Hazardous Materials: Rail Petitions and Recommendations To Improve the Safety of Railroad Tank Car Transportation (RRR), 54849-54861 [2013-21621]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 173 / Friday, September 6, 2013 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
49 CFR Parts 173, 174, 178, 179, and
180
[Docket No. PHMSA–2012–0082 (HM–251)]
RIN 2137–AE91
Hazardous Materials: Rail Petitions
and Recommendations To Improve the
Safety of Railroad Tank Car
Transportation (RRR)
Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA), DOT.
ACTION: Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM).
AGENCY:
PHMSA is considering
revisions to the Hazardous Materials
Regulations (HMR) to improve the
regulations applicable to the
transportation of hazardous materials by
rail. The revisions are based on eight
petitions received from the regulated
community and four National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
Recommendations which are referenced
by a petition. In this ANPRM, we
outline the petitions and NTSB
recommendations, identify a
preliminary estimate of costs and
benefits from the petitions, pose several
questions, and solicit comments and
data from the public. Under Executive
Order 13563, Federal agencies were
asked to periodically review existing
regulations. The questions posed in this
ANPRM and responses by commenters
will be used in conjunction with a
retrospective review of existing
requirements aimed to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal existing
rules that are outmoded, ineffective,
insufficient, or excessively burdensome.
DATES: Comments must be received by
November 5, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by the docket number
PHMSA–2012–0082 (HM–251) and the
relevant petition number by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 1–202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Management System;
U.S. Department of Transportation,
West Building, Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, Routing Symbol M–30, 1200
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SUMMARY:
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New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: To the Docket
Management System; Room W12–140
on the ground floor of the West
Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number for this notice at the beginning
of the comment. To avoid duplication,
please use only one of these four
methods. All comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov and will include
any personal information you provide.
All comments received will be posted
without change to the Federal Docket
Management System (FDMS), including
any personal information.
Docket: For access to the dockets to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov or DOT’s Docket
Operations Office located at U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, Routing Symbol M–30, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590.
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search
the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comments (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78) which
may be viewed at: https://www.gpo.gov/
fdsys/pkg/FR-2000-04-11/pdf/008505.pdf.
Karl
Alexy, (202) 493–6245, Office of Safety
Assurance and Compliance, Federal
Railroad Administration or Ben Supko,
(202) 366–8553, Standards and
Rulemaking Division, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave.
SE., Washington, DC 20590–0001.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
III. Review of Amendments Considered
A. Petition P–1507
B. Petition P–1519
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54849
C. Petition P–1547
D. Petition P–1548
E. Petition P–1577
F. Petition P–1587
G. Petition P–1595
H. Petition P–1612
IV. Regulatory Review and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866, Executive Order
13563, Executive Order 13610, and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Executive Order 13132
C. Executive Order 13175
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act, Executive
Order 13272, and DOT Policies and
Procedures
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Environmental Assessment
G. Privacy Act
H. International Trade Analysis
I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This
Rulemaking
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
I. Executive Summary
PHMSA has received eight petitions
for rulemaking and four NTSB
recommendations proposing
amendments to the Hazardous Materials
Regulations (HMR; 49 CFR parts 171–
180) applicable to the transportation of
hazardous materials in commerce by
rail. PHMSA is seeking public
comments on whether the proposed
amendments would enhance safety,
revise, and clarify the HMR with regard
to rail transport. Specifically, these
amendments propose to: (1) Relax
regulatory requirements to afford the
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
greater discretion to authorize the
movement of non-conforming tank cars;
(2) impose additional requirements that
would correct an unsafe condition
associated with pressure relief valves
(PRV) on rail cars transporting carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid; (3) relax
regulatory requirements applicable to
the repair and maintenance of DOT
Specification 110, DOT Specification
106, and ICC 27 tank car tanks (ton
tanks); (4) relax regulatory requirement
for the removal of rupture discs for
inspection if the removal process would
damage, change, or alter the intended
operation of the device; and (5) impose
additional requirements that would
enhance the standards for DOT
Specification 111 tank cars used to
transport Packing Group (PG) I and II
hazardous materials. The NTSB
recommendations directly relate to the
enhancement of DOT Specification 111
tank cars. PHMSA looks forward to
reviewing the public’s comments
pertaining to the potential economic,
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environmental, and safety implications
of the petitions discussed in this
ANPRM. Comments received will be
used in our evaluation and development
of possible future regulatory actions on
issues relating to the transportation of
hazardous materials by rail.
Access to the petitions, NTSB
Recommendations, and background
documents referenced in this ANPRM
can be found at https://
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
PHMSA–2012–0082 or at DOT’s Docket
Operations Office (see ADDRESSES).
PHMSA requests that commenters note
the applicable petition number when
submitting comments.
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II. Background
Federal hazmat law authorizes the
Secretary of DOT (Secretary) to
‘‘prescribe regulations for the safe
transportation, including security, of
hazardous material in intrastate,
interstate, and foreign commerce.’’ The
Secretary has delegated this authority to
PHMSA. 49 CFR § 1.97(b). The HMR,
promulgated by PHMSA under the
authority provided in Federal hazmat
law, are designed to achieve three goals:
(1) To ensure that hazardous materials
are packaged and handled safely and
securely during transportation; (2) to
provide effective communication to
transportation workers and emergency
responders of the hazards of the
materials being transported; and (3) to
minimize the consequences of an
incident should one occur. The
hazardous material regulatory system is
a risk management system that is
prevention-oriented and focused on
identifying a safety or security hazard
and reducing the probability and
quantity of a hazardous material release.
Under the HMR, hazardous materials
are categorized by analysis and
experience into hazard classes and
packing groups based upon the risks
that they present during transportation.
The HMR specify appropriate packaging
and handling requirements for
hazardous materials based on this
classification, and require a shipper to
communicate the material’s hazards
through the use of shipping papers,
package marking and labeling, and
vehicle placarding. The HMR also
require shippers to provide emergency
response information applicable to the
specific hazard or hazards of the
material being transported. Finally, the
HMR mandate training requirements for
persons who prepare hazardous
materials for shipment or who transport
hazardous materials in commerce.
The HMR also include operational
requirements applicable to each mode of
transportation. The Secretary has
authority over all areas of railroad
transportation safety (Federal railroad
safety laws, 49 U.S.C. 20101 et seq.),
and has delegated this authority to FRA.
49 CFR 1.89. Pursuant to its statutory
authority, FRA promulgates and
enforces a comprehensive regulatory
program (49 CFR parts 200–244) to
address railroad track; signal systems;
railroad communications; rolling stock;
rear-end marking devices; safety glazing;
railroad accident/incident reporting;
locational requirements for the dispatch
of U.S. rail operations; safety integration
plans governing railroad consolidations;
merger and acquisitions of control;
operating practices; passenger train
emergency preparedness; alcohol and
drug testing; locomotive engineer
certification; and workplace safety. FRA
inspects railroads and shippers for
compliance with both FRA and PHMSA
regulations. FRA also conducts research
and development to enhance railroad
safety.
As a result of the shared role in the
safe and secure transportation of
hazardous materials by rail, PHMSA
and FRA work very closely when
considering regulatory changes. The
issues being considered under this
ANPRM are derived from petitions
submitted to PHMSA by its
stakeholders. The Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) requires Federal
agencies to give interested persons the
right to petition an agency to issue,
amend, or repeal a rule. (5 U.S.C.
553(e)). In accordance with PHMSA’s
rulemaking procedure regulations,
interested persons may ask PHMSA to
add, amend, or repeal a regulation by
filing a petition for rulemaking along
with information and arguments that
support the requested action. (49 CFR
Part 106). On average, thirty petitions
for rulemaking are submitted to PHMSA
annually by the regulated community,
in accordance with § 106.95. The eight
petitions included in this ANPRM are
applicable to the transportation of
hazardous materials by rail and have
been reviewed by PHMSA and FRA
representatives.
In this ANPRM, PHMSA is seeking
public comment to obtain the views of
those who are likely to be impacted in
any way by the changes proposed in the
petitions, including those who are likely
to benefit from, be adversely affected by,
or potentially be subject to additional
regulation. Additionally, we seek
comments on the four NTSB
recommendations that are specifically
referenced by Petition P–1587. This
ANPRM will provide an opportunity for
public participation in the development
of regulatory amendments, and promote
greater exchange of information and
perspectives among the various
stakeholders. This additional step is
intended to lead to more focused and
well-developed proposals that reflect
the views of all relevant parties.
In addition to this ANPRM, FRA
published a notice on July 18, 2013 (78
FR 42998) announcing a PHMSA and
FRA public meeting scheduled for
August 27–28, 2013, from 8:30 a.m.
until 5:00 p.m., in the DOT Conference
Center, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590. The meeting
was focused on operational factors that
affect the safe transportation of
hazardous materials by rail. During the
meeting, we asked for input from
stakeholders and interested parties. The
meeting agenda was included in the
public docket for this rulemaking.
PHMSA requested comments on the
relationship between the items
identified in the agenda and the
petitions, recommendations, and
standards addressed in this rulemaking.
III. Review of Amendments Considered
This ANPRM is based on Petitions P–
1507, P–1519, P–1547, P–1548, P–1577,
P–1587, P–1595, and P–1612 and NTSB
Recommendations R–12–5, R–12–6, R–
12–7, and R–07–4. Petition P–1587
directly references NTSB
Recommendations R–12–5, R–12–6, R–
12–7, and R–07–4. Additionally, NTSB
Recommendations R–12–5 and R–12–6
directly relate to and reference petition
P–1577. The following table provides a
brief summary of the petitions and
NTSB Recommendations addressed in
this ANPRM:
Petition/
recommendation
Party submitting petition
Summary
P–1507 ..............
Eastman Chemical Co. ...........................
P–1519 ..............
The Compressed
(CGA).
Revise the wording of § 174.50 to afford FRA greater discretion in authorizing car
movement.
Revise § 173.314 Note 5 to clearly indicate that the liquid portion of the gas must
not completely fill the tank prior to reaching the pressure setting of the regulating valves or the safety relief valve, whichever is lower.
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Association
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Petition/
recommendation
Party submitting petition
Summary
P–1547 ..............
Carroll Welding Supply ............................
P–1548 ..............
American Chemistry Council (ACC) ........
P–1577 ..............
P–1587 ..............
Association of American Railroads
(AAR).
Village of Barrington, Illinois and The
Regional Answer to Canadian Nation.
P–1595 ..............
ACC, American Petroleum Institute (API)
and The Chlorine Institute, Inc. (CI).
P–1612 ..............
API, ACC, CI, and The Renewable Fuels
Association (RFA).
R–07–4 ..............
NTSB .......................................................
R–12–5 ..............
NTSB .......................................................
R–12–6 ..............
NTSB .......................................................
R–12–7 ..............
NTSB .......................................................
Revise the ton tank repair, maintenance, and marking regulations for consistency
with existing regulations for DOT 3-series cylinders since ton tanks share more
in common with these cylinders than tank cars.
Proposes a change to the wording in § 173.31(d)(1)(vi) intended to prevent damage or loss of effectiveness of rupture discs removed from their initial placement in the relief device by adding language that would except them from removal if the inspection itself would damage, change, or alter the intended operation of the device.
Proposes a new standard for newly-constructed DOT Specification 111 tank cars
used to transport PG I and II materials.
Stresses the importance of adopting P–1577 for newly-constructed and existing
DOT Specification 111 tank cars in accordance with NTSB Recommendations
R–12–5 and R–12–6. In addition, the petition urges PHMSA to adopt NTSB
Recommendation R–07–4.
Proposes that PHMSA apply requirements related to top fittings protection, reclosing pressure relief devices, and head and shell thickness requirements as
suggested in P–1577 and P–1587 for DOT Specification 111 tank cars used to
transport ethanol and crude oil in PG I and II.
The Petitioners request that PHMSA separate new tank car regulatory requirements from any potential retrofits for the timely adoption of revised regulatory
requirements for the construction of new DOT Specification 111 tank cars used
for the transportation of ethanol and crude oil.
With the assistance of the FRA, require that railroads immediately provide to
emergency responders accurate, real-time information regarding the identity
and location of all hazardous materials on a train.
Require that all newly-manufactured and existing general service tank cars authorized for transportation of denatured fuel ethanol and crude oil in PGs I and
II have enhanced tank head and shell puncture resistance systems and top fittings protection that exceed existing design requirements for DOT Specification
111 tank cars.
Require that all bottom outlet valves used on newly-manufactured and existing
non-pressure tank cars are designed to remain closed during accidents in
which the valve and operating handle are subjected to impact forces.
Require that all newly-manufactured and existing tank cars authorized for transportation of hazardous materials have center sill or draft sill attachment designs
that conform to the revised Association of American Railroads’ design requirements adopted as a result of Safety Recommendation R–12–9.
Each petition is discussed in detail
below. Each description includes a
summary of the petition, including the
regulatory solution proposed by the
petition; based on the petition, costs and
benefits associated with the granting the
action requested by the petitioner; and
a request for comments including
specific questions regarding each
petition. Additionally, the discussion of
P–1587 includes a brief summary of the
NTSB accident report which resulted in
the issuance of Recommendations R–
12–5 through R–12–8 to PHMSA and
reiterates the reasons for the issuance of
Recommendation R–07–4. The petitions
and NTSB accident report are included
in the public docket for this rulemaking.
A. Petition P–1507
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Summary
In Petition P–1507, the Law Offices of
McCarthy, Sweeney & Harkaway, P.C.,
on behalf of Eastman Chemical Co.,
propose that the wording of § 174.50 be
changed to afford FRA greater discretion
in authorizing car movement. Eastman
Chemical Co. asserts that adherence to
the regulation impedes the flow of
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commerce because all non-conforming
bulk packagings, regardless of the safety
risk, require a movement approval. Nonconforming conditions that are a
relatively minor risk require the same
approval application and evaluation
process as a non-conforming condition
that poses a clear and significant risk.
For example, many low risk movement
approvals are provided for tank cars that
have a defective bottom outlet valve, but
have been cleaned and purged to
remove any potential hazard in
transportation. Other common low-risk
examples are jacketed tank cars with
damage solely to the jacket causing a
violation of the requirement for the
jacket to be weather tight. An example
of a high-risk approval is one that is
issued for a hole or crack in the tank car
shell or head.
The petitioner suggests revising
§ 174.50 to provide FRA greater
discretion in authorizing car movement.
Currently, § 174.50 provides that:
A leaking non-bulk package may not be
forwarded until repaired, reconditioned, or
overpacked in accordance with § 173.3 of this
subchapter. Except as otherwise provided in
this section, a bulk packaging that no longer
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conforms to [the HMR] may not be forwarded
by rail unless repaired or approved for
movement by the Associate Administrator for
Safety, Federal Railroad Administration.
Eastman Chemical Co. petitions PHMSA
to add language that enables FRA to
publish guidance on specific elements
of non-conformity that would not
require a movement approval by the
Associate Administrator for Railroad
Safety.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action
requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did
not identify specific costs and benefits.
However, FRA has recently modified its
movement approval process to
minimize burdens without decreasing
safety. On February 22, 2011, FRA
hosted a public meeting and solicited
comments on the one-time movement
approval (OTMA 1) process to address
the increasing number of requests for
OTMAs, which slowed processing
1 Detailed information regarding FRA’s OTMA
program is available at the following URL: https://
www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/Details/L04692.
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time.2 The basis for the meeting was the
increasing volume of approvals issued
annually. FRA issued 380 movement
approvals in calendar year (CY) 2007,
444 in CY 2008, 645 in CY 2009, and
906 in CY 2010. These approvals
covered a broad range of nonconformity, such as service equipment,
tank shell, or lining failures; overloaded
packagings; jacket, tank car shell, or
head damage; stub sill weld cracks;
failures of heater coils or thermal
protection systems; tank cars overdue
for required tests; etc.
Following FRA’s public meeting,
PHMSA and FRA conducted a peer
review panel, which audited FRA’s
OTMA program. The audit highlighted
the range and frequencies of various
defective conditions and identified
those defects that pose a lesser safety
risk. The panel and comments received
during the public meeting
recommended that FRA focus its
resources on serious safety concerns
while allowing for more efficient
handling of OTMAs.
FRA subsequently revised its OTMA
program with the goal of making the
system more efficient and allowing
better monitoring of non-conformance.
Specifically, on January 31, 2012, FRA
published Hazardous Materials
Guidance (HMG)—127 (77 FR 10799),
which provides a standardized
procedure developed by FRA to make
the OTMA process more consistent and
efficient. While an applicant isn’t
‘‘required’’ to follow the procedure and
provide the needed information to
perform a proper safety analysis, failure
to do so could cause significant delays
in processing time, or may result in a
denial of the application. Applicants are
highly encouraged to use the procedure
to expedite the FRA review and
approval process.
