Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans, State of California, San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District, New Source Review, 46504-46514 [2013-18413]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 148 / Thursday, August 1, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
reimbursement payment was not treated as
compensation and wages paid to Y, under
section 274(e)(3)(A) and paragraph
(f)(2)(iv)(C)(1) of this section Y is not subject
to the section 274 deduction limitations.
Under paragraph (f)(2)(iv)(C)(2) of this
section, C, the payor, is subject to the section
274 deduction limitations.
Example 3. (i) The facts are the same as in
Example 1, except that the written agreement
between L and C expressly provides that the
limitations of this section will apply to C.
(ii) Under paragraph (f)(2)(iv)(D)(2)(b) of
this section, L and C have established a
reimbursement or other expense allowance
arrangement for purposes of paragraph
(f)(2)(iv)(C) of this section. Because the
agreement provides that the 274 deduction
limitations apply to C, under section
274(e)(3)(B) and paragraph (f)(2)(iv)(C) of this
section, C and not L is subject to the section
274 deduction limitations.
Example 4. (i) The facts are the same as in
Example 1, except that the agreement
between L and C does not provide that C will
reimburse L for travel expenses.
(ii) The arrangement between L and C is
not a reimbursement or other expense
allowance arrangement within the meaning
of section 274(e)(3)(B) and paragraph
(f)(2)(iv)(D)(2) of this section. Therefore, even
though L accounts to C for the expenses, L
is subject to the section 274 deduction
limitations.
(F) Effective/applicability date. This
paragraph (f)(2)(iv) applies to expenses
paid or incurred in taxable years
beginning after August 1, 2013.
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 3. Section 1.274–8 is revised to
read as follows:
§ 1.274–8
Effective/applicability date.
Except as provided in §§ 1.274–2(a),
1.274–2(e), 1.274–2(f)(2)(iv)(F), and
1.274–5, §§ 1.274–1 through 1.274–7
apply to taxable years ending after
December 31, 1962.
Beth Tucker,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
Approved: June 25, 2013.
Mark J. Mazur,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax
Policy).
[FR Doc. 2013–18559 Filed 7–31–13; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2010–0062; FRL–9837–5]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans, State of
California, San Joaquin Valley Unified
Air Pollution Control District, New
Source Review
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is taking final action to
correct the May 2004 approval of a
version of the New Source Review
(NSR) rules for the San Joaquin Valley
Unified Air Pollution Control District
portion of the California State
Implementation Plan, consistent with
the relevant provisions of state law.
Specifically, EPA is taking final action
to correct the May 2004 approval by
limiting the approval, as it relates to
agricultural sources, to apply the
permitting requirements only to such
sources with potential emissions at or
above a major source applicability
threshold and to such sources with
actual emissions at or above 50 percent
of a major source applicability threshold
and to apply the emission offset
requirement only to major agricultural
sources and major modifications of such
sources.
DATES: This rule is effective on
September 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established docket
number EPA–R09–OAR–2010–0062 for
this action. The index to the docket is
available electronically at
www.regulations.gov and in hard copy
at EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, California. While all
documents in the docket are listed 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 in
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura Yannayon, Permits Office (AIR–
3), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region IX, (415) 972–3534,
yannayon.laura@epa.gov.
SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Today’s Final Action
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A. Actions Proposed in January 29, 2010
Proposed Rule
B. Background, Authority and Rationale for
Proposed Error Correction
C. Letters from the California Attorney
General’s Office
II. Public Comments and EPA’s Responses
III. Final Action
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Today’s Final Action
A. Actions Proposed in January 29, 2010
Proposed Rule
On January 29, 2010 (75 FR 4745),
under the Clean Air Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’),
we proposed three actions in connection
with the permitting rules for the San
Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution
Control District (‘‘District’’) portion of
the California State Implementation
Plan (SIP).1 Herein, we refer to our
January 29, 2010 proposed rule as the
‘‘proposed rule.’’ As discussed further
below, we have already finalized the
second and third actions included in
our proposed rule, and are taking action
today to finalize the first action.
First, in our proposed rule, we
proposed to correct an error in our May
2004 final rule approving Rules 2020
(‘‘Exemptions’’) and 2201 (‘‘New and
Modified Stationary Source Review
Rule’’), as amended by the District in
December 2002, that establish the
requirements and exemptions for review
of new or modified stationary sources
(‘‘new source review’’ or ‘‘NSR’’).
Herein, we refer to District Rules 2020
and 2201 as the ‘‘District’s NSR rules.’’
In our proposed rule, we explained how
our error arose from the failure, in light
of information available at the time, to
recognize that the District did not have
the authority under state law to
implement the District’s NSR rules with
respect to permitting of minor
agricultural sources with actual
emissions less than 50% of the
applicable ‘‘major source’’ thresholds
and with respect to the imposition of
emissions offset requirements for minor
agricultural sources.
In addition to the error correction
described above, our January 2010
proposed rule also proposed two other
actions: (a) a limited approval and
limited disapproval of the District’s NSR
rules, as further amended in 2007 and
1 The San Joaquin Valley includes all of San
Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Kings
and Tulare counties, and the western half of Kern
County, in the State of California. The San Joaquin
Valley is designated as a nonattainment area for the
1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS) and the 1997 (annual)
and 2006 (24-hour) fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
NAAQS and is designated as attainment or
unclassifiable for the other NAAQS. See 40 CFR
81.305. The area is further classified as ‘‘extreme’’
for the now-revoked 1-hour ozone NAAQS, and the
1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
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2008 and a full approval of amended
District Rule 2530 (‘‘Federally
Enforceable Potential to Emit’’); and (b)
rescission of certain obsolete permitting
requirements from the District portion
of the California SIP.
On May 11, 2010 (75 FR 26102), we
finalized the proposed action on the
2007 and 2008 amendments to the
District’s NSR rules,2 District Rule 2530,
and the proposed rescission of obsolete
permitting requirements, but we
deferred final action on the proposed
error correction pending receipt from
the California Attorney General of an
interpretation of the District’s legal
authority with respect to agricultural
sources under state law.
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B. Background, Authority, and
Rationale for Proposed Error Correction
In our proposed rule, we provided a
detailed background discussion
regarding the District’s NSR rules and
related EPA SIP actions. See pages
4746–4747 of our proposed rule. In the
following paragraphs, we provide a
summary of this information. For more
details, please see our proposed rule.
EPA originally approved the District’s
NSR rules as part of the California SIP
in 2001.3 See 66 FR 37587 (July 19,
2001). EPA’s 2001 action was a limited
approval and limited disapproval
reflecting our conclusion that the rules
could not be fully approved as meeting
all applicable requirements because,
2 As discussed in more detail in our proposed
rule, the amendments to the NSR rules that were
adopted by the District in 2007 and 2008, among
other things, aligned the rules explicitly with the
limitations on the District’s authority under state
law to permit minor agricultural sources and to
require emissions offsets for such sources. 75 FR
4745, at 4749–4750 (January 29, 2010). Thus, as of
the effective date of EPA approval of the 2007- and
2008-amended District NSR rules at 75 FR 26102
(May 11, 2010), the SIP and State law is aligned
with respect to permitting of agricultural sources
(and imposition of the emissions offset
requirement) in San Joaquin Valley. Today’s final
action thus affects the applicable California plan
under 40 CFR part 52, subpart F during the period
of time after the effective date of our May 2004
approval of the 2002-amended District NSR rules
(i.e., June 16, 2004) and the effective date of our
May 2010 approval of the subsequently amended
NSR rules (i.e., June 9, 2010). During this period,
a number of CAA enforcement actions were brought
against San Joaquin Valley agricultural sources for
failure to secure permits and/or provide emissions
offsets even though such requirements were beyond
the authority of the District to impose under State
law. For additional background on why EPA is
taking today’s action, please see our January 29,
2010 proposed rule at 75 FR 4745, at 4748.
3 Rules 2020 and 2201 were adopted by the
District to meet NSR requirements under the Clean
Air Act, as amended in 1990, for areas that have not
attained the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS). District Rules 2020 and 2201
replaced existing NSR rules from the individual
county air pollution control districts that were
combined into the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air
Pollution Control District (‘‘District’’) in 1991.
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among other reasons, District Rule 2020
exempted all agricultural sources from
District permitting requirements. 66 FR
at 37590. At that time, District Rule
2020, citing California Health & Safety
Code (CH&SC) section 42310(e),
included a permitting exclusion for
‘‘any equipment used in agricultural
operations in the growing of crops or the
raising of fowl or animals,’’ except for
certain orchard and citrus grove heaters
in the southern portion of the District.
Our limited disapproval stated that the
District could not exempt major
stationary sources or major
modifications at existing major sources
from NSR requirements and be found to
meet applicable CAA requirements.4
To correct this deficiency, in
December 2002, the District amended
their NSR rules to eliminate the
agricultural permitting exemption in its
entirety, and, later that same month, the
California Air Resources Board (CARB)
submitted the District’s amended NSR
rules to EPA as a revision to the
California SIP. Shortly thereafter, EPA
proposed approval of the amended
District NSR rules, see 68 FR 7330
(February 13, 2003), even though we
recognized that ‘‘California Health &
Safety Code 42310(e) continues to
preclude the District, as well as all other
districts in California, from permitting
agricultural sources under either title I
or title V of the CAA.’’ See 68 FR 7330,
at 7335. We did so in light of a proposed
‘‘SIP Call’’ that we issued on the same
day as we proposed approval of the
amended District NSR rules. See 68 FR
7327 (February 13, 2003). The SIP Call
was based on our finding that the
California SIP was substantially
inadequate by failing to provide the
necessary assurances under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E) that the State had
the legal authority to carry out its NSR
permitting obligations under the CAA
with respect to major agricultural
sources. EPA finalized the SIP Call in
mid-2003, and thereby required
California to submit the necessary
assurances of authority to support an
affirmative finding by EPA under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E). 68 FR 37746 (June
25, 2003).
Later in 2003, the California
legislature enacted Senate Bill (SB) 700,
which the Governor of California signed
on September 22, 2003. SB 700 removed
4 District NSR permitting rules do not adopt the
distinction between minor sources and major
sources as set forth under the CAA. District Rules
2020 and 2201 generally apply to both federal
minor and major stationary sources. Our limited
approval and limited disapproval specified that the
rule deficiency was exempting major agricultural
sources and major modifications. See 65 FR 58252,
at 58254 (September 28, 2000).
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the wholesale exemption from
permitting for agricultural sources
provided under CH&SC section 42310(e)
and subjected major agricultural sources
to permit requirements. SB 700,
however, retained a limited exemption
for new source permitting at certain
minor agricultural sources, and limited
the ability of districts to require minor
agricultural sources to obtain offsets.5
California notified EPA of the
legislature’s action by letter dated
November 3, 2003 and enclosed a copy
of SB 700.6
On May 17, 2004, EPA took final
action approving the District’s NSR
rules, as amended by the District and
submitted by CARB in 2002. See 69 FR
27837 (May 17, 2004). These rules, as
approved by EPA, did not on their face
exempt any agricultural sources from
permitting or limit the applicability of
offset requirements. EPA’s final
approval stated that the District had
removed its exemption for agricultural
sources and that the state had also
‘‘removed a similar blanket exemption,
thereby providing the District with
authority to require air permits for
agricultural sources, including federally
required NSR permits.’’ See 69 FR
27837, at 27838. EPA’s final approval
cited SB 700 in a footnote, but did not
note the limited scope of authority for
permitting and offset requirements
under SB 700, which allowed
permitting of only certain minor
agricultural sources and continued the
exemption for other minor agricultural
sources.
In our proposed rule, under CAA
section 110(k)(6), we found that (1) our
May 2004 final full approval of District’s
NSR rules was in error in that our
approval of the rules should have
ensured that the authority in those rules
was consistent with the authority
granted by SB 700 and that (2) the
District did not, as of May 2004, have
the authority under SB 700 to require
permits for new or modified minor
agricultural sources with actual
emissions less than 50 percent of the
5 Specifically, under SB 700, minor agricultural
sources with actual emissions below 50 percent of
the major source threshold are exempt from
permitting unless the District makes certain
findings, while sources at or above 50 percent of the
major source threshold are subject to permitting
unless the District makes certain findings. See
CH&SC section 42301.16(b) and (c). In addition, a
district may not require an agricultural source to
obtain emissions offsets for criteria pollutants for
that source if emissions reductions from that source
would not meet the criteria for real, permanent,
quantifiable, and enforceable emission reductions.
See CH&SC section 42301.18(c).
6 See Letter from Bill Lockyer, Attorney General,
California Office of the Attorney General, to
Marianne Horinko, Acting Administrator, EPA,
dated November 3, 2003.
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major source threshold or to require
new minor agricultural sources or minor
modifications to agricultural sources to
obtain emission reduction offsets,
notwithstanding the absence of explicit
exemptions in the District’s NSR rules.
Moreover, we noted in our proposed
rule that California submitted a copy of
SB 700 in November 2003, and thus we
had information indicating that the
District did not have the authority to
implement the NSR rules to the extent
that the language of the District’s rule
appeared to allow (i.e., to require
permits and offsets from all new or
modified agricultural sources, including
those exempt under SB 700) prior to the
time we took final action. In our
proposed rule, we explained that we
should have limited our approval of the
District’s NSR rules in May 2004 to
conform with SB 700, and promulgated
language in 40 CFR part 52 codifying
that limitation on our approval.
To correct this error, we proposed to
limit our approval of the District’s NSR
rules to exclude applicability to
agricultural sources exempt from new
source permitting under SB 700 (i.e.,
minor sources with actual emissions
less than 50 percent of the major source
threshold). We also proposed to limit
our approval to require offsets only for
major agricultural sources, because at
the time of our 2010 proposed action,
we believed that the District had not
found emissions reductions from
agricultural sources to meet the criteria
for real, permanent, quantifiable, and
enforceable emissions reductions and
thus had not lifted the restriction
otherwise provided in SB 700 (and
codified in CH&SC section 42301.18(c))
on the imposition of the emissions offset
requirement on new minor agricultural
sources or minor modifications of
agricultural sources.
For more information about our
proposed determination of error and our
proposed correction, please see pages
4747–4748 of our proposed rule.
C. Letters From the California Attorney
General’s Office
In response to our proposed rule,
several comments were submitted that
objected to our proposed error
correction action and the interpretation
of state law upon which it was based,
and raised significant questions as to the
extent of District authority with respect
to agricultural sources under state law.
Specifically, the commenters who
objected to our proposed correction
cited ‘‘savings’’ clauses in state law that
they contend ratified the District’s NSR
rules that contain no permitting or
offsets exemptions for agricultural
sources notwithstanding other
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provisions in state law that would
otherwise limit District authority over
those sources.
To ensure our final action would be
informed by the State’s interpretation of
the relevant provisions of state law, we
requested that CARB provide us with a
legal interpretation from the California
Attorney General of the extent of
District authority with respect to
agricultural sources under state law.7
More specifically, we requested that
CARB provide us a legal interpretation
from the California Attorney General of
SB 700 as it applies to the District NSR
rules adopted in December 2002 and
approved by EPA in May 2004. By
letters dated November 14, 2012 and
March 18, 2013, the California Attorney
General’s Office has now provided us
the requested interpretation of state
law.8
II. Public Comments and EPA’s
Responses
Our proposed rule (75 FR 4745)
provided for a 30-day comment period.
During that period, we received adverse
comments from three groups: (1)
Greenberg-Glusker law firm, on behalf
of Dairy Cares, a coalition of California’s
dairy producer and processor
associations (referred to herein as
‘‘Dairy Cares’’), by letter dated March 1,
2010; (2) Earthjustice, by letter dated
March 1, 2010; and (3) the Center on
Race, Poverty & the Environment, on
behalf of the Association of Irritated
Residents and other community and
environmental groups (referred to
herein as ‘‘AIR’’), by letter dated March
1, 2010. AIR joins in the comments from
Earthjustice, but also adds comments of
its own.
