Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; California; South Coast; Contingency Measures for 1997 PM2.5, 37741-37752 [2013-14918]
Download as PDF
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
may result in hazardous radiation
exposure.
(v) In the case of laser products other
than laser systems, a statement of the
compatibility requirements for a laser
energy source that will assure
compliance of the laser product with
this section and, if applicable, with
§ 1040.11.
(vi) For Class 1M and 2M laser
products, an additional warning is
required. This warning must state that
viewing the laser output with optical
instruments may result in an eye hazard
for Class 1M or an increased eye hazard
for Class 2M.
(2) Purchasing and servicing
information. Manufacturers of laser
products must provide or cause to be
provided:
(i) In all catalogs, specification sheets,
and descriptive brochures pertaining to
each laser product, a statement of the
class designation of the laser product.
(ii) To servicing dealers and
distributors and to others upon request
at a cost not to exceed the cost of
preparation and distribution, adequate
instructions for radiation safety
procedures during service. The
radiation safety procedures must
include:
(A) Precautions to be taken to avoid
possible exposure of service and other
personnel to hazardous levels of laser
and collateral radiation,
(B) A listing of controls and
procedures that could be utilized by
persons other than the manufacturer or
the manufacturer’s agents to increase
the hazard by increasing accessible
levels of radiation,
(C) A description of the displaceable
portions of protective housings that
could allow human access to hazardous
levels of laser or collateral radiation,
and
(D) Legible reproductions (color
optional) of required labels and hazard
warnings required by paragraph (g) of
this section and, if applicable, by
§ 1040.11, to be affixed to the laser
product or provided with the laser
product.
(i) Modification of certified laser
products. The modification of a laser
product previously certified under
§ 1010.2 of this subchapter by any
person engaged in the business of
manufacturing, assembling, or
modifying laser products constitutes
manufacturing under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act if the
modification affects any aspect of the
product’s performance or intended
function(s) for which this section or
§ 1040.11 have an applicable
requirement. The person who performs
such modification must recertify and re-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
identify the product in accordance with
the provisions of §§ 1010.2 and 1010.3
of this subchapter.
■ 10. Section 1040.11 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 1040.11
Specific purpose laser products.
(a) Medical laser products. Each
medical laser product must comply with
all of the applicable requirements of
§ 1040.10 for laser products of its class.
In addition, such products must comply
with the following specified clauses and
subclauses of IEC 60601–2–22:2007 and
IEC 60825–1:2007 (incorporated by
reference; see § 1040.5).
(1) Instructions for use, subclause
201.7.9.2 of IEC 60601–2–22:2007;
(2) Protection against unwanted and
excessive radiation hazards, clause
201.10 of IEC 60601–2–22:2007, except
for:
(i) Applicability to medical LED
products, and
(ii) Emission indicator, subclause
201.10.4(e) of IEC 60601–2–22:2007, for
which subclause 4.7 of IEC 60825–
1:2007 is applicable;
(3) Indication of laser output,
subclause 201.12.1.101 of IEC 60601–2–
22:2007;
(4) Indication of parameters relevant
to safety, subclause 201.12.4.2 of IEC
60601–2–22:2007;
(5) Calibration procedures, subclause
201.7.9.2.101, 4th dash of IEC 60601–2–
22:2007;
(6) Incorrect output, subclause
201.12.4.4 of IEC 60601–2–22:2007; and
(7) Emergency laser stop, subclause
201.12.4.4.101 of IEC 60601–2–22:2007.
(b) Surveying, leveling, and alignment
laser products. Each surveying, leveling,
or alignment laser product must comply
with all of the applicable requirements
of § 1040.10 for a Class 1, 2, or 3R laser
product and must not permit human
access to laser radiation in excess of the
accessible emission limits of Class 3R.
(c) Demonstration laser products.
Each demonstration laser product must
comply with all of the applicable
requirements of § 1040.10 for a Class 1,
2, or 3R laser product and must not
permit human access to laser radiation
in excess of the accessible emission
limits of Class 3R.
(d) Children’s toy laser products. Each
children’s toy laser product must
comply with all of the applicable
requirements of § 1040.10 for a Class 1
laser product and must not permit
human access to laser radiation in
excess of the accessible emission limits
of Class 1 under any conditions of
operation, maintenance, service, or
failure. If a children’s toy laser product
also meets the definition of a
demonstration laser product or
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
37741
surveying, leveling, and alignment laser
product, then the classification limit for
children’s toy laser product applies.
(e) Laser products procured by the
U.S. Department of Defense (DOD).
Laser products procured by the DOD for
use in combat, combat training, or that
are classified in the interest of national
security are exempt from the other
provisions of this section, and from
§§ 1002.10, 1002.11, 1002.13 of this
subchapter, and those provisions of
§ 1040.10 that are determined not to be
appropriate for the intended military
application. In order for this exemption
to apply to a specific laser product, the
manufacturer of such product shall
obtain a letter from an authorized DOD
procuring Agency that applies the
exemption to the products. The
exemption letter must be obtained prior
to sale and must be retained for
subsequent sales of the exempted
products under the specific contract to
any DOD Agency.
Dated: June 18, 2013.
Leslie Kux,
Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2013–14846 Filed 6–21–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2013–0384; FRL–9826–2]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; California;
South Coast; Contingency Measures
for 1997 PM2.5 Standards
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
a state implementation plan (SIP)
revision submitted by California to
address Clean Air Act (CAA)
contingency measure requirements for
the 1997 annual and 24-hour national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS)
for fine particulate matter (PM2.5) in the
Los Angeles-South Coast Air Basin
(South Coast). Final approval of this SIP
revision would terminate the sanctions
clocks and a federal implementation
plan (FIP) clock that were triggered by
EPA’s partial disapproval of a related
SIP submission on November 9, 2011
(76 FR 69928).
DATES: Any comments must arrive by
July 24, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by docket number EPA–R09–
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
37742
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
OAR–2013–0384, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
instructions.
• Email: lo.doris@epa.gov.
• Mail or deliver: Marty Robin, Office
of Air Planning (AIR–2), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street, San
Francisco, CA 94105.
Instructions: All comments will be
included in the public docket without
change and may be made available
online at www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Information that
you consider CBI or otherwise protected
should be clearly identified as such and
should not be submitted through
www.regulations.gov or email. The
www.regulations.gov Web site is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, and EPA
will not know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send
email directly to EPA, your email
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the public
comment. If EPA cannot read your
comments due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for
this action is available electronically on
the www.regulations.gov Web site and
in hard copy at EPA Region 9, 75
Hawthorne Street, San Francisco,
California, 94105. While all documents
in the docket are listed in the index,
some information may be publicly
available only at the hard copy location
(e.g., copyrighted material), and some
may not be publicly available at either
location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the hard
copy materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
below.
Copies of the SIP materials are also
available for inspection at the following
locations:
• California Air Resources Board,
1001 I Street, Sacramento, California
95814, and
• South Coast Air Quality
Management District, 21865 E. Copley
Drive, Diamond Bar, California 91765.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Doris Lo, Air Planning Office (AIR–2),
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 9, (415) 972–3959,
lo.doris@epa.gov.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of California Submittal
III. EPA Review of the SIP Revision
A. SIP Procedural Requirements
B. Substantive Requirements for
Contingency Measures
C. Section 110(l) of the Act
IV. Proposed Action and Public Comment
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On July 18, 1997 (62 FR 36852), EPA
established new national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS) for PM2.5,
particulate matter with a diameter of 2.5
microns or less, including annual
standards of 15.0 micrograms per cubic
meter (mg/m3) based on a 3-year average
of annual mean PM2.5 concentrations,
and 24-hour (daily) standards of 65 mg/
m3 based on a 3-year average of the 98th
percentile of 24-hour concentrations. 40
CFR 50.7. Effective April 5, 2005, EPA
designated the ‘‘Los Angeles-South
Coast Air Basin’’ in California (South
Coast), including Orange County, the
southwestern two-thirds of Los Angeles
County, southwestern San Bernardino
County, and western Riverside County,
as nonattainment for the 1997 24-hour
and annual PM2.5 standards. See 70 FR
944 (January 5, 2005) and 40 CFR
81.305.1 The local air district with
primary responsibility for developing a
plan to attain the PM2.5 NAAQS in this
area is the South Coast Air Quality
Management District (SCAQMD or
District).
California has made numerous SIP
submittals to address the South Coast
area’s nonattainment designation for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS. The two principal
ones are the SCAQMD’s ‘‘Final 2007 Air
Quality Management Plan’’ (South Coast
2007 AQMP), submitted on November
28, 2007, and the California Air
Resources Board’s (CARB’s) ‘‘State
Strategy for California’s 2007 State
Implementation Plan’’ (2007 State
Strategy), submitted on November 16,
2007 and revised in 2009 and 2011
through CARB’s ‘‘2009 State Strategy
Status Report’’ and ‘‘2011 Progress
Report.’’
On November 9, 2011, EPA partially
approved and partially disapproved the
1 EPA has also designated the South Coast area as
nonattainment for the more stringent 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS of 35 mg/m3, which EPA promulgated on
October 17, 2006 and codified in 40 CFR 50.13. 74
FR 58688 (November 13, 2009). In this preamble,
all references to the PM2.5 NAAQS, unless
otherwise specified, are to the 1997 24-hour PM2.5
standards of 65 mg/m3 and annual standards of 15
mg/m3 as codified in 40 CFR 50.7.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
South Coast 2007 AQMP and the 2007
State Strategy (collectively the ‘‘South
Coast PM2.5 SIP’’). 76 FR 69928. As part
of this action, EPA disapproved the
contingency measure provisions in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP as failing to meet
the requirements of CAA section
172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1012, which
require that the SIP for each PM2.5
nonattainment area contain contingency
measures to be implemented if the area
fails to make reasonable further progress
(RFP) or to attain the NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date. See 76 FR
41578–41580 (July 14, 2011) and 76 FR
69947 (November 9, 2011). EPA found
that the suggested contingency measures
contained in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP
did not meet the minimum CAA
requirements because, among other
things, the measures were not fully
adopted and the District had failed to
quantify the SIP-creditable emission
reductions they would achieve. Id.
As EPA explained in the proposed
rule, contingency measures must be
fully adopted rules or control measures
that are ready to be implemented
quickly without significant additional
action by the State, must be measures
not relied on in the plan to demonstrate
RFP or attainment, and should provide
SIP-creditable emissions reductions
equivalent to one year of RFP. See 76 FR
41652 (July 14, 2011) at 41578; see also
‘‘Final Technical Support Document
and Response to Comments, Final
Rulemaking Action on the South Coast
2007 AQMP for PM2.5 and the South
Coast Portions of the Revised 2007 State
Strategy,’’ Air Division, U.S. EPA
Region 9, September 30, 2011 (‘‘Final
TSD for South Coast PM2.5 SIP’’) at pp.
123–130. Additionally, the SIP should
contain trigger mechanisms for the
contingency measures and specify a
schedule for their implementation. Id.
Although CARB’s 2011 Progress
Report demonstrated that existing CARB
mobile source measures would achieve
24 tons per day (tpd) of NOX reductions
and 13 tpd of VOC reductions in 2015,
the year after the attainment year, EPA
found that these measures alone were
not adequate to satisfy the Act’s
contingency measure requirements. See
76 FR 41478–80 and 76 FR 69947–8,
69952. Specifically, EPA reviewed the
information provided in the 2011
Progress Report and found that these
post-attainment year emission
reductions were not sufficient to
achieve one year’s worth of RFP on a
pollutant-specific basis.2 76 FR 41579–
2 EPA estimated one year’s worth of RFP to be
approximately 49 tpd of NOX, 29 tpd of VOC, 0.7
tpd of direct PM2.5 and 3.8 tpd of SOX reductions.
See Final TSD at Table I–2 (pg. 128). Thus, the 24
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
41580. EPA also found that the South
Coast PM2.5 SIP did not address the
contingency measure requirement for
the 2012 RFP year. Id. at Table 9.
Accordingly, EPA disapproved the
contingency measure provisions in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP for failure to
satisfy the Act’s contingency measure
requirements for the 2012 RFP year and
for the 2015 attainment date. Id. at
41580 and 76 FR 69952.
II. Summary of California Submittal
On November 14, 2011, CARB
submitted the ‘‘South Coast Air Quality
Management District Proposed
Contingency Measures for the 2007
PM2.5 SIP’’ (dated October 2011)
(‘‘Contingency Measures SIP’’) as a
revision to the California SIP. The
November 14, 2011 submittal includes a
copy of the Contingency Measures SIP
itself; a letter dated November 14, 2011
from James N. Goldstene, Executive
Officer, California Air Resources Board,
to Jared Blumenfeld, Regional
Administrator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 9, submitting
the adopted Contingency Measures SIP
for EPA review; CARB Executive Order
S–11–023 adopting the Contingency
Measures SIP; a letter dated October 26,
2011 from Barry R. Wallerstein,
Executive Officer, SCAQMD, to James
Goldstene, Executive Officer, CARB,
submitting the adopted Contingency
Measures SIP for CARB review and
approval; SCAQMD Resolution No. 11–
24 approving the Contingency Measures
SIP; and public process documentation.
On April 24, 2013, the District
submitted a technical clarification to the
Contingency Measures SIP, including
updated emissions data for 2012. See
letter dated April 24, 2013, from Elaine
Chang, Deputy Executive Officer,
SCAQMD, to Deborah Jordan, Director,
Air Division, EPA Region 9, Re: ‘‘Update
of the 2012 RFP Emissions and 2015
Reductions from Contingency Measures
for the 2007 Annual PM2.5 Air Quality
Management Plan for the South Coast
Air Basin,’’ including attachments
(hereinafter ‘‘2013 Supplement’’).
The Contingency Measures SIP, as
supplemented in 2013, contains: (1) The
District’s demonstration that actual
emission levels in the South Coast in
2012 were below the RFP ‘‘benchmarks’’
for the 2012 RFP year; (2) identification
of SIP-creditable control measures that
will provide emission reductions in
2015 in excess of those relied on to
demonstrate RFP and attainment; and
tpd of NOX reductions and 13 tpd of VOC
reductions achieved in 2015 by CARB’s mobile
source measures would amount to approximately
half of those NOX and VOC measures needed to
achieve one year’s worth of RFP reductions.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
(3) the SCAQMD’s analysis of
significant air quality improvements in
the South Coast area that the District
believes EPA should take into account
in its review of and action on the SIP
submission.
III. EPA Review of the SIP Revision
A. SIP Procedural Requirements
CAA sections 110(a) and 110(l)
require that revisions to a SIP be
adopted by the State after reasonable
notice and public hearing. EPA has
promulgated specific procedural
requirements for SIP revisions in 40
CFR part 51, subpart F. These
requirements include publication of
notices, by prominent advertisement in
the relevant geographic area, of a public
hearing on the proposed revisions, a
public comment period of at least 30
days, and an opportunity for a public
hearing.
CARB’s SIP submission includes
public process documentation for the
Contingency Measures SIP, including
documentation of a duly noticed public
hearing held by the District on October
7, 2011 on the proposed Contingency
Measures SIP. On November 14, 2011,
CARB adopted the Contingency
Measures SIP as a revision to the
California SIP and submitted it to EPA
for action pursuant to CAA section
110(k).3 We find that the process
followed by CARB and the District in
adopting the Contingency Measures SIP
complies with the procedural
requirements for SIP revisions under
CAA section 110 and EPA’s
implementing regulations.
B. Substantive Requirements for
Contingency Measures
Section 172(c)(9) of the CAA requires
that the SIP for each nonattainment area
‘‘provide for the implementation of
specific measures to be undertaken if
the area fails to make reasonable further
progress, or to attain the [NAAQS] by
the attainment date applicable under
[part D of title I]’’ and requires that these
measures ‘‘take effect without further
action by the State or EPA.’’ The Act
does not specify how many contingency
measures are required or the magnitude
of emissions reductions that must be
provided by these measures. Consistent
with the text of section 172(c)(9),
however, these measures must be
specific, adopted measures that are
ready to be implemented quickly upon
failure to meet RFP or failure of the area
3 The 2013 Supplement is not subject to
additional procedural requirements under the Act
as it is a technical clarification that does not alter
the substance of the Contingency Measures SIP.
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
37743
to meet the standard by its attainment
date.4
EPA provided guidance on the section
172(c)(9) contingency measure
requirement in an interpretative
document entitled ‘‘State
Implementation Plans; General
Preamble for the Implementation of
Title I of the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1990,’’ 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992)
(‘‘General Preamble’’). As EPA
explained in the General Preamble,
‘‘contingency measures should, at a
minimum, ensure that an appropriate
level of emissions reduction progress
continues to be made if attainment [or]
RFP is not achieved and additional
planning by the State is needed.’’ 57 FR
13511. These emission reductions
would be in addition to those that were
already scheduled to occur in
accordance with the plan for the area.
Id. at n. 2 and 13543–544. Additionally,
States must show that their contingency
measures can be implemented with
minimal further action on their part and
with no additional rulemaking actions
such as public hearings or legislative
review. In general, EPA expects all
actions needed to effect full
implementation of the measures to
occur within 60 days after EPA notifies
the State of its failure. 57 FR 13512 and
13543–544; see also 59 FR 41998 at
42014–42015 (August 16, 1994)(‘‘PM–10
Addendum’’).
Consistent with these longstanding
interpretations of the Act, EPA
explained in the preamble to its 2007
implementation rule for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS that the SIP should contain
trigger mechanisms for the contingency
measures, specify a schedule for
implementation, and indicate that the
measures will be implemented without
significant further action by the State or
EPA. See 72 FR 20586 at 20642–20645
(April 25, 2007) and 40 CFR 51.1012.5
4 We refer to those measures addressing failure to
make RFP as ‘‘RFP contingency measures’’ and
those measures addressing failure to attain as
‘‘attainment contingency measures.’’
