5 See also Final rule, 76 FR 16696 (March 25,
2011) (approving Rule 4320 as SIP-strengthening
but noting that the rule is not consistent with EPA
guidance on economic incentive programs).
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
at 14. We note that the SJVUAPCD’s
supporting documentation for Rule 4320
did include evaluation of alternative
NOx RACT requirements that the State
rejected as not economically feasible
(see SJVUAPCD, Final Draft Staff
Report, Proposed Amendments to Rule
4306, Proposed Amendments to Rule
4307, and Proposed New Rule 4320
(October 16, 2008) at 11, 17, and
Appendix C), and the commenter
submits no substantive claims to rebut
the State’s conclusion. We are not,
however, making any determination in
this action as to the stringency of the
NOx requirements in Rule 4320 given
our previous conclusion that Rule 4306
adequately implements NOx RACT for
this source category.
Comment 3b (Rule 4354—Glass
Melting Furnaces):
Earthjustice asserts that EPA’s 2011
RACT SIP TSD indicates more stringent
glass melting furnace limits have been
adopted in the Bay Area but fails to
explain why the Bay Area’s limits are
not reasonable for SJV other than the
fact that the Bay Area has not
implemented them.
Response 3b:
EPA approved Rule 4354 (as amended
September 16, 2010) on August 29, 2011
as satisfying RACT under CAA section
182. See 76 FR 53640. As explained in
the Technical Support Document for our
proposed action on this rule (76 FR
30744, June 24, 2011), our approval was
based on our evaluation of several
sources of information, including EPA’s
1994 Alternative Control Techniques
(ACT) Document for Glass
Manufacturing, EPA’s RACT/BACT/
LAER Clearinghouse (RBLC),6 emission
limits in 40 CFR part 60 (Standards of
Performance for New Stationary
Sources) and part 63 (National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants),
and several analogous State/local rules.
See Technical Support Document, ‘‘San
Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution
Control District’s Rule 4354, Glass
Melting Furnaces,’’ June 2011 (Rule
4354 TSD at 3). In response to
Earthjustice’s comment about the Bay
Area Air Quality Management District’s
(BAAQMD’s) NOX limit for glass
melting operations, however, we have
further evaluated BAAQMD Regulation
9, Rule 12 (Nitrogen Oxides from Glass
Melting Furnaces) and compared it to
Rule 4354.
BAAQMD Regulation 9, Rule 12
contains a single NOX limit of 5.5 lbs of
NOX per short ton of glass pulled from
‘‘any glass melting furnace.’’ See
BAAQMD Rule 9–12–301 (as adopted
6 EPA’s RACT/BACT/LAER Clearinghouse is
available at: https://cfpub.epa.gov/RBLC/.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
January 19, 1994). The January 7, 1994
staff report for Regulation 9, Rule 12
indicates that the BAAQMD developed
the NOX limit in this rule to apply
specifically to three container glass
facilities in the Bay Area and does not
indicate this NOX limit was feasible for
flat glass melting operations. See
BAAQMD, ‘‘Staff Report, Proposed
Regulation 9, Rule 12, Nitrogen Oxides
from Glass Melting Furnaces,’’ January
7, 1994, at 1 (stating that ‘‘[t]he
proposed rule would affect three Bay
Area container glass plants operating a
total of five furnaces * * *’’). To date,
EPA is not aware of any flat glass
melting facility that has operated in the
Bay Area and thus been subject to the
NOX emission limit in BAAQMD
Regulation 9, Rule 12 (5.5 lbs of NOX
per short ton of glass pulled). See email
dated October 27, 2011, from Julian
Elliot (BAAQMD) to Stanley Tong (EPA
Region 9), RE: Glass plants in
BAAQMD. We also note that container
glass furnaces generally emit NOX at
lower levels compared to flat glass
furnaces. See EPA’s Compilation of Air
Pollutant Emission Factors, AP–42 Fifth
Edition, Volume I, Chapter 11, at Table
11.15–1 (identifying NOX emission
factors of 3.3 to 9.1 lbs of NOX per ton
of glass for container glass furnaces and
emission factors of 5.6 to 10.4 lbs of
NOX/ton of glass for flat glass furnaces).
Thus, we do not have information
indicating that any flat glass melting
furnaces are located in the Bay Area and
are subject to and meeting the NOX limit
in BAAQMD Regulation 9, Rule 12.
At the time the SJVUAPCD adopted
its 2009 RACT SIP demonstration (on
April 16, 2009), this NOX limit in
BAAQMD Rule 9–12–301 was more
stringent than the NOX limits in
SJVUAPCD Rule 4354 (as adopted
August 17, 2006) for flat glass melting
operations, which ranged from 7.0 to 9.2
lbs of NOX per ton of flat glass,
depending on the averaging period. On
September 16, 2010, however, the
SJVUAPCD adopted successive tiers of
more stringent NOX limits for flat glass
melting operations, including a NOX
limit equivalent to the limit in
BAAQMD’s Regulation 9, Rule 12.
Specifically, the revised Rule 4354
established new ‘‘Tier 3’’ NOX emission
limits, which reduced the earlier rule’s
Tier 2 limits of 9.2 lbs of NOX per ton
of flat glass (24-hour average) and 7.0
lbs of NOX per ton (30-day average) to
5.5 and 5.0 lbs of NOX per ton of flat
glass, respectively, effective January 1,
2011. See Rule 4354 (as amended
September 16, 2010), section 7.2.1.1.
These amendments to Rule 4354 also
provide flat glass melting facilities with
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
1421
an ‘‘enhanced’’ compliance option
which grants them a temporary reprieve
from the Tier 3 limits (i.e., allowing
them to continue complying with the
Tier 2 limits) if the facilities comply
with the more stringent ‘‘Tier 4’’ NOX
limits either by January 1, 2014 (four
years earlier than the required
compliance date of January 1, 2018) or
by the next furnace rebuild schedule,
whichever is earlier. See Rule 4354,
section 7.2.2.3.7 Thus, SJVUAPCD’s
Rule 4354, as revised September 16,
2010, now contains the same NOX
emission limit for flat glass melting
facilities (effective January 1, 2011) as
applied to the three container glass
melting facilities in the Bay Area.8 EPA
approved these revisions to Rule 4354
into the California SIP on August 29,
2011. See 76 FR 53640. We believe the
limited option for delayed compliance
under section 7.2.2.3 of Rule 4354 is
reasonable, given current uncertainty
about the feasibility of a 5.5 lb/ton NOX
limit for flat glass melting furnaces, and
given the requirement to meet even
lower NOX limits under the ‘‘Tier 4
early enhanced option’’ by the next
furnace rebuild and no later than
January 1, 2014 (see fn. 8 and
accompanying text, above).
Comment 3c (Rule 4606—Wood
Products and Flat Wood Paneling
Products Coating Operations):
Earthjustice asserts that EPA’s 2011
RACT SIP TSD indicates Rule 4606
‘‘includes less stringent requirements’’
but fails to explain why strengthening
the rule would not be reasonable.
Response 3c:
EPA approved Rule 4606 (as amended
October 16, 2008) on October 15, 2009
as satisfying RACT under CAA section
182. See 74 FR 52894. In the Technical
Support Document for our proposed
action on this rule (74 FR 33399, July
13, 2009), we noted that Rule 4606
exempts refinishing, replacement and
custom replica furniture operations
from VOC control requirements, while
the CTG for this source category
(‘‘Control of Volatile Organic Compound
Emissions from Wood Furniture
Manufacturing Operations, EPA–453/R–
7 The ‘‘Tier 4’’ NO limits in the rule are 3.4 lbs/
X
ton of glass (block 24-hour average) and 2.9 lbs/ton
of glass (rolling 30-day average). See Rule 4354 (as
amended September 16, 2010), section 5.1, Table 1.
8 In the 2011 RACT SIP TSD, we stated that the
District had compared its rule with BAAQMD
Regulation 9 Rule 12 and ‘‘indicate[d] that although
[Bay Area’s] NOX limits are more stringent than
Rule 4354 for flat glass, [Bay Area] staff verified
there are no flat glass furnaces operating within the
Bay Area.’’ 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 16. In response
to these comments, we are revising our evaluation
of Rule 4354 to take into account the September 16,
2010 revisions to the rule, which strengthened its
NOX emission limits.
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
1422
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
96–007’’ April 1996 (1996 Wood
Furniture CTG)) does not contain such
an exemption. See Technical Support
Document, ‘‘San Joaquin Valley Unified
Air Pollution Control District, Rule
4606, Wood Products and Flat Wood
Paneling Product Coating Operations,’’
June 2009 (Rule 4606 TSD), at 3–4. We
also noted that a few requirements for
wood coatings are more stringent in
other areas. See Rule 4606 TSD at 4. In
response to Earthjustice’s comment, we
have further evaluated the VOC limits in
Rule 4606 and compared them to CTG
recommendations and limits in other
California air district regulations.
First, with respect to the exemption in
Rule 4606 for refinishing, replacement
and custom replica furniture operations,
this is not a RACT deficiency because
the only operations of this type in the
SJV have combined potential VOC
emissions well below the 1996 Wood
Furniture CTG’s applicability threshold.
The 1996 Wood Furniture CTG provides
recommendations for control of VOC
emissions from wood furniture coating
and cleaning operations located at a
manufacturing site. See 1996 Wood
Furniture CTG at 1–2, 7–3 and
Appendix B at B–1 and B–2. The
guidance applies to affected sources in
extreme ozone nonattainment areas that
potentially emit at least 10 tons per year
(tpy) of VOC. Id. at 7–4. Rule 4606
exempts refinishing, replacement, and
custom replica furniture operations
from VOC control requirements, but
only two such facilities operate in the
SJV area and their combined VOC
emissions are well below 10 tons per
year. See Rule 4606 TSD at 4.9 Because
VOC emissions from these facilities are
well below the major source and CTG
applicability threshold of 10 tpy, section
182 RACT does not apply to these two
facilities. We agree, however, that
additional VOC reductions could be
achieved from wood refinishing,
replacement and custom replica
furniture operations in the SJV and
recommended that SJVUAPCD consider
adopting limits for these operations in
the next revision of Rule 4606. See Rule
4606 TSD at 4.
Second, as to the statement in the
Rule 4606 TSD that some requirements
in other areas are more stringent than
Rule 4606, we have reviewed several
other California air district rules and do
not have sufficient information to
conclude that more stringent controls
for this source category are reasonably
available for implementation in the SJV.
Id. According to SJVUAPCD’s final staff
9 The combined VOC emissions from these two
facilities amount to approximately 1 ton per year.
See SJV RACT SIP at 4–210.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
report for Rule 4606, Ventura County
APCD (VCAPCD) has a VOC limit for
sanding sealers of 240 grams/liter (see
VCAPCD Rule 74.30 as amended June
27, 2006, section B.1), which is lower
than the limit of 275 grams/liter in
SJVUAPCD’s Rule 4606 (see SJVUAPCD
Rule 4606 section, 5.1), and San Diego
APCD (SDAPCD) has two rules
containing a VOC limit for surface
preparation and paint stripping
operations of 200 grams/liter (see
SDAPCD Rules 67.11 and 67.11.1, as
adopted September 25, 2002, sections
(d)(5) and (d)(3), respectively), which is
lower than the limit of 350 grams/liter
in SJVUAPCD’s Rule 4606 (see
SJVUAPCD Rule 4606, section 5.1). See
SJVUAPCD, Final Staff Report,
‘‘Proposed Amendments to: Rule 4603
(Surface Coating of Metal Parts and
Products), Rule 4606 (Wood Products
Coating Operations), October 16, 2008,
Appendix A at A–2 and A–3. On further
investigation, it is not clear that the
VOC limits for these wood coating
categories in the Ventura and San Diego
rules are actually achievable by the
application of reasonably available
controls. The VOC limits in SJVUAPCD
Rule 4606 are equivalent to analogous
requirements in several other California
regulations that we have evaluated (see,
e.g., SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as amended
June 14, 1996), BAAQMD Regulation 8,
Rule 32 (as amended August 5, 2009),
and Sacramento Metropolitan AQMD
(SMAQMD) Rule 463 (as amended
September 25, 2008)), and Earthjustice
has provided no information to support
a conclusion that the SJVUAPCD has
failed to adequately evaluate additional
controls for wood coating operations
that are reasonably available.
