Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Withdrawal of Federal Implementation Plan; Texas; Prevention of Significant Deterioration; Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule Revisions, 66641-66651 [2014-26315]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 217 / Monday, November 10, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
66641
EPA-APPROVED NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES IN THE TEXAS SIP
Applicable
geographic or
nonattainment
area
State submittal/
effective date
*
*
Commitment Letter from the
TCEQ regarding regulation of
PSD pollutants into the future.
*
Statewide ..........
*
December 2, 2013 ...
*
11/10/2014 [Insert
FR page number
where document
begins].
Clarification Letter from the TCEQ
regarding authority to administer EPA issued GHG PSD
permits.
Statewide ..........
January 13, 2014 ....
11/10/2014 [Insert
FR page number
where document
begins].
Clarification Letter from the TCEQ
regarding Judicial Review for
PSD Permits.
Statewide ..........
May 30, 2014 ..........
11/10/2014 [Insert
FR page number
where document
begins].
Name of SIP provisions
3. Section 52.2303 is amended by
adding paragraph (a)(1)(xi) to read as
follows.
Significant deterioration of air
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(xi) November 10, 2014 (as revised by
the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality on March 24,
2014, and submitted on April 16, 2014,
and further clarified in letters dated
December 2, 2013, January 13, 2014, and
May 30, 2014) to address PSD
permitting requirements of GHG
emissions for major sources and
modifications required to obtain PSD
permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs
promulgated by EPA on June 3, 2010.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2014–26314 Filed 11–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
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[EPA–R06–OAR–2013–0808; FRL–9912–50–
OAR]
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.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
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The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking final action to
rescind a Federal Implementation Plan
(FIP) for Texas for greenhouse gas (GHG)
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) permitting, with three limited
circumstances for retained federal
permitting authority. We are removing
the majority of the GHG PSD FIP
because in a separate but simultaneous
action being published elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, we are
finalizing approval of the majority of
revisions to the Texas State
Implementation Plan (SIP) submitted by
the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to the
EPA on October 5, 2010, and April 16,
2014, that address the state’s authority
to regulate GHGs and establish an
approvable GHG PSD permitting
program. The EPA is finalizing this
action under Section 110 and Part C of
the Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: This final rule is effective on
November 10, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R06–OAR–2013–0808. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov Web
site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
SUMMARY:
■
§ 52.2303
quality.
EPA approval date
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Comments
*
*
Clarifies 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.
Clarifies that the TCEQ has the general
authority to administer EPA issued
GHG PSD permits. Also clarifies that
the TCEQ has authority to process and
issue any and all subsequent PSD actions relating to EPA issued GHG PSD
permits.
Clarifies the judicial review process for
Texas PSD permits.
the Air Planning Section (6PD–L),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1445
Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas
75202–2733. Contact the person listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT paragraph below to make an
appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Adina Wiley, Air Permits Section (6PD–
R), telephone (214) 665–2115, email
wiley.adina@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Recent UARG v. EPA U.S. Supreme Court
Decision
A. Overview of the Decision and
Implications for this Action
B. Changes to the Transition Process as a
Result of the UARG v. EPA Decision
III. Response to Comments
IV. Effective Date of Final Action
V. Final Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
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Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
to Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
I. Background
The background for today’s final
action to rescind the Texas GHG PSD
FIP, but for three limited circumstances,
and the background for the separate but
simultaneous final action also being
published today to approve the majority
of revisions to the Texas SIP, are
discussed in detail in our February 18,
2014, proposal (79 FR 9123). In that
document, we proposed to approve
portions of two revisions to the Texas
SIP submitted by the TCEQ on October
5, 2010, and December 2, 2013. The
December 2, 2013, submittal was a
request for parallel processing of
revisions proposed by the TCEQ on
October 23, 2013. Our February 18,
2014, proposed approval and
accompanying Technical Support
Document provide the EPA’s evaluation
of the October 5, 2010, and December 2,
2013, revisions to the Texas SIP that
would provide for the regulation of GHG
emissions in the Texas PSD program
and clarify the applicability of BACT for
all PSD permit applications. We
preliminarily determined that the
revisions were consistent with the CAA
and the EPA’s regulations and guidance
for the permitting of GHG emissions in
the PSD program. Therefore, we
proposed approval of the SIP revisions
and simultaneously proposed to rescind
the GHG PSD Federal Implementation
Plan (FIP) for Texas with the exception
of the three limited circumstances for
retained federal permitting authority.