5 Although the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia (DC Circuit) recently remanded
this rule and directed EPA to re-promulgate it
pursuant to subpart 4 of part D, title I of the CAA
(see Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 706
F.3d 428 (D.C. Cir., Jan. 4, 2013)), the court’s ruling
in this case does not affect EPA’s action on the
Contingency Measures SIP. Subpart 4 of part D, title
I of the Act contains no specific provision
governing contingency measures for PM10 or PM2.5
nonattainment areas that supersedes the general
contingency measure requirement for all
nonattainment areas in CAA section 172(c)(9).
Thus, even if EPA applies the subpart 4
requirements to our evaluation of the Contingency
Measures SIP and disregards the provisions of the
2007 PM2.5 implementation rule recently remanded
by the court, the general requirement for
contingency measures in CAA section 172(c)(9) and
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
Continued
24JNP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
37744
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
Contingency measures can include
federal measures and local measures
already scheduled for implementation
that provide emissions reductions in
excess of those needed to provide for
RFP or expeditious attainment. The key
is that the statute requires that
contingency measures provide for
additional emission reductions that are
not relied on for RFP or attainment and
that are not included in the RFP or
attainment demonstrations. The purpose
is ‘‘to provide a cushion while the plan
is being revised to meet the missed
milestone.’’ 72 FR 20642–20643.
Nothing in the statute precludes a State
from implementing such measures
before they are triggered. See, e.g., LEAN
v. EPA, 382 F.3d 575 (5th Cir. 2004)
(upholding contingency measures that
were previously required and
implemented and which provided
emissions reductions in excess of those
in the attainment demonstration and
RFP SIP).
The EPA has approved numerous SIPs
under this interpretation—i.e., SIPs that
use as contingency measures one or
more federal or local measures that are
in place and provide reductions that are
in excess of the reductions required by
the attainment demonstration or RFP
plan. See, e.g., 62 FR 15844 (April 3,
1997) (direct final rule approving
Indiana ozone SIP revision); 62 FR
66279 (December 18, 1997) (final rule
approving Illinois ozone SIP revision);
66 FR 30811 (June 8, 2001) (direct final
rule approving Rhode Island ozone SIP
revision); 66 FR 586 (January 3, 2001)
(final rule approving District of
Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia
ozone SIP revisions); and 66 FR 634
(January 3, 2001) (final rule approving
Connecticut ozone SIP revision). The
State may use the same measures for
purposes of both RFP and attainment
contingency if the measures will
provide reductions in the relevant years.
Should these measures first be triggered
for failure to make RFP, however, the
State would need to submit replacement
contingency measures for attainment
purposes. See 57 FR 13511.
With respect to the level of emission
reductions associated with contingency
measures, EPA has recommended that
states consider ‘‘the potential nature and
extent of any attainment shortfall for the
area’’ and the amount of actual
emissions reductions required by the
SIP control strategy to attain the
standards. PM–10 Addendum at 42015;
see also 72 FR 20643. The contingency
measures are to be implemented in the
event that the area does not meet RFP
EPA’s longstanding interpretation of it continue to
apply.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
or attain the standards by the attainment
date, and ‘‘should represent a portion of
the actual emissions reductions
necessary to bring about attainment in
[the] area.’’ 72 FR 20643. Generally, EPA
has recommended that the emissions
reductions anticipated by the
contingency measures should be equal
to approximately 1 year’s worth of
emissions reductions necessary to
achieve RFP for the area. See id. and
PM–10 Addendum at 42015.
1. 2012 RFP Contingency Measures
The Contingency Measures SIP states
that the District has identified several
already-adopted rules that will achieve
additional emission reductions for the
2012 RFP year beyond those reductions
already accounted for in the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP. Additionally, the
Contingency Measures SIP provides the
District’s rationale for concluding that
significant PM2.5 air quality
improvements in the South Coast area
should be accounted for in evaluating
the 2012 RFP contingency measure
requirement for the area. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 5–11.
Finally, the 2013 Supplement to the
Contingency Measures SIP provides a
demonstration that the South Coast area
achieved its 2012 RFP benchmarks.
Based on our review of the District’s
analyses and our independent review of
available PM2.5 air monitoring data for
the 2002 to 2012 period, EPA is
proposing to find that the RFP
requirement for the 2012 RFP year has
been met and that, therefore, the
contingency measure requirement for
that year is now moot.6
According to the District, recent
modeling analyses indicate that
‘‘existing air quality at all monitoring
stations is already better than it would
be if emissions were at the levels
projected in the plan for RFP, and an
additional one year’s worth of
reductions had been implemented (i.e.,
simulated implementation of
contingency measure on top of actually
meeting RFP).’’ Contingency Measures
SIP at 2. The District states that the
speciated regional modeling analysis in
the South Coast PM2.5 SIP had predicted
that implementation of the plan would
result in a reduction in the basin-wide
6 Given our proposal to conclude that
contingency measures for the 2012 RFP year are no
longer required, we do not evaluate here the
incentive programs and voluntary measures that the
Contingency Measures SIP discusses for purposes of
addressing the 2012 RFP contingency measure
requirement. To the extent the District discusses
these same measures to address the attainment
contingency measure requirement, however, we
have reviewed those analyses and discuss our
evaluation of them in Section III.B.2.b, infra
(‘‘Attainment Contingency Measures’’).
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
design concentration from 22.7 mg/m3 in
2005 to a value of 17.98 mg/m3 in 2010.
Id. at 5. The maximum observed design
value for 2010 at the design value site 7
(Rubidoux 8), however, was 15.01 mg/m3
according to the District, 17 percent
lower than the concentrations projected
in the plan. See id.; see also id. at 10,
Table 2. Accounting for temporary
reductions in ambient PM2.5 levels due
to favorable weather and reduced
economic activity, the District estimates
the PM2.5 design value ‘‘improvement’’
attributable to implementation of its
plans, compared to previous
projections, to be approximately 1.88
mg/m3 in 2010. Id. at 8–10 and Table 2.
If PM2.5 air quality at the design site
(Rubidoux) were to remain at 2010
levels through 2012, the difference
between the predicted and observed
design value would show a 1.47 mg/m3
improvement over the 2012 projections
underlying the South Coast PM2.5 SIP.
Id. at 5. According to the District, these
PM2.5 air quality improvements equate
to approximately 420 tons per day (tpd)
of NOX emission reductions in 2012. Id.
Additionally, the District’s 2013
Supplement includes a demonstration
that the South Coast area achieved its
emission reduction benchmarks for the
2012 RFP year. Specifically, the updated
emissions inventory data 9 provided in
this technical supplement show that
emissions of direct PM2.5, NOX, VOC,
and SOX were all below the
corresponding 2012 benchmarks in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See id. at
Attachment 1 (‘‘Updated Table C–2,
South Coast Air Basin PM2.5 Reasonable
Further Progress’’). Based on the
District’s evaluation of these updated
emissions data, the District concludes
that it satisfied its 2012 RFP
benchmarks and, accordingly, that RFP
7 Consistent with EPA’s definition of ‘‘design
value’’ in 40 CFR 58.1, we use the term ‘‘design
value site’’ to refer to the monitoring site that
records the highest calculated pollutant
concentration (according to the applicable appendix
of 40 CFR part 50) in the nonattainment area.
8 Although the current design value site for the
area is the Mira Loma (Van Buren) monitoring
station, this site was not accounted for in the
analyses underlying the South Coast PM2.5 SIP as
it was not operational until 2007. See Contingency
Measures SIP at 5, n. 2. Therefore, the District
compared the projected and observed values for the
Rubidoux monitoring site, which was the design
value site prior to 2007.
9 This updated emissions data is based on
emissions inventory data that the District adopted
in December 2012 as part of its Final 2012 Air
Quality Management Plan, which CARB submitted
to EPA as a SIP revision on February 13, 2013. See
letter dated February 13, 2013, from James
Goldstene, Executive Officer, CARB, to Jared
Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9,
transmitting 2012 AQMP and enclosures.
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
contingency measures for this milestone
year are no longer needed. See id.
We agree with the District’s
conclusion that the South Coast area
met the 2012 RFP benchmarks in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP and that RFP
contingency measures for 2012 are,
therefore, no longer needed. EPA
reviewed the updated 2012 emissions
inventory data provided by the District
in the 2013 Supplement and confirmed
that the data are consistent with the
emissions inventory data recently
submitted to EPA as part of the District’s
2012 AQMP, which includes the State’s
plan to provide for attainment of the
2006 PM2.5 NAAQS in the South Coast
area. See Memorandum from Wienke
Tax to File dated May 30, 2013. The
updated data in the 2013 Supplement
show that actual emissions of direct
PM2.5, NOX, VOC, and SOX in the South
Coast were all below the corresponding
2012 benchmarks in the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP.10 See id.
Additionally, EPA independently
reviewed PM2.5 air quality data available
in EPA’s ‘‘Air Quality System’’ (AQS)
for the 2002–2012 period to assess the
District’s representations regarding
PM2.5 air quality improvements in the
South Coast area,11 as well as the
District’s estimates of the amounts of
emission reductions that these air
quality improvements represent. We
believe these assessments further
support a conclusion that emission
levels in the South Coast area were
below the 2012 RFP benchmarks in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP. For more detail
on our technical evaluations, see
Memorandum from Carol Bohnenkamp
to File dated May 30, 2013.
Based on this information, EPA
proposes to find that the RFP
contingency measure requirement for
2012 is now moot as applied to the
South Coast. The sole purpose of RFP
contingency measures is to provide
continued progress if the area fails to
meet its RFP goal. Failure to meet the
2012 benchmark would have required
California to implement RFP
contingency measures and to revise the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP to assure that the
plan still provided for attainment by the
attainment date of April 5, 2015. In this
case, however, the 2013 Supplement
10 Emissions in the area were well below both the
2012 RFP benchmarks that EPA approved as part
of the South Coast PM2.5 SIP (see 76 FR 41578,
Table 8, ‘‘revised projected controlled emissions
levels’’ for 2012) and the RFP ‘‘targets’’ listed in
Attachment 1 of the 2013 Supplement, identified as
‘‘linear benchmarks’’ in the plan. See CARB 2011
Progress Report (Hearing Date: April 28, 2011), at
Table C–2.
11 For a more detailed discussion of the air quality
data that EPA evaluated, see Section III.B.2.c, infra
(‘‘PM2.5 air quality data’’).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
submitted by the District demonstrates
that actual emission levels in 2012 met
the SIP-approved benchmarks for all
four pollutants (PM2.5, NOX, VOC, and
SOX), and both the District’s and EPA’s
evaluations of the substantial PM2.5 air
quality improvements in the South
Coast area further support a conclusion
that emission levels in the area were
well below the 2012 RFP benchmarks.
Accordingly, RFP contingency measures
for 2012 no longer have meaning or
purpose, and the requirement for them
is moot.
2. Attainment Contingency Measures
a. Regulatory Measures and Programs
The South Coast PM2.5 SIP, as
partially approved and partially
disapproved by EPA in November 2011
(76 FR 69928), provides for the
continuing implementation of existing
CARB mobile source measures that will
achieve 24 tpd of NOX reductions and
13 tpd of VOC reductions in 2015. See
76 FR 41562 at 41580, Table 9, and
Final TSD for South Coast PM2.5 SIP at
126. These mobile source emission
reductions are surplus to the reductions
relied upon to demonstrate RFP and
attainment because they occur in 2015
(after implementation of all control
measures necessary for expeditious
attainment) 12 and will achieve
approximately one half of the NOX and
VOC emission reductions needed to
achieve 1 year’s worth of RFP.13
The Contingency Measures SIP also
identifies two stationary source control
measures that the District believes
should be creditable towards meeting
the attainment contingency measure
requirement: (1) The ‘‘SOX RECLAIM
Shave,’’ which is projected to achieve
1.10 tpd of SOX reductions in 2014, and
(2) SCAQMD Rule 1113 (Architectural
Coatings), which is projected to achieve
1.30 tpd of VOC reductions in 2015. See
Contingency Measure SIP at 12–13, 17
and 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2.14
EPA approved the SOX RECLAIM
Shave into the California SIP on August
12, 2011. See 76 FR 50128. Because all
of the SOX emission reductions
associated with these rule
improvements have already been
12 Consistent with CAA section 172(c)(1) and 40
CFR 51.1007(b), the South Coast PM2.5 SIP provides
for the implementation of all control measures
needed for attainment as expeditiously as
practicable and no later than the beginning of the
year prior to the attainment date (i.e., by January
2014). See 76 FR 69928 at 69942 (November 9,
2011).
13 See n. 2, supra.
14 The Contingency Measures SIP identifies
emission reductions for 2014 but in the 2013
Supplement, the District provided updated 2015
emission reductions for Rule 1113 and several other
measures. See 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2.
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
37745
credited toward the PM2.5 attainment
demonstration as part of EPA’s
November 9, 2011 final action on the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP, the 1.10 tpd of
SOX reductions identified in the
Contingency Measure SIP are not
surplus to attainment requirements and,
therefore, cannot be treated as
contingency measures. See 76 FR 41562
at 41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011) and 76
FR 69928 at 69948, Table 1 (November
9, 2011).
EPA has also approved SCAQMD
Rule 1113 (Architectural Coatings) into
the California SIP. 78 FR 18244 (March
26, 2013). The 1.30 tpd of 2015 VOC
reductions associated with this measure
in the Contingency Measure SIP are not
relied on for RFP or attainment
purposes in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP.
See South Coast 2007 AQMP at pp. 4–
10, Table 4–2A; see also 76 FR 41562 at
41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011) and 76 FR
69928 at 69948, Table 1 (November 9,
2011). EPA therefore agrees with the
District that Rule 1113 may serve as an
attainment contingency measure for
purposes of the PM2.5 NAAQS.
Additionally, the 2013 Supplement
identifies two new stationary source
control measures scheduled for
adoption in May 2013 that are expected
to collectively achieve 0.6 tpd of direct
PM2.5 emission reductions in 2015. See
2013 Supplement, Attachment 2
(identifying SCAQMD Rule 444 and
Rule 445). The 0.6 tpd of direct PM2.5
emission reductions associated with
these two measures in the Contingency
Measure SIP are not relied on for RFP
or attainment purposes in the South
Coast PM2.5 SIP. See 76 FR 41562 at
41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011) and 76 FR
69928 at 69948, Table 1 (November 9,
2011). On May 3, 2013, the District
adopted both measures and CARB
submitted them to EPA on June 12,
2013. In a separate notice published in
today’s Federal Register, EPA is
proposing to approve these rules into
the California SIP. See ‘‘Revisions to the
California State Implementation Plan,
South Coast Air Quality Management
District,’’ pre-publication proposed rule
signed June 12, 2013.
Finally, the Contingency Measures
SIP states that an additional 17.6 tpd of
NOX reductions, 4.5 tpd of VOC
reductions, and 1.1 tpd of SOX
reductions will be achieved in 2015
through continued implementation of
the District’s 2007 Ozone Attainment
Plan, and that these ‘‘backstop’’
emission reductions provide the
equivalent of contingency measures for
the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 10–11 and
Table 3. Although control measures
relied upon in an ozone attainment plan
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
37746
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
may qualify for approval as contingency
measures for the PM2.5 NAAQS,
provided the measures are surplus to
PM2.5 attainment and RFP requirements
and meet all other EPA criteria for SIP
approval, the Contingency Measures SIP
does not provide EPA with sufficient
information to determine whether the
referenced ozone-related measures meet
these approval criteria. Accordingly, we
cannot at this time propose to approve
these ‘‘backstop’’ ozone-related
measures as PM2.5 contingency
measures at this time.
In sum, taking into account surplus
emission reductions in the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP that EPA previously identified
as available for contingency measure
purposes, the total amount of emission
reductions from regulatory control
measures that we are proposing to
approve as part of the Contingency
Measures SIP are as follows: 24 tpd of
NOX reductions from fleet turnover;
14.3 tpd of VOC reductions from fleet
turnover and SCAQMD Rule 1113; and
0.6 tpd of direct PM2.5 emission
reductions from SCAQMD Rule 444 and
Rule 445, which will be available for
contingency purposes upon final EPA
approval of these rules into the SIP. See
Table 4.
b. Voluntary Measures, Incentive
Programs, and Miscellaneous ‘‘Excess
Reductions’’
The Contingency Measures SIP
identifies several voluntary measures
and incentive programs that the District
believes should qualify for approval as
PM2.5 contingency measures because
emission reductions achieved by these
measures have not been accounted for
in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. The
submittal also identifies certain
miscellaneous ‘‘excess reductions’’
resulting from economic conditions and
source operations below permit limits,
which the District believes should
qualify for approval as contingency
measures. We discuss each of these
programs/measures and our evaluations
below.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality
Standards Attainment Program
The Contingency Measures SIP
identifies a portion of the Carl Moyer
Memorial Air Quality Standards
Attainment Program (Carl Moyer
Program) as a contingency measure for
the PM2.5 NAAQS. See Contingency
Measures SIP at 14 and 17, Table 4 and
2013 Supplement, Attachment 2. We are
proposing to approve specific amounts
of emission reductions from the Carl
Moyer Program, as identified in the
District’s submissions, for this purpose.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
The Carl Moyer Program is a
California grant program established in
1998 that provides funding to encourage
the voluntary purchase of cleaner-thanrequired engines, equipment, and other
emission reduction technologies. See
generally California Air Resources
Board, ‘‘The Carl Moyer Program
Guidelines, Approved Revisions 2011,’’
Release Date: February 8, 2013, at
Chapter 1 (available electronically at
https://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/moyer/
moyer.htm). In its first 12 years, the Carl
Moyer Program provided over $680
million in state and local funds to
reduce air pollution emissions from
equipment statewide, e.g., by replacing
older trucks with newer, cleaner trucks,
retrofitting controls on existing engines,
and encouraging the early retirement of
older, more polluting vehicles. Id.