Specifically, according to staff at the
VCAPCD, the 240 grams/liter limit for
wood sealers in VCAPCD Rule 74.30
was based on a prior version of
SCAQMD Rule 1136 from the mid1990s. See email dated October 31,
2011, from Stan Cowen (VCAPCD) to
Stanley Tong (EPA Region 9), RE: Wood
Coating Rule 74.30. In 1996, however,
SCAQMD amended Rule 1136 to
increase the sealer limit from 240
grams/liter up to 275 grams/liter and
extended the compliance date from
1996 to 2005. See SCAQMD Rule 1136
(as amended June 14, 1996), at section
(c)(1)(A)(i). EPA approved these
revisions to SCAQMD Rule 1136 into
the California SIP on August 18, 1998
(63 FR 44132). The VOC limit in
SJVUAPCD’s Rule 4606 for wood sealers
(275 g/l) is equivalent to the limits in
SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as amended June
14, 1996), and several other California
ozone nonattainment areas have also
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
adopted VOC limits of 275 grams/liter
or higher for these types of wood
coatings. See, e.g., BAAQMD Regulation
8, Rule 32 (as amended August 5, 2009)
at section 8–32–302 and Sacramento
SMAQMD Rule 463 (as amended
September 25, 2008) at section 302.
Although VCAPCD’s Rule 74.30
continues to require a VOC limit of 240
grams/liter for wood sealers, this is the
only regulation we know of that
contains a limit this low, and we do not
have information indicating that wood
sealers can generally meet a 240 grams/
liter limit by the application of
reasonably available controls.10 Given at
least one district has adopted a limit of
240 grams/liter and at least one large
manufacturer sells wood sealers that
apparently can meet a 240 grams/liter
limit, we encourage the SJVUAPCD to
reevaluate Rule 4606 at the next
opportunity to ensure that it requires all
controls for wood sealers that are
reasonably available for implementation
in the SJV. At this time, however, we
believe the limits in Rule 4606 for wood
sealers meet RACT under CAA section
182 for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
Similarly, the VOC limit in
SJVUAPCD’s Rule 4606 for paint
strippers (350 g/l) is equivalent to or
more stringent than the limits for this
category of wood coatings in most other
California nonattainment areas. See,
e.g., SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as amended
June 14, 1996), at section (c)(1)(B);
SMAQMD Rule 463 (as amended
September 25, 2008), at section 304;
VCAPCD Rule 74–30 (as amended June
27, 2006), at section B.3. The only
California district rules we know of that
contain lower limits for paint strippers
are SDAPCD’s Rule 67.11 (‘‘Wood
Products Coating Operations’’) and Rule
67.11.1 (‘‘Large Coating Operations for
Wood Products’’), both of which
prohibit the use of VOC containing
10 EPA contacted two manufacturers that sell
wood sealers in California and learned that only
one of them, Sherwin Williams, makes a waterbased sealer that meets a 240 grams/liter limit. See
email dated November 3, 2011, from Matt Collins
(The Sherwin-Williams Company) to Stanley Tong
(EPA Region 9), RE: Sher-Wood Q&A, and email
dated November 3, 2011 from Robert Wendoll
(Dunn-Edwards Corporation) to Stanley Tong (EPA
Region 9), RE: Does Dunn-Edwards make sanding
sealers—240 g/l? Information from SherwinWilliams indicates that the performance of this
wood sealer may depend upon the use of its
complete ‘‘wood finishing system.’’ See Sherwin
Williams, Chemical Coatings, ‘‘CC–F46: SHER–
WOOD® KEM AQUA® Lacquer Sanding Sealer’’
(stating that ‘‘[d]ue to the wide variety of substrates,
surface preparation methods, application methods,
and environments, the customer should test the
complete [wood finishing] system for adhesion and
compatibility prior to full scale application’’),
available at https://www.paintdocs.com/webmsds/
webPDF.jsp?SITEID=STORECAT&prodno=
035777432143&doctype=PDS&lang=E).
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
materials for surface preparation or
stripping unless at least one of the
following conditions is met: (1) The
material contains 200 grams/liter or less
of VOC per liter of material, (2) the
material has an initial boiling point of
190 °C (374 °F or greater), or (3) the total
VOC vapor pressure of the material is 20
mm Hg or less at 20 °C (68 °F). See
SDAPCD Rule 67.11 at section (d)(5)
and Rule 67.11.1 at section (d)(3).11
Thus, although both of these rules
contain a VOC limit of 200 grams/liter
for paint strippers, this limit is only one
of three different compliance options
and it is not clear that facilities in the
San Diego area have actually achieved
the 200 grams/liter VOC limit. We do
not have information indicating that
paint strippers can generally meet a 200
grams/liter limit by the application of
reasonably available controls and
Earthjustice has not provided any
information to support such a
conclusion.
Based on this evaluation, we conclude
that SJVUAPCD Rule 4606 satisfies
RACT under CAA section 182 for the
1997 8-hour ozone standard. As
discussed above, however, we
recommend that the SJVUAPCD
consider revisiting the wood sealer limit
and adding VOC limits for refinishing,
replacement, and custom replica
furniture operations the next time Rule
4606 is amended.
Comment 3d (Rule 4624—Transfer of
Organic Liquid):
Earthjustice states that EPA’s 2011
RACT SIP TSD indicates more stringent
limits exist for organic liquid loading
activities but fails to explain why these
limits are not reasonable for Rule 4624.
Response 3d:
Our 2011 RACT SIP TSD stated that
the emission limit in Rule 4624 (0.08 lbs
of VOC per 1,000 gallons of liquid
transferred) is consistent with the VOC
limits in other districts’ regulations,
which range from 0.05 to 0.84 lbs of
VOC per 1,000 gallons of gasoline. See
2011 RACT SIP TSD at 19; see also
SJVUAPCD Rule 4624 (as amended
December 20, 2007) at section 5.0;
SCAQMD Rule 1142 (as adopted July
19, 1991) at section (c)(1)(B); and
VCAPCD Rule 70 (as amended April 1,
2009) at section C.1. We also stated that
the South Coast AQMD provides the
option of either meeting a limit of 0.05
lb VOC per 1,000 gallons 12 or reducing
VOC emissions by 95 percent weight
11 EPA approved SDAPCD Rule 67.11.1 into the
California SIP on June 5, 2003. See 68 FR 33635.
Rule 67.11 is not SIP-approved.
12 SCAQMD Rule 1142 (Marine Tank Vessel
Operations) VOC limit is 2 lbs per 1,000 barrels,
which is equivalent to approximately 0.05 lb per
1,000 gallons (assuming 1 barrel = 42 gallons).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
from uncontrolled conditions. See 2011
RACT SIP TSD at 19. In response to the
comment, we are clarifying that this
statement was in reference to SCAQMD
Rule 1142, ‘‘Marine Tank Vessel
Operations,’’ which applies to all
‘‘loading, lightering, ballasting, and
housekeeping events where a marine
tank vessel is filled with an organic
liquid,’’ or ‘‘where a liquid is placed
into a marine tank vessel’s cargo tanks
which had previously held organic
liquid.’’ See SCAQMD Rule 1142 (as
adopted July 19, 1991), section (a).
SCAQMD Rule 1142 prohibits loading,
lightering, ballasting, or housekeeping
events in South Coast Waters unless the
owner or operator of the marine tank
vessel either limits VOC emissions to
5.7 grams per cubic meter (2 lbs per
1,000 barrels, which is approximately
equivalent to 0.05 lbs/1000 gallons) of
liquid loaded into a marine tank vessel
or reduces VOC emissions by at least 95
percent by weight from uncontrolled
conditions. Id. at section (c). This VOC
limit applies only to liquid loading or
unloading operations on a marine tank
vessel, which the rule defines as ‘‘any
tugboat, tanker, freighter, passenger
ship, barge, boat, ship, or watercraft,
which is specifically constructed or
converted to carry liquid cargo in
tanks.’’ Id. at section (b). The rule does
not apply to liquid loading or unloading
operations at facilities onshore. The
SCAQMD has a separate rule that limits
VOC emissions from organic liquid
loading or unloading operations at
facilities onshore (Rule 462 Organic
Liquid Loading), which contains the
same VOC limit as SJVUAPCD Rule
4624, 0.08 lb or less per 1,000 gallons
of liquid transferred. See SCAQMD Rule
462 (as amended May 14, 1999), section
(d); see also Antelope Valley AQMD
Rule 462 Organic Liquid Loading (as
amended June 9, 1995), section (d)(1)(D)
and Kern County APCD Rule 413
Organic Liquid Loading (as amended
March 7, 1996), section (IV.A).
We also contacted SJVUAPCD staff to
determine whether marine loading
operations occur within the SJV and
found that liquid transfers of ammonia,
urea-ammonium nitrate, ammonia based
fertilizers, molasses, and palm oil have
occurred at or near the port of Stockton.
Since there is no CTG for marine
loading operations and we have no
information indicating that emissions
from the transfer of these liquids reach
10 tons per year of VOC or NOX,13 we
13 Ammonia and ammonium nitrate are not VOCs
(40 CFR 51.100(s)), molasses is highly viscous and
Palm Oil is a semi-solid at room temperature.
Several Materials Safety Data Sheets for Palm Oil
list its vapor pressure as: ‘‘not applicable’’, ‘‘N/A’’
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
1423
believe it is reasonable to conclude that
section 182 RACT does not apply to
these operations. The SCAQMD marine
loading rule is designed to control
emissions of gasoline, aviation fuels,
crude oils and other liquids containing
volatile organic compounds. As
explained above, SJVUAPCD’s Rule
4624, which regulates VOC emissions
from the transfer of organic liquids at
onshore facilities, is equivalent to
analogous rules in other California
districts, and Earthjustice does not
identify any additional control option
for this source category that the District
has failed to adequately evaluate.
Comment #4:
Earthjustice asserts that SJVUAPCD
applies ‘‘invalid economic tests for
determining what rules are and are not
reasonable’’ and rejects controls ‘‘not
based solely on the cost-effectiveness of
controls but based on an overly
simplistic ratio of costs to profits for the
industry,’’ referred to as the ‘‘‘10 percent
of profits’ test, to determine whether
controls are economically feasible.’’
Earthjustice asserts that this 10-percentof-profits test ‘‘has no connection to
whether an industry is actually capable
of bearing the costs of control, let alone
whether the control should be
considered cost-effective on a dollars
per ton of emission reduction basis.’’
Referencing their own comments on the
Open Burning Rule and Confined
Animal Facilities Rule as examples,
Earthjustice asserts that the District
‘‘discards technologically feasible
control measures based on its illegal test
of economic feasibility.’’ Earthjustice
also references EPA policy in support of
its statement that EPA presumes it is
reasonable for similar sources to bear
similar costs of emission reductions and
that capital costs, annualized costs, and
cost effectiveness should be determined
for all technologically feasible emission
reduction options (quoting 57 FR 18070,
18074, April 28, 1992). Earthjustice
further argues that EPA ‘‘reiterates the
proper test for economic feasibility
* * * but then fails to explain how the
District has complied with this
interpretation of the statute.’’ Finally,
Earthjustice states that ‘‘[u]ntil this
failure has been corrected, EPA cannot
reasonably conclude that the District’s
rules satisfy RACT because EPA cannot
reasonably claim that all technologically
and economically feasible controls have
been adopted by the District.’’
Response #4:
We agree generally that an economic
feasibility analysis based on the use of
the SJVUAPCD’s ‘‘10 percent of profits’’
and ‘‘none listed.’’ See, e.g., https://
www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9926383.
