Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Louisiana; Regional Haze State Implementation Plan, 39425-39435 [2012-15729]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 128 / Tuesday, July 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: June 15, 2012.
S.M. Wischmann,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Buffalo.
regional haze SIP submittal arising from
the remand by the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia (D.C.
Circuit) to the EPA of the Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR). In this action, the
EPA is finalizing a partial disapproval
because of deficiencies in Louisiana’s
RH SIP submittal that go beyond the
issues addressed in the EPA’s limited
disapproval in that separate action. The
EPA is also finalizing a partial limited
approval of those elements of this SIP
revision not addressed by our partial
disapproval. The partial limited
approval of the RH requirements for
Louisiana is based on the conclusion
that the revisions, as a whole,
strengthen the Louisiana SIP. This
action is being taken under section 110
and part C of the CAA.
[FR Doc. 2012–16243 Filed 7–2–12; 8:45 am]
DATES:
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
2012.
petty officer who has been designated
by the Captain of the Port Buffalo to act
on his behalf.
(4) Vessel operators desiring to enter
or operate within the safety zone shall
contact the Captain of the Port Buffalo
or his on-scene representative to obtain
permission to do so. The Captain of the
Port Buffalo or his on-scene
representative may be contacted via
VHF Channel 16. Vessel operators given
permission to enter or operate in the
safety zone must comply with all
directions given to them by the Captain
of the Port Buffalo, or his on-scene
representative.
This rule is effective August 6,
The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket
Identification No. EPA–R06–OAR–
2008–0510. All documents in the docket
are listed on the www.regulations.gov
Web site. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, i.e., Confidential Business
Information or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202–2733. The EPA
requests that if at all possible, you
contact the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
for further information. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
excluding federal holidays.
ADDRESSES:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2008–0510; FRL–9692–3]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Louisiana;
Regional Haze State Implementation
Plan
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The EPA is finalizing a partial
limited approval and a partial
disapproval of a revision to the
Louisiana State Implementation Plan
(SIP) submitted by the State of
Louisiana through the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality
(LDEQ), on June 13, 2008, that addresses
regional haze (RH) for the first
implementation period. This revision
was submitted to address the
requirements of the Clean Air Act (CAA)
and the EPA’s rules that require states
to prevent any future and remedy any
existing anthropogenic impairment of
visibility in mandatory Class I areas
(national parks and wilderness areas)
caused by emissions of air pollutants
from numerous sources located over a
wide geographic area (also referred to as
the ‘‘regional haze program’’). States are
required to assure reasonable progress
toward the national goal of achieving
natural visibility conditions in Class I
areas. In a separate action, the EPA has
finalized a limited disapproval of the
Louisiana RH SIP, along with several
other states’ regional haze plans,
because of deficiencies in the state’s
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SUMMARY:
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Ms.
Ellen Belk, Air Planning Section (6PD–
L), Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700,
Dallas, Texas 75202–2733, telephone
214–665–2164; fax number 214–665–
6762; email address belk.ellen@epa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
Table of Contents
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I. Background
II. Final Action
III. Comments Received and Our Responses
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
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I. Background
The EPA is taking action on a revision
to Louisiana’s SIP submitted on June 13,
2008, that addressed progress toward
reducing regional haze for the first
implementation period ending in 2018.
This revision was submitted to address
the requirements of the CAA and the
EPA’s rules to assure reasonable
progress toward the national goal of
achieving natural visibility conditions
in mandatory Class I areas. As identified
by Congress, there is one mandatory
Class I area within the State of
Louisiana, Breton National Wilderness
Area.1 The initial submittal from
Louisiana was supplemented by a May
30, 2012, letter communicating that the
State finalized its Smoke Management
Plan (SMP). On February 28, 2012, the
EPA published a proposed partial
limited approval and partial disapproval
of Louisiana’s SIP revision to address
RH. See 77 FR 11839.2
In that action, the EPA proposed a
partial limited approval of Louisiana’s
June 13, 2008, SIP revision addressing
RH under CAA sections 301(a) and
110(k)(3) because certain provisions of
the revision strengthen the Louisiana
(LA) SIP. The EPA also proposed a
partial disapproval of the LA RH SIP
submittal because the submittal
includes several deficient provisions.
The deficiencies identified in the
proposal go beyond those identified in
the limited disapproval proposed on
December 30, 2011 (76 FR 82219) which
addressed deficiencies in several states’
regional haze plans caused by the
remand of the CAIR. The EPA proposed
that certain elements of the State’s Best
Available Retrofit Technology (BART)
1 It is recognized that at the Breton National
Wilderness Area (Breton or Breton NWA), some
acres have at times been submerged. However, as
a Class I area, Congress has declared as a national
goal ‘‘the prevention of any future, and the
remedying, of any existing, impairment of
visibility’’ at the Breton NWA. 42 U.S.C. 7491.
Breton was designated by Congress as a national
wilderness area on June 3, 1975, under the
Wilderness Act. Public Law 93–632 1(f); see also 16
U.S.C. 1132. In the August 7, 1977, Clean Air Act
Amendment, national wilderness areas that
exceeded 5,000 acres in size and were in existence
at that time (August 7, 1977), were designated as
mandatory Class I areas that may not be
redesignated. 42 U.S.C. 7472(a). In accordance with
section 169A of the CAA, the EPA, in consultation
with the Department of Interior, promulgated a list
of 156 areas where visibility is identified as an
important value. See, 44 FR 69122, November 30,
1979. As required, the EPA lists Breton as a
mandatory Class I federal area at 40 CFR 81.412.
2 For additional details on the EPA’s analysis and
findings, the reader is referred to the proposal
published in the February 28, 2012 Federal Register
(77 FR 11839), and a more detailed discussion as
contained in the Technical Support Document
which is available on line at https://
www.regulations.gov, Docket number EPA–R06–
OAR–2008–0510.
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evaluations and determinations are not
fully adequate to meet the federal
requirements. Additionally, as a result
of the deficiencies related to BART, the
EPA proposed that the Long-Term
Strategy (LTS) is not fully adequate to
meet federal requirements. Finally,
because visibility impacts from smoke
are significant in Louisiana, we
proposed that Louisiana should finalize
its SMP. The EPA proposed a limited
approval for portions of the revision
because those portions represent an
improvement over the current SIP, and
make considerable progress in fulfilling
the applicable CAA RH program
requirements.
The EPA received comments on the
Agency’s February 28, 2012 proposed
action. See section III of this rulemaking
for a summary of comments received
and the EPA’s responses to these
comments. Also, the EPA received a
final SMP from Louisiana on May 30,
2012.
Following the remand of CAIR, the
EPA issued a new rule in 2011 to
address the interstate transport of
nitrogen oxides (NOX) and sulfur
dioxide (SO2) in the eastern United
States. See 76 FR 48208, August 8, 2011
(‘‘the Transport Rule,’’ also known as
the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule
(CSAPR)). On December 30, 2011, the
EPA proposed to find that the trading
programs in the Transport Rule would
achieve greater reasonable progress
towards the national visibility goal than
would source-specific BART in the
states in which the Transport Rule
applies. See 76 FR 82219. The EPA
finalized that rule on May 30, 2012 (77
FR 33642). Based on this finding, the
EPA also revised the RH Rule (RHR) to
allow states to substitute participation
in the trading programs under the
Transport Rule for source-specific
BART.
Also on December 30, 2011, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit
stayed the Transport Rule (including the
provisions that would have sunset CAIR
and the CAIR Federal Implementation
Plans (FIPs)) and instructed the EPA to
continue to administer CAIR pending
the outcome of the court’s decision on
the petitions for review challenging the
Transport Rule. EME Homer City v.
EPA, No. 11–1302 (Order).
II. Final Action
In this action, the EPA is finalizing a
partial limited approval and a partial
disapproval of Louisiana’s June 13, 2008
RH SIP revision. With one difference,
we are finalizing our action as proposed.
As discussed below, we are slightly
adjusting our action on the LA RH SIP
with respect to the LDEQ’s BART
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determination for the Rhodia Sulfuric
Acid Plant (Rhodia). We proposed to
find the BART evaluation for Rhodia is
deficient because the LDEQ’s RH
submittal does not analyze controls for
the subject-to-BART unit using the
factors required by 40 CFR 51.308(e).
Having considered the public
comments, we find that Rhodia’s
subject-to-BART unit meets the RH
requirements specified in 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) for an adequate BART
evaluation; however the Rhodia BART
determination still fails to meet the
requirement in 40 CFR 51.308(e) to
include the emissions limits in the SIP.
See our response to comment 6 in
section III for further discussion of our
findings for Rhodia. Also, this action
acknowledges that Louisiana has
satisfied the requirement to consider
smoke management techniques,
including plans, because Louisiana has
finalized its SMP (see the docket for this
action, Docket No. EPA–R06–OAR–
2008–0510, for Louisiana’s SMP).
The EPA is finalizing a partial limited
approval of Louisiana’s RH SIP revision.
This partial limited approval results in
approval of all of the remaining
elements of Louisiana’s RH SIP.3 The
EPA is taking this approach because
Louisiana’s SIP will be stronger and
more protective of the environment with
the implementation of those measures
by the state and having federal approval
and enforceability than it would
without those measures being included
in Louisiana’s SIP.
The EPA is also finalizing a partial
disapproval of Louisiana’s RH SIP
revision insofar as this SIP revision
relies on deficient BART evaluations for
four non-electric generating unit (nonEGU) subject-to-BART sources. The
legal effect of the final partial
disapproval for Louisiana’s June 13,
2008, SIP revision is to provide the EPA
authority to issue a FIP at any time, and
to obligate the Agency to take such
action no more than two years after the
effective date of the EPA’s final action.
42 USC 7410(c)(1); CAA 110(c)(1).
Note that in another action, signed
May 30, 2012, the EPA finalized its
finding that the trading programs in the
Transport Rule would achieve greater
reasonable progress towards the
national goal than would BART in the
states in which the Transport Rule
applies. See 77 FR 33642. In that action,
the EPA finalized a limited
3 Processing of State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Revisions, EPA Memorandum from John Calcagni,
Director, Air Quality Management Division,
OAQPS, to Air Division Directors, EPA Regional
Offices I–X (1992 Calcagni Memorandum) located at
https://www.epa.gov/ttn/caaa/t1/memoranda/
siproc.pdf.
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disapproval 4 of Louisiana’s June 13,
2008, RH SIP revision insofar as those
revisions rely on the CAIR to address
the impact of emissions from the State’s
electric generating units (EGUs).
However, that action did not finalize a
FIP for Louisiana. The legal effect of that
final limited disapproval for Louisiana’s
June 13, 2008, SIP revision is to provide
the EPA authority to issue a FIP at any
time, and to obligate the Agency to take
such action no more than two years after
the effective date of the EPA’s final
action.
Specifically, the EPA is finalizing a
partial limited approval and a partial
disapproval of a revision to the
Louisiana SIP submitted by the State of
Louisiana on June 13, 2008, as meeting
some of the applicable regional haze
requirements as set forth in sections
169A and 169B of the CAA and in 40
CFR 51.300–308. In this action, the EPA
grants a partial limited approval of the
LA RH SIP submittal for meeting the
requirements of: 51.308(d), for the core
requirements for regional haze SIPs,
except for the requirements of
51.308(d)(3); 51.308(f), for the
commitment to submit comprehensive
periodic revisions of regional haze SIPs;
51.308(g), for the commitment to submit
periodic reports describing progress
towards the reasonable progress goals
(RPGs); 51.308(h), for the commitment
to conduct periodic determinations of
the adequacy of the existing regional
haze SIP; and 51.308(i), for coordination
with state and Federal Land Managers.
However, in this action the EPA is also
partially disapproving the LA RH SIP
submittal because it does not include
fully approvable measures for meeting
the requirements of 40 CFR 51.308(d)(3),
long-term strategy for regional haze as it
relies on deficient non-EGU BART
analyses; and 51.308(e), BART
requirements for regional haze visibility
impairment with respect to emissions of
visibility impairing pollutants from four
non-EGUs.
III. Comments Received and Our
Responses
The EPA received four sets of
comments on the February 28, 2012,
rulemaking proposing a partial limited
approval and a partial disapproval of
Louisiana’s June 13, 2008 SIP revision.
4 As explained in the 1992 Calcagni
Memorandum, ‘‘[t]hrough a limited approval, the
EPA [will] concurrently, or within a reasonable
period of time thereafter, disapprove the rule * * *
for not meeting all of the applicable requirements
of the Act. * * * [T]he limited disapproval is a
rulemaking action, and it is subject to notice and
comment.’’ Final limited disapproval of a SIP
submittal does not affect the federal enforceability
of the measures in the subject SIP revision nor
prevent state implementation of these measures.
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Specifically, the comments were
received from the National Parks
Service; the LDEQ; Exxon Mobil
Corporation; and Tulane Environmental
Law Clinic, on behalf of the Gulf
Restoration Network. Full sets of the
comments provided by all of the
aforementioned entities (hereinafter
referred to as ‘‘the Commenter’’) are
provided in the docket for today’s final
action. The docket for this action is
available at www.regulations.gov under
Docket Identification No. EPA–R06–
OAR–2008–0510. A summary of the
comments and the EPA’s responses are
provided below.
Comment 1: The EPA does not have
the authority under the CAA to issue a
limited approval of Louisiana’s RH SIP.
The CAA provides that the EPA can
approve a SIP submittal in whole or can
approve part of a submittal and
disapprove the other parts. CAA section
110(k)(3). But the CAA says nothing
about allowing the EPA to grant a
‘‘limited approval.’’
Response 1: The EPA disagrees with
the comment that the EPA lacks the
authority to give limited approval of
Louisiana’s RH SIP. As discussed in the
September 7, 1992, EPA memorandum
cited in the proposed rulemaking,5
although section 110(k) of the CAA may
not expressly provide authority for
limited approvals, the plain language of
section 301(a) does provide ‘‘gapfilling’’ authority authorizing the
Agency to ‘‘prescribe such regulations
as are necessary to carry out’’ the EPA’s
CAA functions. The EPA may rely on
section 301(a) in conjunction with the
Agency’s SIP approval authority in
section 110(k)(3) to issue limited
approvals where it has determined that
a submittal strengthens a given state SIP
and that the provisions meeting the
applicable requirements of the CAA are
not separable from the provisions that
do not meet the CAA’s requirements.
The EPA has adopted the limited
approval approach numerous times in
SIP actions across the nation over the
last twenty years. Limited approval is
appropriate for part of the SIP submittal
here because the EPA has determined
that a portion of Louisiana’s SIP
revisions addressing regional haze, as a
whole, strengthen the State’s SIP and
because the provisions in the SIP
revisions that relate to BART for EGUs
are not separable. Further, this limited
approval complements the national
‘‘Better-than-BART’’ action, which
proposed a limited disapproval for the
LA RH SIP due to its reliance on the
remanded CAIR for BART for EGUs.
Adopting the Commenter’s position
5 The
EPA’s 1992 Calcagni Memorandum.
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would ignore CAA section 301 and
violate the ‘‘‘fundamental canon of
statutory construction that the words of
a statute must be read in their context
and with a view to their place in the
overall statutory scheme’. * * * A court
must therefore interpret the statute ‘as a
symmetrical and coherent regulatory
scheme,’ * * * and ‘fit, if possible, all
parts into an harmonious whole.’’’ FDA
v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
529 U.S. 120, 133 (2000) (quoting Davis
v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 489 U.S.