The Contingency Measures SIP, as
supplemented in 2013, states that
certain Carl Moyer Program projects
funded beginning in program year
2005–06 to program year 2009–2010
will provide 3.2 tpd of NOX reductions
and 0.2 tpd of PM2.5 reductions in 2015
that may be treated as contingency
measures. See Contingency Measures
SIP at 14 and 17, Table 4 and 2013
Supplement, Attachment 2 (‘‘2015
Emission Reductions Beyond 2007
AQMP SIP Commitment Available for
Contingency’’).15 In the 2013
Supplement, the District clarified that
these emission reductions would be
obtained from the following source
categories participating in Carl Moyer
programs: on-road heavy duty engines,
off-road diesel equipment, marine
engines, and locomotive engines. See
2013 Supplement, Attachment 2, notes.
Under EPA’s long-standing policy,
voluntary mobile source emission
reduction programs (VMEPs) that meet
certain minimum criteria may qualify
for a limited amount of SIP credit under
the CAA. See generally Memorandum
dated October 24, 1997 from Richard D.
Wilson, Acting Assistant Administrator
for Air and Radiation, to EPA Regional
Administrators, Regions 1–10, entitled
‘‘Guidance on Incorporating Voluntary
Mobile Source Emission Reduction
Programs in State Implementation Plans
(SIPs)’’ (hereinafter ‘‘1997 VMEP’’). To
qualify for SIP credit, a VMEP must be
consistent with SIP attainment and RFP
requirements and must achieve
emission reductions that are
15 The Contingency Measures SIP, as initially
submitted in November 2011, provides emission
reductions for 2014 (4.43 tpd of NOX reductions,
0.06 tpd of PM reductions, and 0.17 tpd of VOC
reductions), but we are evaluating the updated 2015
emission reductions provided in the 2013
Supplement because 2015 is the relevant year for
attainment contingency measure purposes.
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
quantifiable, surplus, enforceable, and
permanent. See 1997 VMEP at 6, 7.
Additionally, the VMEP submission
must be accompanied by sufficient
technical support for EPA to determine
that the statutory criteria for approval
are met—e.g., procedures designed to
compare projected emission reductions
with actual emissions reductions
achieved; State commitments to
monitor, assess, and report on program
implementation and actual emission
reductions achieved; and procedures for
the State to remedy emission reduction
shortfalls in a timely manner. Id. The
State must also demonstrate that it has
adequate personnel and program
resources to implement the program and
that the VMEP does not interfere with
other requirements of the Act. Id. EPA
has generally limited the amount of
emission reductions allowed for VMEPs
in a SIP to three percent (3%) of the
total projected future year emission
reductions required to attain the
relevant NAAQS, and with respect to
any particular SIP submittal to
demonstrate attainment or maintenance
of the NAAQS or progress toward
attainment (RFP), 3% of the specific
statutory requirement. Id. at 5.
Consistent with these criteria, the
SCAQMD submitted an enforceable
commitment in 2007 to take ‘‘all actions
necessary to ensure that emission
reductions resulting from projects
funded by the Carl Moyer Program will
meet U.S. EPA criteria (surplus,
quantifiable, enforceable, and
permanent for life of project) and
requirements for SIP creditability to
meet federal Clean Air Act
requirements.’’ See South Coast AQMD
Board Resolution No. 07–9, dated June
1, 2007 (adopting South Coast 2007
AQMP) (‘‘2007 Resolution’’).
Specifically, the 2007 Resolution
includes the District’s commitments to:
(1) Calculate emission reductions from
Carl Moyer Program projects using
established quantification protocols
specified in the applicable Carl Moyer
Program Guidelines; (2) verify surplus
emission reductions through a
comprehensive inspection, monitoring
and reporting program for each project
funded by the Carl Moyer Program, (3)
conduct onsite inspections, random
audits, and other monitoring activities
to ensure that funded projects are
implemented according to contract
terms; (4) submit reports to EPA by
November 30 of each calendar year,
verifying the amounts of actual emission
reductions achieved by the Carl Moyer
Program grants for the preceding
funding cycle, and (5) take specific
actions to remedy any shortfalls in
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
emission reductions, to ensure that
contracted emission reductions occur.
Id. The District also submitted technical
support documentation describing the
Carl Moyer Program, the District’s
policies for implementing the program,
and the methodologies for predicting
emissions benefits. See generally South
Coast 2007 AQMP, Appendix IV–B–3,
‘‘District Implementation of the Carl
Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards
Attainment Program,’’ available
electronically at https://www.aqmd.gov/
aqmp/07aqmp/aqmp/Appendix_IV-B3_section1.pdf.
EPA approved these District
commitments into the California SIP as
part of our November 2011 final action
on the South Coast PM2.5 SIP, thereby
making the commitments federally
enforceable. See 76 FR 69928 at 69954
(November 9, 2011) and 40 CFR
52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(2) (codifying
SCAQMD commitment ‘‘to fulfill
USEPA Requirements for the use of
emissions reductions [from] the Carl
Moyer Program in the State
Implementation Plan, June 1, 2007’’).
EPA also approved the District’s
technical documentation describing the
Carl Moyer Program as part of the South
Coast PM2.5 SIP. See 40 CFR
52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(1). In the 2013
Supplement, the District affirmed its
SIP-approved commitments to ‘‘take all
actions necessary to assure that
emissions reductions resulting from the
projects funded by the Carl Moyer
Program will meet U.S. EPA criteria
. . . and requirements for SIP
creditability,’’ including its obligation to
prepare and submit annual reports to
EPA by November 30 of each year
identifying actual emission reductions
achieved compared to predicted
emissions reductions and audit
information for each grant issued. See
letter dated April 24, 2013, from Elaine
Chang, Deputy Executive Officer,
SCAQMD, to Deborah Jordan, Air
Division Director, U.S. EPA Region 9,
transmitting 2013 Supplement.
The SIP-approved commitments in
the 2007 Resolution enable the District
to quantify the emission reductions
attributed to the Carl Moyer Program,
verify that those emission reductions are
surplus to other CAA requirements,
enforce the conditions of the Carl Moyer
Program grants to ensure that contracted
emission reductions are achieved, and
monitor the continuing implementation
of program grants to ensure that
emission reductions are ‘‘permanent’’
throughout the life of each project. The
3.2 tpd of NOx reductions and 0.2 tpd
of PM2.5 reductions attributed to the Carl
Moyer Program in 2015 for contingency
measure purposes each amount to less
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
than 2% of the total projected emission
reductions of each pollutant needed to
attain the PM2.5 NAAQS in the South
Coast area.16 Finally, information
provided in the South Coast 2007
AQMP demonstrates that the District
has adequate personnel and program
resources to implement the Carl Moyer
Program. See generally, South Coast
2007 AQMP, Appendix IV-B-3, ‘‘District
Implementation of the Carl Moyer
Memorial Air Quality Standards
Attainment Program,’’ at Section 1,
available electronically at https://
www.aqmd.gov/aqmp/07aqmp/aqmp/
Appendix_IV–B–3_section1.pdf.
Based on our evaluation of the
District’s enforceable SIP commitments
regarding the Carl Moyer Program and
technical documentation provided by
the District in its SIP submissions, we
propose to find that the 2015 emission
reductions associated with the Carl
Moyer Program in the Contingency
Measures SIP, as supplemented in 2013,
satisfy the statutory criteria for SIP
credit for contingency measure
purposes. The Carl Moyer Program
procedures have served as models for
the design of national, state, and local
credit validation systems for mobile
source subsidy programs, and California
continuously refines these guidelines to
accurately reflect the reductions
associated with the program subsidies.
The procedures address emission
reduction quantification issues
associated with both baseline emissions
and the amount of reductions
achievable from the various repower,
retrofit, and replacement technologies
and alternative fuel options, as well as
issues associated with project life and
enforceable requirements to ensure that
reductions continue within the
nonattainment area.
Given all of these considerations, we
propose to approve these Carl Moyer
Program emission reductions as
attainment contingency measures for the
PM2.5 NAAQS. Upon EPA’s final
approval of the Contingency Measures
16 The South Coast PM
2.5 SIP projects that the
total amounts of emission reductions needed to
attain the PM2.5 NAAQS, from a 2002 base year to
a 2014 attainment year, are as follows: 633 tpd of
NOx reductions, 370 tpd of VOC reductions, 13 tpd
of direct PM2.5 reductions, and 33 tpd of SOx
reductions. See 76 FR 69928 at 69950, Table 4
(November 9, 2011) and Final TSD at 97 (Table F–
9). Thus, the Carl Moyer Program reductions
identified in the Contingency Measures SIP amount
to approximately 0.5 percent of the NOx reductions
and 1.5 percent of the PM2.5 reductions needed for
timely attainment of the PM2.5 NAAQS. The
Contingency Measures SIP provides these Carl
Moyer Program emission reductions for the sole
purpose of fulfilling the requirements for
contingency measures in CAA section 172(c)(9) and
not for the purposes of demonstrating attainment or
maintenance of the NAAQS or progress toward
attainment (RFP).
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
37747
SIP, the District will be obligated to
monitor, assess, and report to EPA on
implementation of the Carl Moyer
Program with respect to the four specific
source categories identified in the 2013
Supplement (on-road heavy duty
engines, off-road diesel equipment,
marine engines, and locomotive
engines). See 2013 Supplement,
Attachment 2. Additionally, should EPA
subsequently determine that the South
Coast area has failed to attain the PM2.5
NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date of April 5, 2015, the District will
be obligated to verify through its next
annual report to EPA whether the 3.2
tpd of NOx reductions and 0.2 tpd of
PM2.5 reductions identified in the 2013
Supplement occurred in 2015, and if
not, to take specific actions to remedy
any emission reduction shortfalls
consistent with its SIP-approved
commitments in 40 CFR
52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(2). We are
proposing to approve these Carl Moyer
Program emission reductions for the
sole purpose of satisfying the attainment
contingency measure requirement in
CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the South Coast.
Other Voluntary Measures and Incentive
Programs
The Contingency Measures SIP
identifies several other voluntary
measures and incentive programs that
the District believes should qualify for
approval as PM2.5 attainment
contingency measures.17 For the reasons
provided below, these programs do not
qualify for approval as contingency
measures at this time.
First, the submittal states that the
‘‘average vehicle ridership’’ (AVR)
portion of SCAQMD Rule 2202 (OnRoad Mobile Source Vehicle Mitigation
Options) requires employers with 250 or
more employees to develop rideshare
programs or help fund an air quality
improvement program to achieve
equivalent emissions reductions to meet
the AVR target. Contingency Measures
SIP at 13. The District states that this
measure will achieve 1.32 tpd of NOX
reductions and 0.06 tpd of direct PM2.5
reductions in 2014 beyond those relied
17 According to the District, all but one of these
measures will achieve surplus emission reductions
in both 2012 and 2014 and may, therefore, serve
both as 2012 RFP contingency measures and as
attainment contingency measures. As explained
above in Section III.B.1, EPA is not evaluating the
2012 emission reduction estimates that the District
provided for each of these measures, given our
proposal to conclude that the 2012 RFP contingency
measure requirement is now moot for this area. See
n. 6, supra. We therefore evaluate only the emission
reduction estimates associated with these measures
for attainment contingency measure purposes (i.e.,
for 2015), as provided in the 2013 Supplement.
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
37748
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
on for attainment, and that the measure
could therefore serve as an attainment
contingency measure. Id. at 17, Table 4.
EPA does not currently have sufficient
information to evaluate the emission
reductions associated with this measure
as the State has not submitted the
measure or any supporting
documentation to EPA. Thus, we cannot
propose to approve this measure as a
contingency measure at this time.
Second, the submittal states that the
AB 2766 program provides annual
funding to local governments in the
South Coast air basin to reduce mobile
source emissions and that the SCAQMD
submits annual reports about the
emission reductions under AB 2766 to
CARB. Contingency Measures SIP at 13.
The District states that this measure will
achieve 1.90 tpd of NOX reductions and
0.30 tpd of direct PM2.5 reductions in
2014 beyond those relied on for
attainment, and that this measure could
therefore serve as an attainment
contingency measure. Id. at 17, Table 4.
EPA does not currently have sufficient
information to evaluate the emission
reductions associated with this measure
as the State has not submitted the
measure or any supporting
documentation to EPA. Thus, we cannot
approve this measure as a contingency
measure at this time.
Third, the submittal states that the
Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach
(POLA/POLB) have been facilitating use
of shore-side power as part of the San
Pedro Bay Ports Clean Air Action Plan
(referred to as the ‘‘Ocean-Going Vessel
At-Berth’’), and that these measures
reduce emissions further than those
achieved by a statewide (CARB)
regulation that requires a percentage of
certain ocean-going vessels (OGVs) to
use shore-side power while at berth.
Contingency Measures SIP at 14. The
District states that these POLA/POLB
measures will achieve 3.3 tpd of NOX
reductions and 0.06 tpd of direct PM2.5
reductions in 2014 beyond those relied
on for attainment, and that the measures
may therefore serve as attainment
contingency measures. Id. at 17, Table 4.
EPA does not currently have sufficient
information to evaluate the emission
reductions associated with these
measures as the State has not submitted
the measures or any supporting
documentation to EPA. Thus, we cannot
approve these measures as contingency
measures at this time.
Finally, the submittal states that early
implementation of certain provisions of
the ‘‘SCAQMD Surplus Off-Road Opt-In
for NOX’’ (SOON) program, adopted by
the SCAQMD in May 2008, will achieve
0.30 tpd of PM2.5 emission reductions in
2014 beyond those relied on for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
attainment, and that this program could
therefore serve as an attainment
contingency measure. Contingency
Measures SIP at 15 and 17, Table 4.
CARB submitted this measure (Rule
2449) to EPA on July 18, 2008 but EPA
has not yet taken any action on it. Thus,
we cannot propose to approve this
measure as a contingency measure at
this time.
EPA is currently working with the
State and districts to develop reliable
processes for documenting the emission
reductions associated with voluntary
and incentive programs for SIP
purposes. The goal is to develop
processes that ensure that the emission
reductions resulting from voluntary and
incentive programs are surplus,
quantifiable, enforceable and permanent
consistent with the Act as interpreted in
EPA guidance. EPA strongly encourages
CARB and the SCAQMD to continue
implementing effective incentive
programs and voluntary measures as
part of their strategies for meeting air
quality goals and to continue discussing
with EPA the potential incorporation of
these incentive programs and measures
into SIP planning processes going
forward. We welcome public comments
on how to ensure that emission
reductions resulting from these
programs meet the Act’s requirements
for SIP credit.
Miscellaneous ‘‘Excess Reductions’’
The Contingency Measures SIP states
that permitted sources in the South
Coast area often achieve ‘‘excess
reductions’’ beyond those assumed in
the SIP. For example, the District states
that sources typically emit at levels well
below allowable levels to maintain
adequate compliance margins, or they
may comply with stringent control
standards through preconstruction
review processes that reduce emissions
below the levels assumed in the SIP.
Contingency Measures SIP at 15.
Furthermore, the District states that the
recent recession in the region ‘‘would
further lower the growth projections
that were previously assumed in the
2007 PM2.5 SIP.’’ Id. The District states
that these factors combined caused
significantly lower emissions in 2010
compared to the levels projected for that
year in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. Id.
According to the District, these
circumstances will result in
approximately 6.42 tpd of NOX
reductions, 0.45 tpd of PM2.5 reductions,
and 8.75 tpd of VOC reductions in 2014
beyond the reductions relied on for
attainment, which collectively equate to
about 14 tpd of ‘‘NOX equivalent’’
emission reductions for that year. Id. at
15 and 17, Table 4.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
We disagree with these statements.
Emission reductions that occur as a
result of business decisions to maintain
adequate compliance margins or due to
an unexpected economic recession are
not approvable as contingency measures
unless such reductions are quantifiable,
surplus, enforceable, and permanent
and meet all applicable CAA
requirements for approval. Even
assuming the ‘‘excess’’ emission
reductions identified in the Contingency
Measures SIP are in fact surplus to those
that are specifically relied upon in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP for attainment
purposes, these reductions are not SIPcreditable without adequate
documentation to show that the
reductions are also quantifiable,
enforceable, and permanent consistent
with long-standing EPA policy. The
Contingency Measures SIP provides no
such documentation. Accordingly, the
‘‘excess’’ reductions associated with 14
tpd of ‘‘NOx equivalent’’ emission
reductions in 2015 are not SIPcreditable at this time.
c. PM2.5 Air Quality Data
The Contingency Measures SIP
provides the District’s rationale for
concluding that significant PM2.5 air
quality improvements in the South
Coast area should be accounted for in
evaluating the attainment contingency
measure requirement for the area. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 5–11.
Based on our review of the District’s
analyses and our independent review of
available PM2.5 air monitoring data for
the 2002–2012 period, EPA agrees that
these air quality improvements should
be taken into account in evaluating the
level of emission reductions needed for
purposes of meeting the attainment
contingency measure requirement under
CAA section 172(c)(9). Although these
air quality improvements do not, in
themselves, represent SIP-creditable
emission reductions, we believe the
significant decline in ambient PM2.5
levels observed during the 2002–2012
period provides a reasonable basis for
concluding that emission reductions
amounting to less than 1 year’s worth of
RFP are adequate for PM2.5 attainment
contingency measure purposes in this
particular nonattainment area.
Under EPA regulations at 40 CFR
50.7, the 1997 annual primary and
secondary PM2.5 standards are met when
the annual arithmetic mean
concentration, as determined in
accordance with 40 CFR part 50,
appendix N, is less than or equal to 15.0
mg/m3 at all relevant monitoring sites in
the subject area. The 1997 24-hour
primary and secondary PM2.5 standards
are met when the 98th percentile 24-
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
37749
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
hour concentration, also as determined
in accordance with appendix N, is less
than or equal to 65 mg/m3 at all relevant
monitoring sites. 40 CFR 50.7(b), (c).