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Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P–
1507. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• In what ways has the January 31,
2012, publication of HMG–127 by FRA
satisfactorily addressed the petitioner’s
proposed revisions; and, in what ways
is the issuance of HMG–127
inconsistent with regard to the
petitioner’s proposed revision?
2 To
view the meeting notice and transcript go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search for ‘‘FRA–
2011–0004.’’
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• What evidence would help FRA
quantify the benefits and costs of the
current approval process? For example,
what is the average time an applicant
typically waits to obtain a final
determination from FRA on a request for
approval? What are the economic effects
of this waiting period?
• How could FRA increase the
benefits of HMG–127 and of the OTMA
program in general?
• Has the petitioner’s proposed
revision been studied to determine
reasonably foreseeable environmental
and human health effects?
• Are there economic benefits or costs
of including certain commonly issued
Approvals into the regulations? If so, is
there evidence to help FRA quantify
those benefits and costs?
• What are some potential
alternatives to the current approval
process and HMG–127 that could
further maximize benefits and minimize
costs? What data is available to help
quantify the benefits and costs of these
alternatives?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
B. Petition P–1519
Summary
In Petition P–1519, the CGA asserts
the current wording of § 173.314 Note 5
permits the operation of tank cars
designed and constructed for the
transportation of carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid, in an unsafe
condition. This is the second petition
submitted by the CGA on this topic.
PHMSA rejected the previous petition
because of a lack of information
supporting the assertion. The focus of
the petition is that, if loaded in
accordance with § 173.314 Note 5, a
tank car transporting carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid, could become shell
full prior to the internal pressure
exceeding the actuation pressure of the
PRV and/or the regulating valves. This
condition may result in clogging of the
PRV, leading to lowering of the flow
capacity of the valve and possibly
extreme hydraulic pressure. CGA
petitions PHMSA to revise § 173.314
Note 5 to clearly indicate that the liquid
portion of the gas must not completely
fill the tank prior to reaching the
pressure setting of the regulating valves
or the safety relief valve, whichever is
lower.
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Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action
requested by this petition might have
safety benefits, but add additional
regulatory burden. However, PHMSA
has not conducted an analysis of the
possible actions that could result from
this petition. The intent of this ANPRM
is to gather relevant safety and
economic data from the public regarding
changes proposed in the petition.
PHMSA notes that the petition did not
provide data demonstrating
manifestation of this potential problem.
However, in analyzing the petition from
a technical perspective, PHMSA and
FRA engineers agree, theoretically,
CGA’s assertion that a shell full
condition may result in clogging of the
PRV, leading to lowering of the flow
capacity of the valve and possibly
extreme hydraulic pressure, is correct.
The valve capacity remains the same.
However, the capacity is based on the
flow of vapor. In the case of carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid, three phase
flow is possible and the valve does not
have the capacity to vent vapor, liquid,
and solid. This is a result of adiabatic
flash evaporation or auto-refrigeration.
Assume a compressed gas that is under
pressure and at a temperature above its
boiling point. When the pressure is
released (returning to atmospheric
pressure), the temperature of the
compressed gas will drop to its boiling
point, in the case of carbon dioxide this
is ¥109 °F (sublimation point), which is
below the freezing point of water. The
water in the atmosphere freezes and
clogs the valve. There is also a phase
change in which the vapor changes to
solid or liquid (depending on the
pressure along the flow path). This is a
fairly common concern during the
unloading process for carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid.
The cost of incorporating the
proposed change will be a slightly lower
payload to the affected entities, which
include shippers of carbon dioxide.
Initial FRA calculations suggest a 1–2
percent decrease in payload, which in
turn will require 1–2 additional trips
per 100 shipments.3 The anticipated
benefit may be additional safety in the
transportation of carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P–
1519. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
3 Assume 20,000 gallon payload. Decrease
payload by 2% = 19,600 gallons. Loss of 400 gallons
per trip. After 50 trips the total loss in payload is
20,000 (an extra trip will be needed).
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impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• Can you provide data on incidents
that were a direct result of a clogged
PRV that resulted in a lower flow of the
PRV and extreme hydraulic pressure
involving the transportation of carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid, or any other
refrigerated liquid?
• Is this problem unique to the
transportation of carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid? If not, what are the
additional safety benefits of expanding
the scope of the petitioner’s
recommended revision to transportation
of other refrigerated liquids?
• Please comment on the accuracy of
the initial calculations listed above, and
provide any other potential costs and
benefits of the proposed change.
• Is there an estimate of the number
of shipments (trips) of carbon dioxide,
refrigerated liquid, in rail tank cars, and
the number of vehicle-miles and tonmiles transported annually? If so, what
is the basis for this estimate? Is there an
estimate of the cost per rail car per
vehicle mile, per ton-mile for carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid, via rail
annually?
• How many of the rail tank cars
identified above are shell full prior to
the internal pressure exceeding the
actuation pressure of the PRV and/or the
regulating valves? What would the
annual decrease in payload be if we
adopt the petition? How many more
trips would be required annually? What
is the overall impact?
• Are there existing consensus
standards or operating practices that
adequately address this potential safety
issue? If so, what are they?
• Are any other options available that
could provide a similar safety benefit? If
so, what are they?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
Supply asserts that the regulations in
§ 180.212 applicable to re-threading
damaged tapped holes with oversized
threads are different for DOT 3-series
cylinders than for ton tanks. The
petition indicates that ton tanks are
increasingly being requalified and
repaired by cylinder requalifiers, and
not by railroad tank car repair facilities.
Often the cylinder requalifiers are not
aware of § 180.513 and Appendix R of
the AAR Manual of Standards and
Recommended Practices, Section C-Part
III, Specifications for Tank Cars,
Specification M–1002.4 A common
practice in the chlorine industry is the
use of oversize valves in tapped holes of
DOT 3-series cylinders and oversized
valves or fusible plugs in ton tanks.
Currently, the regulations clearly do not
allow any oversized holes in ton tanks.
Carroll Welding Supply recommends
amending the regulations by revising
ton tank repair, maintenance, and
marking regulations for consistency
with existing regulations for DOT 3series cylinders since ton tanks share
more in common with these cylinders
than tank cars.
C. Petition P–1547
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P–
1547. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
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Summary
In petition P–1547, Carroll Welding
Supply identifies an area of confusion
regarding the current requirements for
the repair and maintenance of ton tanks.
Carroll Welding Supply asserts that
these tanks are exclusively transported
by highway, yet the regulations require
them to be repaired and marked in
accordance with AAR standards for tank
cars. More specifically, Carroll Welding
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Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action
requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did
not identify specific costs and benefits.
Affected entities include persons who
manufacture, repair, and/or maintain
ton tanks. As stated in the petition,
these tanks share more in common with
DOT 3-series cylinders than tank cars.
Therefore, allowing these tanks to be
repaired in accordance with the
requirements for DOT 3-series cylinders
would simplify the regulations. The
intent of this petition is to consolidate,
clarify, and update existing regulations
to promote the consistent application of
long-standing ton tank regulations and
guidance while eliminating
unnecessary, outdated, or ambiguous
regulatory language or references.
Affected entities and the general public
may see incremental safety benefits
through improved regulatory awareness,
understanding, and compliance.
4 AAR’s Specifications for Tank Cars,
Specification M–1002 is incorporated by reference
in § 171.1 of the HMR. Appendix R paragraph 24.1
allows damaged tapped holes to be repaired with
thread inserts, and paragraph 24.1.4 specifies that
the nominal thread size of the insert is to match the
existing tapped hole. Further 24.1.4 does not permit
oversize holes.
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impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• Would the relocation of the
requirements for ton tanks from Part 179
to Part 178 and aligning the
requirements accordingly address the
concern of the petition?
• Will it be more or less costly to
mark and repair ton tanks in accordance
with existing regulations for DOT 3series cylinders as compared to the
current requirements?
• Is the use of oversized valves or
fusible plugs in ton tanks common
practice within the industry?
• How many ton tanks will be
impacted by this change?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
D. Petition P–1548
Summary
In Petition P–1548, ACC asserts that
repeated removal of the rupture disc
from the housing for inspection, as
required by § 173.31(d)(1)(vi), can result
in damage and a reduction in the
effectiveness of the rupture disc. ACC
contends that PHMSA has
acknowledged this concern by issuing
Special Permit DOT SP–13219, which
allows for the shipment of certain
peroxides in tank cars that have been
inspected under a modified inspection
program prior to transportation. The
modified inspection program does not
require the shipper to remove the
rupture disc for inspection and requires
the shipper to subject the tank to a
pressure test at 10 psig for 10 minutes
to verify the rupture disc shows no sign
of leakage. Currently, two companies are
parties to this special permit.
The ACC is proposing that PHMSA
incorporate Special Permit DOT SP–
13219 into the HMR by adding language
to § 173.31(d)(1)(vi) that would except
rupture discs from removal if the
inspection itself would damage, change,
or alter the intended operation of the
device. While the special permit
requires an alternative inspection
program and is limited to shipments of
only certain peroxides, the ACC petition
would broaden the scope of the special
permit to include additional materials.
The ACC petition does not address the
operational controls of the special
permit; specifically the requirement for
the tank car to be subjected to a pressure
test of 10 psi for a minimum of 10
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minutes to verify that the rupture disc
shows no sign of leakage. PHMSA does
not currently mandate a service interval
at which rupture discs are required to be
changed, but expects that inspections or
testing that identifies wear or leaks will
lead to rupture disc replacement.
PHMSA has already partially
modified the rupture disc inspection
requirements in § 173.31(d)(1)(vi), since
this petition was filed. That
modification addressed related safety
implications of not removing rupture
discs prior to visual inspections and
created a more limited exception than
P–1548 requests. PHMSA adopted the
provision as proposed in a May 14, 2010
final rule issued under Docket No.
PHMSA–2009–0289 (HM–233A; 75 FR
27205). Access to the HM–233A
rulemaking documents and comments
can be found at https://
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
PHMSA–2009–0289 or at DOT’s Docket
Operations Office (see ADDRESSES).
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action
requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did
not identify specific costs, but did
indicate that the proposed change
would reduce the need for periodic
renewal of the special permit and
expand its use to others, which
decreases time and expense for tank car
owners, shippers, and PHMSA. Another
potential benefit of the proposal is that
it would eliminate the requirement to
remove a rupture disc from the safety
vent for inspection prior to
transportation, thereby saving the time
the loading rack operator needed to
disassemble the device as well as the
cost of new discs.
Based on the petition, inspection of
the rupture disc as specified in
§ 173.31(d)(1)(vi) may cause or
contribute to the rupture disc failing.
For that reason, incorporating into the
HMR an alternate method of inspecting
the rupture disc that mirrors the
requirements in Special Permit DOT
SP–13219 may reduce releases and
provide a safety benefit. A preliminary
review of hazardous materials incident
reports involving all pressure-related
releases for the five-year period from
January 2007 to January 2011 found that
40 of the 85 recorded incidents related
to pressure relief devices involved a
failed rupture disc. In addition,
available data does not provide a
credible estimate of how many incidents
were prevented because of the
inspections. However, the incident
report forms do provide the
approximate cost associated with these
the incidents, mainly attributable to
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clean-up, response, and damages. For
the 40 incidents identified above, the
reported cost is $300,000.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P–
1548. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• Can commenters provide data
indicating the percentage of rupture
discs that were found to be defective
during the currently required
inspection?
• What percentage of the 40 recorded
incidents that involved a failed rupture
disc would have been prevented had the
rupture disc not been removed and
inspected in accordance with
§ 173.31(d)(1)(vi)? What is the basis for
this conclusion if the commenter
believes any would have been
prevented?
• Is there an inspection program with
an established history of safety that
could be followed in lieu of removal
and visual examination of the underside
of the rupture disc, such as the
procedures in Special Permit DOT SP–
13219? If so, what?
• Can commenters provide an
explanation of how the rupture disc is
damaged or its effectiveness is lost as a
result of the required inspection?
• How much time is required to
inspect rupture discs in accordance
with the existing regulation?
• What are the comparative costs and
benefits of Special Permit DOT SP–
13219 and ACC’s proposal, which
expands Special Permit DOT SP–13219
beyond limited shipments of certain
peroxides and without the alternative
inspection program?
• Under the action requested by the
petitioner, what criteria should shippers
use to determine if an inspection would
damage, change, or alter the operation of
the device?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
E. Petition P–1577
Summary
In petition P–1577, AAR provides
new standards for DOT Specification
111 tank cars based on findings and
recommendations created by AAR’s
Tank Car Committee. The committee
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reviewed tank car performance under
the current standards and investigated
the benefits of potential improvements.
The new standards AAR proposes are
intended to enhance the safety of the
existing specification. According to
AAR, these new tank car standards
would improve the ability of tank cars
to survive an accident without the
release of hazardous materials. AAR
requests that the new standards only be
required for newly constructed DOT
Specification 111 tank cars that
transport PG I and II hazardous
materials. Key tank car requirements in
the AAR petition include:
• PG I and II material tank cars to be
constructed to 286,000 lb. Gross Rail
Load (GRL) standards;
• Head and shell thickness must be
1⁄2 inch for TC–128B non jacketed cars
and 7⁄16 inch for jacketed cars;
• Shells of non-jacketed tank cars
constructed of A5l6–70 must be 9⁄16 inch
thick;
• Shells of jacketed tank cars
constructed of A5l6–70 must be 1⁄2 inch
thick;
• New cars must be equipped with at
least a 1⁄2 inch half-head shields;
• Heads and the shells must be
constructed of normalized steel;
• Top fittings must be protected by a
protective structure as tall as the tallest
fitting; and
• A reclosing pressure relief valve
must be installed.
PHMSA notes that in addition to the
tank car requirements outlined above,
AAR created the T87.6 Task Force to
consider several other enhancements to
tank car design and rail carrier
operations that would further enhance
rail transportation safety. On July 20,
2011, at the summer AAR Tank Car
Committee meeting, docket T87.6 was
created with a dual charge to develop an
industry standard for tank cars used to
transport crude oil, denatured alcohol
and ethanol/gasoline mixtures as well as
consider operating requirements to
reduce the risk of derailment of tank
cars carrying crude oil classified as PG
I and II, and ethanol. The task force
recommendations were finalized on
March 1, 2012. PHMSA and FRA
believe it is important to identify the
additional safety enhancements, which
may include both rail car design and rail
carrier operational changes that were
considered by the task force and provide
the public an opportunity to comment.
Below, we highlight the key
considerations of the task force from
both a tank car design and operations
standpoint.
Tank car design:
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• Thermal protection to address
breaches attributable to exposure to fire
conditions;
• Roll-over protection to prevent
damage to top and bottom fittings and
limit stresses transferred from the
protection device to the tank shell;
• Hinged and bolted manways to
address a common cause of leakage
during accidents and Non-Accident
Releases (NARS);
• Bottom outlet valve elimination;
and
• Increasing outage from 1% to 2% to
improve puncture resistance.
Rail Carrier Operations:
• Rail integrity (e.g., broken rails or
welds, misaligned track, obstructions,
track geometry, etc.) to reduce the
number and severity of derailments;
• Alternative brake signal
propagation systems (electronic
controlled pneumatic brakes (ECP),
distributed power (DP), two-way end of
train device (EOT) to reduce the number
of cars and energy associated with
derailments;
• Speed restrictions for key trains
containing 20 or more loaded tank cars
(On August 5, 2013, AAR issued
Circular No. OT–55–N addressing this
issue); 5 and
• Emergency response to mitigate the
risks faced by response and salvage
personnel, the impact on the
environment, and delays to traffic on
the line.
For more detailed information, the
T87.6 Task Force Summary Report has
been provided in its entirety in the
public docket for this ANPRM which is
accessible at https://www.regulations.gov
under Docket No. PHMSA–2012–0082
or at DOT’s Docket Operations Office
(see ADDRESSES).
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Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action
requested by this petition might have
safety benefits, but add additional
regulatory burden. However, PHMSA
has not conducted an analysis of the
possible actions that could result from
this petition. The intent of this ANPRM
is to gather relevant safety and
economic data from the public regarding
changes proposed in the petition. The
petition does provide some associated
costs and benefits. In the petition, AAR
5 On August 5, 2013, AAR published Circular No.
OT–55–N. This document supersedes OT–55–M,
issued October 1, 2012. The definition of a ‘‘key
train’’ was revised to include ‘‘20 car loads or
portable tank loads of any combination of
hazardous material.’’ Therefore, the maximum
speed of these trains is limited to 50 MPH. The
document is available in the public docket for this
proceeding and at the following URL: https://
www.aar.com/CPC-1258%20OT-55-N%208-513.pdf.