803, 809 (1989), Gustafson v. Alloyd
Co., 513 U.S. 561, 569 (1995), and FTC
v. Mandel Brothers, Inc., 359 U.S. 385,
389 (1959)).
Comment 2: The EPA cannot partially
approve or partially disapprove a RH
SIP without evaluating Louisiana’s
proposed SIP as a whole. The EPA has
proposed to issue a FIP to address the
deficiencies in Louisiana’s SIP
associated with the BART requirements
for NOX for EGUs, but did not propose
a FIP for the EGU BART requirements
for SO2. Accordingly, Louisiana and the
EPA must issue BART determinations
for SO2 at each source subject to BART,
including those EGUs subject to the
Transport Rule. Because of this
bifurcated treatment, the proposed
partial SIP violates the CAA and RHR
because the EPA failed to evaluate, let
alone determine, whether exempting
Louisiana EGUs from BART complies
with the CAA’s reasonable progress
mandate. To meet the 2064 goal, a
regional haze plan must include two
components: BART limits and a longterm strategy to achieve reasonable
progress toward that goal. Because
BART is a critical component to
achieving reasonable progress, neither
the states nor the EPA can exempt
sources from the RHR’s BART
requirements without any consideration
of how doing so will affect the
overarching reasonable progress
mandate. All required components of a
RH SIP or FIP affect each other, are part
of a ‘‘single administrative action,’’ and
must be evaluated together to determine
compliance with the CAA and RHR. The
EPA has failed to account for how, in
the absence of relied upon SO2
reductions anticipated under CAIR, it
will maintain its uniform rate of
progress. The EPA’s failure to consider
together the proposed alternative BART
program, BART for SO2, the LTS and
RPGs in Louisiana’s SIP violates the
CAA and RHR and is arbitrary and
capricious.
Response 2: We have evaluated the
LA RH SIP submittal as a whole and at
this time we are taking final action on
all elements of the LA RH SIP submittal
that were not addressed in the national
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Better-than-BART rule. Louisiana must
consider whether EGUs previously
covered by the CAIR, whether subject to
BART or not, should be controlled to
ensure reasonable progress to meet the
State’s long-term strategies. However,
insofar as Louisiana’s LTS and RPGs are
affected by the remand of CAIR, those
issues are addressed in the national
Better-than-BART rulemaking and are
outside the scope of this action on the
remainder of the LA RH SIP. Also, the
CAA expressly provides authority to the
EPA to partially approve and partially
disapprove a SIP revision. 42 U.S.C.
7410(k)(3). The EPA has adopted the
partial approval approach numerous
times in SIP actions across the nation
over the last twenty years. Partial
approval and partial disapproval is
appropriate here because the EPA has
determined that a portion of Louisiana’s
RH SIP meets regional haze
requirements and a portion of it does
not. Additionally, the EPA has
discretion to issue an immediate FIP for
all or part of the deficiencies in the LA
RH SIP; however, the EPA is not under
an obligation to promulgate a FIP for
any part of the LA RH SIP at this time
because the FIP clock has not begun yet.
See Section II of this action for
additional information about the FIP.
While the EPA proposed a FIP for
Louisiana for NOX BART for EGUs, the
final national Better-than-BART rule
does not include a FIP for NOX BART
for EGUs.6 Without a FIP, the Louisiana
RH SIP contains a gap for NOX BART for
EGUs. Additionally, because no FIP was
promulgated for SO2 in Louisiana, the
Louisiana RH SIP contains a gap for SO2
BART for EGUs. Therefore, Louisiana
must submit and the EPA must approve
a revised SIP submittal to address both
NOX and SO2 BART for EGUs to cure
the deficiencies in the SIP resulting
from the remand of CAIR. Louisiana
may elect to rely on the Transport Rule
for NOX BART for EGUs in that
submittal. However, because Louisiana
is not covered under the Transport Rule
for SO2, the State must submit sourcespecific SO2 BART evaluations for the
subject-to-BART EGUs in Louisiana. As
discussed further in our responses to
several comments below, Louisiana
must also submit revisions sufficient to
cure the deficiencies in the non-EGU
BART determinations.
Comment 3: The EPA should not
finalize a limited disapproval of the LTS
in the LA RH SIP based on the
6 The national proposal proposed a NO BART
X
EGU FIP for Louisiana, but as the State did not
receive a finding of failure to timely submit a SIP
and requested the allowable time to revise and
resubmit a SIP, the final action did not include such
a FIP.
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Transport Rule. The Transport Rule is
currently in litigation and has been
stayed by the Court. The EPA cannot
legally base a SIP action on a regulation
that is not effective and that may be
vacated and remanded. Limited
disapproval of the LA RH SIP submittal
will trigger the ‘‘two year sanction
clock’’ imposed by the CAA. The State
will be required to submit a SIP
revision, with the EPA review and
approval within two years of the denial
when the ‘‘applicable standard’’ is still
unknown at this time. Instead, the CAIR
is currently effective and will continue
to be implemented by the EPA, the
States, and the regulated community
indefinitely. Once the question of
regional transport of particulate matter
(PM) and PM precursors is resolved and
a regulation replaces CAIR, the State
will submit a SIP revision to implement
BART for EGUs in accordance with
provisions of the new program.
However, until this question is resolved,
Louisiana and its regulated entities are
obligated to comply with the effective
regulation and so is the EPA. The State
and its regulated entities are entitled to
rely upon the effective regulation as the
basis for the EPA action concerning the
Louisiana SIP. The EPA is compelled to
approve the current LA RH SIP
submittal that relies on CAIR and the
EPA’s prior determination that CAIR is
equivalent to BART.
Response 3: In a separate action that
revises the RHR and finds that the
Transport Rule is better than BART we
finalized a limited disapproval of
Louisiana’s long-term strategy. See 77
FR 33642. The docket for that
rulemaking (Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2011–0729) is available at
www.regulations.gov. For that reason,
we are not taking action on the longterm strategy in this action insofar as the
LA RH SIP relied on the CAIR.
Therefore, the comment that the EPA
should not disapprove the LA RH LTS
based on the State’s reliance on the
CAIR is outside the scope of this action.
Additionally, we clarify that today’s
final action on the remainder of LA’s RH
SIP triggers a two-year FIP clock,7 but
does not start a sanctions clock for
Louisiana.8 See Section II of this action
for additional information about the FIP.
While the comment is outside the
scope of this action, we note that CAIR
has been remanded and only remains in
place temporarily; therefore, the EPA
cannot fully approve the regional haze
SIP revisions that have relied on the
now-temporary reductions from CAIR.
Although CAIR is currently in effect as
7 42
U.S.C. 7410(c)(1); CAA 110(c)(1).
42 U.S.C. 7509.
8 See
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a result of the December 30, 2011 Order
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit staying the Transport Rule, this
does not affect the substance of the D.C.
Circuit’s ruling in 2008 remanding CAIR
to the EPA. Additionally, in the
Transport Rule, the EPA determined
that Louisiana need not be covered for
SO2 controls to prevent impacts on PM
nonattainment or maintenance in other
states. As a result of the CAIR remand
and the SO2 finding for Louisiana in the
Transport Rule, no national rule
addresses SO2 reductions in Louisiana.
We recognize that the final outcome of
the PM transport requirements that
CAIR and the Transport Rule are
designed to address is uncertain at this
time. However, the applicable standard
for BART is certain under the RHR.
Thus, notwithstanding the uncertain
status of the Transport Rule and the
continued implementation of CAIR,
Louisiana must address SO2 BART in
order to comply with the RHR. We
believe that Louisiana should be
working to address SO2 BART on a
source by source basis.
Comment 4: The Commenter opposes
the EPA’s December 30, 2011, proposed
rulemaking to find that the Transport
Rule is better than BART and to use the
Transport Rule as an alternative to
BART for Louisiana and other states
subject to the Transport Rule. The
Commenter incorporates its comments
on that December 30, 2011, rulemaking
by reference and outlines several of
those comments, including its
arguments that the Transport Rule is not
better than BART, and that the EPA
cannot rely on the Transport Rule as an
alternative program or measure to
displace BART requirements for those
BART-eligible sources in Transport Rule
states.
Response 4: These comments are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking. In
today’s rule, the EPA is taking final
action on the proposed partial limited
approval and partial disapproval of
Louisiana’s RH SIP. The EPA did not
propose to find that participation in the
Transport Rule is an alternative to
BART in this action. As noted above,
EPA made that proposed finding in a
separate action on December 30, 2011,
and the Commenter is merely reiterating
and incorporating its comments on that
separate action. EPA addressed these
comments concerning the Transport
Rule as a BART alternative in a final
action that was signed on May 30, 2012.
See 77 FR 33642. The EPA’s response to
these comments can be found in Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2011–0729 at
www.regulations.gov.
Comment 5: The commenter objects to
the EPA’s limited approval of portions
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of LA’s RH SIP because it replaces
reliance on CAIR with reliance on the
Transport Rule for NOX emissions from
EGUs. 77 FR 11839, 11840–41. The
effect of this proposed rule is to exempt
Louisiana EGUs from the RHR’s
requirements for case-by-case, sourcespecific analyses and installation and
operation of BART to reduce NOX and
achieve the RHR’s visibility mandates.
This exemption is based on the EPA’s
proposed finding that the Transport
Rule would be better than BART at
making reasonable progress with regard
to NOX emissions toward achieving the
RHR’s goal of eliminating human caused
visibility impairment at Class I areas by
2064. Id. at 11846; see also 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3) (criteria for determining if
an alternative measure is better than
BART). But the EPA’s proposed Betterthan-BART rule as applied to all 28
states covered under the Transport Rule,
including Louisiana, is inconsistent
with the CAA. The EPA has not
complied with the CAA’s statutory
requirements for a BART exemption,
has failed to make a state-by-state
demonstration that the Transport Rule is
better than BART, and has included
fatal methodological flaws in its
proposed determination. Additionally,
the EPA’s determination fails to account
for the geographic and temporal
uncertainties in emissions reductions
under the Transport Rule—uncertainties
inherent in a cap-and-trade program.
Moreover, Louisiana cannot rely on the
Transport Rule to exempt Louisiana’s
EGUs from the RHR’s BART
requirements because the D.C. Circuit
has indefinitely stayed the rule. The
Transport Rule’s uncertainties and lack
of year round emission reduction
requirements make it unsuitable as a
BART alternative in Louisiana.
Moreover, the application of the
Transport Rule as a substitute for source
specific BART is uniquely and
particularly problematic in Louisiana,
and four other states (Florida,
Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Arkansas)
for which the EPA exempts sources
from BART NOX requirements, because
NOX emissions are only covered by the
Transport Rule during the ozone
season—less than half the year. Finally,
the national rule expressly states that
the EPA is taking no action on the RPGs,
effectively making it impossible to
determine whether the Transport Rule
for an ozone season only state could
achieve greater reasonable progress than
an absent or unconfirmed goal. See 76
FR 82219, at 82221. Absent a uniform
rate of progress calculation, LTS, or
RPGs, the EPA has no rational basis to
determine that the Transport Rule
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emissions controls are sufficient to
comply with the RHR reasonable
progress mandate. The commenter also
incorporated by reference comments
from Earthjustice on the national Betterthan-BART proposed rule and
comments from National Parks
Conservation Association, et al. For the
reasons stated above and the reasons
provided in the national comments, the
Transport Rule does not satisfy the
requirements of the RHR, and cannot be
approved as a substitute for BART as
proposed. Instead, the EPA must
promulgate a regional haze plan that
contains all aspects of the State’s
regional haze plan including sourcespecific NOX BART limits for the
Louisiana EGUs.
Response 5: As discussed above, in
today’s rule, the EPA is taking final
action on the proposed partial limited
approval and partial disapproval of
Louisiana’s RH SIP. These comments
are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
EPA addressed these comments
concerning the Transport Rule as a
BART alternative in a final action that
was signed on May 30, 2012. See 77 FR
33642. The EPA’s response to these
comments can be found in Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2011–0729 at
www.regulations.gov. Additionally,
insofar as this comment discusses
regional haze actions for states other
than Louisiana, the comments are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment 6: The EPA proposed that
the BART determination for Rhodia is
deficient at this time. The SIP includes
a BART analysis for Rhodia that the
LDEQ feels is complete. The analysis
takes into account all available control
technologies for removing SO2 at the
affected units. All of the available
control technologies provide a control
efficiency of approximately 94%.
Rhodia considered three abatement
alternatives: double absorption, sodium
scrubbing (caustic/soda ash), and
ammonia scrubbing. Rhodia selected
caustic scrubbing as the most effective
control option that is also cost effective.
This control strategy is currently in
place for Unit 2 and will be in place for
Unit 1 by May 2012. SO2 emissions will
be reduced from over 8,800 tons per
year (tpy) to a permit limit of 1,075 tpy
for the units combined. This control not
only meets BART but surpasses the
control for new facilities under New
Source Performance Standards.
Modeling results with the SO2 controls
show all impacts of Rhodia to the
Breton and Caney Creek Wilderness
Areas are below 0.5 deciviews. The
LDEQ believes that this source has the
most stringent control strategy available
and no further BART analysis is
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necessary as allowed by 40 CFR Part 51
Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9). The LDEQ
anticipates that the controls will be
installed for Unit 1 prior to the EPA
approval of the LA RH SIP submittal.
The controls will be required to be
diligently maintained and are federally
enforceable through Section 905 of the
Louisiana Administrative Code (LAC),
Title 33, Part III (denoted LAC
33:III.905), which has been approved as
part of the Louisiana SIP. The EPA
should approve this BART analysis as it
fulfills the BART requirements.
Response 6: The LDEQ’s RH SIP
submittal properly identified Rhodia as
a subject-to-BART source and provided
information concerning the BART
determination for Rhodia. We proposed
to find that Rhodia’s BART
determination was deficient because it
does not include a sufficient evaluation
under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). The
LDEQ has determined that the control
strategy selected for implementation by
Rhodia is among the most stringent
available. The LDEQ’s determination is
corroborated by the information
provided in the LA RH SIP submittal,
including a determination that Rhodia’s
units are subject-to-BART and the
demonstration in the LA RH SIP
Appendix G that the control strategies at
Rhodia have approximately 94% control
efficiency.9 The EPA finds that with the
control strategy selected, the Rhodia
units meet the BART requirements at 40
CFR 51 Appendix Y.OV.D.1.9 10 with
the exception of having enforceable
emissions limits for regional haze in the
SIP (see also response to Comment 11 in
this action). Although the SIP submittal
said that, post-control, Rhodia is no
longer subject-to-BART, that
determination is not approvable because
once a unit is determined to be subject
to BART, it must meet the requirements
of 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii). However, the
LDEQ’s comment letter in part
addresses this deficiency in its
determination that with controls,
Rhodia meets BART. As indicated in the
proposal, the LDEQ did not submit a
complete BART evaluation for the
Rhodia units; the submittal did not
analyze controls for the units using the
factors as required by 40 CFR 51.308(e).
However, with the LDEQ’s finding that
the controls at Rhodia are among the
most stringent, the regional haze
requirement for a BART analysis has
9 LDEQ Comment Letter, received March 29,
2012.
10 We acknowledge that compliance with the
BART Guidelines in 40 CFR 51 Appendix Y is not
mandatory for Rhodia because Rhodia is a non-EGU
source. However, following these Guidelines is one
option for subject-to-BART non-EGUs to ensure
BART determinations are adequate.
