Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Withdrawal of Federal Implementation Plan; Texas; Prevention of Significant Deterioration; Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule Revisions, 9123-9133 [2014-03429]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 32 / Tuesday, February 18, 2014 / Proposed Rules
§ 961.8 Hearing Official authority and
responsibilities.
The Hearing Official’s authority
includes, but is not limited to, the
following:
(a) Ruling on all motions or requests
by the parties.
(b) Issuing notices, orders or
memoranda to the parties concerning
the hearing proceedings.
(c) Conducting telephone conferences
with the parties to expedite the
proceedings. The Hearing Official will
prepare a Memorandum of Telephone
Conference, which shall be transmitted
to both parties and which serves as the
official record of that conference.
(d) Determining whether an oral
hearing shall be conducted, the type of
oral hearing to be held, and setting the
place, date, and time for such hearing.
(e) Administering oaths or
affirmations to witnesses.
(f) Conducting the hearing in a
manner to maintain discipline and
decorum while assuring that relevant,
reliable and probative evidence is
elicited on the issues in dispute, but
irrelevant, immaterial or repetitious
evidence is excluded. The Hearing
Official in his or her discretion may
examine witnesses to ensure that a
satisfactory record is developed.
(g) Establishing the record in the case.
The weight to be attached to any
evidence of record will rest within the
discretion of the Hearing Official.
Except as the Hearing Official may
otherwise order, no proof shall be
received in evidence after completion of
an oral hearing or, in cases submitted on
the written record, after notification by
the Hearing Official that the record is
closed. The Hearing Official may require
either party, with appropriate notice to
the other party, to submit additional
evidence on any relevant matter;
(h) Granting reasonable time
extensions or other relief for good cause
shown in the Hearing Official’s sole
discretion.
(i) Issuing the final decision. The
decision must include the
determination of the amount and
validity of the alleged debt and, where
applicable, the repayment schedule.
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§ 961.9
Opportunity for oral hearing.
An oral hearing shall be conducted in
the sole discretion of the Hearing
Official. An oral hearing may be
conducted in-person, by telephone, by
video conference, or other appropriate
means as directed by the Hearing
Official. When the Hearing Official
determines that an oral hearing shall not
be conducted, the decision shall be
based solely on the written submissions.
The Hearing Official shall arrange for
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the recording and transcription of an
oral hearing, which shall serve as the
official record of the hearing. In the
event of an unexcused absence, the
hearing may proceed without the
participation of the absent party.
§ 961.10 Effect of Hearing Official’s
decision; motion for reconsideration.
(a) After the receipt of written
submissions or after the conclusion of
the hearing and the receipt of posthearing briefs, if any, the Hearing
Official shall issue a written decision,
which shall include the findings of fact
and conclusions of law, relied upon.
(b) The Hearing Official shall send
each party a copy of the decision. The
Hearing Official’s decision shall be the
final administrative determination on
the employee’s debt or repayment
schedule. No reconsideration of the
decision will be allowed unless a
motion for reconsideration is filed
within 10 days from receipt of the
decision and shows good cause for
reconsideration. Reconsideration will be
allowed only in the discretion of the
Hearing Official. A motion for
reconsideration by the employee will
not operate to stay a collection action
authorized by the Hearing Official’s
decision.
§ 961.11 Consequences for failure to
comply with rules.
(a) The Hearing Official may
determine that the employee has
abandoned the right to a hearing, and
that administrative offset may be
initiated if the employee files his or her
petition late without good cause; or files
a withdrawal of the employee’s petition
for a hearing.
(b) The Hearing Official may
determine that the administrative offset
may not be initiated if the Postal Service
fails to file the answer or files the
answer late without good cause; or files
a withdrawal of the debt determination
at issue.
(c) If a party fails to comply with
these Rules or the Hearing Official’s
orders, the Hearing Official may take
such action as he or she deems
reasonable and proper under the
circumstances, including dismissing or
granting the petition as appropriate.
§ 961.12
Ex parte communications.
Ex parte communications are not
allowed between a party and the
Hearing Official or the Official’s staff. Ex
parte communication means an oral or
written communication, not on the
public record, with one party only with
respect to which reasonable prior notice
to all parties is not given, but it shall not
include requests for status reports or
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procedural matters. A memorandum of
any communication between the
Hearing Official and a party will be
transmitted to both parties.
Stanley F. Mires,
Attorney, Legal Policy & Legislative Advice.
[FR Doc. 2014–03368 Filed 2–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–12–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2013–0808; FRL–9906–62–
Region-6]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Withdrawal of Federal Implementation
Plan; Texas; Prevention of Significant
Deterioration; Greenhouse Gas
Tailoring Rule Revisions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
portions of two revisions to the Texas
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submitted by the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to EPA
on October 5, 2010, and December 2,
2013. Together, these two SIP submittals
revise the Texas Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD) Program
to provide for the regulation of
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and
clarify the applicability of Best
Available Control Technology (BACT)
for all PSD permit applications. The
December 2, 2013, submittal is a request
for parallel processing of revisions
proposed by the TCEQ on October 23,
2013. The December 2, 2013, submittal
includes proposed revisions to the
Texas SIP to provide the State of Texas
with the express authority to regulate
GHG emissions, issue PSD permits
governing GHG emissions, establish
appropriate emission thresholds for
determining which new stationary
sources and modifications to existing
stationary sources become subject to
Texas’s PSD permitting requirements for
their GHG emissions, and revises
several Minor New Source Review
(NSR) provisions to specify that Minor
NSR permit mechanisms cannot be used
for authorizing GHG emissions. The
December 2, 2013, SIP revision also
defers until July 21, 2014, application of
the PSD permitting requirements to
biogenic carbon dioxide emissions from
bioenergy and other biogenic stationary
sources. The October 5, 2010, submittal
SUMMARY:
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revises the Texas SIP to clarify that all
PSD permits must undergo BACT
review consistent with the requirements
in the Federal and Texas PSD programs.
EPA is proposing to approve portions of
the October 5, 2010, and December 2,
2013, SIP revisions to the Texas SIP and
NSR permitting program as consistent
with federal requirements for PSD
permitting of GHG emissions. EPA is
proposing to sever and take no action on
the portion of the October 5, 2010, SIP
revision which pertains to the Texas
Minor NSR program for Qualified
Facilities. EPA is also proposing to sever
and take no action on the portion of the
December 2, 2013, SIP revision that
relates to the provisions of EPA’s July
20, 2011, ‘‘Deferral for CO2 Emissions
from Bioenergy and other Biogenic
Sources Under the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD) and Title
V Programs’’ (Biomass Deferral Rule), as
the DC Circuit Court of Appeals issued
an order to vacate that rule on July 13,
2013. EPA is also proposing to rescind
the Federal Implementation Plan (FIP)
for Texas, with three limited
possibilities for retained authority,
which was put in place to ensure the
availability of a permitting authority for
GHG permitting in Texas until final
approval of the Texas SIP PSD GHG
program. EPA is proposing this action
under section 110 and part C of the
Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before March 20, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R06–
OAR–2013–0808 by one of the following
methods:
• www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• EMail: Ms. Adina Wiley at
wiley.adina@epa.gov.
• Mail or Delivery: Ms. Adina Wiley,
Air Permits Section (6PD–R),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 1200, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2013–
0808. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
the disclosure of which is restricted by
statute. Do not submit information
through https://www.regulations.gov or
email, if you believe that it is CBI or
otherwise protected from disclosure.
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The https://www.regulations.gov Web
site is an ‘‘anonymous access’’ system,
which means that EPA will not know
your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send an email
comment directly to EPA without going
through https://www.regulations.gov,
your email address will be
automatically captured and included as
part of the comment that is placed in the
public docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment along with any disk or CD–
ROM submitted. If EPA cannot read
your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for
clarification, EPA may not be able to
consider your comment. Electronic files
should avoid the use of special
characters and any form of encryption
and should be free of any defects or
viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket, visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: The index to the docket for
this action is available electronically at
www.regulations.gov and in hard copy
at EPA Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas. While all
documents in the docket are listed in
the index, some information may be
publicly available only at the hard copy
location (e.g., copyrighted material), and
some may not be publicly available at
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment with the person listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
paragraph below or Mr. Bill Deese at
214–665–7253.
Ms.
Adina Wiley (6PD–R), Air Permits
Section, Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue
(6PD–R), Suite 1200, Dallas, TX 75202–
2733. The telephone number is (214)
665–2115. Ms. Wiley can also be
reached via electronic mail at
wiley.adina@epa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Our Proposed Action
A. History of EPA’s GHG-Related Actions
B. EPA’s Biomass Deferral Rule
C. EPA’s Tailoring Rule Step 3
II. Summary of State Submittals
A. October 5, 2010
B. December 2, 2013
III. EPA’s Analysis of the State Submittals
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A. Analysis of the October 5, 2010 State
Submittal
B. Analysis of the December 2, 2013 State
Submittal
i. Analysis of the Proposed Revisions to the
Texas PSD Program
ii. Analysis of the Proposed Non-PSD
Revisions to the Texas SIP
IV. EPA’s Analysis for Rescinding the Texas
PSD FIP
A. Evaluation of Rescission of the GHG
PSD FIP at 40 CFR 52.2305(a), (b) and (c)
B. Transition Process upon Rescission of
the GHG PSD FIP for Pending GHG PSD
Permit Applications and Issued GHG
PSD Permits
V. Proposed Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Our Proposed Action
The CAA at section 110(a)(2)(C)
requires states to develop and submit to
EPA for approval into the SIP,
preconstruction review and permitting
programs applicable to certain new and
modified stationary sources of air
pollutants for attainment and
nonattainment areas that cover both
major and minor new sources and
modifications, collectively referred to as
the NSR SIP. The CAA NSR SIP
program is composed of three separate
programs: PSD, Nonattainment NSR
(NNSR), and Minor NSR. PSD is
established in part C of title I of the
CAA and applies in areas that meet the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS)—‘‘attainment areas’’—as well
as areas where there is insufficient
information to determine if the area
meets the NAAQS—‘‘unclassifiable
areas.’’ The NNSR SIP program is
established in part D of title I of the
CAA and applies in areas that are not in
attainment of the NAAQS—
‘‘nonattainment areas.’’ The Minor NSR
SIP program addresses construction or
modification activities that do not emit,
or have the potential to emit, beyond
certain major source thresholds and
thus do not qualify as ‘‘major’’ and
applies regardless of the designation of
the area in which a source is located.
EPA regulations governing the criteria
that states must satisfy for EPA approval
of the NSR programs as part of the SIP
are contained in 40 CFR sections
51.160—51.166.
Texas submitted on October 5, 2010,
and December 2, 2013, a collection of
regulations for approval by EPA into the
Texas SIP, including some regulations
specific to the Texas PSD permitting
program to clarify the applicability of
BACT for all PSD permit applications
and to provide for regulation of GHG
emissions through the Texas PSD
program. The October 5, 2010, submittal
included revisions to the Permit
Application requirements for the Texas
NSR program at 30 TAC Section 116.111
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to clarify that federal BACT will be
applied to all PSD permit applications,
in addition to the application of Texas
BACT process as required by the Texas
Clean Air Act. The October 5, 2010,
submittal also included revisions to the
Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities
Program, which is severable from
today’s proposed action on the Texas
PSD program. The December 2, 2013,
submittal includes revisions to the
Texas SIP and the Texas NSR program
to (1) establish that the State of Texas
has the express authority to regulate
GHG emissions, (2) provide for the
issuance of PSD permits governing GHG
emissions, (3) establish appropriate
emission thresholds for determining
which new stationary sources and
modification projects become subject to
Texas’s PSD permitting requirements for
their GHG emissions consistent with the
‘‘PSD and Title V Greenhouse Gas
Tailoring Final Rule’’ (75 FR 31514)
hereafter referred to as the ‘‘Tailoring
Rule’’, and (4) make revisions to the
Texas Minor NSR program to limit the
scope of GHG permitting to the Texas
PSD program. The December 2, 2013,
submittal also included provisions to
adopt and implement EPA’s July 20,
2011, GHG Biomass Deferral.
We have evaluated the SIP
submissions for whether they meet the
CAA and 40 CFR Part 51, and are
consistent with EPA’s interpretation of
the relevant provisions. Today’s
proposed action and the accompanying
Technical Support Document (TSD)
present our rationale for proposing
approval of these regulations as meeting
the minimum federal requirements for
the adoption and implementation of the
PSD SIP permitting programs. Note that
Texas is currently subject to the PSD
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) at 40
CFR 52.2305. See 76 FR 25178, May 3,
2011. We are also proposing to rescind
the PSD FIP for Texas when we finalize
today’s proposed action. EPA is
proposing to sever and take no action on
the portions of the October 5, 2010,
submittal that pertain to the Texas
Minor NSR Qualified Facilities Program.
EPA is proposing to sever and take no
action on the portions of the December
2, 2013, submittal that relate to the
provisions of EPA’s Biomass Deferral for
the reasons stated above.
A. History of EPA’s GHG-Related
Actions
This section summarizes EPA’s recent
GHG-related actions. Please see the
preambles for the identified GHGrelated rulemakings for more
information.
EPA has recently undertaken a series
of actions pertaining to the regulation of
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GHGs that, although for the most part
are distinct from one another, establish
the overall framework for today’s
proposed action on the Texas SIP. Four
of these actions include, as they are
commonly called, the ‘‘Endangerment
Finding’’ and ‘‘Cause or Contribute
Finding,’’ which EPA issued in a single
final action,1 the ‘‘Johnson Memo
Reconsideration,’’ 2 the ‘‘Light-Duty
Vehicle Rule,’’ 3 and the ‘‘Tailoring
Rule.’’ 4 Taken together and in
conjunction with the CAA, these actions
established regulatory requirements for
GHGs emitted from new motor vehicles
and new motor vehicle engines;
determined that such regulations, when
they took effect on January 2, 2011,
subjected GHGs emitted from stationary
sources to PSD requirements; and
limited the applicability of PSD
requirements to GHG sources on a
phased-in basis. EPA took this last
action in the Tailoring Rule, which,
more specifically, established
appropriate GHG emission thresholds
for determining the applicability of PSD
requirements to GHG-emitting sources.
PSD is implemented through the SIP
system, and so in December 2010, EPA
promulgated several rules to implement
the new GHG PSD SIP program.
Recognizing that some states had
approved SIP PSD programs that did not
apply PSD to GHGs, EPA issued a SIP
call for 13 states (including Texas) on
December 13, 2010, that would require
those states with SIPs that have
approved PSD programs but do not
authorize PSD permitting for GHGs to
submit a SIP revision providing such
authority.5 EPA advised the States that
as of January 2, 2011, if the States had
not submitted, and EPA had not
approved, a SIP revision establishing
PSD permitting for GHGs, or if EPA had
not promulgated a Federal
Implementation Plan (FIP) by the same
time, then sources with GHG emissions
1 ‘‘Endangerment and Cause or Contribute
Findings for Greenhouse Gases Under Section
202(a) of the Clean Air Act.’’ 74 FR 66496
(December 15, 2009).
2 ‘‘Interpretation of Regulations that Determine
Pollutants Covered by Clean Air Act Permitting
Programs.’’ 75 FR 17004 (April 2, 2010).
3 ‘‘Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emission
Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy
Standards; Final Rule.’’ 75 FR 25324 (May 7, 2010).
4 Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Title
V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule; Final Rule.’’ 75
FR 31514 (June 3, 2010).
5 ‘‘Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits
Under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Program to Sources of Greenhouse Gas Emissions:
Finding of Substantial Inadequacy and SIP Call,’’ 75
FR 77698 (Dec. 13, 2010). Specifically, by notice
dated December 13, 2010, EPA finalized a ‘‘SIP
Call’’ that would require those states with SIPs that
have approved PSD programs but do not authorize
PSD permitting for GHGs to submit a SIP revision
providing such authority.
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could, as a practical matter, be
precluded from lawfully constructing or
modifying due to the lack of a
permitting authority to issue the
required permit.