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cites a member survey as the source for
information on the consequences of
derailments involving PG I and II
hazardous materials from 2004 to 2008.
The petition indicates that the
derailment incidents resulted in 1
fatality, 11 injuries, and the release of
approximately 925,000 gallons of
materials with associated cleanup costs
of approximately $64 million.
The AAR petition does not provide a
retrofit solution for the existing fleet of
about 77,000 DOT Specification 111
tank cars used to transport PG I or II
hazardous materials because of
technical difficulties and comparative
costs. In the petition, AAR notes that the
Railway Supply Institute (RSI)
‘‘conservatively estimates the cost of
retrofitting existing cars with head
shield and jackets [to be more than] $1
billion over the life of a retrofit program,
not including cleaning and out-ofservice costs.’’ By comparison, AAR
states that the cost of derailments over
the past 5 years was approximately $64
million.
Additionally, PHMSA has received an
estimate of the increased costs
associated with the proposed revisions.
In 2011, the AAR issued Casualty
Prevention Circular (CPC) 1232, which
outlines the new requirements for tanks
constructed after October 1, 2011, for
use in ethanol and crude oil service.
The requirements of CPC 1232 are the
same as those in this petition. RSI
estimates that a new DOT Specification
111 tank car built to CPC 1232 will cost
approximately $18,000 more than a car
built to the standard currently required
by the HMR. Only 7,000 to 10,000
pounds of the 23,000 pound increase in
weight (263,000 pound car to a 286,000
pound car) results from the head shield
and added thickness to the head and
shell. Therefore, for $18,000 initial cost,
a shipper will be able to transport an
additional 13,000 to 16,000 pounds of
product. The added weight of the car
would also likely result in additional
fees established by the rail carrier. We
request comments on these costs, and
benefits, as well as any fees associated
with the action proposed in the petition.
PHMSA recognizes that the petition
may not have accounted for all
economic impacts associated with
revising the DOT Specification 111 tank
car.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P–
1577 and the remaining rail safety
enhancements that were considered by
the task force for both tank car design
and rail carrier. Please provide
comments and data on the costs and
benefits, as well as environmental and
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54855
small businesses impacts, of granting
the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments
on the following questions:
• Would the proposed revisions
under P–1577 decrease the release of
hazardous materials during derailment?
If so, what is the basis for this
conclusion?
• Should PHMSA segment the
petition and first address requirements
for tank cars carrying Class 3 materials
(because there is an abundance of work
to inform the rulemaking), then the
remaining hazard classes within PGs I
and II? If so, why?
• The proposed tank car requirements
do not include thermal protection and
therefore do not address thermal
damage specifically. Given that ethanol
and crude oil are often shipped in unit
trains or large blocks within a train and
a pool fire is likely in the event of
certain large incidents, should thermal
protection requirements, such as those
considered by the T87.6 Task Force,6 be
a consideration? If so, why or why not?
• Under the Docket HM–233A,
PHMSA modified § 179.13 to permit the
operation of tank cars at a GRL of
286,000 pounds if the tank car owners
obtain approval from the FRA. On
January 25, 2011, FRA published a
notice outlining the specification
requirements for tank cars operating at
286,000 pounds GRL (76 FR 4250). As
established by the January 25, 2011
notice, the approval requirements for
minimum thickness and materials of
construction for newly-constructed tank
cars must be based on an analysis that
considers puncture velocity. Under an
ongoing research project conducted in
conjunction with both the T87.6 Task
Force and the Advance Tank Car
Collaborative Research Project, data
suggest that the puncture protection
benefits of a 1⁄16 increase in shell
thickness, as proposed in P–1577, are
marginal. Further, the enhancements
proposed by P–1577 may not be of value
when considered relative to the risk
associated with the increased weight of
the tank cars. Will the changes proposed
in the petition adequately improve the
safety (puncture resistance) of tank cars?
What is the overall impact on rail
transportation safety and risk associated
with the enhancements proposed for
DOT Specification 111 tank cars under
P–1577?
• The petition addresses some of the
tank car design issues raised by T87.6
Task Force. In the P–1577 summary
provided above, PHMSA highlights the
6 A copy of the report is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM. To view, go to https://
www.regulations.gov.
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remaining rail safety enhancements that
were considered by the task force for
both tank car design and rail carrier.
What, if any, design and operations
enhancements should PHMSA and FRA
consider beyond those identified in P–
1577 to improve the safe transportation
of PG I and II materials?
• Does AAR Circular No. OT–55–N
adequately address speed restrictions
for key trains? Should PHMSA
incorporate the language contained in
AAR Circular No. OT–55–N into the
HMR to account for the train speed
considerations of the task force? Should
PHMSA expand upon AAR Circular No.
OT–55–N to include requirements for
fewer than 20 cars?
• Are shippers ordering CPC 1232compliant tank cars voluntarily to
address safety concerns and the
immediate need for new cars or because
compliance with CPC 1232 is required?
If so, please provide any relevant data
about this.
• How many CPC 1232-compliant
tank cars are currently in service?
• PHMSA and FRA estimate that for
an $18,000 initial cost, a shipper will be
able to transport an additional 13,000 to
16,000 pounds of product. This would
result in fewer cars required to transport
the same amount of product. What are
the safety and economic benefits of
increasing the product capacity of the
tank car?
• Positive train control (PTC) is a
system of functional requirements for
monitoring and controlling train
movements to provide increased safety.
PTC is designed to automatically stop or
slow to prevent accidents. Specifically,
PTC is designed to prevent train-to-train
collisions, derailments caused by
excessive speed, unauthorized
incursions by trains onto sections of
track where repairs are being made and
movement of a train through a track
switch left in the wrong position. Are
technologies available, such as PTC, that
would prevent derailments? If so, please
provide any relevant data—including
any projected improvements in safety
performance that would reduce current
rail transportation risks.
• What, if any, are the additional
implementation and operating costs
associated with CPC 1232 compliant
tank cars (e.g., higher fees charged by
rail carriers)? Are there any additional
benefits, if so, what are they?
• Would the increased cost of CPC
1232-compliant cars slow the
replacement of older cars? How does
this impact the current backlog of cars?
• What are the costs associated with
re-tooling tank car construction facilities
to manufacture CPC 1231-compliant
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tank cars? How would the costs impact
small businesses that build these cars?
• Please comment on the accuracy of
the estimated costs indicated by AAR
and RSI, and include any additional
anticipated costs of complying with the
proposed revisions. Are there any
additional anticipated benefits if the
proposed revisions are adopted?
• If the PHMSA were to adopt the
action requested by the petitioner, what
is the appropriate timeframe for
complying with the new requirements?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
FRA and PHMSA continue to make
progress toward electronic
communications. FRA and PHMSA
have met with AAR and the American
Short Line and Regional Railroad
Association (ASLRRA) to discuss the
available systems and to identify the
systemic gaps and measures to close
those gaps. In addition, on June 25, 2012
PHMSA, working closely with FRA,
published a final rule incorporating a
several widely used rail special permits
into the HMR (77 FR 37961). In the rule,
requirements for electronic shipping
papers, electronic data interchange (EDI)
standards, and electronic certification
for hazardous material rail shipments
were codified in the HMR.
NTSB Recommendations Addressed
In published findings from the June
19, 2009, incident in Cherry Valley,
F. Petition P–1587
Illinois, NTSB indicated that the DOT
Summary
Specification 111 tank car can almost
always be expected to breach in the
In petition P–1587, the Village of
event of a derailment resulting in car-toBarrington, Illinois and The Regional
car impacts or pileups (68% failure rate
Answer to Canadian National request
for the Cherry Valley incident).
modifications to the HMR. First, they
Furthermore, NTSB’s findings show that
request that PHMSA correct flaws with
whether or not the bottom outlet valves
the DOT Specification 111 tank car by
on DOT Specification 111 tank cars are
adopting the AAR standards identified
protected, they are still susceptible to
in P–1577 for the tank cars. However, in
failure. The findings are described in
addition to applying these standards to
detail below.
newly-manufactured cars, the
As described in detail in NTSB
petitioners stress the importance of
Railroad Accident Report RAR–12–01,
promulgating enhanced standards for
available for review in the public docket
existing tank cars used to transport PG
for this rulemaking, NTSB determined
I and II materials in accordance with the that one of the probable causes of the
NTSB Railroad Accident Report—
June 19, 2009 incident in Cherry Valley,
Derailment of CN Freight Train U70691– Illinois, in which several derailed cars
18 With Subsequent Hazardous
released hazardous materials, was the
Materials Release and Fire, Cherry
washout of the track structure at the
Valley, Illinois, June 19, 2009 (RAR–12– grade crossing and failure to notify the
01).
train crew of the known washout. It also
Second, the petitioners request that
determined that inadequate design
PHMSA adopt NTSB Recommendation
features of a DOT Specification 111 rail
R–07–04 and ‘‘require that railroads
tank car made it susceptible to damage
immediately provide to emergency
and catastrophic loss of hazardous
responders accurate, real-time
material during the derailment, and
information regarding the identity and
thus, contributed to the severity of the
location of all hazardous materials on a
incident.
The Cherry Valley incident involved
train.’’ While the petitioners recognize
that PHMSA has made progress with its the derailment of 19 cars, all of which
were tank cars carrying denatured fuel
hazardous materials automated cargo
ethanol, a flammable liquid. Thirteen of
communications for efficient and safe
the derailed tank cars were breached or
shipments (HM–ACCESS; a study to
lost product and caught fire. NTSB’s
identify and eliminate barriers to using
investigation revealed that several motor
electronic hazardous materials (e-HM)
vehicles were stopped on either side of
shipping documents) initiative, they
request that PHMSA move from the fact- the grade crossing waiting for the train
to pass as the derailment occurred. As
finding phase of this initiative to the
a result of the fire that erupted, a
regulatory action phase. The petition
asks that any regulations stemming from passenger in one of the stopped cars was
fatally injured, two passengers in the
the HM–ACCESS initiative be
same car received serious injuries, and
enforceable with a system of random
five occupants of other cars waiting at
audits to promote compliance. The
the highway-rail crossing were injured.
petitioner urges PHMSA to act
Two firefighters also sustained minor
expeditiously.
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injuries. The release of ethanol and fire
prompted a mandatory evacuation of
about 600 residences within a 1⁄2-mile
radius of the accident site. Damages
were estimated to total $7.9 million.
On March 2, 2012, the NTSB issued
Safety Recommendations R–12–5 thru
R–12–8, which recommend that
PHMSA:
• Require that all newly
manufactured and existing general
service tank cars authorized for
transportation of denatured fuel ethanol
and crude oil in PGs I and II have
enhanced tank head and shell puncture
resistance systems and top fittings
protection that exceeds existing design
requirements for DOT Specification 111
tank cars. (R–12–5)
• Require that all bottom outlet valves
used on newly manufactured and
existing non-pressure tank cars are
designed to remain closed during
accidents in which the valve and
operating handle are subjected to impact
forces. (R–12–6).
• Require that all newly
manufactured and existing tank cars
authorized for transportation of
hazardous materials have center sill or
draft sill attachment designs that
conform to the revised Association of
American Railroads’ design
requirements adopted as a result of
Safety Recommendation R–12–9.
(R–12–7).
• Inform pipeline operators about the
circumstances of the accident and
advise them of the need to inspect
pipeline facilities after notification of
accidents occurring in railroad rights-ofway. (R–12–8).7
In addition, based on its findings in
this accident investigation, NTSB
reiterated the following previously
issued Safety Recommendation to
PHMSA:
• With the assistance of the Federal
Railroad Administration, require that
railroads immediately provide to
emergency responders accurate, realtime information regarding the identity
and location of all hazardous materials
on a train. (R–07–4).
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Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action
requested by this petition might have
safety benefits, but add additional
7 On
July 31, 2012, PHMSA published in the
Federal Register (77 FR 45417) an advisory bulletin
to all pipeline operators alerting them to the
circumstances of the Cherry Valley derailment and
reminding them of the importance of assuring that
pipeline facilities have not been damaged either
during a railroad accident or other event occurring
in the right-of-way. This recommendation was
Closed by NTSB on September 20, 2012. This action
is accessible at the following URL: https://
phmsa.dot.gov/pipeline/regs/ntsb/closed
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regulatory burden. However, PHMSA
has not conducted an analysis of the
possible actions that could result from
this petition. The intent of this ANPRM
is to gather relevant safety and
economic data from the public regarding
changes proposed in the petition. The
key difference is between P–1577 and
the combination of P–1587 and the
NTSB recommendations R–12–5 and
R–12–6 is that the latter would require
retrofitting of existing DOT
Specification 111 tank cars. NTSB
Recommendations R–12–7 and R–07–4
are currently being addressed by
separate initiatives that have been
undertaken by PHMSA and FRA.
Petition P–1587 references the cost and
benefit information contained in
petition P–1577 and the NTSB accident
report and Recommendations outlined
above. However, the petition provides
clarifying information regarding the cost
of retrofitting existing tank cars with
jackets and head shields. Petition P–
1577 states that the cost of retrofitting
existing cars (77,000 with a 40 year life
cycle) with head shields and jackets
alone would be over $1 billion. This
petition notes that the AAR’s Tank Car
Committee T87.5 ‘‘estimated that the
cost of modifying existing tank cars with
jackets and head shields alone would be
at least $15,000 per tank car.’’ The
petition further states:
While the AAR claims that the retrofit
costs cannot be justified because the cost of
derailments was only $64 million over five
years, Petitioners suggest that AAR’s
reasoning is grossly misleading. In order to
determine the impact of the cost of
retrofitting the existing fleet, PHMSA should
note that the existing fleet has a future life
expectancy of at least 32 years. Even if the
estimated cost of the recommended retrofit is
$15,000 per car, when amortized over thirtytwo (32) years, the cost is less than $500 per
year per tank car . . .
In reviewing the derailment cost chart at
Attachment B of AAR’s petition, PHMSA
should note that there is no apparent
accounting for costs associated with civil
litigation in the wake of derailments.
However, in the Cherry Valley/Rockford
derailment, [Canadian National Railway
(CN)] paid over $36 million in October of
2011 to settle a lawsuit brought by the family
of only one victim. AAR’s chart, however,
reflects costs of only $8 million for that
incident.
The petition indicates that based on
this information, there is ‘‘no rational
reason to not require the retrofitting of
the existing fleet consistent with NTSB’s
recommendation.’’
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on
P–1587. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
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54857
as, environmental and small businesses
impacts of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• Petition P–1587 indicates that the
new standards should apply to both
new construction and retrofitting the
existing fleet. Can you provide the
safety benefits and costs associated with
each retrofit option outlined below:
Æ Meets NTSB Recommendation
R–12–5 (enhanced tank head and shell
puncture resistance and top fitting
protection);
Æ Meets NTSB Recommendation
R–12–6 (alternative designs to ensure
the bottom outlet valves on the
enhanced DOT Specification 111 tank
cars will remain closed during
accidents.);
Æ Provides thermal protection to
address breaches attributable to
exposure to fire conditions;
Æ Provides roll-over protection to
prevent damage to top and bottom
fittings and limit stresses transferred
from the protection device to the tank
shell;
Æ Requires hinged and bolted
manways to address a common cause of
leakage during accidents and NonAccident Releases (NARS);
Æ Requires bottom outlet valve
elimination; and
Æ Increases outage from 1% to 2% to
improve puncture resistance.
• RSI estimates the cost of retrofitting
existing cars with head shield and
jackets to be more than $1 billion over
the life of a retrofit program, not
including cleaning and out-of-service
costs. Would retrofitting with head
shields and jackets sufficiently address
the concerns of the petitioner? Please
explain.
• Are commenters aware of any
systems currently in use that railroads
could use to immediately provide
emergency responders accurate, realtime information regarding the identity
and location of all hazardous materials
on a train? If so, what does the system
cost? Are there any additional costs
associated with the system? If so, what
are they? What are the specific benefits
of providing real-time information
regarding the identity and location of all
hazardous materials on a train to
emergency responders?
• What is the failure rate for DOT
Specification 111 tank cars? Is the 68%
failure rate for DOT Specification 111
tank cars that occurred during the June
19, 2009, incident in Cherry Valley,
Illinois typical? Please provide relevant
data regarding the failure rate for DOT
Specification 111 tank cars.
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Comments and Questions
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. The
petition and NTSB Recommendations
are available in the public docket for
this ANPRM, to view go to https://
www.regulations.gov or DOT’s Docket
Operations Office (see ADDRESSES
section above).