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39429
been satisfied (however, the
requirement for enforceable emissions
limits is still not met).11 The EPA finds
that the LDEQ acted reasonably within
its discretion in determining that the
controls selected by Rhodia are among
the most stringent because the control
efficiency for the technology selected is
94%.
However, the emissions limits for
Rhodia’s subject-to-BART units were
not included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ
must include the BART emission limits
in the LA RH SIP through a SIP
revision.12 More information about this
requirement is provided in response to
Comment 7 in this action.
Comment 7: The EPA proposed that
the state should have identified the
Mosaic facility as being subject to BART
and made a BART determination for the
source. The LDEQ agrees that Mosaic
should be identified as a BART facility.
Mosaic has installed or is scheduled to
install controls required by a Consent
Decree (CD) for Sulfuric Acid Trains A,
D, and E. Only Train A is subject to
BART, but it should be noted that
significant reductions have been made
on Trains D and E also. The following
is a summary of these controls:
—A scrubber system has been installed
on Train A reducing SO2 emissions by
9,490 tpy.
—SO2 emissions from Train D have
been reduced by 576 tpy.
—SO2 emissions from Train E have been
reduced by 942 tpy.
The LDEQ believes that this source
has the most stringent control strategy
available and no further BART analysis
is necessary as allowed by 40 CFR Part
51 Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9). The
scrubber system has been installed on
Train A. The controls are required to be
diligently maintained and are federally
enforceable through LAC 33:III.905,
which has been approved by the EPA as
11 The EPA’s finding is a logical outgrowth of the
proposed rule. ‘‘[A] final rule will be deemed to be
the logical outgrowth of a proposed rule if a new
round of notice and comment would not provide
commentators with their first occasion to offer new
and different criticisms which the agency might
find convincing.’’ Fertilizer Inst. v. EPA, 935 F.2d
1303, 1311 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). In our proposal, we note
that ‘‘[t]he LDEQ may be able to find that the
controls required under the CD are among the most
stringent, and therefore, no additional controls
would be required for these units to meet BART.’’
As LDEQ has now provided this determination and
the LA RH SIP submittal already contains sufficient
technical information to support this determination,
the controls at Rhodia are sufficient to meet BART,
and are therefore approvable in accordance with
our proposal. However, as stated in our response,
the LA RH SIP for Rhodia is not fully approvable
at this time because it does not contain enforceable
emissions limits for regional haze.
12 CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR
35714, at 35741.
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part of the Louisianan SIP. The EPA
should approve this BART analysis as it
fulfills the BART requirements.
Response 7: The EPA acknowledges
the LDEQ’s agreement that Mosaic is a
subject-to-BART source. However, we
cannot approve the BART analysis at
this time. The LDEQ did not identify
Mosaic as being subject to BART in the
submitted SIP and therefore did not
perform a BART analysis. Consequently,
the EPA cannot act today upon the
information in the comments because
there is no logical outgrowth. ‘‘A final
rule is only a logical outgrowth of the
proposed rule if interested parties
should have anticipated that the change
was possible, and thus reasonably
should have filed their comments on the
subject during the notice-and-comment
period. * * * Notice of the agency’s
intention is crucial to ensure that
agency regulations are tested via
exposure to diverse public comment
* * * to ensure fairness to affected
parties, and * * * to give affected
parties an opportunity to develop
evidence in the record to support their
objections to the rule and thereby
enhance the quality of judicial review.’’
Int’l Union, United Mine Workers of
America v. Mine Safety and Health
Admin., 626 F.3d 84, 94–95 (D.C. Cir.
2010) (citing Int’l Union, United Mine
Workers of America v. Mine Safety and
Health Admin., 407 F.3d 1250, 1259
(D.C. Cir. 2005)) (internal quotations
omitted). With regard to Mosaic, we
proposed to disapprove the LA RH SIP
submitted June 13, 2008 because the
submittal failed to identify Mosaic as a
subject-to-BART source. We noted that,
once the LDEQ identifies Mosaic as
subject to BART, the LDEQ needs to
provide a BART evaluation for the
EPA’s review and action. The LDEQ has
not completed the rulemaking and SIP
revision process for the determination
that Mosaic is subject to BART or for the
Mosaic BART evaluation. Based on our
proposal, the public could not have
anticipated that the EPA would approve
the state’s identification of Mosaic as
subject to BART and approve a BART
evaluation for Mosaic. As a result,
approval of Mosaic does not meet the
standard for logical outgrowth for this
final action. The LDEQ will need to
revise its SIP after notice and comment
to include Mosaic as a subject-to-BART
source, and also to provide a
determination of BART based on an
analysis of the best system of
continuous emission control technology
available and associated emission
reductions achievable for the facility.13
Although the LDEQ provided a
13 40
14 CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR
35714, at 35741.
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
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determination in its comment that the
control strategies selected for
implementation by Mosaic are among
the most stringent available, as
discussed previously for the EPA to be
able to consider this determination, the
SIP must be revised after notice and
comment to include the identification of
Mosaic as a subject-to-BART source, and
include a BART evaluation for the
facility and be submitted to the EPA.
The BART evaluation may include
relevant permit information if
applicable.
For Mosaic, in addition to including
the facility as a subject-to-BART source
in the SIP, for the unit subject to BART
for each pollutant, there must be
sufficient information in the SIP to
satisfy the requirement under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A): ‘‘The determination
of BART must be based on an analysis
of the best system of continuous
emissions control technology available
and associated emissions reductions
achievable. In this analysis, the state
must take into consideration the
technology available, the cost of
compliance, the energy and non-air
quality environmental impacts of
compliance, any pollution control
equipment in use at the source, the
remaining useful life of the source, and
the degree of improvement in visibility
which may reasonably be anticipated to
result from the use of such technology.’’
Also, the emissions limits for
Mosaic’s controls are required to be
included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ
must include the BART emission limits
in the LA RH SIP through a SIP
revision.14 More information about this
requirement is provided in response to
Comment 8 in this action.
Comment 8: The EPA proposed that
the BART determinations for Sid
Richardson are deficient at this time.
The LDEQ has determined that while
SO2 controls may be technically
feasible, they are not economically
feasible. Modeling results for Sid
Richardson show that in only 1 of the
3 modeled years did the 98th percentile
day show a visibility impact above 0.5
dv. Sid Richardson provided a detailed
analysis of the cost associated with
implementing the technically feasible
control techniques. Because all of the
possible controls were deemed
economically infeasible, an evaluation
of the controls on the visibility impact
at Breton is unnecessary. Sid
Richardson is currently controlling SO2
by limiting sulfur content of the feed
stock oil. The LDEQ has determined that
this control is BART for this facility.
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The EPA should approve this BART
analysis as it fulfills the BART
requirements. The EPA is proposing that
the NOX BART determination for Sid
Richardson is deficient at this time.
The LDEQ has determined that NOX
controls for Sid Richardson are
technically infeasible. Sid Richardson
presented detailed information in the
BART analysis discussing the
infeasibility of NOX controls aside from
good combustion practices. NOX
controls were determined to be
infeasible for the following reasons:
Reactors: combustion modifications
would affect the reaction process and
ultimately, the yield and quality of the
carbon black produced; selective noncatalytic reduction (SNCR) is infeasible
because the reagent (urea or ammonia)
would affect the yield and quality of the
carbon black produced; selective
catalytic reduction (SCR) is infeasible
because of particulate loading that could
come in contact with the catalyst
causing a fire hazard; Absorption
control is already in use since the flue
gases are already in direct contact with
the carbon black; Wet chemical
scrubbers are used in a limited number
of industrial applications and have not
been used in the carbon black industry.
Flares: There are no NOX control
options available. Dryers: Combustion
modifications would affect the yield and
quality of the carbon black produced;
SNCR is infeasible because the reagent
(urea or ammonia) would affect the
yield and quality of the carbon black
produced; SCR is infeasible because of
particulate loading that could come in
contact with the catalyst causing a fire
hazard; Absorption control is already in
use since the flue gases are already in
direct contact with the carbon black.
The LDEQ stated that further BART
analysis for NOX control is unnecessary
and that the EPA should approve this
BART analysis as it fulfills the BART
requirements.
Response 8: The EPA disagrees that
the information provided in the SIP and
comments for SO2 BART for Sid
Richardson satisfies the requirements
for a BART determination. The BART
Rule provides that for each unit subject
to BART, the state must satisfy the
requirements under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) by providing a
determination of BART which ‘‘must be
based on an analysis of the best system
of continuous emissions control
technology available and associated
emissions reductions achievable.’’ In
this analysis the state must take the
following into consideration: ‘‘The
technology available, the cost of
compliance, the energy and non-air
quality environmental impacts of
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compliance, any pollution control
equipment in use at the source, the
remaining useful life of the source, and
the degree of improvement in visibility
which may reasonably be anticipated to
result from the use of such technology.’’
A determination of economic
infeasibility is not sufficient information
to meet these requirements. States have
a duty to evaluate the statutory factors
cited above.15 It is important that, in
analyzing the technology, states take
into account the most stringent emission
control level that the technology is
capable of achieving. States should
consider the level of control that is
currently achievable at the time the
BART analysis is conducted.16 The CAA
gives states discretion to make BART
determinations; and the BART
regulations and the preambles to the
proposed and final BART Rule contain
examples showing that a state has
discretion to choose an alternative
control level after considering the five
statutory factors. However, section
169A(g) of the CAA requires States to
consider these statutory factors in
determining BART for affected sources.
If a proper evaluation of the five
statutory factors demonstrates that an
emission limit is BART for the subjectto-BART source in question, then the
State must require the source to comply
with such emission limit. The EPA
agrees that states have considerable
discretion in making BART
determinations, but in doing so the State
must conduct a proper evaluation of the
five statutory factors, as required by 40
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) and section
169A(g) of the CAA.
Also, the LDEQ states in the comment
that Sid Richardson is currently
controlling SO2 by limiting sulfur
content of the feed stock oil, and as
indicated in the LA RH SIP Appendix
G, the limitation is already reflected in
the Addis Plant’s emission limits; 17
however, the record does not provide
material that supports this conclusion.
No enforceable permit conditions or
similar restrictions were provided, nor
is there an analysis demonstrating that
limiting of the sulfur content of the feed
stock oil meets BART requirements.
The EPA agrees with the comment
that the modeling results show that the
Sid Richardson facility has a visibility
impact greater than the State’s
established BART threshold of 0.5 dv in
one of the three years considered. As
such, Sid Richardson is subject to
BART, and a full BART analysis is
15 CAA
169A(g)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
FR 39104, at 39170–71.
17 LDEQ Comment Letter, received March 29,
2012.
16 70
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required. Consistent with 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(i) and (ii), the LDEQ chose
a 0.5 dv threshold for BART (LA RH SIP
Chapter 9); included Sid Richardson in
its list of BART-eligible sources within
the State, and provided a determination
of BART for the facility as required for
each source in the State ‘‘that emits any
air pollutant which may reasonably be
anticipated to cause or contribute to any
impairment of visibility in any
mandatory Class I Federal Area. All
such sources are subject to BART.’’ 18
The LDEQ determined that Sid
Richardson is subject-to-BART because
it is a BART-eligible source with
visibility impacts on the 98th percentile
day above the state’s chosen threshold,
LA RH SIP Chapter 9, page 53.19 The
EPA disagrees with the comment that an
evaluation of the visibility benefits is
not necessary. ‘‘CAA section 169A(g)(2)
clearly requires an evaluation of the
expected degree of improvement in
visibility from BART controls. All five
statutory factors [required under CAA
169A(g)(2)], including cost-effectiveness
and expected visibility improvement,
should be reflected in the level of BART
control that the State implements.’’ 70
FR 39104, at 39129. Sid Richardson was
determined to be subject-to-BART and a
full BART analysis is required under 40
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
The EPA disagrees that the
information provided in the SIP and
comments for NOX BART for Sid
Richardson satisfies the requirements
for a BART determination. For Sid
Richardson for NOX, the LDEQ states in
its comments that all controls are
infeasible, which is consistent with the
SIP submittal (LA RH SIP Chapter 9
states that the Sid Richardson
engineering analyses included the
potential installation of NOX add-on
controls, but it determined that all were
infeasible—there were no demonstrated
NOX scrubbing technologies at any
carbon black plants). However, there is
not sufficient information in the
comment letter or in the LA RH SIP
submittal to support this conclusion. In
particular, we note that SCR has been
discounted as technically infeasible
because of the potential for particulate
matter to contact the catalyst. We
believe there are a number of
applications where SCR has been used
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii).
that the use of the 98th percentile of
modeled visibility values is appropriate because it
excludes roughly seven days per year from
consideration. This approach captures ‘‘the sources
that contribute to visibility impairment in a Class
I area, while minimizing the likelihood that the
highest modeled visibility impacts might be caused
by unusual meteorology or conservative
assumptions in the model.’’ 70 FR 39104, at 39121.
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19 Note
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39431
in situations with high particulate
loading such as Fluidized Bed Catalytic
Cracking Units (FCCU). In fact, as
discussed in the Louisiana SIP and in
other sections of this action,
ConocoPhillips is a subject-to-BART
source that has installed SCR on an
FCCU. It is not apparent why this
technology would not be applicable to
carbon black plants, as well, given the
similar high particulate matter
situations. We do not believe Louisiana
provided a sufficient record to justify
that SCR is infeasible for the Carbon
Black Industry. Therefore, the state must
satisfy the requirement for NOX for Sid
Richardson for an ‘‘analysis of the best
system of continuous emission control
technology available and associated
emissions reductions achievable’’ as
required under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
Also, the emission limits for Sid
Richardson’s controls are required to be
included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ
must include the BART emission limits
in the LA RH SIP through a SIP
revision.20 In addition, we encourage
Sid Richardson and the LDEQ to
consider achievable emissions
reductions in determining emissions
limits for this unit to include in the SIP,
as required under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). More information
about this requirement is provided in
response to Comment 9 in this action.
Comment 9: The EPA proposed that
the BART determination for
ConocoPhillips is deficient at this time.
The SIP includes a BART analysis for
ConocoPhillips that the LDEQ feels is
complete. Conoco has installed or is
scheduled to install controls required by
a consent decree with the EPA 21 for the
FCCU, process refinery flares and the
crude unit heater. The following is a
summary of these controls.
• A wet gas scrubber was installed on
the FCCU in 2009 that reduced SO2
emissions by 2,500 tpy and PM
emissions by 220 tpy. SCR is scheduled
to be installed by 2015 that will reduce
NOX emissions by 760 tpy.
• SCR and a NOX CEMS were
installed on the crude unit heater in
2009 that reduced NOX emissions by
700 tpy.
• Flare gas recovery was installed for
the process refinery flares in 2011 that
reduced NOX emissions by 16 tpy and
SO2 emissions by 330 tpy.
The LDEQ believes that the most
stringent controls available have been
installed or are scheduled to be installed
20 CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR
35714, at 35741.
21 Civil Action No. H–05–0285, Federal District
Court for the Southern District of Texas.
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on these sources. According to 40 CFR
Part 51 Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9) because
the source will have the most stringent
controls available, it is not necessary to
comprehensively complete each step of
the BART analysis. The EPA should
approve this BART analysis as it fulfills
the BART requirements.
The EPA proposed to accept the
BART analysis for remaining sources at
the facility. However, most of these
sources have a ‘‘D’’ which represents
proposed disapproval in Table 10 of the
TSD. The LDEQ feels that no further
BART analysis is necessary for
ConocoPhillips and requests that the
‘‘D’’ be changed to ‘‘NA.’’