EPA independently reviewed PM2.5
air quality data available in EPA’s ‘‘Air
Quality System’’ (AQS) for the 2002–
2012 period to assess the District’s
representations regarding PM2.5 air
quality improvements in the South
Coast area.18 The SCAQMD currently
operates 20 regulatory PM2.5 monitoring
sites in the South Coast air basin and
annually reports quality-assured
ambient PM2.5 data from these sampling
sites to the EPA AQS database. See
SCAQMD, Annual Air Quality
Monitoring Network Plan (July 2012), at
7–9 and 21, Table 5. EPA has approved
the District’s monitoring network as
satisfying the network design and data
adequacy requirements of 40 CFR part
58. See letter dated April 18, 2013, from
Matthew Lakin, Manager, Air Quality
Analysis Office, EPA Region 9, to Dr.
Matt Miyasato, Deputy Executive
Officer, Science and Technology
Advancement, SCAQMD. Qualityassured and certified ambient air quality
data collected through the District’s
monitoring network and available in
AQS show that PM2.5 levels in the South
Coast nonattainment area were
significantly lower in the years leading
to 2012 than the levels projected in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP for this period,
and that both annual and 24-hour
concentrations have declined
significantly at all monitors in the area.
See U.S. EPA, Air Quality System,
Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5,
2002–2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013);
see also U.S. EPA, Data Quality
Indicator Report, SCAQMD, California,
PM2.5 (April 26, 2012) and letter dated
May 1, 2012, from Chung Liu, Deputy
Executive Officer, Science and
Technology Advancement, SCAQMD, to
Jared Blumenfeld, Regional
Administrator, U.S. EPA Region 9
(certifying air quality data submitted to
AQS).
Table 1 lists the annual mean PM2.5
concentration at each monitor in the
South Coast air basin during the 2002–
2012 period.
TABLE 1—PM2.5 ANNUAL MEAN CONCENTRATIONS, 2002–2012
One-year annual mean (μg/m3)
Site
AQS ID
2002
Azusa ..............................................................................
Burbank—Palm Ave. .......................................................
LA—North Main ...............................................................
Reseda ............................................................................
Lynwood ..........................................................................
Compton ..........................................................................
Pico Rivera #1 .................................................................
Pico Rivera #2 .................................................................
Pasadena ........................................................................
Long Beach .....................................................................
Long Beach—PCH ..........................................................
Anaheim ..........................................................................
Mission Viejo ...................................................................
Riverside .........................................................................
Rubidoux .........................................................................
Mira Loma .......................................................................
Ontario ............................................................................
Fontana ...........................................................................
Big Bear ..........................................................................
San Bernardino ...............................................................
060370002
060371002
060371103
060371201
060371301
060371302
060371601
060371602
060372005
060374002
060374004
060590007
060592022
060651003
060658001
060658005
060710025
060712002
060718001
060719004
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
20.7
24.0
22.0
18.9
23.3
..........
24.0
..........
20.3
19.5
..........
18.6
15.5
27.1
27.5
..........
25.4
24.3
11.5
25.8
19.3
22.1
21.3
16.5
20.3
..........
20.6
..........
18.6
18.0
20.6
17.3
13.1
22.6
24.8
..........
23.8
22.1
10.6
22.2
18.3
19.1
19.7
15.7
18.5
..........
20.0
..........
16.6
17.9
16.5
17.0
12.0
20.8
22.1
..........
20.9
19.9
9.6
21.9
17.0
17.8
17.8
13.9
17.5
..........
15.2
22.3
15.1
15.9
14.7
14.7
10.6
17.9
20.9
..........
18.8
18.8
12.0
17.3
15.4
16.5
15.6
12.8
16.7
..........
..........
16.6
13.4
14.1
14.4
14.0
11.0
16.9
18.9
20.8
18.4
17.5
11.3
17.6
15.7
16.9
16.8
13.3
16.0
..........
..........
16.6
14.4
14.6
13.7
14.4
11.1
18.3
19.0
20.9
18.3
18.9
10.3
17.9
14.0
13.9
16.1
11.8
14.6
12.4
..........
14.9
12.8
14.1
13.7
13.1
10.4
13.3
16.4
18.3
15.8
15.3
9.1
13.4
13.1
15.3
14.4
11.4
..........
14.7
..........
14.8
12.3
12.8
12.5
12.1
9.5
13.3
15.6
17.2
14.7
14.2
9.9
13.0
10.8
12.8
12.6
10.1
..........
12.5
..........
12.5
10.2
10.4
10.4
10.5
8.0
11.0
13.3
15.5
13.0
11.9
8.4
11.1
12.1
13.5
13.5
10.2
..........
12.5
..........
12.5
10.8
11.3
10.7
11.1
8.5
11.8
13.8
15.9
13.3
12.6
8.4
12.2
11.0
12.6
13.2
10.5
..........
11.7
..........
11.9
10.1
10.6
10.9
10.0
7.9
11.4
13.7
15.3
12,4
12.8
8.0
11.8
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002–2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
Table 2 lists the annual PM2.5 design
value at each monitor in the South Coast
air basin for the 2002–2012 period.
TABLE 2—ANNUAL PM2.5 DESIGN VALUES, 2002–2012
One-year annual mean (μg/m3)19
Site
AQS ID
Azusa ..............................................................................
Burbank—Palm Ave. .......................................................
LA—North Main ...............................................................
Reseda ............................................................................
Lynwood ..........................................................................
Compton ..........................................................................
Pico Rivera #1 .................................................................
Pico Rivera #2 .................................................................
Pasadena ........................................................................
Long Beach .....................................................................
Long Beach—PCH ..........................................................
Anaheim ..........................................................................
Mission Viejo ...................................................................
Riverside .........................................................................
060370002
060371002
060371103
060371201
060371301
060371302
060371601
060371602
060372005
060374002
060374004
060590007
060592022
060651003
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
2002
18 EPA evaluated these data only preliminarily,
for purposes of determining whether the
Contingency Measures SIP satisfies the
requirements of CAA section 172(c)(9), and is not
at this time proposing to make any formal
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
20.8
23.3
22.2
18.4
23.6
..........
24.4
..........
20.2
20.1
..........
22.0
15.4
26.9
20.6
23.6
22.0
17.9
22.7
..........
23.3
..........
19.9
19.6
20.6
20.4
14.8
25.9
19.4
21.7
21.0
17.0
20.7
..........
21.5
..........
18.5
18.5
18.6
17.6
13.5
23.5
18.2
19.7
19.6
15.4
18.7
..........
18.6
22.3
16.8
17.3
17.3
16.3
11.9
20.5
16.9
17.8
17.7
14.1
17.5
..........
17.6
19.5
15.0
16.0
15.2
15.2
11.2
18.6
16.0
17.1
16.7
13.3
16.7
..........
15.2
18.5
14.3
14.9
14.3
14.3
10.9
17.7
15.1
15.8
16.1
12.6
15.8
12.4
..........
16.0
13.5
14.3
13.9
13.8
10.8
16.2
14.3
15.4
15.8
12.1
15.3
13.5
..........
15.4
13.2
13.9
13.3
13.2
10.3
15.0
12.7
14.0
14.4
11.1
14.6
13.2
..........
14.1
11.8
12.4
12.2
11.9
9.3
12.5
12.0
13.9
13.5
10.6
..........
13.4
..........
13.3
11.1
11.5
11.2
11.2
8.7
12.0
11.3
12.9
13.1
10.3
..........
12.4
..........
12.3
10.4
10.8
10.7
10.8
8.1
11.4
determination regarding attainment for the South
Coast PM2.5 nonattainment area.
19 Most but not all of these design values are
based on data that meet EPA’s completeness criteria
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
in 40 CFR part 50, appendix N, section 4.0. See
Memorandum from Meredith Kurpius to File dated
May 10, 2013.
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
37750
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2—ANNUAL PM2.5 DESIGN VALUES, 2002–2012—Continued
One-year annual mean (μg/m3)19
Site
AQS ID
2002
Rubidoux .........................................................................
Mira Loma .......................................................................
Ontario ............................................................................
Fontana ...........................................................................
Big Bear ..........................................................................
San Bernardino ...............................................................
060658001
060658005
060710025
060712002
060718001
060719004
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
28.9
..........
25.3
24.6
10.9
25.9
27.8
..........
25.2
23.8
11.1
24.7
24.8
..........
23.4
22.1
10.6
23.3
22.6
..........
21.2
20.3
10.8
20.5
20.6
20.8
19.4
18.7
11.0
18.9
19.6
20.9
18.5
18.4
11.2
17.6
18.1
20.0
17.5
17.2
10.3
16.3
17.0
18.8
16.2
16.1
9.8
14.7
15.1
17.0
14.5
13.8
9.1
12.5
14.2
16.2
13.7
12.9
8.9
12.1
13.6
15.6
12.9
12.4
8.3
11.7
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002–2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
Table 3 lists the 24-hour PM2.5 design
value at each monitor in the South Coast
air basin for the 2002–2012 period.
TABLE 3—24-HOUR PM2.5 DESIGN VALUES, 2002–2012
24-Hour Design Value (μg/m3) 20
Site
AQS ID
2002
Azusa ..............................................................................
Burbank—Palm Ave. .......................................................
LA—North Main ...............................................................
Reseda ............................................................................
Lynwood ..........................................................................
Compton ..........................................................................
Pico Rivera #1 .................................................................
Pico Rivera #2 .................................................................
Pasadena ........................................................................
Long Beach .....................................................................
Long Beach—PCH ..........................................................
Anaheim ..........................................................................
Mission Viejo ...................................................................
Riverside .........................................................................
Rubidoux .........................................................................
Mira Loma .......................................................................
Ontario ............................................................................
Fontana ...........................................................................
Big Bear ..........................................................................
San Bernardino ...............................................................
060370002
060371002
060371103
060371201
060371301
060371302
060371601
060371602
060372005
060374002
060374004
060590007
060592022
060651003
060658001
060658005
060710025
060712002
060718001
060719004
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
59
69
62
51
60
..........
65
..........
53
54
..........
54
43
65
73
62
62
64
30
68
57
62
58
49
57
..........
58
..........
51
48
53
53
43
62
72
..........
63
60
30
64
54
55
57
48
53
..........
53
..........
48
46
48
49
41
58
67
..........
61
58
28
66
54
53
56
45
51
..........
51
58
46
45
44
47
36
50
65
..........
59
55
30
58
48
48
49
40
49
..........
52
51
41
41
38
42
32
47
57
53
50
52
34
55
47
48
48
34
46
..........
51
50
40
39
36
42
31
49
55
56
47
52
38
54
41
43
43
30
41
13
..........
43
37
38
35
38
29
48
50
53
45
52
36
53
42
41
42
29
39
25
..........
41
38
38
34
37
29
44
45
49
43
48
32
49
38
34
35
29
33
28
..........
35
31
33
31
30
23
33
38
41
37
37
30
35
36
34
34
28
..........
34
..........
33
30
30
28
29
23
30
35
39
34
31
29
32
31
32
32
30
..........
31
..........
31
27
28
27
27
21
27
34
37
32
32
29
30
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002–2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
According to these certified ambient
air quality data, the highest annual
mean PM2.5 concentration in the South
Coast area dropped from 27.5 mg/m3 in
2002 (at Rubidoux) to 15.3 mg/m3 in
2012 (at Mira Loma), and the annual
PM2.5 design value for the area dropped
from 28.9 mg/m3 to 15.6 mg/m3 during
this same timeframe. Daily PM2.5 design
values at all monitors in the South Coast
area also declined significantly, from 73
mg/m3 (at Rubidoux) in 2002 to 37 mg/
m3 (at Mira Loma) in 2012. All monitors
in the South Coast area have recorded
24-hour PM2.5 design values below the
24-hour PM2.5 standard of 65 mg/m3
since at least 2006, and as of 2010 most
monitors were also recording 24-hour
design values below the more stringent
2006 24-hour standard of 35 mg/m3.21
These data indicate that actual
emission levels in the area during the
20 See
ibid.
21 See also Final TSD for South Coast PM
2.5 SIP
at 8, Figure IB–3 (‘‘South Coast AQMP 1997 24-hour
PM2.5 Design Value Concentration Trends 2000–
2010’’).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
years leading to 2012 were significantly
lower than the levels projected for this
period in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. The
data also indicate that the area is
already attaining the 1997 24-hour PM2.5
standard (65 mg/m3) and may also attain
the annual standard (15 mg/m3) in
advance of the applicable attainment
date of April 5, 2015. Accordingly,
compared to the assumptions
underlying the South Coast PM2.5 SIP, in
reality the likelihood that attainment
contingency measures will never need
to be triggered is much greater, and the
extent of any potential attainment
shortfall much lower, than was
predicted. Therefore, given the
proximity of the applicable attainment
date (April 5, 2015) and the probability
that the area will attain the PM2.5
standards by that date 22 or, in the event
it fails to attain, that a smaller amount
of additional emission reductions
(compared to the levels identified in the
plan as needed to achieve 1 year’s worth
of RFP) will be needed to bring about
attainment in the area, we believe it is
appropriate to find that emission
reductions amounting to less than 1
year’s worth of RFP are adequate to
satisfy the attainment contingency
measure requirement in these particular
circumstances. This conclusion is
consistent with EPA’s long-standing
recommendation that states should
consider ‘‘the potential nature and
extent of any attainment shortfall for the
area’’ and that contingency measures
‘‘should represent a portion of the actual
emissions reductions necessary to bring
about attainment in the area.’’ See PM–
10 Addendum at 42015 and 72 FR
20643.
22 EPA is not aware of any information indicating
significant changes (such as a sharp upturn in
economic or population growth, or dramatic
meteorological shift) that might adversely affect the
consistent historical trend in the area to improved
air quality, during the relatively short amount of
time remaining before April 5, 2015.
d. Surplus emission reductions in South
Coast PM2.5 SIP
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
The Contingency Measures SIP states
that the South Coast PM2.5 SIP identified
emission reductions sufficient for the
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
South Coast air basin to reach 15.00 mg/
m3 by April 2015, which is more than
necessary to demonstrate timely
attainment according to EPA modeling
guidelines. Specifically, the District
states that EPA guidelines allow states
to demonstrate attainment at a level of
15.04 mg/m3 rather than 15.00 mg/m3,
and that the additional 0.04 mg/m3 of air
quality improvement accounted for in
its attainment demonstration equated to
a ‘‘surplus’’ of 11 tpd of NOX-equivalent
emission reductions. See Contingency
Measures SIP at 15. In the 2013
Supplement, the District characterized
this amount as a ‘‘surplus’’ of 0.8 tpd of
SOX reductions, in accordance with
conversion factors provided in
Appendix C of a CARB Staff Report
entitled ‘‘2007 State Implementation
Plan for the South Coast Air Basin PM2.5
and 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS.’’ See 2013
Supplement, Attachment 2.
EPA agrees that the District may
demonstrate attainment using 15.04 mg/
m3 as the target emission level in its
modeling analyses 23 and that, because
the South Coast PM2.5 SIP models
attainment at a level of 15.0 mg/m3,
some amount of emission reductions
accounting for the additional 0.04 mg/m3
of air quality improvement may be
characterized as ‘‘surplus’’ to attainment
needs. We are not equating these air
quality improvements with a specific
amount of SIP credit at this time but we
have reviewed the District’s conversions
of these concentrations into NOXequivalent and SOX-equivalent emission
reductions and find the approximations
to be reasonable. See Memorandum
from Carol Bohnenkamp to File dated
May 30, 2013. These analyses generally
support our conclusion that attainment
contingency measures achieving less
than 1 year’s worth of RFP are adequate
for this particular nonattainment area.
37751
e. Summary
In sum, the Contingency Measure SIP,
as supplemented in 2013, identifies SIPcreditable attainment contingency
measures that will achieve a total of
27.2 tpd of NOX reductions, 14.3 tpd of
VOC reductions, and 0.2 tpd of direct
PM2.5 reductions in 2015. The 2013
Supplement identifies two additional
control measures that will, upon final
EPA approval of the measures, achieve
an additional 0.6 tpd of direct PM2.5
reductions, for a total of 0.8 tpd of direct
PM2.5 reductions in 2015. These
emission reductions amount to
approximately 56% of the NOX
reductions, 49% of the VOC reductions,
and more than 100% of the direct PM2.5
reductions that would be needed to
achieve approximately 1 year’s worth of
RFP in 2015.24 See Table 4.
TABLE 4—SUMMARY OF 2015 EMISSION REDUCTIONS CREDITABLE AS ATTAINMENT CONTINGENCY MEASURES
[in tons per day]
NOX
VOC
PM2.5
SOX
Fleet turnover ...............................................................................
Rule 1113 ....................................................................................
Carl Moyer ...................................................................................
Rule 444 * ....................................................................................
Rule 445 * ....................................................................................
24
..............................
3.2
..............................
..............................
13
1.3
..............................
..............................
..............................
............................
............................
0.2
0.2
0.4
............................
............................
............................
............................
............................
Total Emission Reductions: ..................................................
1 year RFP 25 ...............................................................................
Total as percentage of 1-year RFP ......................................
27.2
49
56
14.3
29
49
0.8
0.7
114
0
3.8
0
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
* Creditable only upon EPA’s final approval of these rules into the SIP pursuant to CAA section 110.
We are proposing to fully approve
these measures and surplus emission
reductions as satisfying the attainment
contingency measure requirement in
CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the South Coast
nonattainment area. All of these
emission reductions are provided by
control measures or incentive programs
that are fully adopted under State law
and currently being implemented by the
District. These measures and programs
provide SIP-creditable emission
reductions that are not relied on in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP to demonstrate
RFP or attainment and provide for an
appropriate level of continued
emissions reduction progress should the
South Coast area fail to attain by the
statutory attainment date and
necessitate additional planning.