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
1424
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
test is not a sufficient basis for rejecting
a control option from consideration as
RACT under CAA section 182. As
explained in the 2011 RACT SIP TSD,
EPA’s long-standing guidance on
RACT 14 states that the cost of using a
control measure is considered
reasonable if those same costs are borne
by other comparable facilities. See 2011
RACT SIP TSD at 11 (citing 59 FR 41998
at 42009 (August 16, 1994) and 57 FR
18070 at 18074 (April 28, 1992)).
Earthjustice correctly notes that
economic feasibility is largely
determined by evidence that other
sources in a source category have in fact
applied the control technology in
question and may also be based on cost
effectiveness (i.e., calculation of the cost
per amount of emission reduction in $/
ton). Id. We therefore do not endorse the
District’s use of a ‘‘10 percent of the
industry’s profit’’ test for evaluating the
economic feasibility of an available
control option for purposes of a RACT
analysis.
We disagree, however, with
Earthjustice’s assertions that the District
has ‘‘discard[ed] technologically feasible
control measures based on its illegal test
of economic feasibility’’ and that EPA
has failed to explain how the District’s
analyses are consistent with EPA’s
interpretation of the CAA’s RACT
requirement.
In numerous guidance documents
EPA has stated that several different
factors, including cost effectiveness,
may be considered in evaluating the
economic feasibility of an available
control option. See, e.g., 57 FR at 18074
(‘‘[t]he capital costs, annualized costs,
and cost effectiveness of an emission
reduction technology should be
considered in determining its economic
feasibility’’) (emphasis added); 57 FR
55620 at 55625 (November 25, 1992)
(‘‘NOX Supplement to General
Preamble’’) (‘‘comparability’’ of a NOX
RACT control level ‘‘shall be
determined on the basis of several
factors including, for example, cost,
cost-effectiveness, and emission
reductions’’); 59 FR 41998 at 42013
(August 16, 1994) (‘‘PM–10 Addendum
to General Preamble’’) (‘‘capital costs,
annualized costs, and cost effectiveness
of an emission reduction technology
should be considered in determining its
economic feasibility’’). EPA has also
consistently stated that States may
justify rejection of certain control
measures as not ‘‘reasonably available’’
14 EPA has defined RACT as ‘‘the lowest emission
limitation that a particular source is capable of
meeting by the application of control technology
that is reasonably available considering
technological and economic feasibility.’’ See 44 FR
53762 (September 17, 1979).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
based on the technical and economic
circumstances of the particular sources
being regulated. See 2011 RACT SIP
TSD at 11, 12 (referencing, inter alia, 44
FR 53761 (September 17, 1979)).
As we explained in the 2011 RACT
SIP TSD and further in the individual
TSDs associated with EPA’s previous
actions on the District’s rules, the
District generally considered multiple
sources of information about the costs of
available control options, including
information from manufacturers,
vendors, stakeholders, and other air
districts (see Rule 4308—Final Draft
Staff Report, Revised Proposed Rule
4308 (Boilers, Steam Generators, and
Process Heaters—0.075 MMBtu/hr to 2.0
MMBtu/hr), October 20, 2005 Appendix
C at C–3); technical reports, CTGs, US
Economic Census and Internal Revenue
Service data (see Rule 4607—Final Draft
Staff Report, Revised Proposed
Amendments to Rule 4607 (Graphic
Arts and Paper, Film, Foil and Fabric
Coatings), December 18, 2008,
Appendix C at C–3, and Appendix D at
D–8); and annualized costs of control
options, California State oil and gas
production reports, and Dun and
Bradstreet profits (see Rule 4703—Final
Staff Report Amendments to Rule 4703
(Stationary Gas Turbines), September
20, 2007, Appendix C at C–4 and
Appendix D at D–8). Given EPA’s longstanding position that States may justify
rejection of certain control measures as
not ‘‘reasonably available’’ based on the
technical and economic circumstances
of the particular sources being
regulated, it is appropriate for the
District to consider multiple sources of
information about the costs of potential
control options to determine if they are
economically feasible with respect to
sources located within the SJV.
EPA has reviewed the District’s
technical and economic analyses as well
as supplemental information for each of
the RACT rules that we have categorized
under groups 1 and 2.15 Based on these
evaluations, we conclude that
additional or more stringent controls are
not reasonably available for
implementation in the SJV area. See
TSD at 13–32. For example, with respect
to those crop categories subject to Rule
4103 (Open Burning) for which the
District concluded that alternatives to
burning were not economically feasible
15 We note that Earthjustice’s comments refer to
just two specific rules as examples in which the
District applied the 10 percent of profits test—Rule
4103, ‘‘Agricultural Burning,’’ and Rule 4570
‘‘Confined Animal Feeding Operations.’’ We note
further that Earthjustice did not comment on this
issue on EPA’s most recent proposal to approve
revisions to Rule 4570. See, 76 FR 56706
(September 14, 2011).
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
(e.g., citrus orchard material), EPA
considered several indicators of
technical and economic feasibility, such
as other State/local open burning
prohibitions and information indicating
current uncertainty about the feasibility
of sending citrus orchard removal
material to biomass facilities. See Final
Rule, ‘‘Revisions to the California State
Implementation Plan, San Joaquin
Valley Unified Air Pollution Control
District (SJVUAPCD),’’ signed
September 30, 2011, at Response #2
(pre-publication notice); see also
Technical Support Document,
SJVUAPCD Rule 4103, Open Burning,
June 2011, at fn. 14. These evaluations
adequately support our conclusion that
additional burn prohibitions under Rule
4103 are not reasonably available for
implementation in the SJV at this time.
Similarly, for those ‘‘Class Two
mitigation measures’’ that the
SJVUAPCD did not adopt in its October
2010 revisions to Rule 4570 (Confined
Animal Facilities), the District evaluated
the cost effectiveness of the rejected
VOC control systems (e.g., venting
emissions from livestock barns to
biofilters, replacing naturally ventilated
poultry housing with mechanically
ventilated housing) by calculating the
annual capital costs, annual operating
costs, and emissions reductions
associated with each control option. See
Technical Support Document,
SJVUAPCD Rule 4570, Confined Animal
Facilities, August 2011, at 7–8 and Final
Rule, signed December 13, 2011 (prepublication notice); see also Final Draft
Staff Report, Amended Revised
Proposed Amendments to Rule 4570
(Confined Animal Facilities), October
21, 2010, Appendices C and E. These
evaluations also adequately support our
conclusion that additional VOC controls
under Rule 4570 are not reasonably
available for implementation in the SJV
at this time.
Thus, without endorsing the use of a
‘‘10 percent of profits’’ test for economic
feasibility, we find that analyses
supporting the District’s RACT
demonstration for the rules in groups 1
and 2 adequately considered other
appropriate factors, such as costs of
control borne by comparable sources in
other nonattainment areas and costeffectiveness (i.e., the cost per amount
of emission reduction in $/ton).
Comment #5:
Earthjustice argues that in preparing a
RACT SIP analysis, ‘‘the District must
not only use the correct metric (i.e.,
cost-effectiveness rather than
affordability) but must also justify the
cutoff applied,’’ and that neither EPA
nor the District purport to do this.
Earthjustice also asserts that ‘‘what is
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
1425
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
considered too costly for one area may
not be for another because the
attainment needs of the areas are
different,’’ and that ‘‘what should be
considered economically feasible in the
Valley may represent a more aggressive
control option than what would be
required elsewhere.’’
Response #5:
First, we disagree with Earthjustice’s
assertion that neither EPA nor the
District have used the correct metrics for
economic feasibility. See Response #4
above. Second, as to Earthjustice’s
argument about the threshold (‘‘cutoff’’)
applied to the analysis supporting the
RACT SIP, it is not clear what specific
‘‘cutoff’’ the commenter intended to
refer to. To the extent Earthjustice
intended to argue that the District
should establish and justify a consistent
cost-effectiveness threshold for
determining the economic feasibility of
potential RACT measures, we disagree.
Neither EPA nor the District has
established such a generalized costeffectiveness threshold for RACT
purposes. Consistent with EPA policy,
as discussed in Response #4, the District
considers multiple factors in
determining the economic feasibility of
specific control options, such as cost
effectiveness, the ratio of control costs
to industry profits, control requirements
in other nonattainment areas, and
employment impacts. Thus, depending
on the specific circumstances of the
source category at issue and the control
costs borne by comparable sources
elsewhere, the District’s selected costeffectiveness ‘‘cutoff’’ can vary (e.g.,
industries dominated by large highly
profitable operators may be subject to
more expensive control requirements
than less profitable sources). As
discussed above, we believe the
Rule
4103
4311
4401
4565
4570
4603
4605 .......................
4684 .......................
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
III. Final Action and CAA
Consequences
A. Final Action
Since our September 9, 2011
proposal, we have approved the
following SJVUAPCD rules as satisfying
RACT under CAA section 182.
Title
.......................
.......................
.......................
.......................
.......................
.......................
Amended
Open Burning ..........................................................................................................
Flares ......................................................................................................................
Steam Enhanced Crude Oil Production Wells .......................................................
Biosolids, Animal Manure, and Poultry Litter Operations ......................................
Confined Animal Facilities ......................................................................................
Surface Coating of Metal Parts and Products, Plastic Parts and Products, and
Pleasure Craft.
Aerospace Assembly and Component Coating Operations ...................................
Polyester Resin Operations ....................................................................................
For the reasons provided in our
September 9, 2011 proposed rule and
further explained above in response to
comments, EPA is partially approving
under CAA section 110(k)(3)
SJVUAPCD’s RACT demonstration
adopted on April 16, 2009, based on our
conclusion that it satisfies the
requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and (f) for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS except as provided below.
Simultaneously under CAA section
110(k)(3), EPA is partially disapproving
the RACT SIP based on our conclusion
that the SJVUAPCD has not
demonstrated that the following rules
satisfy RACT under CAA sections
182(b)(2) and (f) for the 1997 8-hour
ozone standard.
1. Rule 4352—Solid Fuel Fired
Boilers, Steam Generators, and Process
Heaters.
2. Rule 4402—Crude Oil Production
Sumps.
3. Rule 4625—Wastewater Separators.
4. Rule 4682—Polystyrene,
Polyethylene, and Polypropylene
Products Manufacturing.
Additionally, EPA is partially
disapproving the RACT SIP with respect
to the following rules, which we have
not yet approved as satisfying RACT
VerDate Mar<15>2010
District’s economic feasibility analyses
with respect to the source categories
identified in group 1 and group 2 of our
2011 RACT SIP TSD were adequate.
Finally, as to the assertion that an
economic feasibility analysis for sources
in the SJV area may need to be more
aggressive than elsewhere in light of the
attainment needs, such analysis would
need to be made for purposes of the
RACM analysis under CAA section
172(c)(1), which is a component of the
attainment demonstration. See Response
#1 above.
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
under CAA sections 182(b)(2) and (f) for
the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
1. Rule 4566—Organic Material
Composting Operations.
2. Rule 4694—Wine Fermentation and
Storage Tanks.
3. Fumigant Volatile Organic
Compound Regulations—California
Department of Pesticide Regulation.
B. CAA Consequences of Final Partial
Disapproval
EPA is committed to working with the
District and CARB to resolve the
identified RACT deficiencies. We note
that SJVUAPCD will not be required to
submit a revised CAA section 182 RACT
SIP demonstration for the 1997 8-hour
ozone NAAQS if each of the rule
revisions required by this action is
accompanied by adequate supporting
analyses demonstrating that the rule
satisfies current RACT requirements and
EPA fully approves it into the SIP.
However, because we are finalizing a
partial disapproval of the RACT SIP, the
offset sanction in CAA section 179(b)(2)
will apply in the SJV ozone
nonattainment area 18 months after the
effective date of today’s final
disapproval. The highway funding
sanctions in CAA section 179(b)(1)
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Approved
4/15/10
6/18/09
6/16/11
3/15/07
10/21/10
9/17/09
Signed 9/30/11.
11/3/11, 76 FR 68106.
11/16/11, 76 FR 70886.
Signed 12/13/11.
Signed 12/13/11.