Response 9: We disagree with the
comment that the BART evaluation for
ConocoPhillips is complete for the
subject-to-BART units that were
included in the 2005 CD. Although
some emissions reduction information
was provided for some of the units and
controls, without information about the
year or baseline emissions, the EPA is
unable to verify the determination that
the control technologies and emission
limits for SO2, NOX, and PM selected for
the crude unit heater, the CO boilers,
and the flares are among the most
stringent. The submittal did not analyze
controls for the units using the factors
as required by 40 CFR 51.308(e).
Although the LDEQ provided a
determination in its comment that the
control strategies selected for
implementation by ConocoPhillips are
among the most stringent available, the
record does not provide sufficient
material to support the LDEQ’s
conclusion. The BART evaluation may
include relevant permit information if
applicable, and also may include a
demonstration of emissions reductions
achieved by the selected technologies. It
is expected that emissions reductions
for control technologies which are
among the most stringent will be high
unless the LDEQ can demonstrate that
lower efficiency rates are sufficient to
meet BART requirements.
For ConocoPhillips, for the five units
under the CD that are subject to BART,
for each pollutant, there is not sufficient
information in the SIP nor in the
comments to satisfy the requirement
under 40 CFR 50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A): ‘‘The
determination of BART must be based
on an analysis of the best system of
continuous emissions control
technology available and associated
emissions reductions achievable. In this
analysis the state must take into
consideration the technology available,
the cost of compliance, the energy and
non-air quality environmental impacts
of compliance, any pollution control
equipment in use at the source, the
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remaining useful life of the source, and
the degree of improvement in visibility
which may reasonably be anticipated to
result from the use of such technology.’’
Also, the emissions limits for
ConocoPhillips’s controls are required
to be included in the RH SIP, so the
LDEQ must include the BART emission
limits in the LA RH SIP through a SIP
revision.22 In addition, we encourage
ConocoPhillips and the LDEQ to
consider achievable emissions
reductions in determining emissions
limits for this unit to include in the SIP,
as required under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). More information
about this requirement is provided in
response to Comment 10 in this action.
For the ConocoPhillips units which
were not part of the CD, the Commenter
is correct that the EPA proposed to
accept the BART analysis for those
units, and that Table 10 of the TSD is
in error for those units. Accordingly, the
EPA has revised the table and an
updated Table 10 is provided in the
docket associated with this action as an
amendment to the TSD.
Comment 10: The EPA should
provide clarification that the CAA and
the RHR both allow states the discretion
to make BART determinations for nonEGUs, and states are not required to use
the ‘‘5-step’’ analysis that is specifically
required only for 750 MW+ EGUs. The
proposal contains statements such as:
‘‘* * * all subject to BART sources are
required to comply with the five BART
factors (or steps). 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).’’ Additionally, the
commenter is concerned that the EPA
proposed to find that Louisiana’s RPGs
and LTS contain deficiencies because
they are based on BART determinations
that are not fully approvable. Louisiana
has met the obligation to determine
BART for Louisiana refineries if they
have documented the rationale for the
BART determinations using their state
authority. CAA section 169(b)(2)(A); 77
FR 3966, at 3969. Some of the subjectto-BART determinations with a
proposed disapproval are not EGUs.
Therefore, the LDEQ has the discretion
to make BART determinations in a
fashion reasonable in the judgment of
the LDEQ and supply the rationale to
the EPA. The EPA has accepted states’
BART determinations for non-EGUs not
subject to the ‘‘5-step’’ analysis. For
example, the EPA proposed to approve
Illinois’s BART determinations for two
petroleum refineries on the basis that
the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency found that the emissions limits
for the subject-to-BART units
22 CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR
35714, at 35741.
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established by CDs to meet BACT also
satisfy BART. That proposal further
states that the CDs are federally
enforceable and the emissions limits at
issue must be incorporated into
federally enforceable permits. 77 FR
3966, at 3973. Therefore, the EPA
should approve Louisiana’s non-EGU
BART determinations, especially the
ConocoPhillips Refinery, that rely on
emissions limits established by CDs.
Response 10: We agree with the
commenter that the five steps in the
BART guidelines at 40 CFR 51
Appendix Y.IV.D 23 are mandatory only
for subject-to-BART EGUs with a total
generating capacity greater than 750
MWs. However, ‘‘all BART
determinations must be based on an
analysis of the best system of
continuous emission control technology
available and associated emission
reductions achievable for each BARTeligible source that is subject to BART
within the state.’’ For all BART
determinations, including those for nonEGUs, 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A)
requires states to consider the following
factors: the technology available; the
costs of compliance; the energy and
non-air quality environmental impacts
of compliance; any pollution control
equipment in use at the source; the
remaining useful life of the source; and
the degree of improvement in visibility
which may reasonably be anticipated to
result from the use of such technology.
See also, 42 USC 7941(g)(2); CAA
169A(g)(2). The submitted BART
analyses should address all of these
factors or provide some other basis for
ensuring subject-to-BART units meet
BART in order to be approvable. The
commenter contends that the LDEQ has
the discretion to make BART
determinations in a fashion reasonable
in the judgment of the LDEQ. To clarify,
states are free to determine the weight
and significance of each of the factors
listed above, but they must arrive at a
reasoned determination that is
supported by an adequate record. We
acknowledge that BART-determining
authorities presented with equivalent
facts and circumstances may arrive at
different, but reasoned, BART
determinations. For additional
information about our final action on
these non-EGU BART determinations,
please see our discussion of the nonEGU BART determinations and
enforceable emissions limits for those
23 Step 1: Identify All Available Retrofit Control
Technologies, Step 2: Eliminate Technically
Infeasible Options, Step 3: Evaluate Control
Effectiveness of Remaining Control Technologies,
Step 4: Evaluate Impacts and Document the Results,
and Step 5: Evaluate Visibility Impacts. 40 CFR 51
Appendix Y.IV.D.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 128 / Tuesday, July 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
subject-to-BART units addressed in our
responses to Comments 6, 7, 8, and 9 in
this action. Finally, we disagree with
the comment that the EPA should
approve Louisiana’s non-EGU BART
determinations that rely on emissions
limits established by CDs. See the
following response to Comment 11.
Comment 11: Emission limits for the
subject-to-BART units should not be
required to be included in the SIP. The
emissions limitations are contained in
the permits and are enforceable as
required. Furthermore, the LDEQ will
rely on the SIP approved provision
contained in LAC. 33:111.905, which
specifies that ‘‘* * * when facilities
have been installed on a property, they
shall be used and diligently maintained
in proper working order whenever any
emissions are being made which can be
controlled by the facilities, even though
the ambient air quality standards in
affected areas are not exceeded.’’ If
necessary, the LDEQ will include the
CDs affected between the EPA and
Rhodia, Mosaic and ConocoPhillips,
respectively, as evidence of enforceable
emissions limitation. However, the
LDEQ will not attach the operating
permits that are the result of these CDs.
Response 11: We disagree with the
comment that emission limits for the
subject-to-BART units should not be
required to be included in the SIP. 40
CFR 51.308(e) requires the state to
‘‘submit an implementation plan
containing emissions limits representing
BART’’ for each subject-to-BART unit in
the state. For an emissions limit
contained in a federal CD to be a
federally enforceable component of a
RH SIP, the emissions limit itself must
be incorporated into the SIP. States do
have some flexibility in how this
incorporation occurs. For example, a
state could list the specific emissions
limit for each subject-to-BART unit as
part of the regulatory text in the SIP
submittal or a state could incorporate
these limits into its SIP submittal’s
regulatory text by referencing the
federally enforceable Title I permit that
contains the emissions limits for the
subject-to-BART units at a facility. See
e.g., 77 FR 19, January 3, 2012; 76 FR
80754, December 27, 2011; 76 FR 36329,
June 22, 2011; and 76 FR 38997, July 5,
2011. If the state chooses to incorporate
emissions limits from a Title I permit
into the SIP, the permit conditions must
require a RH SIP revision in order for
the BART emissions limits to be revised.
However, the CDs themselves are not
adequate to ensure enforceable
emissions limits remain in place for
purposes of BART for several reasons.
Courts and parties to the litigation can
change the terms of CDs without
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revising the RH SIP or notifying the
public that a BART requirement is being
altered. Additionally, CDs are not
effective forever. The terms of a CD are
subsumed into a permit, which could be
altered during the permitting process
without revising the RH SIP or notifying
the public that a BART requirement is
being altered. Absent some express
correlation to the LA RH SIP, the
emissions limits required under the CDs
are not adequately enforceable to ensure
continued compliance with BART.
Moreover, if the emissions limits in a
CD are relied upon to meet BART, the
RH SIP must contain sufficient technical
information to ensure compliance with
BART.
Comment 12: The commenter agrees
that the LA RH SIP is deficient because
elements of the State’s BART
evaluations and determinations are not
fully adequate to meet the federal
requirements. Additionally, as a result
of the deficiencies related to BART, the
LTS and RPGs are not fully adequate to
meet federal requirements.
Response 12: We acknowledge the
commenter’s support for those aspects
of this action. We note that, as indicated
in the above responses to comments
from the LDEQ regarding Rhodia, some
but not all of the deficiencies were
addressed by the LDEQ’s comments
although the emissions limits for Rhodia
must be included in the SIP.
Comment 13: Insofar as the EPA
proposed to find that elements of the
SIP submittal fully satisfy the RHR
requirements, the commenter supports
the EPA’s proposal.
Response 13: We acknowledge the
commenter’s support for those aspects
of this action.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
CAA and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the
EPA’s role is to act on state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under the terms of
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and is therefore not
subject to review under Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011).
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39433
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., because this
SIP action under section 110 of the CAA
will not in-and-of itself create any new
information collection burdens but
simply approves or disapproves certain
State requirements for inclusion into the
SIP. Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to conduct
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small not-for-profit enterprises, and
small governmental jurisdictions. For
purposes of assessing the impacts of
today’s rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small business
as defined by the Small Business
Administration’s (SBA) regulations at 13
CFR 121.201; (2) a small governmental
jurisdiction that is a government of a
city, county, town, school district or
special district with a population of less
than 50,000; and (3) a small
organization that is any not-for-profit
enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
After considering the economic
impacts of today’s rule on small entities,
I certify that this action will not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This rule does
not impose any requirements or create
impacts on small entities. This SIP
action under section 110 of the CAA
will not in-and-of itself create any new
requirements but simply approves or
disapproves certain State requirements
for inclusion into the SIP. Accordingly,
it affords no opportunity for the EPA to
fashion for small entities less
burdensome compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables or
exemptions from all or part of the rule.
The fact that the CAA prescribes that
various consequences (i.e., emission
limitations) may or will flow from this
action does not mean that the EPA
either can or must conduct a regulatory
flexibility analysis for this action.
Therefore, this action will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 128 / Tuesday, July 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This action contains no Federal
mandates under the provisions of Title
II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 1531–
1538 for State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector. The
EPA has determined that the
disapproval action does not include a
Federal mandate that may result in
estimated costs of $100 million or more
to either State, local, or tribal
governments in the aggregate, or to the
private sector. This action merely
approves or disapproves 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
Executive Order 13132, entitled
‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999), requires the EPA to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have
federalism implications’’ is defined in
the Executive Order to include
regulations that have ‘‘substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132, because it
merely approves or disapproves certain
State requirements for inclusion into the
SIP and does not alter the relationship
or the distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the CAA.
Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not
apply to this action.
tribal law. Thus, Executive Order 13175
does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as
applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under section 5–501 of the Executive
Order has the potential to influence the
regulation. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it is not
an economically significant regulatory
action based on health or safety risks
subject to Executive Order 13045 . This
SIP action under section 110 of the CAA
will not in-and-of itself create any new
regulations but simply approves or
disapproves certain State requirements
for inclusion into the SIP.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22,
2001) because it is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination
With Indian Tribal Governments
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law
104–113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272
note) directs the EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be
inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications,
test methods, sampling procedures, and
business practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies. NTTAA directs the
EPA to provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards.
The EPA believes that this action is
not subject to requirements of Section
12(d) of NTTAA because application of
those requirements would be
inconsistent with the CAA.
This action does not have tribal
implications, as specified in Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), because the SIP submittals the
EPA is approving or disapproving
would not apply in Indian country
located in the state, and the EPA notes
that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
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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.
The EPA lacks the discretionary
authority to address environmental
justice in this action. In reviewing SIP
submissions, the EPA’s role is to
approve or disapprove state choices,
based on the criteria of the CAA.
Accordingly, this action merely
approves or disapproves certain State
requirements for inclusion into the SIP
under section 110 of the CAA and will
not in-and-of itself create any new
requirements. Accordingly, it does not
provide the 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.
K. Congressional Review Act
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. The 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). This rule will be effective on
August 6, 2012.
L. Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by September 4, 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 CAA
section 307(b)(2).
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 128 / Tuesday, July 3, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Regional haze, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Visibility.
Dated: June 15, 2012.
Samuel Coleman,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
Therefore, 40 CFR part 52, as
amended June 7, 2012, at 77 FR 33657
and effective August 6, 2012, is further
amended as follows:
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
2. Amend § 52.985 by adding
paragraphs (b) and (c) to read as follows:
■
Visibility protection.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The regional haze plan submitted
by Louisiana on June 13, 2008, includes
measures for meeting the requirements
of: 40 CFR 51.308(d), for the core
requirements for regional haze plans,
except for the requirements of 40 CFR
51.308(d)(3); 40 CFR 51.308(f), for the
commitment to submit comprehensive
periodic revisions of regional haze
plans; 40 CFR 51.308(g), for the
commitment to submit periodic reports
describing progress towards the
reasonable progress goals; 40 CFR
51.308(h), for the commitment to
conduct periodic determinations of the
adequacy of the existing regional haze
plan; and 40 CFR 51.308(i), for
coordination with state and Federal
Land Managers. EPA has given partial
limited approval to the plan provisions
addressing these requirements.
(c) The regional haze plan submitted
by Louisiana on June 13, 2008, does not
include fully approvable measures for
meeting the requirements of 40 CFR
51.308(d)(3), long-term strategy for
regional haze as it relies on deficient
non-electric generating units Best
Available Retrofit
Technology (BART) analyses; and 40
CFR 51.308(e), BART requirements for
regional haze visibility impairment with
respect to emissions of visibility
impairing pollutants from four nonelectric generating units. EPA has given
partial disapproval to the plan
provisions addressing these
requirements.
[FR Doc. 2012–15729 Filed 7–2–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
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47 CFR Part 54
[WC Docket Nos. 10–90, 07–135, 05–337,
03–109; GN Docket No. 09–51; CC Docket
Nos. 01–92, 96–45; WT Docket No. 10–208;
FCC 12–70]
Connect America Fund, A National
Broadband Plan for Our Future,
Universal Service Reform—Mobility
Fund
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule: limited forbearance.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) adopts a limited
forbearance from requiring that the
service area of an eligible
telecommunications carrier (ETC)
conform to the service area of any rural
telephone company serving the same
area for the Mobility Fund Phase I
auction 901. This forbearance applies
only with respect to conditional ETC
designations for participating in
Auction 901.
DATES: Effective July 3, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division:
call Sayuri Rajapakse, Scott Mackoul or
Stephen Johnson at (202) 418–0660.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the CAF/ICC Second Report
and Order released on June 27, 2012.