23 See ‘‘Guidance on the Use of Models and Other
Analyses for Demonstrating Attainment of Air
Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional
Haze,’’ April 2007, EPA—454/B–07–002, at p. 21
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
C. Section 110(l) of the Act
Section 110(l) of the Act prohibits
EPA from approving any SIP revision
that would interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
RFP or any other applicable requirement
of the Act. The Contingency Measures
SIP corrects SIP deficiencies identified
in EPA’s November 9, 2011 partial
approval and partial disapproval of the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP (76 FR 69928).
Specifically, the Contingency Measures
SIP, as supplemented in 2013, contains:
(1) the District’s demonstration that
actual emission levels in the South
Coast in 2012 were below the 2012 RFP
benchmarks, (2) identification of SIPcreditable control measures that will
achieve emission reductions in 2015 in
excess of those relied on for RFP and
expeditious attainment, and (3) an
analysis of significant air quality
(referencing EPA’s rounding convention in 40 CFR
part 50, appendix N for calculation of annual
average PM2.5 values).
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
improvements in the South Coast area
that the District believes EPA should
take into account as part of our action
on the SIP submission. We propose to
determine that our approval of the
Contingency Measures SIP, as
supplemented in 2013, would comply
with CAA section 110(l) because the
proposed SIP revision would not
interfere with the on-going process for
ensuring that requirements for RFP and
attainment of the NAAQS are met, and
the submitted SIP corrects SIP
deficiencies that were the basis for
EPA’s November 9, 2011 partial
disapproval of the South Coast PM2.5
SIP.
IV. Proposed Action and Public
Comment
For the reasons discussed above, we
are proposing to conclude that the
Contingency Measures SIP submitted by
24 The Contingency Measure SIP does not
specifically provide SIP-creditable SOX reductions
in 2015 for contingency measure purposes.
25 See n. 2, supra.
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
37752
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
CARB on November 14, 2011, as
supplemented on April 24, 2013,
satisfies the attainment contingency
measure requirement in CAA section
172(c)(9) for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in
the South Coast nonattainment area, and
to fully approve this submission into the
California SIP. Simultaneously, we are
proposing to conclude that the RFP
contingency measure requirement in
CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 2012
milestone year is moot as applied to the
South Coast because the area achieved
its emission reduction benchmarks for
the 2012 RFP year.
Final approval of the Contingency
Measures SIP, as supplemented, would
correct the deficiencies that were the
basis for EPA’s partial disapproval of
the South Coast PM2.5 SIP on November
9, 2011 (76 FR 69928) and would,
therefore, terminate the CAA section
179(b) sanctions clocks triggered by that
action and the obligation on EPA to
promulgate a FIP within two years of
that action.
EPA will accept public comments on
this proposal for the next 30 days.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
State choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this proposed action
merely proposes to approve State law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by State law. For
that reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:06 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
• is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address
disproportionate human health or
environmental effects with practical,
appropriate, and legally permissible
methods under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this proposed action does
not have tribal implications as specified
by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the State, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Incorporation by reference,
Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 12, 2013.
Jared Blumenfeld,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2013–14918 Filed 6–21–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R08–OAR–2013–0417; FRL–9827–2]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Rescission of Federal Implementation
Plan; Wyoming; Prevention of
Significant Deterioration; Greenhouse
Gas Tailoring Rule Revisions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve
revisions and additions to the Wyoming
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submitted by the Wyoming Department
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) to
EPA on March 8, 2013. The proposed
SIP revision to the Wyoming Prevention
of Significant Deterioration (PSD)
program updates the program to regulate
permitting of sources of greenhouse
gases (GHGs). Specifically, we propose
to approve revisions to Chapter 1,
Common Provisions, Section 3,
Definitions, and Chapter 6, Permitting
Requirements, Section 4, Prevention of
Significant Deterioration, and the
addition of Chapter 1, Section 7,
Greenhouse Gases. The March 8, 2013
proposed SIP revision to the Wyoming
PSD program establishes emission
thresholds for determining which new
stationary sources and modifications to
existing stationary sources become
subject to Wyoming’s PSD permitting
requirements for their GHG emissions.
The March 8, 2013 proposed SIP
revision also defers until July 21, 2014
application of the PSD permitting
requirements to biogenic carbon dioxide
emissions from bioenergy and other
biogenic stationary sources. EPA is
proposing to approve the March 8, 2013
SIP revision to the Wyoming PSD
permitting program as being consistent
with federal requirements for PSD
permitting. EPA is also proposing to
rescind the GHG PSD Federal
Implementation Plan (FIP) for Wyoming
that was put in place to ensure the
availability of a permitting authority for
GHG PSD permitting in Wyoming,
which would be effective upon final
approval of the March 8, 2013 PSD SIP
revision. EPA is proposing this action
under section 110 and part C of the
Clean Air Act (the Act or CAA).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before July 24, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R08–
OAR–2013–0417, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: ostendorf.jody@epa.gov
• Fax: (303) 312–6064 (please alert
the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT if you are faxing
comments).
• Mail: Carl Daly, Director, Air
Program, Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), Region 8, Mailcode 8P–
AR, 1595 Wynkoop St., Denver,
Colorado 80202–1129.
• Hand Delivery: Carl Daly, Director,
Air Program, Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), Region 8, Mailcode 8P–
AR, 1595 Wynkoop St., Denver,
Colorado 80202–1129. Such deliveries
are only accepted Monday through
Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding
E:\FR\FM\24JNP1.SGM
24JNP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 121 (Monday, June 24, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 37741-37752]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-14918]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2013-0384; FRL-9826-2]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; California;
South Coast; Contingency Measures for 1997 PM2.5 Standards
AGENCY: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing to approve a state implementation plan (SIP)
revision submitted by California to address Clean Air Act (CAA)
contingency measure requirements for the 1997 annual and 24-hour
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for fine particulate
matter (PM2.5) in the Los Angeles-South Coast Air Basin
(South Coast). Final approval of this SIP revision would terminate the
sanctions clocks and a federal implementation plan (FIP) clock that
were triggered by EPA's partial disapproval of a related SIP submission
on November 9, 2011 (76 FR 69928).
DATES: Any comments must arrive by July 24, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments, identified by docket number EPA-R09-
[[Page 37742]]
OAR-2013-0384, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. Follow
the on-line instructions.
Email: lo.doris@epa.gov.
Mail or deliver: Marty Robin, Office of Air Planning (AIR-
2), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, CA 94105.
Instructions: All comments will be included in the public docket
without change and may be made available online at www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information provided, unless the comment
includes Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Information that you
consider CBI or otherwise protected should be clearly identified as
such and should not be submitted through www.regulations.gov or email.
The www.regulations.gov Web site is an ``anonymous access'' system, and
EPA will not know your identity or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment. If you send email directly to
EPA, your email address will be automatically captured and included as
part of the public comment. If EPA cannot read your comments due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA
may not be able to consider your comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for this action is available
electronically on the www.regulations.gov Web site and in hard copy at
EPA Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, California, 94105.
While all documents in the docket are listed in the index, some
information may be publicly available only at the hard copy location
(e.g., copyrighted material), and some may not be publicly available at
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the hard copy materials, please
schedule an appointment during normal business hours with the contact
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section below.
Copies of the SIP materials are also available for inspection at
the following locations:
California Air Resources Board, 1001 I Street, Sacramento,
California 95814, and
South Coast Air Quality Management District, 21865 E.
Copley Drive, Diamond Bar, California 91765.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Doris Lo, Air Planning Office (AIR-2),
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9, (415) 972-3959,
lo.doris@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of California Submittal
III. EPA Review of the SIP Revision
A. SIP Procedural Requirements
B. Substantive Requirements for Contingency Measures
C. Section 110(l) of the Act
IV. Proposed Action and Public Comment
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On July 18, 1997 (62 FR 36852), EPA established new national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for PM2.5, particulate
matter with a diameter of 2.5 microns or less, including annual
standards of 15.0 micrograms per cubic meter ([micro]g/m\3\) based on a
3-year average of annual mean PM2.5 concentrations, and 24-
hour (daily) standards of 65 [micro]g/m\3\ based on a 3-year average of
the 98th percentile of 24-hour concentrations. 40 CFR 50.7. Effective
April 5, 2005, EPA designated the ``Los Angeles-South Coast Air Basin''
in California (South Coast), including Orange County, the southwestern
two-thirds of Los Angeles County, southwestern San Bernardino County,
and western Riverside County, as nonattainment for the 1997 24-hour and
annual PM2.5 standards. See 70 FR 944 (January 5, 2005) and
40 CFR 81.305.\1\ The local air district with primary responsibility
for developing a plan to attain the PM2.5 NAAQS in this area
is the South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD or
District).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ EPA has also designated the South Coast area as
nonattainment for the more stringent 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS
of 35 [micro]g/m\3\, which EPA promulgated on October 17, 2006 and
codified in 40 CFR 50.13. 74 FR 58688 (November 13, 2009). In this
preamble, all references to the PM2.5 NAAQS, unless
otherwise specified, are to the 1997 24-hour PM2.5
standards of 65 [micro]g/m\3\ and annual standards of 15 [micro]g/
m\3\ as codified in 40 CFR 50.7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
California has made numerous SIP submittals to address the South
Coast area's nonattainment designation for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS. The two principal ones are the SCAQMD's ``Final 2007 Air Quality
Management Plan'' (South Coast 2007 AQMP), submitted on November 28,
2007, and the California Air Resources Board's (CARB's) ``State
Strategy for California's 2007 State Implementation Plan'' (2007 State
Strategy), submitted on November 16, 2007 and revised in 2009 and 2011
through CARB's ``2009 State Strategy Status Report'' and ``2011
Progress Report.''
On November 9, 2011, EPA partially approved and partially
disapproved the South Coast 2007 AQMP and the 2007 State Strategy
(collectively the ``South Coast PM2.5 SIP''). 76 FR 69928.
As part of this action, EPA disapproved the contingency measure
provisions in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP as failing to meet
the requirements of CAA section 172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1012, which
require that the SIP for each PM2.5 nonattainment area
contain contingency measures to be implemented if the area fails to
make reasonable further progress (RFP) or to attain the NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date. See 76 FR 41578-41580 (July 14, 2011) and
76 FR 69947 (November 9, 2011). EPA found that the suggested
contingency measures contained in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP
did not meet the minimum CAA requirements because, among other things,
the measures were not fully adopted and the District had failed to
quantify the SIP-creditable emission reductions they would achieve. Id.
As EPA explained in the proposed rule, contingency measures must be
fully adopted rules or control measures that are ready to be
implemented quickly without significant additional action by the State,
must be measures not relied on in the plan to demonstrate RFP or
attainment, and should provide SIP-creditable emissions reductions
equivalent to one year of RFP. See 76 FR 41652 (July 14, 2011) at
41578; see also ``Final Technical Support Document and Response to
Comments, Final Rulemaking Action on the South Coast 2007 AQMP for
PM2.5 and the South Coast Portions of the Revised 2007 State
Strategy,'' Air Division, U.S. EPA Region 9, September 30, 2011
(``Final TSD for South Coast PM2.5 SIP'') at pp. 123-130.
Additionally, the SIP should contain trigger mechanisms for the
contingency measures and specify a schedule for their implementation.
Id.
Although CARB's 2011 Progress Report demonstrated that existing
CARB mobile source measures would achieve 24 tons per day (tpd) of
NOX reductions and 13 tpd of VOC reductions in 2015, the
year after the attainment year, EPA found that these measures alone
were not adequate to satisfy the Act's contingency measure
requirements. See 76 FR 41478-80 and 76 FR 69947-8, 69952.
Specifically, EPA reviewed the information provided in the 2011
Progress Report and found that these post-attainment year emission
reductions were not sufficient to achieve one year's worth of RFP on a
pollutant-specific basis.\2\ 76 FR 41579-
[[Page 37743]]
41580. EPA also found that the South Coast PM2.5 SIP did not
address the contingency measure requirement for the 2012 RFP year. Id.
at Table 9. Accordingly, EPA disapproved the contingency measure
provisions in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP for failure to
satisfy the Act's contingency measure requirements for the 2012 RFP
year and for the 2015 attainment date. Id. at 41580 and 76 FR 69952.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ EPA estimated one year's worth of RFP to be approximately 49
tpd of NOX, 29 tpd of VOC, 0.7 tpd of direct
PM2.5 and 3.8 tpd of SOX reductions. See Final
TSD at Table I-2 (pg. 128). Thus, the 24 tpd of NOX
reductions and 13 tpd of VOC reductions achieved in 2015 by CARB's
mobile source measures would amount to approximately half of those
NOX and VOC measures needed to achieve one year's worth
of RFP reductions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Summary of California Submittal
On November 14, 2011, CARB submitted the ``South Coast Air Quality
Management District Proposed Contingency Measures for the 2007 PM2.5
SIP'' (dated October 2011) (``Contingency Measures SIP'') as a revision
to the California SIP. The November 14, 2011 submittal includes a copy
of the Contingency Measures SIP itself; a letter dated November 14,
2011 from James N. Goldstene, Executive Officer, California Air
Resources Board, to Jared Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency Region 9, submitting the adopted
Contingency Measures SIP for EPA review; CARB Executive Order S-11-023
adopting the Contingency Measures SIP; a letter dated October 26, 2011
from Barry R. Wallerstein, Executive Officer, SCAQMD, to James
Goldstene, Executive Officer, CARB, submitting the adopted Contingency
Measures SIP for CARB review and approval; SCAQMD Resolution No. 11-24
approving the Contingency Measures SIP; and public process
documentation.
On April 24, 2013, the District submitted a technical clarification
to the Contingency Measures SIP, including updated emissions data for
2012. See letter dated April 24, 2013, from Elaine Chang, Deputy
Executive Officer, SCAQMD, to Deborah Jordan, Director, Air Division,
EPA Region 9, Re: ``Update of the 2012 RFP Emissions and 2015
Reductions from Contingency Measures for the 2007 Annual
PM2.5 Air Quality Management Plan for the South Coast Air
Basin,'' including attachments (hereinafter ``2013 Supplement'').
The Contingency Measures SIP, as supplemented in 2013, contains:
(1) The District's demonstration that actual emission levels in the
South Coast in 2012 were below the RFP ``benchmarks'' for the 2012 RFP
year; (2) identification of SIP-creditable control measures that will
provide emission reductions in 2015 in excess of those relied on to
demonstrate RFP and attainment; and (3) the SCAQMD's analysis of
significant air quality improvements in the South Coast area that the
District believes EPA should take into account in its review of and
action on the SIP submission.
III. EPA Review of the SIP Revision
A. SIP Procedural Requirements
CAA sections 110(a) and 110(l) require that revisions to a SIP be
adopted by the State after reasonable notice and public hearing. EPA
has promulgated specific procedural requirements for SIP revisions in
40 CFR part 51, subpart F. These requirements include publication of
notices, by prominent advertisement in the relevant geographic area, of
a public hearing on the proposed revisions, a public comment period of
at least 30 days, and an opportunity for a public hearing.
CARB's SIP submission includes public process documentation for the
Contingency Measures SIP, including documentation of a duly noticed
public hearing held by the District on October 7, 2011 on the proposed
Contingency Measures SIP. On November 14, 2011, CARB adopted the
Contingency Measures SIP as a revision to the California SIP and
submitted it to EPA for action pursuant to CAA section 110(k).\3\ We
find that the process followed by CARB and the District in adopting the
Contingency Measures SIP complies with the procedural requirements for
SIP revisions under CAA section 110 and EPA's implementing regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The 2013 Supplement is not subject to additional procedural
requirements under the Act as it is a technical clarification that
does not alter the substance of the Contingency Measures SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Substantive Requirements for Contingency Measures
Section 172(c)(9) of the CAA requires that the SIP for each
nonattainment area ``provide for the implementation of specific
measures to be undertaken if the area fails to make reasonable further
progress, or to attain the [NAAQS] by the attainment date applicable
under [part D of title I]'' and requires that these measures ``take
effect without further action by the State or EPA.'' The Act does not
specify how many contingency measures are required or the magnitude of
emissions reductions that must be provided by these measures.
Consistent with the text of section 172(c)(9), however, these measures
must be specific, adopted measures that are ready to be implemented
quickly upon failure to meet RFP or failure of the area to meet the
standard by its attainment date.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ We refer to those measures addressing failure to make RFP as
``RFP contingency measures'' and those measures addressing failure
to attain as ``attainment contingency measures.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA provided guidance on the section 172(c)(9) contingency measure
requirement in an interpretative document entitled ``State
Implementation Plans; General Preamble for the Implementation of Title
I of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990,'' 57 FR 13498 (April 16,
1992) (``General Preamble''). As EPA explained in the General Preamble,
``contingency measures should, at a minimum, ensure that an appropriate
level of emissions reduction progress continues to be made if
attainment [or] RFP is not achieved and additional planning by the
State is needed.'' 57 FR 13511. These emission reductions would be in
addition to those that were already scheduled to occur in accordance
with the plan for the area. Id. at n. 2 and 13543-544. Additionally,
States must show that their contingency measures can be implemented
with minimal further action on their part and with no additional
rulemaking actions such as public hearings or legislative review. In
general, EPA expects all actions needed to effect full implementation
of the measures to occur within 60 days after EPA notifies the State of
its failure. 57 FR 13512 and 13543-544; see also 59 FR 41998 at 42014-
42015 (August 16, 1994)(``PM-10 Addendum'').
Consistent with these longstanding interpretations of the Act, EPA
explained in the preamble to its 2007 implementation rule for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS that the SIP should contain trigger mechanisms
for the contingency measures, specify a schedule for implementation,
and indicate that the measures will be implemented without significant
further action by the State or EPA. See 72 FR 20586 at 20642-20645
(April 25, 2007) and 40 CFR 51.1012.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Although the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia (DC Circuit) recently remanded this rule and directed EPA
to re-promulgate it pursuant to subpart 4 of part D, title I of the
CAA (see Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 706 F.3d 428
(D.C. Cir., Jan. 4, 2013)), the court's ruling in this case does not
affect EPA's action on the Contingency Measures SIP. Subpart 4 of
part D, title I of the Act contains no specific provision governing
contingency measures for PM10 or PM2.5
nonattainment areas that supersedes the general contingency measure
requirement for all nonattainment areas in CAA section 172(c)(9).