All of the states identified in the SIP
Call, except for Texas, either (i)
submitted a corrective SIP revision to
apply their CAA PSD programs to
sources of GHG emissions promptly
enough to avoid adverse impacts on
their new or modifying sources, or (ii)
did not object to EPA establishing a
deadline for SIP revisions of December
22, 2010. For the latter states, EPA
published a finding of failure to submit
the required SIP revision by the
specified deadline and then
immediately promulgated the GHG PSD
FIP to ensure the availability of a
permitting authority for GHG emitting
sources subject to PSD requirements in
those states.6 7
The State of Texas did not identify a
GHG SIP revision deadline; therefore,
EPA assigned a default twelve-month
SIP revision deadline of December 1,
2011. This meant that, absent further
action, there would be no authority in
Texas to issue PSD permits starting
January 2, 2011. In that case, GHGemitting sources seeking to undertake
construction or modification activities
during almost all of 2011 would have no
permitting authority available to issue a
PSD permit until, at the earliest,
December 2011.
To remedy this situation, EPA
determined that pursuant to CAA
Section 110(k)(6), its prior approval of
Texas’s PSD program ‘‘was in error’’
because, among other things the SIP
failed to address all pollutants that
would become subject to regulation in
the future or provide assurance of
Texas’s legal authority to do so. EPA
corrected its previous full approval of
Texas’s PSD SIP to be a partial approval
and partial disapproval. The partial
disapproval reflected the PSD SIP’s
failure to address how PSD would apply
to newly regulated pollutants. At the
same time, EPA promulgated a FIP that
applied PSD to GHGs, which are the
newly regulated pollutants presently at
issue. That FIP established EPA as the
permitting authority, so that as of
January 2, 2011, EPA could issue PSD
permits to Texas’s GHG-emitting
6 ‘‘Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits
Under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Program to Sources of Greenhouse Gas Emissions:
Finding of Failure To Submit State Implementation
Plan Revisions Required for Greenhouse Gases,’’ 75
FR 81874 (December 29, 2010).
7 ‘‘Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits
Under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Program to Sources of Greenhouse Gas Emissions:
Federal Implementation Plan,’’ 75 FR 82246
(December 30, 2010).
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sources that sought to undertake
construction or modification activities.
EPA took this action in December
2010, through an interim final
rulemaking, without a prior proposal,
under the ‘‘good cause’’ exception of 5
U.S.C. Section 553(b)(B), in light of the
need to establish a permitting authority
by January 2, 2011. EPA further
provided that the interim final
rulemaking would expire by May 1,
2011. At the same time, EPA proposed
to take the same action through noticeand-comment rulemaking. By May 1,
2011, EPA completed the notice-andcomment rulemaking by finalizing a
rule that mirrored the interim final
rulemaking by correcting the previous
full approval of Texas’s PSD SIP
provision to be a partial approval and
partial disapproval, and by
promulgating a FIP that established EPA
as the permitting authority for GHGemitting sources.8
For other states, EPA recognized that
many states had approved SIP PSD
programs that do apply PSD to GHGs,
but that do so for sources that emit as
little as 100 or 250 tpy of GHG, and that
do not limit PSD applicability to GHGs
to the higher thresholds in the Tailoring
Rule. Therefore, EPA issued the GHG
PSD SIP Narrowing Rule.9 Under that
rule, EPA withdrew its approval of the
affected SIPs to the extent those SIPs
covered GHG-emitting sources below
the Tailoring Rule thresholds. EPA
based its action primarily on the ‘‘error
correction’’ provisions of CAA section
110(k)(6).
B. EPA’s Biomass Deferral Rule
On July 20, 2011, EPA promulgated
the final Biomass Deferral Rule. The
Biomass Deferral delayed until July 21,
2014, the consideration of CO2
emissions from bioenergy and other
biogenic sources when determining
whether a stationary source meets the
PSD and Title V applicability
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8 Texas,
Wyoming and industry challenged the
GHG PSD SIP Call rules in the D.C. Circuit. Texas
and industry also challenged the Texas error
correction rules in the D.C. Circuit. On July 26,
2013, the D.C. Circuit handed down a single
decision for two separate cases: (1) the challenge by
Texas, Wyoming and industry to three related GHG
PSD SIP Call rules (Utility Air Regulatory Group v.
EPA, No. 11–1037), and (2) the challenge by Texas
and industry to two related Texas GHG PSD error
correction and FIP rules (Texas v. EPA, No. 10–
1425). The decision dismisses challenges to both of
these sets of rules by holding that none of the
petitioners had standing to challenge any of the
rules.
9 ‘‘Limitation of Approval of Prevention of
Significant Deterioration Provisions Concerning
Greenhouse Gas Emitting Sources in State
Implementation Plans,’’ 75 FR 82536 (December 30,
2010). The GHG PSD SIP Narrowing Rule does not
apply to Texas because the GHG PSD FIP is in
place.
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thresholds. The D.C. Circuit Court
issued its decision to vacate the Biomass
Deferral Rule on July 12, 2013.
C. EPA’s Tailoring Rule Step 3
On July 12, 2012, EPA promulgated
the final ‘‘Prevention of Significant
Deterioration and Title V Greenhouse
Gas Tailoring Rule Step 3 and GHG
Plantwide Applicability Limits’’ (GHG
Tailoring Rule Step 3 and GHG PALs).
EPA’s rationale for the rule is available
in the notice of final rulemaking at 77
FR 41051. EPA finalized Step 3 by
determining not to lower the current
GHG applicability thresholds from the
Step 1 and Step 2 levels because state
permitting authorities had not had
sufficient time and opportunity to
develop the necessary infrastructure and
increase their GHG permitting expertise
and capacity, and the state permitting
authorities and EPA had not had the
opportunity to develop streamlining
measures to improve permit
implementation. See 77 FR 41051,
41052. The Tailoring Rule Step 3 also
promulgated revisions to our regulations
under 40 CFR part 52 for better
implementation of the federal program
for establishing PALs for GHG
emissions. A PAL establishes a sitespecific plantwide emission level for a
pollutant that allows the source to make
changes at the facility without triggering
the requirements of the PSD program,
provided that emissions do not exceed
the PAL level. Under the EPA’s
interpretation of the federal PAL
provisions, such PALs are already
available under PSD for non-GHG
pollutants and for GHGs on a mass
basis, and we revised the PAL
regulations to allow for GHG PALs to be
established on a CO2e basis as well. We
also revised the regulations to allow a
GHG-only source to submit an
application for a CO2e-based GHG PAL
while also maintaining its minor source
status. We believe that these actions
could streamline PSD permitting
programs by allowing sources and
permitting authorities to address GHG
emissions one time for a source and
avoid repeated subsequent permitting
actions for a 10-year period. See 77 FR
41051, 41052.
The revisions to the PSD PAL rules
for GHG permitting are voluntary for a
state to adopt and implement. The
December 2, 2013, submittal from Texas
does not address the Tailoring Rule Step
3 GHG PAL revisions.
II. Summary of State Submittals
A. October 5, 2010
In a letter dated October 5, 2010, Mr.
Bryan W. Shaw, Ph.D., Chairman of the
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TCEQ, submitted revisions to the Texas
SIP that were adopted on September 15,
2010, and became effective on October
7, 2010. This submittal included the
following revisions that were submitted
primarily to address the Texas Minor
NSR Qualified Facilities Program:
• Substantive and non-substantive
revisions to General Definitions for the
Texas NSR Program at 30 TAC Section
116.10,
• New definitions at 30 TAC Section
116.17 for the Texas Qualified Facilities
Program,
• Substantive and non-substantive
revisions to the General Application
Provisions for the Texas NSR Program at
30 TAC Section 116.111,
• Substantive revisions to the
provisions for Changes to Facilities at 30
TAC Section 116.116 specific to
qualified facilities, and
• Substantive and non-substantive
revisions to the provisions for
Documentation and Notification of
Changes to Qualified Facilities at 30
TAC Section 116.117.
EPA’s proposed action today will only
evaluate the revisions to the General
Application requirements at 30 TAC
Section 116.111 that are necessary to
support the Texas PSD program,
including the permitting of GHG
emissions in Texas. EPA is severing and
taking no action at this time on the
remaining components of the October 5,
2010, SIP submittal that address the
Qualified Facilities program. By
severing, we mean that the October 5,
2010 submittal of the revisions to the
General Application requirements at 30
TAC Section 116.111 can be
implemented independently of the
portions of the submittal relating to the
Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities
program. EPA will evaluate and take
action on the remaining portions of the
October 5, 2010, SIP submittal at a later
date.
B. December 2, 2013
In a letter dated December 2, 2013,
Mr. Zak Covar, Executive Director of the
TCEQ, requested parallel processing of
the October 23, 2013, proposed new and
amended rules to implement the
requirements of Texas House Bill (HB)
788, 83rd Legislature, 2013. Texas HB
788 directed the TCEQ to adopt rules
necessary to implement the
requirements of EPA’s GHG Tailoring
Rule and limit the regulation of GHGs
only to the Texas PSD program. The
December 2, 2013, parallel processing
submittal consisted of the following
revisions:
• 30 TAC Chapter 39—Public Notice.
The rules governing public notice for
applications for air quality permits are
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contained in Chapter 39. Emissions of
GHGs will be covered under the Texas
PSD program, and will therefore follow
the same public notice provisions as
other PSD permit applications in Texas.
The TCEQ has made changes to indicate
that certain items required by a PSD
public notice may not be applicable to
GHG PSD permit applications—such as
an air quality analysis or a Class I
impact analysis for GHGs. Additionally,
Texas HB 788, from the 83rd
Legislature, 2013, has specifically
exempted GHG PSD permit applications
from the Texas requirement to provide
an opportunity for the contested case
hearing process.
Æ 30 TAC Section 39.411—Text of
Public Notice.
The TCEQ has proposed revisions to
30 TAC Section 39.411 that will require
the public notice for a GHG PSD permit
application to include a statement that
any person is entitled to request a
public meeting or a notice and comment
hearing. The TCEQ has also amended
this section to include the phrase ‘‘as
applicable’’ in reference to the air
quality analyses that must be made
available for review. Additionally, the
TCEQ has proposed several
typographical corrections throughout
section 39.411.
Æ 30 TAC Section 39.412—Combined
Notice for Certain Greenhouse Gases
Permit Applications.
The TCEQ has proposed this new
section to streamline the permit
application process only for permit
applications that have been transferred
from EPA after the effective date of the
FIP rescission, or for permit
applications that were previously filed
with EPA and EPA has already
published a draft permit. This new
section would allow a permit applicant
to issue one public notice combining the
requirements of the Texas first notice
(Notice of Receipt of Application and
Intent to Obtain Permit (NORI)) and the
Texas second notice (Notice of
Application and Preliminary Decision
(NAPD)).
Æ 30 TAC Section 39.419—Notice of
Application and Preliminary Decision.
The TCEQ has amended this section
to add the phrase ‘‘as applicable’’ in
reference to the air quality analysis that
must be available for public review.
Æ 30 TAC Section 39.420—
Transmittal of the Executive Director’s
Response to Comments and Decision.
TCEQ has amended this section to
include a new provision at 30 TAC
Section 39.420(e)(4) that says public
notice documents for GHG PSD permits
do not need to include instructions on
how to request a contested case hearing
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or requesting the commission reconsider
the Executive Director’s decision.
• 30 TAC Chapter 101—General Air
Quality Rules.
The TCEQ has amended the
definitions and general rules germane to
the Texas SIP to implement the
requirements of Texas HB 788 and to
provide authority to regulate GHGs.
Æ 30 TAC Section 101.1—Definitions.
D The TCEQ has proposed a new
definition for GHGs at 30 TAC Section
101.1(42).
D The TCEQ has also proposed
several amendments to the definition of
Reportable Quantity at 30 TAC Section
101.1(89) to establish that there is no
reportable quantity for GHGs (except for
the specific individual air contaminants
found in the current definition of RQ),
and establish a reportable quantity of
5,000 pounds for 3-pentanone,
1,1,1,2,2,4,5,5,5-nonafluoro-4(trifluromethyl)-, CAS No. 756–13–8
(hereafter referred to as C6 fluoroketone)
rather than the default reportable
quantity of 100 pounds.
D The TCEQ has also proposed
amendments to the definition of
unauthorized emissions at 30 TAC
Section 101.1(108) to exclude emissions
of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane
(CH4).
D The TCEQ has also proposed a
number of non-substantive amendments
to correct for renumbering and internal
referencing to other TAC provisions.
Æ 30 TAC Section 101.10—Emissions
Inventory Requirements.
D The TCEQ has proposed
amendments to 30 TAC Section
101.10(a)(3) to provide an exception for
GHG emissions to the applicable criteria
for which an owner or operator is
required to submit emission inventories.
D The TCEQ has also proposed nonsubstantive revisions for renumbering
and formatting and to update references
to other TAC provisions.
Æ 30 TAC Section 101.201—
Emissions Event Reporting and
Recordkeeping Requirements.
The TCEQ has proposed an
amendment to specify that any
emissions of GHG, individually or
collectively, are not subject to emissions
event reporting.
• 30 TAC Chapter 106—Permits by
Rule.
The Texas Permits by Rule (PBR)
program under 30 TAC Chapter 106, is
one component of the SIP-approved
Minor NSR program in Texas. The
TCEQ has proposed amendments to the
Minor NSR PBR program at 30 TAC
Section 106.2 to clarify that emissions of
GHG cannot be authorized through a
PBR. Additionally, the TCEQ has
proposed an amendment to 30 TAC
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Section 106.4 to specify that for sources
that are only subject to PSD for GHG
emissions, a PBR can still be used to
authorize the non-PSD emissions;
provided that the source obtains the
GHG PSD construction permit prior to
commencing construction.
• 30 TAC Chapter 116—Control of
Air Pollution by Permits for New
Construction or Modification.
The Texas PSD program and
necessary implementing definitions are
SIP-approved under 30 TAC Chapter
116. With the exception of PBR which
are codified at 30 TAC Chapter 106, the
remainder of the SIP-approved Texas
Minor NSR program is SIP-approved at
30 TAC Chapter 116. The TCEQ has
proposed several amendments to this
chapter to provide for PSD permitting of
GHG emissions and to limit the scope of
the Texas Minor NSR programs to not
include emissions of GHG. Specifically,
the TCEQ has proposed the following:
Æ 30 TAC Section 116.12—
Nonattainment and Prevention of
Significant Deterioration Definitions.
D The TCEQ has proposed new
definitions for the ‘‘CO2 equivalent’’ and
the pollutant GHG.
D The TCEQ has also proposed
revisions to the definitions of ‘‘Federally
Regulated NSR pollutant,’’ ‘‘major
stationary source,’’ and ‘‘major
modifications.’’
D The TCEQ has also proposed
renumbering to accommodate the
proposed new definitions.
Æ 30 TAC Section 116.111—General
Application.
D The TCEQ has proposed an
amendment to the general application
provisions to require a PSD permit for
GHG emissions that meet or exceed the
thresholds for GHG PSD permitting
established in new proposed section
116.164. This amendment will specify
that GHG permitting is statewide,
without regard to an attainment
designation for GHG permitting.
Æ 30 TAC Section 116.160—Prevision
of Significant Deterioration
Requirements.
D TCEQ has proposed an amendment
to 30 TAC Section 116.160(a) to require
new major sources of GHG emissions or
major modifications of GHG emissions
to comply with the PSD permitting
program regardless of location of the
source.
D TCEQ has proposed amendments to
30 TAC Section 116.160(b)(2) to include
references to the netting requirements
for GHG applicability thresholds
established in new section 116.164.
D TCEQ has also proposed an
amendment to 30 TAC Section
116.160(c) to clarify that emissions of
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GHG are subject to the applicability
thresholds in new section 116.164.
Æ 30 TAC Section 116.164—
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Applicability for Greenhouse Gases
Sources.