The CAF/ICC Second Report and Order
and related Commission documents
may be purchased from the
Commission’s duplicating contractor,
Best Copy and Printing, Inc. (BCPI), 445
12th Street SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554, telephone 202–
488–5300, fax 202–488–5563, or you
may contact BCPI at its Web site:
https://www.BCPIWEB.com. When
ordering documents from BCPI, please
provide the appropriate FCC document
number, for example, FCC 12–70. The
CAF/ICC Second Report and Order and
related documents also are available on
the Internet at the Commission’s Web
site: https://wireless.fcc.gov or by using
the search function for WT Docket No.
10–208 on the Commission’s Electronic
Comment Filing System (ECFS) Web
page at https://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/.
SUMMARY:
PART 52—[AMENDED]
§ 52.985
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
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I. Introduction
1. The Commission adopts a limited
forbearance pursuant to section 10 of
the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended (the Act), 47 U.S.C. 160, from
requiring that the service area of an
eligible telecommunications carrier
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39435
(ETC) conform to the service area of any
rural telephone company serving the
same area, pursuant to 47 U.S.C.
214(e)(5) and 47 CFR 54.207(b). In
particular, this forbearance applies only
with respect to conditional ETC
designations for participating in the
Mobility Fund Phase I auction, ETC
designations conditioned on receipt of
Mobility Fund Phase I support. Such
conditional ETC designations, and thus
this forbearance, are also limited to the
specific areas in which such an ETC
becomes authorized to receive Mobility
Fund Phase I support.
2. The Commission concludes that
forbearance in these limited
circumstances furthers the public
interest, advancing the Act’s and the
Commission’s goals of promoting access
to mobile service over current and next
generation wireless networks in areas
currently without such service by
reducing barriers to participation in
Phase I of the Mobility Fund. The
Commission finds that application of
the service area conformance
requirements set forth in 47 U.S.C.
214(e)(5) and 47 CFR 54.207(b) in these
limited circumstances is not necessary
to ensure that rates remain just and
reasonable or to protect consumers. The
Commission emphasizes that the
forbearance it is granting is limited to
petitioners seeking conditional
designation as ETCs in areas eligible for
Mobility Fund Phase I support in order
to participate in the Mobility Fund
Phase I auction and receive support.
Parties petitioning for designation as an
ETC for this purpose must satisfy all of
the other statutory requirements
applicable to ETCs under the Act. The
forbearance order does not apply with
respect to petitions for designation as an
ETC for other purposes. In light of the
requirement that, with one exception for
Tribal entities, an applicant for the
Mobility Fund Phase I auction, Auction
901, must be designated as an ETC in
every geographic area on which it
wishes to bid by the time it applies to
participate and in light of the short time
remaining before the July 11, 2012
deadline for filing Auction 901
applications, the Commission finds that
case-by-case forbearance is not feasible
and grant blanket forbearance for this
limited purpose.
II. Background
3. In the recent USF/ICC
Transformation Order, 76 FR 73830,
November 29, 2011 and 76 FR 81562,
December 28, 2011, the Commission
comprehensively reformed and
modernized the universal service
system to ensure that robust, affordable
voice and broadband service, both fixed
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 128 (Tuesday, July 3, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 39425-39435]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-15729]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2008-0510; FRL-9692-3]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Louisiana;
Regional Haze State Implementation Plan
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is finalizing a partial limited approval and a partial
disapproval of a revision to the Louisiana State Implementation Plan
(SIP) submitted by the State of Louisiana through the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ), on June 13, 2008, that
addresses regional haze (RH) for the first implementation period. This
revision was submitted to address the requirements of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) and the EPA's rules that require states to prevent any future and
remedy any existing anthropogenic impairment of visibility in mandatory
Class I areas (national parks and wilderness areas) caused by emissions
of air pollutants from numerous sources located over a wide geographic
area (also referred to as the ``regional haze program''). States are
required to assure reasonable progress toward the national goal of
achieving natural visibility conditions in Class I areas. In a separate
action, the EPA has finalized a limited disapproval of the Louisiana RH
SIP, along with several other states' regional haze plans, because of
deficiencies in the state's regional haze SIP submittal arising from
the remand by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
(D.C. Circuit) to the EPA of the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR). In
this action, the EPA is finalizing a partial disapproval because of
deficiencies in Louisiana's RH SIP submittal that go beyond the issues
addressed in the EPA's limited disapproval in that separate action. The
EPA is also finalizing a partial limited approval of those elements of
this SIP revision not addressed by our partial disapproval. The partial
limited approval of the RH requirements for Louisiana is based on the
conclusion that the revisions, as a whole, strengthen the Louisiana
SIP. This action is being taken under section 110 and part C of the
CAA.
DATES: This rule is effective August 6, 2012.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket Identification No. EPA-R06-OAR-2008-0510. All documents in the
docket are listed on the www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed
in the index, some information is not publicly available, i.e.,
Confidential Business Information or other information whose disclosure
is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted
material, is not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available
only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through www.regulations.gov or in hard
copy at the Air Planning Section (6PD-L), Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-
2733. The EPA requests that if at all possible, you contact the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section for further
information. The Regional Office's official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30, excluding federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Ellen Belk, Air Planning Section
(6PD-L), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-2733, telephone 214-665-2164; fax number
214-665-6762; email address belk.ellen@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,''
and ``our'' means the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Final Action
III. Comments Received and Our Responses
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
The EPA is taking action on a revision to Louisiana's SIP submitted
on June 13, 2008, that addressed progress toward reducing regional haze
for the first implementation period ending in 2018. This revision was
submitted to address the requirements of the CAA and the EPA's rules to
assure reasonable progress toward the national goal of achieving
natural visibility conditions in mandatory Class I areas. As identified
by Congress, there is one mandatory Class I area within the State of
Louisiana, Breton National Wilderness Area.\1\ The initial submittal
from Louisiana was supplemented by a May 30, 2012, letter communicating
that the State finalized its Smoke Management Plan (SMP). On February
28, 2012, the EPA published a proposed partial limited approval and
partial disapproval of Louisiana's SIP revision to address RH. See 77
FR 11839.\2\
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\1\ It is recognized that at the Breton National Wilderness Area
(Breton or Breton NWA), some acres have at times been submerged.
However, as a Class I area, Congress has declared as a national goal
``the prevention of any future, and the remedying, of any existing,
impairment of visibility'' at the Breton NWA. 42 U.S.C. 7491. Breton
was designated by Congress as a national wilderness area on June 3,
1975, under the Wilderness Act. Public Law 93-632 1(f); see also 16
U.S.C. 1132. In the August 7, 1977, Clean Air Act Amendment,
national wilderness areas that exceeded 5,000 acres in size and were
in existence at that time (August 7, 1977), were designated as
mandatory Class I areas that may not be redesignated. 42 U.S.C.
7472(a). In accordance with section 169A of the CAA, the EPA, in
consultation with the Department of Interior, promulgated a list of
156 areas where visibility is identified as an important value. See,
44 FR 69122, November 30, 1979. As required, the EPA lists Breton as
a mandatory Class I federal area at 40 CFR 81.412.
\2\ For additional details on the EPA's analysis and findings,
the reader is referred to the proposal published in the February 28,
2012 Federal Register (77 FR 11839), and a more detailed discussion
as contained in the Technical Support Document which is available on
line at https://www.regulations.gov, Docket number EPA-R06-OAR-2008-
0510.
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In that action, the EPA proposed a partial limited approval of
Louisiana's June 13, 2008, SIP revision addressing RH under CAA
sections 301(a) and 110(k)(3) because certain provisions of the
revision strengthen the Louisiana (LA) SIP. The EPA also proposed a
partial disapproval of the LA RH SIP submittal because the submittal
includes several deficient provisions. The deficiencies identified in
the proposal go beyond those identified in the limited disapproval
proposed on December 30, 2011 (76 FR 82219) which addressed
deficiencies in several states' regional haze plans caused by the
remand of the CAIR. The EPA proposed that certain elements of the
State's Best Available Retrofit Technology (BART)
[[Page 39426]]
evaluations and determinations are not fully adequate to meet the
federal requirements. Additionally, as a result of the deficiencies
related to BART, the EPA proposed that the Long-Term Strategy (LTS) is
not fully adequate to meet federal requirements. Finally, because
visibility impacts from smoke are significant in Louisiana, we proposed
that Louisiana should finalize its SMP. The EPA proposed a limited
approval for portions of the revision because those portions represent
an improvement over the current SIP, and make considerable progress in
fulfilling the applicable CAA RH program requirements.
The EPA received comments on the Agency's February 28, 2012
proposed action. See section III of this rulemaking for a summary of
comments received and the EPA's responses to these comments. Also, the
EPA received a final SMP from Louisiana on May 30, 2012.
Following the remand of CAIR, the EPA issued a new rule in 2011 to
address the interstate transport of nitrogen oxides (NOX)
and sulfur dioxide (SO2) in the eastern United States. See
76 FR 48208, August 8, 2011 (``the Transport Rule,'' also known as the
Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR)). On December 30, 2011, the EPA
proposed to find that the trading programs in the Transport Rule would
achieve greater reasonable progress towards the national visibility
goal than would source-specific BART in the states in which the
Transport Rule applies. See 76 FR 82219. The EPA finalized that rule on
May 30, 2012 (77 FR 33642). Based on this finding, the EPA also revised
the RH Rule (RHR) to allow states to substitute participation in the
trading programs under the Transport Rule for source-specific BART.
Also on December 30, 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC
Circuit stayed the Transport Rule (including the provisions that would
have sunset CAIR and the CAIR Federal Implementation Plans (FIPs)) and
instructed the EPA to continue to administer CAIR pending the outcome
of the court's decision on the petitions for review challenging the
Transport Rule. EME Homer City v. EPA, No. 11-1302 (Order).
II. Final Action
In this action, the EPA is finalizing a partial limited approval
and a partial disapproval of Louisiana's June 13, 2008 RH SIP revision.
With one difference, we are finalizing our action as proposed. As
discussed below, we are slightly adjusting our action on the LA RH SIP
with respect to the LDEQ's BART determination for the Rhodia Sulfuric
Acid Plant (Rhodia). We proposed to find the BART evaluation for Rhodia
is deficient because the LDEQ's RH submittal does not analyze controls
for the subject-to-BART unit using the factors required by 40 CFR
51.308(e). Having considered the public comments, we find that Rhodia's
subject-to-BART unit meets the RH requirements specified in 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) for an adequate BART evaluation; however the Rhodia
BART determination still fails to meet the requirement in 40 CFR
51.308(e) to include the emissions limits in the SIP. See our response
to comment 6 in section III for further discussion of our findings for
Rhodia. Also, this action acknowledges that Louisiana has satisfied the
requirement to consider smoke management techniques, including plans,
because Louisiana has finalized its SMP (see the docket for this
action, Docket No. EPA-R06-OAR-2008-0510, for Louisiana's SMP).
The EPA is finalizing a partial limited approval of Louisiana's RH
SIP revision. This partial limited approval results in approval of all
of the remaining elements of Louisiana's RH SIP.\3\ The EPA is taking
this approach because Louisiana's SIP will be stronger and more
protective of the environment with the implementation of those measures
by the state and having federal approval and enforceability than it
would without those measures being included in Louisiana's SIP.
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\3\ Processing of State Implementation Plan (SIP) Revisions, EPA
Memorandum from John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality Management
Division, OAQPS, to Air Division Directors, EPA Regional Offices I-X
(1992 Calcagni Memorandum) located at https://www.epa.gov/ttn/caaa/t1/memoranda/siproc.pdf.
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The EPA is also finalizing a partial disapproval of Louisiana's RH
SIP revision insofar as this SIP revision relies on deficient BART
evaluations for four non-electric generating unit (non-EGU) subject-to-
BART sources. The legal effect of the final partial disapproval for
Louisiana's June 13, 2008, SIP revision is to provide the EPA authority
to issue a FIP at any time, and to obligate the Agency to take such
action no more than two years after the effective date of the EPA's
final action. 42 USC 7410(c)(1); CAA 110(c)(1).
Note that in another action, signed May 30, 2012, the EPA finalized
its finding that the trading programs in the Transport Rule would
achieve greater reasonable progress towards the national goal than
would BART in the states in which the Transport Rule applies. See 77 FR
33642. In that action, the EPA finalized a limited disapproval \4\ of
Louisiana's June 13, 2008, RH SIP revision insofar as those revisions
rely on the CAIR to address the impact of emissions from the State's
electric generating units (EGUs). However, that action did not finalize
a FIP for Louisiana. The legal effect of that final limited disapproval
for Louisiana's June 13, 2008, SIP revision is to provide the EPA
authority to issue a FIP at any time, and to obligate the Agency to
take such action no more than two years after the effective date of the
EPA's final action.
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\4\ As explained in the 1992 Calcagni Memorandum, ``[t]hrough a
limited approval, the EPA [will] concurrently, or within a
reasonable period of time thereafter, disapprove the rule * * * for
not meeting all of the applicable requirements of the Act. * * *
[T]he limited disapproval is a rulemaking action, and it is subject
to notice and comment.'' Final limited disapproval of a SIP
submittal does not affect the federal enforceability of the measures
in the subject SIP revision nor prevent state implementation of
these measures.
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Specifically, the EPA is finalizing a partial limited approval and
a partial disapproval of a revision to the Louisiana SIP submitted by
the State of Louisiana on June 13, 2008, as meeting some of the
applicable regional haze requirements as set forth in sections 169A and
169B of the CAA and in 40 CFR 51.300-308. In this action, the EPA
grants a partial limited approval of the LA RH SIP submittal for
meeting the requirements of: 51.308(d), for the core requirements for
regional haze SIPs, except for the requirements of 51.308(d)(3);
51.308(f), for the commitment to submit comprehensive periodic
revisions of regional haze SIPs; 51.308(g), for the commitment to
submit periodic reports describing progress towards the reasonable
progress goals (RPGs); 51.308(h), for the commitment to conduct
periodic determinations of the adequacy of the existing regional haze
SIP; and 51.308(i), for coordination with state and Federal Land
Managers. However, in this action the EPA is also partially
disapproving the LA RH SIP submittal because it does not include fully
approvable measures for meeting the requirements of 40 CFR
51.308(d)(3), long-term strategy for regional haze as it relies on
deficient non-EGU BART analyses; and 51.308(e), BART requirements for
regional haze visibility impairment with respect to emissions of
visibility impairing pollutants from four non-EGUs.
III. Comments Received and Our Responses
The EPA received four sets of comments on the February 28, 2012,
rulemaking proposing a partial limited approval and a partial
disapproval of Louisiana's June 13, 2008 SIP revision.
[[Page 39427]]
Specifically, the comments were received from the National Parks
Service; the LDEQ; Exxon Mobil Corporation; and Tulane Environmental
Law Clinic, on behalf of the Gulf Restoration Network. Full sets of the
comments provided by all of the aforementioned entities (hereinafter
referred to as ``the Commenter'') are provided in the docket for
today's final action. The docket for this action is available at
www.regulations.gov under Docket Identification No. EPA-R06-OAR-2008-
0510. A summary of the comments and the EPA's responses are provided
below.
Comment 1: The EPA does not have the authority under the CAA to
issue a limited approval of Louisiana's RH SIP. The CAA provides that
the EPA can approve a SIP submittal in whole or can approve part of a
submittal and disapprove the other parts. CAA section 110(k)(3). But
the CAA says nothing about allowing the EPA to grant a ``limited
approval.''