11/1/11, 76 FR 67369.
6/16/11
8/18/11
11/16/11, 76 FR 70886.
Signed 11/18/11.
would apply in the area six months after
the offset sanction is imposed. Neither
sanction will be imposed under the
CAA if California submits and we
approve prior to the implementation of
sanctions, SIP revisions that correct the
RACT deficiencies in the individual
rules identified in our proposed action.
In addition to the sanctions, CAA
section 110(c)(1) provides that EPA
must promulgate a federal
implementation plan (FIP) addressing
the deficient RACT elements in the
individual rules two years after March
12, 2012, the effective date of this rule,
if we have not approved a SIP revision
correcting the deficiencies within two
years. EPA previously found that the
State had failed to submit a plan
revision for SJV addressing the CAA
section 182 RACT requirements for the
1-hour ozone standard, starting a FIP
clock that expired on January 21, 2011.
See 74 FR 3442 (January 21, 2009).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has exempted this regulatory
action from Executive Order 12866,
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
1426
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
entitled ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review.’’
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. Burden is
defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to conduct
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small not-for-profit enterprises, and
small governmental jurisdictions.
This rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities because SIP approvals and
partial approvals/partial disapprovals
under section 110 and subchapter I, part
D of the Clean Air Act do not create any
new requirements but simply approve
requirements that the State is already
imposing. Therefore, because this
partial approval/partial disapproval
action does not create any new
requirements I certify that this action
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Moreover, due to the nature of the
Federal-State relationship under the
Clean Air Act, preparation of flexibility
analysis would constitute Federal
inquiry into the economic
reasonableness of State action. The
Clean Air Act forbids EPA to base its
actions concerning SIPs on such
grounds. Union Electric Co., v. U.S.
EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 255–66 (1976); 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2).
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Under sections 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(‘‘Unfunded Mandates Act’’), signed
into law on March 22, 1995, EPA must
prepare a budgetary impact statement to
accompany any proposed or final rule
that includes a Federal mandate that
may result in estimated costs to State,
local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate; or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more. Under section
205, EPA must select the most cost
effective and least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule and is consistent with
statutory requirements. Section 203
requires EPA to establish a plan for
informing and advising any small
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
governments that may be significantly
or uniquely impacted by the rule.
EPA has determined that the partial
approval/partial disapproval action
promulgated does not include a Federal
mandate that may result in estimated
costs of $100 million or more to either
State, local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. This
Federal action approves pre-existing
requirements under State or local law,
and imposes no new requirements.
Accordingly, no additional costs to
State, local, or tribal governments, or to
the private sector, result from this
action.
E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Federalism (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999) revokes and replaces Executive
Orders 12612 (Federalism) and 12875
(Enhancing the Intergovernmental
Partnership). Executive Order 13132
requires EPA to develop an accountable
process to ensure ‘‘meaningful and
timely input by State and local officials
in the development of regulatory
policies that have federalism
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have
federalism implications’’ is defined in
the Executive Order to include
regulations that have ‘‘substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’ Under
Executive Order 13132, EPA may not
issue a regulation that has federalism
implications, that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs, and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by State and local
governments, or EPA consults with
State and local officials early in the
process of developing the proposed
regulation. EPA also may not issue a
regulation that has federalism
implications and that preempts State
law unless the Agency consults with
State and local officials early in the
process of developing the proposed
regulation.
This rule will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132, because it
merely approves a State rule
implementing a Federal standard, and
does not alter the relationship or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean
Air Act. Thus, the requirements of
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
section 6 of the Executive Order do not
apply to this rule.
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination
With Indian Tribal Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 9, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ This final rule does not
have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175. It will not have
substantial direct effects on tribal
governments, on the relationship
between the Federal government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal government and Indian tribes.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this rule.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
(62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as
applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under section 5–501 of the Executive
Order has the potential to influence the
regulation. This rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045, because it
approves a State rule implementing a
Federal standard.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This rule is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use’’ (66
FR 28355, May 22, 2001) because it is
not a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12 of the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act
(NTTAA) of 1995 requires Federal
agencies to evaluate existing technical
standards when developing a new
regulation. To comply with NTTAA,
EPA must consider and use ‘‘voluntary
consensus standards’’ (VCS) if available
and applicable when developing
programs and policies unless doing so
would be inconsistent with applicable
law or otherwise impractical.
The EPA believes that VCS are
inapplicable to this action. Today’s
action does not require the public to
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 6 / Tuesday, January 10, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
perform activities conducive to the use
of VCS.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Population
Executive Order (EO) 12898 (59 FR
7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
EPA lacks the discretionary authority
to address environmental justice in this
rulemaking. In reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve or
disapprove state choices, based on the
criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
approves certain State regulations for
inclusion into the SIP under the CAA
section 110 and subchapter I, part D and
disapproves others, and will not in-andof itself create any new requirements.
Accordingly, it does not provide EPA
with the disproportionate human health
or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898.
wreier-aviles on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with RULES
K. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
VerDate Mar<15>2010
12:49 Jan 09, 2012
Jkt 226001
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule
will be effective on March 12, 2012.
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by March 12, 2012.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this rule for the
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed, and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements (see section
307(b)(2)).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Incorporation by reference,
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
1427
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Volatile
organic compounds.
Dated: December 15, 2011.
Jared Blumenfeld,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Part 52, Chapter I, Title 40 of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 52 [AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for Part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart F—California
2. Section 52.220 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(407) to read as
follows:
■
§ 52.220
Identification of plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(407) A plan was submitted on June
18, 2009 by the Governor’s designee.
(i) [Reserved]
(ii) Additional Material.
(A) San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution
Control District.
(1) Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT) Demonstration for
Ozone State Implementation Plan (SIP),
adopted April 16, 2009.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2012–139 Filed 1–9–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
E:\FR\FM\10JAR1.SGM
10JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 6 (Tuesday, January 10, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1417-1427]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-139]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2011-0723; FRL-9616-5]
Partial Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air Quality
Implementation Plans; California; San Joaquin Valley; Reasonably
Available Control Technology for Ozone
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is approving in part and disapproving in part a revision
to the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District
(SJVUAPCD or SJV) portion of the California State Implementation Plan
(SIP). This action was proposed in the Federal Register on September 9,
2011 and concerns SJVUAPCD's ``Reasonably Available Control Technology
(RACT) Demonstration for Ozone SIP'' (RACT SIP) for the 8-hour ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard. Under authority of the Clean Air
Act as amended in 1990 (CAA or the Act), this action directs California
to correct RACT rule deficiencies in the SJV.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective on February 9, 2012.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established docket number EPA-R09-OAR-2011-0723 for
this action. Generally, documents in the docket for this action are
available electronically at www.regulations.gov and in hard copy at EPA
Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, California. While all
documents in the docket are listed at www.regulations.gov, some
information may be publicly available only at the hard copy location
(e.g., copyrighted material, large maps), and some may not be publicly
available in either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the hard copy
materials, please schedule an appointment during normal business hours
with the contact listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stanley Tong, EPA Region IX, (415)
947-4122, tong.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Proposed Action
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
III. Final Action and CAA Consequences
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Proposed Action
On September 9, 2011 (76 FR 55842), EPA proposed to partially
approve and partially disapprove the following document that was
submitted for incorporation into the California SIP.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Local agency Document Adopted Submitted
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SJVUAPCD...................................... Reasonably Available Control 04/16/2009 06/18/2009
Technology (RACT) Demonstration for
Ozone State Implementation Plan (SIP).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In our proposed action we divided SJVUAPCD's rules into the
following categories and evaluated each rule for compliance with RACT
requirements.
Group 1: Rules that EPA recently approved or proposed to approve as
implementing RACT.
Group 2: Rules previously approved for which we are not aware of
more stringent controls that are reasonably available.
[[Page 1418]]
Group 3: Rules that EPA has disapproved or proposed to disapprove,
in full or in part, because SJVUAPCD's has failed to demonstrate they
fully satisfy current RACT requirements.
Group 4: Rules for which EPA has not yet made a RACT determination.
We proposed to approve those elements of SJVUAPCD's RACT SIP
demonstration that pertain to the SIP rules identified in groups 1 and
2, which EPA has fully approved or proposed to approve as satisfying
the RACT requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2) and (f).
Simultaneously, we proposed to disapprove those elements of the
RACT SIP demonstration that pertain to the SJVUAPCD rules identified in
group 3, which EPA has either disapproved or proposed to disapprove in
whole or in part, for failure to satisfy RACT requirements, and those
elements of the RACT SIP demonstration that pertain to the rules in
group 4, for which EPA has not yet made a RACT determination.
Our technical support document for our proposed action stated that
a revised RACT SIP demonstration would not be necessary if each SIP
submittal for the rules in groups 3 and 4 contains the necessary
supporting analyses to demonstrate the rule meets RACT.
Specifically, we proposed to partially disapprove SJVUAPCD's RACT
SIP demonstration because seven rules did not fully satisfy current
RACT requirements. We have since approved three of the rules and are
awaiting SIP submittals for the remaining four rules. The seven rules
were:
1. Rule 4352--Solid Fuel Fired Boilers, Steam Generators, and
Process Heaters--final limited approval/disapproval October 1, 2010 (75
FR 60623). SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt amendments to Rule 4352 on
December 15, 2011.
2. Rule 4401--Steam Enhanced Crude Oil Production Wells--final
limited approval/disapproval January 26, 2010, (75 FR 3996). SJVUAPCD
submitted amendments to EPA on July 28, 2011 and EPA approved them into
the SIP on November 16, 2011, (76 FR 70886).
3. Rule 4402--Crude Oil Production Sumps--final limited approval/
disapproval July 7, 2011 (76 FR 39777). SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt
amendments to Rule 4402 on December 15, 2011.
4. Rule 4605--Aerospace Assembly and Component Coating Operations--
final limited approval/disapproval January 26, 2010, (75 FR 3996).
SJVUAPCD submitted amendments to EPA on July 28, 2011 and EPA approved
them into the SIP on November 16, 2011, (76 FR 70886).
5. Rule 4625--Wastewater Separators--final limited approval/
disapproval July 7, 2011 (76 FR 39777). SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt
amendments to Rule 4625 on December 15, 2011.
6. Rule 4682--Polystyrene, Polyethylene, and Polypropylene Products
Manufacturing--proposed disapproval July 15, 2011, (76 FR 41745).
SJVUAPCD is scheduled to adopt amendments to Rule 4682 on December 15,
2011.
7. Rule 4684--Polyester Resin Operations--final limited approval/
disapproval January 26, 2010, (75 FR 3996). SJVUAPCD submitted
amendments to EPA on August 26, 2011 and EPA approved them on November
18, 2011 (awaiting publication).
We also proposed to partially disapprove the RACT SIP because we
had not yet made RACT determinations for the following three rules
identified under group 4:
1. Rule 4566--Organic Material Composting Operations--adopted
August 18, 2011 and submitted to EPA on November 18, 2011.
2. Rule 4694--Wine Fermentation and Storage Tanks--amendments
adopted August 18, 2011 and submitted to EPA on November 18, 2011.
3. Fumigant Volatile Organic Compound Regulations--California
Department of Pesticide Regulation--submitted August 2, 2011. EPA is
currently reviewing the submittal.
Our proposed rule contains more information on the basis for this
rulemaking and on our evaluation of the RACT SIP demonstration.
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
EPA's proposed action provided a 30-day public comment period.
During this period, we received comments from the following party.
Paul Cort, Earthjustice; letter dated October 11, 2011 and received
October 11, 2011.
We have summarized the comments and provided responses below.