G. Petition P–1595
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Summary
In petition P–1595, ACC, API, and CI
indicate that they are aware of petitions
P–1577 and P–1587. According to the
ACC, API, and CI petition, many PG I
and II materials, with very different
hazards and rail transportation risks,
have been lumped together in petitions
P–1577 and P–1587. In petition P–1595,
ACC, API, and CI request that PHMSA
institute a separate rulemaking to
specifically address new tank car
construction standards for ethanol and
crude oil in PG I and II. The petition
suggests that PHMSA not include the
other PG I and II materials because
further analysis is required that could
delay the rulemaking process. Key tank
car requirements identified in the ACC,
API, and CI petition include:
• Top fittings must be protected by a
protective structure as tall as the tallest
fitting;
• A reclosing pressure relief valve
must be installed;
• Head and shell thickness must be
1⁄2 inch for TC–128B non-jacketed cars
and 7⁄16 inch for jacketed cars;
• Shells of non-jacketed tank cars
constructed of A5l6–70 must be 9⁄16 inch
thick; and
• Shells of jacketed tank cars
constructed of A5l6–70 must be 1⁄2 inch
thick.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action
requested by this petition would
address a safety concern, but add
additional regulatory burden. The
petition did not identify specific costs
and benefits. In the petition ACC, API,
and CI indicate that focusing on an
expedited rulemaking to address
ethanol and crude oil would better
address the risks involved. Further,
ACC, API and CI indicate that
separating the ethanol and crude oil in
PG I and II from other PG I and II
materials would provide for a tank car
design that is tailored to the
requirements of the materials being
transported. The petitioners
acknowledge that ‘‘[m]uch more
research and analysis would be
necessary to justify any significant
change in the construction standards for
tank cars carrying other PG I and II
materials, such as corrosive materials.’’
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PHMSA requests comments on
P–1595. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following
questions:
• Petition P–1595 indicates that new
standards should apply to newly
constructed DOT Specification 111 tank
cars used for ethanol and crude oil in
PG I and II. Can you provide the safety
benefits and costs associated with each
new construction option outlined in the
petition and identified below:
Æ Requiring top fittings to be
protected by a protective structure as
tall as the tallest fitting;
Æ Requiring that a reclosing pressure
relief valve be installed;
Æ Requiring head and shell thickness
to be 1⁄2 inch for TC–128B non-jacketed
cars and 7⁄16 inch for jacketed cars;
Æ Requiring shells of non-jacketed
tank cars constructed of A5l6–70 to be
9⁄16 inch thick; and
Æ Requiring shells of jacketed tank
cars constructed of A5l6–70 must be 1⁄2
inch thick.
• What are the costs and benefits of
requiring the use of CPC 1232-compliant
tank cars for the transportation of
ethanol and crude oil in PG I and II?
How many cars are currently in this
service? What are the implications on
public safety of PHMSA considering
standards for tank cars used to transport
ethanol and crude oil in PG I and II,
before considering standards for other
PG I and II materials? What are the
specific safety risks/vulnerabilities
associated with the remaining hazard
classes within PG I and II? Please
explain how those vulnerabilities are
best addressed.
• What will be the price difference
between the DOT Specification 111 tank
cars for PG I and II ethanol and crude
oil vs. DOT Specification 111 tank cars
used for other hazardous materials in
PG I and II? Please explain the
differences.
• Would the increased cost of PG I
and II ethanol and crude oil cars slow
the replacement of older cars? How does
this impact the current backlog of cars?
• What are the costs associated with
re-tooling tank car construction facilities
to manufacture different DOT
Specification 111 tank cars for PG I and
II ethanol and crude oil vs. other PG I
and II materials? How would the costs
impact small businesses that build these
cars?
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
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the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
H. Petition P–1612
Summary
In petition P–1612, ACC, API, CI, and
RFA indicate they stand ready and
willing to work with PHMSA and other
stakeholders to ensure that the recently
increased volumes of crude oil and
ethanol that move by rail are
transported safely. The petitioners
indicate that they support the tank car
changes proposed in petition P–1577
and the T87.6 Task Force Summary
Report. Further, the petitioners indicate
that PHMSA has the authority and
responsibility to institute these new
requirements for these tank cars to
ensure certainty for stakeholders. The
petitioners clearly indicate that
expediting regulatory requirements for
new tank cars transporting crude oil and
ethanol will increase rail transportation
safety, remove economic uncertainty,
and eliminate increasing risks of future
economic harm. As such, petition
P–1612 requests that PHMSA act
expeditiously by issuing a direct final
rule to implement the changes P–1577
and the T87.6 Task Force Summary
Report for ethanol and crude oil.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action
requested by this petition might have
safety benefits, but add additional
regulatory burden. However, PHMSA
has not conducted an analysis of the
possible actions that could result from
this petition. The intent of this ANPRM
is to gather relevant safety and
economic data from the public regarding
changes proposed in the petition. The
petition did not identify specific costs
and benefits. In the petition ACC, API,
CI, and RFA indicate that focusing on an
expedited rulemaking to adopt the
changes proposed in petition P–1577
and the T87.6 Task Force Summary
Report for new tank cars transporting
crude oil and ethanol is appropriate for
a number of reasons. First, the
petitioners indicate that there has been
a significant increase in rail shipment of
crude oil, while most other PG I and II
materials shipping patterns have been
relatively consistent. The petitioners
indicate that the increase in shipments
of both ethanol and crude oil and
abundance of available information
provides an opportunity to significantly
increase the safety of these shipments
immediately. The petitioners indicate
that delaying further, to allow more time
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to formulate a rule for unrelated tank car
retrofits, would unnecessarily increase
the risk of a release in the unlikely event
that an incident occur.
Second, the petitioners indicate that
tank cars for crude oil and ethanol
service are currently being
manufactured. The petitioners indicate
that delays in establishing a new
construction standard for these tank cars
may result in many tank cars being
manufactured that do not meet future
requirements. The petitioners indicate
that this is impractical and would
increase compliance costs significantly.
The petitioners indicate that many tank
cars may be required to go back to the
shop for retrofits which will increase
demand for shop space and delay tank
cars from being placed back into service.
Finally, petition P–1612 states that
‘‘many builders and shippers have made
significant capital investments in tank
cars built to P–1577 and T87.6
construction standards in good faith,
expecting PHMSA’s approval of that
standard.’’ The petitioners indicate that
the involvement of the DOT in the T87.6
Task Force and the safety improvements
contained in the T87.6 Task Force
Summary Report gave industry the
impression that the changes would be
codified. Petition P–1612 goes on to
state, ‘‘As a result, those cars should be
considered in compliance with any
regulatory requirements included in the
final rule without being required to
undergo retrofits.’’
Comments and Questions
• PHMSA requests comments on
P–1612. Please provide comments and
data on the costs and benefits, as well
as environmental and small businesses
impacts, of granting the action requested
by the petitioner. PHMSA asks
commenters to consider the potential
economic and safety implications
associated with the petition. In addition,
PHMSA specifically requests comments
on the following questions:
• What are the implications on public
safety of PHMSA addressing standards
for new construction of tank cars used
to transport ethanol and crude oil
without also considering enhancements
to the existing fleet?
• Petition P–1612 states that PHMSA
should, ‘‘initiate an expedited
rulemaking on regulatory requirements
for new tank car construction standards
for cars transporting crude oil and
ethanol as a stand-alone rulemaking and
address potential retrofits proposals at a
later date in a separate rulemaking.’’
Would such a requirement include
ethanol and crude oil in PG I, II, and III?
• What are the costs and benefits of
requiring ethanol and crude oil in PG III
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to be shipped in DOT Specification 111
tank cars that are CPC 1232-compliant?
• Petition P–1612 states that the
‘‘Petitioners continue to support P–1577
and the T87.6 Task Force
recommendations, which recommend
no retrofit requirements for the existing
fleet of tank cars carrying crude oil and
ethanol.’’ Please provide the safety
benefits and costs associated the
following key considerations of P–1577
and the task force from both a tank car
design and operations standpoint:
Æ Enhancing the tank car by:
D Constructing tank cars to 286,000
lb. GRL standards;
D Increasing head and shell thickness
to 1⁄2 inch for TC–128B non-jacketed
cars and 7⁄16 inch for jacketed cars;
D Requiring shells of non-jacketed
tank cars constructed of A5l6–70 to be
9⁄16 inch thick;
D Requiring shells of jacketed tank
cars constructed of A5l6–70 to be 1⁄2
inch thick;
D Equipping cars with at least a 1⁄2
inch half-head shields;
D Requiring heads and the shells to be
constructed of normalized steel;
D Requiring top fittings to be
protected by a protective structure as
tall as the tallest fitting;
D Requiring a reclosing pressure relief
valve to be installed;
D Adding thermal protection to
address breaches attributable to
exposure to fire conditions;
D Adding roll-over protection to
prevent damage to top and bottom
fittings and limit stresses transferred
from the protection device to the tank
shell;
D Adding hinged and bolted manways
to address a common cause of leakage
during accidents and NARS;
D Eliminating bottom outlet valves;
and
D Increasing outage from 1% to 2% to
improve puncture resistance.
Æ Enhancing rail operations in the
following areas:
D Rail integrity (e.g., broken rails or
welds, buckled track, obstructions, track
geometry, etc.) to reduce the number
and severity of derailments;
D Alternative brake signal propagation
systems ECP, DP, EOT to reduce the
number of cars and energy associated
with derailments;
D Speed restrictions for key trains;
and
D Emergency response to mitigate the
risks faced by response and salvage
personnel, the impact on the
environment, and delays to traffic on
the line.
• Petition P–1612 makes the
following statement, ‘‘The increase in
shipments of these commodities, which
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54859
should create a sense of urgency to
ensure they are moved as safely as
possible, combined with PHMSA’s
understanding of their properties and a
wealth of technical information to draw
from, provides an opportunity to
significantly increase the safety of these
shipments immediately.’’ Please provide
any available technical information and
justification that clearly indicates what
is meant by the statement ‘‘significantly
increase the safety of these shipments.’’
• Considering the statement from
petition P–1612 and the request for
more technical information and
justification in the bullet above, please
provide a quantitative estimate that
supports the issuance of a direct final
rule as requested by petition P–1612.
Please note the applicable petition
number in your submission. A copy of
the petition is available in the public
docket for this ANPRM, to view go to
https://www.regulations.gov or DOT’s
Docket Operations Office (see
ADDRESSES section above).
IV. Regulatory Review and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866, Executive
Order 13563, Executive Order 13610
and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This ANPRM is considered a
significant regulatory action under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
and was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The
ANPRM is considered a significant
regulatory action under the Regulatory
Policies and Procedures order issued by
the Department of Transportation. 44 FR
11034 (Feb. 26, 1979).
Executive Orders 12866 (‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review’’) and 13563
(‘‘Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review’’) require agencies to regulate in
the ‘‘most cost-effective manner,’’ to
make a ‘‘reasoned determination that
the benefits of the intended regulation
justify its costs,’’ and to develop
regulations that ‘‘impose the least
burden on society.’’ Executive Order
13610, issued May 10, 2012, urges
agencies to conduct retrospective
analyses of existing rules to examine
whether they remain justified and
whether they should be modified or
streamlined in light of changed
circumstances, including the rise of new
technologies.
Additionally, Executive Orders 12866,
13563, and 13610 require agencies to
provide a meaningful opportunity for
public participation. Accordingly,
PHMSA invites comments on these
considerations, including any cost or
benefit figures or factors, alternative
approaches, and relevant scientific,
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technical and economic data. These
comments, along with the noted
petitions and recommendations, will
help PHMSA evaluate whether the
proposed rulemakings are needed and
appropriate.
B. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 requires
agencies to assure meaningful and
timely input by state and local officials
in the development of regulatory
policies that may 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.’’ We invite state
and local governments with an interest
in this rulemaking to comment on any
effect that revisions to the HMR may
cause.
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C. Executive Order 13175
Executive Order 13175 requires
agencies to assure meaningful and
timely input from Indian tribal
government representatives in the
development of rules that significantly
or uniquely affect Indian communities
by imposing ‘‘substantial direct
compliance costs’’ or ‘‘substantial direct
effects’’ on such communities or the
relationship and distribution of power
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes. We invite Indian tribal
governments to provide comments on
the costs and effects the petitions and
recommendations could have on them,
if adopted.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act, Executive
Order 13272, and DOT Policies and
Procedures
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), we must
consider whether a rulemaking would
have a ‘‘significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.’’
‘‘Small entities’’ include small
businesses, not-for-profit organizations
that are independently owned and
operated and are not dominant in their
fields, and governmental jurisdictions
with populations under 50,000.
It is possible that if PHMSA proposes
to adopt the revisions suggested in the
petitions for rulemaking and NTSB
Recommendations, there may be a
‘‘significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.’’
As such, we would like small entities’
input on the issues presented in this
ANPRM. If you believe that revisions to
the HMR would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, please provide
information on such impacts.
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Any future proposed rule would be
developed in accordance with Executive
Order 13272 (‘‘Proper Consideration of
Small Entities in Agency Rulemaking’’)
and DOT’s procedures and policies to
promote compliance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act to ensure that
potential impacts on small entities of a
regulatory action are properly
considered.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
5 CFR 1320.8(d) requires that PHMSA
provide interested members of the
public and affected agencies an
opportunity to comment on information
collection and recordkeeping requests.
This ANPRM does not impose new
information collection requirements.
Depending on the results of our request
for comments to this ANPRM, a
decrease may result in the annual
burden and costs under OMB Control
Number 2137–0559. This reduction
would be based on P–1507. Specifically,
the burden associated with submitting
an approval application would be
reduced if PHMSA adds language that
enables FRA to publish guidance on
specific elements of non-conformity that
would no longer be subject to approval
by the Associate Administrator for
Railroad Safety.
PHMSA specifically requests
comments on the information collection
and recordkeeping burdens associated
with this ANPRM.
F. Environmental Assessment
The National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4375,
requires that federal agencies analyze
proposed actions to determine whether
the action will have a significant impact
on the human environment. The
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) regulations require federal
agencies to conduct an environmental
review considering (1) the need for the
proposed action, (2) alternatives to the
proposed action, (3) probable
environmental impacts of the proposed
action and alternatives, and (4) the
agencies and persons consulted during
the consideration process. 40 CFR
1508.9(b). PHMSA welcomes any data
or information related to environmental
impacts that may result if the petitions
and recommendations are adopted, as
well as possible alternatives and their
environmental impacts.
G. Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of any written
communications and comments
received into any of our dockets by the
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name of the individual submitting the
document (or signing the document, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement, published in the Federal
Register on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477) or you may visit https://
www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
H. Executive Order 13609 and
International Trade Analysis
Under Executive Order 13609,
agencies must consider whether the
impacts associated with significant
variations between domestic and
international regulatory approaches are
unnecessary or may impair the ability of
American businesses to export and
compete internationally. In meeting
shared challenges involving health,
safety, labor, security, environmental,
and other issues, regulatory approaches
developed through international
cooperation can provide equivalent
protection to standards developed
independently while also minimizing
unnecessary differences.
Similarly, the Trade Agreements Act
of 1979 (Pub. L. 96–39), as amended by
the Uruguay Round Agreements Act
(Pub. L. 103–465), prohibits Federal
agencies from establishing any
standards or engaging in related
activities that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States. For purposes of these
requirements, Federal agencies may
participate in the establishment of
international standards, so long as the
standards have a legitimate domestic
objective, such as providing for safety,
and do not operate to exclude imports
that meet this objective. The statute also
requires consideration of international
standards and, where appropriate, that
they be the basis for U.S. standards.
PHMSA participates in the
establishment of international standards
in order to protect the safety of the
American public, and we have assessed
the effects of the proposed rule to
ensure that it does not cause
unnecessary obstacles to foreign trade.
Accordingly, this rulemaking is
consistent with E.O. 13609 and
PHMSA’s obligations under the Trade
Agreement Act, as amended.
PHMSA welcomes any data or
information related to international
impacts that may result if the petitions
and recommendations are adopted, as
well as possible alternatives and their
international impacts. Please describe
the impacts and the basis for the
comment.
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I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This
Rulemaking
This ANPRM is published under the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 5103(b), which
authorizes the Secretary of
Transportation to ‘‘prescribe regulations
for the safe transportation, including
security, of hazardous materials in
intrastate, interstate, and foreign
commerce.’’ The petitions and
recommendations addressed in the
ANPRM purport to address safety issues
with the transportation of hazardous
materials in commerce. Our goal in this
ANPRM is to gather the necessary
information to determine a course of
action in a potential Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM).
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
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A regulation identifier number (RIN)
is assigned to each regulatory action
listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulations. The Regulatory Information
Service Center publishes the Unified
Agenda in April and October of each
year. The RIN contained in the heading
of this document can be used to crossreference this action with the Unified
Agenda.