Response 1: The EPA disagrees with the comment that the EPA lacks
the authority to give limited approval of Louisiana's RH SIP. As
discussed in the September 7, 1992, EPA memorandum cited in the
proposed rulemaking,\5\ although section 110(k) of the CAA may not
expressly provide authority for limited approvals, the plain language
of section 301(a) does provide ``gap-filling'' authority authorizing
the Agency to ``prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry
out'' the EPA's CAA functions. The EPA may rely on section 301(a) in
conjunction with the Agency's SIP approval authority in section
110(k)(3) to issue limited approvals where it has determined that a
submittal strengthens a given state SIP and that the provisions meeting
the applicable requirements of the CAA are not separable from the
provisions that do not meet the CAA's requirements. The EPA has adopted
the limited approval approach numerous times in SIP actions across the
nation over the last twenty years. Limited approval is appropriate for
part of the SIP submittal here because the EPA has determined that a
portion of Louisiana's SIP revisions addressing regional haze, as a
whole, strengthen the State's SIP and because the provisions in the SIP
revisions that relate to BART for EGUs are not separable. Further, this
limited approval complements the national ``Better-than-BART'' action,
which proposed a limited disapproval for the LA RH SIP due to its
reliance on the remanded CAIR for BART for EGUs. Adopting the
Commenter's position would ignore CAA section 301 and violate the
```fundamental canon of statutory construction that the words of a
statute must be read in their context and with a view to their place in
the overall statutory scheme'. * * * A court must therefore interpret
the statute `as a symmetrical and coherent regulatory scheme,' * * *
and `fit, if possible, all parts into an harmonious whole.''' FDA v.
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 133 (2000) (quoting
Davis v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 489 U.S. 803, 809 (1989),
Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., 513 U.S. 561, 569 (1995), and FTC v. Mandel
Brothers, Inc., 359 U.S. 385, 389 (1959)).
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\5\ The EPA's 1992 Calcagni Memorandum.
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Comment 2: The EPA cannot partially approve or partially disapprove
a RH SIP without evaluating Louisiana's proposed SIP as a whole. The
EPA has proposed to issue a FIP to address the deficiencies in
Louisiana's SIP associated with the BART requirements for
NOX for EGUs, but did not propose a FIP for the EGU BART
requirements for SO2. Accordingly, Louisiana and the EPA
must issue BART determinations for SO2 at each source
subject to BART, including those EGUs subject to the Transport Rule.
Because of this bifurcated treatment, the proposed partial SIP violates
the CAA and RHR because the EPA failed to evaluate, let alone
determine, whether exempting Louisiana EGUs from BART complies with the
CAA's reasonable progress mandate. To meet the 2064 goal, a regional
haze plan must include two components: BART limits and a long-term
strategy to achieve reasonable progress toward that goal. Because BART
is a critical component to achieving reasonable progress, neither the
states nor the EPA can exempt sources from the RHR's BART requirements
without any consideration of how doing so will affect the overarching
reasonable progress mandate. All required components of a RH SIP or FIP
affect each other, are part of a ``single administrative action,'' and
must be evaluated together to determine compliance with the CAA and
RHR. The EPA has failed to account for how, in the absence of relied
upon SO2 reductions anticipated under CAIR, it will maintain
its uniform rate of progress. The EPA's failure to consider together
the proposed alternative BART program, BART for SO2, the LTS
and RPGs in Louisiana's SIP violates the CAA and RHR and is arbitrary
and capricious.
Response 2: We have evaluated the LA RH SIP submittal as a whole
and at this time we are taking final action on all elements of the LA
RH SIP submittal that were not addressed in the national Better-than-
BART rule. Louisiana must consider whether EGUs previously covered by
the CAIR, whether subject to BART or not, should be controlled to
ensure reasonable progress to meet the State's long-term strategies.
However, insofar as Louisiana's LTS and RPGs are affected by the remand
of CAIR, those issues are addressed in the national Better-than-BART
rulemaking and are outside the scope of this action on the remainder of
the LA RH SIP. Also, the CAA expressly provides authority to the EPA to
partially approve and partially disapprove a SIP revision. 42 U.S.C.
7410(k)(3). The EPA has adopted the partial approval approach numerous
times in SIP actions across the nation over the last twenty years.
Partial approval and partial disapproval is appropriate here because
the EPA has determined that a portion of Louisiana's RH SIP meets
regional haze requirements and a portion of it does not. Additionally,
the EPA has discretion to issue an immediate FIP for all or part of the
deficiencies in the LA RH SIP; however, the EPA is not under an
obligation to promulgate a FIP for any part of the LA RH SIP at this
time because the FIP clock has not begun yet. See Section II of this
action for additional information about the FIP. While the EPA proposed
a FIP for Louisiana for NOX BART for EGUs, the final
national Better-than-BART rule does not include a FIP for
NOX BART for EGUs.\6\ Without a FIP, the Louisiana RH SIP
contains a gap for NOX BART for EGUs. Additionally, because
no FIP was promulgated for SO2 in Louisiana, the Louisiana
RH SIP contains a gap for SO2 BART for EGUs. Therefore,
Louisiana must submit and the EPA must approve a revised SIP submittal
to address both NOX and SO2 BART for EGUs to cure
the deficiencies in the SIP resulting from the remand of CAIR.
Louisiana may elect to rely on the Transport Rule for NOX
BART for EGUs in that submittal. However, because Louisiana is not
covered under the Transport Rule for SO2, the State must
submit source-specific SO2 BART evaluations for the subject-
to-BART EGUs in Louisiana. As discussed further in our responses to
several comments below, Louisiana must also submit revisions sufficient
to cure the deficiencies in the non-EGU BART determinations.
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\6\ The national proposal proposed a NOX BART EGU FIP
for Louisiana, but as the State did not receive a finding of failure
to timely submit a SIP and requested the allowable time to revise
and resubmit a SIP, the final action did not include such a FIP.
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Comment 3: The EPA should not finalize a limited disapproval of the
LTS in the LA RH SIP based on the
[[Page 39428]]
Transport Rule. The Transport Rule is currently in litigation and has
been stayed by the Court. The EPA cannot legally base a SIP action on a
regulation that is not effective and that may be vacated and remanded.
Limited disapproval of the LA RH SIP submittal will trigger the ``two
year sanction clock'' imposed by the CAA. The State will be required to
submit a SIP revision, with the EPA review and approval within two
years of the denial when the ``applicable standard'' is still unknown
at this time. Instead, the CAIR is currently effective and will
continue to be implemented by the EPA, the States, and the regulated
community indefinitely. Once the question of regional transport of
particulate matter (PM) and PM precursors is resolved and a regulation
replaces CAIR, the State will submit a SIP revision to implement BART
for EGUs in accordance with provisions of the new program. However,
until this question is resolved, Louisiana and its regulated entities
are obligated to comply with the effective regulation and so is the
EPA. The State and its regulated entities are entitled to rely upon the
effective regulation as the basis for the EPA action concerning the
Louisiana SIP. The EPA is compelled to approve the current LA RH SIP
submittal that relies on CAIR and the EPA's prior determination that
CAIR is equivalent to BART.
Response 3: In a separate action that revises the RHR and finds
that the Transport Rule is better than BART we finalized a limited
disapproval of Louisiana's long-term strategy. See 77 FR 33642. The
docket for that rulemaking (Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2011-0729) is
available at www.regulations.gov. For that reason, we are not taking
action on the long-term strategy in this action insofar as the LA RH
SIP relied on the CAIR. Therefore, the comment that the EPA should not
disapprove the LA RH LTS based on the State's reliance on the CAIR is
outside the scope of this action. Additionally, we clarify that today's
final action on the remainder of LA's RH SIP triggers a two-year FIP
clock,\7\ but does not start a sanctions clock for Louisiana.\8\ See
Section II of this action for additional information about the FIP.
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\7\ 42 U.S.C. 7410(c)(1); CAA 110(c)(1).
\8\ See 42 U.S.C. 7509.
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While the comment is outside the scope of this action, we note that
CAIR has been remanded and only remains in place temporarily;
therefore, the EPA cannot fully approve the regional haze SIP revisions
that have relied on the now-temporary reductions from CAIR. Although
CAIR is currently in effect as a result of the December 30, 2011 Order
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit staying the Transport
Rule, this does not affect the substance of the D.C. Circuit's ruling
in 2008 remanding CAIR to the EPA. Additionally, in the Transport Rule,
the EPA determined that Louisiana need not be covered for
SO2 controls to prevent impacts on PM nonattainment or
maintenance in other states. As a result of the CAIR remand and the
SO2 finding for Louisiana in the Transport Rule, no national
rule addresses SO2 reductions in Louisiana. We recognize
that the final outcome of the PM transport requirements that CAIR and
the Transport Rule are designed to address is uncertain at this time.
However, the applicable standard for BART is certain under the RHR.
Thus, notwithstanding the uncertain status of the Transport Rule and
the continued implementation of CAIR, Louisiana must address
SO2 BART in order to comply with the RHR. We believe that
Louisiana should be working to address SO2 BART on a source
by source basis.
Comment 4: The Commenter opposes the EPA's December 30, 2011,
proposed rulemaking to find that the Transport Rule is better than BART
and to use the Transport Rule as an alternative to BART for Louisiana
and other states subject to the Transport Rule. The Commenter
incorporates its comments on that December 30, 2011, rulemaking by
reference and outlines several of those comments, including its
arguments that the Transport Rule is not better than BART, and that the
EPA cannot rely on the Transport Rule as an alternative program or
measure to displace BART requirements for those BART-eligible sources
in Transport Rule states.
Response 4: These comments are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
In today's rule, the EPA is taking final action on the proposed partial
limited approval and partial disapproval of Louisiana's RH SIP. The EPA
did not propose to find that participation in the Transport Rule is an
alternative to BART in this action. As noted above, EPA made that
proposed finding in a separate action on December 30, 2011, and the
Commenter is merely reiterating and incorporating its comments on that
separate action. EPA addressed these comments concerning the Transport
Rule as a BART alternative in a final action that was signed on May 30,
2012. See 77 FR 33642. The EPA's response to these comments can be
found in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2011-0729 at www.regulations.gov.
Comment 5: The commenter objects to the EPA's limited approval of
portions of LA's RH SIP because it replaces reliance on CAIR with
reliance on the Transport Rule for NOX emissions from EGUs.
77 FR 11839, 11840-41. The effect of this proposed rule is to exempt
Louisiana EGUs from the RHR's requirements for case-by-case, source-
specific analyses and installation and operation of BART to reduce
NOX and achieve the RHR's visibility mandates. This
exemption is based on the EPA's proposed finding that the Transport
Rule would be better than BART at making reasonable progress with
regard to NOX emissions toward achieving the RHR's goal of
eliminating human caused visibility impairment at Class I areas by
2064. Id. at 11846; see also 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3) (criteria for
determining if an alternative measure is better than BART). But the
EPA's proposed Better-than-BART rule as applied to all 28 states
covered under the Transport Rule, including Louisiana, is inconsistent
with the CAA. The EPA has not complied with the CAA's statutory
requirements for a BART exemption, has failed to make a state-by-state
demonstration that the Transport Rule is better than BART, and has
included fatal methodological flaws in its proposed determination.
Additionally, the EPA's determination fails to account for the
geographic and temporal uncertainties in emissions reductions under the
Transport Rule--uncertainties inherent in a cap-and-trade program.
Moreover, Louisiana cannot rely on the Transport Rule to exempt
Louisiana's EGUs from the RHR's BART requirements because the D.C.
Circuit has indefinitely stayed the rule. The Transport Rule's
uncertainties and lack of year round emission reduction requirements
make it unsuitable as a BART alternative in Louisiana. Moreover, the
application of the Transport Rule as a substitute for source specific
BART is uniquely and particularly problematic in Louisiana, and four
other states (Florida, Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Arkansas) for which
the EPA exempts sources from BART NOX requirements, because
NOX emissions are only covered by the Transport Rule during
the ozone season--less than half the year. Finally, the national rule
expressly states that the EPA is taking no action on the RPGs,
effectively making it impossible to determine whether the Transport
Rule for an ozone season only state could achieve greater reasonable
progress than an absent or unconfirmed goal. See 76 FR 82219, at 82221.
Absent a uniform rate of progress calculation, LTS, or RPGs, the EPA
has no rational basis to determine that the Transport Rule
[[Page 39429]]
emissions controls are sufficient to comply with the RHR reasonable
progress mandate. The commenter also incorporated by reference comments
from Earthjustice on the national Better-than-BART proposed rule and
comments from National Parks Conservation Association, et al. For the
reasons stated above and the reasons provided in the national comments,
the Transport Rule does not satisfy the requirements of the RHR, and
cannot be approved as a substitute for BART as proposed. Instead, the
EPA must promulgate a regional haze plan that contains all aspects of
the State's regional haze plan including source-specific NOX
BART limits for the Louisiana EGUs.
Response 5: As discussed above, in today's rule, the EPA is taking
final action on the proposed partial limited approval and partial
disapproval of Louisiana's RH SIP. These comments are beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. EPA addressed these comments concerning the
Transport Rule as a BART alternative in a final action that was signed
on May 30, 2012. See 77 FR 33642. The EPA's response to these comments
can be found in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2011-0729 at
www.regulations.gov. Additionally, insofar as this comment discusses
regional haze actions for states other than Louisiana, the comments are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment 6: The EPA proposed that the BART determination for Rhodia
is deficient at this time. The SIP includes a BART analysis for Rhodia
that the LDEQ feels is complete. The analysis takes into account all
available control technologies for removing SO2 at the
affected units. All of the available control technologies provide a
control efficiency of approximately 94%. Rhodia considered three
abatement alternatives: double absorption, sodium scrubbing (caustic/
soda ash), and ammonia scrubbing. Rhodia selected caustic scrubbing as
the most effective control option that is also cost effective. This
control strategy is currently in place for Unit 2 and will be in place
for Unit 1 by May 2012. SO2 emissions will be reduced from
over 8,800 tons per year (tpy) to a permit limit of 1,075 tpy for the
units combined. This control not only meets BART but surpasses the
control for new facilities under New Source Performance Standards.
Modeling results with the SO2 controls show all impacts of
Rhodia to the Breton and Caney Creek Wilderness Areas are below 0.5
deciviews. The LDEQ believes that this source has the most stringent
control strategy available and no further BART analysis is necessary as
allowed by 40 CFR Part 51 Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9). The LDEQ anticipates
that the controls will be installed for Unit 1 prior to the EPA
approval of the LA RH SIP submittal. The controls will be required to
be diligently maintained and are federally enforceable through Section
905 of the Louisiana Administrative Code (LAC), Title 33, Part III
(denoted LAC 33:III.905), which has been approved as part of the
Louisiana SIP. The EPA should approve this BART analysis as it fulfills
the BART requirements.