Comment #1:
Earthjustice asserts that EPA's analysis of SJVUAPCD's RACT SIP
demonstration fails to satisfy Clean Air Act requirements and largely
excuses the District's ``continued refusal to adopt the controls
necessary to meet the ozone standards in the Valley.'' Referencing
sections 172(c)(1), 182(b)(2) and 182(f) of the CAA as the provisions
governing this action, Earthjustice asserts that the requirement in
section 172(c)(1) is not limited to ``major sources'' and that ``[o]nly
section 182 mentions the need to provide for RACT for all major
stationary sources.'' Earthjustice quotes from EPA's 1992 General
Preamble (57 FR 13498, 13541 (April 16, 1992)), in which EPA states
that it ``recommends that a State's control technology analyses for
existing stationary sources go beyond major stationary sources in the
area and that States require control technology for other sources in
the area that are reasonable in light of the area's attainment needs
and the feasibility of such controls,'' and asserts that this language
represents EPA's interpretation of the ``interplay'' of CAA sections
172(c)(1), 182(b)(2), and 182(f). Finally, Earthjustice argues that
EPA's review of SJVUAPCD's RACT demonstration does not recognize ``the
extreme attainment needs for the Valley'' and that ``[i]t is not
possible to make the RACT demonstration for the Valley without
explaining what is needed to attain the ozone standards in the Valley
and using this attainment need to justify the thresholds used to accept
or eliminate available control options.''
Response #1:
We disagree with Earthjustice's characterization of the CAA
requirements that apply to our evaluation of the RACT SIP for SJV. As
explained in our proposed rule and our August 29, 2011 Technical
Support Document for our proposed action on the RACT SIP (``2011 RACT
SIP TSD''), California submitted the SJV RACT SIP to meet the RACT
requirements of subpart 2, part D of title I of the CAA (sections
182(b) and 182(f)), and EPA therefore evaluated the submittal in
accordance with those requirements. See 76 FR 55842 at 55844 (September
9, 2011) and 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 2-9 and 34-35.
Prior to the 1990 Amendments to the CAA, all nonattainment areas
were subject to the nonattainment planning provisions of section 172.
Under section 172, the RACT requirement and the attainment
demonstration are addressed in the same subsection. Specifically,
section 172(c)(1) of the Act requires that the SIP for each
nonattainment area ``shall provide for the implementation of all
reasonably available control measures as expeditiously as practicable
(including such reductions in emissions from existing sources in the
area as may be obtained through the adoption, at a minimum, of
reasonably available control technology) and shall provide for the
attainment of the national primary ambient air quality standards.'' As
part of the 1990 Amendments, Congress created specific nonattainment
area planning requirements for ozone. In section 182(b)(2) of the Act,
Congress
[[Page 1419]]
required States with areas classified as moderate and above to submit a
RACT SIP within two years.\1\ Separately, in sections 182(b)(1)(A) and
(c)(2)(A), Congress required States to submit attainment demonstrations
within three years for moderate areas and within four years for serious
and above areas. Where these more specific planning obligations apply,
we interpret them to supplant the similar, but less specific,
obligations in section 172. Furthermore, because Congress expressly
separated the RACT requirement from the attainment demonstration
obligation, EPA has treated the RACT requirement as a technology-based
requirement that is separate from the attainment demonstration
obligation.\2\ The RACT requirement in CAA section 182 is a control
mandate that applies independent of the emission reductions needed for
attainment. See, e.g., EPA's Proposed Rule to Implement the 8-Hour
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard, 68 FR 32802 at 32837 (June
2, 2003) (explaining that ``[u]nder subpart 2, RACT requirements for
ozone nonattainment areas apply independent of the emissions reductions
needed to attain the standard''). However, as we have explained,
Congress did not supplant the more general requirement for areas to
demonstrate they have adopted ``reasonably available control measures''
(RACM) consistent with section 172(c)(1) and we have required States to
address RACM as a component of the area's attainment demonstration. 57
FR 13498 at 13560 (April 16, 1992) (1992 General Preamble); see also 40
CFR 51.912(d) (requiring States to submit with the attainment
demonstration (where required) for an ozone nonattainment area ``a SIP
revision demonstrating that it has adopted all RACM necessary to
demonstrate attainment as expeditiously as practicable and to meet any
RFP requirements'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For the 1997 8-hour ozone standard, EPA's regulations
required States to submit the RACT SIP within 27 months after
designation as nonattainment for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard. 40
CFR 51.912(a)(2).
\2\ For example, see 40 CFR 51.918 and Memorandum dated May 10,
1995, from John S. Seitz, Director, EPA, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, to Air Division Directors, EPA, Regions I-X,
``Reasonable Further Progress, Attainment Demonstration, and Related
Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment Areas Meeting the Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard'' (explaining that certain SIP
requirements related to attainment of the NAAQS may be suspended if
an ozone nonattainment area subject to those requirements is in fact
attaining the ozone standard but stating that this interpretation of
the Act does not extend to ``requirements of subpart 2 that are not
linked by the language of the Act with the attainment demonstration
and RFP requirements,'' such as VOC RACT).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, at this time, we are reviewing only the RACT demonstration
submitted by the State to determine whether it meets the technology-
based requirements of section 182(b)(2). Earthjustice quotes from a
portion of EPA's 1992 General Preamble that discusses CAA RACT
requirements, but that discussion addresses the subpart 1 RACT/RACM
requirement in CAA section 172(c)(1), not the more specific RACT
control mandate in CAA section 182(b)(2). See 57 FR 13498 at 13541
(April 16, 1992) (referencing CAA section 172(c)(1) in support of
statement that RACT applies to ``existing sources''). To the extent the
commenters have concerns about whether there are additional
``reasonably available'' controls that are necessary to attain the 1997
8-hour ozone standard, the State is required to address that issue in
the context of the RACM analysis submitted with its attainment
demonstration for that standard. In a separate action, EPA has proposed
to approve the SIP submitted by California to provide for attainment of
the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS in the SJV area (SJV 2007 Ozone Plan). See
76 FR 57846 at 57850-57853 (September 16, 2011). As part of that
action, EPA will determine whether the SJV 2007 Ozone Plan satisfies
the CAA section 172(c)(1) requirement to implement all RACT/RACM
necessary for expeditious attainment of the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS in
the SJV.
We note that our approach to evaluating the RACT SIP under CAA
section 182 as a discreet SIP element is consistent with EPA's actions
on RACT SIPs for the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS in other nonattainment
areas. See, e.g.,73 FR 76947 (December 18, 2008) (final rule approving
CAA section 182 RACT SIP for Los Angeles-South Coast, California); 73
FR 78192 (December 22, 2008) (final rule approving CAA section 182 RACT
SIP for Virginia); 74 FR 18148 (April 21, 2009) (final rule approving
CAA section 182 RACT SIP for Ventura County, California); and 74 FR
22837 (May 15, 2009) (final rule fully approving RACM analysis but
conditionally approving CAA section 182 RACT SIP for New Jersey).
We further note that contrary to the implication of the comment,
section 182 does not limit RACT to ``major sources.'' Rather, States
are required to adopt RACT rules for all sources covered by a control
technique guideline (CTG) and many CTGs apply to sources smaller than
major sources. In addition to addressing all sources covered by a CTG,
States are also required to adopt RACT rules for ``major stationary
sources.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Section 182(b)(2) of the CAA mandates that each State with
an ozone nonattainment area classified as moderate or above under
subpart 2 submit a SIP revision providing for the implementation of
RACT with respect to three specific types of sources: (1) Each
category of VOC sources in the area covered by a Control Techniques
Guideline (CTG) document issued between November 15, 1990 and the
date of attainment; (2) all VOC sources in the area covered by any
CTG issued before November 15, 1990; and (3) all other ``major
stationary sources'' of VOC located in the area. Section 182(f)
provides that the requirements for major stationary sources of VOC
under subpart 2 shall also apply to major stationary sources of
NOX.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment #2:
Earthjustice asserts that EPA or the District must explain why
options for controlling sources beyond major sources have not been
considered. Earthjustice references portions of EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD
that discuss six specific SJVUAPCD regulations (Rules 4106, 4601, 4652,
4692, 4902, and 4905) and states that EPA cannot ``avoid RACT review''
for these rules that regulate non-major sources.
Response #2:
As provided above, the State submitted the RACT SIP to meet the
requirements in section 182(b)(2) and (f), which requires VOC RACT for
all sources subject to a CTG and all major VOC sources and requires
NOX RACT for all major sources of NOX. The
portions of EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD referenced by Earthjustice discuss
six specific SJVUAPCD regulations that were not submitted to meet the
CAA section 182 RACT requirement: Rule 4106 (Prescribed Burning and
Hazard Reduction Burning); Rule 4601 (Architectural Coatings); Rule
4652 (Coatings and Ink Manufacturing); Rule 4692 (Commercial
Charbroiling); Rule 4902 (Residential Water Heaters); and Rule 4905
(Natural Gas-Fired, Fan-Type Residential Central Furnaces). As
explained in the 2011 RACT SIP TSD, these rules are not subject to the
CAA section 182 RACT control mandate because they do not apply to any
CTG source category or any major stationary source of VOC or
NOX. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 12-13. Therefore, evaluation
of these rules is not a necessary element of our action on the RACT
SIP.
In a separate action on the SJV 2007 Ozone Plan, EPA is currently
evaluating whether the State and District have adopted all RACM
(including RACT) necessary for expeditious attainment of the 1997 8-
hour ozone standard in the Valley, as required by CAA section
172(c)(1). 76 FR 57846 at 57850-57853 (September 16, 2011). The
evaluation of potentially reasonable control options for sources not
subject to the RACT control mandate in CAA section 182
[[Page 1420]]
belongs in the context of this broader evaluation of the 8-hour ozone
attainment demonstration for the SJV area. EPA is not ``avoiding''
review for these other source categories but, rather, appropriately
evaluating these additional control options as part of our separate
action on the RACM and attainment demonstration under section 172(c)(1)
and section 182(c)(2).
Comment #3:
Earthjustice asserts that ``EPA cannot acknowledge feasible control
options that have been left out of District rules and excuse this
failure without explaining why these options are not necessary for
attainment.'' In particular, Earthjustice references portions of EPA's
2011 RACT SIP TSD discussing four specific SJVUAPCD regulations (Rules
4320, 4354, 4606, and 4624) and asserts that EPA has provided ``no
numbers or any suggestion that it has actually evaluated the potential
emission reductions achievable'' by these rules. Earthjustice also
asserts that ``[c]onclusory claims that tighter controls would not
provide significant emission reductions need to be supported.''
Finally, Earthjustice questions what is ``significant'' in ``an area
that currently has no actual strategy for meeting the ozone
standards,'' what the cumulative effect of these potential rule
improvements would be, and whether emission reductions might be
significant if the rules applied to non-major sources.
Response #3:
With respect to Earthjustice's assertion that EPA must consider the
SJV area's attainment needs and the cumulative effect of potential rule
improvements as part of our action on the RACT SIP, we disagree for the
reasons provided in Response 1 above. As to Earthjustice's
statement about the need to support ``[c]onclusory claims that tighter
controls would not provide significant emission reductions,'' we agree
generally that a RACT evaluation should include adequate support for
rejection of any control option based on the cost of and amount of
incremental emission reductions it would achieve.\4\ We disagree,
however, that either EPA's or the District's RACT analyses are
``conclusory.'' As explained in the 2011 RACT SIP TSD, our evaluation
of the RACT SIP was based on multiple sources of information about
potentially available control options, including: (1) The District's
SIP submittals for specific rules, including public comments and the
District's responses to those comments; (2) the District's RACT
analysis in the April 16, 2009 RACT SIP; and (3) EPA's previous
rulemaking action on each rule, including public comments and EPA's
responses to those comments. Our 2011 RACT SIP TSD references each of
the documents we relied upon and adequately supports our conclusions
with respect to each of the District rules we evaluated as part of the
RACT SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ EPA explained in the preamble to the Phase 2 Ozone Rule that
where the incremental emission reductions that would result from
application of a particular control option are small, the costs
necessary to achieve that small additional increment of reduction
may not be ``reasonable.'' See 70 FR 71612, 71654 (November 29,
2005). In contrast, a RACT analysis for uncontrolled sources would
more likely result in a conclusion that RACT level controls are
economically and technically feasible. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In support of its challenge to EPA's evaluation of the RACT SIP,
Earthjustice refers generally to statements in EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD
identifying issues that EPA considered with respect to four specific
SJVUAPCD rules (Rules 4320, 4354, 4606, and 4624). For the most part,
these portions of the 2011 RACT SIP TSD summarize issues that EPA
considered as part of its recent actions on these rules. See 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 14, 17, and 19 (referencing previous EPA rulemaking actions
on Rules 4320, 4606, and 4624). However, some portions of the 2011 RACT
SIP TSD referenced by Earthjustice describe additional information that
EPA considered as part of its evaluation of the RACT SIP. See 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 15 (referencing, with respect to Rule 4354, previous EPA
rulemaking action and SJVUAPCD's statements in RACT SIP demonstration).