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Issued in Washington, DC, on August 30,
2013, under authority delegated in 49 CFR
1.97(b).
William Schoonover,
Deputy Associate Administrator for
Hazardous Materials Safety, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
[FR Doc. 2013–21621 Filed 9–5–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–60–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 396
[Docket No. FMCSA–2012–0336]
RIN 2126–AB46
Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance;
Driver-Vehicle Inspection Report
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM); correction.
AGENCY:
This document makes
corrections to a proposed rule published
in the Federal Register of August 7,
2013, regarding driver vehicle
inspection reports. The corrections
involve clerical corrections to
references. Additionally, this notice
updates the point of contact in the
‘‘Assistance to Small Entities’’ section of
the NPRM.
SUMMARY:
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Ms.
Deborah M. Freund, Vehicle and
Roadside Operations Division, Office of
Bus and Truck Standards and
Operations, Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, telephone: 202–366–
5541; deborah.freund@dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For
FMCSA’s NPRM published on August 7,
2013 (78 FR 48125), the following
corrections are made:
On page 48127, in column 2, last
paragraph, change ‘‘396.11(b)’’ to
‘‘396.11(a)’’.
On page 48128, in column 2, first
paragraph in the Agency Proposal
section, change ‘‘396.11(b)’’ to
‘‘396.11(a)’’.
On page 48130, in column 1, in the
first paragraph of Section Analysis,
change both references regarding
‘‘§ 396.11(b)(2)’’ to ‘‘§ 396.11(a)(2)’’.
On page 48132, in column 1, second
line, change ‘‘Mike Huntley’’ to
‘‘Deborah M. Freund’’.
On page 48133, in instruction 4,
change the amendatory language
‘‘§ 396.11(b)(2)’’ to ‘‘§ 396.11(a)(2)’’ and
also change ‘‘(b)’’ to ‘‘(a)’’ in the
associated regulatory text.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Issued on: August 30, 2013.
Larry Minor,
Associate Administrator for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2013–21763 Filed 9–5–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
E:\FR\FM\06SEP1.SGM
06SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 173 (Friday, September 6, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 54849-54861]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-21621]
[[Page 54849]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
49 CFR Parts 173, 174, 178, 179, and 180
[Docket No. PHMSA-2012-0082 (HM-251)]
RIN 2137-AE91
Hazardous Materials: Rail Petitions and Recommendations To
Improve the Safety of Railroad Tank Car Transportation (RRR)
AGENCY: Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA),
DOT.
ACTION: Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: PHMSA is considering revisions to the Hazardous Materials
Regulations (HMR) to improve the regulations applicable to the
transportation of hazardous materials by rail. The revisions are based
on eight petitions received from the regulated community and four
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Recommendations which are
referenced by a petition. In this ANPRM, we outline the petitions and
NTSB recommendations, identify a preliminary estimate of costs and
benefits from the petitions, pose several questions, and solicit
comments and data from the public. Under Executive Order 13563, Federal
agencies were asked to periodically review existing regulations. The
questions posed in this ANPRM and responses by commenters will be used
in conjunction with a retrospective review of existing requirements
aimed to modify, streamline, expand, or repeal existing rules that are
outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome.
DATES: Comments must be received by November 5, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments identified by the docket number
PHMSA-2012-0082 (HM-251) and the relevant petition number by any of the
following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
Mail: Docket Management System; U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building, Ground Floor, Room W12-140, Routing
Symbol M-30, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: To the Docket Management System; Room W12-
140 on the ground floor of the West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue
SE., Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number for this notice at the beginning of the comment. To avoid
duplication, please use only one of these four methods. All comments
received will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov
and will include any personal information you provide. All comments
received will be posted without change to the Federal Docket Management
System (FDMS), including any personal information.
Docket: For access to the dockets to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket
Operations Office located at U.S. Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12-140, Routing Symbol M-30, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all
comments received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comments (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages 19477-78) which may be
viewed at: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2000-04-11/pdf/00-8505.pdf.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karl Alexy, (202) 493-6245, Office of
Safety Assurance and Compliance, Federal Railroad Administration or Ben
Supko, (202) 366-8553, Standards and Rulemaking Division, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590-0001.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
III. Review of Amendments Considered
A. Petition P-1507
B. Petition P-1519
C. Petition P-1547
D. Petition P-1548
E. Petition P-1577
F. Petition P-1587
G. Petition P-1595
H. Petition P-1612
IV. Regulatory Review and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, Executive Order
13610, and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Executive Order 13132
C. Executive Order 13175
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act, Executive Order 13272, and DOT
Policies and Procedures
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Environmental Assessment
G. Privacy Act
H. International Trade Analysis
I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This Rulemaking
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
I. Executive Summary
PHMSA has received eight petitions for rulemaking and four NTSB
recommendations proposing amendments to the Hazardous Materials
Regulations (HMR; 49 CFR parts 171-180) applicable to the
transportation of hazardous materials in commerce by rail. PHMSA is
seeking public comments on whether the proposed amendments would
enhance safety, revise, and clarify the HMR with regard to rail
transport. Specifically, these amendments propose to: (1) Relax
regulatory requirements to afford the Federal Railroad Administration
(FRA) greater discretion to authorize the movement of non-conforming
tank cars; (2) impose additional requirements that would correct an
unsafe condition associated with pressure relief valves (PRV) on rail
cars transporting carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid; (3) relax
regulatory requirements applicable to the repair and maintenance of DOT
Specification 110, DOT Specification 106, and ICC 27 tank car tanks
(ton tanks); (4) relax regulatory requirement for the removal of
rupture discs for inspection if the removal process would damage,
change, or alter the intended operation of the device; and (5) impose
additional requirements that would enhance the standards for DOT
Specification 111 tank cars used to transport Packing Group (PG) I and
II hazardous materials. The NTSB recommendations directly relate to the
enhancement of DOT Specification 111 tank cars. PHMSA looks forward to
reviewing the public's comments pertaining to the potential economic,
[[Page 54850]]
environmental, and safety implications of the petitions discussed in
this ANPRM. Comments received will be used in our evaluation and
development of possible future regulatory actions on issues relating to
the transportation of hazardous materials by rail.
Access to the petitions, NTSB Recommendations, and background
documents referenced in this ANPRM can be found at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. PHMSA-2012-0082 or at DOT's Docket
Operations Office (see ADDRESSES). PHMSA requests that commenters note
the applicable petition number when submitting comments.
II. Background
Federal hazmat law authorizes the Secretary of DOT (Secretary) to
``prescribe regulations for the safe transportation, including
security, of hazardous material in intrastate, interstate, and foreign
commerce.'' The Secretary has delegated this authority to PHMSA. 49 CFR
Sec. 1.97(b). The HMR, promulgated by PHMSA under the authority
provided in Federal hazmat law, are designed to achieve three goals:
(1) To ensure that hazardous materials are packaged and handled safely
and securely during transportation; (2) to provide effective
communication to transportation workers and emergency responders of the
hazards of the materials being transported; and (3) to minimize the
consequences of an incident should one occur. The hazardous material
regulatory system is a risk management system that is prevention-
oriented and focused on identifying a safety or security hazard and
reducing the probability and quantity of a hazardous material release.
Under the HMR, hazardous materials are categorized by analysis and
experience into hazard classes and packing groups based upon the risks
that they present during transportation. The HMR specify appropriate
packaging and handling requirements for hazardous materials based on
this classification, and require a shipper to communicate the
material's hazards through the use of shipping papers, package marking
and labeling, and vehicle placarding. The HMR also require shippers to
provide emergency response information applicable to the specific
hazard or hazards of the material being transported. Finally, the HMR
mandate training requirements for persons who prepare hazardous
materials for shipment or who transport hazardous materials in
commerce.
The HMR also include operational requirements applicable to each
mode of transportation. The Secretary has authority over all areas of
railroad transportation safety (Federal railroad safety laws, 49 U.S.C.
20101 et seq.), and has delegated this authority to FRA. 49 CFR 1.89.
Pursuant to its statutory authority, FRA promulgates and enforces a
comprehensive regulatory program (49 CFR parts 200-244) to address
railroad track; signal systems; railroad communications; rolling stock;
rear-end marking devices; safety glazing; railroad accident/incident
reporting; locational requirements for the dispatch of U.S. rail
operations; safety integration plans governing railroad consolidations;
merger and acquisitions of control; operating practices; passenger
train emergency preparedness; alcohol and drug testing; locomotive
engineer certification; and workplace safety. FRA inspects railroads
and shippers for compliance with both FRA and PHMSA regulations. FRA
also conducts research and development to enhance railroad safety.
As a result of the shared role in the safe and secure
transportation of hazardous materials by rail, PHMSA and FRA work very
closely when considering regulatory changes. The issues being
considered under this ANPRM are derived from petitions submitted to
PHMSA by its stakeholders. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
requires Federal agencies to give interested persons the right to
petition an agency to issue, amend, or repeal a rule. (5 U.S.C.
553(e)). In accordance with PHMSA's rulemaking procedure regulations,
interested persons may ask PHMSA to add, amend, or repeal a regulation
by filing a petition for rulemaking along with information and
arguments that support the requested action. (49 CFR Part 106). On
average, thirty petitions for rulemaking are submitted to PHMSA
annually by the regulated community, in accordance with Sec. 106.95.
The eight petitions included in this ANPRM are applicable to the
transportation of hazardous materials by rail and have been reviewed by
PHMSA and FRA representatives.
In this ANPRM, PHMSA is seeking public comment to obtain the views
of those who are likely to be impacted in any way by the changes
proposed in the petitions, including those who are likely to benefit
from, be adversely affected by, or potentially be subject to additional
regulation. Additionally, we seek comments on the four NTSB
recommendations that are specifically referenced by Petition P-1587.
This ANPRM will provide an opportunity for public participation in the
development of regulatory amendments, and promote greater exchange of
information and perspectives among the various stakeholders. This
additional step is intended to lead to more focused and well-developed
proposals that reflect the views of all relevant parties.
In addition to this ANPRM, FRA published a notice on July 18, 2013
(78 FR 42998) announcing a PHMSA and FRA public meeting scheduled for
August 27-28, 2013, from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., in the DOT
Conference Center, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
The meeting was focused on operational factors that affect the safe
transportation of hazardous materials by rail. During the meeting, we
asked for input from stakeholders and interested parties. The meeting
agenda was included in the public docket for this rulemaking. PHMSA
requested comments on the relationship between the items identified in
the agenda and the petitions, recommendations, and standards addressed
in this rulemaking.
III. Review of Amendments Considered
This ANPRM is based on Petitions P-1507, P-1519, P-1547, P-1548, P-
1577, P-1587, P-1595, and P-1612 and NTSB Recommendations R-12-5, R-12-
6, R-12-7, and R-07-4. Petition P-1587 directly references NTSB
Recommendations R-12-5, R-12-6, R-12-7, and R-07-4. Additionally, NTSB
Recommendations R-12-5 and R-12-6 directly relate to and reference
petition P-1577. The following table provides a brief summary of the
petitions and NTSB Recommendations addressed in this ANPRM:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Party submitting
Petition/ recommendation petition Summary
------------------------------------------------------------------------
P-1507................... Eastman Chemical Revise the wording of
Co.. Sec. 174.50 to afford
FRA greater discretion
in authorizing car
movement.
P-1519................... The Compressed Gas Revise Sec. 173.314
Association (CGA). Note 5 to clearly
indicate that the
liquid portion of the
gas must not completely
fill the tank prior to
reaching the pressure
setting of the
regulating valves or
the safety relief
valve, whichever is
lower.
[[Page 54851]]
P-1547................... Carroll Welding Revise the ton tank
Supply. repair, maintenance,
and marking regulations
for consistency with
existing regulations
for DOT 3-series
cylinders since ton
tanks share more in
common with these
cylinders than tank
cars.
P-1548................... American Chemistry Proposes a change to the
Council (ACC). wording in Sec.
173.31(d)(1)(vi)
intended to prevent
damage or loss of
effectiveness of
rupture discs removed
from their initial
placement in the relief
device by adding
language that would
except them from
removal if the
inspection itself would
damage, change, or
alter the intended
operation of the
device.
P-1577................... Association of Proposes a new standard
American Railroads for newly-constructed
(AAR). DOT Specification 111
tank cars used to
transport PG I and II
materials.
P-1587................... Village of Stresses the importance
Barrington, of adopting P-1577 for
Illinois and The newly-constructed and
Regional Answer to existing DOT
Canadian Nation. Specification 111 tank
cars in accordance with
NTSB Recommendations R-
12-5 and R-12-6. In
addition, the petition
urges PHMSA to adopt
NTSB Recommendation R-
07-4.
P-1595................... ACC, American Proposes that PHMSA
Petroleum apply requirements
Institute (API) related to top fittings
and The Chlorine protection, reclosing
Institute, Inc. pressure relief
(CI). devices, and head and
shell thickness
requirements as
suggested in P-1577 and
P-1587 for DOT
Specification 111 tank
cars used to transport
ethanol and crude oil
in PG I and II.
P-1612................... API, ACC, CI, and The Petitioners request
The Renewable that PHMSA separate new
Fuels Association tank car regulatory
(RFA). requirements from any
potential retrofits for
the timely adoption of
revised regulatory
requirements for the
construction of new DOT
Specification 111 tank
cars used for the
transportation of
ethanol and crude oil.
R-07-4................... NTSB............... With the assistance of
the FRA, require that
railroads immediately
provide to emergency
responders accurate,
real-time information
regarding the identity
and location of all
hazardous materials on
a train.
R-12-5................... NTSB............... Require that all newly-
manufactured and
existing general
service tank cars
authorized for
transportation of
denatured fuel ethanol
and crude oil in PGs I
and II have enhanced
tank head and shell
puncture resistance
systems and top
fittings protection
that exceed existing
design requirements for
DOT Specification 111
tank cars.
R-12-6................... NTSB............... Require that all bottom
outlet valves used on
newly-manufactured and
existing non-pressure
tank cars are designed
to remain closed during
accidents in which the
valve and operating
handle are subjected to
impact forces.
R-12-7................... NTSB............... Require that all newly-
manufactured and
existing tank cars
authorized for
transportation of
hazardous materials
have center sill or
draft sill attachment
designs that conform to
the revised Association
of American Railroads'
design requirements
adopted as a result of
Safety Recommendation R-
12-9.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each petition is discussed in detail below. Each description
includes a summary of the petition, including the regulatory solution
proposed by the petition; based on the petition, costs and benefits
associated with the granting the action requested by the petitioner;
and a request for comments including specific questions regarding each
petition. Additionally, the discussion of P-1587 includes a brief
summary of the NTSB accident report which resulted in the issuance of
Recommendations R-12-5 through R-12-8 to PHMSA and reiterates the
reasons for the issuance of Recommendation R-07-4. The petitions and
NTSB accident report are included in the public docket for this
rulemaking.
A. Petition P-1507
Summary
In Petition P-1507, the Law Offices of McCarthy, Sweeney &
Harkaway, P.C., on behalf of Eastman Chemical Co., propose that the
wording of Sec. 174.50 be changed to afford FRA greater discretion in
authorizing car movement. Eastman Chemical Co. asserts that adherence
to the regulation impedes the flow of commerce because all non-
conforming bulk packagings, regardless of the safety risk, require a
movement approval. Non-conforming conditions that are a relatively
minor risk require the same approval application and evaluation process
as a non-conforming condition that poses a clear and significant risk.
For example, many low risk movement approvals are provided for tank
cars that have a defective bottom outlet valve, but have been cleaned
and purged to remove any potential hazard in transportation. Other
common low-risk examples are jacketed tank cars with damage solely to
the jacket causing a violation of the requirement for the jacket to be
weather tight. An example of a high-risk approval is one that is issued
for a hole or crack in the tank car shell or head.
The petitioner suggests revising Sec. 174.50 to provide FRA
greater discretion in authorizing car movement.
Currently, Sec. 174.50 provides that:
A leaking non-bulk package may not be forwarded until repaired,
reconditioned, or overpacked in accordance with Sec. 173.3 of this
subchapter. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bulk
packaging that no longer conforms to [the HMR] may not be forwarded
by rail unless repaired or approved for movement by the Associate
Administrator for Safety, Federal Railroad Administration.