All three comment letters cited above
included comments on one or more
aspects of our proposed rule (e.g., on
our proposed limited approval and
limited disapproval of the District’s NSR
rules, as further amended in 2007 and
2008) in addition to comments on the
proposed error correction. With respect
to the comments germane to the other
aspects of our proposed rule, we
provided responses in our final action
published on May 11, 2010 (75 FR
26102) and do not reopen those issues
through today’s final action.9 Rather, in
7 See letters from Jared Blumenfeld, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region IX, to Mary D. Nichols,
Chairwoman, California Air Resources Board, dated
April 12, 2010 and April 26, 2012.
8 See letters dated November 14, 2012 and March
18, 2013 from Robert W. Byrne, Senior Assistant
Attorney General, to Jared Blumenfeld, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region IX.
9 In its March 1, 2010 comment letter, AIR also
provided comments germane to a separate EPA
rulemaking also proposed on January 29, 2010
(‘‘Approval and Promulgation of Implementation
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the following paragraphs, we summarize
the significant comments that relate to
the proposed error correction that we
are taking final action on today, and
provide our responses.
Earthjustice Comment #1: EPA has
incorrectly interpreted State law in
proposing the error correction, and EPA
should ask the State to provide the
necessary assurances that the District
has the authority under State law to
permit all sources covered by Rule 2201.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #1:
EPA requested that the California
Attorney General provide an
interpretation of SB 700 as applied to
the District’s NSR rules, as amended by
the District in December 2002, and as
noted above, the California Attorney
General’s Office has responded to EPA’s
request in the form of two letters, one
dated November 14, 2012 and one dated
March 18, 2013. EPA has taken the
State’s interpretation into account in
responding to comments on our
proposed error correction and in taking
today’s final action.
Earthjustice Comment #2: The
District’s authority to permit
agricultural sources under the Clean Air
Act is not limited to sources above 50
percent of any applicable major source
threshold. EPA reads CH&SC section
42301.16(a) as only authorizing permits
for major agricultural sources. Nothing
in section 42301.16(a) refers to ‘‘major’’
sources or limits the CAA provisions
referenced to ‘‘major source’’
requirements. To the contrary, the
language refers to permits required for
‘‘any’’ source and instead of referring
only to part D of Title I, as EPA suggests,
refers to all of Title I beginning with
section 101 of the Act. EPA’s
interpretation cannot be reconciled with
the plain language of the CH&SC.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #2:
Earthjustice is correct that our proposed
error correction is predicated in part on
the interpretation that CH&SC section
42301.16(a) refers to ‘‘major sources’’ as
defined under the CAA, i.e., sources
that emit or have the potential to emit
at or above the major source threshold,
notwithstanding the fact that an explicit
reference to ‘‘major sources’’ is not
found in CH&SC section 42301.16(a).
See footnote #7 on page 4747 in the
proposed rule.
CH&SC section 42301.16(a) provides:
‘‘In addition to complying with the
requirements of this chapter, a permit
system established by a district
Plans: State of California; Legal Authority,’’ and
published at 75 FR 4742. We responded to AIR’s
comments germane to that separate rulemaking in
a final rule published at 75 FR 27938 (May 19,
2010) and do not reopen those issues through
today’s final action.
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pursuant to Section 42300 shall ensure
that any agricultural source that is
required to obtain a permit pursuant to
Title I . . . or Title V . . . of the federal
Clean Air Act is required by district
regulation to obtain a permit in a
manner that is consistent with the
federal requirements.’’ In proposing the
error correction, we interpreted the
reference to permits required under
Title I as meaning permits for major
sources covered under parts C or D of
Title I, and not minor sources. This is
because, under the relevant SIP content
provisions under Title I [section
110(a)(2)(C)], while SIPs must provide
for the ‘‘regulation of the modification
and construction of any stationary
source,’’ i.e., including minor sources,
the only explicit permitting requirement
is for a ‘‘permit program as required in
part C and D’’ of Title I. Thus, under
Title I, a permit program is only
explicitly required for sources covered
under parts C and D, and the sources
covered under parts C and D are major
sources.
Moreover, a State must identify the
types and sizes of minor stationary
sources which will be subject to review
[see 40 CFR 51.160(e)]. As such, States
are authorized to exempt certain minor
stationary sources from such review. No
such exemptions are allowed for review
of new or modified major sources. Thus,
permits for ‘‘major sources’’ can be
considered to be ‘‘required’’ in a way
that permits for minor sources are not.
In addition, our interpretation of
CH&SC section 42301.16(a) is consistent
with the fact that the California
legislature adopted SB 700 in part in an
effort to avoid sanctions that were set in
motion by EPA’s final determination
that the California SIP was
‘‘substantially inadequate’’ because
State law did not provide the legal
authority allowing State and local
permitting agencies to meet the
permitting obligations under parts C and
D of title I with respect to major
agricultural sources. Lastly, we note that
our interpretation of CH&SC section
42301.16(a) is consistent with
California’s interpretation. See the
memorandum from James N. Goldstene,
Executive Director, CARB, to Air
Pollution Control Officers, dated
September 3, 2008; and the letter from
Robert W. Byrne, Acting Senior
Assistant Attorney General, to Jared
Blumenfeld, dated November 14, 2012.
For the reasons given above, therefore,
we continue to interpret CH&SC section
423016(a) as referring to major sources
under Titles I and V of the CAA.
Earthjustice Comment #3: Even if one
were to accept EPA’s interpretation of
CH&SC section 42301.16(a) as being
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limited to title I part D requirements,
permitting of minor agricultural sources
in the District would still be authorized
because Rule 2201 relies on non-major
source permitting to fulfill the
requirements of part D. The District has
chosen not to impose Part D
requirements on major sources and has
claimed instead (with EPA’s approval)
that its permitting of non-major sources
can be credited to show that in the
aggregate Rule 2201 is ‘‘equivalent’’ to
the program required under part D for
major sources. By relying on credit from
its permitting of non-major sources to
meet federal NSR requirements, the
District has eliminated any lines
between what portion of Rule 2201 is
meant to comply with major source
permit requirements and what part is
not derived from or in satisfaction of the
part D major source provisions. The
same is true for agricultural sources. It
is only by permitting both major and
minor sources that the District can claim
to satisfy part D. Having allowed this
demonstration of compliance with
major source requirements ‘‘in the
aggregate,’’ EPA cannot now claim that
the permitting of certain non-major
source is not authorized under Title I.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #3:
Earthjustice is correct that EPA has
approved an equivalency tracking
system that the District uses to assess
overall equivalency of its NSR program
with CAA nonattainment NSR (i.e., part
D) requirements on an annual basis. 69
FR 27837 (May 17, 2004). The
requirements for the tracking system are
set forth in District Rule 2201, section
7.0 (‘‘Annual Offset Equivalency
Demonstration and Pre-Baseline ERC
Cap Tracking System’’). The goal of the
tracking system is to show that,
notwithstanding certain differences
between the District and Federal NSR
program, the District’s NSR rules would
require offsets that are, in the aggregate,
equivalent to offsets required under the
Federal program. 68 FR 7330, at 7332
(February 13, 2003).
To make the equivalency
demonstration, the District can use,
among other sources of emissions
reductions, emission reductions used to
meet offset requirements imposed on
minor sources. However, the fact that
the District can rely, and has relied, on
minor source offsets to demonstrate
equivalency does not mean that permits
for new or modified minor agricultural
sources are required under part D of
Title I and therefore subject to District
permitting authority under CH&SC
section 42301.16(a). The District has
demonstrated equivalency each year
since the tracking system was approved
and has never relied on offsets from new
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46507
minor agricultural sources or minor
modifications of agricultural sources to
do so. Thus, we disagree with
Earthjustice’s contention that the
District’s reliance on minor source (nonagricultural source) offsets to
demonstrate equivalency of the
District’s NSR program with Federal
NSR requirements makes all minor
source permits, including minor source
permits for agricultural sources,
required under part D of Title I and thus
‘‘required’’ for the purposes of CH&SC
section 42301.16(a).
Earthjustice Comment #4: EPA’s
interpretation of State law regarding
District permitting authority over
agricultural sources fails to reconcile
and give meaning to CH&SC section
39011.5. Under paragraphs (b) and (c) of
CH&SC section 39011.5, the authority to
permit any agricultural source under the
terms of Rule 2201 as it was revised in
December 2002 is expressly preserved
and made applicable to agricultural
sources. There is no dispute that, under
the terms of Rule 2201, the District had
jurisdiction over the permitting of all
agricultural sources on January 1, 2003,
and there is no dispute that Rule 2201
was adopted and submitted for EPA
approval to satisfy the requirements of
the CAA. Nothing in the language of
CH&SC section 39011.5(b) and (c)
suggests that the permitting authority
conferred by these preserved regulations
is subject to the limitations in CH&SC
section 42301.16(c) 10 or elsewhere. To
the contrary, the CH&SC uses broad
language making ‘‘any’’ existing district
regulation applicable to agricultural
sources and ensuring that ‘‘nothing’’
limits existing district authority. If the
District truly lacked authority to
regulate sources with actual emission
less than 50 percent of a major source
threshold, there would be no need for
these sections preserving the authority
of existing regulations. State law could
have been silent and allowed the
permitting of these sources only to the
extent authorized by SB 700. The only
way to reconcile these provisions is to
limit the effect of CH&SC section
42301.16(c) to future regulation (i.e.,
post enactment of SB 700) of these
sources.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #4:
We disagree with the contention that,
under the terms of Rule 2201, the
District had jurisdiction over the
10 As noted in footnote #5 of this document,
under CH&SC section 42301.16(b) and (c), minor
agricultural sources with emissions below 50
percent of the major source threshold are exempt
from permitting unless the District makes certain
findings, while sources at or above 50 percent of the
major source threshold are subject to permitting
unless the District makes certain findings.
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permitting of all agricultural sources on
January 1, 2003. At that time, State law
excluded all agricultural sources from
District permitting authority. The
absence of an exemption in Rule 2201
as adopted by the District in December
2002 did not imbue the District with
authority otherwise denied under State
law. In the following paragraphs, we
explain how our interpretation of
District permitting authority over
agricultural sources can be reconciled
with CH&SC section 39011.5. We also
find further support for our view in the
California Attorney General office’s
interpretation of the relevant sections of
SB 700.
CH&SC section 39011.5(a) defines
‘‘agricultural source of pollution’’ and
‘‘agricultural source’’ for the purposes of
Division 26 (‘‘Air Resources’’) of the
CH&SC. As noted in our proposed rule
(75 FR at 4752), California law defines
‘‘agricultural source’’ as a source of air
pollution or group of sources used in
the production of crops or the raising of
fowl or animals located on contiguous
property under common ownership or
control that is a confined animal facility
(e.g., barn, corral, coop); is an internal
combustion engine used in the
production of crops or the raising of
fowl or animals (e.g., irrigation pumps,
but excluding nonroad vehicles such as
tractors); or is a title V source or is a
source that is otherwise subject to
regulation by a district or the federal
Clean Air Act. See CH&SC section
39011.5(a). As such, agricultural sources
include both combustion sources (such
as, internal combustion engines and
boilers) and non-combustion sources
[e.g., confined animal facilities and onand off-field vehicular activity (e.g.,
tilling and harvesting)]. Among the noncombustion agricultural sources, some
by their nature generate fugitive
emissions such as tilling, harvesting,
and vehicle travel over unpaved farm
roads.
CH&SC section 39011.5(b) provides
that: ‘‘Any district rule or regulation
affecting stationary sources on
agricultural operations adopted on or
before January 1, 2004, is applicable to
an agricultural source.’’ In proposing the
error correction, we were aware of
CH&SC section 39011.5(b) but did not
interpret that statutory provision as
conferring authority to the District to
require permits for all new or modified
agricultural sources on January 1, 2004
(i.e., the effective date of SB 700).
Under our interpretation, the savings
clause in CH&SC section 39011.5(b)
preserves general prohibitory and
permitting rules affecting agricultural
sources and adopted prior to the
effective date of SB 700 (i.e., January 1,
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2004) but does not authorize the
application of District permitting
requirements inconsistent with the
limited exemptions set forth in other
sections of SB 700 [specifically, CH&SC
section 42301.16(c) and 42301.18(c)].
That is, CH&SC section 39011.5(b)
simply preserves District rules affecting
agricultural sources that were adopted
prior to SB 700 and avoids the need to
re-adopt such rules after the effective
date of SB 700. Under this view, CH&SC
section 39011.5(b) preserved the ability
of the District to administer its NSR
rules and apply them to agricultural
sources consistent with SB 700 upon the
effective date of SB 700 notwithstanding
the fact that the NSR rules were adopted
prior to the effective date of SB 700 and
thus could not be applied to agricultural
sources (because of the preclusion from
District permitting for agricultural
sources in then-current CH&SC section
42310(e)) at the time the District
adopted them.
The California Attorney General’s
office shares this view:
‘‘. . . . Although California before SB 700’s
enactment exempted agricultural sources
from New Source Review permitting
requirements, California law did not
preclude districts from adopting emissionsreduction rules of general application
(independent of the New Source Review
process) that would apply to agricultural
stationary sources. Some districts had such
rules and, following SB 700’s enactment,
section 39011.5, subdivision (b) preserved
them. For example, where air pollution
control districts had regulated stationary
diesel engines or generators, those
regulations were not limited or diminished
by SB 700 merely because the regulated
equipment happened to be located on or
involved in what SB 700 now termed
‘agricultural sources.’ Therefore, section
39011.5, subdivision (b) has a limited and
distinct purpose; it preserves and validates
those existing equipment-governing
regulations of general application, that,
without such a savings clause, might be
construed as invalid because the regulated
equipment was included as part of SB 700’s
‘agricultural sources.’ Subdivision (b) does
not authorize district New Source Review
rules that conflict with the sections of SB 700
that address the New Source Review
permitting process.’’ 11
Thus, EPA’s interpretation of CH&SC
section 39011.5(b) is consistent with
that expressed by the California
Attorney General’s office. Moreover, in
the excerpt provided above, the
California Attorney General’s office
explains the need for the savings clause.
CH&SC section 39011.5(c) provides in
relevant part: ‘‘Nothing in this section
limits the authority of a district to
11 See California Attorney General Office’s Letter,
November 14, 2013, page 4.
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regulate a source, including, but not
limited to, a stationary source that is an
agricultural source, over which it
otherwise has jurisdiction pursuant to
this division, or pursuant to the federal
Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 7401 et
seq.) or any rules or regulations adopted
pursuant to that act that were in effect
on or before January 1, 2003, or . . . .’’
Similar to CH&SC section 39011.5(b),
EPA did not view CH&SC section
39011.5(c) as validating the application
of District permitting requirements to all
new or modified agricultural sources
inconsistent with the limited
exemptions found in other sections of
SB 700 [specifically, CH&SC section
42301.16(c) and 42301.18(c)]. Under our
view, the phrase ‘‘nothing in this
section’’ limits the reach of CH&SC
section 39011.5(c) to the other
provisions in CH&SC section 39011.5,
i.e., the definition of ‘‘agricultural
source’’ in CH&SC section 39011.5(a)
and the savings clause in CH&SC
section 39011.5(b), discussed above. As
such, we view CH&SC section
39011.5(c) as ensuring that the
definition of ‘‘agricultural source’’ and
the savings clause in paragraph (b) does
not inadvertently limit the authority of
districts to regulate sources, including
agricultural sources, over which the
districts otherwise have jurisdiction
pursuant to rules adopted before
January 1, 2003, and does not inform
our interpretation of other sections of
SB 700, such as CH&SC section
42301.16(c) and 42301.18(c). Thus,
CH&SC 39011.5(c) in no way
undermines our determination in the
proposed rule that the District’s
authority to permit agricultural sources
and to impose emissions offset
requirements on such sources was
limited under State law notwithstanding
the absence of such limiting language in
the District’s NSR rules as adopted in
December 2002 and approved by EPA in
May 2004.