The TCEQ has proposed a new
subsection to the Texas PSD program
specifically for the permitting of GHG
emissions. This new subsection
establishes the applicability thresholds
developed by EPA in the GHG Tailoring
Rule.
Æ 30 TAC Section 116.169—
Greenhouse Gas Transition.
The TCEQ has proposed a new
subsection to the Texas PSD program to
address the transition process for permit
applicants upon the effective date of the
rescission of the GHG PSD FIP by the
EPA Administrator. The proposed
subsection does not identify the actions
to be taken by EPA; it only establishes
that upon the rescission of the FIP, the
TCEQ will accept the transfer and
review of pending permit applications.
The actions to be taken by EPA during
the transition process will be discussed
in section IV.B. of this notice.
• 30 TAC Chapter 122—Federal
Operating Permits.
The TCEQ proposed several
amendments to the Texas Title V
program on October 23, 2013; but only
the proposed revisions to 30 TAC
Section 122.122—Potential to Emit—
have been submitted for parallel
processing into the Texas SIP. In this
proposed revision, the TCEQ amends
the potential to emit provisions to
clarify that existing sites must certify
emissions of GHG below major source
thresholds. Existing sites that are
currently operating will have 90 days
after EPA’s FIP rescission to certify
emissions of GHGs to avoid
applicability of Title V permitting.
• The TCEQ December 2, 2013,
commitment letter also addresses the
requirement that the state provide the
necessary assurances of its authority to
address all future federally regulated
pollutants under the Texas PSD
program, in order to remove the PSD FIP
at 40 CFR 52.2305(c).
• The January 13, 2014, letter from
TCEQ demonstrates its authority to
administer the Texas PSD program for
EPA issued GHG PSD permits.
III. EPA’s Analysis of the State
Submittals
A. Analysis of the October 5, 2010, State
Submittal
As explained previously in section
II.A., EPA’s analysis of the October 5,
2010, submittal only addresses the
submitted substantive and non-
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substantive revisions to the General
Application provisions to the Texas
NSR program at 30 Section TAC
116.111. The substantive revision to 30
TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(C) clarifies
when federal BACT will be applied to
PSD permit applications. The TCAA
requires the TCEQ to apply BACT to all
facilities and to all contaminants
emitted from said facilities that are
permitted under the TCAA, including
non-PSD sources and modifications.
EPA refers to this process as ‘‘Texas
BACT.’’ We view the application of
Texas BACT, which would include
BACT for Minor NSR permitting, to be
a separate requirement from the
application of federal BACT as required
in EPA’s PSD regulations and the Texas
SIP-approved PSD Program. To clarify
the requirements of the TCAA and to
ensure compliance with federal PSD
regulations, the TCEQ has submitted
revisions to the general application
provisions at 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(C). Pursuant to the
submitted revisions, BACT consistent
with the Texas Clean Air Act (Texas
BACT) will be applied to all permit
applications under the TCAA. However,
prior to the application of Texas BACT,
if the permit application is for a new
source or modification subject to PSD,
then BACT consistent with the federal
PSD requirements and the SIP-approved
Texas PSD program must be applied.
The SIP-approved Texas PSD program at
30 TAC Section 116.160(c)(1)(A)
incorporates the requirements for BACT
at 40 CFR 52.21(b)(12).10 The submitted
revision clearly requires that all PSD
subject applications go through federal
PSD BACT in addition to Texas BACT;
for PSD permit applications, federal
BACT requirements will govern the
permitting process if there is a
discrepancy between the federal BACT
and Texas BACT analysis. The TCEQ
also submitted several non-substantive
revisions made throughout 30 TAC
Section 116.111 to spell out acronyms
and to clarify/update cross-references. A
complete listing of all the revisions is
available in the accompanying TSD for
this rulemaking. EPA proposes to
approve the October 5, 2010, revisions
10 The Texas PSD program incorporates the
federal PSD definition of BACT at 40 CFR
52.21(b)(12). This means that PSD BACT will be
based on the maximum degree of reduction for each
pollutant subject to regulation under the Act, taking
into account energy, environmental, and economic
impacts and other costs. The Texas BACT process
will apply to all permitted facilities and
contaminants—not just major sources—and is not
held to the same rigor as the federal PSD BACT
analysis. For example, minor NSR applicants only
have to meet controls currently permitted as
compared to the federal PSD requirement to use the
most stringent control technology.
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to 30 TAC Section 116.111 as consistent
with the PSD requirements at 40 CFR
51.166. Further, we note that the
substantive revision is consistent with
and supportive of revisions to the Texas
PSD program separately approved at 30
TAC Section 116.160 on September 15,
2010. See 75 FR 55978.
B. Analysis of the December 2, 2013,
State Submittal
As described in the discussion in
Section II.B of this proposal notice, the
TCEQ proposed revisions to several
portions of the Texas Air Code to
implement the requirements of Texas
HB 788 and to provide TCEQ the
authority to regulate GHG emissions
through the Texas PSD program. Texas
HB 788 required further revisions to the
Texas SIP and the Minor NSR program
to ensure that GHG emissions would
only be regulated via the PSD program
as required through EPA’s GHG
Tailoring Rule. The analysis in this
section will be presented based on those
revisions necessary for the PSD program
and those that are non-PSD.
EPA is parallel processing the
revisions proposed on October 23, 2013,
based on the request submitted on
December 2, 2013. This means that EPA
is proposing approval at the same time
that Texas is completing the public
comment and rulemaking process at the
state level. The December 2, 2013, SIP
revision request will not be complete
and will not meet all the adequacy
criteria until the state public process is
complete and the SIP revision is
submitted as a final adoption with a
letter from the Governor or Governor’s
designee. EPA is proposing to approve
the SIP revision request after
completion of the state public process
and final submittal.
i. Analysis of the Proposed Revisions to
the Texas PSD Program
Definitions To Effectuate Authority
TCEQ has proposed several new
definitions in the Texas SIP to adopt
and implement the permitting of GHGs
consistent with federal requirements.
• TCEQ proposed new definitions at
30 TAC Sections 101.1(42) and
116.12(16) to adopt the definition of
‘‘greenhouse gases’’. Based on our
analysis, EPA proposes to find that the
new definitions of GHG are consistent
with the federal PSD definition at 40
CFR 51.166(b)(48).
• The TCEQ has also proposed a new
definition for ‘‘carbon dioxide
equivalent (CO2e)’’ at 30 TAC Section
116.12(7)(A). Based on our analysis,
EPA proposes to find that the definition
at 30 TAC Section 116.12(7)(A) is
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consistent with the provisions at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(ii)(a) and (b).
• The TCEQ also proposed revisions
to the definition of ‘‘potential to emit’’
at 30 TAC Section 122.122. EPA
proposes to find that these revisions are
necessary to update the SIP-approved
definition to account for the permitting
of GHG emissions. The Texas PSD
program relies on a source’s potential to
emit for establishing applicability of the
PSD rules.
EPA’s analysis is that the new
definitions for GHG and CO2e at 30 TAC
Sections 101.1(42), 116.12(16), and
116.12(7A) are consistent with the Act
and EPA regulations at 40 CFR 51.166.
The proposed revisions to the definition
of ‘‘potential to emit’’ at 30 TAC Section
122.122 are necessary to ensure that
PSD permitting applicability is
calculated correctly. Therefore, we
propose approval of the new definitions
and propose to find that the final
adoption of the definitions for
‘‘greenhouse gases’’ and ‘‘CO2e’’ will
effectuate the authority for the State of
Texas to regulate emissions of GHG
through the Texas SIP and the Texas
PSD program.
Public Notice for GHG PSD Permit
Applications
The December 2, 2013, proposed
revisions included revisions to the
Texas Public Notice requirements for
PSD permitting at 30 TAC Chapter 39.
On January 6, 2014, EPA approved the
Texas public notice rules for PSD
permitting for inclusion in the Texas
SIP. See 79 FR 551. Our final approval
found that the Texas public notice
process of the Notice of Receipt of
Application and Intent to Obtain Permit
(NORI) and the Notice of Application
and Preliminary Decision (NAPD)
would satisfy all PSD-specific public
notice requirements at 40 CFR 51.160,
51.161 and 51.166(q). We note that
Texas regulations require that non-GHG
PSD permits are subject to the Texas
Contested Case Hearing (CCH) process
which EPA has determined is outside
the scope of the Texas SIP. Texas HB
788 specifically directed the TCEQ to
adopt and implement regulations to
issue GHG PSD permits; however these
GHG PSD permits will be exempted
from the Texas CCH process. This
exemption required the TCEQ to revise
the PSD public notice provisions at 30
TAC Chapter 39 to address the special
requirements for issuing separate GHG
PSD permits. Additionally, the PSD
public notice provisions were revised to
accommodate the subset of pending
permit applications that will be
transferred to TCEQ from EPA upon the
effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
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rescission. Because of these revisions to
the PSD public notice rules, EPA finds
it necessary to evaluate the Texas
proposed revisions to 30 TAC Chapter
39 with respect to the federal PSD
requirements at 40 CFR 51.166(q) to
ensure all federal requirements continue
to be satisfied in the December 2, 2013,
proposed SIP revision.
Proposed 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) requires that a
proposed facility or modification that
meets or exceeds the GHG emission
thresholds defined in new 30 TAC
Section 116.164 must comply with all
applicable requirements in 30 TAC
Chapter 116 for PSD permitting. One
such applicable requirement for PSD
permitting is the SIP-approved
requirement at 30 TAC Section
116.111(b)(2) which requires that
Chapter 39 public notice provisions are
followed for PSD permits declared
administratively complete on or after
September 1, 1999. Therefore, proposed
30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) and
the existing SIP establish that the
requirements found in 30 TAC Chapter
39, Subchapters H and K apply to
applications for the new major source or
major modifications for facilities subject
to Chapter 116, Subchapter B, Division
6, Sections 116.164 and 116.169 for
GHG PSD Permitting. Every application
for a new major source or major
modification subject to GHG PSD
permitting requirements will therefore
go through public notice with both the
NORI and NAPD. Note that under the
SIP, as of January 6, 2014, the applicant,
rather than the state permitting
authority, is the legally responsible
party for satisfying the public notice
requirements for PSD applications. For
example, the applicant continues to be
legally responsible for the publication of
the NORI and NAPD, using the specific
notice text provided through regulations
by the TCEQ. The applicant is also
legally responsible for providing copies
of the public notice documents to the
EPA Regional Office, local air pollution
control agencies with jurisdiction in the
county, and air pollution control
agencies of nearby states that may be
impacted by the proposed new source or
modification. The applicant is required
to follow the Texas public notice
regulations, which specify the text for
the notice documents and specify the
additional agencies that will receive
notice.
The TCEQ has proposed revisions to
the public notice text requirements at 30
TAC Section 39.411 specific to GHG
PSD permit applications at Sections
39.411(e)(11), (e)(15), (e)(16), (f)(4) and
(f)(8). These proposed revisions to the
notice text require that, in addition to
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the text SIP-approved for PSD permits,
the text of the public notice specifically
for a GHG PSD permit must specify that
any person is entitled to a public
meeting or a notice and comment
hearing from the commission and that
the air quality analysis will be provided
if applicable. Currently EPA does not
require an air quality analysis for GHG
PSD permits. In the event that an
analysis is required in the future, the
proposed revisions to the Texas Public
Notice requirements will include the
analysis as required without further
rulemaking on the part of TCEQ.
Similarly, the TCEQ has proposed
revisions to the NAPD text requirements
specific to GHG PSD Permit
applications at 30 TAC Section
30.419(e)(1) to state that an air quality
analysis will be available for public
notice as applicable. The proposed
revisions to 30 TAC Section 39.420(e)(4)
exempt applications for GHG PSD
permits from the Texas CCH process.
EPA is proposing to find that the GHG
PSD specific revisions as discussed
above continue to meet the
requirements to provide opportunity for
public comment and for information
availability at 40 CFR 51.161 and
51.166. The NORI and NAPD both
identify locations where materials,
including the draft permit and all
technical materials supporting the
decision, will be made available for
public review. The TCEQ will also
respond to each comment received
when making a final permit decision.
The TCEQ will provide opportunity for
a public meeting on the permit
application if requested. TCEQ has
exempted the GHG PSD permit
applications from the Texas-specific
process of contested case hearings,
which is outside the scope of the Texas
SIP.
The TCEQ has also proposed a new
public notice process for the subset of
GHG PSD permit applications that are
transferred to TCEQ from the EPA upon
the effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
Rescission and where EPA has already
proposed a draft permit. Proposed new
Section 30 TAC 39.412 creates an
optional Combined Notice process, to be
used in lieu of the current SIP-approved
process of a separate NORI and NAPD,
to streamline the processing of these
pending permit applications. Proposed
new 30 TAC Section 39.412(a)
establishes the applicability of this new
section specifically to the subset of
applications that were previously filed
with EPA and which EPA proposed a
draft permit prior to transfer to the
TCEQ. Proposed new 30 TAC Section
39.412(b) provides the streamlined
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process for the subset of permit
applications to be a Combined Notice
addressing the requirements of both the
NORI and NAPD in one notice
document, in lieu of the SIP-approved
process requiring a separate NORI and
NAPD. The Combined Notice will
identify a public location where the
application, the preliminary
determination and draft permit will be
available for review and comment, in
addition to a list of all the GHGs
proposed to be emitted and an air
quality analysis, as applicable. The
Combined Notice will also provide
instructions on submitting comments, a
statement that a public meeting will be
held if requested, and a statement that
the comment period will be 30 days
after the last publication of the
Combined Notice. Additionally, the
Combined Notice will state that any
comments previously submitted to EPA
regarding the GHG PSD permit
application will not be included in the
Executive Director’s response to
comments unless the comments are
submitted to the TCEQ during the
comment period identified in the
Combined Notice. EPA proposes to find
the Combined Notice at 30 TAC Section
39.412, specific to the subset of
transferred permit applications where a
draft permit was previously proposed by
EPA, is consistent with all requirements
of 40 CFR 51.166(q) for PSD public
notice requirements.
EPA’s analysis of the Texas public
participation requirements, both for
newly submitted GHG PSD permit
applications and those transferred from
EPA, demonstrates that the submitted
provisions are consistent with the Act
and EPA regulations at 40 CFR 51.160,
51.161 and 51.166(q). Therefore, we
propose approval of the new and
revised sections in 30 TAC Chapter 39,
submitted for parallel processing on
December 2, 2013.
Proposed Revisions To Establish PSD
Authority and Appropriate Thresholds
for GHG Permitting
TCEQ has proposed several new
provisions in the Texas NSR Program to
adopt and implement the permitting of
GHG emissions consistent with federal
requirements in EPA’s GHG Tailoring
Rule. The proposed regulations are
substantively similar to the federal
requirements for the permitting of GHGemitting sources subject to PSD. The
detailed analysis in our TSD
demonstrates that the regulatory
revisions proposed on October 23, 2013,
and submitted for parallel processing on
December 2, 2013, establish that Texas
has the authority to issue PSD permits
for GHG-emitting sources subject to PSD
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consistent with the federal PSD
requirements of EPA’s final GHG
Tailoring Rule. The revisions also
establish thresholds for determining
which stationary sources and
modification projects become subject to
permitting requirements for GHG
emissions under its PSD program.
Specifically, the December 2, 2013,
submittal satisfies the Tailoring Rule
requirements in the following ways:
• TCEQ proposed a new provision in
the NSR Permit Application procedures
at new subsection 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) that explicitly
requires that any proposed facility or
modification that meets or exceeds the
GHG thresholds established in new
proposed section 30 TAC Section
116.164 must comply with all
applicable requirements of Chapter 116
for PSD review. This new provision
ensures that all PSD requirements such
as BACT and public notice will be
followed for GHG PSD permit
applications. The October 5, 2010,
revisions to 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(C), previously discussed
in this proposed rulemaking,
complement the implementation of the
Texas PSD program, especially with
regard to the PSD permitting of GHG
emissions. While the October 5, 2010,
revisions are germane to the Texas PSD
program and ensure that federal BACT
consistent with EPA’s PSD regulations
will apply to all PSD permit
applications, we specifically note that
the provision also applies to GHG PSD
permits and ensures that federal BACT
will be applied to all GHG PSD permit
applications. EPA proposes to find that
the October 5, 2010, revisions to 30 TAC
Section 116.111(a)(2)(C) and the
proposed new provision at 30 TAC
Section 116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) are necessary
to implement the Texas GHG PSD
permitting process.