Eastman Chemical Co. petitions PHMSA to add language that enables FRA
to publish guidance on specific elements of non-conformity that would
not require a movement approval by the Associate Administrator for
Railroad Safety.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did not identify specific costs
and benefits. However, FRA has recently modified its movement approval
process to minimize burdens without decreasing safety. On February 22,
2011, FRA hosted a public meeting and solicited comments on the one-
time movement approval (OTMA \1\) process to address the increasing
number of requests for OTMAs, which slowed processing
[[Page 54852]]
time.\2\ The basis for the meeting was the increasing volume of
approvals issued annually. FRA issued 380 movement approvals in
calendar year (CY) 2007, 444 in CY 2008, 645 in CY 2009, and 906 in CY
2010. These approvals covered a broad range of non-conformity, such as
service equipment, tank shell, or lining failures; overloaded
packagings; jacket, tank car shell, or head damage; stub sill weld
cracks; failures of heater coils or thermal protection systems; tank
cars overdue for required tests; etc.
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\1\ Detailed information regarding FRA's OTMA program is
available at the following URL: https://www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/Details/L04692.
\2\ To view the meeting notice and transcript go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for ``FRA-2011-0004.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following FRA's public meeting, PHMSA and FRA conducted a peer
review panel, which audited FRA's OTMA program. The audit highlighted
the range and frequencies of various defective conditions and
identified those defects that pose a lesser safety risk. The panel and
comments received during the public meeting recommended that FRA focus
its resources on serious safety concerns while allowing for more
efficient handling of OTMAs.
FRA subsequently revised its OTMA program with the goal of making
the system more efficient and allowing better monitoring of non-
conformance. Specifically, on January 31, 2012, FRA published Hazardous
Materials Guidance (HMG)--127 (77 FR 10799), which provides a
standardized procedure developed by FRA to make the OTMA process more
consistent and efficient. While an applicant isn't ``required'' to
follow the procedure and provide the needed information to perform a
proper safety analysis, failure to do so could cause significant delays
in processing time, or may result in a denial of the application.
Applicants are highly encouraged to use the procedure to expedite the
FRA review and approval process.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1507. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the following questions:
In what ways has the January 31, 2012, publication of HMG-
127 by FRA satisfactorily addressed the petitioner's proposed
revisions; and, in what ways is the issuance of HMG-127 inconsistent
with regard to the petitioner's proposed revision?
What evidence would help FRA quantify the benefits and
costs of the current approval process? For example, what is the average
time an applicant typically waits to obtain a final determination from
FRA on a request for approval? What are the economic effects of this
waiting period?
How could FRA increase the benefits of HMG-127 and of the
OTMA program in general?
Has the petitioner's proposed revision been studied to
determine reasonably foreseeable environmental and human health
effects?
Are there economic benefits or costs of including certain
commonly issued Approvals into the regulations? If so, is there
evidence to help FRA quantify those benefits and costs?
What are some potential alternatives to the current
approval process and HMG-127 that could further maximize benefits and
minimize costs? What data is available to help quantify the benefits
and costs of these alternatives?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
B. Petition P-1519
Summary
In Petition P-1519, the CGA asserts the current wording of Sec.
173.314 Note 5 permits the operation of tank cars designed and
constructed for the transportation of carbon dioxide, refrigerated
liquid, in an unsafe condition. This is the second petition submitted
by the CGA on this topic. PHMSA rejected the previous petition because
of a lack of information supporting the assertion. The focus of the
petition is that, if loaded in accordance with Sec. 173.314 Note 5, a
tank car transporting carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid, could become
shell full prior to the internal pressure exceeding the actuation
pressure of the PRV and/or the regulating valves. This condition may
result in clogging of the PRV, leading to lowering of the flow capacity
of the valve and possibly extreme hydraulic pressure. CGA petitions
PHMSA to revise Sec. 173.314 Note 5 to clearly indicate that the
liquid portion of the gas must not completely fill the tank prior to
reaching the pressure setting of the regulating valves or the safety
relief valve, whichever is lower.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action requested by this petition might
have safety benefits, but add additional regulatory burden. However,
PHMSA has not conducted an analysis of the possible actions that could
result from this petition. The intent of this ANPRM is to gather
relevant safety and economic data from the public regarding changes
proposed in the petition. PHMSA notes that the petition did not provide
data demonstrating manifestation of this potential problem. However, in
analyzing the petition from a technical perspective, PHMSA and FRA
engineers agree, theoretically, CGA's assertion that a shell full
condition may result in clogging of the PRV, leading to lowering of the
flow capacity of the valve and possibly extreme hydraulic pressure, is
correct. The valve capacity remains the same. However, the capacity is
based on the flow of vapor. In the case of carbon dioxide, refrigerated
liquid, three phase flow is possible and the valve does not have the
capacity to vent vapor, liquid, and solid. This is a result of
adiabatic flash evaporation or auto-refrigeration. Assume a compressed
gas that is under pressure and at a temperature above its boiling
point. When the pressure is released (returning to atmospheric
pressure), the temperature of the compressed gas will drop to its
boiling point, in the case of carbon dioxide this is -109 [deg]F
(sublimation point), which is below the freezing point of water. The
water in the atmosphere freezes and clogs the valve. There is also a
phase change in which the vapor changes to solid or liquid (depending
on the pressure along the flow path). This is a fairly common concern
during the unloading process for carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid.
The cost of incorporating the proposed change will be a slightly
lower payload to the affected entities, which include shippers of
carbon dioxide. Initial FRA calculations suggest a 1-2 percent decrease
in payload, which in turn will require 1-2 additional trips per 100
shipments.\3\ The anticipated benefit may be additional safety in the
transportation of carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Assume 20,000 gallon payload. Decrease payload by 2% =
19,600 gallons. Loss of 400 gallons per trip. After 50 trips the
total loss in payload is 20,000 (an extra trip will be needed).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1519. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses
[[Page 54853]]
impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner. PHMSA
specifically requests comments on the following questions:
Can you provide data on incidents that were a direct
result of a clogged PRV that resulted in a lower flow of the PRV and
extreme hydraulic pressure involving the transportation of carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid, or any other refrigerated liquid?
Is this problem unique to the transportation of carbon
dioxide, refrigerated liquid? If not, what are the additional safety
benefits of expanding the scope of the petitioner's recommended
revision to transportation of other refrigerated liquids?
Please comment on the accuracy of the initial calculations
listed above, and provide any other potential costs and benefits of the
proposed change.
Is there an estimate of the number of shipments (trips) of
carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid, in rail tank cars, and the number
of vehicle-miles and ton-miles transported annually? If so, what is the
basis for this estimate? Is there an estimate of the cost per rail car
per vehicle mile, per ton-mile for carbon dioxide, refrigerated liquid,
via rail annually?
How many of the rail tank cars identified above are shell
full prior to the internal pressure exceeding the actuation pressure of
the PRV and/or the regulating valves? What would the annual decrease in
payload be if we adopt the petition? How many more trips would be
required annually? What is the overall impact?
Are there existing consensus standards or operating
practices that adequately address this potential safety issue? If so,
what are they?
Are any other options available that could provide a
similar safety benefit? If so, what are they?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
C. Petition P-1547
Summary
In petition P-1547, Carroll Welding Supply identifies an area of
confusion regarding the current requirements for the repair and
maintenance of ton tanks. Carroll Welding Supply asserts that these
tanks are exclusively transported by highway, yet the regulations
require them to be repaired and marked in accordance with AAR standards
for tank cars. More specifically, Carroll Welding Supply asserts that
the regulations in Sec. 180.212 applicable to re-threading damaged
tapped holes with oversized threads are different for DOT 3-series
cylinders than for ton tanks. The petition indicates that ton tanks are
increasingly being requalified and repaired by cylinder requalifiers,
and not by railroad tank car repair facilities. Often the cylinder
requalifiers are not aware of Sec. 180.513 and Appendix R of the AAR
Manual of Standards and Recommended Practices, Section C-Part III,
Specifications for Tank Cars, Specification M-1002.\4\ A common
practice in the chlorine industry is the use of oversize valves in
tapped holes of DOT 3-series cylinders and oversized valves or fusible
plugs in ton tanks. Currently, the regulations clearly do not allow any
oversized holes in ton tanks. Carroll Welding Supply recommends
amending the regulations by revising ton tank repair, maintenance, and
marking regulations for consistency with existing regulations for DOT
3-series cylinders since ton tanks share more in common with these
cylinders than tank cars.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ AAR's Specifications for Tank Cars, Specification M-1002 is
incorporated by reference in Sec. 171.1 of the HMR. Appendix R
paragraph 24.1 allows damaged tapped holes to be repaired with
thread inserts, and paragraph 24.1.4 specifies that the nominal
thread size of the insert is to match the existing tapped hole.
Further 24.1.4 does not permit oversize holes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did not identify specific costs
and benefits. Affected entities include persons who manufacture,
repair, and/or maintain ton tanks. As stated in the petition, these
tanks share more in common with DOT 3-series cylinders than tank cars.
Therefore, allowing these tanks to be repaired in accordance with the
requirements for DOT 3-series cylinders would simplify the regulations.
The intent of this petition is to consolidate, clarify, and update
existing regulations to promote the consistent application of long-
standing ton tank regulations and guidance while eliminating
unnecessary, outdated, or ambiguous regulatory language or references.
Affected entities and the general public may see incremental safety
benefits through improved regulatory awareness, understanding, and
compliance.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1547. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the following questions:
Would the relocation of the requirements for ton tanks
from Part 179 to Part 178 and aligning the requirements accordingly
address the concern of the petition?
Will it be more or less costly to mark and repair ton
tanks in accordance with existing regulations for DOT 3-series
cylinders as compared to the current requirements?
Is the use of oversized valves or fusible plugs in ton
tanks common practice within the industry?
How many ton tanks will be impacted by this change?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
D. Petition P-1548
Summary
In Petition P-1548, ACC asserts that repeated removal of the
rupture disc from the housing for inspection, as required by Sec.
173.31(d)(1)(vi), can result in damage and a reduction in the
effectiveness of the rupture disc. ACC contends that PHMSA has
acknowledged this concern by issuing Special Permit DOT SP-13219, which
allows for the shipment of certain peroxides in tank cars that have
been inspected under a modified inspection program prior to
transportation. The modified inspection program does not require the
shipper to remove the rupture disc for inspection and requires the
shipper to subject the tank to a pressure test at 10 psig for 10
minutes to verify the rupture disc shows no sign of leakage. Currently,
two companies are parties to this special permit.
The ACC is proposing that PHMSA incorporate Special Permit DOT SP-
13219 into the HMR by adding language to Sec. 173.31(d)(1)(vi) that
would except rupture discs from removal if the inspection itself would
damage, change, or alter the intended operation of the device. While
the special permit requires an alternative inspection program and is
limited to shipments of only certain peroxides, the ACC petition would
broaden the scope of the special permit to include additional
materials. The ACC petition does not address the operational controls
of the special permit; specifically the requirement for the tank car to
be subjected to a pressure test of 10 psi for a minimum of 10
[[Page 54854]]
minutes to verify that the rupture disc shows no sign of leakage. PHMSA
does not currently mandate a service interval at which rupture discs
are required to be changed, but expects that inspections or testing
that identifies wear or leaks will lead to rupture disc replacement.
PHMSA has already partially modified the rupture disc inspection
requirements in Sec. 173.31(d)(1)(vi), since this petition was filed.
That modification addressed related safety implications of not removing
rupture discs prior to visual inspections and created a more limited
exception than P-1548 requests. PHMSA adopted the provision as proposed
in a May 14, 2010 final rule issued under Docket No. PHMSA-2009-0289
(HM-233A; 75 FR 27205). Access to the HM-233A rulemaking documents and
comments can be found at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
PHMSA-2009-0289 or at DOT's Docket Operations Office (see ADDRESSES).
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA considers the action requested by this petition to be
deregulatory in nature. The petition did not identify specific costs,
but did indicate that the proposed change would reduce the need for
periodic renewal of the special permit and expand its use to others,
which decreases time and expense for tank car owners, shippers, and
PHMSA. Another potential benefit of the proposal is that it would
eliminate the requirement to remove a rupture disc from the safety vent
for inspection prior to transportation, thereby saving the time the
loading rack operator needed to disassemble the device as well as the
cost of new discs.
Based on the petition, inspection of the rupture disc as specified
in Sec. 173.31(d)(1)(vi) may cause or contribute to the rupture disc
failing. For that reason, incorporating into the HMR an alternate
method of inspecting the rupture disc that mirrors the requirements in
Special Permit DOT SP-13219 may reduce releases and provide a safety
benefit. A preliminary review of hazardous materials incident reports
involving all pressure-related releases for the five-year period from
January 2007 to January 2011 found that 40 of the 85 recorded incidents
related to pressure relief devices involved a failed rupture disc. In
addition, available data does not provide a credible estimate of how
many incidents were prevented because of the inspections. However, the
incident report forms do provide the approximate cost associated with
these the incidents, mainly attributable to clean-up, response, and
damages. For the 40 incidents identified above, the reported cost is
$300,000.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1548. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the following questions:
Can commenters provide data indicating the percentage of
rupture discs that were found to be defective during the currently
required inspection?
What percentage of the 40 recorded incidents that involved
a failed rupture disc would have been prevented had the rupture disc
not been removed and inspected in accordance with Sec.
173.31(d)(1)(vi)? What is the basis for this conclusion if the
commenter believes any would have been prevented?
Is there an inspection program with an established history
of safety that could be followed in lieu of removal and visual
examination of the underside of the rupture disc, such as the
procedures in Special Permit DOT SP-13219? If so, what?
Can commenters provide an explanation of how the rupture
disc is damaged or its effectiveness is lost as a result of the
required inspection?
How much time is required to inspect rupture discs in
accordance with the existing regulation?
What are the comparative costs and benefits of Special
Permit DOT SP-13219 and ACC's proposal, which expands Special Permit
DOT SP-13219 beyond limited shipments of certain peroxides and without
the alternative inspection program?
Under the action requested by the petitioner, what
criteria should shippers use to determine if an inspection would
damage, change, or alter the operation of the device?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
E. Petition P-1577
Summary
In petition P-1577, AAR provides new standards for DOT
Specification 111 tank cars based on findings and recommendations
created by AAR's Tank Car Committee. The committee reviewed tank car
performance under the current standards and investigated the benefits
of potential improvements. The new standards AAR proposes are intended
to enhance the safety of the existing specification. According to AAR,
these new tank car standards would improve the ability of tank cars to
survive an accident without the release of hazardous materials. AAR
requests that the new standards only be required for newly constructed
DOT Specification 111 tank cars that transport PG I and II hazardous
materials. Key tank car requirements in the AAR petition include:
PG I and II material tank cars to be constructed to
286,000 lb. Gross Rail Load (GRL) standards;
Head and shell thickness must be \1/2\ inch for TC-128B
non jacketed cars and \7/16\ inch for jacketed cars;
Shells of non-jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-70
must be \9/16\ inch thick;
Shells of jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-70 must
be \1/2\ inch thick;
New cars must be equipped with at least a \1/2\ inch half-
head shields;
Heads and the shells must be constructed of normalized
steel;
Top fittings must be protected by a protective structure
as tall as the tallest fitting; and
A reclosing pressure relief valve must be installed.
PHMSA notes that in addition to the tank car requirements outlined
above, AAR created the T87.6 Task Force to consider several other
enhancements to tank car design and rail carrier operations that would
further enhance rail transportation safety. On July 20, 2011, at the
summer AAR Tank Car Committee meeting, docket T87.6 was created with a
dual charge to develop an industry standard for tank cars used to
transport crude oil, denatured alcohol and ethanol/gasoline mixtures as
well as consider operating requirements to reduce the risk of
derailment of tank cars carrying crude oil classified as PG I and II,
and ethanol. The task force recommendations were finalized on March 1,
2012. PHMSA and FRA believe it is important to identify the additional
safety enhancements, which may include both rail car design and rail
carrier operational changes that were considered by the task force and
provide the public an opportunity to comment. Below, we highlight the
key considerations of the task force from both a tank car design and
operations standpoint.
Tank car design:
[[Page 54855]]
Thermal protection to address breaches attributable to
exposure to fire conditions;
Roll-over protection to prevent damage to top and bottom
fittings and limit stresses transferred from the protection device to
the tank shell;
Hinged and bolted manways to address a common cause of
leakage during accidents and Non-Accident Releases (NARS);
Bottom outlet valve elimination; and
Increasing outage from 1% to 2% to improve puncture
resistance.