The California Attorney General’s
office agrees that CH&SC section
39011.5(c) does not authorize NSR rules
that conflict with other sections of SB
700 that expressly address the NSR
permitting process. The California
Attorney General’s office explains:
‘‘Likewise, [CH&SC section 39011.5(c)]
does not authorize district New Source
Review rules that conflict with SB 700’s
provisions concerning the New Source
Review process. Subdivision (c) provides that
nothing in that section limits a district’s
authority to regulate a source over which it
otherwise has jurisdiction under the Clean
Air Act or any Clean Air Act rules or
regulations that were in effect on or before
January 1, 2003. That is, subdivision (c)
clarifies that section 39011.5 itself does not
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limit a district’s existing authority, but
subdivision (c) does not concern whether
some other provision of SB 700 might limit
a district’s authority. Therefore, the only
effect of subdivision (c) is to assure that
section 39011.5, by defining the term
‘agricultural source,’ did not inadvertently
limit the validity or reach of any existing
district rules. Subdivision (c) does not grant
authority, and does not authorize New
Source Review rules that conflict with other
sections of SB 700 that expressly address the
New Source Review permitting process.’’ 12
Thus, we continue to read the savings
clauses of CH&SC section 39011.5(b)
and (c) as not validating the application
of District permitting requirements to all
new or modified agricultural sources
inconsistent with the limited
exemptions found in other sections of
SB 700, and as consistent with our
finding in the proposed rule that the
absence of the limited exemptions in SB
700 for agricultural sources in the
District’s NSR rules resulted in a
mismatch between the SIP and the
District’s authority under State law
when we approved the District’s NSR
rules in May 2004.
Earthjustice Comment #5: There is no
requirement that the District make
specific findings before requiring offsets
from agricultural sources. First, EPA’s
interpretation of CH&SC section
42301.18(c) has no basis in the language
of that section. There is nothing in
CH&SC section 42301.18(c) that requires
some ‘‘finding’’ by the District before
imposing offsets. Second, EPA’s
interpretation is inconsistent with
CARB’s explanation that the issue in
CH&SC 42301.18(c) is ‘‘whether the
emissions reductions meet the generic
criteria that the U.S. EPA and the ARB
and air district have, since 1976,
required of sources in order for the
reductions to ‘count’ for purposes of
attaining ambient standards’’ and ‘‘[t]he
existence of a District rule allowing
such offsets to be generated is not
germane. . . .’’ 13
Response to Earthjustice Comment #5:
We start with the words of CH&SC
section 42301.18(c): ‘‘A district may not
require an agricultural source to obtain
emissions offsets for criteria pollutants
for that source if emissions reductions
from that source would not meet the
criteria for real, permanent, quantifiable,
and enforceable emission reductions.’’
Earthjustice is correct that EPA did read
CH&SC section 42301.18(c) as
exempting new minor agricultural
sources or minor modifications of
12 See
California Attorney General Office’s Letter,
November 14, 2013, pages 4 and 5.
13 Earthjustice cites a letter from W. Thomas
Jennings, Chief Counsel, CARB, to Brent Newell,
Center on Race, Poverty and the Environment, May
30, 2007.
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existing agricultural sources from the
emissions offset requirement pending a
determination on the part of the District.
Based on that understanding, EPA
proposed to limit the Agency’s prior
approval in such a way as to give effect
to the absence of such a determination
during the period in which the relevant
version of District’s NSR rules were in
effect as part of the SIP, i.e., mid-2004
through mid-2010.
In response to this comment, we
reviewed again the language of CH&SC
section 42301.18(c) and acknowledge
that it does not specify any particular
process for determining when the
criteria, that would authorize
imposition by a District of the emission
offset requirement for a new or modified
minor agricultural source, have been
met for the given minor agricultural
source. We also reviewed the CARB
reference cited above in Earthjustice
Comment #5, and agree that it does not
support EPA’s understanding that a
determination by the District is a
prerequisite to the District’s authority to
impose the emissions offset requirement
to new or modified minor agricultural
sources under CH&SC section
42301.18(c), to the extent that the
‘‘determination’’ consists of a regulatory
protocol or District rule allowing such
offsets to be generated. In the CARB
reference cited by Earthjustice, CARB
writes:
‘‘With respect to our interpretation of
[CH&SC section 42301.18(c)], we believe that
section 42301.18(c) does not ask whether or
not the District has a regulatory protocol to
verify whether ERC’s offered by agricultural
source are creditable, but rather sets forth the
objective, generic criteria that must be
satisfied by an agricultural source seeking
credits for its emission reductions. If the
proffered reductions were real (i.e., surplus
to required reductions), quantifiable, and
enforceable, then the source would be able to
use (or bank) them as credits and the District
may, therefore, require the source to provide
offsets. The use of the subjective ‘‘would not
meet’’ is critical in interpreting this
provision; it focuses the inquiry on whether
the emissions reductions meet the generic
criteria that the U.S. EPA and the ARB and
air districts have, since 1976, required of
sources in order for the reductions to ‘‘count’’
for purposes of attaining ambient standards
and to qualify for use as offsets. The
existence of a District rule allowing offsets to
be generated is not germane to determining
whether emission reductions from a given
agricultural source ‘‘would’’ meet the criteria
for real, permanent, quantifiable, and
enforceable.’’
However, whether emissions
reductions from a given agricultural
source meet the relevant criteria is not
self-evident or self-implementing. Some
determination is necessary. For
instance, the District is the agency
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46509
responsible for allowing the emissions
reductions from a given agricultural
source to be banked or used for the
purpose of offsetting emissions
increases from new or modified
stationary sources that are subject to the
offset requirement under an approved
NSR program. If the District allowed
emission reductions to be banked or
used for offsetting emission increases,
then the District would thereby be
determining that the emissions
reductions are ‘‘real, permanent,
quantifiable, and enforceable’’ since
those are the basic criteria for judging
the creditability of emission reductions
for use as NSR offsets. The District’s
authority to impose the offset
requirement on new or modified minor
agricultural sources would vest as to
those agricultural sources for which it
has allowed banking or use of emission
reductions for NSR offset purposes.
Thus, while no protocol or District rule
specifically directed at agricultural
sources need be adopted for the offset
authority to vest, some determination is
necessary. Because no such
determination was made during the
relevant period between the effective
date of EPA’s 2004 approval of the
previous version of District NSR rules
and the effective date of EPA’s 2010
approval of District NSR rules that align
such rules with SB 700, EPA continues
to believe that limiting its approval to
exempt new minor agricultural sources
and minor modifications to existing
agricultural sources from the offset
requirement is warranted.
EPA’s position is supported by the
California Attorney General’s Office. In
its March 2013 letter, the California
Attorney General’s Office writes: ‘‘It is
our understanding that currently
emissions reductions from minor
agricultural sources do not meet the
criteria for real, permanent, quantifiable
and enforceable emission reductions.
On these facts, the plain language of
[CH&SC section 42301.18(c)] serves to
suspend the duty of a minor agricultural
source to offset emissions from that
source.’’ 14 If emission reductions from
14 See letter from the California Attorney
General’s office, dated March 18, 2013. We
recognize that the California Attorney General’s
Office’s November 2012 letter states that CH&SC
section 42301.18(c) ‘‘does not create an exemption’’
but merely ‘‘disqualifies any offsets that do not
meet the offset criteria and forbids the district from
requiring these deficient offsets.’’ We find this
statement difficult to reconcile with that Office’s
March 2013 letter that states that CH&SC section
42301.18(c) serves to ‘‘suspend the duty of a minor
agricultural source to offset emissions from that
source.’’ We believe that ‘‘exemption’’ and
‘‘suspend the duty’’ are essentially the same, and
thus both statements cannot be correct, but we
place greater weight on the March 2013 statement
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minor agricultural sources do not meet
the criteria in March 2013, then they
certainly did not meet the criteria
during the relevant period affected by
today’s error correction action (mid2004 through mid-2010).
The California Attorney General’s
Office, in its March 2013 letter,
maintains that its reading of CH&SC
section 42301.18(c) is consistent with
CARB’s letter to the California Air
Pollution Control Officers, dated
September 3, 2008, which was included
as an attachment to the California
Attorney General office’s letter, dated
March 18, 2013, and which provides the
following guidance with respect to
CH&SC section 42301.18(c):
‘‘This limited exemption from the offset
requirement means that agricultural sources
that are not amenable to District prohibitory
rules or control measures that would qualify
for SIP credit—or that are unable to generate
emission reductions that would qualify as
offsets—because they fail to meet one or
more of the basic criteria for a creditable rule
or for offset credit cannot be required to
provide offsets.
We believe this exemption is based upon
considerations of equity. If a source cannot
get credit for its emission reductions in the
SIP or cannot quantify its surplus emission
reductions for banking and later use as
offsets, it should not be required to provide
offsets. This exemption should be narrowly
applied, and in any event, cannot be used to
exempt major federal sources from offset
requirements.’’ 15
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During the relevant time period, EPA
approved several District rules affecting
agricultural sources, and several District
air quality plans that reflect emissions
reductions from implementation of
those rules. For example, EPA approved
District Rule 4550 (‘‘Conservation
Management Practices’’) and its
associated List of Conservation
Management Practices at 71 FR 7683
(February 14, 2006), District Rule 4570
(‘‘Confined Animal Facilities’’) at 75 FR
2079 (January 14, 2010), the 2003 San
because it was prepared specifically to respond to
the relevant issue addressed herein, i.e., the
application of CH&SC section 42301.18(c) to minor
agricultural sources.
15 See letter from James N. Goldstene, Executive
Officer, CARB, to ‘‘Air Pollution Control Officers,’’
September 3, 2008, page 4. CARB draws a
distinction between SIP credit and NSR offset
credit, a distinction that we also draw. Some
prohibitory rules or control measures are credited
in the SIP, particularly those related to mobile
sources and non-traditional stationary sources, that
do not necessarily qualify for NSR offset credit. For
example, a programmatic level of documentation
may be acceptable to support quantification of
emissions reductions from mobile sources and nontraditional stationary sources for general SIP
attainment demonstration purposes, but that same
documentation may be insufficient to validate ERCs
for owners or operators of individual mobile
sources or individual non-traditional stationary
sources for NSR offset purposes.
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Joaquin Valley PM10 Plan at 69 FR
30006 (May 26, 2004), the 2004 San
Joaquin Valley Extreme Ozone
Attainment Demonstration Plan at 75 FR
10420 (March 8, 2010), and the 2007
San Joaquin Valley PM10 Maintenance
Plan and Redesignation Request at 73
FR 66759 (November 12, 2008).
However, the use of the conjunction
‘‘or’’ by CARB in its discussion of
CH&SC section 42301.18(c), quoted
above, means that, under CARB’s
interpretation, even if SIP credit were
approved for prohibitory rules or
control measures, new or modified
minor agricultural sources could not be
required to provide emissions offsets if
they are unable to generate emission
reductions that would qualify as offsets.
Thus, we find that CARB’s
interpretation of CH&SC section
42301.18(c) supports EPA’s limitation
on its May 2004 approval to exempt
new minor agricultural sources and
minor modifications of existing
agricultural sources from the emissions
offset requirement because, under that
provision of State law, the District did
not have the authority to require such
sources to provide emissions offsets
because such sources were unable to
generate emissions reductions that
qualify as offsets during the relevant
time period.
Earthjustice Comment #6: EPA’s use
of section 110(k)(6) to correct this error
is unlawful. EPA cannot use section
110(k)(6) to achieve a result that EPA
could not have achieved if it had acted
‘‘correctly’’ at the outset. EPA can point
to no authority that allows EPA to adopt
such a limitation when acting on this or
any other SIP approval. To the contrary,
such attempts to rewrite the rule
submitted to EPA for approval violate
well-established prohibitions against
piecemeal approval of rule submittals.
See Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Gorsuch,
742 F.2d 1028 (7th Cir. 1984).
Section 110(k)(6) does not allow EPA
to revise the rule itself, only the action
used to approve the rule. The ‘‘actions’’
on a SIP submittal are outlined in
section 110(k)(3) and include full and
partial approval or disapproval. First,
there should be little question that EPA
could not have partially approved the
District’s NSR rules as submitted in
2002. The other option theoretically
available to EPA at the time of the 2004
action was the ‘‘limited approval/
limited disapproval,’’ but EPA guidance
cautions against use of that option to
approve any rule that is unenforceable
for all situations.16 None of the options
16 Earthjustice cites EPA guidance memorandum
titled ‘‘Processing of State Implementation Plan
(SIP) Submittals,’’ dated July 9, 1992, from John
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
available to EPA when acting on a SIP
submittal allow EPA to do what it is
proposing to do here. EPA cannot
‘‘limit’’ the approval by rewriting the
applicability of the rule as submitted.
Section 110(k)(6) does not create new
options for EPA to act on SIP submittals
and cannot be used to circumvent the
limitations on EPA actions provided by
the plain language of section 110(k)(3).
Response to Earthjustice Comment #6:
First of all, we agree that we cannot use
section 110(k)(6) to revise the District’s
NSR rules that we previously approved,
but we are not doing so in this action.
Our action to limit our approval would
in no way change the language of the
District NSR rules that we approved in
May 2004. Instead, it would revise the
scope of our approval in such a way as
to align our approval with the limits of
District permitting authority under State
law at the time we initially approved
the rules and thus does not conflict with
the decision in Bethlehem Steel.
In doing so, our action amounts to a
revision to the approved California SIP
that was applicable between June 2004
and June 2010.17 EPA is not changing
the District rule component of the SIP.
We believe that our action finalized
today is the appropriate revision to
make to the California SIP under CAA
section 110(k)(6) to address the error
that we made in our May 2004 final
action.
Second, we agree that there are
significant obstacles to correcting our
May 2004 action on the District’s NSR
rules by revising the action from a full
approval to a ‘‘partial approval/partial
disapproval’’ or ‘‘limited approval/
limited disapproval.’’ For instance, a
‘‘partial approval/partial disapproval’’
action is problematic in this instance
because, as a general matter, NSR rules
are not separable. Correcting our action
from a full approval action to a ‘‘limited
approval/limited disapproval’’ action is
problematic in that it would incorporate
the entire rule into the California SIP,
and thus would not remedy the problem
of the mismatch between the District
Calcagni, Director, Air Quality Management
Division, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards.
17 As discussed in more detail in our proposed
rule, the District amended the NSR rules in 2007
and 2008 to, among other things, align the rules
explicitly with the District’s authority to permit
minor agricultural sources and to require emissions
offsets for such sources. 75 FR 4745, at 4749–4750
(January 29, 2010). EPA approved the amended
NSR rules in May 2010, effective June 10, 2010. 75
FR 26102 (May 11, 2010). Thus, our action today
need only correct the mismatch between the District
NSR rules and the District’s authority with respect
to minor agricultural sources under SB 700 from the
effective date of our May 2004 approval of the 2002amended District NSR rules (i.e., June 16, 2004)
through June 9, 2010.
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NSR rules in the SIP and the District’s
authority with respect to agricultural
sources under SB 700.