The December 2, 2013, submittal was
a request for parallel processing;
meaning that the EPA proposed a
rulemaking action on a proposed SIP
revision concurrently with the State’s
public review process. As discussed in
our separate but simultaneous final
approval action on the Texas SIP
revisions published elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, the EPA
evaluated the April 16, 2014, final Texas
SIP submittal and determined that the
changes made by the TCEQ at adoption
are not material changes to the
regulations that we proposed to
approve; and therefore do not alter our
rationale presented in the February 18,
2014 proposed approval. By extension,
the underlying rationale for the
proposed rescission of the majority of
the Texas GHG PSD FIP remains
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unchanged from proposal. However, as
discussed in Section II of this final FIP
rescission and the separate but
simultaneous final SIP approval, the
EPA is not acting on certain sections of
the April 16, 2014, submittal that are no
longer necessary after the recent United
States Supreme Court decision, UARG
v. EPA.
In this action, the EPA is finalizing
only the rescission of the majority of the
Texas GHG PSD FIP. We are also
finalizing in a separate but simultaneous
action published elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register the approval of
the majority of the above referenced
revisions to the Texas PSD SIP.
Therefore, as of the effective date of this
final action, the TCEQ becomes the
primary permitting authority for GHGs,
except in the three limited
circumstances described this final
action. As explained in our separate but
simultaneous final SIP action, we
explain in the final notice the recent
United States Supreme Court decision,
Utility Air Regulatory Group (UARG) v.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
(No. 12–1146). We discuss in that notice
that we are finalizing the majority of the
proposed approval of the Texas SIP
revisions but are not acting on certain
sections of the submittal that appear no
longer necessary after the decision.
Please see that notice for further
discussion.
II. Recent UARG v. EPA U.S. Supreme
Court Decision
A. Overview of the Decision and
Implications for This Action
On June 23, 2014, the United States
Supreme Court issued a decision
addressing the application of stationary
source permitting requirements to GHGs
in Utility Air Regulatory Group (UARG)
v. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) (No. 12–1146). The Supreme
Court held that the EPA may not treat
GHGs as an air pollutant for purposes of
determining whether a source is a major
source required to obtain a PSD permit,
but that the EPA could continue to
require that PSD permits, otherwise
required based on a source’s emissions
of conventional pollutants (‘‘anyway’’
sources), contain limitations on GHG
emissions based on the application of
the BACT.
The Supreme Court reversed in part
and affirmed in part the decision of the
D.C. Circuit Court that upheld several
EPA actions addressing PSD permitting
requirements for greenhouse gases
including the Tailoring Rule.1 Although
1 See ‘‘Prevention of Significant Deterioration and
Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule; Final Rule.’’
75 FR 31514 June 3, 2010. See also our February
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the Supreme Court concluded that ‘‘EPA
exceeded its statutory authority when it
interpreted the Clean Air Act to require
PSD and Title V permitting for
stationary sources based on their
greenhouse gas emissions,’’ 134 S.Ct. at
2449, it did not specifically identify
particular provisions of the EPA
regulations it was striking down. Thus,
pending further action by the United
States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit (the D.C. Circuit)
and EPA action to revise the regulations
in accordance with a more specific
remedy ordered by the D.C. Circuit, the
provisions of 40 CFR 51.166 that
provide criteria for EPA approval of
state PSD permit programs remain in the
Code of Federal Regulations. This
includes 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(v), which
addresses permitting of ‘‘Step 2’’
sources that emit greenhouse gases in
excess of 100,000 tons per year and no
other pollutants over the major source
thresholds. In light of UARG, the EPA is
not requiring PSD permits, either
directly or through state implementation
plans for sources emitting greenhouse
gases at any level unless a source emits
a regulated pollutant other than
greenhouse gases above the statutory
major source thresholds. That means
that the EPA will not apply or enforce
regulations that would require states to
include in their SIPs a requirement that
‘‘Step 2’’ sources obtain PSD permits.
Thus, despite the fact that 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(v) remains in the Code of
Federal Regulations at this time, in light
of the Supreme Court’s decision the
EPA is not taking action on the
provisions of the Texas SIP that would
require a stationary source to obtain a
PSD permit if GHGs are the only
pollutant (i) that the source emits or has
the potential to emit above the major
source thresholds, or (ii) for which there
is a significant emissions increase and a
significant net emissions increase from
a modification.
The Supreme Court also affirmed the
lower court’s decision that the BACT
requirement applies to GHG emissions
from new and modified sources that
trigger PSD permitting obligations on
the basis of their emissions of air
pollutants other than GHG (also known
as ‘‘Step 1’’ or ‘‘anyway’’ sources). The
Court concluded that ‘‘EPA may
continue to treat greenhouse gases as a
‘pollutant subject to regulation under
[the Clean Air Act]’ for purposes of
requiring BACT for ‘anyway’ sources.’’