Thus, even if EPA applies the subpart 4 requirements to our
evaluation of the Contingency Measures SIP and disregards the
provisions of the 2007 PM2.5 implementation rule recently
remanded by the court, the general requirement for contingency
measures in CAA section 172(c)(9) and EPA's longstanding
interpretation of it continue to apply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 37744]]
Contingency measures can include federal measures and local
measures already scheduled for implementation that provide emissions
reductions in excess of those needed to provide for RFP or expeditious
attainment. The key is that the statute requires that contingency
measures provide for additional emission reductions that are not relied
on for RFP or attainment and that are not included in the RFP or
attainment demonstrations. The purpose is ``to provide a cushion while
the plan is being revised to meet the missed milestone.'' 72 FR 20642-
20643. Nothing in the statute precludes a State from implementing such
measures before they are triggered. See, e.g., LEAN v. EPA, 382 F.3d
575 (5th Cir. 2004) (upholding contingency measures that were
previously required and implemented and which provided emissions
reductions in excess of those in the attainment demonstration and RFP
SIP).
The EPA has approved numerous SIPs under this interpretation--i.e.,
SIPs that use as contingency measures one or more federal or local
measures that are in place and provide reductions that are in excess of
the reductions required by the attainment demonstration or RFP plan.
See, e.g., 62 FR 15844 (April 3, 1997) (direct final rule approving
Indiana ozone SIP revision); 62 FR 66279 (December 18, 1997) (final
rule approving Illinois ozone SIP revision); 66 FR 30811 (June 8, 2001)
(direct final rule approving Rhode Island ozone SIP revision); 66 FR
586 (January 3, 2001) (final rule approving District of Columbia,
Maryland, and Virginia ozone SIP revisions); and 66 FR 634 (January 3,
2001) (final rule approving Connecticut ozone SIP revision). The State
may use the same measures for purposes of both RFP and attainment
contingency if the measures will provide reductions in the relevant
years. Should these measures first be triggered for failure to make
RFP, however, the State would need to submit replacement contingency
measures for attainment purposes. See 57 FR 13511.
With respect to the level of emission reductions associated with
contingency measures, EPA has recommended that states consider ``the
potential nature and extent of any attainment shortfall for the area''
and the amount of actual emissions reductions required by the SIP
control strategy to attain the standards. PM-10 Addendum at 42015; see
also 72 FR 20643. The contingency measures are to be implemented in the
event that the area does not meet RFP or attain the standards by the
attainment date, and ``should represent a portion of the actual
emissions reductions necessary to bring about attainment in [the]
area.'' 72 FR 20643. Generally, EPA has recommended that the emissions
reductions anticipated by the contingency measures should be equal to
approximately 1 year's worth of emissions reductions necessary to
achieve RFP for the area. See id. and PM-10 Addendum at 42015.
1. 2012 RFP Contingency Measures
The Contingency Measures SIP states that the District has
identified several already-adopted rules that will achieve additional
emission reductions for the 2012 RFP year beyond those reductions
already accounted for in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP.
Additionally, the Contingency Measures SIP provides the District's
rationale for concluding that significant PM2.5 air quality
improvements in the South Coast area should be accounted for in
evaluating the 2012 RFP contingency measure requirement for the area.
See Contingency Measures SIP at 5-11. Finally, the 2013 Supplement to
the Contingency Measures SIP provides a demonstration that the South
Coast area achieved its 2012 RFP benchmarks. Based on our review of the
District's analyses and our independent review of available
PM2.5 air monitoring data for the 2002 to 2012 period, EPA
is proposing to find that the RFP requirement for the 2012 RFP year has
been met and that, therefore, the contingency measure requirement for
that year is now moot.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Given our proposal to conclude that contingency measures for
the 2012 RFP year are no longer required, we do not evaluate here
the incentive programs and voluntary measures that the Contingency
Measures SIP discusses for purposes of addressing the 2012 RFP
contingency measure requirement. To the extent the District
discusses these same measures to address the attainment contingency
measure requirement, however, we have reviewed those analyses and
discuss our evaluation of them in Section III.B.2.b, infra
(``Attainment Contingency Measures'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the District, recent modeling analyses indicate that
``existing air quality at all monitoring stations is already better
than it would be if emissions were at the levels projected in the plan
for RFP, and an additional one year's worth of reductions had been
implemented (i.e., simulated implementation of contingency measure on
top of actually meeting RFP).'' Contingency Measures SIP at 2. The
District states that the speciated regional modeling analysis in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP had predicted that implementation of
the plan would result in a reduction in the basin-wide design
concentration from 22.7 [micro]g/m\3\ in 2005 to a value of 17.98
[micro]g/m\3\ in 2010. Id. at 5. The maximum observed design value for
2010 at the design value site \7\ (Rubidoux \8\), however, was 15.01
[micro]g/m\3\ according to the District, 17 percent lower than the
concentrations projected in the plan. See id.; see also id. at 10,
Table 2. Accounting for temporary reductions in ambient
PM2.5 levels due to favorable weather and reduced economic
activity, the District estimates the PM2.5 design value
``improvement'' attributable to implementation of its plans, compared
to previous projections, to be approximately 1.88 [micro]g/m\3\ in
2010. Id. at 8-10 and Table 2. If PM2.5 air quality at the
design site (Rubidoux) were to remain at 2010 levels through 2012, the
difference between the predicted and observed design value would show a
1.47 [micro]g/m\3\ improvement over the 2012 projections underlying the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP. Id. at 5. According to the District,
these PM2.5 air quality improvements equate to approximately
420 tons per day (tpd) of NOX emission reductions in 2012.
Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Consistent with EPA's definition of ``design value'' in 40
CFR 58.1, we use the term ``design value site'' to refer to the
monitoring site that records the highest calculated pollutant
concentration (according to the applicable appendix of 40 CFR part
50) in the nonattainment area.
\8\ Although the current design value site for the area is the
Mira Loma (Van Buren) monitoring station, this site was not
accounted for in the analyses underlying the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP as it was not operational until 2007. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 5, n. 2. Therefore, the District
compared the projected and observed values for the Rubidoux
monitoring site, which was the design value site prior to 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the District's 2013 Supplement includes a
demonstration that the South Coast area achieved its emission reduction
benchmarks for the 2012 RFP year. Specifically, the updated emissions
inventory data \9\ provided in this technical supplement show that
emissions of direct PM2.5, NOX, VOC, and
SOX were all below the corresponding 2012 benchmarks in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See id. at Attachment 1 (``Updated
Table C-2, South Coast Air Basin PM2.5 Reasonable Further
Progress''). Based on the District's evaluation of these updated
emissions data, the District concludes that it satisfied its 2012 RFP
benchmarks and, accordingly, that RFP
[[Page 37745]]
contingency measures for this milestone year are no longer needed. See
id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ This updated emissions data is based on emissions inventory
data that the District adopted in December 2012 as part of its Final
2012 Air Quality Management Plan, which CARB submitted to EPA as a
SIP revision on February 13, 2013. See letter dated February 13,
2013, from James Goldstene, Executive Officer, CARB, to Jared
Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9, transmitting 2012
AQMP and enclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the District's conclusion that the South Coast area
met the 2012 RFP benchmarks in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP and
that RFP contingency measures for 2012 are, therefore, no longer
needed. EPA reviewed the updated 2012 emissions inventory data provided
by the District in the 2013 Supplement and confirmed that the data are
consistent with the emissions inventory data recently submitted to EPA
as part of the District's 2012 AQMP, which includes the State's plan to
provide for attainment of the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS in the South
Coast area. See Memorandum from Wienke Tax to File dated May 30, 2013.
The updated data in the 2013 Supplement show that actual emissions of
direct PM2.5, NOX, VOC, and SOX in the
South Coast were all below the corresponding 2012 benchmarks in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP.\10\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Emissions in the area were well below both the 2012 RFP
benchmarks that EPA approved as part of the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP (see 76 FR 41578, Table 8, ``revised projected
controlled emissions levels'' for 2012) and the RFP ``targets''
listed in Attachment 1 of the 2013 Supplement, identified as
``linear benchmarks'' in the plan. See CARB 2011 Progress Report
(Hearing Date: April 28, 2011), at Table C-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, EPA independently reviewed PM2.5 air
quality data available in EPA's ``Air Quality System'' (AQS) for the
2002-2012 period to assess the District's representations regarding
PM2.5 air quality improvements in the South Coast area,\11\
as well as the District's estimates of the amounts of emission
reductions that these air quality improvements represent. We believe
these assessments further support a conclusion that emission levels in
the South Coast area were below the 2012 RFP benchmarks in the South
Coast PM2.5 SIP. For more detail on our technical
evaluations, see Memorandum from Carol Bohnenkamp to File dated May 30,
2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ For a more detailed discussion of the air quality data that
EPA evaluated, see Section III.B.2.c, infra (``PM2.5 air
quality data'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this information, EPA proposes to find that the RFP
contingency measure requirement for 2012 is now moot as applied to the
South Coast. The sole purpose of RFP contingency measures is to provide
continued progress if the area fails to meet its RFP goal. Failure to
meet the 2012 benchmark would have required California to implement RFP
contingency measures and to revise the South Coast PM2.5 SIP
to assure that the plan still provided for attainment by the attainment
date of April 5, 2015. In this case, however, the 2013 Supplement
submitted by the District demonstrates that actual emission levels in
2012 met the SIP-approved benchmarks for all four pollutants
(PM2.5, NOX, VOC, and SOX), and both
the District's and EPA's evaluations of the substantial
PM2.5 air quality improvements in the South Coast area
further support a conclusion that emission levels in the area were well
below the 2012 RFP benchmarks. Accordingly, RFP contingency measures
for 2012 no longer have meaning or purpose, and the requirement for
them is moot.
2. Attainment Contingency Measures
a. Regulatory Measures and Programs
The South Coast PM2.5 SIP, as partially approved and
partially disapproved by EPA in November 2011 (76 FR 69928), provides
for the continuing implementation of existing CARB mobile source
measures that will achieve 24 tpd of NOX reductions and 13
tpd of VOC reductions in 2015. See 76 FR 41562 at 41580, Table 9, and
Final TSD for South Coast PM2.5 SIP at 126. These mobile
source emission reductions are surplus to the reductions relied upon to
demonstrate RFP and attainment because they occur in 2015 (after
implementation of all control measures necessary for expeditious
attainment) \12\ and will achieve approximately one half of the
NOX and VOC emission reductions needed to achieve 1 year's
worth of RFP.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Consistent with CAA section 172(c)(1) and 40 CFR
51.1007(b), the South Coast PM2.5 SIP provides for the
implementation of all control measures needed for attainment as
expeditiously as practicable and no later than the beginning of the
year prior to the attainment date (i.e., by January 2014). See 76 FR
69928 at 69942 (November 9, 2011).
\13\ See n. 2, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Contingency Measures SIP also identifies two stationary source
control measures that the District believes should be creditable
towards meeting the attainment contingency measure requirement: (1) The
``SOX RECLAIM Shave,'' which is projected to achieve 1.10
tpd of SOX reductions in 2014, and (2) SCAQMD Rule 1113
(Architectural Coatings), which is projected to achieve 1.30 tpd of VOC
reductions in 2015. See Contingency Measure SIP at 12-13, 17 and 2013
Supplement, Attachment 2.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The Contingency Measures SIP identifies emission reductions
for 2014 but in the 2013 Supplement, the District provided updated
2015 emission reductions for Rule 1113 and several other measures.
See 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA approved the SOX RECLAIM Shave into the California
SIP on August 12, 2011. See 76 FR 50128. Because all of the
SOX emission reductions associated with these rule
improvements have already been credited toward the PM2.5
attainment demonstration as part of EPA's November 9, 2011 final action
on the South Coast PM2.5 SIP, the 1.10 tpd of SOX
reductions identified in the Contingency Measure SIP are not surplus to
attainment requirements and, therefore, cannot be treated as
contingency measures. See 76 FR 41562 at 41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011)
and 76 FR 69928 at 69948, Table 1 (November 9, 2011).
EPA has also approved SCAQMD Rule 1113 (Architectural Coatings)
into the California SIP. 78 FR 18244 (March 26, 2013). The 1.30 tpd of
2015 VOC reductions associated with this measure in the Contingency
Measure SIP are not relied on for RFP or attainment purposes in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See South Coast 2007 AQMP at pp. 4-
10, Table 4-2A; see also 76 FR 41562 at 41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011)
and 76 FR 69928 at 69948, Table 1 (November 9, 2011). EPA therefore
agrees with the District that Rule 1113 may serve as an attainment
contingency measure for purposes of the PM2.5 NAAQS.
Additionally, the 2013 Supplement identifies two new stationary
source control measures scheduled for adoption in May 2013 that are
expected to collectively achieve 0.6 tpd of direct PM2.5
emission reductions in 2015. See 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2
(identifying SCAQMD Rule 444 and Rule 445). The 0.6 tpd of direct
PM2.5 emission reductions associated with these two measures
in the Contingency Measure SIP are not relied on for RFP or attainment
purposes in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See 76 FR 41562 at
41569, Table 3 (July 14, 2011) and 76 FR 69928 at 69948, Table 1
(November 9, 2011). On May 3, 2013, the District adopted both measures
and CARB submitted them to EPA on June 12, 2013. In a separate notice
published in today's Federal Register, EPA is proposing to approve
these rules into the California SIP. See ``Revisions to the California
State Implementation Plan, South Coast Air Quality Management
District,'' pre-publication proposed rule signed June 12, 2013.
Finally, the Contingency Measures SIP states that an additional
17.6 tpd of NOX reductions, 4.5 tpd of VOC reductions, and
1.1 tpd of SOX reductions will be achieved in 2015 through
continued implementation of the District's 2007 Ozone Attainment Plan,
and that these ``backstop'' emission reductions provide the equivalent
of contingency measures for the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 10-11 and Table 3. Although control
measures relied upon in an ozone attainment plan
[[Page 37746]]
may qualify for approval as contingency measures for the
PM2.5 NAAQS, provided the measures are surplus to
PM2.5 attainment and RFP requirements and meet all other EPA
criteria for SIP approval, the Contingency Measures SIP does not
provide EPA with sufficient information to determine whether the
referenced ozone-related measures meet these approval criteria.
Accordingly, we cannot at this time propose to approve these
``backstop'' ozone-related measures as PM2.5 contingency
measures at this time.
In sum, taking into account surplus emission reductions in the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP that EPA previously identified as
available for contingency measure purposes, the total amount of
emission reductions from regulatory control measures that we are
proposing to approve as part of the Contingency Measures SIP are as
follows: 24 tpd of NOX reductions from fleet turnover; 14.3
tpd of VOC reductions from fleet turnover and SCAQMD Rule 1113; and 0.6
tpd of direct PM2.5 emission reductions from SCAQMD Rule 444
and Rule 445, which will be available for contingency purposes upon
final EPA approval of these rules into the SIP. See Table 4.
b. Voluntary Measures, Incentive Programs, and Miscellaneous ``Excess
Reductions''
The Contingency Measures SIP identifies several voluntary measures
and incentive programs that the District believes should qualify for
approval as PM2.5 contingency measures because emission
reductions achieved by these measures have not been accounted for in
the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. The submittal also identifies
certain miscellaneous ``excess reductions'' resulting from economic
conditions and source operations below permit limits, which the
District believes should qualify for approval as contingency measures.
We discuss each of these programs/measures and our evaluations below.
Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program
The Contingency Measures SIP identifies a portion of the Carl Moyer
Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program (Carl Moyer Program)
as a contingency measure for the PM2.5 NAAQS. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 14 and 17, Table 4 and 2013 Supplement,
Attachment 2. We are proposing to approve specific amounts of emission
reductions from the Carl Moyer Program, as identified in the District's
submissions, for this purpose.
The Carl Moyer Program is a California grant program established in
1998 that provides funding to encourage the voluntary purchase of
cleaner-than-required engines, equipment, and other emission reduction
technologies. See generally California Air Resources Board, ``The Carl
Moyer Program Guidelines, Approved Revisions 2011,'' Release Date:
February 8, 2013, at Chapter 1 (available electronically at https://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/moyer/moyer.htm). In its first 12 years, the Carl
Moyer Program provided over $680 million in state and local funds to
reduce air pollution emissions from equipment statewide, e.g., by
replacing older trucks with newer, cleaner trucks, retrofitting
controls on existing engines, and encouraging the early retirement of
older, more polluting vehicles. Id.