Rail Carrier Operations:
Rail integrity (e.g., broken rails or welds, misaligned
track, obstructions, track geometry, etc.) to reduce the number and
severity of derailments;
Alternative brake signal propagation systems (electronic
controlled pneumatic brakes (ECP), distributed power (DP), two-way end
of train device (EOT) to reduce the number of cars and energy
associated with derailments;
Speed restrictions for key trains containing 20 or more
loaded tank cars (On August 5, 2013, AAR issued Circular No. OT-55-N
addressing this issue); \5\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ On August 5, 2013, AAR published Circular No. OT-55-N. This
document supersedes OT-55-M, issued October 1, 2012. The definition
of a ``key train'' was revised to include ``20 car loads or portable
tank loads of any combination of hazardous material.'' Therefore,
the maximum speed of these trains is limited to 50 MPH. The document
is available in the public docket for this proceeding and at the
following URL: https://www.aar.com/CPC-1258%20OT-55-N%208-5-13.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Emergency response to mitigate the risks faced by response
and salvage personnel, the impact on the environment, and delays to
traffic on the line.
For more detailed information, the T87.6 Task Force Summary Report
has been provided in its entirety in the public docket for this ANPRM
which is accessible at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
PHMSA-2012-0082 or at DOT's Docket Operations Office (see ADDRESSES).
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action requested by this petition might
have safety benefits, but add additional regulatory burden. However,
PHMSA has not conducted an analysis of the possible actions that could
result from this petition. The intent of this ANPRM is to gather
relevant safety and economic data from the public regarding changes
proposed in the petition. The petition does provide some associated
costs and benefits. In the petition, AAR cites a member survey as the
source for information on the consequences of derailments involving PG
I and II hazardous materials from 2004 to 2008. The petition indicates
that the derailment incidents resulted in 1 fatality, 11 injuries, and
the release of approximately 925,000 gallons of materials with
associated cleanup costs of approximately $64 million.
The AAR petition does not provide a retrofit solution for the
existing fleet of about 77,000 DOT Specification 111 tank cars used to
transport PG I or II hazardous materials because of technical
difficulties and comparative costs. In the petition, AAR notes that the
Railway Supply Institute (RSI) ``conservatively estimates the cost of
retrofitting existing cars with head shield and jackets [to be more
than] $1 billion over the life of a retrofit program, not including
cleaning and out-of-service costs.'' By comparison, AAR states that the
cost of derailments over the past 5 years was approximately $64
million.
Additionally, PHMSA has received an estimate of the increased costs
associated with the proposed revisions. In 2011, the AAR issued
Casualty Prevention Circular (CPC) 1232, which outlines the new
requirements for tanks constructed after October 1, 2011, for use in
ethanol and crude oil service. The requirements of CPC 1232 are the
same as those in this petition. RSI estimates that a new DOT
Specification 111 tank car built to CPC 1232 will cost approximately
$18,000 more than a car built to the standard currently required by the
HMR. Only 7,000 to 10,000 pounds of the 23,000 pound increase in weight
(263,000 pound car to a 286,000 pound car) results from the head shield
and added thickness to the head and shell. Therefore, for $18,000
initial cost, a shipper will be able to transport an additional 13,000
to 16,000 pounds of product. The added weight of the car would also
likely result in additional fees established by the rail carrier. We
request comments on these costs, and benefits, as well as any fees
associated with the action proposed in the petition. PHMSA recognizes
that the petition may not have accounted for all economic impacts
associated with revising the DOT Specification 111 tank car.
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1577 and the remaining rail safety
enhancements that were considered by the task force for both tank car
design and rail carrier. Please provide comments and data on the costs
and benefits, as well as environmental and small businesses impacts, of
granting the action requested by the petitioner. PHMSA specifically
requests comments on the following questions:
Would the proposed revisions under P-1577 decrease the
release of hazardous materials during derailment? If so, what is the
basis for this conclusion?
Should PHMSA segment the petition and first address
requirements for tank cars carrying Class 3 materials (because there is
an abundance of work to inform the rulemaking), then the remaining
hazard classes within PGs I and II? If so, why?
The proposed tank car requirements do not include thermal
protection and therefore do not address thermal damage specifically.
Given that ethanol and crude oil are often shipped in unit trains or
large blocks within a train and a pool fire is likely in the event of
certain large incidents, should thermal protection requirements, such
as those considered by the T87.6 Task Force,\6\ be a consideration? If
so, why or why not?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ A copy of the report is available in the public docket for
this ANPRM. To view, go to https://www.regulations.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Docket HM-233A, PHMSA modified Sec. 179.13 to
permit the operation of tank cars at a GRL of 286,000 pounds if the
tank car owners obtain approval from the FRA. On January 25, 2011, FRA
published a notice outlining the specification requirements for tank
cars operating at 286,000 pounds GRL (76 FR 4250). As established by
the January 25, 2011 notice, the approval requirements for minimum
thickness and materials of construction for newly-constructed tank cars
must be based on an analysis that considers puncture velocity. Under an
ongoing research project conducted in conjunction with both the T87.6
Task Force and the Advance Tank Car Collaborative Research Project,
data suggest that the puncture protection benefits of a \1/16\ increase
in shell thickness, as proposed in P-1577, are marginal. Further, the
enhancements proposed by P-1577 may not be of value when considered
relative to the risk associated with the increased weight of the tank
cars. Will the changes proposed in the petition adequately improve the
safety (puncture resistance) of tank cars? What is the overall impact
on rail transportation safety and risk associated with the enhancements
proposed for DOT Specification 111 tank cars under P-1577?
The petition addresses some of the tank car design issues
raised by T87.6 Task Force. In the P-1577 summary provided above, PHMSA
highlights the
[[Page 54856]]
remaining rail safety enhancements that were considered by the task
force for both tank car design and rail carrier. What, if any, design
and operations enhancements should PHMSA and FRA consider beyond those
identified in P-1577 to improve the safe transportation of PG I and II
materials?
Does AAR Circular No. OT-55-N adequately address speed
restrictions for key trains? Should PHMSA incorporate the language
contained in AAR Circular No. OT-55-N into the HMR to account for the
train speed considerations of the task force? Should PHMSA expand upon
AAR Circular No. OT-55-N to include requirements for fewer than 20
cars?
Are shippers ordering CPC 1232-compliant tank cars
voluntarily to address safety concerns and the immediate need for new
cars or because compliance with CPC 1232 is required? If so, please
provide any relevant data about this.
How many CPC 1232-compliant tank cars are currently in
service?
PHMSA and FRA estimate that for an $18,000 initial cost, a
shipper will be able to transport an additional 13,000 to 16,000 pounds
of product. This would result in fewer cars required to transport the
same amount of product. What are the safety and economic benefits of
increasing the product capacity of the tank car?
Positive train control (PTC) is a system of functional
requirements for monitoring and controlling train movements to provide
increased safety. PTC is designed to automatically stop or slow to
prevent accidents. Specifically, PTC is designed to prevent train-to-
train collisions, derailments caused by excessive speed, unauthorized
incursions by trains onto sections of track where repairs are being
made and movement of a train through a track switch left in the wrong
position. Are technologies available, such as PTC, that would prevent
derailments? If so, please provide any relevant data--including any
projected improvements in safety performance that would reduce current
rail transportation risks.
What, if any, are the additional implementation and
operating costs associated with CPC 1232 compliant tank cars (e.g.,
higher fees charged by rail carriers)? Are there any additional
benefits, if so, what are they?
Would the increased cost of CPC 1232-compliant cars slow
the replacement of older cars? How does this impact the current backlog
of cars?
What are the costs associated with re-tooling tank car
construction facilities to manufacture CPC 1231-compliant tank cars?
How would the costs impact small businesses that build these cars?
Please comment on the accuracy of the estimated costs
indicated by AAR and RSI, and include any additional anticipated costs
of complying with the proposed revisions. Are there any additional
anticipated benefits if the proposed revisions are adopted?
If the PHMSA were to adopt the action requested by the
petitioner, what is the appropriate timeframe for complying with the
new requirements?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
F. Petition P-1587
Summary
In petition P-1587, the Village of Barrington, Illinois and The
Regional Answer to Canadian National request modifications to the HMR.
First, they request that PHMSA correct flaws with the DOT Specification
111 tank car by adopting the AAR standards identified in P-1577 for the
tank cars. However, in addition to applying these standards to newly-
manufactured cars, the petitioners stress the importance of
promulgating enhanced standards for existing tank cars used to
transport PG I and II materials in accordance with the NTSB Railroad
Accident Report--Derailment of CN Freight Train U70691-18 With
Subsequent Hazardous Materials Release and Fire, Cherry Valley,
Illinois, June 19, 2009 (RAR-12-01).
Second, the petitioners request that PHMSA adopt NTSB
Recommendation R-07-04 and ``require that railroads immediately provide
to emergency responders accurate, real-time information regarding the
identity and location of all hazardous materials on a train.'' While
the petitioners recognize that PHMSA has made progress with its
hazardous materials automated cargo communications for efficient and
safe shipments (HM-ACCESS; a study to identify and eliminate barriers
to using electronic hazardous materials (e-HM) shipping documents)
initiative, they request that PHMSA move from the fact-finding phase of
this initiative to the regulatory action phase. The petition asks that
any regulations stemming from the HM-ACCESS initiative be enforceable
with a system of random audits to promote compliance. The petitioner
urges PHMSA to act expeditiously.
FRA and PHMSA continue to make progress toward electronic
communications. FRA and PHMSA have met with AAR and the American Short
Line and Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA) to discuss the
available systems and to identify the systemic gaps and measures to
close those gaps. In addition, on June 25, 2012 PHMSA, working closely
with FRA, published a final rule incorporating a several widely used
rail special permits into the HMR (77 FR 37961). In the rule,
requirements for electronic shipping papers, electronic data
interchange (EDI) standards, and electronic certification for hazardous
material rail shipments were codified in the HMR.
NTSB Recommendations Addressed
In published findings from the June 19, 2009, incident in Cherry
Valley, Illinois, NTSB indicated that the DOT Specification 111 tank
car can almost always be expected to breach in the event of a
derailment resulting in car-to-car impacts or pileups (68% failure rate
for the Cherry Valley incident). Furthermore, NTSB's findings show that
whether or not the bottom outlet valves on DOT Specification 111 tank
cars are protected, they are still susceptible to failure. The findings
are described in detail below.
As described in detail in NTSB Railroad Accident Report RAR-12-01,
available for review in the public docket for this rulemaking, NTSB
determined that one of the probable causes of the June 19, 2009
incident in Cherry Valley, Illinois, in which several derailed cars
released hazardous materials, was the washout of the track structure at
the grade crossing and failure to notify the train crew of the known
washout. It also determined that inadequate design features of a DOT
Specification 111 rail tank car made it susceptible to damage and
catastrophic loss of hazardous material during the derailment, and
thus, contributed to the severity of the incident.
The Cherry Valley incident involved the derailment of 19 cars, all
of which were tank cars carrying denatured fuel ethanol, a flammable
liquid. Thirteen of the derailed tank cars were breached or lost
product and caught fire. NTSB's investigation revealed that several
motor vehicles were stopped on either side of the grade crossing
waiting for the train to pass as the derailment occurred. As a result
of the fire that erupted, a passenger in one of the stopped cars was
fatally injured, two passengers in the same car received serious
injuries, and five occupants of other cars waiting at the highway-rail
crossing were injured. Two firefighters also sustained minor
[[Page 54857]]
injuries. The release of ethanol and fire prompted a mandatory
evacuation of about 600 residences within a \1/2\-mile radius of the
accident site. Damages were estimated to total $7.9 million.
On March 2, 2012, the NTSB issued Safety Recommendations R-12-5
thru R-12-8, which recommend that PHMSA:
Require that all newly manufactured and existing general
service tank cars authorized for transportation of denatured fuel
ethanol and crude oil in PGs I and II have enhanced tank head and shell
puncture resistance systems and top fittings protection that exceeds
existing design requirements for DOT Specification 111 tank cars. (R-
12-5)
Require that all bottom outlet valves used on newly
manufactured and existing non-pressure tank cars are designed to remain
closed during accidents in which the valve and operating handle are
subjected to impact forces. (R-12-6).
Require that all newly manufactured and existing tank cars
authorized for transportation of hazardous materials have center sill
or draft sill attachment designs that conform to the revised
Association of American Railroads' design requirements adopted as a
result of Safety Recommendation R-12-9. (R-12-7).
Inform pipeline operators about the circumstances of the
accident and advise them of the need to inspect pipeline facilities
after notification of accidents occurring in railroad rights-of-way.
(R-12-8).\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ On July 31, 2012, PHMSA published in the Federal Register
(77 FR 45417) an advisory bulletin to all pipeline operators
alerting them to the circumstances of the Cherry Valley derailment
and reminding them of the importance of assuring that pipeline
facilities have not been damaged either during a railroad accident
or other event occurring in the right-of-way. This recommendation
was Closed by NTSB on September 20, 2012. This action is accessible
at the following URL: https://phmsa.dot.gov/pipeline/regs/ntsb/closed
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, based on its findings in this accident investigation,
NTSB reiterated the following previously issued Safety Recommendation
to PHMSA:
With the assistance of the Federal Railroad
Administration, require that railroads immediately provide to emergency
responders accurate, real-time information regarding the identity and
location of all hazardous materials on a train. (R-07-4).
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action requested by this petition might
have safety benefits, but add additional regulatory burden. However,
PHMSA has not conducted an analysis of the possible actions that could
result from this petition. The intent of this ANPRM is to gather
relevant safety and economic data from the public regarding changes
proposed in the petition. The key difference is between P-1577 and the
combination of P-1587 and the NTSB recommendations R-12-5 and R-12-6 is
that the latter would require retrofitting of existing DOT
Specification 111 tank cars. NTSB Recommendations R-12-7 and R-07-4 are
currently being addressed by separate initiatives that have been
undertaken by PHMSA and FRA. Petition P-1587 references the cost and
benefit information contained in petition P-1577 and the NTSB accident
report and Recommendations outlined above. However, the petition
provides clarifying information regarding the cost of retrofitting
existing tank cars with jackets and head shields. Petition P-1577
states that the cost of retrofitting existing cars (77,000 with a 40
year life cycle) with head shields and jackets alone would be over $1
billion. This petition notes that the AAR's Tank Car Committee T87.5
``estimated that the cost of modifying existing tank cars with jackets
and head shields alone would be at least $15,000 per tank car.'' The
petition further states:
While the AAR claims that the retrofit costs cannot be justified
because the cost of derailments was only $64 million over five
years, Petitioners suggest that AAR's reasoning is grossly
misleading. In order to determine the impact of the cost of
retrofitting the existing fleet, PHMSA should note that the existing
fleet has a future life expectancy of at least 32 years. Even if the
estimated cost of the recommended retrofit is $15,000 per car, when
amortized over thirty-two (32) years, the cost is less than $500 per
year per tank car . . .
In reviewing the derailment cost chart at Attachment B of AAR's
petition, PHMSA should note that there is no apparent accounting for
costs associated with civil litigation in the wake of derailments.
However, in the Cherry Valley/Rockford derailment, [Canadian
National Railway (CN)] paid over $36 million in October of 2011 to
settle a lawsuit brought by the family of only one victim. AAR's
chart, however, reflects costs of only $8 million for that incident.
The petition indicates that based on this information, there is
``no rational reason to not require the retrofitting of the existing
fleet consistent with NTSB's recommendation.''
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1587. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as, environmental and small
businesses impacts of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the following questions:
Petition P-1587 indicates that the new standards should
apply to both new construction and retrofitting the existing fleet. Can
you provide the safety benefits and costs associated with each retrofit
option outlined below:
[cir] Meets NTSB Recommendation R-12-5 (enhanced tank head and
shell puncture resistance and top fitting protection);
[cir] Meets NTSB Recommendation R-12-6 (alternative designs to
ensure the bottom outlet valves on the enhanced DOT Specification 111
tank cars will remain closed during accidents.);
[cir] Provides thermal protection to address breaches attributable
to exposure to fire conditions;
[cir] Provides roll-over protection to prevent damage to top and
bottom fittings and limit stresses transferred from the protection
device to the tank shell;
[cir] Requires hinged and bolted manways to address a common cause
of leakage during accidents and Non-Accident Releases (NARS);
[cir] Requires bottom outlet valve elimination; and
[cir] Increases outage from 1% to 2% to improve puncture
resistance.
RSI estimates the cost of retrofitting existing cars with
head shield and jackets to be more than $1 billion over the life of a
retrofit program, not including cleaning and out-of-service costs.
Would retrofitting with head shields and jackets sufficiently address
the concerns of the petitioner? Please explain.
Are commenters aware of any systems currently in use that
railroads could use to immediately provide emergency responders
accurate, real-time information regarding the identity and location of
all hazardous materials on a train? If so, what does the system cost?
Are there any additional costs associated with the system? If so, what
are they? What are the specific benefits of providing real-time
information regarding the identity and location of all hazardous
materials on a train to emergency responders?