134 S.Ct. at 2449. Accordingly, the PSD
BACT requirement continues to apply to
greenhouse gas emissions from any new
18, 2014, Proposal (79 FR 9123) for a full
background discussion.
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or modified source that is otherwise
subject to PSD requirements as a result
of its emissions of a criteria pollutant
(i.e. to an ‘‘anyway’’ source), and EPA
will continue to implement existing
regulations that limit application of the
statutory BACT requirement to
greenhouse gases where the
construction project to be completed
would emit at or above a level of 75,000
tpy of CO2e as provided in 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(iv).
The EPA and D.C. Circuit have long
recognized, and the D.C. Circuit’s
decision affirmed by the Supreme Court
further confirmed, that PSD
requirements apply to emissions of PSD
pollutants ‘‘by automatic operation of’’
the Clean Air Act. Coalition for
Responsible Regulation v. EPA, 684 F.3f
102, 115 (D.C. Cir. 2012). The Supreme
Court rejected ‘‘a greenhouse-gasinclusive interpretation of the PSD and
Title V triggers,’’ because the CAA does
not allow the Agency to ‘‘treat
greenhouse gases as a pollutant for
purposes of defining a ‘major emitting
facility’ (or a ‘modification’ thereof) in
the PSD context.’’ 134 S.Ct. at 2442,
2449. But the Court did not question the
longstanding interpretation of the EPA
and the D.C. Circuit court that the CAA
PSD permitting requirements
automatically apply to major source
emissions of pollutants that are ‘‘subject
to regulation’’ under the Act. 134 S.Ct.
at 2442 n. 6. See also UARG, 134 S.Ct.
at 2435 (‘‘it is unlawful to construct or
modify a ‘major emitting facility’ in ‘any
area to which [the PSD program]
applies’ without first obtaining a
permit.’’). To the contrary, UARG
affirmed the portion of the D.C. Circuit’s
decision holding that the BACT
requirement clearly applies to
greenhouse gas emissions from
‘‘anyway’’ sources and that such PSD
requirements apply to sources
automatically by operation of the Clean
Air Act. Accordingly, the EPA does not
interpret UARG to alter the settled
understanding that the BACT
requirement automatically applies to a
pollutant (including greenhouse gases)
once it becomes subject to regulation
under the Clean Air Act. Thus,
consistent with the Supreme Court’s
holding that EPA can ‘‘continue to’’
require compliance with the BACT
requirement in the Clean Air Act, 134
S.Ct. 2449, the EPA will continue to
apply the BACT requirement to
greenhouse gases under its existing
regulations applicable to EPA’s review
of state implementation plans, including
40 CFR 51.166(j), 40 CFR 51.166(b)(12),
40 CFR 51.166(b)(49), and 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(i)–(iv).
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The Supreme Court noted that the
EPA could exercise its discretion to
limit application of BACT to sources
with the potential to emit greenhouse
gases above a de minimis threshold, but
that if EPA wished to do so, it would
need to justify such threshold for
application of BACT to GHGs on proper
grounds. The Court observed that when
EPA established the existing 75,000 tpy
threshold the Agency did not
characterize it as a de minimis level. 134
S.Ct. at 2449. Rather, that threshold
represents a level that EPA determined
to be both administratively feasible for
permitting authorities to implement and
reasonable for sources to comply with.
75 FR 31514, 31560 (June 3, 2010). EPA
is considering additional action to
establish a de minimis threshold for
application of the BACT requirement to
GHGs. Pending additional action by
EPA addressing the threshold for
application of the BACT requirement to
greenhouse gases, the Agency will
continue to apply the existing
regulations that require a state PSD
program to apply the PSD BACT
requirement to GHG emissions from
‘‘anyway’’ sources that emit or have the
potential to emit 75,000 tons per year
tpy or more of GHG on a carbon dioxide
(CO2e) basis. With respect to modified
‘‘anyway’’ sources, the EPA is presently
reading its regulations to require that
state PSD programs apply the PSD
BACT requirements to GHG if both of
the following circumstances are present:
(1) The modification is otherwise
subject to PSD for a pollutant other than
GHG; (2) the modification results in a
GHG emissions increase and a net GHG
emissions increase equal to or greater
than 75,000 tpy CO2e and greater than
zero on a mass basis.
Based on information submitted by
TCEQ, EPA concluded in its Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking that TCEQ had
provided sufficient assurance that it has
the legal authority, personnel, and
funding to implement PSD permitting
requirements for greenhouse gases.