• TCEQ proposed revisions to the
Texas PSD program rules at 30 TAC
Section 116.160(a) to explicitly require
any new major source of GHG emissions
or major modification involving GHG
emissions shall comply with the
applicable requirements of the Texas
PSD program. TCEQ proposed further
revisions to the Texas PSD program at
30 TAC Sections 116.160(b) and (c) to
specify that the proposed new GHG
emission thresholds established at 30
TAC Section 116.164 must be used
when evaluating a proposed new source
or modification for PSD applicability.
EPA proposes to find that the proposed
revisions to the Texas PSD program at
30 TAC Sections 116.160(a), (b), and (c)
are necessary to implement the Texas
GHG PSD permitting process.
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• TCEQ proposed new 30 TAC
Sections 116.164 to establish the PSD
applicability requirements for GHG
sources.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a), which
establishes the applicability statement
for the GHG PSD permitting thresholds,
is consistent with the federal
requirement at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(iv)
to regulate GHG emissions through the
PSD program.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a)(1) is
consistent with the federal requirements
at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(iv)(a) for the
regulation of a new major stationary
source that is subject to PSD
requirements for a non-GHG pollutant
and will emit or have the potential to
emit GHG emissions above the specified
thresholds.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a)(2) is
consistent with the federal requirements
at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(iv)(b) for the
regulation of an existing major
stationary source that is major for nonGHG and will emit or have the potential
to emit GHG emissions above the
specified thresholds.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a)(3) is
consistent with the federal requirement
at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(v)(a) for the
regulation of a new major stationary
source that is subject to PSD only for
GHG emissions based on the specified
thresholds.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a)(4) is
consistent with the federal requirements
at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(v)(b) for the
regulation of an existing stationary
source that is major for GHG emissions
and proposes a major modification for
GHG emissions above the specified
thresholds.
Æ EPA proposes to find that proposed
new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a)(5) is
consistent with the requirement at 40
CFR 51.166(b)(1)(i)(C) for the regulation
of an existing minor stationary source
for non-GHG pollutants that would
undertake a physical change or change
in the method of operation that will
cause the source to be a major stationary
source by itself for GHG emissions at the
specified thresholds.
Æ Proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(b) establishes that new
stationary sources or existing stationary
sources that make modifications
involving emissions of GHG below the
thresholds established in new 30 TAC
Section 116.164(a) are not required to
have an authorization for the GHG
emissions through a PSD permit or other
Texas Minor NSR permit authorizations
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such as a Standard Permit, PBR or
Flexible Permit. EPA proposes to find
that this new provision is consistent
with EPA’s GHG Tailoring Rule where
we have established that emissions of
GHG are only subject to regulation
above the Tailoring Rule thresholds.
• TCEQ proposed new 30 TAC
Section 116.169 to establish the
authority for the TCEQ to accept the
transfer of permit applications and
associated materials upon the effective
date of the GHG PSD FIP rescission.
EPA proposes to find that new 30 TAC
Section 116.169 is necessary for
establishing the legal authority for
TCEQ to implement the GHG PSD
permitting program.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
ii. Analysis of the Proposed Non-PSD
Revisions to the Texas SIP
The December 2, 2013, submittal
included several proposed revisions to
the remainder of the Texas SIP and the
Texas Minor NSR programs to satisfy
the requirements of Texas HB 788 and
restrict the permitting of GHG emissions
only to the extent required under federal
law. As such, the TCEQ proposed
revisions to the definitions of
‘‘reportable quantity’’ at 30 TAC Section
101.1(89) to establish there is no
reportable quantity for GHG emissions.
TCEQ also proposed revisions to the
Emission Inventory Requirements at 30
TAC Section 101.10 to specify that
emissions of GHG are not subject to the
reporting requirements in the Emission
Inventory. Similarly, the TCEQ
proposed revisions to the Emissions
Event Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements to specify that emissions
of GHG are not included in emissions
event reporting. EPA proposes to find
that these provisions are consistent with
EPA’s GHG Tailoring Rule and our
determination that emissions of GHG
are only subject to regulation in the PSD
program above the specified GHG
thresholds. There are no federal
requirements establishing reportable
quantities or reporting requirements for
emission inventories or emission events
for GHG emissions.11
The December 2, 2013, submittal also
proposed revisions to the Texas Minor
NSR program at 30 TAC Sections 106.2,
106.4, 116.610, and 116.611. The
proposed revisions to the Texas Minor
NSR Permits by Rule (PBR) Program at
11 EPA has separately promulgated mandatory
reporting requirements for owners and operators of
certain facilities that directly emit GHG emissions
at 40 CFR part 98. See 74 FR 56260, October 30,
2009. The Emission Inventory developed and
maintained by a state permitting authority under
the applicable SIP is separate from the requirements
under 40 CFR part 98 and is not required to include
GHG emissions data.
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30 TAC Sections 106.2 and 106.4 clarify
that a PBR cannot be used to authorize
emissions of GHGs. Similarly, the
proposed revisions to the Texas Minor
NSR Standard Permit Program at 30
TAC Sections 116.610 and 116.611
clarify that a Standard Permit cannot be
used to authorize emissions of GHGs.
The Texas provisions also provide that
if a source is subject to PSD
requirements only for the emissions of
GHGs, then a PBR or Standard Permit
can be used to authorize the non-GHG
pollutants. EPA proposes that the
revisions to the PBR and Standard
Permit are consistent with EPA’s
Tailoring Rule to only regulate GHG
emissions through the PSD program at
or above the specified GHG PSD
thresholds; therefore, these proposed
revisions will ensure that GHG PSD
requirements will not be circumvented.
IV. EPA’s Analysis for Rescinding the
Texas PSD FIP
A. Evaluation of Rescission of the GHG
PSD FIP at 40 CFR 52.2305(a), (b), and
(c)
EPA established the final Texas GHG
PSD FIP on May 3, 2011, at 40 CFR
52.2305(a), (b), and (c). These provisions
remain in effect until EPA approves the
state’s rules to address the permitting of
GHG emissions consistent with federal
requirements and EPA rescinds the FIP.
The analysis presented in Section III of
this rulemaking and the accompanying
TSD demonstrate that the October 23,
2013, proposed rules submitted for
parallel processing on December 2,
2013, adequately address all federal
requirements for GHG PSD permitting.
In addition, Mr. Zak Covar, former
Executive Director of the TCEQ,
submitted a commitment letter on
December 2, 2013, that addresses the
requirement that the state provide
necessary assurances of its authority to
address all future regulated pollutants
under the Texas PSD program in order
to remove the PSD FIP at 40 CFR
52.2305(c). Based on the commitments
in the December 2, 2013, letter and the
October 23, 2013, proposed rulemaking
for permitting emissions of GHG
through the Texas PSD program, EPA
proposes to find that the TCEQ has the
authority under the Texas Clean Air Act
to apply the Texas PSD program to all
pollutants newly subject to regulation,
including non-NAAQS pollutants into
the future. EPA recognizes that the
TCEQ may be required to proceed
through a notice and comment rule
development process, but this process
in no way prevents the TCEQ from
addressing the PSD requirements of the
CAA. As such, we are proposing
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9131
rescission of the Texas GHG PSD FIP at
40 CFR 52.2305(a), (b), and (c), with
three limited possibilities for retained
authority as detailed below in Section
IV.B.
B. Transition Process Upon Rescission
of the GHG PSD FIP for Pending GHG
PSD Permit Applications and Issued
GHG PSD Permits
As explained throughout this notice,
EPA is proposing approval of the
December 2, 2013, submittal as
consistent with the requirements for
PSD permitting of GHG emissions under
EPA’s GHG Tailoring Rule. Our analysis
demonstrates the TCEQ has proposed
necessary rule revisions to provide
adequate authority to regulate GHG
emissions using appropriate emission
thresholds under the Texas PSD
program. As such, EPA is
simultaneously proposing to rescind the
GHG PSD FIP and intends to finalize
both actions simultaneously. We expect
that the FIP rescission will be effective
30 days after publication of the final
approval of the Texas GHG PSD
revisions. EPA has developed a process
for transitioning pending permit
applications and EPA issued permits to
the TCEQ following the rescission of the
FIP. Our transition process, titled
‘‘Transition Process for Pending GHG
PSD Permit Applications and Issued
GHG PSD Permits Upon Rescission of
the GHG PSD FIP’’ is available in the
docket for this rulemaking and on the
EPA Region 6 GHG Web site at https://
yosemite.epa.gov/r6/Apermit.nsf/AirP.
The transition process is briefly
summarized below. EPA believes that
the transition process will ensure a
smooth transfer of permitting authorities
for GHG PSD permits in Texas and
inform the regulated entities. Please
note that this transition process is
predicated on the fact that the TCEQ
will proceed with final rulemaking to
adopt the GHG PSD SIP rules and
submit these rules to EPA for approval
into the Texas SIP. If TCEQ is unable to
submit a final SIP revision, EPA will not
rescind the FIP and will therefore not
initiate the transition process.
EPA’s transition process addresses
two components of the GHG PSD
program—pending permit applications
and issued permits.12 Through
application of this transition process
and in concert with the rescission of the
GHG PSD FIP, EPA will retain GHG PSD
12 A ‘‘pending permit application’’ is any GHG
PSD permit application submitted to EPA for which
EPA has not yet issued a final permit to authorize
the emissions of GHG by the signature date of EPA’s
final approval of the Texas SIP rules and rescission
of the FIP.
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permitting authority at 40 CFR 52.2305
in the following three limited instances:
1. EPA will retain GHG PSD
permitting authority for any applicants
who select to remain with EPA for GHG
PSD permit issuance. This option will
be detailed in a letter to the permit
applicant and will contain a deadline by
which the applicant must inform EPA of
its decision to remain with EPA. EPA
will also maintain a list of all pending
permit applications retained under
EPA’s GHG PSD permitting authority on
the EPA Region 6 GHG Web site, which
will be referenced in any future final
GHG PSD SIP approval and FIP
rescission action EPA may take for
Texas.
2. EPA will retain the GHG PSD
permitting authority for applicants with
pending permits who fail to select a
permitting authority by the deadline
specified in the above referenced EPA
letter to each permit applicant.
3. EPA will retain GHG PSD
permitting authority for issued permits
for which either (a) the time for filing an
administrative appeal has not expired or
(b) all administrative and judicial
appeal processes (including any
associated remand action) have not been
completed upon the signature date of
any future EPA final action to approve
TCEQ’s SIP submittal and rescind the
GHG PSD FIP. In a letter dated January
13, 2014, TCEQ requested approval to
exercise its authority to administer the
PSD program with respect to those
sources that have final GHG PSD
permits issued by EPA upon the
effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
rescission. This letter is available for
review in the docket for this
rulemaking. With respect to this
transition process, a ‘‘final GHG PSD
permit issued by EPA’’ is a permit
where all final EPA actions have been
taken and all administrative and judicial
appeal opportunities have expired or
processes have been concluded or
completed.
We note that as with any PSD permit
application, an applicant may withdraw
a pending application for any reason
before the permit is issued. With respect
to the permit applications for which
EPA will retain permitting authority as
specified in the transition process,
EPA’s permitting authority will cease
upon an applicant’s written request
withdrawing the pending permit
application before a final determination
is made.
For the permit applicants who elect to
transfer to TCEQ for GHG PSD permit
issuance, EPA will transfer the
application, all related technical
materials submitted by the applicant,
the proposed draft permit and any
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Jkt 232001
comments received on the proposed
draft permit to TCEQ. The TCEQ will
require the applicant to comply with
SIP-approved public notice rules. The
applicant will either follow the current
SIP-approved process of publishing a
separate NORI and NAPD, or publish a
combined NORI and NAPD notice
pursuant to new proposed revisions at
30 TAC Section 39.412. Further,
pursuant to the Texas SIP, any
comments submitted to EPA on the
proposed draft permit must be
resubmitted to the TCEQ during the
TCEQ’s public comment period. EPA
intends to identify on the EPA Region
6 GHG Web site which applications
with proposed draft permits have been
transferred to TCEQ for issuance. EPA
will endeavor to notify each commenter
about the need to resubmit comments
under the SIP-approved Texas public
comment period provisions or the
newly proposed revisions at 30 TAC
Section 39.412.
The TCEQ will assume full PSD
responsibility for the administration and
implementation of final GHG PSD
permits issued by EPA upon notification
from EPA that all administrative and
judicial appeal processes have expired
or have been completed or concluded
(including any associated remand
actions) for a specific permit or permit
application. Assuming full PSD
responsibility includes the authority to
conduct general administration of these
existing permits, authority to process
and issue any and all subsequent PSD
permit actions relating to such permits
(e.g., amendments), and authority to
enforce such permits. In the above
referenced January 13, 2014, letter, the
TCEQ explains that the provisions
contained in element 1 of the Texas PSD
Supplement (as adopted by the Texas
Air Control Board on July 17, 1987)
provide the TCEQ the authority to
enforce all conditions of PSD permits
issued for sources in Texas by EPA prior
to full delegation of authority to
implement the Texas PSD program. The
TCEQ has affirmed that this provision
continues to apply to the GHG PSD
permits issued by EPA. Therefore, TCEQ
has demonstrated it has the authority to
administer EPA-issued GHG PSD
permits.
V. Proposed Action
EPA has made the preliminary
determination that the October 5, 2010,
revisions to the Texas SIP that are part
of this rulemaking are approvable
because they are adopted and submitted
in accordance with the CAA and EPA
regulations regarding NSR permitting.
EPA has made the preliminary
determination that the December 2,
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2013, proposed revisions to the Texas
SIP and request for parallel processing
are in accordance with the CAA and
EPA regulations regarding SIP
development and GHG regulations. EPA
invites the public to make comments on
all aspects of the EPA proposed
approval of the revisions to the Texas
NSR SIP to provide for the regulation of
GHG emissions and clarify the
applicability of BACT for all PSD permit
applications, and to submit comments
by the date listed above. Therefore,
under section 110 and part C of the Act,
and for the reasons stated above, EPA
proposes to approve the following
revisions to the Texas SIP:
• Substantive and non-substantive
revisions to 30 TAC Section 116.111
adopted on September 15, 2010, and
submitted on October 5, 2010, to clarify
the application of BACT to all PSD
permit applications in the Texas NSR
program;
• Substantive and non-substantive
revisions proposed October 23, 2013,
and submitted for parallel processing on
December 2, 2013, necessary to provide
the TCEQ the authority to regulate GHG
emissions under the Texas PSD
Program:
Æ Revisions to Public Notice
requirements at 30 TAC Sections
39.411(e)(11), (e)(15), (e)(16), (f)(4),
(f)(8), 39.412(a)—(d), 39.419(e)(1), and
39.420(e)(4).
Æ Revisions to the entirety of the
General Air Quality Definitions at 30
TAC Sections 101.1.
Æ Revisions to the Emission Inventory
Requirements at 30 TAC Section 101.10.
Æ Revisions to Emissions Event
Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements at 30 TAC Section
101.201.
Æ Revisions to the Permits by Rule
Minor NSR program at 30 TAC Sections
106.2 and 106.4.
Æ Revisions to the Definitions for
Texas NSR Permitting at 30 TAC
Section 116.12.
Æ Revisions to Permit Application
provisions for Texas NSR Permitting at
30 TAC Section 116.111.
Æ Revisions to the Texas PSD
Program at 30 TAC Section 116.160.