Response 6: The LDEQ's RH SIP submittal properly identified Rhodia
as a subject-to-BART source and provided information concerning the
BART determination for Rhodia. We proposed to find that Rhodia's BART
determination was deficient because it does not include a sufficient
evaluation under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). The LDEQ has determined
that the control strategy selected for implementation by Rhodia is
among the most stringent available. The LDEQ's determination is
corroborated by the information provided in the LA RH SIP submittal,
including a determination that Rhodia's units are subject-to-BART and
the demonstration in the LA RH SIP Appendix G that the control
strategies at Rhodia have approximately 94% control efficiency.\9\ The
EPA finds that with the control strategy selected, the Rhodia units
meet the BART requirements at 40 CFR 51 Appendix Y.OV.D.1.9 \10\ with
the exception of having enforceable emissions limits for regional haze
in the SIP (see also response to Comment 11 in this action). Although
the SIP submittal said that, post-control, Rhodia is no longer subject-
to-BART, that determination is not approvable because once a unit is
determined to be subject to BART, it must meet the requirements of 40
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii). However, the LDEQ's comment letter in part
addresses this deficiency in its determination that with controls,
Rhodia meets BART. As indicated in the proposal, the LDEQ did not
submit a complete BART evaluation for the Rhodia units; the submittal
did not analyze controls for the units using the factors as required by
40 CFR 51.308(e). However, with the LDEQ's finding that the controls at
Rhodia are among the most stringent, the regional haze requirement for
a BART analysis has been satisfied (however, the requirement for
enforceable emissions limits is still not met).\11\ The EPA finds that
the LDEQ acted reasonably within its discretion in determining that the
controls selected by Rhodia are among the most stringent because the
control efficiency for the technology selected is 94%.
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\9\ LDEQ Comment Letter, received March 29, 2012.
\10\ We acknowledge that compliance with the BART Guidelines in
40 CFR 51 Appendix Y is not mandatory for Rhodia because Rhodia is a
non-EGU source. However, following these Guidelines is one option
for subject-to-BART non-EGUs to ensure BART determinations are
adequate.
\11\ The EPA's finding is a logical outgrowth of the proposed
rule. ``[A] final rule will be deemed to be the logical outgrowth of
a proposed rule if a new round of notice and comment would not
provide commentators with their first occasion to offer new and
different criticisms which the agency might find convincing.''
Fertilizer Inst. v. EPA, 935 F.2d 1303, 1311 (D.C. Cir. 1991)
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted). In our proposal, we
note that ``[t]he LDEQ may be able to find that the controls
required under the CD are among the most stringent, and therefore,
no additional controls would be required for these units to meet
BART.'' As LDEQ has now provided this determination and the LA RH
SIP submittal already contains sufficient technical information to
support this determination, the controls at Rhodia are sufficient to
meet BART, and are therefore approvable in accordance with our
proposal. However, as stated in our response, the LA RH SIP for
Rhodia is not fully approvable at this time because it does not
contain enforceable emissions limits for regional haze.
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However, the emissions limits for Rhodia's subject-to-BART units
were not included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ must include the BART
emission limits in the LA RH SIP through a SIP revision.\12\ More
information about this requirement is provided in response to Comment 7
in this action.
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\12\ CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR 35714, at
35741.
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Comment 7: The EPA proposed that the state should have identified
the Mosaic facility as being subject to BART and made a BART
determination for the source. The LDEQ agrees that Mosaic should be
identified as a BART facility. Mosaic has installed or is scheduled to
install controls required by a Consent Decree (CD) for Sulfuric Acid
Trains A, D, and E. Only Train A is subject to BART, but it should be
noted that significant reductions have been made on Trains D and E
also. The following is a summary of these controls:
--A scrubber system has been installed on Train A reducing
SO2 emissions by 9,490 tpy.
--SO2 emissions from Train D have been reduced by 576 tpy.
--SO2 emissions from Train E have been reduced by 942 tpy.
The LDEQ believes that this source has the most stringent control
strategy available and no further BART analysis is necessary as allowed
by 40 CFR Part 51 Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9). The scrubber system has been
installed on Train A. The controls are required to be diligently
maintained and are federally enforceable through LAC 33:III.905, which
has been approved by the EPA as
[[Page 39430]]
part of the Louisianan SIP. The EPA should approve this BART analysis
as it fulfills the BART requirements.
Response 7: The EPA acknowledges the LDEQ's agreement that Mosaic
is a subject-to-BART source. However, we cannot approve the BART
analysis at this time. The LDEQ did not identify Mosaic as being
subject to BART in the submitted SIP and therefore did not perform a
BART analysis. Consequently, the EPA cannot act today upon the
information in the comments because there is no logical outgrowth. ``A
final rule is only a logical outgrowth of the proposed rule if
interested parties should have anticipated that the change was
possible, and thus reasonably should have filed their comments on the
subject during the notice-and-comment period. * * * Notice of the
agency's intention is crucial to ensure that agency regulations are
tested via exposure to diverse public comment * * * to ensure fairness
to affected parties, and * * * to give affected parties an opportunity
to develop evidence in the record to support their objections to the
rule and thereby enhance the quality of judicial review.'' Int'l Union,
United Mine Workers of America v. Mine Safety and Health Admin., 626
F.3d 84, 94-95 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (citing Int'l Union, United Mine
Workers of America v. Mine Safety and Health Admin., 407 F.3d 1250,
1259 (D.C. Cir. 2005)) (internal quotations omitted). With regard to
Mosaic, we proposed to disapprove the LA RH SIP submitted June 13, 2008
because the submittal failed to identify Mosaic as a subject-to-BART
source. We noted that, once the LDEQ identifies Mosaic as subject to
BART, the LDEQ needs to provide a BART evaluation for the EPA's review
and action. The LDEQ has not completed the rulemaking and SIP revision
process for the determination that Mosaic is subject to BART or for the
Mosaic BART evaluation. Based on our proposal, the public could not
have anticipated that the EPA would approve the state's identification
of Mosaic as subject to BART and approve a BART evaluation for Mosaic.
As a result, approval of Mosaic does not meet the standard for logical
outgrowth for this final action. The LDEQ will need to revise its SIP
after notice and comment to include Mosaic as a subject-to-BART source,
and also to provide a determination of BART based on an analysis of the
best system of continuous emission control technology available and
associated emission reductions achievable for the facility.\13\
Although the LDEQ provided a determination in its comment that the
control strategies selected for implementation by Mosaic are among the
most stringent available, as discussed previously for the EPA to be
able to consider this determination, the SIP must be revised after
notice and comment to include the identification of Mosaic as a
subject-to-BART source, and include a BART evaluation for the facility
and be submitted to the EPA. The BART evaluation may include relevant
permit information if applicable.
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\13\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
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For Mosaic, in addition to including the facility as a subject-to-
BART source in the SIP, for the unit subject to BART for each
pollutant, there must be sufficient information in the SIP to satisfy
the requirement under 40 CFR 50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A): ``The determination
of BART must be based on an analysis of the best system of continuous
emissions control technology available and associated emissions
reductions achievable. In this analysis, the state must take into
consideration the technology available, the cost of compliance, the
energy and non-air quality environmental impacts of compliance, any
pollution control equipment in use at the source, the remaining useful
life of the source, and the degree of improvement in visibility which
may reasonably be anticipated to result from the use of such
technology.''
Also, the emissions limits for Mosaic's controls are required to be
included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ must include the BART emission
limits in the LA RH SIP through a SIP revision.\14\ More information
about this requirement is provided in response to Comment 8 in this
action.
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\14\ CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR 35714, at
35741.
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Comment 8: The EPA proposed that the BART determinations for Sid
Richardson are deficient at this time. The LDEQ has determined that
while SO2 controls may be technically feasible, they are not
economically feasible. Modeling results for Sid Richardson show that in
only 1 of the 3 modeled years did the 98th percentile day show a
visibility impact above 0.5 dv. Sid Richardson provided a detailed
analysis of the cost associated with implementing the technically
feasible control techniques. Because all of the possible controls were
deemed economically infeasible, an evaluation of the controls on the
visibility impact at Breton is unnecessary. Sid Richardson is currently
controlling SO2 by limiting sulfur content of the feed stock
oil. The LDEQ has determined that this control is BART for this
facility. The EPA should approve this BART analysis as it fulfills the
BART requirements. The EPA is proposing that the NOX BART
determination for Sid Richardson is deficient at this time.
The LDEQ has determined that NOX controls for Sid
Richardson are technically infeasible. Sid Richardson presented
detailed information in the BART analysis discussing the infeasibility
of NOX controls aside from good combustion practices.
NOX controls were determined to be infeasible for the
following reasons: Reactors: combustion modifications would affect the
reaction process and ultimately, the yield and quality of the carbon
black produced; selective non-catalytic reduction (SNCR) is infeasible
because the reagent (urea or ammonia) would affect the yield and
quality of the carbon black produced; selective catalytic reduction
(SCR) is infeasible because of particulate loading that could come in
contact with the catalyst causing a fire hazard; Absorption control is
already in use since the flue gases are already in direct contact with
the carbon black; Wet chemical scrubbers are used in a limited number
of industrial applications and have not been used in the carbon black
industry. Flares: There are no NOX control options
available. Dryers: Combustion modifications would affect the yield and
quality of the carbon black produced; SNCR is infeasible because the
reagent (urea or ammonia) would affect the yield and quality of the
carbon black produced; SCR is infeasible because of particulate loading
that could come in contact with the catalyst causing a fire hazard;
Absorption control is already in use since the flue gases are already
in direct contact with the carbon black. The LDEQ stated that further
BART analysis for NOX control is unnecessary and that the
EPA should approve this BART analysis as it fulfills the BART
requirements.
Response 8: The EPA disagrees that the information provided in the
SIP and comments for SO2 BART for Sid Richardson satisfies
the requirements for a BART determination. The BART Rule provides that
for each unit subject to BART, the state must satisfy the requirements
under 40 CFR 50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) by providing a determination of BART
which ``must be based on an analysis of the best system of continuous
emissions control technology available and associated emissions
reductions achievable.'' In this analysis the state must take the
following into consideration: ``The technology available, the cost of
compliance, the energy and non-air quality environmental impacts of
[[Page 39431]]
compliance, any pollution control equipment in use at the source, the
remaining useful life of the source, and the degree of improvement in
visibility which may reasonably be anticipated to result from the use
of such technology.'' A determination of economic infeasibility is not
sufficient information to meet these requirements. States have a duty
to evaluate the statutory factors cited above.\15\ It is important
that, in analyzing the technology, states take into account the most
stringent emission control level that the technology is capable of
achieving. States should consider the level of control that is
currently achievable at the time the BART analysis is conducted.\16\
The CAA gives states discretion to make BART determinations; and the
BART regulations and the preambles to the proposed and final BART Rule
contain examples showing that a state has discretion to choose an
alternative control level after considering the five statutory factors.
However, section 169A(g) of the CAA requires States to consider these
statutory factors in determining BART for affected sources. If a proper
evaluation of the five statutory factors demonstrates that an emission
limit is BART for the subject-to-BART source in question, then the
State must require the source to comply with such emission limit. The
EPA agrees that states have considerable discretion in making BART
determinations, but in doing so the State must conduct a proper
evaluation of the five statutory factors, as required by 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) and section 169A(g) of the CAA.
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\15\ CAA 169A(g)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
\16\ 70 FR 39104, at 39170-71.
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Also, the LDEQ states in the comment that Sid Richardson is
currently controlling SO2 by limiting sulfur content of the
feed stock oil, and as indicated in the LA RH SIP Appendix G, the
limitation is already reflected in the Addis Plant's emission limits;
\17\ however, the record does not provide material that supports this
conclusion. No enforceable permit conditions or similar restrictions
were provided, nor is there an analysis demonstrating that limiting of
the sulfur content of the feed stock oil meets BART requirements.
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\17\ LDEQ Comment Letter, received March 29, 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA agrees with the comment that the modeling results show that
the Sid Richardson facility has a visibility impact greater than the
State's established BART threshold of 0.5 dv in one of the three years
considered. As such, Sid Richardson is subject to BART, and a full BART
analysis is required. Consistent with 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(i) and (ii),
the LDEQ chose a 0.5 dv threshold for BART (LA RH SIP Chapter 9);
included Sid Richardson in its list of BART-eligible sources within the
State, and provided a determination of BART for the facility as
required for each source in the State ``that emits any air pollutant
which may reasonably be anticipated to cause or contribute to any
impairment of visibility in any mandatory Class I Federal Area. All
such sources are subject to BART.'' \18\ The LDEQ determined that Sid
Richardson is subject-to-BART because it is a BART-eligible source with
visibility impacts on the 98th percentile day above the state's chosen
threshold, LA RH SIP Chapter 9, page 53.\19\ The EPA disagrees with the
comment that an evaluation of the visibility benefits is not necessary.
``CAA section 169A(g)(2) clearly requires an evaluation of the expected
degree of improvement in visibility from BART controls. All five
statutory factors [required under CAA 169A(g)(2)], including cost-
effectiveness and expected visibility improvement, should be reflected
in the level of BART control that the State implements.'' 70 FR 39104,
at 39129. Sid Richardson was determined to be subject-to-BART and a
full BART analysis is required under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii).
\19\ Note that the use of the 98th percentile of modeled
visibility values is appropriate because it excludes roughly seven
days per year from consideration. This approach captures ``the
sources that contribute to visibility impairment in a Class I area,
while minimizing the likelihood that the highest modeled visibility
impacts might be caused by unusual meteorology or conservative
assumptions in the model.'' 70 FR 39104, at 39121.
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The EPA disagrees that the information provided in the SIP and
comments for NOX BART for Sid Richardson satisfies the
requirements for a BART determination. For Sid Richardson for
NOX, the LDEQ states in its comments that all controls are
infeasible, which is consistent with the SIP submittal (LA RH SIP
Chapter 9 states that the Sid Richardson engineering analyses included
the potential installation of NOX add-on controls, but it
determined that all were infeasible--there were no demonstrated
NOX scrubbing technologies at any carbon black plants).
However, there is not sufficient information in the comment letter or
in the LA RH SIP submittal to support this conclusion. In particular,
we note that SCR has been discounted as technically infeasible because
of the potential for particulate matter to contact the catalyst. We
believe there are a number of applications where SCR has been used in
situations with high particulate loading such as Fluidized Bed
Catalytic Cracking Units (FCCU). In fact, as discussed in the Louisiana
SIP and in other sections of this action, ConocoPhillips is a subject-
to-BART source that has installed SCR on an FCCU. It is not apparent
why this technology would not be applicable to carbon black plants, as
well, given the similar high particulate matter situations. We do not
believe Louisiana provided a sufficient record to justify that SCR is
infeasible for the Carbon Black Industry. Therefore, the state must
satisfy the requirement for NOX for Sid Richardson for an
``analysis of the best system of continuous emission control technology
available and associated emissions reductions achievable'' as required
under 40 CFR 50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
Also, the emission limits for Sid Richardson's controls are
required to be included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ must include the
BART emission limits in the LA RH SIP through a SIP revision.\20\ In
addition, we encourage Sid Richardson and the LDEQ to consider
achievable emissions reductions in determining emissions limits for
this unit to include in the SIP, as required under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). More information about this requirement is
provided in response to Comment 9 in this action.
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\20\ CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR 35714, at
35741.
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Comment 9: The EPA proposed that the BART determination for
ConocoPhillips is deficient at this time. The SIP includes a BART
analysis for ConocoPhillips that the LDEQ feels is complete. Conoco has
installed or is scheduled to install controls required by a consent
decree with the EPA \21\ for the FCCU, process refinery flares and the
crude unit heater. The following is a summary of these controls.
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\21\ Civil Action No. H-05-0285, Federal District Court for the
Southern District of Texas.
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A wet gas scrubber was installed on the FCCU in 2009 that
reduced SO2 emissions by 2,500 tpy and PM emissions by 220
tpy. SCR is scheduled to be installed by 2015 that will reduce
NOX emissions by 760 tpy.