Following the UARG decision, the State
of Texas has argued in litigation before
the D.C. Circuit that GHGs are not
presently subject to regulation under the
PSD program and that EPA must
conduct additional rulemaking to
establish a de minimis level before the
BACT requirement can be applied to
greenhouse gas emissions in PSD
permits required for construction at
anyway sources. Nevertheless, the
TCEQ has communicated to the EPA
that it ‘‘continues to pursue EPA
approval of [its] SIP submittal . . . so
our agency has the full authority to
implement the greenhouse gas
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66643
permitting program in Texas.’’ 2 The
State has further stated that
‘‘[r]egardless of litigation positions, we
are currently advocating and might
pursue in the future, we think it is
necessary for TCEQ to assume this
permitting role and issue PSD permits
for greenhouse gas emissions.’’ Based on
information supplied by TCEQ before
the proposed rule and this additional
assurance, EPA concludes that Texas
intends to implement the PSD
permitting requirements for greenhouse
gases consistent with EPA’s
understanding of those requirements, as
articulated above, and that TCEQ
continues to have sufficient legal
authority to do so. Furthermore, TCEQ
has provided sufficient assurance that it
will commit the personnel and funding
necessary to issue PSD permits
addressing greenhouse gases,
notwithstanding the State’s ongoing
efforts to persuade the court that such
permits are not required under the
Clean Air Act until EPA conducts
further rulemaking. EPA’s rescission of
the majority of the FIP and its approval
of the majority of the Texas GHG SIP are
predicated on the understanding that
the State of Texas will implement the
PSD program requirements for
greenhouse gases in accordance with
TCEQ’s representations.
In sum, therefore, the EPA is taking
no action on the portion of the Texas
SIP submittal requiring sources to
obtain PSD permits based solely on their
emissions of GHGs, but is otherwise
finalizing its rescission of the majority
of the FIP and its approval of the
majority of the Texas SIP submittals as
discussed in the separate final SIP
action published elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register.
B. Changes to the Transition Process as
a Result of the UARG v. EPA Decision
The EPA must also consider how the
July 23, 2014, Supreme Court decision
in UARG v. EPA will impact our final
FIP rescission and simultaneous SIP
actions. In our February 18, 2014,
proposed rulemaking we identified the
following three possible circumstances
for retaining federal GHG PSD
permitting authority: (1) The EPA would
retain permitting authority for any
pending permit application where the
permit applicant submitted a written
request to remain with EPA for permit
issuance, (2) the EPA would retain
permitting authority for any pending
permit applications where the permit
2 On October 1, 2014, the TCEQ sent EPA Region
6 a clarification letter in light of the UARG v. EPA
decision. That letter is also posted in the public
docket to this rulemaking.
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applicant did not submit a written
request regarding permit authority and
the EPA had made a proposed
determination through a public-noticed
draft permit upon the signature date of
the EPA’s rescission of the GHG PSD
FIP, and (3) the EPA would retain
permitting authority over any permit
that was issued but had not yet
completed the administrative and
judicial review process. In conjunction
with our February 18, 2014, proposal we
issued the ‘‘Transition Process for
Pending GHG PSD Permit Applications
and Issued GHG PSD Permits Upon
Rescission of the GHG PSD FIP’’ (the
Transition Process). As specified in this
Transition Process, the EPA sent letters
to each existing pending permit
applicant requesting a written response
by May 15, 2014, regarding whether
EPA should retain responsibility for
processing the permitting application or
transfer it to the TCEQ. We received
such a response by the May 15, 2014
deadline from all of the initial GHG PSD
permit applicants.
Since the time of our proposed
rulemaking, we have received
additional GHG PSD permit
applications. For the purposes of the
Transition Process and our final action
today rescinding the Texas GHG PSD
FIP, these GHG permit applicants would
be considered pending permit
applications. According to our February
18, 2014, proposed action, the EPA
would retain authority over any of these
permit applications where we had not
proposed a draft permit at the time of
final signature on the FIP rescission.
However, because of the Supreme
Court’s UARG v. EPA, this has created
some delay in the issuance of a final
action on the proposed Texas SIP
approval and FIP rescission. As such,
these pending permit applicants were
not afforded the same opportunity to
communicate with the EPA that was
provided to the other permit
applications, submitted to the EPA, at
the time of our February 18, 2014,
proposed approval. We believe it is
appropriate to modify our retained FIP
authorities such that the EPA will retain
permitting authority for any pending
permit application submitted after our
February 18, 2014, proposal that did not
respond in writing to the EPA by May
15, 2014, regardless of whether the EPA
has published public notice of a
proposed permit. We will retain the
permitting authority and proceed with
our evaluation and processing of the
permit application until the applicant
submits a written request to be
transferred to the TCEQ, withdraws its
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application, or the EPA issues a final
and effective permit.