Æ Proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164 to tailor the PSD thresholds for
GHG permitting.
Æ Proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.169 to establish the transition
process for GHG permitting.
Æ Revisions to the Standard Permit
Minor NSR program at 30 TAC Sections
116.610 and 116.611.
Æ Revisions to the definition of
Potential to Emit at 30 TAC Section
122.122.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 32 / Tuesday, February 18, 2014 / Proposed Rules
Texas is subject to the FIP for PSD
permitting of GHG emissions. This GHG
PSD FIP remains in place and EPA
remains the PSD permitting authority
for GHG-emitting sources in Texas until
EPA finalizes our proposed approval of
the October 23, 2013, proposed
revisions submitted for parallel
processing on December 2, 2013, to the
Texas SIP. Therefore, we propose that
upon finalization of today’s action, EPA
will rescind the GHG PSD FIP for Texas
at 40 CFR 52.2305(a) and (b). However,
as detailed in Sections IV.B.1–3 and our
transition process, there are three
limited possibilities for retained
authority. First, EPA will retain GHG
PSD permitting authority for any
pending permit applications where the
permit applicant has submitted a
written request to remain with EPA for
permit issuance. Second, EPA will
retain GHG PSD permitting authority for
any pending permit application where
the applicant has not submitted a
written request regarding permit
authority, and EPA has made a
proposed determination through a
public noticed draft permit upon the
signature date of EPA’s rescission of the
GHG PSD FIP. EPA does not intend to
retain any other authority over pending
permit applications. Note, even for
those cases where EPA announces it
will retain permitting authority over an
application, this authority will cease
upon an applicant’s written request to
EPA withdrawing the pending permit
application before a final determination
is made. Finally, EPA will retain GHG
PSD permitting authority for any issued
permit for which either the time for
filing an administrative appeal has not
expired or all administrative and
judicial appeals processes have not been
completed by the signature date of
EPA’s final action to approve TCEQ’s
SIP submittal. Texas is also subject to
the FIP for PSD permitting for any other
pollutants that become newly subject to
regulation under the CAA after January
2, 2011. We propose to find that the
TCEQ has provided necessary and
adequate assurances that the Texas PSD
program will be revised in the future to
address pollutants that become newly
regulated under the CAA after January
2, 2011, and that the TCEQ has the
adequate authority under State law to
regulate the new PSD pollutants.
Therefore, we propose that upon
finalization of today’s action, EPA will
rescind the PSD FIP for Newly
Regulated Pollutants for Texas at 40
CFR 52.2305(c).
EPA is severing and taking no action
on the remainder of the October 5, 2010,
SIP submittal for the adoption and
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implementation of the Texas Minor NSR
Qualified Facilities Program. EPA is also
severing and taking no action on the
portions of the December 2, 2013,
submittal concerning biomass GHG
emissions at 30 TAC Section
116.12(7)(B). The DC Circuit Court
issued an order to vacate EPA’s Biomass
Deferral Rule on July 12, 2013.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
Clean Air Act and applicable Federal
regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR
52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
state choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
proposes to approve state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law. For
that reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
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9133
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, and incorporation by
reference.
Dated: February 4, 2014.
Ron Curry,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
[FR Doc. 2014–03429 Filed 2–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2010–1055; FRL–9906–64–
Region 6]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; New
Mexico; Transportation Conformity
and General Conformity Requirements
for Bernalillo County
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
revisions to the New Mexico State
Implementation Plan (SIP) at New
Mexico Administrative Code 20.11.3
and 20.11.4, concerning transportation
conformity and general conformity rules
for Bernalillo County, New Mexico. The
plan revision is intended to ensure
consistency with amendments to the
federal Transportation Conformity Rule
and the federal General Conformity
Rule. These plan revisions meet
statutory and regulatory requirements,
and are consistent with EPA’s guidance.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before March 20, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Please see the related direct
final rule, which is located in the ‘‘Rules
and Regulations’’ section of this Federal
Register, for detailed instructions on
how to submit comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Peace, Facility Assessment
Section (6PD–A), Environmental
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 32 (Tuesday, February 18, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 9123-9133]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-03429]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2013-0808; FRL-9906-62-Region-6]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Withdrawal of Federal Implementation Plan; Texas; Prevention of
Significant Deterioration; Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule Revisions
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve portions of two revisions to the Texas State Implementation
Plan (SIP) submitted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
(TCEQ) to EPA on October 5, 2010, and December 2, 2013. Together, these
two SIP submittals revise the Texas Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) Program to provide for the regulation of greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions and clarify the applicability of Best Available
Control Technology (BACT) for all PSD permit applications. The December
2, 2013, submittal is a request for parallel processing of revisions
proposed by the TCEQ on October 23, 2013. The December 2, 2013,
submittal includes proposed revisions to the Texas SIP to provide the
State of Texas with the express authority to regulate GHG emissions,
issue PSD permits governing GHG emissions, establish appropriate
emission thresholds for determining which new stationary sources and
modifications to existing stationary sources become subject to Texas's
PSD permitting requirements for their GHG emissions, and revises
several Minor New Source Review (NSR) provisions to specify that Minor
NSR permit mechanisms cannot be used for authorizing GHG emissions. The
December 2, 2013, SIP revision also defers until July 21, 2014,
application of the PSD permitting requirements to biogenic carbon
dioxide emissions from bioenergy and other biogenic stationary sources.
The October 5, 2010, submittal
[[Page 9124]]
revises the Texas SIP to clarify that all PSD permits must undergo BACT
review consistent with the requirements in the Federal and Texas PSD
programs. EPA is proposing to approve portions of the October 5, 2010,
and December 2, 2013, SIP revisions to the Texas SIP and NSR permitting
program as consistent with federal requirements for PSD permitting of
GHG emissions. EPA is proposing to sever and take no action on the
portion of the October 5, 2010, SIP revision which pertains to the
Texas Minor NSR program for Qualified Facilities. EPA is also proposing
to sever and take no action on the portion of the December 2, 2013, SIP
revision that relates to the provisions of EPA's July 20, 2011,
``Deferral for CO2 Emissions from Bioenergy and other
Biogenic Sources Under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) and Title V Programs'' (Biomass Deferral Rule), as the DC Circuit
Court of Appeals issued an order to vacate that rule on July 13, 2013.
EPA is also proposing to rescind the Federal Implementation Plan (FIP)
for Texas, with three limited possibilities for retained authority,
which was put in place to ensure the availability of a permitting
authority for GHG permitting in Texas until final approval of the Texas
SIP PSD GHG program. EPA is proposing this action under section 110 and
part C of the Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 20, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R06-
OAR-2013-0808 by one of the following methods:
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for
submitting comments.
EMail: Ms. Adina Wiley at wiley.adina@epa.gov.
Mail or Delivery: Ms. Adina Wiley, Air Permits Section
(6PD-R), Environmental Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200,
Dallas, Texas 75202-2733.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-
2013-0808. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes information claimed to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information the
disclosure of which is restricted by statute. Do not submit information
through https://www.regulations.gov or email, if you believe that it is
CBI or otherwise protected from disclosure. The https://www.regulations.gov Web site is an ``anonymous access'' system, which
means that EPA will not know your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an email
comment directly to EPA without going through https://www.regulations.gov, your email address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment that is placed in the public docket
and made available on the Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, EPA recommends that you include your name and other contact
information in the body of your comment along with any disk or CD-ROM
submitted. If EPA cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters and any form of encryption and should be free of any
defects or viruses. For additional information about EPA's public
docket, visit the EPA Docket Center homepage at https://www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: The index to the docket for this action is available
electronically at www.regulations.gov and in hard copy at EPA Region 6,
1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas. While all documents in the
docket are listed in the index, some information may be publicly
available only at the hard copy location (e.g., copyrighted material),
and some may not be publicly available at either location (e.g., CBI).
To inspect the hard copy materials, please schedule an appointment with
the person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT paragraph
below or Mr. Bill Deese at 214-665-7253.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Adina Wiley (6PD-R), Air Permits
Section, Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue
(6PD-R), Suite 1200, Dallas, TX 75202-2733. The telephone number is
(214) 665-2115. Ms. Wiley can also be reached via electronic mail at
wiley.adina@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document whenever ``we,''
``us,'' or ``our'' is used, we mean EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Our Proposed Action
A. History of EPA's GHG-Related Actions
B. EPA's Biomass Deferral Rule
C. EPA's Tailoring Rule Step 3
II. Summary of State Submittals
A. October 5, 2010
B. December 2, 2013
III. EPA's Analysis of the State Submittals
A. Analysis of the October 5, 2010 State Submittal
B. Analysis of the December 2, 2013 State Submittal
i. Analysis of the Proposed Revisions to the Texas PSD Program
ii. Analysis of the Proposed Non-PSD Revisions to the Texas SIP
IV. EPA's Analysis for Rescinding the Texas PSD FIP
A. Evaluation of Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP at 40 CFR
52.2305(a), (b) and (c)
B. Transition Process upon Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP for
Pending GHG PSD Permit Applications and Issued GHG PSD Permits
V. Proposed Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Our Proposed Action
The CAA at section 110(a)(2)(C) requires states to develop and
submit to EPA for approval into the SIP, preconstruction review and
permitting programs applicable to certain new and modified stationary
sources of air pollutants for attainment and nonattainment areas that
cover both major and minor new sources and modifications, collectively
referred to as the NSR SIP. The CAA NSR SIP program is composed of
three separate programs: PSD, Nonattainment NSR (NNSR), and Minor NSR.
PSD is established in part C of title I of the CAA and applies in areas
that meet the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)--
``attainment areas''--as well as areas where there is insufficient
information to determine if the area meets the NAAQS--``unclassifiable
areas.'' The NNSR SIP program is established in part D of title I of
the CAA and applies in areas that are not in attainment of the NAAQS--
``nonattainment areas.'' The Minor NSR SIP program addresses
construction or modification activities that do not emit, or have the
potential to emit, beyond certain major source thresholds and thus do
not qualify as ``major'' and applies regardless of the designation of
the area in which a source is located. EPA regulations governing the
criteria that states must satisfy for EPA approval of the NSR programs
as part of the SIP are contained in 40 CFR sections 51.160--51.166.
Texas submitted on October 5, 2010, and December 2, 2013, a
collection of regulations for approval by EPA into the Texas SIP,
including some regulations specific to the Texas PSD permitting program
to clarify the applicability of BACT for all PSD permit applications
and to provide for regulation of GHG emissions through the Texas PSD
program. The October 5, 2010, submittal included revisions to the
Permit Application requirements for the Texas NSR program at 30 TAC
Section 116.111
[[Page 9125]]
to clarify that federal BACT will be applied to all PSD permit
applications, in addition to the application of Texas BACT process as
required by the Texas Clean Air Act. The October 5, 2010, submittal
also included revisions to the Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities
Program, which is severable from today's proposed action on the Texas
PSD program. The December 2, 2013, submittal includes revisions to the
Texas SIP and the Texas NSR program to (1) establish that the State of
Texas has the express authority to regulate GHG emissions, (2) provide
for the issuance of PSD permits governing GHG emissions, (3) establish
appropriate emission thresholds for determining which new stationary
sources and modification projects become subject to Texas's PSD
permitting requirements for their GHG emissions consistent with the
``PSD and Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Final Rule'' (75 FR 31514)
hereafter referred to as the ``Tailoring Rule'', and (4) make revisions
to the Texas Minor NSR program to limit the scope of GHG permitting to
the Texas PSD program. The December 2, 2013, submittal also included
provisions to adopt and implement EPA's July 20, 2011, GHG Biomass
Deferral.
We have evaluated the SIP submissions for whether they meet the CAA
and 40 CFR Part 51, and are consistent with EPA's interpretation of the
relevant provisions. Today's proposed action and the accompanying
Technical Support Document (TSD) present our rationale for proposing
approval of these regulations as meeting the minimum federal
requirements for the adoption and implementation of the PSD SIP
permitting programs. Note that Texas is currently subject to the PSD
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) at 40 CFR 52.2305. See 76 FR 25178,
May 3, 2011. We are also proposing to rescind the PSD FIP for Texas
when we finalize today's proposed action. EPA is proposing to sever and
take no action on the portions of the October 5, 2010, submittal that
pertain to the Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities Program. EPA is
proposing to sever and take no action on the portions of the December
2, 2013, submittal that relate to the provisions of EPA's Biomass
Deferral for the reasons stated above.
A. History of EPA's GHG-Related Actions
This section summarizes EPA's recent GHG-related actions. Please
see the preambles for the identified GHG-related rulemakings for more
information.
EPA has recently undertaken a series of actions pertaining to the
regulation of GHGs that, although for the most part are distinct from
one another, establish the overall framework for today's proposed
action on the Texas SIP. Four of these actions include, as they are
commonly called, the ``Endangerment Finding'' and ``Cause or Contribute
Finding,'' which EPA issued in a single final action,\1\ the ``Johnson
Memo Reconsideration,'' \2\ the ``Light-Duty Vehicle Rule,'' \3\ and
the ``Tailoring Rule.'' \4\ Taken together and in conjunction with the
CAA, these actions established regulatory requirements for GHGs emitted
from new motor vehicles and new motor vehicle engines; determined that
such regulations, when they took effect on January 2, 2011, subjected
GHGs emitted from stationary sources to PSD requirements; and limited
the applicability of PSD requirements to GHG sources on a phased-in
basis. EPA took this last action in the Tailoring Rule, which, more
specifically, established appropriate GHG emission thresholds for
determining the applicability of PSD requirements to GHG-emitting
sources. PSD is implemented through the SIP system, and so in December
2010, EPA promulgated several rules to implement the new GHG PSD SIP
program. Recognizing that some states had approved SIP PSD programs
that did not apply PSD to GHGs, EPA issued a SIP call for 13 states
(including Texas) on December 13, 2010, that would require those states
with SIPs that have approved PSD programs but do not authorize PSD
permitting for GHGs to submit a SIP revision providing such
authority.\5\ EPA advised the States that as of January 2, 2011, if the
States had not submitted, and EPA had not approved, a SIP revision
establishing PSD permitting for GHGs, or if EPA had not promulgated a
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) by the same time, then sources with
GHG emissions could, as a practical matter, be precluded from lawfully
constructing or modifying due to the lack of a permitting authority to
issue the required permit.
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\1\ ``Endangerment and Cause or Contribute Findings for
Greenhouse Gases Under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act.'' 74 FR
66496 (December 15, 2009).
\2\ ``Interpretation of Regulations that Determine Pollutants
Covered by Clean Air Act Permitting Programs.'' 75 FR 17004 (April
2, 2010).
\3\ ``Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards and
Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards; Final Rule.'' 75 FR 25324
(May 7, 2010).
\4\ Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Title V
Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule; Final Rule.'' 75 FR 31514 (June 3,
2010).
\5\ ``Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits Under the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration Program to Sources of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Finding of Substantial Inadequacy and SIP
Call,'' 75 FR 77698 (Dec. 13, 2010). Specifically, by notice dated
December 13, 2010, EPA finalized a ``SIP Call'' that would require
those states with SIPs that have approved PSD programs but do not
authorize PSD permitting for GHGs to submit a SIP revision providing
such authority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All of the states identified in the SIP Call, except for Texas,
either (i) submitted a corrective SIP revision to apply their CAA PSD
programs to sources of GHG emissions promptly enough to avoid adverse
impacts on their new or modifying sources, or (ii) did not object to
EPA establishing a deadline for SIP revisions of December 22, 2010. For
the latter states, EPA published a finding of failure to submit the
required SIP revision by the specified deadline and then immediately
promulgated the GHG PSD FIP to ensure the availability of a permitting
authority for GHG emitting sources subject to PSD requirements in those
states.6 7
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ ``Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits Under the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration Program to Sources of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Finding of Failure To Submit State
Implementation Plan Revisions Required for Greenhouse Gases,'' 75 FR
81874 (December 29, 2010).