SCR and a NOX CEMS were installed on the crude
unit heater in 2009 that reduced NOX emissions by 700 tpy.
Flare gas recovery was installed for the process refinery
flares in 2011 that reduced NOX emissions by 16 tpy and
SO2 emissions by 330 tpy.
The LDEQ believes that the most stringent controls available have
been installed or are scheduled to be installed
[[Page 39432]]
on these sources. According to 40 CFR Part 51 Appendix Y(IV)(D)(1)(9)
because the source will have the most stringent controls available, it
is not necessary to comprehensively complete each step of the BART
analysis. The EPA should approve this BART analysis as it fulfills the
BART requirements.
The EPA proposed to accept the BART analysis for remaining sources
at the facility. However, most of these sources have a ``D'' which
represents proposed disapproval in Table 10 of the TSD. The LDEQ feels
that no further BART analysis is necessary for ConocoPhillips and
requests that the ``D'' be changed to ``NA.''
Response 9: We disagree with the comment that the BART evaluation
for ConocoPhillips is complete for the subject-to-BART units that were
included in the 2005 CD. Although some emissions reduction information
was provided for some of the units and controls, without information
about the year or baseline emissions, the EPA is unable to verify the
determination that the control technologies and emission limits for
SO2, NOX, and PM selected for the crude unit
heater, the CO boilers, and the flares are among the most stringent.
The submittal did not analyze controls for the units using the factors
as required by 40 CFR 51.308(e). Although the LDEQ provided a
determination in its comment that the control strategies selected for
implementation by ConocoPhillips are among the most stringent
available, the record does not provide sufficient material to support
the LDEQ's conclusion. The BART evaluation may include relevant permit
information if applicable, and also may include a demonstration of
emissions reductions achieved by the selected technologies. It is
expected that emissions reductions for control technologies which are
among the most stringent will be high unless the LDEQ can demonstrate
that lower efficiency rates are sufficient to meet BART requirements.
For ConocoPhillips, for the five units under the CD that are
subject to BART, for each pollutant, there is not sufficient
information in the SIP nor in the comments to satisfy the requirement
under 40 CFR 50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A): ``The determination of BART must be
based on an analysis of the best system of continuous emissions control
technology available and associated emissions reductions achievable. In
this analysis the state must take into consideration the technology
available, the cost of compliance, the energy and non-air quality
environmental impacts of compliance, any pollution control equipment in
use at the source, the remaining useful life of the source, and the
degree of improvement in visibility which may reasonably be anticipated
to result from the use of such technology.''
Also, the emissions limits for ConocoPhillips's controls are
required to be included in the RH SIP, so the LDEQ must include the
BART emission limits in the LA RH SIP through a SIP revision.\22\ In
addition, we encourage ConocoPhillips and the LDEQ to consider
achievable emissions reductions in determining emissions limits for
this unit to include in the SIP, as required under 40 CFR
50.308(e)(1)(ii)(A). More information about this requirement is
provided in response to Comment 10 in this action.
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\22\ CAA 169A(b)(2); 40 CFR 51.308(e); and 64 FR 35714, at
35741.
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For the ConocoPhillips units which were not part of the CD, the
Commenter is correct that the EPA proposed to accept the BART analysis
for those units, and that Table 10 of the TSD is in error for those
units. Accordingly, the EPA has revised the table and an updated Table
10 is provided in the docket associated with this action as an
amendment to the TSD.
Comment 10: The EPA should provide clarification that the CAA and
the RHR both allow states the discretion to make BART determinations
for non-EGUs, and states are not required to use the ``5-step''
analysis that is specifically required only for 750 MW+ EGUs. The
proposal contains statements such as: ``* * * all subject to BART
sources are required to comply with the five BART factors (or steps).
40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).'' Additionally, the commenter is concerned
that the EPA proposed to find that Louisiana's RPGs and LTS contain
deficiencies because they are based on BART determinations that are not
fully approvable. Louisiana has met the obligation to determine BART
for Louisiana refineries if they have documented the rationale for the
BART determinations using their state authority. CAA section
169(b)(2)(A); 77 FR 3966, at 3969. Some of the subject-to-BART
determinations with a proposed disapproval are not EGUs. Therefore, the
LDEQ has the discretion to make BART determinations in a fashion
reasonable in the judgment of the LDEQ and supply the rationale to the
EPA. The EPA has accepted states' BART determinations for non-EGUs not
subject to the ``5-step'' analysis. For example, the EPA proposed to
approve Illinois's BART determinations for two petroleum refineries on
the basis that the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency found that
the emissions limits for the subject-to-BART units established by CDs
to meet BACT also satisfy BART. That proposal further states that the
CDs are federally enforceable and the emissions limits at issue must be
incorporated into federally enforceable permits. 77 FR 3966, at 3973.
Therefore, the EPA should approve Louisiana's non-EGU BART
determinations, especially the ConocoPhillips Refinery, that rely on
emissions limits established by CDs.
Response 10: We agree with the commenter that the five steps in the
BART guidelines at 40 CFR 51 Appendix Y.IV.D \23\ are mandatory only
for subject-to-BART EGUs with a total generating capacity greater than
750 MWs. However, ``all BART determinations must be based on an
analysis of the best system of continuous emission control technology
available and associated emission reductions achievable for each BART-
eligible source that is subject to BART within the state.'' For all
BART determinations, including those for non-EGUs, 40 CFR
51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A) requires states to consider the following factors:
the technology available; the costs of compliance; the energy and non-
air quality environmental impacts of compliance; any pollution control
equipment in use at the source; the remaining useful life of the
source; and the degree of improvement in visibility which may
reasonably be anticipated to result from the use of such technology.
See also, 42 USC 7941(g)(2); CAA 169A(g)(2). The submitted BART
analyses should address all of these factors or provide some other
basis for ensuring subject-to-BART units meet BART in order to be
approvable. The commenter contends that the LDEQ has the discretion to
make BART determinations in a fashion reasonable in the judgment of the
LDEQ. To clarify, states are free to determine the weight and
significance of each of the factors listed above, but they must arrive
at a reasoned determination that is supported by an adequate record. We
acknowledge that BART-determining authorities presented with equivalent
facts and circumstances may arrive at different, but reasoned, BART
determinations. For additional information about our final action on
these non-EGU BART determinations, please see our discussion of the
non-EGU BART determinations and enforceable emissions limits for those
[[Page 39433]]
subject-to-BART units addressed in our responses to Comments 6, 7, 8,
and 9 in this action. Finally, we disagree with the comment that the
EPA should approve Louisiana's non-EGU BART determinations that rely on
emissions limits established by CDs. See the following response to
Comment 11.
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\23\ Step 1: Identify All Available Retrofit Control
Technologies, Step 2: Eliminate Technically Infeasible Options, Step
3: Evaluate Control Effectiveness of Remaining Control Technologies,
Step 4: Evaluate Impacts and Document the Results, and Step 5:
Evaluate Visibility Impacts. 40 CFR 51 Appendix Y.IV.D.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 11: Emission limits for the subject-to-BART units should
not be required to be included in the SIP. The emissions limitations
are contained in the permits and are enforceable as required.
Furthermore, the LDEQ will rely on the SIP approved provision contained
in LAC. 33:111.905, which specifies that ``* * * when facilities have
been installed on a property, they shall be used and diligently
maintained in proper working order whenever any emissions are being
made which can be controlled by the facilities, even though the ambient
air quality standards in affected areas are not exceeded.'' If
necessary, the LDEQ will include the CDs affected between the EPA and
Rhodia, Mosaic and ConocoPhillips, respectively, as evidence of
enforceable emissions limitation. However, the LDEQ will not attach the
operating permits that are the result of these CDs.
Response 11: We disagree with the comment that emission limits for
the subject-to-BART units should not be required to be included in the
SIP. 40 CFR 51.308(e) requires the state to ``submit an implementation
plan containing emissions limits representing BART'' for each subject-
to-BART unit in the state. For an emissions limit contained in a
federal CD to be a federally enforceable component of a RH SIP, the
emissions limit itself must be incorporated into the SIP. States do
have some flexibility in how this incorporation occurs. For example, a
state could list the specific emissions limit for each subject-to-BART
unit as part of the regulatory text in the SIP submittal or a state
could incorporate these limits into its SIP submittal's regulatory text
by referencing the federally enforceable Title I permit that contains
the emissions limits for the subject-to-BART units at a facility. See
e.g., 77 FR 19, January 3, 2012; 76 FR 80754, December 27, 2011; 76 FR
36329, June 22, 2011; and 76 FR 38997, July 5, 2011. If the state
chooses to incorporate emissions limits from a Title I permit into the
SIP, the permit conditions must require a RH SIP revision in order for
the BART emissions limits to be revised. However, the CDs themselves
are not adequate to ensure enforceable emissions limits remain in place
for purposes of BART for several reasons. Courts and parties to the
litigation can change the terms of CDs without revising the RH SIP or
notifying the public that a BART requirement is being altered.
Additionally, CDs are not effective forever. The terms of a CD are
subsumed into a permit, which could be altered during the permitting
process without revising the RH SIP or notifying the public that a BART
requirement is being altered. Absent some express correlation to the LA
RH SIP, the emissions limits required under the CDs are not adequately
enforceable to ensure continued compliance with BART. Moreover, if the
emissions limits in a CD are relied upon to meet BART, the RH SIP must
contain sufficient technical information to ensure compliance with
BART.
Comment 12: The commenter agrees that the LA RH SIP is deficient
because elements of the State's BART evaluations and determinations are
not fully adequate to meet the federal requirements. Additionally, as a
result of the deficiencies related to BART, the LTS and RPGs are not
fully adequate to meet federal requirements.
Response 12: We acknowledge the commenter's support for those
aspects of this action. We note that, as indicated in the above
responses to comments from the LDEQ regarding Rhodia, some but not all
of the deficiencies were addressed by the LDEQ's comments although the
emissions limits for Rhodia must be included in the SIP.
Comment 13: Insofar as the EPA proposed to find that elements of
the SIP submittal fully satisfy the RHR requirements, the commenter
supports the EPA's proposal.
Response 13: We acknowledge the commenter's support for those
aspects of this action.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the CAA and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is to act on state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by state law.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the
terms of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and is
therefore not subject to review under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
(76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011).
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.,
because this SIP action under section 110 of the CAA will not in-and-of
itself create any new information collection burdens but simply
approves or disapproves certain State requirements for inclusion into
the SIP. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency
to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking requirements unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Small entities include small
businesses, small not-for-profit enterprises, and small governmental
jurisdictions. For purposes of assessing the impacts of today's rule on
small entities, small entity is defined as: (1) A small business as
defined by the Small Business Administration's (SBA) regulations at 13
CFR 121.201; (2) a small governmental jurisdiction that is a government
of a city, county, town, school district or special district with a
population of less than 50,000; and (3) a small organization that is
any not-for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated
and is not dominant in its field.
After considering the economic impacts of today's rule on small
entities, I certify that this action will not have a significant impact
on a substantial number of small entities. This rule does not impose
any requirements or create impacts on small entities. This SIP action
under section 110 of the CAA will not in-and-of itself create any new
requirements but simply approves or disapproves certain State
requirements for inclusion into the SIP. Accordingly, it affords no
opportunity for the EPA to fashion for small entities less burdensome
compliance or reporting requirements or timetables or exemptions from
all or part of the rule. The fact that the CAA prescribes that various
consequences (i.e., emission limitations) may or will flow from this
action does not mean that the EPA either can or must conduct a
regulatory flexibility analysis for this action. Therefore, this action
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.
[[Page 39434]]
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This action contains no Federal mandates under the provisions of
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C.
1531-1538 for State, local, or tribal governments or the private
sector. The EPA has determined that the disapproval action does not
include a Federal mandate that may result in estimated costs of $100
million or more to either State, local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. This action merely approves or
disapproves 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
Executive Order 13132, entitled ``Federalism'' (64 FR 43255, August
10, 1999), requires the EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure
``meaningful and timely input by State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that have federalism implications.''
``Policies that have federalism implications'' is defined in the
Executive Order to include regulations that have ``substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government.''
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government, as
specified in Executive Order 13132, because it merely approves or
disapproves certain State requirements for inclusion into the SIP and
does not alter the relationship or the distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the CAA. Thus, Executive Order 13132
does not apply to this action.
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000), because the SIP
submittals the EPA is approving or disapproving would not apply in
Indian country located in the state, and the EPA notes that it will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal
law. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23,
1997) as applying only to those regulatory actions that concern health
or safety risks, such that the analysis required under section 5-501 of
the Executive Order has the potential to influence the regulation. This
action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is not an
economically significant regulatory action based on health or safety
risks subject to Executive Order 13045 . This SIP action under section
110 of the CAA will not in-and-of itself create any new regulations but
simply approves or disapproves certain State requirements for inclusion
into the SIP.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355,
May 22, 2001) because it is not a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (``NTTAA''), Public Law 104-113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C.
272 note) directs the EPA to use voluntary consensus standards in its
regulatory activities unless to do so would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards
are technical standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods,
sampling procedures, and business practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies. NTTAA directs the EPA
to provide Congress, through OMB, explanations when the Agency decides
not to use available and applicable voluntary consensus standards.
The EPA believes that this action is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of NTTAA because application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 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.
The EPA lacks the discretionary authority to address environmental
justice in this action. In reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is
to approve or disapprove state choices, based on the criteria of the
CAA. Accordingly, this action merely approves or disapproves certain
State requirements for inclusion into the SIP under section 110 of the
CAA and will not in-and-of itself create any new requirements.
Accordingly, it does not provide the 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.
K. Congressional Review Act
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. The 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). This rule will be effective on August 6, 2012.
L. Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the appropriate circuit by September 4, 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 CAA section 307(b)(2).
[[Page 39435]]
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Regional haze, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Visibility.
Dated: June 15, 2012.
Samuel Coleman,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
Therefore, 40 CFR part 52, as amended June 7, 2012, at 77 FR 33657
and effective August 6, 2012, is further amended as follows:
PART 52--[AMENDED]
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
0
2. Amend Sec. 52.985 by adding paragraphs (b) and (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.985 Visibility protection.
* * * * *
(b) The regional haze plan submitted by Louisiana on June 13, 2008,
includes measures for meeting the requirements of: 40 CFR 51.308(d),
for the core requirements for regional haze plans, except for the
requirements of 40 CFR 51.308(d)(3); 40 CFR 51.308(f), for the
commitment to submit comprehensive periodic revisions of regional haze
plans; 40 CFR 51.308(g), for the commitment to submit periodic reports
describing progress towards the reasonable progress goals; 40 CFR
51.308(h), for the commitment to conduct periodic determinations of the
adequacy of the existing regional haze plan; and 40 CFR 51.308(i), for
coordination with state and Federal Land Managers. EPA has given
partial limited approval to the plan provisions addressing these
requirements.
(c) The regional haze plan submitted by Louisiana on June 13, 2008,
does not include fully approvable measures for meeting the requirements
of 40 CFR 51.308(d)(3), long-term strategy for regional haze as it
relies on deficient non-electric generating units Best Available
Retrofit
Technology (BART) analyses; and 40 CFR 51.308(e), BART requirements
for regional haze visibility impairment with respect to emissions of
visibility impairing pollutants from four non-electric generating
units. EPA has given partial disapproval to the plan provisions
addressing these requirements.
[FR Doc. 2012-15729 Filed 7-2-12; 8:45 am]
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