We note as a threshold matter that Earthjustice's generalized
assertions fail to identify any specific deficiency in any of these
rules or to provide any new information that EPA did not evaluate in
our previous rulemaking actions. A commenter bears the burden of
bringing to an agency's attention at least some particulars of an
alleged defect in a rulemaking. See International Fabricare Inst. v.
EPA, 972 F. 2d 384, 391 (DC Cir. 1992). Nonetheless, in response to
these comments, we have conducted further evaluation of Rules 4320,
4354, 4606, and 4624 and discuss these evaluations below. For the
reasons provided in our 2011 RACT SIP TSD, as further discussed in the
previous rulemaking actions referenced therein and as further explained
below, we disagree with Earthjustice's assertion that EPA has failed to
explain the bases for our approvals with respect to these particular
source categories.
Comment 3a (Rule 4320--Advanced Emission Reduction Options for
Boilers, Steam Generators, and Process Heaters Greater than 5.0 MMBtu/
hr):
Earthjustice asserts that EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD indicates more
stringent control options for this rule are available but fails to
explain why these options should not be required for all sources as
RACT.
Response 3a:
We did not propose to approve Rule 4320 as satisfying RACT under
CAA section 182. In the Technical Support Document for EPA's proposed
action on this rule (75 FR 68294, November 5, 2010), EPA stated that
section 5.3.3 of Rule 4320, which requires operators of units for which
annual fees are paid to ``certify that the units meet federal RACT
control measures at the time the annual fee is provided,'' is not
sufficient to ensure implementation of RACT by covered sources. See
Technical Support Document, ``San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution
Control District's Rule 4320, Advanced Emission Reduction Options for
Boilers, Steam Generators and Process Heaters Greater than 5.0 MMbtu/
hr,'' August 19, 2010 (Rule 4320 TSD).\5\ EPA also noted, however, that
EPA had approved Rule 4306 as satisfying RACT for this source category.
See Rule 4320 TSD at 6 (referencing 75 FR 1715, January 13, 2010)
(final rule approving Rule 4306). EPA further explained that
``[b]ecause sources have a separate obligation to comply with Rule 4306
(which does not allow payment of fees in lieu of compliance), the
necessary regulatory framework is in place to ensure that RACT will be
implemented for this source category'' and that ``[i]f, in the future,
the District intends to rely on Rule 4320 to implement RACT, the
District would need to modify Rule 4320 to delete the provision which
allows sources to pay fees in lieu of compliance or otherwise ensure
RACT implementation.'' Rule 4320 TSD at 6. Accordingly, we noted in our
2011 RACT SIP TSD that ``EPA approved Rule 4320 only as SIP-
strengthening (not as meeting RACT) but determined that the source
category covered by this rule is subject to RACT requirements under
SIP-approved Rule 4306.'' 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See also Final rule, 76 FR 16696 (March 25, 2011)
(approving Rule 4320 as SIP-strengthening but noting that the rule
is not consistent with EPA guidance on economic incentive programs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, we disagree with the comment that EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD
indicated more stringent control options were available under Rule
4320. EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD simply noted that EPA had not approved
Rule 4320 as satisfying RACT requirements because of the option it
provided to pay fees in lieu of compliance with control requirements.
See 2011 RACT SIP TSD
[[Page 1421]]
at 14. We note that the SJVUAPCD's supporting documentation for Rule
4320 did include evaluation of alternative NOx RACT requirements that
the State rejected as not economically feasible (see SJVUAPCD, Final
Draft Staff Report, Proposed Amendments to Rule 4306, Proposed
Amendments to Rule 4307, and Proposed New Rule 4320 (October 16, 2008)
at 11, 17, and Appendix C), and the commenter submits no substantive
claims to rebut the State's conclusion. We are not, however, making any
determination in this action as to the stringency of the NOx
requirements in Rule 4320 given our previous conclusion that Rule 4306
adequately implements NOx RACT for this source category.
Comment 3b (Rule 4354--Glass Melting Furnaces):
Earthjustice asserts that EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD indicates more
stringent glass melting furnace limits have been adopted in the Bay
Area but fails to explain why the Bay Area's limits are not reasonable
for SJV other than the fact that the Bay Area has not implemented them.
Response 3b:
EPA approved Rule 4354 (as amended September 16, 2010) on August
29, 2011 as satisfying RACT under CAA section 182. See 76 FR 53640. As
explained in the Technical Support Document for our proposed action on
this rule (76 FR 30744, June 24, 2011), our approval was based on our
evaluation of several sources of information, including EPA's 1994
Alternative Control Techniques (ACT) Document for Glass Manufacturing,
EPA's RACT/BACT/LAER Clearinghouse (RBLC),\6\ emission limits in 40 CFR
part 60 (Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources) and part
63 (National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants), and
several analogous State/local rules. See Technical Support Document,
``San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District's Rule
4354, Glass Melting Furnaces,'' June 2011 (Rule 4354 TSD at 3). In
response to Earthjustice's comment about the Bay Area Air Quality
Management District's (BAAQMD's) NOX limit for glass melting
operations, however, we have further evaluated BAAQMD Regulation 9,
Rule 12 (Nitrogen Oxides from Glass Melting Furnaces) and compared it
to Rule 4354.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ EPA's RACT/BACT/LAER Clearinghouse is available at: https://cfpub.epa.gov/RBLC/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BAAQMD Regulation 9, Rule 12 contains a single NOX limit
of 5.5 lbs of NOX per short ton of glass pulled from ``any
glass melting furnace.'' See BAAQMD Rule 9-12-301 (as adopted January
19, 1994). The January 7, 1994 staff report for Regulation 9, Rule 12
indicates that the BAAQMD developed the NOX limit in this
rule to apply specifically to three container glass facilities in the
Bay Area and does not indicate this NOX limit was feasible
for flat glass melting operations. See BAAQMD, ``Staff Report, Proposed
Regulation 9, Rule 12, Nitrogen Oxides from Glass Melting Furnaces,''
January 7, 1994, at 1 (stating that ``[t]he proposed rule would affect
three Bay Area container glass plants operating a total of five
furnaces * * *''). To date, EPA is not aware of any flat glass melting
facility that has operated in the Bay Area and thus been subject to the
NOX emission limit in BAAQMD Regulation 9, Rule 12 (5.5 lbs
of NOX per short ton of glass pulled). See email dated
October 27, 2011, from Julian Elliot (BAAQMD) to Stanley Tong (EPA
Region 9), RE: Glass plants in BAAQMD. We also note that container
glass furnaces generally emit NOX at lower levels compared
to flat glass furnaces. See EPA's Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission
Factors, AP-42 Fifth Edition, Volume I, Chapter 11, at Table 11.15-1
(identifying NOX emission factors of 3.3 to 9.1 lbs of
NOX per ton of glass for container glass furnaces and
emission factors of 5.6 to 10.4 lbs of NOX/ton of glass for
flat glass furnaces). Thus, we do not have information indicating that
any flat glass melting furnaces are located in the Bay Area and are
subject to and meeting the NOX limit in BAAQMD Regulation 9,
Rule 12.
At the time the SJVUAPCD adopted its 2009 RACT SIP demonstration
(on April 16, 2009), this NOX limit in BAAQMD Rule 9-12-301
was more stringent than the NOX limits in SJVUAPCD Rule 4354
(as adopted August 17, 2006) for flat glass melting operations, which
ranged from 7.0 to 9.2 lbs of NOX per ton of flat glass,
depending on the averaging period. On September 16, 2010, however, the
SJVUAPCD adopted successive tiers of more stringent NOX
limits for flat glass melting operations, including a NOX
limit equivalent to the limit in BAAQMD's Regulation 9, Rule 12.
Specifically, the revised Rule 4354 established new ``Tier 3''
NOX emission limits, which reduced the earlier rule's Tier 2
limits of 9.2 lbs of NOX per ton of flat glass (24-hour
average) and 7.0 lbs of NOX per ton (30-day average) to 5.5
and 5.0 lbs of NOX per ton of flat glass, respectively,
effective January 1, 2011. See Rule 4354 (as amended September 16,
2010), section 7.2.1.1. These amendments to Rule 4354 also provide flat
glass melting facilities with an ``enhanced'' compliance option which
grants them a temporary reprieve from the Tier 3 limits (i.e., allowing
them to continue complying with the Tier 2 limits) if the facilities
comply with the more stringent ``Tier 4'' NOX limits either
by January 1, 2014 (four years earlier than the required compliance
date of January 1, 2018) or by the next furnace rebuild schedule,
whichever is earlier. See Rule 4354, section 7.2.2.3.\7\ Thus,
SJVUAPCD's Rule 4354, as revised September 16, 2010, now contains the
same NOX emission limit for flat glass melting facilities
(effective January 1, 2011) as applied to the three container glass
melting facilities in the Bay Area.\8\ EPA approved these revisions to
Rule 4354 into the California SIP on August 29, 2011. See 76 FR 53640.
We believe the limited option for delayed compliance under section
7.2.2.3 of Rule 4354 is reasonable, given current uncertainty about the
feasibility of a 5.5 lb/ton NOX limit for flat glass melting
furnaces, and given the requirement to meet even lower NOX
limits under the ``Tier 4 early enhanced option'' by the next furnace
rebuild and no later than January 1, 2014 (see fn. 8 and accompanying
text, above).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The ``Tier 4'' NOX limits in the rule are 3.4
lbs/ton of glass (block 24-hour average) and 2.9 lbs/ton of glass
(rolling 30-day average). See Rule 4354 (as amended September 16,
2010), section 5.1, Table 1.
\8\ In the 2011 RACT SIP TSD, we stated that the District had
compared its rule with BAAQMD Regulation 9 Rule 12 and ``indicate[d]
that although [Bay Area's] NOX limits are more stringent
than Rule 4354 for flat glass, [Bay Area] staff verified there are
no flat glass furnaces operating within the Bay Area.'' 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 16. In response to these comments, we are revising our
evaluation of Rule 4354 to take into account the September 16, 2010
revisions to the rule, which strengthened its NOX
emission limits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 3c (Rule 4606--Wood Products and Flat Wood Paneling
Products Coating Operations):
Earthjustice asserts that EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD indicates Rule
4606 ``includes less stringent requirements'' but fails to explain why
strengthening the rule would not be reasonable.
Response 3c:
EPA approved Rule 4606 (as amended October 16, 2008) on October 15,
2009 as satisfying RACT under CAA section 182. See 74 FR 52894. In the
Technical Support Document for our proposed action on this rule (74 FR
33399, July 13, 2009), we noted that Rule 4606 exempts refinishing,
replacement and custom replica furniture operations from VOC control
requirements, while the CTG for this source category (``Control of
Volatile Organic Compound Emissions from Wood Furniture Manufacturing
Operations, EPA-453/R-
[[Page 1422]]
96-007'' April 1996 (1996 Wood Furniture CTG)) does not contain such an
exemption. See Technical Support Document, ``San Joaquin Valley Unified
Air Pollution Control District, Rule 4606, Wood Products and Flat Wood
Paneling Product Coating Operations,'' June 2009 (Rule 4606 TSD), at 3-
4. We also noted that a few requirements for wood coatings are more
stringent in other areas. See Rule 4606 TSD at 4. In response to
Earthjustice's comment, we have further evaluated the VOC limits in
Rule 4606 and compared them to CTG recommendations and limits in other
California air district regulations.