We disagree, however, that we could
not have limited our approval in May
2004 under section 110(k)(3) in the
same manner as we are doing today, but
in any event, for today’s action, we are
relying on section 110(k)(6), not on
section 110(k)(3). We believe that the
action we proposed to limit our
previous approval and that we are
finalizing today is authorized under the
broad discretionary language of CAA
section 110(k)(6):
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‘‘Whenever the Administrator determines
that the Administrator’s action approving,
disapproving, or promulgating any plan or
plan revision (or part thereof), . . . was in
error, the Administrator may in the same
manner as the approval, disapproval, or
promulgation revise such action as
appropriate without requiring any further
submission from the State. Such
determination and the basis thereof shall be
provided to the State and public.’’
The key provisions are that the
Administrator has the authority to
‘‘determine[ ]’’ when a SIP approval
was in ‘‘error,’’ and when he does so, he
may then revise the SIP approval ‘‘as
appropriate,’’ in the same manner as the
approval, and without requiring any
further submission from the state.
With this action, EPA is determining
that its action approving the District’s
NSR rules in May 2004 was ‘‘in error’’
due to the mismatch between the facial
applicability in the NSR rules of the
permitting and emission offset
requirements to minor agricultural
sources and the limits on District
authority under State law applicable at
the time of our SIP approval. Given the
mismatch between the exclusions and
exemptions apparent from the words of
the District NSR rules and the limits
under State law, EPA was in error in
fully approving the NSR rules because
the SIP and SIP revisions must be
supported by necessary assurances by
the State that, in this context, the
District will have adequate authority
under State law to carry out such SIP or
SIP revisions and the State of California
could not have provided such necessary
assurances in May 2004 with respect to
minor agricultural sources because of
the limits on District authority at the
time manifest in SB 700. See CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E) and our January 29,
2010 proposed rule at pages 4747–4748.
EPA is further determining that the
appropriate action EPA can take—in
light of the broad discretion conferred
by the phrase, ‘‘revise such action as
appropriate,’’—is to limit our previous
approval of the District’s NSR rules, as
it relates to agricultural sources, (1) to
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the extent that the permit requirements
apply to agricultural sources with
potential emissions at or above a major
source applicability threshold and to
agricultural sources with actual
emissions at or above 50 percent of a
major source applicability threshold;
and (2) to the extent that the offset
requirements apply to major agricultural
sources and major modifications of such
sources. We have also conducted this
limiting of our prior approval through
notice-and-comment rulemaking, which
is the same manner as EPA conducted
the prior approval.
In limiting our previous approval in
this manner, we are taking an approach
analogous to the one EPA took with
respect to the Agency’s previous SIP
approvals of certain State programs for
the Prevention of Significant
Determination (PSD) to the extent those
programs applied PSD to greenhouse gas
(GHG) emitting sources below the
thresholds in the final ‘‘Tailoring Rule’’
published at 75 FR 31514 on June 3,
2010. See our final rule, ‘‘Limitation of
Approval of Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Provisions Concerning
Greenhouse Gas Emitting-Sources in
State Implementation Plans,’’ referred to
as the PSD SIP ‘‘Narrowing Rule,’’ at 75
FR 82536 (December 30, 2010). In the
case of the previous approvals of State
PSD programs, EPA determined that its
action approving the PSD SIP provisions
was ‘‘in error’’ due to the mismatch
between the PSD applicability
provisions and the state’s ‘‘necessary
assurances’’ under CAA section
110(a)(2)(E) of adequate resources and
further determined that the ‘‘appropriate
action’’ to correct the error was to
narrow its approval of the PSD programs
to the extent they applied PSD to GHGemitting sources below the Tailoring
Rule threshold.
Here, in this action, EPA is
determining that its action approving
the District’s NSR rules was ‘‘in error’’
due to the mismatch between the
applicability provisions of the District
NSR rules and the state’s ‘‘necessary
assurance’’ under CAA section
110(a)(2)(E) of adequate legal authority
and is further determining that the
‘‘appropriate action’’ to correct the error
is to limit its previous approval of the
District’s NSR rules in May 2004 to
align the permitting applicability and
offset requirement in the approved SIP
to the authority granted the District
under State law. EPA’s PSD SIP
‘‘Narrowing Rule’’ contains a detailed
discussion (see pages 82543–82545)
justifying the reliance on CAA section
110(k)(6) to narrow previous SIP
approvals and we incorporate that
discussion herein.
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46511
Lastly, Earthjustice would agree that
EPA could have disapproved the
District’s NSR rules as submitted in
December 2002, and thus would agree
that we could now, under section
110(k)(6), change our former ‘‘approval’’
to ‘‘disapproval,’’ but such an action
would have the deleterious effect of
removing the December 2002 version of
the NSR rules from the SIP entirely
notwithstanding the significant
strengthening they represented relative
to the then-existing SIP District NSR
rules approved in 2001 (66 FR 37587,
July 19, 2001) that included a blanket
exemption for agricultural sources. Our
action to limit our approval is narrowly
tailored to retain the strengthening
aspects of the December 2002 version of
the NSR rules while still addressing the
mismatch between the language of the
NSR rules and the District’s authority
under State law. Our purpose in doing
so is to align the SIP approved by EPA
in May 2004 with the intent of both EPA
and the State of California to address the
deficiencies in the District’s NSR rules,
including the previous blanket
exemption for agricultural sources as it
applied to major agricultural sources.
The mismatch created in the applicable
California SIP between the NSR rules
and the authority vested in the District
under State law with respect to minor
agricultural sources was inadvertent,
and section 110(k)(6) provides EPA with
the broad discretionary authority to take
action to fix the problem caused by the
Agency’s previous erroneous SIP action.
CRP&E Comment #1: The proposed
rule conflicts with Safe Air for Everyone
v. EPA, 488 F.3d 1088 (9th Cir. 2007)
(‘‘Safe Air’’). The SIP means exactly that
which the December 2002 version of
District’s NSR rules say it means, and
EPA made no statement of
administrative intent that would
contradict that plain meaning. As such,
the purported exemption in SB 700
cannot, as a matter of law, be part of the
EPA-approved SIP.
Response to CRP&E Comment #1: We
agree that we cannot simply interpret
the California SIP to include statutory
limitations not manifest in the SIP itself
nor manifest in EPA’s expressed intent
or understanding at the time we
conducted rulemaking to approve the
December 2002 version of the District’s
NSR rules. However, agreement on this
point simply highlights the need for
EPA to take the action it is finalizing
today. We have conducted this error
correction action through a notice-andcomment rulemaking and have made
our administrative intent manifest
through that process. Also, we want to
make clear that we are not changing the
language of the District’s NSR rules that
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we approved in May 2004. Instead, our
action will revise the scope of our
approval in such a way as to align our
approval with the limits of District
permitting authority under State law at
the time we approved the rules. In doing
so, our action amounts to a revision to
the California SIP applicable between
June 2004 and June 2010. EPA is not
changing the District rule component of
the SIP. We believe that our action
finalized today is the appropriate
revision to make to the California SIP
under CAA section 110(k)(6) to address
the error that we made in our May 2004
final action.
CRP&E Comment #2: EPA lacks the
power to amend the SIP to conform to
EPA’s interpretation of the District’s
state law permitting authority. Nothing
in the CAA authorizes EPA to
substantively amend a SIP or SIP
revision, so EPA cannot accomplish that
through a ‘‘correction’’ under section
110(k)(6).
Response to CRP&E Comment #2:
Please see EPA’s Response to
Earthjustice Comment #6.
CRP&E Comment #3: Even if EPA
could make an end-around Safe Air and
could amend the SIP, SB 700 itself gives
the District the authority to implement
and enforce the December 2002 version
of the District’s NSR rules. EPA
rationalizes its correction on the ground
that the District lacked statutory
authority to implement and enforce the
December 2002 version of the District’s
NSR rules. EPA, however, fails to
recognize the authority given to the
District by CH&SC sections 39011.5(b)
and (c).
Response to CRP&E Comment #3:
Please see EPA’s Response to
Earthjustice Comment #4.
Dairy Cares Comment #1: Dairy Cares
agrees that EPA erred in failing to
expressly acknowledge the limitations
imposed on the District’s authority
pursuant to SB 700, because the SB 700
exemptions plainly limited the District’s
permitting authority over agricultural
sources and agrees that EPA’s SIP
correction is appropriate under section
110(k)(6) of the CAA. Dairy Cares,
however, believes that because EPA’s
2004 SIP action implicitly and
necessarily included all of the
expansion and limitation of District
authority contained in SB 700,
including the exemptions, the SIP, as it
currently exists, should be read to
include the exemptions.
Response to Dairy Cares Comment #1:
EPA notes that the argument that
limitations on authority under State law
implicitly and necessarily determine the
applicability of rules and regulations
approved by EPA as part of a SIP, even
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if those statutory limitations are not also
approved as part of the SIP, is not
supported by case law. In Safe Air for
Everyone v. EPA (488 F.3d 1088 (9th
Cir. 2007), the Ninth Circuit held that
‘‘SIPs are interpreted based on their
plain meaning when such a meaning is
apparent, not absurd, and not
contradicted by the manifest intent of
EPA, as expressed in the promulgating
documents available to the public.’’ Id.
at 1100. In this instance, the absence of
limited exemptions for minor
agricultural sources with respect to
permitting and offsets in the version of
the District’s NSR rules approved in
2004 is plain, not absurd, nor
contradicted by EPA in taking the action
in 2004 to approve the rules. Moreover,
SB 700 itself is not approved into the
California SIP. Thus, we continue to
believe that is appropriate to correct our
previous approval of the District’s NSR
rules to reconcile that approval with the
limitations on District authority that
were established by the California
legislature in SB 700.
III. Final Action
After due consideration of the
comments submitted on our proposed
action, and in light of California’s
interpretation of SB 700 as it applies to
the District’s NSR rules, we are taking
final action under CAA section 110(k)(6)
to correct our erroneous approval in
May 2004 of San Joaquin Valley District
NSR rules, Rule 2020 (‘‘Exemptions’’)
and Rule 2210 (‘‘New and Modified
Stationary Source Review Rule’’), as
amended by the District in December
2002. In doing so, we are determining
that such previous approval was in error
for the purposes of CAA section
110(k)(6) because we failed to recognize
that the State could not provide the
necessary assurances under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E) that the District had
the authority to implement its amended
NSR rules as those rules applied to
agricultural sources given that the
District’s NSR rules, as adopted in 2002,
did not reflect the qualified permitting
and emissions offset exemptions
provided in SB 700 with respect to
minor agricultural sources.
To correct this error, we are revising
our previous action by limiting our
previous approval, as it relates to
agricultural sources, to the extent that
the permit requirements apply (1) to
agricultural sources with potential
emissions at or above a major source
applicability threshold and (2) to
agricultural sources with actual
emissions at or above 50 percent of a
major source applicability threshold.
We are also limiting our previous
approval, as it relates to agricultural
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sources, to the extent that the emission
offset requirements apply to major
agricultural sources and major
modifications of such sources.
To codify the new limitation on our
previous approval, we are adding a new
section to 40 CFR part 52 (‘‘Approval
and promulgation of implementation
plans’’), subpart F (‘‘California’’). The
new section is 40 CFR 52.245 (‘‘New
Source Review Rules’’).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has exempted this regulatory
action from Executive Order 12866,
entitled ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review.’’
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. Burden is
defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to conduct
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small not-for-profit enterprises, and
small governmental jurisdictions.
This rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities because error correction actions
under section 110(k)(6) of the Clean Air
Act do not create any new requirements
but simply approve requirements that
the State is already imposing. Therefore,
because this error correction action does
not create any new requirements, I
certify that this action will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Moreover, due to the nature of the
Federal-State relationship under the
Clean Air Act, preparation of flexibility
analysis would constitute Federal
inquiry into the economic
reasonableness of State action. The
Clean Air Act forbids EPA to base its
actions concerning SIPs on such
grounds. Union Electric Co., v. U.S.
EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 255–66 (1976); 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Under section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(‘‘Unfunded Mandates Act’’), signed
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into law on March 22, 1995, EPA must
prepare a budgetary impact statement to
accompany any proposed or final rule
that includes a Federal mandate that
may result in estimated costs to State,
local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate; or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more. Under section
205, EPA must select the most costeffective and least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule and is consistent with
statutory requirements. Section 203
requires EPA to establish a plan for
informing and advising any small
governments that may be significantly
or uniquely impacted by the rule.
EPA has determined that the error
correction action promulgated today
does not include a Federal mandate that
may result in estimated costs of $100
million or more to either State, local, or
tribal governments in the aggregate, or
to the private sector. This Federal action
aligns requirements under Federal law
with those under state and local law,
and imposes no new requirements.
Accordingly, no additional costs to
State, local, or tribal governments, or to
the private sector, result from this
action.
E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132, Federalism,
(64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999) revokes
and replaces Executive Orders 12612
(Federalism) and 12875 (Enhancing the
Intergovernmental Partnership).
Executive Order 13132 requires EPA to
develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that
have federalism implications.’’ ‘‘Policies
that have federalism implications’’ is
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ Under Executive
Order 13132, EPA may not issue a
regulation that has federalism
implications, that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs, and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by State and local
governments, or EPA consults with
State and local officials early in the
process of developing the proposed
regulation. EPA also may not issue a
regulation that has federalism
implications and that preempts State
law unless the Agency consults with
State and local officials early in the
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process of developing the proposed
regulation.
This rule will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132, because it
merely corrects an error in a previous
EPA rulemaking, and does not alter the
relationship or the distribution of power
and responsibilities established in the
Clean Air Act. Thus, the requirements of
section 6 of the Executive Order do not
apply to this rule.
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination
With Indian Tribal Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (65 FR
67249, November 9, 2000), requires EPA
to develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
tribal officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
implications.’’ This rule does not have
tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175. It will not have
substantial direct effects on tribal
governments, on the relationship
between the Federal government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal government and Indian tribes.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this rule.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
46513
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12 of the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act
(NTTAA) of 1995 requires Federal
agencies to evaluate existing technical
standards when developing a new
regulation. To comply with NTTAA,
EPA must consider and use ‘‘voluntary
consensus standards’’ (VCS) if available
and applicable when developing
programs and policies unless doing so
would be inconsistent with applicable
law or otherwise impractical.
The EPA believes that VCS are
inapplicable to this action. Today’s
action does not require the public to
perform activities conducive to the use
of VCS.
J. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. section 801 et seq., as added by
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
generally provides that before a rule
may take effect, the agency
promulgating the rule must submit a
rule report, which includes a copy of
the rule, to each House of the Congress
and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. EPA will submit a report
containing this rule and other required
information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S.
House of Representatives, and the
Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. section 804(2).
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
K. Petitions for Review of This Action
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by September 30,
2013. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of
this final rule does not affect the finality
of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time
within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action. This action may not be
challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
This rule is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, ‘‘Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use’’ (66
FR 28355, May 22, 2001) because it is
not a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Oxides of nitrogen, Ozone, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Volatile organic compounds.
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
(62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as
applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern health or safety
risks, such that the analysis required
under section 5–501 of the Executive
Order has the potential to influence the
regulation. This rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045, because it
corrects a previous EPA approval of a
State rule implementing a Federal
standard.
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46514
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 148 / Thursday, August 1, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: July 12, 2013.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
Part 52, Chapter I, Title 40 of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
[EPA–R10–OAR–2011–0884, FRL–9841–1]
40 CFR Part 52
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Oregon:
Infrastructure Requirements for the
1997 and 2006 Fine Particulate Matter
and 2008 Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
AGENCY:
■
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart F—California
2. Section 52.245 is added to read as
follows:
■
§52.245
New Source Review rules.