\7\ ``Action To Ensure Authority To Issue Permits Under the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration Program to Sources of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Federal Implementation Plan,'' 75 FR 82246
(December 30, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The State of Texas did not identify a GHG SIP revision deadline;
therefore, EPA assigned a default twelve-month SIP revision deadline of
December 1, 2011. This meant that, absent further action, there would
be no authority in Texas to issue PSD permits starting January 2, 2011.
In that case, GHG-emitting sources seeking to undertake construction or
modification activities during almost all of 2011 would have no
permitting authority available to issue a PSD permit until, at the
earliest, December 2011.
To remedy this situation, EPA determined that pursuant to CAA
Section 110(k)(6), its prior approval of Texas's PSD program ``was in
error'' because, among other things the SIP failed to address all
pollutants that would become subject to regulation in the future or
provide assurance of Texas's legal authority to do so. EPA corrected
its previous full approval of Texas's PSD SIP to be a partial approval
and partial disapproval. The partial disapproval reflected the PSD
SIP's failure to address how PSD would apply to newly regulated
pollutants. At the same time, EPA promulgated a FIP that applied PSD to
GHGs, which are the newly regulated pollutants presently at issue. That
FIP established EPA as the permitting authority, so that as of January
2, 2011, EPA could issue PSD permits to Texas's GHG-emitting
[[Page 9126]]
sources that sought to undertake construction or modification
activities.
EPA took this action in December 2010, through an interim final
rulemaking, without a prior proposal, under the ``good cause''
exception of 5 U.S.C. Section 553(b)(B), in light of the need to
establish a permitting authority by January 2, 2011. EPA further
provided that the interim final rulemaking would expire by May 1, 2011.
At the same time, EPA proposed to take the same action through notice-
and-comment rulemaking. By May 1, 2011, EPA completed the notice-and-
comment rulemaking by finalizing a rule that mirrored the interim final
rulemaking by correcting the previous full approval of Texas's PSD SIP
provision to be a partial approval and partial disapproval, and by
promulgating a FIP that established EPA as the permitting authority for
GHG-emitting sources.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Texas, Wyoming and industry challenged the GHG PSD SIP Call
rules in the D.C. Circuit. Texas and industry also challenged the
Texas error correction rules in the D.C. Circuit. On July 26, 2013,
the D.C. Circuit handed down a single decision for two separate
cases: (1) the challenge by Texas, Wyoming and industry to three
related GHG PSD SIP Call rules (Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA,
No. 11-1037), and (2) the challenge by Texas and industry to two
related Texas GHG PSD error correction and FIP rules (Texas v. EPA,
No. 10-1425). The decision dismisses challenges to both of these
sets of rules by holding that none of the petitioners had standing
to challenge any of the rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For other states, EPA recognized that many states had approved SIP
PSD programs that do apply PSD to GHGs, but that do so for sources that
emit as little as 100 or 250 tpy of GHG, and that do not limit PSD
applicability to GHGs to the higher thresholds in the Tailoring Rule.
Therefore, EPA issued the GHG PSD SIP Narrowing Rule.\9\ Under that
rule, EPA withdrew its approval of the affected SIPs to the extent
those SIPs covered GHG-emitting sources below the Tailoring Rule
thresholds. EPA based its action primarily on the ``error correction''
provisions of CAA section 110(k)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ ``Limitation of Approval of Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Provisions Concerning Greenhouse Gas Emitting Sources
in State Implementation Plans,'' 75 FR 82536 (December 30, 2010).
The GHG PSD SIP Narrowing Rule does not apply to Texas because the
GHG PSD FIP is in place.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. EPA's Biomass Deferral Rule
On July 20, 2011, EPA promulgated the final Biomass Deferral Rule.
The Biomass Deferral delayed until July 21, 2014, the consideration of
CO2 emissions from bioenergy and other biogenic sources when
determining whether a stationary source meets the PSD and Title V
applicability thresholds. The D.C. Circuit Court issued its decision to
vacate the Biomass Deferral Rule on July 12, 2013.
C. EPA's Tailoring Rule Step 3
On July 12, 2012, EPA promulgated the final ``Prevention of
Significant Deterioration and Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule
Step 3 and GHG Plantwide Applicability Limits'' (GHG Tailoring Rule
Step 3 and GHG PALs). EPA's rationale for the rule is available in the
notice of final rulemaking at 77 FR 41051. EPA finalized Step 3 by
determining not to lower the current GHG applicability thresholds from
the Step 1 and Step 2 levels because state permitting authorities had
not had sufficient time and opportunity to develop the necessary
infrastructure and increase their GHG permitting expertise and
capacity, and the state permitting authorities and EPA had not had the
opportunity to develop streamlining measures to improve permit
implementation. See 77 FR 41051, 41052. The Tailoring Rule Step 3 also
promulgated revisions to our regulations under 40 CFR part 52 for
better implementation of the federal program for establishing PALs for
GHG emissions. A PAL establishes a site-specific plantwide emission
level for a pollutant that allows the source to make changes at the
facility without triggering the requirements of the PSD program,
provided that emissions do not exceed the PAL level. Under the EPA's
interpretation of the federal PAL provisions, such PALs are already
available under PSD for non-GHG pollutants and for GHGs on a mass
basis, and we revised the PAL regulations to allow for GHG PALs to be
established on a CO2e basis as well. We also revised the
regulations to allow a GHG-only source to submit an application for a
CO2e-based GHG PAL while also maintaining its minor source
status. We believe that these actions could streamline PSD permitting
programs by allowing sources and permitting authorities to address GHG
emissions one time for a source and avoid repeated subsequent
permitting actions for a 10-year period. See 77 FR 41051, 41052.
The revisions to the PSD PAL rules for GHG permitting are voluntary
for a state to adopt and implement. The December 2, 2013, submittal
from Texas does not address the Tailoring Rule Step 3 GHG PAL
revisions.
II. Summary of State Submittals
A. October 5, 2010
In a letter dated October 5, 2010, Mr. Bryan W. Shaw, Ph.D.,
Chairman of the TCEQ, submitted revisions to the Texas SIP that were
adopted on September 15, 2010, and became effective on October 7, 2010.
This submittal included the following revisions that were submitted
primarily to address the Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities Program:
Substantive and non-substantive revisions to General
Definitions for the Texas NSR Program at 30 TAC Section 116.10,
New definitions at 30 TAC Section 116.17 for the Texas
Qualified Facilities Program,
Substantive and non-substantive revisions to the General
Application Provisions for the Texas NSR Program at 30 TAC Section
116.111,
Substantive revisions to the provisions for Changes to
Facilities at 30 TAC Section 116.116 specific to qualified facilities,
and
Substantive and non-substantive revisions to the
provisions for Documentation and Notification of Changes to Qualified
Facilities at 30 TAC Section 116.117.
EPA's proposed action today will only evaluate the revisions to the
General Application requirements at 30 TAC Section 116.111 that are
necessary to support the Texas PSD program, including the permitting of
GHG emissions in Texas. EPA is severing and taking no action at this
time on the remaining components of the October 5, 2010, SIP submittal
that address the Qualified Facilities program. By severing, we mean
that the October 5, 2010 submittal of the revisions to the General
Application requirements at 30 TAC Section 116.111 can be implemented
independently of the portions of the submittal relating to the Texas
Minor NSR Qualified Facilities program. EPA will evaluate and take
action on the remaining portions of the October 5, 2010, SIP submittal
at a later date.
B. December 2, 2013
In a letter dated December 2, 2013, Mr. Zak Covar, Executive
Director of the TCEQ, requested parallel processing of the October 23,
2013, proposed new and amended rules to implement the requirements of
Texas House Bill (HB) 788, 83rd Legislature, 2013. Texas HB 788
directed the TCEQ to adopt rules necessary to implement the
requirements of EPA's GHG Tailoring Rule and limit the regulation of
GHGs only to the Texas PSD program. The December 2, 2013, parallel
processing submittal consisted of the following revisions:
30 TAC Chapter 39--Public Notice.
The rules governing public notice for applications for air quality
permits are
[[Page 9127]]
contained in Chapter 39. Emissions of GHGs will be covered under the
Texas PSD program, and will therefore follow the same public notice
provisions as other PSD permit applications in Texas. The TCEQ has made
changes to indicate that certain items required by a PSD public notice
may not be applicable to GHG PSD permit applications--such as an air
quality analysis or a Class I impact analysis for GHGs. Additionally,
Texas HB 788, from the 83rd Legislature, 2013, has specifically
exempted GHG PSD permit applications from the Texas requirement to
provide an opportunity for the contested case hearing process.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 39.411--Text of Public Notice.
The TCEQ has proposed revisions to 30 TAC Section 39.411 that will
require the public notice for a GHG PSD permit application to include a
statement that any person is entitled to request a public meeting or a
notice and comment hearing. The TCEQ has also amended this section to
include the phrase ``as applicable'' in reference to the air quality
analyses that must be made available for review. Additionally, the TCEQ
has proposed several typographical corrections throughout section
39.411.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 39.412--Combined Notice for Certain Greenhouse
Gases Permit Applications.
The TCEQ has proposed this new section to streamline the permit
application process only for permit applications that have been
transferred from EPA after the effective date of the FIP rescission, or
for permit applications that were previously filed with EPA and EPA has
already published a draft permit. This new section would allow a permit
applicant to issue one public notice combining the requirements of the
Texas first notice (Notice of Receipt of Application and Intent to
Obtain Permit (NORI)) and the Texas second notice (Notice of
Application and Preliminary Decision (NAPD)).
[cir] 30 TAC Section 39.419--Notice of Application and Preliminary
Decision.
The TCEQ has amended this section to add the phrase ``as
applicable'' in reference to the air quality analysis that must be
available for public review.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 39.420--Transmittal of the Executive
Director's Response to Comments and Decision.
TCEQ has amended this section to include a new provision at 30 TAC
Section 39.420(e)(4) that says public notice documents for GHG PSD
permits do not need to include instructions on how to request a
contested case hearing or requesting the commission reconsider the
Executive Director's decision.
30 TAC Chapter 101--General Air Quality Rules.
The TCEQ has amended the definitions and general rules germane to
the Texas SIP to implement the requirements of Texas HB 788 and to
provide authority to regulate GHGs.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 101.1--Definitions.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has proposed a new definition for GHGs at 30 TAC
Section 101.1(42).
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed several amendments to the
definition of Reportable Quantity at 30 TAC Section 101.1(89) to
establish that there is no reportable quantity for GHGs (except for the
specific individual air contaminants found in the current definition of
RQ), and establish a reportable quantity of 5,000 pounds for 3-
pentanone, 1,1,1,2,2,4,5,5,5-nonafluoro-4-(trifluromethyl)-, CAS No.
756-13-8 (hereafter referred to as C6 fluoroketone) rather than the
default reportable quantity of 100 pounds.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed amendments to the definition of
unauthorized emissions at 30 TAC Section 101.1(108) to exclude
emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane
(CH4).
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed a number of non-substantive
amendments to correct for renumbering and internal referencing to other
TAC provisions.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 101.10--Emissions Inventory Requirements.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has proposed amendments to 30 TAC Section
101.10(a)(3) to provide an exception for GHG emissions to the
applicable criteria for which an owner or operator is required to
submit emission inventories.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed non-substantive revisions for
renumbering and formatting and to update references to other TAC
provisions.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 101.201--Emissions Event Reporting and
Recordkeeping Requirements.
The TCEQ has proposed an amendment to specify that any emissions of
GHG, individually or collectively, are not subject to emissions event
reporting.
30 TAC Chapter 106--Permits by Rule.
The Texas Permits by Rule (PBR) program under 30 TAC Chapter 106,
is one component of the SIP-approved Minor NSR program in Texas. The
TCEQ has proposed amendments to the Minor NSR PBR program at 30 TAC
Section 106.2 to clarify that emissions of GHG cannot be authorized
through a PBR. Additionally, the TCEQ has proposed an amendment to 30
TAC Section 106.4 to specify that for sources that are only subject to
PSD for GHG emissions, a PBR can still be used to authorize the non-PSD
emissions; provided that the source obtains the GHG PSD construction
permit prior to commencing construction.
30 TAC Chapter 116--Control of Air Pollution by Permits
for New Construction or Modification.
The Texas PSD program and necessary implementing definitions are
SIP-approved under 30 TAC Chapter 116. With the exception of PBR which
are codified at 30 TAC Chapter 106, the remainder of the SIP-approved
Texas Minor NSR program is SIP-approved at 30 TAC Chapter 116. The TCEQ
has proposed several amendments to this chapter to provide for PSD
permitting of GHG emissions and to limit the scope of the Texas Minor
NSR programs to not include emissions of GHG. Specifically, the TCEQ
has proposed the following:
[cir] 30 TAC Section 116.12--Nonattainment and Prevention of
Significant Deterioration Definitions.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has proposed new definitions for the
``CO2 equivalent'' and the pollutant GHG.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed revisions to the definitions of
``Federally Regulated NSR pollutant,'' ``major stationary source,'' and
``major modifications.''
[ssquf] The TCEQ has also proposed renumbering to accommodate the
proposed new definitions.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 116.111--General Application.
[ssquf] The TCEQ has proposed an amendment to the general
application provisions to require a PSD permit for GHG emissions that
meet or exceed the thresholds for GHG PSD permitting established in new
proposed section 116.164. This amendment will specify that GHG
permitting is statewide, without regard to an attainment designation
for GHG permitting.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 116.160--Prevision of Significant
Deterioration Requirements.
[ssquf] TCEQ has proposed an amendment to 30 TAC Section 116.160(a)
to require new major sources of GHG emissions or major modifications of
GHG emissions to comply with the PSD permitting program regardless of
location of the source.
[ssquf] TCEQ has proposed amendments to 30 TAC Section
116.160(b)(2) to include references to the netting requirements for GHG
applicability thresholds established in new section 116.164.
[ssquf] TCEQ has also proposed an amendment to 30 TAC Section
116.160(c) to clarify that emissions of
[[Page 9128]]
GHG are subject to the applicability thresholds in new section 116.164.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 116.164--Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Applicability for Greenhouse Gases Sources.
The TCEQ has proposed a new subsection to the Texas PSD program
specifically for the permitting of GHG emissions. This new subsection
establishes the applicability thresholds developed by EPA in the GHG
Tailoring Rule.
[cir] 30 TAC Section 116.169--Greenhouse Gas Transition.
The TCEQ has proposed a new subsection to the Texas PSD program to
address the transition process for permit applicants upon the effective
date of the rescission of the GHG PSD FIP by the EPA Administrator. The
proposed subsection does not identify the actions to be taken by EPA;
it only establishes that upon the rescission of the FIP, the TCEQ will
accept the transfer and review of pending permit applications. The
actions to be taken by EPA during the transition process will be
discussed in section IV.B. of this notice.
30 TAC Chapter 122--Federal Operating Permits.
The TCEQ proposed several amendments to the Texas Title V program
on October 23, 2013; but only the proposed revisions to 30 TAC Section
122.122--Potential to Emit--have been submitted for parallel processing
into the Texas SIP. In this proposed revision, the TCEQ amends the
potential to emit provisions to clarify that existing sites must
certify emissions of GHG below major source thresholds. Existing sites
that are currently operating will have 90 days after EPA's FIP
rescission to certify emissions of GHGs to avoid applicability of Title
V permitting.
The TCEQ December 2, 2013, commitment letter also
addresses the requirement that the state provide the necessary
assurances of its authority to address all future federally regulated
pollutants under the Texas PSD program, in order to remove the PSD FIP
at 40 CFR 52.2305(c).
The January 13, 2014, letter from TCEQ demonstrates its
authority to administer the Texas PSD program for EPA issued GHG PSD
permits.