What is the failure rate for DOT Specification 111 tank
cars? Is the 68% failure rate for DOT Specification 111 tank cars that
occurred during the June 19, 2009, incident in Cherry Valley, Illinois
typical? Please provide relevant data regarding the failure rate for
DOT Specification 111 tank cars.
[[Page 54858]]
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. The
petition and NTSB Recommendations are available in the public docket
for this ANPRM, to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's
Docket Operations Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
G. Petition P-1595
Summary
In petition P-1595, ACC, API, and CI indicate that they are aware
of petitions P-1577 and P-1587. According to the ACC, API, and CI
petition, many PG I and II materials, with very different hazards and
rail transportation risks, have been lumped together in petitions P-
1577 and P-1587. In petition P-1595, ACC, API, and CI request that
PHMSA institute a separate rulemaking to specifically address new tank
car construction standards for ethanol and crude oil in PG I and II.
The petition suggests that PHMSA not include the other PG I and II
materials because further analysis is required that could delay the
rulemaking process. Key tank car requirements identified in the ACC,
API, and CI petition include:
Top fittings must be protected by a protective structure
as tall as the tallest fitting;
A reclosing pressure relief valve must be installed;
Head and shell thickness must be \1/2\ inch for TC-128B
non-jacketed cars and \7/16\ inch for jacketed cars;
Shells of non-jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-70
must be \9/16\ inch thick; and
Shells of jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-70 must
be \1/2\ inch thick.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action requested by this petition would
address a safety concern, but add additional regulatory burden. The
petition did not identify specific costs and benefits. In the petition
ACC, API, and CI indicate that focusing on an expedited rulemaking to
address ethanol and crude oil would better address the risks involved.
Further, ACC, API and CI indicate that separating the ethanol and crude
oil in PG I and II from other PG I and II materials would provide for a
tank car design that is tailored to the requirements of the materials
being transported. The petitioners acknowledge that ``[m]uch more
research and analysis would be necessary to justify any significant
change in the construction standards for tank cars carrying other PG I
and II materials, such as corrosive materials.''
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1595. Please provide comments and data
on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the following questions:
Petition P-1595 indicates that new standards should apply
to newly constructed DOT Specification 111 tank cars used for ethanol
and crude oil in PG I and II. Can you provide the safety benefits and
costs associated with each new construction option outlined in the
petition and identified below:
[cir] Requiring top fittings to be protected by a protective
structure as tall as the tallest fitting;
[cir] Requiring that a reclosing pressure relief valve be
installed;
[cir] Requiring head and shell thickness to be \1/2\ inch for TC-
128B non-jacketed cars and \7/16\ inch for jacketed cars;
[cir] Requiring shells of non-jacketed tank cars constructed of
A5l6-70 to be \9/16\ inch thick; and
[cir] Requiring shells of jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-70
must be \1/2\ inch thick.
What are the costs and benefits of requiring the use of
CPC 1232-compliant tank cars for the transportation of ethanol and
crude oil in PG I and II? How many cars are currently in this service?
What are the implications on public safety of PHMSA considering
standards for tank cars used to transport ethanol and crude oil in PG I
and II, before considering standards for other PG I and II materials?
What are the specific safety risks/vulnerabilities associated with the
remaining hazard classes within PG I and II? Please explain how those
vulnerabilities are best addressed.
What will be the price difference between the DOT
Specification 111 tank cars for PG I and II ethanol and crude oil vs.
DOT Specification 111 tank cars used for other hazardous materials in
PG I and II? Please explain the differences.
Would the increased cost of PG I and II ethanol and crude
oil cars slow the replacement of older cars? How does this impact the
current backlog of cars?
What are the costs associated with re-tooling tank car
construction facilities to manufacture different DOT Specification 111
tank cars for PG I and II ethanol and crude oil vs. other PG I and II
materials? How would the costs impact small businesses that build these
cars?
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
H. Petition P-1612
Summary
In petition P-1612, ACC, API, CI, and RFA indicate they stand ready
and willing to work with PHMSA and other stakeholders to ensure that
the recently increased volumes of crude oil and ethanol that move by
rail are transported safely. The petitioners indicate that they support
the tank car changes proposed in petition P-1577 and the T87.6 Task
Force Summary Report. Further, the petitioners indicate that PHMSA has
the authority and responsibility to institute these new requirements
for these tank cars to ensure certainty for stakeholders. The
petitioners clearly indicate that expediting regulatory requirements
for new tank cars transporting crude oil and ethanol will increase rail
transportation safety, remove economic uncertainty, and eliminate
increasing risks of future economic harm. As such, petition P-1612
requests that PHMSA act expeditiously by issuing a direct final rule to
implement the changes P-1577 and the T87.6 Task Force Summary Report
for ethanol and crude oil.
Costs and Benefits
PHMSA believes that the action requested by this petition might
have safety benefits, but add additional regulatory burden. However,
PHMSA has not conducted an analysis of the possible actions that could
result from this petition. The intent of this ANPRM is to gather
relevant safety and economic data from the public regarding changes
proposed in the petition. The petition did not identify specific costs
and benefits. In the petition ACC, API, CI, and RFA indicate that
focusing on an expedited rulemaking to adopt the changes proposed in
petition P-1577 and the T87.6 Task Force Summary Report for new tank
cars transporting crude oil and ethanol is appropriate for a number of
reasons. First, the petitioners indicate that there has been a
significant increase in rail shipment of crude oil, while most other PG
I and II materials shipping patterns have been relatively consistent.
The petitioners indicate that the increase in shipments of both ethanol
and crude oil and abundance of available information provides an
opportunity to significantly increase the safety of these shipments
immediately. The petitioners indicate that delaying further, to allow
more time
[[Page 54859]]
to formulate a rule for unrelated tank car retrofits, would
unnecessarily increase the risk of a release in the unlikely event that
an incident occur.
Second, the petitioners indicate that tank cars for crude oil and
ethanol service are currently being manufactured. The petitioners
indicate that delays in establishing a new construction standard for
these tank cars may result in many tank cars being manufactured that do
not meet future requirements. The petitioners indicate that this is
impractical and would increase compliance costs significantly. The
petitioners indicate that many tank cars may be required to go back to
the shop for retrofits which will increase demand for shop space and
delay tank cars from being placed back into service.
Finally, petition P-1612 states that ``many builders and shippers
have made significant capital investments in tank cars built to P-1577
and T87.6 construction standards in good faith, expecting PHMSA's
approval of that standard.'' The petitioners indicate that the
involvement of the DOT in the T87.6 Task Force and the safety
improvements contained in the T87.6 Task Force Summary Report gave
industry the impression that the changes would be codified. Petition P-
1612 goes on to state, ``As a result, those cars should be considered
in compliance with any regulatory requirements included in the final
rule without being required to undergo retrofits.''
Comments and Questions
PHMSA requests comments on P-1612. Please provide comments
and data on the costs and benefits, as well as environmental and small
businesses impacts, of granting the action requested by the petitioner.
PHMSA asks commenters to consider the potential economic and safety
implications associated with the petition. In addition, PHMSA
specifically requests comments on the following questions:
What are the implications on public safety of PHMSA
addressing standards for new construction of tank cars used to
transport ethanol and crude oil without also considering enhancements
to the existing fleet?
Petition P-1612 states that PHMSA should, ``initiate an
expedited rulemaking on regulatory requirements for new tank car
construction standards for cars transporting crude oil and ethanol as a
stand-alone rulemaking and address potential retrofits proposals at a
later date in a separate rulemaking.'' Would such a requirement include
ethanol and crude oil in PG I, II, and III?
What are the costs and benefits of requiring ethanol and
crude oil in PG III to be shipped in DOT Specification 111 tank cars
that are CPC 1232-compliant?
Petition P-1612 states that the ``Petitioners continue to
support P-1577 and the T87.6 Task Force recommendations, which
recommend no retrofit requirements for the existing fleet of tank cars
carrying crude oil and ethanol.'' Please provide the safety benefits
and costs associated the following key considerations of P-1577 and the
task force from both a tank car design and operations standpoint:
[cir] Enhancing the tank car by:
[ssquf] Constructing tank cars to 286,000 lb. GRL standards;
[ssquf] Increasing head and shell thickness to \1/2\ inch for TC-
128B non-jacketed cars and \7/16\ inch for jacketed cars;
[ssquf] Requiring shells of non-jacketed tank cars constructed of
A5l6-70 to be \9/16\ inch thick;
[ssquf] Requiring shells of jacketed tank cars constructed of A5l6-
70 to be \1/2\ inch thick;
[ssquf] Equipping cars with at least a \1/2\ inch half-head
shields;
[ssquf] Requiring heads and the shells to be constructed of
normalized steel;
[ssquf] Requiring top fittings to be protected by a protective
structure as tall as the tallest fitting;
[ssquf] Requiring a reclosing pressure relief valve to be
installed;
[ssquf] Adding thermal protection to address breaches attributable
to exposure to fire conditions;
[ssquf] Adding roll-over protection to prevent damage to top and
bottom fittings and limit stresses transferred from the protection
device to the tank shell;
[ssquf] Adding hinged and bolted manways to address a common cause
of leakage during accidents and NARS;
[ssquf] Eliminating bottom outlet valves; and
[ssquf] Increasing outage from 1% to 2% to improve puncture
resistance.
[cir] Enhancing rail operations in the following areas:
[ssquf] Rail integrity (e.g., broken rails or welds, buckled track,
obstructions, track geometry, etc.) to reduce the number and severity
of derailments;
[ssquf] Alternative brake signal propagation systems ECP, DP, EOT
to reduce the number of cars and energy associated with derailments;
[ssquf] Speed restrictions for key trains; and
[ssquf] Emergency response to mitigate the risks faced by response
and salvage personnel, the impact on the environment, and delays to
traffic on the line.
Petition P-1612 makes the following statement, ``The
increase in shipments of these commodities, which should create a sense
of urgency to ensure they are moved as safely as possible, combined
with PHMSA's understanding of their properties and a wealth of
technical information to draw from, provides an opportunity to
significantly increase the safety of these shipments immediately.''
Please provide any available technical information and justification
that clearly indicates what is meant by the statement ``significantly
increase the safety of these shipments.''
Considering the statement from petition P-1612 and the
request for more technical information and justification in the bullet
above, please provide a quantitative estimate that supports the
issuance of a direct final rule as requested by petition P-1612.
Please note the applicable petition number in your submission. A
copy of the petition is available in the public docket for this ANPRM,
to view go to https://www.regulations.gov or DOT's Docket Operations
Office (see ADDRESSES section above).
IV. Regulatory Review and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, Executive Order 13610
and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
This ANPRM is considered a significant regulatory action under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 and was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The ANPRM is considered a significant
regulatory action under the Regulatory Policies and Procedures order
issued by the Department of Transportation. 44 FR 11034 (Feb. 26,
1979).
Executive Orders 12866 (``Regulatory Planning and Review'') and
13563 (``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review'') require agencies
to regulate in the ``most cost-effective manner,'' to make a ``reasoned
determination that the benefits of the intended regulation justify its
costs,'' and to develop regulations that ``impose the least burden on
society.'' Executive Order 13610, issued May 10, 2012, urges agencies
to conduct retrospective analyses of existing rules to examine whether
they remain justified and whether they should be modified or
streamlined in light of changed circumstances, including the rise of
new technologies.
Additionally, Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 13610 require
agencies to provide a meaningful opportunity for public participation.
Accordingly, PHMSA invites comments on these considerations, including
any cost or benefit figures or factors, alternative approaches, and
relevant scientific,
[[Page 54860]]
technical and economic data. These comments, along with the noted
petitions and recommendations, will help PHMSA evaluate whether the
proposed rulemakings are needed and appropriate.
B. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 requires agencies to assure meaningful and
timely input by state and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that may 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.'' We invite state and local governments
with an interest in this rulemaking to comment on any effect that
revisions to the HMR may cause.
C. Executive Order 13175
Executive Order 13175 requires agencies to assure meaningful and
timely input from Indian tribal government representatives in the
development of rules that significantly or uniquely affect Indian
communities by imposing ``substantial direct compliance costs'' or
``substantial direct effects'' on such communities or the relationship
and distribution of power between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes. We invite Indian tribal governments to provide comments on the
costs and effects the petitions and recommendations could have on them,
if adopted.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act, Executive Order 13272, and DOT Policies
and Procedures
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.), we must consider whether a rulemaking would have a ``significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.'' ``Small
entities'' include small businesses, not-for-profit organizations that
are independently owned and operated and are not dominant in their
fields, and governmental jurisdictions with populations under 50,000.
It is possible that if PHMSA proposes to adopt the revisions
suggested in the petitions for rulemaking and NTSB Recommendations,
there may be a ``significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.'' As such, we would like small entities' input on the
issues presented in this ANPRM. If you believe that revisions to the
HMR would have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities, please provide information on such impacts.
Any future proposed rule would be developed in accordance with
Executive Order 13272 (``Proper Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking'') and DOT's procedures and policies to promote
compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act to ensure that potential
impacts on small entities of a regulatory action are properly
considered.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), 5 CFR 1320.8(d) requires that PHMSA provide interested members
of the public and affected agencies an opportunity to comment on
information collection and recordkeeping requests. This ANPRM does not
impose new information collection requirements. Depending on the
results of our request for comments to this ANPRM, a decrease may
result in the annual burden and costs under OMB Control Number 2137-
0559. This reduction would be based on P-1507. Specifically, the burden
associated with submitting an approval application would be reduced if
PHMSA adds language that enables FRA to publish guidance on specific
elements of non-conformity that would no longer be subject to approval
by the Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety.
PHMSA specifically requests comments on the information collection
and recordkeeping burdens associated with this ANPRM.
F. Environmental Assessment
The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4375,
requires that federal agencies analyze proposed actions to determine
whether the action will have a significant impact on the human
environment. The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations
require federal agencies to conduct an environmental review considering
(1) the need for the proposed action, (2) alternatives to the proposed
action, (3) probable environmental impacts of the proposed action and
alternatives, and (4) the agencies and persons consulted during the
consideration process. 40 CFR 1508.9(b). PHMSA welcomes any data or
information related to environmental impacts that may result if the
petitions and recommendations are adopted, as well as possible
alternatives and their environmental impacts.
G. Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the electronic form of any written
communications and comments received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the document (or signing the
document, if submitted on behalf of an association, business, labor
union, etc.). You may review DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement,
published in the Federal Register on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477) or
you may visit https://www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
H. Executive Order 13609 and International Trade Analysis
Under Executive Order 13609, agencies must consider whether the
impacts associated with significant variations between domestic and
international regulatory approaches are unnecessary or may impair the
ability of American businesses to export and compete internationally.
In meeting shared challenges involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues, regulatory approaches developed
through international cooperation can provide equivalent protection to
standards developed independently while also minimizing unnecessary
differences.
Similarly, the Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (Pub. L. 96-39), as
amended by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (Pub. L. 103-465),
prohibits Federal agencies from establishing any standards or engaging
in related activities that create unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
commerce of the United States. For purposes of these requirements,
Federal agencies may participate in the establishment of international
standards, so long as the standards have a legitimate domestic
objective, such as providing for safety, and do not operate to exclude
imports that meet this objective. The statute also requires
consideration of international standards and, where appropriate, that
they be the basis for U.S. standards.
PHMSA participates in the establishment of international standards
in order to protect the safety of the American public, and we have
assessed the effects of the proposed rule to ensure that it does not
cause unnecessary obstacles to foreign trade. Accordingly, this
rulemaking is consistent with E.O. 13609 and PHMSA's obligations under
the Trade Agreement Act, as amended.
PHMSA welcomes any data or information related to international
impacts that may result if the petitions and recommendations are
adopted, as well as possible alternatives and their international
impacts. Please describe the impacts and the basis for the comment.
[[Page 54861]]
I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This Rulemaking
This ANPRM is published under the authority of 49 U.S.C. 5103(b),
which authorizes the Secretary of Transportation to ``prescribe
regulations for the safe transportation, including security, of
hazardous materials in intrastate, interstate, and foreign commerce.''
The petitions and recommendations addressed in the ANPRM purport to
address safety issues with the transportation of hazardous materials in
commerce. Our goal in this ANPRM is to gather the necessary information
to determine a course of action in a potential Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM).
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
A regulation identifier number (RIN) is assigned to each regulatory
action listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulations. The
Regulatory Information Service Center publishes the Unified Agenda in
April and October of each year. The RIN contained in the heading of
this document can be used to cross-reference this action with the
Unified Agenda.
Issued in Washington, DC, on August 30, 2013, under authority
delegated in 49 CFR 1.97(b).
William Schoonover,
Deputy Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials Safety, Pipeline
and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
[FR Doc. 2013-21621 Filed 9-5-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-60-P