(a) Approval of the New Source
Review rules for the San Joaquin Valley
Unified Air Pollution Control District
Rules 2020 and 2201 as approved on
May 17, 2004 in
§ 52.220(c)(311)(i)(B)(1), and in effect for
Federal purposes from June 16, 2004
through June 10, 2010, is limited, as it
relates to agricultural sources, to the
extent that the permit requirements
apply:
(1) To agricultural sources with
potential emissions at or above a major
source applicability threshold; and
(2) To agricultural sources with actual
emissions at or above 50 percent of a
major source applicability threshold.
(b) Approval of the New Source
Review rules for the San Joaquin Valley
Unified Air Pollution Control District
Rules 2020 and 2201 as approved on
May 17, 2004 in
§ 52.220(c)(311)(i)(B)(1), and in effect for
Federal purposes from June 16, 2004
through June 10, 2010, is limited, as it
relates to agricultural sources, to the
extent that the emission offset
requirements apply to major agricultural
sources and major modifications of such
sources.
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The EPA is approving the
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submittals from the State of Oregon to
demonstrate that the SIP meets the
infrastructure requirements of the Clean
Air Act (CAA) for the National Ambient
Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
promulgated for fine particulate matter
(PM2.5) on July 18, 1997, and October
17, 2006, and for ozone on March 12,
2008. The EPA is finding that the
Federally-approved provisions currently
in the Oregon SIP meet the CAA
infrastructure requirements for the 1997
PM2.5, 2006 PM2.5, and the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. The EPA is also finding that
the Federally-approved provisions
currently in the Oregon SIP meet the
interstate transport requirements of the
CAA related to prevention of significant
deterioration for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS, and related to visibility for the
2006 PM2.5 and 2008 ozone NAAQS.
This action does not approve any
additional provisions into the Oregon
SIP but is a finding that the current
provisions of the Oregon SIP are
adequate to satisfy the above-mentioned
infrastructure elements required by the
CAA.
DATES: This action is effective on
September 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R10–OAR–2011–0884. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information may not be publicly
available, i.e., Confidential Business
Information or other information the
disclosure of which is restricted by
statute. Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
EPA Region 10, Office of Air, Waste and
Toxics (AWT–107), 1200 Sixth Avenue,
SUMMARY:
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Suite 900, Seattle, WA 98101. The EPA
requests that you contact the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section to schedule your
inspection. The Regional Office’s
official hours of business are Monday
through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30, excluding
Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristin Hall at (206) 553–6357,
hall.kristin@epa.gov, or the above EPA,
Region 10 address.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we’’, ‘‘us’’ or ‘‘our’’ are used, it is
intended to refer to the EPA.
Information is organized as follows:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Response to Comment
III. Action
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On March 21, 2013, the EPA proposed
to approve the September 25, 2008,
December 23, 2010, August 17, 2011,
and December 19, 2011 SIP submittals
from the State of Oregon to demonstrate
that the SIP meets the requirements of
CAA sections 110(a)(1) and (2) for the
NAAQS promulgated for fine particulate
matter (PM2.5) on July 18, 1997, and
October 17, 2006, and for ozone on
March 12, 2008 (78 FR 17304). In our
March 21, 2013, notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR), we proposed to
approve the SIP submittals and to find
that the Federally-approved provisions
currently in the Oregon SIP meet the
following CAA section 110(a)(2)
infrastructure elements for the 1997
PM2.5, 2006 PM2.5, and 2008 ozone
NAAQS: (A), (B), (C), (D)(ii), (E), (F), (G),
(H), (J), (K), (L), and (M). We also
proposed to find that the Federallyapproved provisions currently in the
Oregon SIP meet the requirements of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) as it
applies to prevention of significant
deterioration for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS, and CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) as it applies to
visibility for the 2006 PM2.5 and 2008
ozone NAAQS. An explanation of the
CAA requirements and implementing
regulations that are met by these SIP
submittals, a detailed explanation of the
submittals, and the EPA’s reasons for
approving the submittals and making
the above-described findings were
provided in the NPR, and will not be
restated here. The public comment
period for this proposed rule ended on
April 22, 2013. The EPA received one
comment on the NPR.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 148 (Thursday, August 1, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 46504-46514]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-18413]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2010-0062; FRL-9837-5]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans, State of
California, San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District,
New Source Review
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is taking final action to correct the May 2004 approval of
a version of the New Source Review (NSR) rules for the San Joaquin
Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District portion of the California
State Implementation Plan, consistent with the relevant provisions of
state law. Specifically, EPA is taking final action to correct the May
2004 approval by limiting the approval, as it relates to agricultural
sources, to apply the permitting requirements only to such sources with
potential emissions at or above a major source applicability threshold
and to such sources with actual emissions at or above 50 percent of a
major source applicability threshold and to apply the emission offset
requirement only to major agricultural sources and major modifications
of such sources.
DATES: This rule is effective on September 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established docket number EPA-R09-OAR-2010-0062 for
this action. The index to the docket is available electronically at
www.regulations.gov and in hard copy at EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, California. While all documents in the docket
are listed 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 in either location (e.g., CBI). To
inspect the hard copy materials, please schedule an appointment during
normal business hours with the contact listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laura Yannayon, Permits Office (AIR-
3), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IX, (415) 972-3534,
yannayon.laura@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Today's Final Action
A. Actions Proposed in January 29, 2010 Proposed Rule
B. Background, Authority and Rationale for Proposed Error
Correction
C. Letters from the California Attorney General's Office
II. Public Comments and EPA's Responses
III. Final Action
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Today's Final Action
A. Actions Proposed in January 29, 2010 Proposed Rule
On January 29, 2010 (75 FR 4745), under the Clean Air Act (CAA or
``Act''), we proposed three actions in connection with the permitting
rules for the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District
(``District'') portion of the California State Implementation Plan
(SIP).\1\ Herein, we refer to our January 29, 2010 proposed rule as the
``proposed rule.'' As discussed further below, we have already
finalized the second and third actions included in our proposed rule,
and are taking action today to finalize the first action.
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\1\ The San Joaquin Valley includes all of San Joaquin,
Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Kings and Tulare counties, and
the western half of Kern County, in the State of California. The San
Joaquin Valley is designated as a nonattainment area for the 1997
and 2008 8-hour ozone national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS)
and the 1997 (annual) and 2006 (24-hour) fine particulate matter
(PM2.5) NAAQS and is designated as attainment or
unclassifiable for the other NAAQS. See 40 CFR 81.305. The area is
further classified as ``extreme'' for the now-revoked 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, and the 1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
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First, in our proposed rule, we proposed to correct an error in our
May 2004 final rule approving Rules 2020 (``Exemptions'') and 2201
(``New and Modified Stationary Source Review Rule''), as amended by the
District in December 2002, that establish the requirements and
exemptions for review of new or modified stationary sources (``new
source review'' or ``NSR''). Herein, we refer to District Rules 2020
and 2201 as the ``District's NSR rules.'' In our proposed rule, we
explained how our error arose from the failure, in light of information
available at the time, to recognize that the District did not have the
authority under state law to implement the District's NSR rules with
respect to permitting of minor agricultural sources with actual
emissions less than 50% of the applicable ``major source'' thresholds
and with respect to the imposition of emissions offset requirements for
minor agricultural sources.
In addition to the error correction described above, our January
2010 proposed rule also proposed two other actions: (a) a limited
approval and limited disapproval of the District's NSR rules, as
further amended in 2007 and
[[Page 46505]]
2008 and a full approval of amended District Rule 2530 (``Federally
Enforceable Potential to Emit''); and (b) rescission of certain
obsolete permitting requirements from the District portion of the
California SIP.
On May 11, 2010 (75 FR 26102), we finalized the proposed action on
the 2007 and 2008 amendments to the District's NSR rules,\2\ District
Rule 2530, and the proposed rescission of obsolete permitting
requirements, but we deferred final action on the proposed error
correction pending receipt from the California Attorney General of an
interpretation of the District's legal authority with respect to
agricultural sources under state law.
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\2\ As discussed in more detail in our proposed rule, the
amendments to the NSR rules that were adopted by the District in
2007 and 2008, among other things, aligned the rules explicitly with
the limitations on the District's authority under state law to
permit minor agricultural sources and to require emissions offsets
for such sources. 75 FR 4745, at 4749-4750 (January 29, 2010). Thus,
as of the effective date of EPA approval of the 2007- and 2008-
amended District NSR rules at 75 FR 26102 (May 11, 2010), the SIP
and State law is aligned with respect to permitting of agricultural
sources (and imposition of the emissions offset requirement) in San
Joaquin Valley. Today's final action thus affects the applicable
California plan under 40 CFR part 52, subpart F during the period of
time after the effective date of our May 2004 approval of the 2002-
amended District NSR rules (i.e., June 16, 2004) and the effective
date of our May 2010 approval of the subsequently amended NSR rules
(i.e., June 9, 2010). During this period, a number of CAA
enforcement actions were brought against San Joaquin Valley
agricultural sources for failure to secure permits and/or provide
emissions offsets even though such requirements were beyond the
authority of the District to impose under State law. For additional
background on why EPA is taking today's action, please see our
January 29, 2010 proposed rule at 75 FR 4745, at 4748.
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B. Background, Authority, and Rationale for Proposed Error Correction
In our proposed rule, we provided a detailed background discussion
regarding the District's NSR rules and related EPA SIP actions. See
pages 4746-4747 of our proposed rule. In the following paragraphs, we
provide a summary of this information. For more details, please see our
proposed rule.
EPA originally approved the District's NSR rules as part of the
California SIP in 2001.\3\ See 66 FR 37587 (July 19, 2001). EPA's 2001
action was a limited approval and limited disapproval reflecting our
conclusion that the rules could not be fully approved as meeting all
applicable requirements because, among other reasons, District Rule
2020 exempted all agricultural sources from District permitting
requirements. 66 FR at 37590. At that time, District Rule 2020, citing
California Health & Safety Code (CH&SC) section 42310(e), included a
permitting exclusion for ``any equipment used in agricultural
operations in the growing of crops or the raising of fowl or animals,''
except for certain orchard and citrus grove heaters in the southern
portion of the District. Our limited disapproval stated that the
District could not exempt major stationary sources or major
modifications at existing major sources from NSR requirements and be
found to meet applicable CAA requirements.\4\
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\3\ Rules 2020 and 2201 were adopted by the District to meet NSR
requirements under the Clean Air Act, as amended in 1990, for areas
that have not attained the National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS). District Rules 2020 and 2201 replaced existing NSR rules
from the individual county air pollution control districts that were
combined into the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control
District (``District'') in 1991.
\4\ District NSR permitting rules do not adopt the distinction
between minor sources and major sources as set forth under the CAA.
District Rules 2020 and 2201 generally apply to both federal minor
and major stationary sources. Our limited approval and limited
disapproval specified that the rule deficiency was exempting major
agricultural sources and major modifications. See 65 FR 58252, at
58254 (September 28, 2000).
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To correct this deficiency, in December 2002, the District amended
their NSR rules to eliminate the agricultural permitting exemption in
its entirety, and, later that same month, the California Air Resources
Board (CARB) submitted the District's amended NSR rules to EPA as a
revision to the California SIP. Shortly thereafter, EPA proposed
approval of the amended District NSR rules, see 68 FR 7330 (February
13, 2003), even though we recognized that ``California Health & Safety
Code 42310(e) continues to preclude the District, as well as all other
districts in California, from permitting agricultural sources under
either title I or title V of the CAA.'' See 68 FR 7330, at 7335. We did
so in light of a proposed ``SIP Call'' that we issued on the same day
as we proposed approval of the amended District NSR rules. See 68 FR
7327 (February 13, 2003). The SIP Call was based on our finding that
the California SIP was substantially inadequate by failing to provide
the necessary assurances under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) that the State
had the legal authority to carry out its NSR permitting obligations
under the CAA with respect to major agricultural sources. EPA finalized
the SIP Call in mid-2003, and thereby required California to submit the
necessary assurances of authority to support an affirmative finding by
EPA under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E). 68 FR 37746 (June 25, 2003).
Later in 2003, the California legislature enacted Senate Bill (SB)
700, which the Governor of California signed on September 22, 2003. SB
700 removed the wholesale exemption from permitting for agricultural
sources provided under CH&SC section 42310(e) and subjected major
agricultural sources to permit requirements. SB 700, however, retained
a limited exemption for new source permitting at certain minor
agricultural sources, and limited the ability of districts to require
minor agricultural sources to obtain offsets.\5\ California notified
EPA of the legislature's action by letter dated November 3, 2003 and
enclosed a copy of SB 700.\6\
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\5\ Specifically, under SB 700, minor agricultural sources with
actual emissions below 50 percent of the major source threshold are
exempt from permitting unless the District makes certain findings,
while sources at or above 50 percent of the major source threshold
are subject to permitting unless the District makes certain
findings. See CH&SC section 42301.16(b) and (c). In addition, a
district may not require an agricultural source to obtain emissions
offsets for criteria pollutants for that source if emissions
reductions from that source would not meet the criteria for real,
permanent, quantifiable, and enforceable emission reductions. See
CH&SC section 42301.18(c).
\6\ See Letter from Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, California
Office of the Attorney General, to Marianne Horinko, Acting
Administrator, EPA, dated November 3, 2003.
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On May 17, 2004, EPA took final action approving the District's NSR
rules, as amended by the District and submitted by CARB in 2002. See 69
FR 27837 (May 17, 2004). These rules, as approved by EPA, did not on
their face exempt any agricultural sources from permitting or limit the
applicability of offset requirements. EPA's final approval stated that
the District had removed its exemption for agricultural sources and
that the state had also ``removed a similar blanket exemption, thereby
providing the District with authority to require air permits for
agricultural sources, including federally required NSR permits.'' See
69 FR 27837, at 27838. EPA's final approval cited SB 700 in a footnote,
but did not note the limited scope of authority for permitting and
offset requirements under SB 700, which allowed permitting of only
certain minor agricultural sources and continued the exemption for
other minor agricultural sources.
In our proposed rule, under CAA section 110(k)(6), we found that
(1) our May 2004 final full approval of District's NSR rules was in
error in that our approval of the rules should have ensured that the
authority in those rules was consistent with the authority granted by
SB 700 and that (2) the District did not, as of May 2004, have the
authority under SB 700 to require permits for new or modified minor
agricultural sources with actual emissions less than 50 percent of the
[[Page 46506]]
major source threshold or to require new minor agricultural sources or
minor modifications to agricultural sources to obtain emission
reduction offsets, notwithstanding the absence of explicit exemptions
in the District's NSR rules. Moreover, we noted in our proposed rule
that California submitted a copy of SB 700 in November 2003, and thus
we had information indicating that the District did not have the
authority to implement the NSR rules to the extent that the language of
the District's rule appeared to allow (i.e., to require permits and
offsets from all new or modified agricultural sources, including those
exempt under SB 700) prior to the time we took final action. In our
proposed rule, we explained that we should have limited our approval of
the District's NSR rules in May 2004 to conform with SB 700, and
promulgated language in 40 CFR part 52 codifying that limitation on our
approval.
To correct this error, we proposed to limit our approval of the
District's NSR rules to exclude applicability to agricultural sources
exempt from new source permitting under SB 700 (i.e., minor sources
with actual emissions less than 50 percent of the major source
threshold). We also proposed to limit our approval to require offsets
only for major agricultural sources, because at the time of our 2010
proposed action, we believed that the District had not found emissions
reductions from agricultural sources to meet the criteria for real,
permanent, quantifiable, and enforceable emissions reductions and thus
had not lifted the restriction otherwise provided in SB 700 (and
codified in CH&SC section 42301.18(c)) on the imposition of the
emissions offset requirement on new minor agricultural sources or minor
modifications of agricultural sources.
For more information about our proposed determination of error and
our proposed correction, please see pages 4747-4748 of our proposed
rule.