First, with respect to the exemption in Rule 4606 for refinishing,
replacement and custom replica furniture operations, this is not a RACT
deficiency because the only operations of this type in the SJV have
combined potential VOC emissions well below the 1996 Wood Furniture
CTG's applicability threshold. The 1996 Wood Furniture CTG provides
recommendations for control of VOC emissions from wood furniture
coating and cleaning operations located at a manufacturing site. See
1996 Wood Furniture CTG at 1-2, 7-3 and Appendix B at B-1 and B-2. The
guidance applies to affected sources in extreme ozone nonattainment
areas that potentially emit at least 10 tons per year (tpy) of VOC. Id.
at 7-4. Rule 4606 exempts refinishing, replacement, and custom replica
furniture operations from VOC control requirements, but only two such
facilities operate in the SJV area and their combined VOC emissions are
well below 10 tons per year. See Rule 4606 TSD at 4.\9\ Because VOC
emissions from these facilities are well below the major source and CTG
applicability threshold of 10 tpy, section 182 RACT does not apply to
these two facilities. We agree, however, that additional VOC reductions
could be achieved from wood refinishing, replacement and custom replica
furniture operations in the SJV and recommended that SJVUAPCD consider
adopting limits for these operations in the next revision of Rule 4606.
See Rule 4606 TSD at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The combined VOC emissions from these two facilities amount
to approximately 1 ton per year. See SJV RACT SIP at 4-210.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, as to the statement in the Rule 4606 TSD that some
requirements in other areas are more stringent than Rule 4606, we have
reviewed several other California air district rules and do not have
sufficient information to conclude that more stringent controls for
this source category are reasonably available for implementation in the
SJV. Id. According to SJVUAPCD's final staff report for Rule 4606,
Ventura County APCD (VCAPCD) has a VOC limit for sanding sealers of 240
grams/liter (see VCAPCD Rule 74.30 as amended June 27, 2006, section
B.1), which is lower than the limit of 275 grams/liter in SJVUAPCD's
Rule 4606 (see SJVUAPCD Rule 4606 section, 5.1), and San Diego APCD
(SDAPCD) has two rules containing a VOC limit for surface preparation
and paint stripping operations of 200 grams/liter (see SDAPCD Rules
67.11 and 67.11.1, as adopted September 25, 2002, sections (d)(5) and
(d)(3), respectively), which is lower than the limit of 350 grams/liter
in SJVUAPCD's Rule 4606 (see SJVUAPCD Rule 4606, section 5.1). See
SJVUAPCD, Final Staff Report, ``Proposed Amendments to: Rule 4603
(Surface Coating of Metal Parts and Products), Rule 4606 (Wood Products
Coating Operations), October 16, 2008, Appendix A at A-2 and A-3. On
further investigation, it is not clear that the VOC limits for these
wood coating categories in the Ventura and San Diego rules are actually
achievable by the application of reasonably available controls. The VOC
limits in SJVUAPCD Rule 4606 are equivalent to analogous requirements
in several other California regulations that we have evaluated (see,
e.g., SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as amended June 14, 1996), BAAQMD Regulation 8,
Rule 32 (as amended August 5, 2009), and Sacramento Metropolitan AQMD
(SMAQMD) Rule 463 (as amended September 25, 2008)), and Earthjustice
has provided no information to support a conclusion that the SJVUAPCD
has failed to adequately evaluate additional controls for wood coating
operations that are reasonably available.
Specifically, according to staff at the VCAPCD, the 240 grams/liter
limit for wood sealers in VCAPCD Rule 74.30 was based on a prior
version of SCAQMD Rule 1136 from the mid-1990s. See email dated October
31, 2011, from Stan Cowen (VCAPCD) to Stanley Tong (EPA Region 9), RE:
Wood Coating Rule 74.30. In 1996, however, SCAQMD amended Rule 1136 to
increase the sealer limit from 240 grams/liter up to 275 grams/liter
and extended the compliance date from 1996 to 2005. See SCAQMD Rule
1136 (as amended June 14, 1996), at section (c)(1)(A)(i). EPA approved
these revisions to SCAQMD Rule 1136 into the California SIP on August
18, 1998 (63 FR 44132). The VOC limit in SJVUAPCD's Rule 4606 for wood
sealers (275 g/l) is equivalent to the limits in SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as
amended June 14, 1996), and several other California ozone
nonattainment areas have also adopted VOC limits of 275 grams/liter or
higher for these types of wood coatings. See, e.g., BAAQMD Regulation
8, Rule 32 (as amended August 5, 2009) at section 8-32-302 and
Sacramento SMAQMD Rule 463 (as amended September 25, 2008) at section
302. Although VCAPCD's Rule 74.30 continues to require a VOC limit of
240 grams/liter for wood sealers, this is the only regulation we know
of that contains a limit this low, and we do not have information
indicating that wood sealers can generally meet a 240 grams/liter limit
by the application of reasonably available controls.\10\ Given at least
one district has adopted a limit of 240 grams/liter and at least one
large manufacturer sells wood sealers that apparently can meet a 240
grams/liter limit, we encourage the SJVUAPCD to reevaluate Rule 4606 at
the next opportunity to ensure that it requires all controls for wood
sealers that are reasonably available for implementation in the SJV. At
this time, however, we believe the limits in Rule 4606 for wood sealers
meet RACT under CAA section 182 for the 1997 8-hour ozone standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ EPA contacted two manufacturers that sell wood sealers in
California and learned that only one of them, Sherwin Williams,
makes a water-based sealer that meets a 240 grams/liter limit. See
email dated November 3, 2011, from Matt Collins (The Sherwin-
Williams Company) to Stanley Tong (EPA Region 9), RE: Sher-Wood Q&A,
and email dated November 3, 2011 from Robert Wendoll (Dunn-Edwards
Corporation) to Stanley Tong (EPA Region 9), RE: Does Dunn-Edwards
make sanding sealers--240 g/l? Information from Sherwin-Williams
indicates that the performance of this wood sealer may depend upon
the use of its complete ``wood finishing system.'' See Sherwin
Williams, Chemical Coatings, ``CC-F46: SHER-WOOD[supreg] KEM
AQUA[supreg] Lacquer Sanding Sealer'' (stating that ``[d]ue to the
wide variety of substrates, surface preparation methods, application
methods, and environments, the customer should test the complete
[wood finishing] system for adhesion and compatibility prior to full
scale application''), available at https://www.paintdocs.com/webmsds/webPDF.jsp?SITEID=STORECAT&prodno=035777432143&doctype=PDS&lang=E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, the VOC limit in SJVUAPCD's Rule 4606 for paint
strippers (350 g/l) is equivalent to or more stringent than the limits
for this category of wood coatings in most other California
nonattainment areas. See, e.g., SCAQMD Rule 1136 (as amended June 14,
1996), at section (c)(1)(B); SMAQMD Rule 463 (as amended September 25,
2008), at section 304; VCAPCD Rule 74-30 (as amended June 27, 2006), at
section B.3. The only California district rules we know of that contain
lower limits for paint strippers are SDAPCD's Rule 67.11 (``Wood
Products Coating Operations'') and Rule 67.11.1 (``Large Coating
Operations for Wood Products''), both of which prohibit the use of VOC
containing
[[Page 1423]]
materials for surface preparation or stripping unless at least one of
the following conditions is met: (1) The material contains 200 grams/
liter or less of VOC per liter of material, (2) the material has an
initial boiling point of 190 [deg]C (374 [deg]F or greater), or (3) the
total VOC vapor pressure of the material is 20 mm Hg or less at 20
[deg]C (68 [deg]F). See SDAPCD Rule 67.11 at section (d)(5) and Rule
67.11.1 at section (d)(3).\11\ Thus, although both of these rules
contain a VOC limit of 200 grams/liter for paint strippers, this limit
is only one of three different compliance options and it is not clear
that facilities in the San Diego area have actually achieved the 200
grams/liter VOC limit. We do not have information indicating that paint
strippers can generally meet a 200 grams/liter limit by the application
of reasonably available controls and Earthjustice has not provided any
information to support such a conclusion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ EPA approved SDAPCD Rule 67.11.1 into the California SIP on
June 5, 2003. See 68 FR 33635. Rule 67.11 is not SIP-approved.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this evaluation, we conclude that SJVUAPCD Rule 4606
satisfies RACT under CAA section 182 for the 1997 8-hour ozone
standard. As discussed above, however, we recommend that the SJVUAPCD
consider revisiting the wood sealer limit and adding VOC limits for
refinishing, replacement, and custom replica furniture operations the
next time Rule 4606 is amended.
Comment 3d (Rule 4624--Transfer of Organic Liquid):
Earthjustice states that EPA's 2011 RACT SIP TSD indicates more
stringent limits exist for organic liquid loading activities but fails
to explain why these limits are not reasonable for Rule 4624.
Response 3d:
Our 2011 RACT SIP TSD stated that the emission limit in Rule 4624
(0.08 lbs of VOC per 1,000 gallons of liquid transferred) is consistent
with the VOC limits in other districts' regulations, which range from
0.05 to 0.84 lbs of VOC per 1,000 gallons of gasoline. See 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 19; see also SJVUAPCD Rule 4624 (as amended December 20,
2007) at section 5.0; SCAQMD Rule 1142 (as adopted July 19, 1991) at
section (c)(1)(B); and VCAPCD Rule 70 (as amended April 1, 2009) at
section C.1. We also stated that the South Coast AQMD provides the
option of either meeting a limit of 0.05 lb VOC per 1,000 gallons \12\
or reducing VOC emissions by 95 percent weight from uncontrolled
conditions. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD at 19. In response to the comment, we
are clarifying that this statement was in reference to SCAQMD Rule
1142, ``Marine Tank Vessel Operations,'' which applies to all
``loading, lightering, ballasting, and housekeeping events where a
marine tank vessel is filled with an organic liquid,'' or ``where a
liquid is placed into a marine tank vessel's cargo tanks which had
previously held organic liquid.'' See SCAQMD Rule 1142 (as adopted July
19, 1991), section (a). SCAQMD Rule 1142 prohibits loading, lightering,
ballasting, or housekeeping events in South Coast Waters unless the
owner or operator of the marine tank vessel either limits VOC emissions
to 5.7 grams per cubic meter (2 lbs per 1,000 barrels, which is
approximately equivalent to 0.05 lbs/1000 gallons) of liquid loaded
into a marine tank vessel or reduces VOC emissions by at least 95
percent by weight from uncontrolled conditions. Id. at section (c).
This VOC limit applies only to liquid loading or unloading operations
on a marine tank vessel, which the rule defines as ``any tugboat,
tanker, freighter, passenger ship, barge, boat, ship, or watercraft,
which is specifically constructed or converted to carry liquid cargo in
tanks.'' Id. at section (b). The rule does not apply to liquid loading
or unloading operations at facilities onshore. The SCAQMD has a
separate rule that limits VOC emissions from organic liquid loading or
unloading operations at facilities onshore (Rule 462 Organic Liquid
Loading), which contains the same VOC limit as SJVUAPCD Rule 4624, 0.08
lb or less per 1,000 gallons of liquid transferred. See SCAQMD Rule 462
(as amended May 14, 1999), section (d); see also Antelope Valley AQMD
Rule 462 Organic Liquid Loading (as amended June 9, 1995), section
(d)(1)(D) and Kern County APCD Rule 413 Organic Liquid Loading (as
amended March 7, 1996), section (IV.A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ SCAQMD Rule 1142 (Marine Tank Vessel Operations) VOC limit
is 2 lbs per 1,000 barrels, which is equivalent to approximately
0.05 lb per 1,000 gallons (assuming 1 barrel = 42 gallons).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also contacted SJVUAPCD staff to determine whether marine
loading operations occur within the SJV and found that liquid transfers
of ammonia, urea-ammonium nitrate, ammonia based fertilizers, molasses,
and palm oil have occurred at or near the port of Stockton. Since there
is no CTG for marine loading operations and we have no information
indicating that emissions from the transfer of these liquids reach 10
tons per year of VOC or NOX,\13\ we believe it is reasonable
to conclude that section 182 RACT does not apply to these operations.