The Contingency Measures SIP, as supplemented in 2013, states that
certain Carl Moyer Program projects funded beginning in program year
2005-06 to program year 2009-2010 will provide 3.2 tpd of
NOX reductions and 0.2 tpd of PM2.5 reductions in
2015 that may be treated as contingency measures. See Contingency
Measures SIP at 14 and 17, Table 4 and 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2
(``2015 Emission Reductions Beyond 2007 AQMP SIP Commitment Available
for Contingency'').\15\ In the 2013 Supplement, the District clarified
that these emission reductions would be obtained from the following
source categories participating in Carl Moyer programs: on-road heavy
duty engines, off-road diesel equipment, marine engines, and locomotive
engines. See 2013 Supplement, Attachment 2, notes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The Contingency Measures SIP, as initially submitted in
November 2011, provides emission reductions for 2014 (4.43 tpd of
NOX reductions, 0.06 tpd of PM reductions, and 0.17 tpd
of VOC reductions), but we are evaluating the updated 2015 emission
reductions provided in the 2013 Supplement because 2015 is the
relevant year for attainment contingency measure purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under EPA's long-standing policy, voluntary mobile source emission
reduction programs (VMEPs) that meet certain minimum criteria may
qualify for a limited amount of SIP credit under the CAA. See generally
Memorandum dated October 24, 1997 from Richard D. Wilson, Acting
Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, to EPA Regional
Administrators, Regions 1-10, entitled ``Guidance on Incorporating
Voluntary Mobile Source Emission Reduction Programs in State
Implementation Plans (SIPs)'' (hereinafter ``1997 VMEP''). To qualify
for SIP credit, a VMEP must be consistent with SIP attainment and RFP
requirements and must achieve emission reductions that are
quantifiable, surplus, enforceable, and permanent. See 1997 VMEP at 6,
7. Additionally, the VMEP submission must be accompanied by sufficient
technical support for EPA to determine that the statutory criteria for
approval are met--e.g., procedures designed to compare projected
emission reductions with actual emissions reductions achieved; State
commitments to monitor, assess, and report on program implementation
and actual emission reductions achieved; and procedures for the State
to remedy emission reduction shortfalls in a timely manner. Id. The
State must also demonstrate that it has adequate personnel and program
resources to implement the program and that the VMEP does not interfere
with other requirements of the Act. Id. EPA has generally limited the
amount of emission reductions allowed for VMEPs in a SIP to three
percent (3%) of the total projected future year emission reductions
required to attain the relevant NAAQS, and with respect to any
particular SIP submittal to demonstrate attainment or maintenance of
the NAAQS or progress toward attainment (RFP), 3% of the specific
statutory requirement. Id. at 5.
Consistent with these criteria, the SCAQMD submitted an enforceable
commitment in 2007 to take ``all actions necessary to ensure that
emission reductions resulting from projects funded by the Carl Moyer
Program will meet U.S. EPA criteria (surplus, quantifiable,
enforceable, and permanent for life of project) and requirements for
SIP creditability to meet federal Clean Air Act requirements.'' See
South Coast AQMD Board Resolution No. 07-9, dated June 1, 2007
(adopting South Coast 2007 AQMP) (``2007 Resolution''). Specifically,
the 2007 Resolution includes the District's commitments to: (1)
Calculate emission reductions from Carl Moyer Program projects using
established quantification protocols specified in the applicable Carl
Moyer Program Guidelines; (2) verify surplus emission reductions
through a comprehensive inspection, monitoring and reporting program
for each project funded by the Carl Moyer Program, (3) conduct onsite
inspections, random audits, and other monitoring activities to ensure
that funded projects are implemented according to contract terms; (4)
submit reports to EPA by November 30 of each calendar year, verifying
the amounts of actual emission reductions achieved by the Carl Moyer
Program grants for the preceding funding cycle, and (5) take specific
actions to remedy any shortfalls in
[[Page 37747]]
emission reductions, to ensure that contracted emission reductions
occur. Id. The District also submitted technical support documentation
describing the Carl Moyer Program, the District's policies for
implementing the program, and the methodologies for predicting
emissions benefits. See generally South Coast 2007 AQMP, Appendix IV-B-
3, ``District Implementation of the Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality
Standards Attainment Program,'' available electronically at https://www.aqmd.gov/aqmp/07aqmp/aqmp/Appendix_IV-B-3_section1.pdf.
EPA approved these District commitments into the California SIP as
part of our November 2011 final action on the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP, thereby making the commitments federally
enforceable. See 76 FR 69928 at 69954 (November 9, 2011) and 40 CFR
52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(2) (codifying SCAQMD commitment ``to fulfill
USEPA Requirements for the use of emissions reductions [from] the Carl
Moyer Program in the State Implementation Plan, June 1, 2007''). EPA
also approved the District's technical documentation describing the
Carl Moyer Program as part of the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. See
40 CFR 52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(1). In the 2013 Supplement, the District
affirmed its SIP-approved commitments to ``take all actions necessary
to assure that emissions reductions resulting from the projects funded
by the Carl Moyer Program will meet U.S. EPA criteria . . . and
requirements for SIP creditability,'' including its obligation to
prepare and submit annual reports to EPA by November 30 of each year
identifying actual emission reductions achieved compared to predicted
emissions reductions and audit information for each grant issued. See
letter dated April 24, 2013, from Elaine Chang, Deputy Executive
Officer, SCAQMD, to Deborah Jordan, Air Division Director, U.S. EPA
Region 9, transmitting 2013 Supplement.
The SIP-approved commitments in the 2007 Resolution enable the
District to quantify the emission reductions attributed to the Carl
Moyer Program, verify that those emission reductions are surplus to
other CAA requirements, enforce the conditions of the Carl Moyer
Program grants to ensure that contracted emission reductions are
achieved, and monitor the continuing implementation of program grants
to ensure that emission reductions are ``permanent'' throughout the
life of each project. The 3.2 tpd of NOx reductions and 0.2 tpd of
PM2.5 reductions attributed to the Carl Moyer Program in
2015 for contingency measure purposes each amount to less than 2% of
the total projected emission reductions of each pollutant needed to
attain the PM2.5 NAAQS in the South Coast area.\16\ Finally,
information provided in the South Coast 2007 AQMP demonstrates that the
District has adequate personnel and program resources to implement the
Carl Moyer Program. See generally, South Coast 2007 AQMP, Appendix IV-
B-3, ``District Implementation of the Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality
Standards Attainment Program,'' at Section 1, available electronically
at https://www.aqmd.gov/aqmp/07aqmp/aqmp/Appendix_IV-B-3_section1.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The South Coast PM2.5 SIP projects that the
total amounts of emission reductions needed to attain the
PM2.5 NAAQS, from a 2002 base year to a 2014 attainment
year, are as follows: 633 tpd of NOx reductions, 370 tpd of VOC
reductions, 13 tpd of direct PM2.5 reductions, and 33 tpd
of SOx reductions. See 76 FR 69928 at 69950, Table 4 (November 9,
2011) and Final TSD at 97 (Table F-9). Thus, the Carl Moyer Program
reductions identified in the Contingency Measures SIP amount to
approximately 0.5 percent of the NOx reductions and 1.5 percent of
the PM2.5 reductions needed for timely attainment of the
PM2.5 NAAQS. The Contingency Measures SIP provides these
Carl Moyer Program emission reductions for the sole purpose of
fulfilling the requirements for contingency measures in CAA section
172(c)(9) and not for the purposes of demonstrating attainment or
maintenance of the NAAQS or progress toward attainment (RFP).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on our evaluation of the District's enforceable SIP
commitments regarding the Carl Moyer Program and technical
documentation provided by the District in its SIP submissions, we
propose to find that the 2015 emission reductions associated with the
Carl Moyer Program in the Contingency Measures SIP, as supplemented in
2013, satisfy the statutory criteria for SIP credit for contingency
measure purposes. The Carl Moyer Program procedures have served as
models for the design of national, state, and local credit validation
systems for mobile source subsidy programs, and California continuously
refines these guidelines to accurately reflect the reductions
associated with the program subsidies. The procedures address emission
reduction quantification issues associated with both baseline emissions
and the amount of reductions achievable from the various repower,
retrofit, and replacement technologies and alternative fuel options, as
well as issues associated with project life and enforceable
requirements to ensure that reductions continue within the
nonattainment area.
Given all of these considerations, we propose to approve these Carl
Moyer Program emission reductions as attainment contingency measures
for the PM2.5 NAAQS. Upon EPA's final approval of the
Contingency Measures SIP, the District will be obligated to monitor,
assess, and report to EPA on implementation of the Carl Moyer Program
with respect to the four specific source categories identified in the
2013 Supplement (on-road heavy duty engines, off-road diesel equipment,
marine engines, and locomotive engines). See 2013 Supplement,
Attachment 2. Additionally, should EPA subsequently determine that the
South Coast area has failed to attain the PM2.5 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date of April 5, 2015, the District will be
obligated to verify through its next annual report to EPA whether the
3.2 tpd of NOx reductions and 0.2 tpd of PM2.5 reductions
identified in the 2013 Supplement occurred in 2015, and if not, to take
specific actions to remedy any emission reduction shortfalls consistent
with its SIP-approved commitments in 40 CFR 52.220(c)(398)(ii)(A)(2).
We are proposing to approve these Carl Moyer Program emission
reductions for the sole purpose of satisfying the attainment
contingency measure requirement in CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS in the South Coast.
Other Voluntary Measures and Incentive Programs
The Contingency Measures SIP identifies several other voluntary
measures and incentive programs that the District believes should
qualify for approval as PM2.5 attainment contingency
measures.\17\ For the reasons provided below, these programs do not
qualify for approval as contingency measures at this time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ According to the District, all but one of these measures
will achieve surplus emission reductions in both 2012 and 2014 and
may, therefore, serve both as 2012 RFP contingency measures and as
attainment contingency measures. As explained above in Section
III.B.1, EPA is not evaluating the 2012 emission reduction estimates
that the District provided for each of these measures, given our
proposal to conclude that the 2012 RFP contingency measure
requirement is now moot for this area. See n. 6, supra. We therefore
evaluate only the emission reduction estimates associated with these
measures for attainment contingency measure purposes (i.e., for
2015), as provided in the 2013 Supplement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the submittal states that the ``average vehicle ridership''
(AVR) portion of SCAQMD Rule 2202 (On-Road Mobile Source Vehicle
Mitigation Options) requires employers with 250 or more employees to
develop rideshare programs or help fund an air quality improvement
program to achieve equivalent emissions reductions to meet the AVR
target. Contingency Measures SIP at 13. The District states that this
measure will achieve 1.32 tpd of NOX reductions and 0.06 tpd
of direct PM2.5 reductions in 2014 beyond those relied
[[Page 37748]]
on for attainment, and that the measure could therefore serve as an
attainment contingency measure. Id. at 17, Table 4. EPA does not
currently have sufficient information to evaluate the emission
reductions associated with this measure as the State has not submitted
the measure or any supporting documentation to EPA. Thus, we cannot
propose to approve this measure as a contingency measure at this time.
Second, the submittal states that the AB 2766 program provides
annual funding to local governments in the South Coast air basin to
reduce mobile source emissions and that the SCAQMD submits annual
reports about the emission reductions under AB 2766 to CARB.
Contingency Measures SIP at 13. The District states that this measure
will achieve 1.90 tpd of NOX reductions and 0.30 tpd of
direct PM2.5 reductions in 2014 beyond those relied on for
attainment, and that this measure could therefore serve as an
attainment contingency measure. Id. at 17, Table 4. EPA does not
currently have sufficient information to evaluate the emission
reductions associated with this measure as the State has not submitted
the measure or any supporting documentation to EPA. Thus, we cannot
approve this measure as a contingency measure at this time.
Third, the submittal states that the Ports of Los Angeles and Long
Beach (POLA/POLB) have been facilitating use of shore-side power as
part of the San Pedro Bay Ports Clean Air Action Plan (referred to as
the ``Ocean-Going Vessel At-Berth''), and that these measures reduce
emissions further than those achieved by a statewide (CARB) regulation
that requires a percentage of certain ocean-going vessels (OGVs) to use
shore-side power while at berth. Contingency Measures SIP at 14. The
District states that these POLA/POLB measures will achieve 3.3 tpd of
NOX reductions and 0.06 tpd of direct PM2.5
reductions in 2014 beyond those relied on for attainment, and that the
measures may therefore serve as attainment contingency measures. Id. at
17, Table 4. EPA does not currently have sufficient information to
evaluate the emission reductions associated with these measures as the
State has not submitted the measures or any supporting documentation to
EPA. Thus, we cannot approve these measures as contingency measures at
this time.
Finally, the submittal states that early implementation of certain
provisions of the ``SCAQMD Surplus Off-Road Opt-In for NOX''
(SOON) program, adopted by the SCAQMD in May 2008, will achieve 0.30
tpd of PM2.5 emission reductions in 2014 beyond those relied
on for attainment, and that this program could therefore serve as an
attainment contingency measure. Contingency Measures SIP at 15 and 17,
Table 4. CARB submitted this measure (Rule 2449) to EPA on July 18,
2008 but EPA has not yet taken any action on it. Thus, we cannot
propose to approve this measure as a contingency measure at this time.
EPA is currently working with the State and districts to develop
reliable processes for documenting the emission reductions associated
with voluntary and incentive programs for SIP purposes. The goal is to
develop processes that ensure that the emission reductions resulting
from voluntary and incentive programs are surplus, quantifiable,
enforceable and permanent consistent with the Act as interpreted in EPA
guidance. EPA strongly encourages CARB and the SCAQMD to continue
implementing effective incentive programs and voluntary measures as
part of their strategies for meeting air quality goals and to continue
discussing with EPA the potential incorporation of these incentive
programs and measures into SIP planning processes going forward. We
welcome public comments on how to ensure that emission reductions
resulting from these programs meet the Act's requirements for SIP
credit.
Miscellaneous ``Excess Reductions''
The Contingency Measures SIP states that permitted sources in the
South Coast area often achieve ``excess reductions'' beyond those
assumed in the SIP. For example, the District states that sources
typically emit at levels well below allowable levels to maintain
adequate compliance margins, or they may comply with stringent control
standards through preconstruction review processes that reduce
emissions below the levels assumed in the SIP. Contingency Measures SIP
at 15. Furthermore, the District states that the recent recession in
the region ``would further lower the growth projections that were
previously assumed in the 2007 PM2.5 SIP.'' Id. The District
states that these factors combined caused significantly lower emissions
in 2010 compared to the levels projected for that year in the South
Coast PM2.5 SIP. Id. According to the District, these
circumstances will result in approximately 6.42 tpd of NOX
reductions, 0.45 tpd of PM2.5 reductions, and 8.75 tpd of
VOC reductions in 2014 beyond the reductions relied on for attainment,
which collectively equate to about 14 tpd of ``NOX
equivalent'' emission reductions for that year. Id. at 15 and 17, Table
4.
We disagree with these statements. Emission reductions that occur
as a result of business decisions to maintain adequate compliance
margins or due to an unexpected economic recession are not approvable
as contingency measures unless such reductions are quantifiable,
surplus, enforceable, and permanent and meet all applicable CAA
requirements for approval. Even assuming the ``excess'' emission
reductions identified in the Contingency Measures SIP are in fact
surplus to those that are specifically relied upon in the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP for attainment purposes, these reductions are not
SIP-creditable without adequate documentation to show that the
reductions are also quantifiable, enforceable, and permanent consistent
with long-standing EPA policy. The Contingency Measures SIP provides no
such documentation. Accordingly, the ``excess'' reductions associated
with 14 tpd of ``NOx equivalent'' emission reductions in 2015 are not
SIP-creditable at this time.
c. PM2.5 Air Quality Data
The Contingency Measures SIP provides the District's rationale for
concluding that significant PM2.5 air quality improvements
in the South Coast area should be accounted for in evaluating the
attainment contingency measure requirement for the area. See
Contingency Measures SIP at 5-11. Based on our review of the District's
analyses and our independent review of available PM2.5 air
monitoring data for the 2002-2012 period, EPA agrees that these air
quality improvements should be taken into account in evaluating the
level of emission reductions needed for purposes of meeting the
attainment contingency measure requirement under CAA section 172(c)(9).
Although these air quality improvements do not, in themselves,
represent SIP-creditable emission reductions, we believe the
significant decline in ambient PM2.5 levels observed during
the 2002-2012 period provides a reasonable basis for concluding that
emission reductions amounting to less than 1 year's worth of RFP are
adequate for PM2.5 attainment contingency measure purposes
in this particular nonattainment area.
Under EPA regulations at 40 CFR 50.7, the 1997 annual primary and
secondary PM2.5 standards are met when the annual arithmetic
mean concentration, as determined in accordance with 40 CFR part 50,
appendix N, is less than or equal to 15.0 [micro]g/m\3\ at all relevant
monitoring sites in the subject area. The 1997 24-hour primary and
secondary PM2.5 standards are met when the 98th percentile
24-
[[Page 37749]]
hour concentration, also as determined in accordance with appendix N,
is less than or equal to 65 [micro]g/m\3\ at all relevant monitoring
sites. 40 CFR 50.7(b), (c).
EPA independently reviewed PM2.5 air quality data
available in EPA's ``Air Quality System'' (AQS) for the 2002-2012
period to assess the District's representations regarding
PM2.5 air quality improvements in the South Coast area.\18\
The SCAQMD currently operates 20 regulatory PM2.5 monitoring
sites in the South Coast air basin and annually reports quality-assured
ambient PM2.5 data from these sampling sites to the EPA AQS
database. See SCAQMD, Annual Air Quality Monitoring Network Plan (July
2012), at 7-9 and 21, Table 5. EPA has approved the District's
monitoring network as satisfying the network design and data adequacy
requirements of 40 CFR part 58. See letter dated April 18, 2013, from
Matthew Lakin, Manager, Air Quality Analysis Office, EPA Region 9, to
Dr. Matt Miyasato, Deputy Executive Officer, Science and Technology
Advancement, SCAQMD. Quality-assured and certified ambient air quality
data collected through the District's monitoring network and available
in AQS show that PM2.5 levels in the South Coast
nonattainment area were significantly lower in the years leading to
2012 than the levels projected in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP
for this period, and that both annual and 24-hour concentrations have
declined significantly at all monitors in the area. See U.S. EPA, Air
Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5,
2002-2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013); see also U.S. EPA, Data Quality
Indicator Report, SCAQMD, California, PM2.5 (April 26, 2012)
and letter dated May 1, 2012, from Chung Liu, Deputy Executive Officer,
Science and Technology Advancement, SCAQMD, to Jared Blumenfeld,
Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA Region 9 (certifying air quality data
submitted to AQS).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ EPA evaluated these data only preliminarily, for purposes
of determining whether the Contingency Measures SIP satisfies the
requirements of CAA section 172(c)(9), and is not at this time
proposing to make any formal determination regarding attainment for
the South Coast PM2.5 nonattainment area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1 lists the annual mean PM2.5 concentration at
each monitor in the South Coast air basin during the 2002-2012 period.