C. Letters From the California Attorney General's Office
In response to our proposed rule, several comments were submitted
that objected to our proposed error correction action and the
interpretation of state law upon which it was based, and raised
significant questions as to the extent of District authority with
respect to agricultural sources under state law. Specifically, the
commenters who objected to our proposed correction cited ``savings''
clauses in state law that they contend ratified the District's NSR
rules that contain no permitting or offsets exemptions for agricultural
sources notwithstanding other provisions in state law that would
otherwise limit District authority over those sources.
To ensure our final action would be informed by the State's
interpretation of the relevant provisions of state law, we requested
that CARB provide us with a legal interpretation from the California
Attorney General of the extent of District authority with respect to
agricultural sources under state law.\7\ More specifically, we
requested that CARB provide us a legal interpretation from the
California Attorney General of SB 700 as it applies to the District NSR
rules adopted in December 2002 and approved by EPA in May 2004. By
letters dated November 14, 2012 and March 18, 2013, the California
Attorney General's Office has now provided us the requested
interpretation of state law.\8\
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\7\ See letters from Jared Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator,
EPA Region IX, to Mary D. Nichols, Chairwoman, California Air
Resources Board, dated April 12, 2010 and April 26, 2012.
\8\ See letters dated November 14, 2012 and March 18, 2013 from
Robert W. Byrne, Senior Assistant Attorney General, to Jared
Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX.
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II. Public Comments and EPA's Responses
Our proposed rule (75 FR 4745) provided for a 30-day comment
period. During that period, we received adverse comments from three
groups: (1) Greenberg-Glusker law firm, on behalf of Dairy Cares, a
coalition of California's dairy producer and processor associations
(referred to herein as ``Dairy Cares''), by letter dated March 1, 2010;
(2) Earthjustice, by letter dated March 1, 2010; and (3) the Center on
Race, Poverty & the Environment, on behalf of the Association of
Irritated Residents and other community and environmental groups
(referred to herein as ``AIR''), by letter dated March 1, 2010. AIR
joins in the comments from Earthjustice, but also adds comments of its
own.
All three comment letters cited above included comments on one or
more aspects of our proposed rule (e.g., on our proposed limited
approval and limited disapproval of the District's NSR rules, as
further amended in 2007 and 2008) in addition to comments on the
proposed error correction. With respect to the comments germane to the
other aspects of our proposed rule, we provided responses in our final
action published on May 11, 2010 (75 FR 26102) and do not reopen those
issues through today's final action.\9\ Rather, in the following
paragraphs, we summarize the significant comments that relate to the
proposed error correction that we are taking final action on today, and
provide our responses.
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\9\ In its March 1, 2010 comment letter, AIR also provided
comments germane to a separate EPA rulemaking also proposed on
January 29, 2010 (``Approval and Promulgation of Implementation
Plans: State of California; Legal Authority,'' and published at 75
FR 4742. We responded to AIR's comments germane to that separate
rulemaking in a final rule published at 75 FR 27938 (May 19, 2010)
and do not reopen those issues through today's final action.
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Earthjustice Comment #1: EPA has incorrectly interpreted State law
in proposing the error correction, and EPA should ask the State to
provide the necessary assurances that the District has the authority
under State law to permit all sources covered by Rule 2201.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #1: EPA requested that the
California Attorney General provide an interpretation of SB 700 as
applied to the District's NSR rules, as amended by the District in
December 2002, and as noted above, the California Attorney General's
Office has responded to EPA's request in the form of two letters, one
dated November 14, 2012 and one dated March 18, 2013. EPA has taken the
State's interpretation into account in responding to comments on our
proposed error correction and in taking today's final action.
Earthjustice Comment #2: The District's authority to permit
agricultural sources under the Clean Air Act is not limited to sources
above 50 percent of any applicable major source threshold. EPA reads
CH&SC section 42301.16(a) as only authorizing permits for major
agricultural sources. Nothing in section 42301.16(a) refers to
``major'' sources or limits the CAA provisions referenced to ``major
source'' requirements. To the contrary, the language refers to permits
required for ``any'' source and instead of referring only to part D of
Title I, as EPA suggests, refers to all of Title I beginning with
section 101 of the Act. EPA's interpretation cannot be reconciled with
the plain language of the CH&SC.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #2: Earthjustice is correct that
our proposed error correction is predicated in part on the
interpretation that CH&SC section 42301.16(a) refers to ``major
sources'' as defined under the CAA, i.e., sources that emit or have the
potential to emit at or above the major source threshold,
notwithstanding the fact that an explicit reference to ``major
sources'' is not found in CH&SC section 42301.16(a). See footnote
7 on page 4747 in the proposed rule.
CH&SC section 42301.16(a) provides: ``In addition to complying with
the requirements of this chapter, a permit system established by a
district
[[Page 46507]]
pursuant to Section 42300 shall ensure that any agricultural source
that is required to obtain a permit pursuant to Title I . . . or Title
V . . . of the federal Clean Air Act is required by district regulation
to obtain a permit in a manner that is consistent with the federal
requirements.'' In proposing the error correction, we interpreted the
reference to permits required under Title I as meaning permits for
major sources covered under parts C or D of Title I, and not minor
sources. This is because, under the relevant SIP content provisions
under Title I [section 110(a)(2)(C)], while SIPs must provide for the
``regulation of the modification and construction of any stationary
source,'' i.e., including minor sources, the only explicit permitting
requirement is for a ``permit program as required in part C and D'' of
Title I. Thus, under Title I, a permit program is only explicitly
required for sources covered under parts C and D, and the sources
covered under parts C and D are major sources.
Moreover, a State must identify the types and sizes of minor
stationary sources which will be subject to review [see 40 CFR
51.160(e)]. As such, States are authorized to exempt certain minor
stationary sources from such review. No such exemptions are allowed for
review of new or modified major sources. Thus, permits for ``major
sources'' can be considered to be ``required'' in a way that permits
for minor sources are not.
In addition, our interpretation of CH&SC section 42301.16(a) is
consistent with the fact that the California legislature adopted SB 700
in part in an effort to avoid sanctions that were set in motion by
EPA's final determination that the California SIP was ``substantially
inadequate'' because State law did not provide the legal authority
allowing State and local permitting agencies to meet the permitting
obligations under parts C and D of title I with respect to major
agricultural sources. Lastly, we note that our interpretation of CH&SC
section 42301.16(a) is consistent with California's interpretation. See
the memorandum from James N. Goldstene, Executive Director, CARB, to
Air Pollution Control Officers, dated September 3, 2008; and the letter
from Robert W. Byrne, Acting Senior Assistant Attorney General, to
Jared Blumenfeld, dated November 14, 2012. For the reasons given above,
therefore, we continue to interpret CH&SC section 423016(a) as
referring to major sources under Titles I and V of the CAA.
Earthjustice Comment #3: Even if one were to accept EPA's
interpretation of CH&SC section 42301.16(a) as being limited to title I
part D requirements, permitting of minor agricultural sources in the
District would still be authorized because Rule 2201 relies on non-
major source permitting to fulfill the requirements of part D. The
District has chosen not to impose Part D requirements on major sources
and has claimed instead (with EPA's approval) that its permitting of
non-major sources can be credited to show that in the aggregate Rule
2201 is ``equivalent'' to the program required under part D for major
sources. By relying on credit from its permitting of non-major sources
to meet federal NSR requirements, the District has eliminated any lines
between what portion of Rule 2201 is meant to comply with major source
permit requirements and what part is not derived from or in
satisfaction of the part D major source provisions. The same is true
for agricultural sources. It is only by permitting both major and minor
sources that the District can claim to satisfy part D. Having allowed
this demonstration of compliance with major source requirements ``in
the aggregate,'' EPA cannot now claim that the permitting of certain
non-major source is not authorized under Title I.
Response to Earthjustice Comment #3: Earthjustice is correct that
EPA has approved an equivalency tracking system that the District uses
to assess overall equivalency of its NSR program with CAA nonattainment
NSR (i.e., part D) requirements on an annual basis. 69 FR 27837 (May
17, 2004). The requirements for the tracking system are set forth in
District Rule 2201, section 7.0 (``Annual Offset Equivalency
Demonstration and Pre-Baseline ERC Cap Tracking System''). The goal of
the tracking system is to show that, notwithstanding certain
differences between the District and Federal NSR program, the
District's NSR rules would require offsets that are, in the aggregate,
equivalent to offsets required under the Federal program. 68 FR 7330,
at 7332 (February 13, 2003).
To make the equivalency demonstration, the District can use, among
other sources of emissions reductions, emission reductions used to meet
offset requirements imposed on minor sources. However, the fact that
the District can rely, and has relied, on minor source offsets to
demonstrate equivalency does not mean that permits for new or modified
minor agricultural sources are required under part D of Title I and
therefore subject to District permitting authority under CH&SC section
42301.16(a). The District has demonstrated equivalency each year since
the tracking system was approved and has never relied on offsets from
new minor agricultural sources or minor modifications of agricultural
sources to do so. Thus, we disagree with Earthjustice's contention that
the District's reliance on minor source (non-agricultural source)
offsets to demonstrate equivalency of the District's NSR program with
Federal NSR requirements makes all minor source permits, including
minor source permits for agricultural sources, required under part D of
Title I and thus ``required'' for the purposes of CH&SC section
42301.16(a).
Earthjustice Comment #4: EPA's interpretation of State law
regarding District permitting authority over agricultural sources fails
to reconcile and give meaning to CH&SC section 39011.5. Under
paragraphs (b) and (c) of CH&SC section 39011.5, the authority to
permit any agricultural source under the terms of Rule 2201 as it was
revised in December 2002 is expressly preserved and made applicable to
agricultural sources. There is no dispute that, under the terms of Rule
2201, the District had jurisdiction over the permitting of all
agricultural sources on January 1, 2003, and there is no dispute that
Rule 2201 was adopted and submitted for EPA approval to satisfy the
requirements of the CAA. Nothing in the language of CH&SC section
39011.5(b) and (c) suggests that the permitting authority conferred by
these preserved regulations is subject to the limitations in CH&SC
section 42301.16(c) \10\ or elsewhere. To the contrary, the CH&SC uses
broad language making ``any'' existing district regulation applicable
to agricultural sources and ensuring that ``nothing'' limits existing
district authority. If the District truly lacked authority to regulate
sources with actual emission less than 50 percent of a major source
threshold, there would be no need for these sections preserving the
authority of existing regulations. State law could have been silent and
allowed the permitting of these sources only to the extent authorized
by SB 700. The only way to reconcile these provisions is to limit the
effect of CH&SC section 42301.16(c) to future regulation (i.e., post
enactment of SB 700) of these sources.
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\10\ As noted in footnote 5 of this document, under
CH&SC section 42301.16(b) and (c), minor agricultural sources with
emissions below 50 percent of the major source threshold are exempt
from permitting unless the District makes certain findings, while
sources at or above 50 percent of the major source threshold are
subject to permitting unless the District makes certain findings.
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Response to Earthjustice Comment #4: We disagree with the
contention that, under the terms of Rule 2201, the District had
jurisdiction over the
[[Page 46508]]
permitting of all agricultural sources on January 1, 2003. At that
time, State law excluded all agricultural sources from District
permitting authority. The absence of an exemption in Rule 2201 as
adopted by the District in December 2002 did not imbue the District
with authority otherwise denied under State law. In the following
paragraphs, we explain how our interpretation of District permitting
authority over agricultural sources can be reconciled with CH&SC
section 39011.5. We also find further support for our view in the
California Attorney General office's interpretation of the relevant
sections of SB 700.
CH&SC section 39011.5(a) defines ``agricultural source of
pollution'' and ``agricultural source'' for the purposes of Division 26
(``Air Resources'') of the CH&SC. As noted in our proposed rule (75 FR
at 4752), California law defines ``agricultural source'' as a source of
air pollution or group of sources used in the production of crops or
the raising of fowl or animals located on contiguous property under
common ownership or control that is a confined animal facility (e.g.,
barn, corral, coop); is an internal combustion engine used in the
production of crops or the raising of fowl or animals (e.g., irrigation
pumps, but excluding nonroad vehicles such as tractors); or is a title
V source or is a source that is otherwise subject to regulation by a
district or the federal Clean Air Act. See CH&SC section 39011.5(a). As
such, agricultural sources include both combustion sources (such as,
internal combustion engines and boilers) and non-combustion sources
[e.g., confined animal facilities and on- and off-field vehicular
activity (e.g., tilling and harvesting)]. Among the non-combustion
agricultural sources, some by their nature generate fugitive emissions
such as tilling, harvesting, and vehicle travel over unpaved farm
roads.
CH&SC section 39011.5(b) provides that: ``Any district rule or
regulation affecting stationary sources on agricultural operations
adopted on or before January 1, 2004, is applicable to an agricultural
source.'' In proposing the error correction, we were aware of CH&SC
section 39011.5(b) but did not interpret that statutory provision as
conferring authority to the District to require permits for all new or
modified agricultural sources on January 1, 2004 (i.e., the effective
date of SB 700).
Under our interpretation, the savings clause in CH&SC section
39011.5(b) preserves general prohibitory and permitting rules affecting
agricultural sources and adopted prior to the effective date of SB 700
(i.e., January 1, 2004) but does not authorize the application of
District permitting requirements inconsistent with the limited
exemptions set forth in other sections of SB 700 [specifically, CH&SC
section 42301.16(c) and 42301.18(c)]. That is, CH&SC section 39011.5(b)
simply preserves District rules affecting agricultural sources that
were adopted prior to SB 700 and avoids the need to re-adopt such rules
after the effective date of SB 700. Under this view, CH&SC section
39011.5(b) preserved the ability of the District to administer its NSR
rules and apply them to agricultural sources consistent with SB 700
upon the effective date of SB 700 notwithstanding the fact that the NSR
rules were adopted prior to the effective date of SB 700 and thus could
not be applied to agricultural sources (because of the preclusion from
District permitting for agricultural sources in then-current CH&SC
section 42310(e)) at the time the District adopted them.
The California Attorney General's office shares this view:
``. . . . Although California before SB 700's enactment exempted
agricultural sources from New Source Review permitting requirements,
California law did not preclude districts from adopting emissions-
reduction rules of general application (independent of the New
Source Review process) that would apply to agricultural stationary
sources. Some districts had such rules and, following SB 700's
enactment, section 39011.5, subdivision (b) preserved them. For
example, where air pollution control districts had regulated
stationary diesel engines or generators, those regulations were not
limited or diminished by SB 700 merely because the regulated
equipment happened to be located on or involved in what SB 700 now
termed `agricultural sources.' Therefore, section 39011.5,
subdivision (b) has a limited and distinct purpose; it preserves and
validates those existing equipment-governing regulations of general
application, that, without such a savings clause, might be construed
as invalid because the regulated equipment was included as part of
SB 700's `agricultural sources.' Subdivision (b) does not authorize
district New Source Review rules that conflict with the sections of
SB 700 that address the New Source Review permitting process.'' \11\
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\11\ See California Attorney General Office's Letter, November
14, 2013, page 4.
Thus, EPA's interpretation of CH&SC section 39011.5(b) is consistent
with that expressed by the California Attorney General's office.
Moreover, in the excerpt provided above, the California Attorney
General's office explains the need for the savings clause.
CH&SC section 39011.5(c) provides in relevant part: ``Nothing in
this section limits the authority of a district to regulate a source,
including, but not limited to, a stationary source that is an
agricultural source, over which it otherwise has jurisdiction pursuant
to this division, or pursuant to the federal Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C.
Sec. 7401 et seq.) or any rules or regulations adopted pursuant to that
act that were in effect on or before January 1, 2003, or . . . .''