III. EPA's Analysis of the State Submittals
A. Analysis of the October 5, 2010, State Submittal
As explained previously in section II.A., EPA's analysis of the
October 5, 2010, submittal only addresses the submitted substantive and
non-substantive revisions to the General Application provisions to the
Texas NSR program at 30 Section TAC 116.111. The substantive revision
to 30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(C) clarifies when federal BACT will be
applied to PSD permit applications. The TCAA requires the TCEQ to apply
BACT to all facilities and to all contaminants emitted from said
facilities that are permitted under the TCAA, including non-PSD sources
and modifications. EPA refers to this process as ``Texas BACT.'' We
view the application of Texas BACT, which would include BACT for Minor
NSR permitting, to be a separate requirement from the application of
federal BACT as required in EPA's PSD regulations and the Texas SIP-
approved PSD Program. To clarify the requirements of the TCAA and to
ensure compliance with federal PSD regulations, the TCEQ has submitted
revisions to the general application provisions at 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(C). Pursuant to the submitted revisions, BACT consistent
with the Texas Clean Air Act (Texas BACT) will be applied to all permit
applications under the TCAA. However, prior to the application of Texas
BACT, if the permit application is for a new source or modification
subject to PSD, then BACT consistent with the federal PSD requirements
and the SIP-approved Texas PSD program must be applied. The SIP-
approved Texas PSD program at 30 TAC Section 116.160(c)(1)(A)
incorporates the requirements for BACT at 40 CFR 52.21(b)(12).\10\ The
submitted revision clearly requires that all PSD subject applications
go through federal PSD BACT in addition to Texas BACT; for PSD permit
applications, federal BACT requirements will govern the permitting
process if there is a discrepancy between the federal BACT and Texas
BACT analysis. The TCEQ also submitted several non-substantive
revisions made throughout 30 TAC Section 116.111 to spell out acronyms
and to clarify/update cross-references. A complete listing of all the
revisions is available in the accompanying TSD for this rulemaking. EPA
proposes to approve the October 5, 2010, revisions to 30 TAC Section
116.111 as consistent with the PSD requirements at 40 CFR 51.166.
Further, we note that the substantive revision is consistent with and
supportive of revisions to the Texas PSD program separately approved at
30 TAC Section 116.160 on September 15, 2010. See 75 FR 55978.
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\10\ The Texas PSD program incorporates the federal PSD
definition of BACT at 40 CFR 52.21(b)(12). This means that PSD BACT
will be based on the maximum degree of reduction for each pollutant
subject to regulation under the Act, taking into account energy,
environmental, and economic impacts and other costs. The Texas BACT
process will apply to all permitted facilities and contaminants--not
just major sources--and is not held to the same rigor as the federal
PSD BACT analysis. For example, minor NSR applicants only have to
meet controls currently permitted as compared to the federal PSD
requirement to use the most stringent control technology.
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B. Analysis of the December 2, 2013, State Submittal
As described in the discussion in Section II.B of this proposal
notice, the TCEQ proposed revisions to several portions of the Texas
Air Code to implement the requirements of Texas HB 788 and to provide
TCEQ the authority to regulate GHG emissions through the Texas PSD
program. Texas HB 788 required further revisions to the Texas SIP and
the Minor NSR program to ensure that GHG emissions would only be
regulated via the PSD program as required through EPA's GHG Tailoring
Rule. The analysis in this section will be presented based on those
revisions necessary for the PSD program and those that are non-PSD.
EPA is parallel processing the revisions proposed on October 23,
2013, based on the request submitted on December 2, 2013. This means
that EPA is proposing approval at the same time that Texas is
completing the public comment and rulemaking process at the state
level. The December 2, 2013, SIP revision request will not be complete
and will not meet all the adequacy criteria until the state public
process is complete and the SIP revision is submitted as a final
adoption with a letter from the Governor or Governor's designee. EPA is
proposing to approve the SIP revision request after completion of the
state public process and final submittal.
i. Analysis of the Proposed Revisions to the Texas PSD Program
Definitions To Effectuate Authority
TCEQ has proposed several new definitions in the Texas SIP to adopt
and implement the permitting of GHGs consistent with federal
requirements.
TCEQ proposed new definitions at 30 TAC Sections 101.1(42)
and 116.12(16) to adopt the definition of ``greenhouse gases''. Based
on our analysis, EPA proposes to find that the new definitions of GHG
are consistent with the federal PSD definition at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48).
The TCEQ has also proposed a new definition for ``carbon
dioxide equivalent (CO2e)'' at 30 TAC Section 116.12(7)(A).
Based on our analysis, EPA proposes to find that the definition at 30
TAC Section 116.12(7)(A) is
[[Page 9129]]
consistent with the provisions at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(ii)(a) and (b).
The TCEQ also proposed revisions to the definition of
``potential to emit'' at 30 TAC Section 122.122. EPA proposes to find
that these revisions are necessary to update the SIP-approved
definition to account for the permitting of GHG emissions. The Texas
PSD program relies on a source's potential to emit for establishing
applicability of the PSD rules.
EPA's analysis is that the new definitions for GHG and
CO2e at 30 TAC Sections 101.1(42), 116.12(16), and
116.12(7A) are consistent with the Act and EPA regulations at 40 CFR
51.166. The proposed revisions to the definition of ``potential to
emit'' at 30 TAC Section 122.122 are necessary to ensure that PSD
permitting applicability is calculated correctly. Therefore, we propose
approval of the new definitions and propose to find that the final
adoption of the definitions for ``greenhouse gases'' and
``CO2e'' will effectuate the authority for the State of
Texas to regulate emissions of GHG through the Texas SIP and the Texas
PSD program.
Public Notice for GHG PSD Permit Applications
The December 2, 2013, proposed revisions included revisions to the
Texas Public Notice requirements for PSD permitting at 30 TAC Chapter
39. On January 6, 2014, EPA approved the Texas public notice rules for
PSD permitting for inclusion in the Texas SIP. See 79 FR 551. Our final
approval found that the Texas public notice process of the Notice of
Receipt of Application and Intent to Obtain Permit (NORI) and the
Notice of Application and Preliminary Decision (NAPD) would satisfy all
PSD-specific public notice requirements at 40 CFR 51.160, 51.161 and
51.166(q). We note that Texas regulations require that non-GHG PSD
permits are subject to the Texas Contested Case Hearing (CCH) process
which EPA has determined is outside the scope of the Texas SIP. Texas
HB 788 specifically directed the TCEQ to adopt and implement
regulations to issue GHG PSD permits; however these GHG PSD permits
will be exempted from the Texas CCH process. This exemption required
the TCEQ to revise the PSD public notice provisions at 30 TAC Chapter
39 to address the special requirements for issuing separate GHG PSD
permits. Additionally, the PSD public notice provisions were revised to
accommodate the subset of pending permit applications that will be
transferred to TCEQ from EPA upon the effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
rescission. Because of these revisions to the PSD public notice rules,
EPA finds it necessary to evaluate the Texas proposed revisions to 30
TAC Chapter 39 with respect to the federal PSD requirements at 40 CFR
51.166(q) to ensure all federal requirements continue to be satisfied
in the December 2, 2013, proposed SIP revision.
Proposed 30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) requires that a
proposed facility or modification that meets or exceeds the GHG
emission thresholds defined in new 30 TAC Section 116.164 must comply
with all applicable requirements in 30 TAC Chapter 116 for PSD
permitting. One such applicable requirement for PSD permitting is the
SIP-approved requirement at 30 TAC Section 116.111(b)(2) which requires
that Chapter 39 public notice provisions are followed for PSD permits
declared administratively complete on or after September 1, 1999.
Therefore, proposed 30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) and the
existing SIP establish that the requirements found in 30 TAC Chapter
39, Subchapters H and K apply to applications for the new major source
or major modifications for facilities subject to Chapter 116,
Subchapter B, Division 6, Sections 116.164 and 116.169 for GHG PSD
Permitting. Every application for a new major source or major
modification subject to GHG PSD permitting requirements will therefore
go through public notice with both the NORI and NAPD. Note that under
the SIP, as of January 6, 2014, the applicant, rather than the state
permitting authority, is the legally responsible party for satisfying
the public notice requirements for PSD applications. For example, the
applicant continues to be legally responsible for the publication of
the NORI and NAPD, using the specific notice text provided through
regulations by the TCEQ. The applicant is also legally responsible for
providing copies of the public notice documents to the EPA Regional
Office, local air pollution control agencies with jurisdiction in the
county, and air pollution control agencies of nearby states that may be
impacted by the proposed new source or modification. The applicant is
required to follow the Texas public notice regulations, which specify
the text for the notice documents and specify the additional agencies
that will receive notice.
The TCEQ has proposed revisions to the public notice text
requirements at 30 TAC Section 39.411 specific to GHG PSD permit
applications at Sections 39.411(e)(11), (e)(15), (e)(16), (f)(4) and
(f)(8). These proposed revisions to the notice text require that, in
addition to the text SIP-approved for PSD permits, the text of the
public notice specifically for a GHG PSD permit must specify that any
person is entitled to a public meeting or a notice and comment hearing
from the commission and that the air quality analysis will be provided
if applicable. Currently EPA does not require an air quality analysis
for GHG PSD permits. In the event that an analysis is required in the
future, the proposed revisions to the Texas Public Notice requirements
will include the analysis as required without further rulemaking on the
part of TCEQ. Similarly, the TCEQ has proposed revisions to the NAPD
text requirements specific to GHG PSD Permit applications at 30 TAC
Section 30.419(e)(1) to state that an air quality analysis will be
available for public notice as applicable. The proposed revisions to 30
TAC Section 39.420(e)(4) exempt applications for GHG PSD permits from
the Texas CCH process. EPA is proposing to find that the GHG PSD
specific revisions as discussed above continue to meet the requirements
to provide opportunity for public comment and for information
availability at 40 CFR 51.161 and 51.166. The NORI and NAPD both
identify locations where materials, including the draft permit and all
technical materials supporting the decision, will be made available for
public review. The TCEQ will also respond to each comment received when
making a final permit decision. The TCEQ will provide opportunity for a
public meeting on the permit application if requested. TCEQ has
exempted the GHG PSD permit applications from the Texas-specific
process of contested case hearings, which is outside the scope of the
Texas SIP.
The TCEQ has also proposed a new public notice process for the
subset of GHG PSD permit applications that are transferred to TCEQ from
the EPA upon the effective date of the GHG PSD FIP Rescission and where
EPA has already proposed a draft permit. Proposed new Section 30 TAC
39.412 creates an optional Combined Notice process, to be used in lieu
of the current SIP-approved process of a separate NORI and NAPD, to
streamline the processing of these pending permit applications.
Proposed new 30 TAC Section 39.412(a) establishes the applicability of
this new section specifically to the subset of applications that were
previously filed with EPA and which EPA proposed a draft permit prior
to transfer to the TCEQ. Proposed new 30 TAC Section 39.412(b) provides
the streamlined
[[Page 9130]]
process for the subset of permit applications to be a Combined Notice
addressing the requirements of both the NORI and NAPD in one notice
document, in lieu of the SIP-approved process requiring a separate NORI
and NAPD. The Combined Notice will identify a public location where the
application, the preliminary determination and draft permit will be
available for review and comment, in addition to a list of all the GHGs
proposed to be emitted and an air quality analysis, as applicable. The
Combined Notice will also provide instructions on submitting comments,
a statement that a public meeting will be held if requested, and a
statement that the comment period will be 30 days after the last
publication of the Combined Notice. Additionally, the Combined Notice
will state that any comments previously submitted to EPA regarding the
GHG PSD permit application will not be included in the Executive
Director's response to comments unless the comments are submitted to
the TCEQ during the comment period identified in the Combined Notice.
EPA proposes to find the Combined Notice at 30 TAC Section 39.412,
specific to the subset of transferred permit applications where a draft
permit was previously proposed by EPA, is consistent with all
requirements of 40 CFR 51.166(q) for PSD public notice requirements.
EPA's analysis of the Texas public participation requirements, both
for newly submitted GHG PSD permit applications and those transferred
from EPA, demonstrates that the submitted provisions are consistent
with the Act and EPA regulations at 40 CFR 51.160, 51.161 and
51.166(q). Therefore, we propose approval of the new and revised
sections in 30 TAC Chapter 39, submitted for parallel processing on
December 2, 2013.
Proposed Revisions To Establish PSD Authority and Appropriate
Thresholds for GHG Permitting
TCEQ has proposed several new provisions in the Texas NSR Program
to adopt and implement the permitting of GHG emissions consistent with
federal requirements in EPA's GHG Tailoring Rule. The proposed
regulations are substantively similar to the federal requirements for
the permitting of GHG-emitting sources subject to PSD. The detailed
analysis in our TSD demonstrates that the regulatory revisions proposed
on October 23, 2013, and submitted for parallel processing on December
2, 2013, establish that Texas has the authority to issue PSD permits
for GHG-emitting sources subject to PSD consistent with the federal PSD
requirements of EPA's final GHG Tailoring Rule. The revisions also
establish thresholds for determining which stationary sources and
modification projects become subject to permitting requirements for GHG
emissions under its PSD program. Specifically, the December 2, 2013,
submittal satisfies the Tailoring Rule requirements in the following
ways:
TCEQ proposed a new provision in the NSR Permit
Application procedures at new subsection 30 TAC Section
116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) that explicitly requires that any proposed
facility or modification that meets or exceeds the GHG thresholds
established in new proposed section 30 TAC Section 116.164 must comply
with all applicable requirements of Chapter 116 for PSD review. This
new provision ensures that all PSD requirements such as BACT and public
notice will be followed for GHG PSD permit applications. The October 5,
2010, revisions to 30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(C), previously
discussed in this proposed rulemaking, complement the implementation of
the Texas PSD program, especially with regard to the PSD permitting of
GHG emissions. While the October 5, 2010, revisions are germane to the
Texas PSD program and ensure that federal BACT consistent with EPA's
PSD regulations will apply to all PSD permit applications, we
specifically note that the provision also applies to GHG PSD permits
and ensures that federal BACT will be applied to all GHG PSD permit
applications. EPA proposes to find that the October 5, 2010, revisions
to 30 TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(C) and the proposed new provision at 30
TAC Section 116.111(a)(2)(I)(ii) are necessary to implement the Texas
GHG PSD permitting process.
TCEQ proposed revisions to the Texas PSD program rules at
30 TAC Section 116.160(a) to explicitly require any new major source of
GHG emissions or major modification involving GHG emissions shall
comply with the applicable requirements of the Texas PSD program. TCEQ
proposed further revisions to the Texas PSD program at 30 TAC Sections
116.160(b) and (c) to specify that the proposed new GHG emission
thresholds established at 30 TAC Section 116.164 must be used when
evaluating a proposed new source or modification for PSD applicability.
EPA proposes to find that the proposed revisions to the Texas PSD
program at 30 TAC Sections 116.160(a), (b), and (c) are necessary to
implement the Texas GHG PSD permitting process.
TCEQ proposed new 30 TAC Sections 116.164 to establish the
PSD applicability requirements for GHG sources.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a), which establishes the applicability statement for the GHG
PSD permitting thresholds, is consistent with the federal requirement
at 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(iv) to regulate GHG emissions through the PSD
program.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a)(1) is consistent with the federal requirements at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(iv)(a) for the regulation of a new major stationary
source that is subject to PSD requirements for a non-GHG pollutant and
will emit or have the potential to emit GHG emissions above the
specified thresholds.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a)(2) is consistent with the federal requirements at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(iv)(b) for the regulation of an existing major stationary
source that is major for non-GHG and will emit or have the potential to
emit GHG emissions above the specified thresholds.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a)(3) is consistent with the federal requirement at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(v)(a) for the regulation of a new major stationary source
that is subject to PSD only for GHG emissions based on the specified
thresholds.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a)(4) is consistent with the federal requirements at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(v)(b) for the regulation of an existing stationary source
that is major for GHG emissions and proposes a major modification for
GHG emissions above the specified thresholds.
[cir] EPA proposes to find that proposed new 30 TAC Section
116.164(a)(5) is consistent with the requirement at 40 CFR
51.166(b)(1)(i)(C) for the regulation of an existing minor stationary
source for non-GHG pollutants that would undertake a physical change or
change in the method of operation that will cause the source to be a
major stationary source by itself for GHG emissions at the specified
thresholds.