Table 1--PM[ihel2].[ihel5] Annual Mean Concentrations, 2002-2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One-year annual mean ([mu]g/m\3\)
Site AQS ID ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Azusa.............................................. 060370002 20.7 19.3 18.3 17.0 15.4 15.7 14.0 13.1 10.8 12.1 11.0
Burbank--Palm Ave.................................. 060371002 24.0 22.1 19.1 17.8 16.5 16.9 13.9 15.3 12.8 13.5 12.6
LA--North Main..................................... 060371103 22.0 21.3 19.7 17.8 15.6 16.8 16.1 14.4 12.6 13.5 13.2
Reseda............................................. 060371201 18.9 16.5 15.7 13.9 12.8 13.3 11.8 11.4 10.1 10.2 10.5
Lynwood............................................ 060371301 23.3 20.3 18.5 17.5 16.7 16.0 14.6 ...... ...... ...... ......
Compton............................................ 060371302 ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... 12.4 14.7 12.5 12.5 11.7
Pico Rivera 1............................. 060371601 24.0 20.6 20.0 15.2 ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
Pico Rivera 2............................. 060371602 ...... ...... ...... 22.3 16.6 16.6 14.9 14.8 12.5 12.5 11.9
Pasadena........................................... 060372005 20.3 18.6 16.6 15.1 13.4 14.4 12.8 12.3 10.2 10.8 10.1
Long Beach......................................... 060374002 19.5 18.0 17.9 15.9 14.1 14.6 14.1 12.8 10.4 11.3 10.6
Long Beach--PCH.................................... 060374004 ...... 20.6 16.5 14.7 14.4 13.7 13.7 12.5 10.4 10.7 10.9
Anaheim............................................ 060590007 18.6 17.3 17.0 14.7 14.0 14.4 13.1 12.1 10.5 11.1 10.0
Mission Viejo...................................... 060592022 15.5 13.1 12.0 10.6 11.0 11.1 10.4 9.5 8.0 8.5 7.9
Riverside.......................................... 060651003 27.1 22.6 20.8 17.9 16.9 18.3 13.3 13.3 11.0 11.8 11.4
Rubidoux........................................... 060658001 27.5 24.8 22.1 20.9 18.9 19.0 16.4 15.6 13.3 13.8 13.7
Mira Loma.......................................... 060658005 ...... ...... ...... ...... 20.8 20.9 18.3 17.2 15.5 15.9 15.3
Ontario............................................ 060710025 25.4 23.8 20.9 18.8 18.4 18.3 15.8 14.7 13.0 13.3 12,4
Fontana............................................ 060712002 24.3 22.1 19.9 18.8 17.5 18.9 15.3 14.2 11.9 12.6 12.8
Big Bear........................................... 060718001 11.5 10.6 9.6 12.0 11.3 10.3 9.1 9.9 8.4 8.4 8.0
San Bernardino..................................... 060719004 25.8 22.2 21.9 17.3 17.6 17.9 13.4 13.0 11.1 12.2 11.8
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002-2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
Table 2 lists the annual PM2.5 design value at each
monitor in the South Coast air basin for the 2002-2012 period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Most but not all of these design values are based on data
that meet EPA's completeness criteria in 40 CFR part 50, appendix N,
section 4.0. See Memorandum from Meredith Kurpius to File dated May
10, 2013.
Table 2--Annual PM[ihel2].[ihel5] Design Values, 2002-2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One-year annual mean ([mu]g/m\3\)\19\
Site AQS ID ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Azusa.............................................. 060370002 20.8 20.6 19.4 18.2 16.9 16.0 15.1 14.3 12.7 12.0 11.3
Burbank--Palm Ave.................................. 060371002 23.3 23.6 21.7 19.7 17.8 17.1 15.8 15.4 14.0 13.9 12.9
LA--North Main..................................... 060371103 22.2 22.0 21.0 19.6 17.7 16.7 16.1 15.8 14.4 13.5 13.1
Reseda............................................. 060371201 18.4 17.9 17.0 15.4 14.1 13.3 12.6 12.1 11.1 10.6 10.3
Lynwood............................................ 060371301 23.6 22.7 20.7 18.7 17.5 16.7 15.8 15.3 14.6 ...... ......
Compton............................................ 060371302 ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... 12.4 13.5 13.2 13.4 12.4
Pico Rivera 1............................. 060371601 24.4 23.3 21.5 18.6 17.6 15.2 ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
Pico Rivera 2............................. 060371602 ...... ...... ...... 22.3 19.5 18.5 16.0 15.4 14.1 13.3 12.3
Pasadena........................................... 060372005 20.2 19.9 18.5 16.8 15.0 14.3 13.5 13.2 11.8 11.1 10.4
Long Beach......................................... 060374002 20.1 19.6 18.5 17.3 16.0 14.9 14.3 13.9 12.4 11.5 10.8
Long Beach--PCH.................................... 060374004 ...... 20.6 18.6 17.3 15.2 14.3 13.9 13.3 12.2 11.2 10.7
Anaheim............................................ 060590007 22.0 20.4 17.6 16.3 15.2 14.3 13.8 13.2 11.9 11.2 10.8
Mission Viejo...................................... 060592022 15.4 14.8 13.5 11.9 11.2 10.9 10.8 10.3 9.3 8.7 8.1
Riverside.......................................... 060651003 26.9 25.9 23.5 20.5 18.6 17.7 16.2 15.0 12.5 12.0 11.4
[[Page 37750]]
Rubidoux........................................... 060658001 28.9 27.8 24.8 22.6 20.6 19.6 18.1 17.0 15.1 14.2 13.6
Mira Loma.......................................... 060658005 ...... ...... ...... ...... 20.8 20.9 20.0 18.8 17.0 16.2 15.6
Ontario............................................ 060710025 25.3 25.2 23.4 21.2 19.4 18.5 17.5 16.2 14.5 13.7 12.9
Fontana............................................ 060712002 24.6 23.8 22.1 20.3 18.7 18.4 17.2 16.1 13.8 12.9 12.4
Big Bear........................................... 060718001 10.9 11.1 10.6 10.8 11.0 11.2 10.3 9.8 9.1 8.9 8.3
San Bernardino..................................... 060719004 25.9 24.7 23.3 20.5 18.9 17.6 16.3 14.7 12.5 12.1 11.7
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002-2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
Table 3 lists the 24-hour PM2.5 design value at each
monitor in the South Coast air basin for the 2002-2012 period.
Table 3--24-Hour PM[ihel2].[ihel5] Design Values, 2002-2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
24-Hour Design Value ([mu]g/m\3\) \20\
Site AQS ID ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Azusa.............................................. 060370002 59 57 54 54 48 47 41 42 38 36 31
Burbank--Palm Ave.................................. 060371002 69 62 55 53 48 48 43 41 34 34 32
LA--North Main..................................... 060371103 62 58 57 56 49 48 43 42 35 34 32
Reseda............................................. 060371201 51 49 48 45 40 34 30 29 29 28 30
Lynwood............................................ 060371301 60 57 53 51 49 46 41 39 33 ...... ......
Compton............................................ 060371302 ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... 13 25 28 34 31
Pico Rivera 1............................. 060371601 65 58 53 51 52 51 ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
Pico Rivera 2............................. 060371602 ...... ...... ...... 58 51 50 43 41 35 33 31
Pasadena........................................... 060372005 53 51 48 46 41 40 37 38 31 30 27
Long Beach......................................... 060374002 54 48 46 45 41 39 38 38 33 30 28
Long Beach--PCH.................................... 060374004 ...... 53 48 44 38 36 35 34 31 28 27
Anaheim............................................ 060590007 54 53 49 47 42 42 38 37 30 29 27
Mission Viejo...................................... 060592022 43 43 41 36 32 31 29 29 23 23 21
Riverside.......................................... 060651003 65 62 58 50 47 49 48 44 33 30 27
Rubidoux........................................... 060658001 73 72 67 65 57 55 50 45 38 35 34
Mira Loma.......................................... 060658005 62 ...... ...... ...... 53 56 53 49 41 39 37
Ontario............................................ 060710025 62 63 61 59 50 47 45 43 37 34 32
Fontana............................................ 060712002 64 60 58 55 52 52 52 48 37 31 32
Big Bear........................................... 060718001 30 30 28 30 34 38 36 32 30 29 29
San Bernardino..................................... 060719004 68 64 66 58 55 54 53 49 35 32 30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: U.S. EPA, Air Quality System, Preliminary Design Value Report, PM2.5, 2002-2012 (Report Date: May 10, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to these certified ambient air quality data, the highest
annual mean PM2.5 concentration in the South Coast area
dropped from 27.5 [mu]g/m\3\ in 2002 (at Rubidoux) to 15.3 [mu]g/m\3\
in 2012 (at Mira Loma), and the annual PM2.5 design value
for the area dropped from 28.9 [mu]g/m\3\ to 15.6 [mu]g/m\3\ during
this same timeframe. Daily PM2.5 design values at all
monitors in the South Coast area also declined significantly, from 73
[mu]g/m\3\ (at Rubidoux) in 2002 to 37 [mu]g/m\3\ (at Mira Loma) in
2012. All monitors in the South Coast area have recorded 24-hour
PM2.5 design values below the 24-hour PM2.5
standard of 65 [mu]g/m\3\ since at least 2006, and as of 2010 most
monitors were also recording 24-hour design values below the more
stringent 2006 24-hour standard of 35 [mu]g/m\3\.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See also Final TSD for South Coast PM2.5 SIP at
8, Figure IB-3 (``South Coast AQMP 1997 24-hour PM2.5
Design Value Concentration Trends 2000-2010'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These data indicate that actual emission levels in the area during
the years leading to 2012 were significantly lower than the levels
projected for this period in the South Coast PM2.5 SIP. The
data also indicate that the area is already attaining the 1997 24-hour
PM2.5 standard (65 [mu]g/m\3\) and may also attain the
annual standard (15 [mu]g/m\3\) in advance of the applicable attainment
date of April 5, 2015. Accordingly, compared to the assumptions
underlying the South Coast PM2.5 SIP, in reality the
likelihood that attainment contingency measures will never need to be
triggered is much greater, and the extent of any potential attainment
shortfall much lower, than was predicted. Therefore, given the
proximity of the applicable attainment date (April 5, 2015) and the
probability that the area will attain the PM2.5 standards by
that date \22\ or, in the event it fails to attain, that a smaller
amount of additional emission reductions (compared to the levels
identified in the plan as needed to achieve 1 year's worth of RFP) will
be needed to bring about attainment in the area, we believe it is
appropriate to find that emission reductions amounting to less than 1
year's worth of RFP are adequate to satisfy the attainment contingency
measure requirement in these particular circumstances. This conclusion
is consistent with EPA's long-standing recommendation that states
should consider ``the potential nature and extent of any attainment
shortfall for the area'' and that contingency measures ``should
represent a portion of the actual emissions reductions necessary to
bring about attainment in the area.'' See PM-10 Addendum at 42015 and
72 FR 20643.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ EPA is not aware of any information indicating significant
changes (such as a sharp upturn in economic or population growth, or
dramatic meteorological shift) that might adversely affect the
consistent historical trend in the area to improved air quality,
during the relatively short amount of time remaining before April 5,
2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Surplus emission reductions in South Coast PM2.5 SIP
The Contingency Measures SIP states that the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP identified emission reductions sufficient for the
[[Page 37751]]
South Coast air basin to reach 15.00 [mu]g/m\3\ by April 2015, which is
more than necessary to demonstrate timely attainment according to EPA
modeling guidelines. Specifically, the District states that EPA
guidelines allow states to demonstrate attainment at a level of 15.04
[mu]g/m\3\ rather than 15.00 [mu]g/m\3\, and that the additional 0.04
[mu]g/m\3\ of air quality improvement accounted for in its attainment
demonstration equated to a ``surplus'' of 11 tpd of NOX-
equivalent emission reductions. See Contingency Measures SIP at 15. In
the 2013 Supplement, the District characterized this amount as a
``surplus'' of 0.8 tpd of SOX reductions, in accordance with
conversion factors provided in Appendix C of a CARB Staff Report
entitled ``2007 State Implementation Plan for the South Coast Air Basin
PM2.5 and 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS.'' See 2013 Supplement,
Attachment 2.
EPA agrees that the District may demonstrate attainment using 15.04
[mu]g/m\3\ as the target emission level in its modeling analyses \23\
and that, because the South Coast PM2.5 SIP models
attainment at a level of 15.0 [mu]g/m\3\, some amount of emission
reductions accounting for the additional 0.04 [mu]g/m\3\ of air quality
improvement may be characterized as ``surplus'' to attainment needs. We
are not equating these air quality improvements with a specific amount
of SIP credit at this time but we have reviewed the District's
conversions of these concentrations into NOX-equivalent and
SOX-equivalent emission reductions and find the
approximations to be reasonable. See Memorandum from Carol Bohnenkamp
to File dated May 30, 2013. These analyses generally support our
conclusion that attainment contingency measures achieving less than 1
year's worth of RFP are adequate for this particular nonattainment
area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See ``Guidance on the Use of Models and Other Analyses for
Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze,'' April 2007, EPA--454/B-07-
002, at p. 21 (referencing EPA's rounding convention in 40 CFR part
50, appendix N for calculation of annual average PM2.5
values).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Summary
In sum, the Contingency Measure SIP, as supplemented in 2013,
identifies SIP-creditable attainment contingency measures that will
achieve a total of 27.2 tpd of NOX reductions, 14.3 tpd of
VOC reductions, and 0.2 tpd of direct PM2.5 reductions in
2015. The 2013 Supplement identifies two additional control measures
that will, upon final EPA approval of the measures, achieve an
additional 0.6 tpd of direct PM2.5 reductions, for a total
of 0.8 tpd of direct PM2.5 reductions in 2015. These
emission reductions amount to approximately 56% of the NOX
reductions, 49% of the VOC reductions, and more than 100% of the direct
PM2.5 reductions that would be needed to achieve
approximately 1 year's worth of RFP in 2015.\24\ See Table 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ The Contingency Measure SIP does not specifically provide
SIP-creditable SOX reductions in 2015 for contingency
measure purposes.
Table 4--Summary of 2015 Emission Reductions Creditable as Attainment Contingency Measures
[in tons per day]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOX VOC PM2.5 SOX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fleet turnover........................ 24 13 ................ ................
Rule 1113............................. ................. 1.3 ................ ................
Carl Moyer............................ 3.2 ................. 0.2 ................
Rule 444 *............................ ................. ................. 0.2 ................
Rule 445 *............................ ................. ................. 0.4 ................
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Emission Reductions:........ 27.2 14.3 0.8 0
1 year RFP \25\....................... 49 29 0.7 3.8
Total as percentage of 1-year RFP. 56 49 114 0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Creditable only upon EPA's final approval of these rules into the SIP pursuant to CAA section 110.
We are proposing to fully approve these measures and surplus
emission reductions as satisfying the attainment contingency measure
requirement in CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the South Coast nonattainment area. All of these emission
reductions are provided by control measures or incentive programs that
are fully adopted under State law and currently being implemented by
the District. These measures and programs provide SIP-creditable
emission reductions that are not relied on in the South Coast
PM2.5 SIP to demonstrate RFP or attainment and provide for
an appropriate level of continued emissions reduction progress should
the South Coast area fail to attain by the statutory attainment date
and necessitate additional planning.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See n. 2, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Section 110(l) of the Act
Section 110(l) of the Act prohibits EPA from approving any SIP
revision that would interfere with any applicable requirement
concerning attainment and RFP or any other applicable requirement of
the Act. The Contingency Measures SIP corrects SIP deficiencies
identified in EPA's November 9, 2011 partial approval and partial
disapproval of the South Coast PM2.5 SIP (76 FR 69928).
Specifically, the Contingency Measures SIP, as supplemented in 2013,
contains: (1) the District's demonstration that actual emission levels
in the South Coast in 2012 were below the 2012 RFP benchmarks, (2)
identification of SIP-creditable control measures that will achieve
emission reductions in 2015 in excess of those relied on for RFP and
expeditious attainment, and (3) an analysis of significant air quality
improvements in the South Coast area that the District believes EPA
should take into account as part of our action on the SIP submission.
We propose to determine that our approval of the Contingency Measures
SIP, as supplemented in 2013, would comply with CAA section 110(l)
because the proposed SIP revision would not interfere with the on-going
process for ensuring that requirements for RFP and attainment of the
NAAQS are met, and the submitted SIP corrects SIP deficiencies that
were the basis for EPA's November 9, 2011 partial disapproval of the
South Coast PM2.5 SIP.
IV. Proposed Action and Public Comment
For the reasons discussed above, we are proposing to conclude that
the Contingency Measures SIP submitted by
[[Page 37752]]
CARB on November 14, 2011, as supplemented on April 24, 2013, satisfies
the attainment contingency measure requirement in CAA section 172(c)(9)
for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the South Coast nonattainment
area, and to fully approve this submission into the California SIP.
Simultaneously, we are proposing to conclude that the RFP contingency
measure requirement in CAA section 172(c)(9) for the 2012 milestone
year is moot as applied to the South Coast because the area achieved
its emission reduction benchmarks for the 2012 RFP year.
Final approval of the Contingency Measures SIP, as supplemented,
would correct the deficiencies that were the basis for EPA's partial
disapproval of the South Coast PM2.5 SIP on November 9, 2011
(76 FR 69928) and would, therefore, terminate the CAA section 179(b)
sanctions clocks triggered by that action and the obligation on EPA to
promulgate a FIP within two years of that action.
EPA will accept public comments on this proposal for the next 30
days.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and
applicable federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve State
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this proposed action merely proposes to approve State law
as meeting Federal requirements and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by State law. For that reason, this
proposed action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the Clean Air Act; and
does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address disproportionate human health or environmental effects with
practical, appropriate, and legally permissible methods under Executive
Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this proposed action does not have tribal implications
as specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
because the SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in
the State, and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Incorporation by reference, Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur oxides,
Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 12, 2013.
Jared Blumenfeld,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2013-14918 Filed 6-21-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P