Similar to CH&SC section 39011.5(b), EPA did not view CH&SC section
39011.5(c) as validating the application of District permitting
requirements to all new or modified agricultural sources inconsistent
with the limited exemptions found in other sections of SB 700
[specifically, CH&SC section 42301.16(c) and 42301.18(c)]. Under our
view, the phrase ``nothing in this section'' limits the reach of CH&SC
section 39011.5(c) to the other provisions in CH&SC section 39011.5,
i.e., the definition of ``agricultural source'' in CH&SC section
39011.5(a) and the savings clause in CH&SC section 39011.5(b),
discussed above. As such, we view CH&SC section 39011.5(c) as ensuring
that the definition of ``agricultural source'' and the savings clause
in paragraph (b) does not inadvertently limit the authority of
districts to regulate sources, including agricultural sources, over
which the districts otherwise have jurisdiction pursuant to rules
adopted before January 1, 2003, and does not inform our interpretation
of other sections of SB 700, such as CH&SC section 42301.16(c) and
42301.18(c). Thus, CH&SC 39011.5(c) in no way undermines our
determination in the proposed rule that the District's authority to
permit agricultural sources and to impose emissions offset requirements
on such sources was limited under State law notwithstanding the absence
of such limiting language in the District's NSR rules as adopted in
December 2002 and approved by EPA in May 2004.
The California Attorney General's office agrees that CH&SC section
39011.5(c) does not authorize NSR rules that conflict with other
sections of SB 700 that expressly address the NSR permitting process.
The California Attorney General's office explains:
``Likewise, [CH&SC section 39011.5(c)] does not authorize
district New Source Review rules that conflict with SB 700's
provisions concerning the New Source Review process. Subdivision (c)
provides that nothing in that section limits a district's authority
to regulate a source over which it otherwise has jurisdiction under
the Clean Air Act or any Clean Air Act rules or regulations that
were in effect on or before January 1, 2003. That is, subdivision
(c) clarifies that section 39011.5 itself does not
[[Page 46509]]
limit a district's existing authority, but subdivision (c) does not
concern whether some other provision of SB 700 might limit a
district's authority. Therefore, the only effect of subdivision (c)
is to assure that section 39011.5, by defining the term
`agricultural source,' did not inadvertently limit the validity or
reach of any existing district rules. Subdivision (c) does not grant
authority, and does not authorize New Source Review rules that
conflict with other sections of SB 700 that expressly address the
New Source Review permitting process.'' \12\
\12\ See California Attorney General Office's Letter, November
14, 2013, pages 4 and 5.
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Thus, we continue to read the savings clauses of CH&SC section
39011.5(b) and (c) as not validating the application of District
permitting requirements to all new or modified agricultural sources
inconsistent with the limited exemptions found in other sections of SB
700, and as consistent with our finding in the proposed rule that the
absence of the limited exemptions in SB 700 for agricultural sources in
the District's NSR rules resulted in a mismatch between the SIP and the
District's authority under State law when we approved the District's
NSR rules in May 2004.
Earthjustice Comment #5: There is no requirement that the District
make specific findings before requiring offsets from agricultural
sources. First, EPA's interpretation of CH&SC section 42301.18(c) has
no basis in the language of that section. There is nothing in CH&SC
section 42301.18(c) that requires some ``finding'' by the District
before imposing offsets. Second, EPA's interpretation is inconsistent
with CARB's explanation that the issue in CH&SC 42301.18(c) is
``whether the emissions reductions meet the generic criteria that the
U.S. EPA and the ARB and air district have, since 1976, required of
sources in order for the reductions to `count' for purposes of
attaining ambient standards'' and ``[t]he existence of a District rule
allowing such offsets to be generated is not germane. . . .'' \13\
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\13\ Earthjustice cites a letter from W. Thomas Jennings, Chief
Counsel, CARB, to Brent Newell, Center on Race, Poverty and the
Environment, May 30, 2007.
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Response to Earthjustice Comment #5: We start with the words of
CH&SC section 42301.18(c): ``A district may not require an agricultural
source to obtain emissions offsets for criteria pollutants for that
source if emissions reductions from that source would not meet the
criteria for real, permanent, quantifiable, and enforceable emission
reductions.'' Earthjustice is correct that EPA did read CH&SC section
42301.18(c) as exempting new minor agricultural sources or minor
modifications of existing agricultural sources from the emissions
offset requirement pending a determination on the part of the District.
Based on that understanding, EPA proposed to limit the Agency's prior
approval in such a way as to give effect to the absence of such a
determination during the period in which the relevant version of
District's NSR rules were in effect as part of the SIP, i.e., mid-2004
through mid-2010.
In response to this comment, we reviewed again the language of
CH&SC section 42301.18(c) and acknowledge that it does not specify any
particular process for determining when the criteria, that would
authorize imposition by a District of the emission offset requirement
for a new or modified minor agricultural source, have been met for the
given minor agricultural source. We also reviewed the CARB reference
cited above in Earthjustice Comment 5, and agree that it does
not support EPA's understanding that a determination by the District is
a prerequisite to the District's authority to impose the emissions
offset requirement to new or modified minor agricultural sources under
CH&SC section 42301.18(c), to the extent that the ``determination''
consists of a regulatory protocol or District rule allowing such
offsets to be generated. In the CARB reference cited by Earthjustice,
CARB writes:
``With respect to our interpretation of [CH&SC section
42301.18(c)], we believe that section 42301.18(c) does not ask
whether or not the District has a regulatory protocol to verify
whether ERC's offered by agricultural source are creditable, but
rather sets forth the objective, generic criteria that must be
satisfied by an agricultural source seeking credits for its emission
reductions. If the proffered reductions were real (i.e., surplus to
required reductions), quantifiable, and enforceable, then the source
would be able to use (or bank) them as credits and the District may,
therefore, require the source to provide offsets. The use of the
subjective ``would not meet'' is critical in interpreting this
provision; it focuses the inquiry on whether the emissions
reductions meet the generic criteria that the U.S. EPA and the ARB
and air districts have, since 1976, required of sources in order for
the reductions to ``count'' for purposes of attaining ambient
standards and to qualify for use as offsets. The existence of a
District rule allowing offsets to be generated is not germane to
determining whether emission reductions from a given agricultural
source ``would'' meet the criteria for real, permanent,
quantifiable, and enforceable.''
However, whether emissions reductions from a given agricultural
source meet the relevant criteria is not self-evident or self-
implementing. Some determination is necessary. For instance, the
District is the agency responsible for allowing the emissions
reductions from a given agricultural source to be banked or used for
the purpose of offsetting emissions increases from new or modified
stationary sources that are subject to the offset requirement under an
approved NSR program. If the District allowed emission reductions to be
banked or used for offsetting emission increases, then the District
would thereby be determining that the emissions reductions are ``real,
permanent, quantifiable, and enforceable'' since those are the basic
criteria for judging the creditability of emission reductions for use
as NSR offsets. The District's authority to impose the offset
requirement on new or modified minor agricultural sources would vest as
to those agricultural sources for which it has allowed banking or use
of emission reductions for NSR offset purposes. Thus, while no protocol
or District rule specifically directed at agricultural sources need be
adopted for the offset authority to vest, some determination is
necessary. Because no such determination was made during the relevant
period between the effective date of EPA's 2004 approval of the
previous version of District NSR rules and the effective date of EPA's
2010 approval of District NSR rules that align such rules with SB 700,
EPA continues to believe that limiting its approval to exempt new minor
agricultural sources and minor modifications to existing agricultural
sources from the offset requirement is warranted.
EPA's position is supported by the California Attorney General's
Office. In its March 2013 letter, the California Attorney General's
Office writes: ``It is our understanding that currently emissions
reductions from minor agricultural sources do not meet the criteria for
real, permanent, quantifiable and enforceable emission reductions. On
these facts, the plain language of [CH&SC section 42301.18(c)] serves
to suspend the duty of a minor agricultural source to offset emissions
from that source.'' \14\ If emission reductions from
[[Page 46510]]
minor agricultural sources do not meet the criteria in March 2013, then
they certainly did not meet the criteria during the relevant period
affected by today's error correction action (mid-2004 through mid-
2010).
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\14\ See letter from the California Attorney General's office,
dated March 18, 2013. We recognize that the California Attorney
General's Office's November 2012 letter states that CH&SC section
42301.18(c) ``does not create an exemption'' but merely
``disqualifies any offsets that do not meet the offset criteria and
forbids the district from requiring these deficient offsets.'' We
find this statement difficult to reconcile with that Office's March
2013 letter that states that CH&SC section 42301.18(c) serves to
``suspend the duty of a minor agricultural source to offset
emissions from that source.'' We believe that ``exemption'' and
``suspend the duty'' are essentially the same, and thus both
statements cannot be correct, but we place greater weight on the
March 2013 statement because it was prepared specifically to respond
to the relevant issue addressed herein, i.e., the application of
CH&SC section 42301.18(c) to minor agricultural sources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The California Attorney General's Office, in its March 2013 letter,
maintains that its reading of CH&SC section 42301.18(c) is consistent
with CARB's letter to the California Air Pollution Control Officers,
dated September 3, 2008, which was included as an attachment to the
California Attorney General office's letter, dated March 18, 2013, and
which provides the following guidance with respect to CH&SC section
42301.18(c):
``This limited exemption from the offset requirement means that
agricultural sources that are not amenable to District prohibitory
rules or control measures that would qualify for SIP credit--or that
are unable to generate emission reductions that would qualify as
offsets--because they fail to meet one or more of the basic criteria
for a creditable rule or for offset credit cannot be required to
provide offsets.
We believe this exemption is based upon considerations of
equity. If a source cannot get credit for its emission reductions in
the SIP or cannot quantify its surplus emission reductions for
banking and later use as offsets, it should not be required to
provide offsets. This exemption should be narrowly applied, and in
any event, cannot be used to exempt major federal sources from
offset requirements.'' \15\
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\15\ See letter from James N. Goldstene, Executive Officer,
CARB, to ``Air Pollution Control Officers,'' September 3, 2008, page
4. CARB draws a distinction between SIP credit and NSR offset
credit, a distinction that we also draw. Some prohibitory rules or
control measures are credited in the SIP, particularly those related
to mobile sources and non-traditional stationary sources, that do
not necessarily qualify for NSR offset credit. For example, a
programmatic level of documentation may be acceptable to support
quantification of emissions reductions from mobile sources and non-
traditional stationary sources for general SIP attainment
demonstration purposes, but that same documentation may be
insufficient to validate ERCs for owners or operators of individual
mobile sources or individual non-traditional stationary sources for
NSR offset purposes.
During the relevant time period, EPA approved several District
rules affecting agricultural sources, and several District air quality
plans that reflect emissions reductions from implementation of those
rules. For example, EPA approved District Rule 4550 (``Conservation
Management Practices'') and its associated List of Conservation
Management Practices at 71 FR 7683 (February 14, 2006), District Rule
4570 (``Confined Animal Facilities'') at 75 FR 2079 (January 14, 2010),
the 2003 San Joaquin Valley PM10 Plan at 69 FR 30006 (May
26, 2004), the 2004 San Joaquin Valley Extreme Ozone Attainment
Demonstration Plan at 75 FR 10420 (March 8, 2010), and the 2007 San
Joaquin Valley PM10 Maintenance Plan and Redesignation
Request at 73 FR 66759 (November 12, 2008).
However, the use of the conjunction ``or'' by CARB in its
discussion of CH&SC section 42301.18(c), quoted above, means that,
under CARB's interpretation, even if SIP credit were approved for
prohibitory rules or control measures, new or modified minor
agricultural sources could not be required to provide emissions offsets
if they are unable to generate emission reductions that would qualify
as offsets. Thus, we find that CARB's interpretation of CH&SC section
42301.18(c) supports EPA's limitation on its May 2004 approval to
exempt new minor agricultural sources and minor modifications of
existing agricultural sources from the emissions offset requirement
because, under that provision of State law, the District did not have
the authority to require such sources to provide emissions offsets
because such sources were unable to generate emissions reductions that
qualify as offsets during the relevant time period.
Earthjustice Comment #6: EPA's use of section 110(k)(6) to correct
this error is unlawful. EPA cannot use section 110(k)(6) to achieve a
result that EPA could not have achieved if it had acted ``correctly''
at the outset. EPA can point to no authority that allows EPA to adopt
such a limitation when acting on this or any other SIP approval. To the
contrary, such attempts to rewrite the rule submitted to EPA for
approval violate well-established prohibitions against piecemeal
approval of rule submittals. See Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Gorsuch, 742
F.2d 1028 (7th Cir. 1984).
Section 110(k)(6) does not allow EPA to revise the rule itself,
only the action used to approve the rule. The ``actions'' on a SIP
submittal are outlined in section 110(k)(3) and include full and
partial approval or disapproval. First, there should be little question
that EPA could not have partially approved the District's NSR rules as
submitted in 2002. The other option theoretically available to EPA at
the time of the 2004 action was the ``limited approval/limited
disapproval,'' but EPA guidance cautions against use of that option to
approve any rule that is unenforceable for all situations.\16\ None of
the options available to EPA when acting on a SIP submittal allow EPA
to do what it is proposing to do here. EPA cannot ``limit'' the
approval by rewriting the applicability of the rule as submitted.
Section 110(k)(6) does not create new options for EPA to act on SIP
submittals and cannot be used to circumvent the limitations on EPA
actions provided by the plain language of section 110(k)(3).
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\16\ Earthjustice cites EPA guidance memorandum titled
``Processing of State Implementation Plan (SIP) Submittals,'' dated
July 9, 1992, from John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality Management
Division, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Earthjustice Comment #6: First of all, we agree that we
cannot use section 110(k)(6) to revise the District's NSR rules that we
previously approved, but we are not doing so in this action. Our action
to limit our approval would in no way change the language of the
District NSR rules that we approved in May 2004. Instead, it would
revise the scope of our approval in such a way as to align our approval
with the limits of District permitting authority under State law at the
time we initially approved the rules and thus does not conflict with
the decision in Bethlehem Steel.
In doing so, our action amounts to a revision to the approved
California SIP that was applicable between June 2004 and June 2010.\17\
EPA is not changing the District rule component of the SIP. We believe
that our action finalized today is the appropriate revision to make to
the California SIP under CAA section 110(k)(6) to address the error
that we made in our May 2004 final action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ As discussed in more detail in our proposed rule, the
District amended the NSR rules in 2007 and 2008 to, among other
things, align the rules explicitly with the District's authority to
permit minor agricultural sources and to require emissions offsets
for such sources. 75 FR 4745, at 4749-4750 (January 29, 2010). EPA
approved the amended NSR rules in May 2010, effective June 10, 2010.
75 FR 26102 (May 11, 2010). Thus, our action today need only correct
the mismatch between the District NSR rules and the District's
authority with respect to minor agricultural sources under SB 700
from the effective date of our May 2004 approval of the 2002-amended
District NSR rules (i.e., June 16, 2004) through June 9, 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, we agree that there are significant obstacles to correcting
our May 2004 action on the District's NSR rules by revising the action
from a full approval to a ``partial approval/partial disapproval'' or
``limited approval/limited disapproval.'' For instance, a ``partial
approval/partial disapproval'' action is problematic in this instance
because, as a general matter, NSR rules are not separable. Correcting
our action from a full approval action to a ``limited approval/limited
disapproval'' action is problematic in that it would incorporate the
entire rule into the California SIP, and thus would not remedy the
problem of the mismatch between the District
[[Page 46511]]
NSR rules in the SIP and the District's authority with respect to
agricultural sources under SB 700.