[cir] Proposed new 30 TAC Section 116.164(b) establishes that new
stationary sources or existing stationary sources that make
modifications involving emissions of GHG below the thresholds
established in new 30 TAC Section 116.164(a) are not required to have
an authorization for the GHG emissions through a PSD permit or other
Texas Minor NSR permit authorizations
[[Page 9131]]
such as a Standard Permit, PBR or Flexible Permit. EPA proposes to find
that this new provision is consistent with EPA's GHG Tailoring Rule
where we have established that emissions of GHG are only subject to
regulation above the Tailoring Rule thresholds.
TCEQ proposed new 30 TAC Section 116.169 to establish the
authority for the TCEQ to accept the transfer of permit applications
and associated materials upon the effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
rescission. EPA proposes to find that new 30 TAC Section 116.169 is
necessary for establishing the legal authority for TCEQ to implement
the GHG PSD permitting program.
ii. Analysis of the Proposed Non-PSD Revisions to the Texas SIP
The December 2, 2013, submittal included several proposed revisions
to the remainder of the Texas SIP and the Texas Minor NSR programs to
satisfy the requirements of Texas HB 788 and restrict the permitting of
GHG emissions only to the extent required under federal law. As such,
the TCEQ proposed revisions to the definitions of ``reportable
quantity'' at 30 TAC Section 101.1(89) to establish there is no
reportable quantity for GHG emissions. TCEQ also proposed revisions to
the Emission Inventory Requirements at 30 TAC Section 101.10 to specify
that emissions of GHG are not subject to the reporting requirements in
the Emission Inventory. Similarly, the TCEQ proposed revisions to the
Emissions Event Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements to specify
that emissions of GHG are not included in emissions event reporting.
EPA proposes to find that these provisions are consistent with EPA's
GHG Tailoring Rule and our determination that emissions of GHG are only
subject to regulation in the PSD program above the specified GHG
thresholds. There are no federal requirements establishing reportable
quantities or reporting requirements for emission inventories or
emission events for GHG emissions.\11\
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\11\ EPA has separately promulgated mandatory reporting
requirements for owners and operators of certain facilities that
directly emit GHG emissions at 40 CFR part 98. See 74 FR 56260,
October 30, 2009. The Emission Inventory developed and maintained by
a state permitting authority under the applicable SIP is separate
from the requirements under 40 CFR part 98 and is not required to
include GHG emissions data.
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The December 2, 2013, submittal also proposed revisions to the
Texas Minor NSR program at 30 TAC Sections 106.2, 106.4, 116.610, and
116.611. The proposed revisions to the Texas Minor NSR Permits by Rule
(PBR) Program at 30 TAC Sections 106.2 and 106.4 clarify that a PBR
cannot be used to authorize emissions of GHGs. Similarly, the proposed
revisions to the Texas Minor NSR Standard Permit Program at 30 TAC
Sections 116.610 and 116.611 clarify that a Standard Permit cannot be
used to authorize emissions of GHGs. The Texas provisions also provide
that if a source is subject to PSD requirements only for the emissions
of GHGs, then a PBR or Standard Permit can be used to authorize the
non-GHG pollutants. EPA proposes that the revisions to the PBR and
Standard Permit are consistent with EPA's Tailoring Rule to only
regulate GHG emissions through the PSD program at or above the
specified GHG PSD thresholds; therefore, these proposed revisions will
ensure that GHG PSD requirements will not be circumvented.
IV. EPA's Analysis for Rescinding the Texas PSD FIP
A. Evaluation of Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP at 40 CFR 52.2305(a),
(b), and (c)
EPA established the final Texas GHG PSD FIP on May 3, 2011, at 40
CFR 52.2305(a), (b), and (c). These provisions remain in effect until
EPA approves the state's rules to address the permitting of GHG
emissions consistent with federal requirements and EPA rescinds the
FIP. The analysis presented in Section III of this rulemaking and the
accompanying TSD demonstrate that the October 23, 2013, proposed rules
submitted for parallel processing on December 2, 2013, adequately
address all federal requirements for GHG PSD permitting. In addition,
Mr. Zak Covar, former Executive Director of the TCEQ, submitted a
commitment letter on December 2, 2013, that addresses the requirement
that the state provide necessary assurances of its authority to address
all future regulated pollutants under the Texas PSD program in order to
remove the PSD FIP at 40 CFR 52.2305(c). Based on the commitments in
the December 2, 2013, letter and the October 23, 2013, proposed
rulemaking for permitting emissions of GHG through the Texas PSD
program, EPA proposes to find that the TCEQ has the authority under the
Texas Clean Air Act to apply the Texas PSD program to all pollutants
newly subject to regulation, including non-NAAQS pollutants into the
future. EPA recognizes that the TCEQ may be required to proceed through
a notice and comment rule development process, but this process in no
way prevents the TCEQ from addressing the PSD requirements of the CAA.
As such, we are proposing rescission of the Texas GHG PSD FIP at 40 CFR
52.2305(a), (b), and (c), with three limited possibilities for retained
authority as detailed below in Section IV.B.
B. Transition Process Upon Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP for Pending
GHG PSD Permit Applications and Issued GHG PSD Permits
As explained throughout this notice, EPA is proposing approval of
the December 2, 2013, submittal as consistent with the requirements for
PSD permitting of GHG emissions under EPA's GHG Tailoring Rule. Our
analysis demonstrates the TCEQ has proposed necessary rule revisions to
provide adequate authority to regulate GHG emissions using appropriate
emission thresholds under the Texas PSD program. As such, EPA is
simultaneously proposing to rescind the GHG PSD FIP and intends to
finalize both actions simultaneously. We expect that the FIP rescission
will be effective 30 days after publication of the final approval of
the Texas GHG PSD revisions. EPA has developed a process for
transitioning pending permit applications and EPA issued permits to the
TCEQ following the rescission of the FIP. Our transition process,
titled ``Transition Process for Pending GHG PSD Permit Applications and
Issued GHG PSD Permits Upon Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP'' is
available in the docket for this rulemaking and on the EPA Region 6 GHG
Web site at https://yosemite.epa.gov/r6/Apermit.nsf/AirP. The transition
process is briefly summarized below. EPA believes that the transition
process will ensure a smooth transfer of permitting authorities for GHG
PSD permits in Texas and inform the regulated entities. Please note
that this transition process is predicated on the fact that the TCEQ
will proceed with final rulemaking to adopt the GHG PSD SIP rules and
submit these rules to EPA for approval into the Texas SIP. If TCEQ is
unable to submit a final SIP revision, EPA will not rescind the FIP and
will therefore not initiate the transition process.
EPA's transition process addresses two components of the GHG PSD
program--pending permit applications and issued permits.\12\ Through
application of this transition process and in concert with the
rescission of the GHG PSD FIP, EPA will retain GHG PSD
[[Page 9132]]
permitting authority at 40 CFR 52.2305 in the following three limited
instances:
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\12\ A ``pending permit application'' is any GHG PSD permit
application submitted to EPA for which EPA has not yet issued a
final permit to authorize the emissions of GHG by the signature date
of EPA's final approval of the Texas SIP rules and rescission of the
FIP.
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1. EPA will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for any applicants
who select to remain with EPA for GHG PSD permit issuance. This option
will be detailed in a letter to the permit applicant and will contain a
deadline by which the applicant must inform EPA of its decision to
remain with EPA. EPA will also maintain a list of all pending permit
applications retained under EPA's GHG PSD permitting authority on the
EPA Region 6 GHG Web site, which will be referenced in any future final
GHG PSD SIP approval and FIP rescission action EPA may take for Texas.
2. EPA will retain the GHG PSD permitting authority for applicants
with pending permits who fail to select a permitting authority by the
deadline specified in the above referenced EPA letter to each permit
applicant.
3. EPA will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for issued permits
for which either (a) the time for filing an administrative appeal has
not expired or (b) all administrative and judicial appeal processes
(including any associated remand action) have not been completed upon
the signature date of any future EPA final action to approve TCEQ's SIP
submittal and rescind the GHG PSD FIP. In a letter dated January 13,
2014, TCEQ requested approval to exercise its authority to administer
the PSD program with respect to those sources that have final GHG PSD
permits issued by EPA upon the effective date of the GHG PSD FIP
rescission. This letter is available for review in the docket for this
rulemaking. With respect to this transition process, a ``final GHG PSD
permit issued by EPA'' is a permit where all final EPA actions have
been taken and all administrative and judicial appeal opportunities
have expired or processes have been concluded or completed.
We note that as with any PSD permit application, an applicant may
withdraw a pending application for any reason before the permit is
issued. With respect to the permit applications for which EPA will
retain permitting authority as specified in the transition process,
EPA's permitting authority will cease upon an applicant's written
request withdrawing the pending permit application before a final
determination is made.
For the permit applicants who elect to transfer to TCEQ for GHG PSD
permit issuance, EPA will transfer the application, all related
technical materials submitted by the applicant, the proposed draft
permit and any comments received on the proposed draft permit to TCEQ.
The TCEQ will require the applicant to comply with SIP-approved public
notice rules. The applicant will either follow the current SIP-approved
process of publishing a separate NORI and NAPD, or publish a combined
NORI and NAPD notice pursuant to new proposed revisions at 30 TAC
Section 39.412. Further, pursuant to the Texas SIP, any comments
submitted to EPA on the proposed draft permit must be resubmitted to
the TCEQ during the TCEQ's public comment period. EPA intends to
identify on the EPA Region 6 GHG Web site which applications with
proposed draft permits have been transferred to TCEQ for issuance. EPA
will endeavor to notify each commenter about the need to resubmit
comments under the SIP-approved Texas public comment period provisions
or the newly proposed revisions at 30 TAC Section 39.412.
The TCEQ will assume full PSD responsibility for the administration
and implementation of final GHG PSD permits issued by EPA upon
notification from EPA that all administrative and judicial appeal
processes have expired or have been completed or concluded (including
any associated remand actions) for a specific permit or permit
application. Assuming full PSD responsibility includes the authority to
conduct general administration of these existing permits, authority to
process and issue any and all subsequent PSD permit actions relating to
such permits (e.g., amendments), and authority to enforce such permits.
In the above referenced January 13, 2014, letter, the TCEQ explains
that the provisions contained in element 1 of the Texas PSD Supplement
(as adopted by the Texas Air Control Board on July 17, 1987) provide
the TCEQ the authority to enforce all conditions of PSD permits issued
for sources in Texas by EPA prior to full delegation of authority to
implement the Texas PSD program. The TCEQ has affirmed that this
provision continues to apply to the GHG PSD permits issued by EPA.
Therefore, TCEQ has demonstrated it has the authority to administer
EPA-issued GHG PSD permits.
V. Proposed Action
EPA has made the preliminary determination that the October 5,
2010, revisions to the Texas SIP that are part of this rulemaking are
approvable because they are adopted and submitted in accordance with
the CAA and EPA regulations regarding NSR permitting. EPA has made the
preliminary determination that the December 2, 2013, proposed revisions
to the Texas SIP and request for parallel processing are in accordance
with the CAA and EPA regulations regarding SIP development and GHG
regulations. EPA invites the public to make comments on all aspects of
the EPA proposed approval of the revisions to the Texas NSR SIP to
provide for the regulation of GHG emissions and clarify the
applicability of BACT for all PSD permit applications, and to submit
comments by the date listed above. Therefore, under section 110 and
part C of the Act, and for the reasons stated above, EPA proposes to
approve the following revisions to the Texas SIP:
Substantive and non-substantive revisions to 30 TAC
Section 116.111 adopted on September 15, 2010, and submitted on October
5, 2010, to clarify the application of BACT to all PSD permit
applications in the Texas NSR program;
Substantive and non-substantive revisions proposed October
23, 2013, and submitted for parallel processing on December 2, 2013,
necessary to provide the TCEQ the authority to regulate GHG emissions
under the Texas PSD Program:
[cir] Revisions to Public Notice requirements at 30 TAC Sections
39.411(e)(11), (e)(15), (e)(16), (f)(4), (f)(8), 39.412(a)--(d),
39.419(e)(1), and 39.420(e)(4).
[cir] Revisions to the entirety of the General Air Quality
Definitions at 30 TAC Sections 101.1.
[cir] Revisions to the Emission Inventory Requirements at 30 TAC
Section 101.10.
[cir] Revisions to Emissions Event Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements at 30 TAC Section 101.201.
[cir] Revisions to the Permits by Rule Minor NSR program at 30 TAC
Sections 106.2 and 106.4.
[cir] Revisions to the Definitions for Texas NSR Permitting at 30
TAC Section 116.12.
[cir] Revisions to Permit Application provisions for Texas NSR
Permitting at 30 TAC Section 116.111.
[cir] Revisions to the Texas PSD Program at 30 TAC Section 116.160.
[cir] Proposed new 30 TAC Section 116.164 to tailor the PSD
thresholds for GHG permitting.
[cir] Proposed new 30 TAC Section 116.169 to establish the
transition process for GHG permitting.
[cir] Revisions to the Standard Permit Minor NSR program at 30 TAC
Sections 116.610 and 116.611.
[cir] Revisions to the definition of Potential to Emit at 30 TAC
Section 122.122.
[[Page 9133]]
Texas is subject to the FIP for PSD permitting of GHG emissions.
This GHG PSD FIP remains in place and EPA remains the PSD permitting
authority for GHG-emitting sources in Texas until EPA finalizes our
proposed approval of the October 23, 2013, proposed revisions submitted
for parallel processing on December 2, 2013, to the Texas SIP.
Therefore, we propose that upon finalization of today's action, EPA
will rescind the GHG PSD FIP for Texas at 40 CFR 52.2305(a) and (b).
However, as detailed in Sections IV.B.1-3 and our transition process,
there are three limited possibilities for retained authority. First,
EPA will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for any pending permit
applications where the permit applicant has submitted a written request
to remain with EPA for permit issuance. Second, EPA will retain GHG PSD
permitting authority for any pending permit application where the
applicant has not submitted a written request regarding permit
authority, and EPA has made a proposed determination through a public
noticed draft permit upon the signature date of EPA's rescission of the
GHG PSD FIP. EPA does not intend to retain any other authority over
pending permit applications. Note, even for those cases where EPA
announces it will retain permitting authority over an application, this
authority will cease upon an applicant's written request to EPA
withdrawing the pending permit application before a final determination
is made. Finally, EPA will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for any
issued permit for which either the time for filing an administrative
appeal has not expired or all administrative and judicial appeals
processes have not been completed by the signature date of EPA's final
action to approve TCEQ's SIP submittal. Texas is also subject to the
FIP for PSD permitting for any other pollutants that become newly
subject to regulation under the CAA after January 2, 2011. We propose
to find that the TCEQ has provided necessary and adequate assurances
that the Texas PSD program will be revised in the future to address
pollutants that become newly regulated under the CAA after January 2,
2011, and that the TCEQ has the adequate authority under State law to
regulate the new PSD pollutants. Therefore, we propose that upon
finalization of today's action, EPA will rescind the PSD FIP for Newly
Regulated Pollutants for Texas at 40 CFR 52.2305(c).
EPA is severing and taking no action on the remainder of the
October 5, 2010, SIP submittal for the adoption and implementation of
the Texas Minor NSR Qualified Facilities Program. EPA is also severing
and taking no action on the portions of the December 2, 2013, submittal
concerning biomass GHG emissions at 30 TAC Section 116.12(7)(B). The DC
Circuit Court issued an order to vacate EPA's Biomass Deferral Rule on
July 12, 2013.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Clean Air Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely proposes to approve state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by state law. For that reason, this
action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the Clean Air Act; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have tribal implications as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
because the SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in
the state, and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, and incorporation by reference.
Dated: February 4, 2014.
Ron Curry,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
[FR Doc. 2014-03429 Filed 2-14-14; 8:45 am]
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