The SCAQMD marine loading rule is designed to control emissions of
gasoline, aviation fuels, crude oils and other liquids containing
volatile organic compounds. As explained above, SJVUAPCD's Rule 4624,
which regulates VOC emissions from the transfer of organic liquids at
onshore facilities, is equivalent to analogous rules in other
California districts, and Earthjustice does not identify any additional
control option for this source category that the District has failed to
adequately evaluate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Ammonia and ammonium nitrate are not VOCs (40 CFR
51.100(s)), molasses is highly viscous and Palm Oil is a semi-solid
at room temperature. Several Materials Safety Data Sheets for Palm
Oil list its vapor pressure as: ``not applicable'', ``N/A'' and
``none listed.'' See, e.g., https://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9926383.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment #4:
Earthjustice asserts that SJVUAPCD applies ``invalid economic tests
for determining what rules are and are not reasonable'' and rejects
controls ``not based solely on the cost-effectiveness of controls but
based on an overly simplistic ratio of costs to profits for the
industry,'' referred to as the ```10 percent of profits' test, to
determine whether controls are economically feasible.'' Earthjustice
asserts that this 10-percent-of-profits test ``has no connection to
whether an industry is actually capable of bearing the costs of
control, let alone whether the control should be considered cost-
effective on a dollars per ton of emission reduction basis.''
Referencing their own comments on the Open Burning Rule and Confined
Animal Facilities Rule as examples, Earthjustice asserts that the
District ``discards technologically feasible control measures based on
its illegal test of economic feasibility.'' Earthjustice also
references EPA policy in support of its statement that EPA presumes it
is reasonable for similar sources to bear similar costs of emission
reductions and that capital costs, annualized costs, and cost
effectiveness should be determined for all technologically feasible
emission reduction options (quoting 57 FR 18070, 18074, April 28,
1992). Earthjustice further argues that EPA ``reiterates the proper
test for economic feasibility * * * but then fails to explain how the
District has complied with this interpretation of the statute.''
Finally, Earthjustice states that ``[u]ntil this failure has been
corrected, EPA cannot reasonably conclude that the District's rules
satisfy RACT because EPA cannot reasonably claim that all
technologically and economically feasible controls have been adopted by
the District.''
Response #4:
We agree generally that an economic feasibility analysis based on
the use of the SJVUAPCD's ``10 percent of profits''
[[Page 1424]]
test is not a sufficient basis for rejecting a control option from
consideration as RACT under CAA section 182. As explained in the 2011
RACT SIP TSD, EPA's long-standing guidance on RACT \14\ states that the
cost of using a control measure is considered reasonable if those same
costs are borne by other comparable facilities. See 2011 RACT SIP TSD
at 11 (citing 59 FR 41998 at 42009 (August 16, 1994) and 57 FR 18070 at
18074 (April 28, 1992)). Earthjustice correctly notes that economic
feasibility is largely determined by evidence that other sources in a
source category have in fact applied the control technology in question
and may also be based on cost effectiveness (i.e., calculation of the
cost per amount of emission reduction in $/ton). Id. We therefore do
not endorse the District's use of a ``10 percent of the industry's
profit'' test for evaluating the economic feasibility of an available
control option for purposes of a RACT analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ EPA has defined RACT as ``the lowest emission limitation
that a particular source is capable of meeting by the application of
control technology that is reasonably available considering
technological and economic feasibility.'' See 44 FR 53762 (September
17, 1979).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree, however, with Earthjustice's assertions that the
District has ``discard[ed] technologically feasible control measures
based on its illegal test of economic feasibility'' and that EPA has
failed to explain how the District's analyses are consistent with EPA's
interpretation of the CAA's RACT requirement.
In numerous guidance documents EPA has stated that several
different factors, including cost effectiveness, may be considered in
evaluating the economic feasibility of an available control option.
See, e.g., 57 FR at 18074 (``[t]he capital costs, annualized costs, and
cost effectiveness of an emission reduction technology should be
considered in determining its economic feasibility'') (emphasis added);
57 FR 55620 at 55625 (November 25, 1992) (``NOX Supplement
to General Preamble'') (``comparability'' of a NOX RACT
control level ``shall be determined on the basis of several factors
including, for example, cost, cost-effectiveness, and emission
reductions''); 59 FR 41998 at 42013 (August 16, 1994) (``PM-10 Addendum
to General Preamble'') (``capital costs, annualized costs, and cost
effectiveness of an emission reduction technology should be considered
in determining its economic feasibility''). EPA has also consistently
stated that States may justify rejection of certain control measures as
not ``reasonably available'' based on the technical and economic
circumstances of the particular sources being regulated. See 2011 RACT
SIP TSD at 11, 12 (referencing, inter alia, 44 FR 53761 (September 17,
1979)).
As we explained in the 2011 RACT SIP TSD and further in the
individual TSDs associated with EPA's previous actions on the
District's rules, the District generally considered multiple sources of
information about the costs of available control options, including
information from manufacturers, vendors, stakeholders, and other air
districts (see Rule 4308--Final Draft Staff Report, Revised Proposed
Rule 4308 (Boilers, Steam Generators, and Process Heaters--0.075 MMBtu/
hr to 2.0 MMBtu/hr), October 20, 2005 Appendix C at C-3); technical
reports, CTGs, US Economic Census and Internal Revenue Service data
(see Rule 4607--Final Draft Staff Report, Revised Proposed Amendments
to Rule 4607 (Graphic Arts and Paper, Film, Foil and Fabric Coatings),
December 18, 2008, Appendix C at C-3, and Appendix D at D-8); and
annualized costs of control options, California State oil and gas
production reports, and Dun and Bradstreet profits (see Rule 4703--
Final Staff Report Amendments to Rule 4703 (Stationary Gas Turbines),
September 20, 2007, Appendix C at C-4 and Appendix D at D-8). Given
EPA's long-standing position that States may justify rejection of
certain control measures as not ``reasonably available'' based on the
technical and economic circumstances of the particular sources being
regulated, it is appropriate for the District to consider multiple
sources of information about the costs of potential control options to
determine if they are economically feasible with respect to sources
located within the SJV.
EPA has reviewed the District's technical and economic analyses as
well as supplemental information for each of the RACT rules that we
have categorized under groups 1 and 2.\15\ Based on these evaluations,
we conclude that additional or more stringent controls are not
reasonably available for implementation in the SJV area. See TSD at 13-
32. For example, with respect to those crop categories subject to Rule
4103 (Open Burning) for which the District concluded that alternatives
to burning were not economically feasible (e.g., citrus orchard
material), EPA considered several indicators of technical and economic
feasibility, such as other State/local open burning prohibitions and
information indicating current uncertainty about the feasibility of
sending citrus orchard removal material to biomass facilities. See
Final Rule, ``Revisions to the California State Implementation Plan,
San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District (SJVUAPCD),''
signed September 30, 2011, at Response 2 (pre-publication
notice); see also Technical Support Document, SJVUAPCD Rule 4103, Open
Burning, June 2011, at fn. 14. These evaluations adequately support our
conclusion that additional burn prohibitions under Rule 4103 are not
reasonably available for implementation in the SJV at this time.
Similarly, for those ``Class Two mitigation measures'' that the
SJVUAPCD did not adopt in its October 2010 revisions to Rule 4570
(Confined Animal Facilities), the District evaluated the cost
effectiveness of the rejected VOC control systems (e.g., venting
emissions from livestock barns to biofilters, replacing naturally
ventilated poultry housing with mechanically ventilated housing) by
calculating the annual capital costs, annual operating costs, and
emissions reductions associated with each control option. See Technical
Support Document, SJVUAPCD Rule 4570, Confined Animal Facilities,
August 2011, at 7-8 and Final Rule, signed December 13, 2011 (pre-
publication notice); see also Final Draft Staff Report, Amended Revised
Proposed Amendments to Rule 4570 (Confined Animal Facilities), October
21, 2010, Appendices C and E. These evaluations also adequately support
our conclusion that additional VOC controls under Rule 4570 are not
reasonably available for implementation in the SJV at this time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ We note that Earthjustice's comments refer to just two
specific rules as examples in which the District applied the 10
percent of profits test--Rule 4103, ``Agricultural Burning,'' and
Rule 4570 ``Confined Animal Feeding Operations.'' We note further
that Earthjustice did not comment on this issue on EPA's most recent
proposal to approve revisions to Rule 4570. See, 76 FR 56706
(September 14, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, without endorsing the use of a ``10 percent of profits'' test
for economic feasibility, we find that analyses supporting the
District's RACT demonstration for the rules in groups 1 and 2
adequately considered other appropriate factors, such as costs of
control borne by comparable sources in other nonattainment areas and
cost-effectiveness (i.e., the cost per amount of emission reduction in
$/ton).
Comment #5:
Earthjustice argues that in preparing a RACT SIP analysis, ``the
District must not only use the correct metric (i.e., cost-effectiveness
rather than affordability) but must also justify the cutoff applied,''
and that neither EPA nor the District purport to do this. Earthjustice
also asserts that ``what is
[[Page 1425]]
considered too costly for one area may not be for another because the
attainment needs of the areas are different,'' and that ``what should
be considered economically feasible in the Valley may represent a more
aggressive control option than what would be required elsewhere.''
Response #5:
First, we disagree with Earthjustice's assertion that neither EPA
nor the District have used the correct metrics for economic
feasibility. See Response 4 above. Second, as to
Earthjustice's argument about the threshold (``cutoff'') applied to the
analysis supporting the RACT SIP, it is not clear what specific
``cutoff'' the commenter intended to refer to. To the extent
Earthjustice intended to argue that the District should establish and
justify a consistent cost-effectiveness threshold for determining the
economic feasibility of potential RACT measures, we disagree. Neither
EPA nor the District has established such a generalized cost-
effectiveness threshold for RACT purposes. Consistent with EPA policy,
as discussed in Response 4, the District considers multiple
factors in determining the economic feasibility of specific control
options, such as cost effectiveness, the ratio of control costs to
industry profits, control requirements in other nonattainment areas,
and employment impacts. Thus, depending on the specific circumstances
of the source category at issue and the control costs borne by
comparable sources elsewhere, the District's selected cost-
effectiveness ``cutoff'' can vary (e.g., industries dominated by large
highly profitable operators may be subject to more expensive control
requirements than less profitable sources). As discussed above, we
believe the District's economic feasibility analyses with respect to
the source categories identified in group 1 and group 2 of our 2011
RACT SIP TSD were adequate.
Finally, as to the assertion that an economic feasibility analysis
for sources in the SJV area may need to be more aggressive than
elsewhere in light of the attainment needs, such analysis would need to
be made for purposes of the RACM analysis under CAA section 172(c)(1),
which is a component of the attainment demonstration. See Response
1 above.
III. Final Action and CAA Consequences
A. Final Action
Since our September 9, 2011 proposal, we have approved the
following SJVUAPCD rules as satisfying RACT under CAA section 182.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule Title Amended Approved
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4103.............................. Open Burning.............. 4/15/10 Signed 9/30/11.
4311.............................. Flares.................... 6/18/09 11/3/11, 76 FR 68106.
4401.............................. Steam Enhanced Crude Oil 6/16/11 11/16/11, 76 FR 70886.
Production Wells.
4565.............................. Biosolids, Animal Manure, 3/15/07 Signed 12/13/11.
and Poultry Litter
Operations.
4570.............................. Confined Animal Facilities 10/21/10 Signed 12/13/11.
4603.............................. Surface Coating of Metal 9/17/09 11/1/11, 76 FR 67369.
Parts and Products,
Plastic Parts and
Products, and Pleasure
Craft.
4605.............................. Aerospace Assembly and 6/16/11 11/16/11, 76 FR 70886.
Component Coating
Operations.
4684.............................. Polyester Resin Operations 8/18/11 Signed 11/18/11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------