We disagree, however, that we could not have limited our approval
in May 2004 under section 110(k)(3) in the same manner as we are doing
today, but in any event, for today's action, we are relying on section
110(k)(6), not on section 110(k)(3). We believe that the action we
proposed to limit our previous approval and that we are finalizing
today is authorized under the broad discretionary language of CAA
section 110(k)(6):
``Whenever the Administrator determines that the Administrator's
action approving, disapproving, or promulgating any plan or plan
revision (or part thereof), . . . was in error, the Administrator
may in the same manner as the approval, disapproval, or promulgation
revise such action as appropriate without requiring any further
submission from the State. Such determination and the basis thereof
shall be provided to the State and public.''
The key provisions are that the Administrator has the authority to
``determine[ ]'' when a SIP approval was in ``error,'' and when he does
so, he may then revise the SIP approval ``as appropriate,'' in the same
manner as the approval, and without requiring any further submission
from the state.
With this action, EPA is determining that its action approving the
District's NSR rules in May 2004 was ``in error'' due to the mismatch
between the facial applicability in the NSR rules of the permitting and
emission offset requirements to minor agricultural sources and the
limits on District authority under State law applicable at the time of
our SIP approval. Given the mismatch between the exclusions and
exemptions apparent from the words of the District NSR rules and the
limits under State law, EPA was in error in fully approving the NSR
rules because the SIP and SIP revisions must be supported by necessary
assurances by the State that, in this context, the District will have
adequate authority under State law to carry out such SIP or SIP
revisions and the State of California could not have provided such
necessary assurances in May 2004 with respect to minor agricultural
sources because of the limits on District authority at the time
manifest in SB 700. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) and our January 29,
2010 proposed rule at pages 4747-4748.
EPA is further determining that the appropriate action EPA can
take--in light of the broad discretion conferred by the phrase,
``revise such action as appropriate,''--is to limit our previous
approval of the District's NSR rules, as it relates to agricultural
sources, (1) to the extent that the permit requirements apply to
agricultural sources with potential emissions at or above a major
source applicability threshold and to agricultural sources with actual
emissions at or above 50 percent of a major source applicability
threshold; and (2) to the extent that the offset requirements apply to
major agricultural sources and major modifications of such sources. We
have also conducted this limiting of our prior approval through notice-
and-comment rulemaking, which is the same manner as EPA conducted the
prior approval.
In limiting our previous approval in this manner, we are taking an
approach analogous to the one EPA took with respect to the Agency's
previous SIP approvals of certain State programs for the Prevention of
Significant Determination (PSD) to the extent those programs applied
PSD to greenhouse gas (GHG) emitting sources below the thresholds in
the final ``Tailoring Rule'' published at 75 FR 31514 on June 3, 2010.
See our final rule, ``Limitation of Approval of Prevention of
Significant Deterioration Provisions Concerning Greenhouse Gas
Emitting-Sources in State Implementation Plans,'' referred to as the
PSD SIP ``Narrowing Rule,'' at 75 FR 82536 (December 30, 2010). In the
case of the previous approvals of State PSD programs, EPA determined
that its action approving the PSD SIP provisions was ``in error'' due
to the mismatch between the PSD applicability provisions and the
state's ``necessary assurances'' under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) of
adequate resources and further determined that the ``appropriate
action'' to correct the error was to narrow its approval of the PSD
programs to the extent they applied PSD to GHG-emitting sources below
the Tailoring Rule threshold.
Here, in this action, EPA is determining that its action approving
the District's NSR rules was ``in error'' due to the mismatch between
the applicability provisions of the District NSR rules and the state's
``necessary assurance'' under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) of adequate
legal authority and is further determining that the ``appropriate
action'' to correct the error is to limit its previous approval of the
District's NSR rules in May 2004 to align the permitting applicability
and offset requirement in the approved SIP to the authority granted the
District under State law. EPA's PSD SIP ``Narrowing Rule'' contains a
detailed discussion (see pages 82543-82545) justifying the reliance on
CAA section 110(k)(6) to narrow previous SIP approvals and we
incorporate that discussion herein.
Lastly, Earthjustice would agree that EPA could have disapproved
the District's NSR rules as submitted in December 2002, and thus would
agree that we could now, under section 110(k)(6), change our former
``approval'' to ``disapproval,'' but such an action would have the
deleterious effect of removing the December 2002 version of the NSR
rules from the SIP entirely notwithstanding the significant
strengthening they represented relative to the then-existing SIP
District NSR rules approved in 2001 (66 FR 37587, July 19, 2001) that
included a blanket exemption for agricultural sources. Our action to
limit our approval is narrowly tailored to retain the strengthening
aspects of the December 2002 version of the NSR rules while still
addressing the mismatch between the language of the NSR rules and the
District's authority under State law. Our purpose in doing so is to
align the SIP approved by EPA in May 2004 with the intent of both EPA
and the State of California to address the deficiencies in the
District's NSR rules, including the previous blanket exemption for
agricultural sources as it applied to major agricultural sources. The
mismatch created in the applicable California SIP between the NSR rules
and the authority vested in the District under State law with respect
to minor agricultural sources was inadvertent, and section 110(k)(6)
provides EPA with the broad discretionary authority to take action to
fix the problem caused by the Agency's previous erroneous SIP action.
CRP&E Comment #1: The proposed rule conflicts with Safe Air for
Everyone v. EPA, 488 F.3d 1088 (9th Cir. 2007) (``Safe Air''). The SIP
means exactly that which the December 2002 version of District's NSR
rules say it means, and EPA made no statement of administrative intent
that would contradict that plain meaning. As such, the purported
exemption in SB 700 cannot, as a matter of law, be part of the EPA-
approved SIP.
Response to CRP&E Comment #1: We agree that we cannot simply
interpret the California SIP to include statutory limitations not
manifest in the SIP itself nor manifest in EPA's expressed intent or
understanding at the time we conducted rulemaking to approve the
December 2002 version of the District's NSR rules. However, agreement
on this point simply highlights the need for EPA to take the action it
is finalizing today. We have conducted this error correction action
through a notice-and-comment rulemaking and have made our
administrative intent manifest through that process. Also, we want to
make clear that we are not changing the language of the District's NSR
rules that
[[Page 46512]]
we approved in May 2004. Instead, our action will revise the scope of
our approval in such a way as to align our approval with the limits of
District permitting authority under State law at the time we approved
the rules. In doing so, our action amounts to a revision to the
California SIP applicable between June 2004 and June 2010. EPA is not
changing the District rule component of the SIP. We believe that our
action finalized today is the appropriate revision to make to the
California SIP under CAA section 110(k)(6) to address the error that we
made in our May 2004 final action.
CRP&E Comment #2: EPA lacks the power to amend the SIP to conform
to EPA's interpretation of the District's state law permitting
authority. Nothing in the CAA authorizes EPA to substantively amend a
SIP or SIP revision, so EPA cannot accomplish that through a
``correction'' under section 110(k)(6).
Response to CRP&E Comment #2: Please see EPA's Response to
Earthjustice Comment 6.
CRP&E Comment #3: Even if EPA could make an end-around Safe Air and
could amend the SIP, SB 700 itself gives the District the authority to
implement and enforce the December 2002 version of the District's NSR
rules. EPA rationalizes its correction on the ground that the District
lacked statutory authority to implement and enforce the December 2002
version of the District's NSR rules. EPA, however, fails to recognize
the authority given to the District by CH&SC sections 39011.5(b) and
(c).
Response to CRP&E Comment #3: Please see EPA's Response to
Earthjustice Comment 4.
Dairy Cares Comment #1: Dairy Cares agrees that EPA erred in
failing to expressly acknowledge the limitations imposed on the
District's authority pursuant to SB 700, because the SB 700 exemptions
plainly limited the District's permitting authority over agricultural
sources and agrees that EPA's SIP correction is appropriate under
section 110(k)(6) of the CAA. Dairy Cares, however, believes that
because EPA's 2004 SIP action implicitly and necessarily included all
of the expansion and limitation of District authority contained in SB
700, including the exemptions, the SIP, as it currently exists, should
be read to include the exemptions.
Response to Dairy Cares Comment #1: EPA notes that the argument
that limitations on authority under State law implicitly and
necessarily determine the applicability of rules and regulations
approved by EPA as part of a SIP, even if those statutory limitations
are not also approved as part of the SIP, is not supported by case law.
In Safe Air for Everyone v. EPA (488 F.3d 1088 (9th Cir. 2007), the
Ninth Circuit held that ``SIPs are interpreted based on their plain
meaning when such a meaning is apparent, not absurd, and not
contradicted by the manifest intent of EPA, as expressed in the
promulgating documents available to the public.'' Id. at 1100. In this
instance, the absence of limited exemptions for minor agricultural
sources with respect to permitting and offsets in the version of the
District's NSR rules approved in 2004 is plain, not absurd, nor
contradicted by EPA in taking the action in 2004 to approve the rules.
Moreover, SB 700 itself is not approved into the California SIP. Thus,
we continue to believe that is appropriate to correct our previous
approval of the District's NSR rules to reconcile that approval with
the limitations on District authority that were established by the
California legislature in SB 700.
III. Final Action
After due consideration of the comments submitted on our proposed
action, and in light of California's interpretation of SB 700 as it
applies to the District's NSR rules, we are taking final action under
CAA section 110(k)(6) to correct our erroneous approval in May 2004 of
San Joaquin Valley District NSR rules, Rule 2020 (``Exemptions'') and
Rule 2210 (``New and Modified Stationary Source Review Rule''), as
amended by the District in December 2002. In doing so, we are
determining that such previous approval was in error for the purposes
of CAA section 110(k)(6) because we failed to recognize that the State
could not provide the necessary assurances under CAA section
110(a)(2)(E) that the District had the authority to implement its
amended NSR rules as those rules applied to agricultural sources given
that the District's NSR rules, as adopted in 2002, did not reflect the
qualified permitting and emissions offset exemptions provided in SB 700
with respect to minor agricultural sources.
To correct this error, we are revising our previous action by
limiting our previous approval, as it relates to agricultural sources,
to the extent that the permit requirements apply (1) to agricultural
sources with potential emissions at or above a major source
applicability threshold and (2) to agricultural sources with actual
emissions at or above 50 percent of a major source applicability
threshold. We are also limiting our previous approval, as it relates to
agricultural sources, to the extent that the emission offset
requirements apply to major agricultural sources and major
modifications of such sources.
To codify the new limitation on our previous approval, we are
adding a new section to 40 CFR part 52 (``Approval and promulgation of
implementation plans''), subpart F (``California''). The new section is
40 CFR 52.245 (``New Source Review Rules'').
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has exempted this
regulatory action from Executive Order 12866, entitled ``Regulatory
Planning and Review.''
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency
to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking requirements unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Small entities include small
businesses, small not-for-profit enterprises, and small governmental
jurisdictions.
This rule will not have a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities because error correction actions under section
110(k)(6) of the Clean Air Act do not create any new requirements but
simply approve requirements that the State is already imposing.
Therefore, because this error correction action does not create any new
requirements, I certify that this action will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Moreover, due to the nature of the Federal-State relationship under
the Clean Air Act, preparation of flexibility analysis would constitute
Federal inquiry into the economic reasonableness of State action. The
Clean Air Act forbids EPA to base its actions concerning SIPs on such
grounds. Union Electric Co., v. U.S. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 255-66 (1976);
42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Under section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(``Unfunded Mandates Act''), signed
[[Page 46513]]
into law on March 22, 1995, EPA must prepare a budgetary impact
statement to accompany any proposed or final rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in estimated costs to State, local, or
tribal governments in the aggregate; or to the private sector, of $100
million or more. Under section 205, EPA must select the most cost-
effective and least burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule and is consistent with statutory requirements. Section 203
requires EPA to establish a plan for informing and advising any small
governments that may be significantly or uniquely impacted by the rule.
EPA has determined that the error correction action promulgated
today does not include a Federal mandate that may result in estimated
costs of $100 million or more to either State, local, or tribal
governments in the aggregate, or to the private sector. This Federal
action aligns requirements under Federal law with those under state and
local law, and imposes no new requirements. Accordingly, no additional
costs to State, local, or tribal governments, or to the private sector,
result from this action.
E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132, Federalism, (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999)
revokes and replaces Executive Orders 12612 (Federalism) and 12875
(Enhancing the Intergovernmental Partnership). Executive Order 13132
requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful
and timely input by State and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism implications.'' ``Policies
that have federalism implications'' is defined in the Executive Order
to include regulations that have ``substantial direct effects on the
States, on the relationship between the national government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.'' Under Executive Order 13132, EPA may
not issue a regulation that has federalism implications, that imposes
substantial direct compliance costs, and that is not required by
statute, unless the Federal government provides the funds necessary to
pay the direct compliance costs incurred by State and local
governments, or EPA consults with State and local officials early in
the process of developing the proposed regulation. EPA also may not
issue a regulation that has federalism implications and that preempts
State law unless the Agency consults with State and local officials
early in the process of developing the proposed regulation.
This rule will not have substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in Executive Order 13132, because it
merely corrects an error in a previous EPA rulemaking, and does not
alter the relationship or the distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 6 of the Executive Order do not apply to this
rule.
F. Executive Order 13175, Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments
Executive Order 13175, entitled ``Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments'' (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful
and timely input by tribal officials in the development of regulatory
policies that have tribal implications.'' This rule does not have
tribal implications, as specified in Executive Order 13175. It will not
have substantial direct effects on tribal governments, on the
relationship between the Federal government and Indian tribes, or on
the distribution of power and responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this rule.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997)
as applying only to those regulatory actions that concern health or
safety risks, such that the analysis required under section 5-501 of
the Executive Order has the potential to influence the regulation. This
rule is not subject to Executive Order 13045, because it corrects a
previous EPA approval of a State rule implementing a Federal standard.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This rule is not subject to Executive Order 13211, ``Actions
Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use'' (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001) because it is not a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Section 12 of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
(NTTAA) of 1995 requires Federal agencies to evaluate existing
technical standards when developing a new regulation. To comply with
NTTAA, EPA must consider and use ``voluntary consensus standards''
(VCS) if available and applicable when developing programs and policies
unless doing so would be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise
impractical.
The EPA believes that VCS are inapplicable to this action. Today's
action does not require the public to perform activities conducive to
the use of VCS.
J. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. section 801 et seq., as
added by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, generally provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency
promulgating the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy
of the rule, to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller
General of the United States. EPA will submit a report containing this
rule and other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House
of Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States
prior to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
section 804(2).
K. Petitions for Review of This Action
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, petitions for
judicial review of this action must be filed in the United States Court
of Appeals for the appropriate circuit by September 30, 2013. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such
rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings
to enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Oxides of nitrogen, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Volatile organic compounds.
[[Page 46514]]
Dated: July 12, 2013.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Part 52, Chapter I, Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations is
amended as follows:
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart F--California
0
2. Section 52.245 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 52.245 New Source Review rules.
(a) Approval of the New Source Review rules for the San Joaquin
Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District Rules 2020 and 2201 as
approved on May 17, 2004 in Sec. 52.220(c)(311)(i)(B)(1), and in
effect for Federal purposes from June 16, 2004 through June 10, 2010,
is limited, as it relates to agricultural sources, to the extent that
the permit requirements apply:
(1) To agricultural sources with potential emissions at or above a
major source applicability threshold; and
(2) To agricultural sources with actual emissions at or above 50
percent of a major source applicability threshold.
(b) Approval of the New Source Review rules for the San Joaquin
Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District Rules 2020 and 2201 as
approved on May 17, 2004 in Sec. 52.220(c)(311)(i)(B)(1), and in
effect for Federal purposes from June 16, 2004 through June 10, 2010,
is limited, as it relates to agricultural sources, to the extent that
the emission offset requirements apply to major agricultural sources
and major modifications of such sources.
[FR Doc. 2013-18413 Filed 7-31-13; 8:45 am]
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