In this circumstance, the EPA will
consider a request for transfer to be a
withdrawal of the application that
removes the application from review
and further action by EPA Region 6. As
discussed in our February 18, 2014,
proposed rulemaking, the EPA’s
permitting authority ‘‘will cease upon
an applicant’s written request to the
EPA withdrawing the pending permit
application before a final determination
is made.’’ See 79 FR 9123, 9133. For
those applications transferred to the
TCEQ for which the EPA has not
proposed a draft permit, the Texas SIPapproved public notice process will
involve two opportunities for public
comment under 30 TAC Sections 39.418
and 39.419 for the Notice of Receipt of
Application and Intent to Obtain Permit
(NORI) and the Notice of Application
and Preliminary Decision (NAPD). In
the instances where a permit applicant
requests that EPA transfer the permit
application to the TCEQ and Region 6
has already public noticed a draft
permit, an additional public notice will
be necessary to initiate and complete
the permitting process in accordance
with the process required under Texas
procedures approved in the SIP. If the
EPA has received any public comments
on its draft permit, the EPA intends to
contact each commenter to advise them
to resubmit comments to the TCEQ
pursuant to 30 TAC Sections 39.412 and
55.152.
The EPA’s Region 6 will consider
such a request to transfer a permit
application until the time that Region 6
issues a final permit decision under 40
CFR 124.15(b) of the EPA’s regulations.
After this point in the permitting
process, interested parties who
commented on the draft permit will
have 30 days to request an
administrative appeal of the permit
before the EPA Environmental Appeals
Board (EAB) under 40 CFR 124.19.
During this 30 day period, the EPA will
retain authority over the permit and will
no longer consider any requests to
transfer a permit application. If no party
petitions the EAB for review, the permit
will become final and effective under 40
CFR 124.15(b). At this point, Region 6
will transfer administration of the final
and effective permit to TCEQ. If a party
petitions the EAB for review of a final
permit decision by Region 6, the EPA
will retain authority over the permit
until administrative and judicial review
proceedings are exhausted with one
exception. If a petition for review has
been filed with the EAB, the permit
does not become final and effective, and
EPA Region 6 will still have the
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opportunity to withdraw the permit or
request that the EAB grant a voluntary
remand under 40 CFR 124.19(j). An
applicant that wishes to withdraw a
permit under EAB review must provide
written notice to the EAB that it is doing
so. If an applicant wishes for Region 6
to initiate this withdrawal process while
administrative review of a permit is
pending before the EAB, the applicant
will need to communicate with Region
6 in writing that it seeks to withdraw its
permit application. The applicant may
submit a new permit application to
TCEQ after withdrawing its application
from the EPA in this manner, but the
EPA will not transfer a permit
application at this point in the process.
If a permit decision is remanded to
Region 6 by the EAB, the permit
applicant may also request withdrawal
of its permit application prior to Region
6 issuing a final permit after remand,
but Region 6 will also not transfer a
permit application at this point in the
process. Once the final permit decision
is issued under 40 CFR 124.19(i)(2), the
EPA would retain authority under the
FIP until the period for seeking judicial
review has expired or any judicial
review proceedings are completed.
Under the UARG v. EPA decision, the
U.S. Supreme Court stated that the EPA
may not treat GHG as an air pollutant
for purposes of determining whether a
source is a major source required to
obtain a PSD permit. Therefore,
consistent with our understanding of
the Supreme Court’s decision, the EPA
will no longer process pending permit
applications for ‘‘non-anyway’’ sources
or modifications. The EPA will also not
transfer the permitting authority for
‘‘non-anyway’’ sources or modifications
or any issued ‘‘non-anyway’’ permits to
the TCEQ. After the completion of the
GHG litigation in the D.C. Circuit, the
EPA will determine the best course of
disposition of these issued ‘‘nonanyway’’ permits.
In summary, the EPA is finalizing
retained permitting authority in the
following circumstances:
(1) The EPA will continue to be the
permitting authority for a pending
permit application for an ‘‘anyway’’
source or ‘‘anyway’’ modification where
the permit applicant submitted a written
request by May 15, 2014, that the EPA
remain as the permitting authority.
(2) The EPA will continue to be the
permitting authority for any pending
permit applications for ‘‘anyway’’
sources or ‘‘anyway’’ modifications
submitted after the February 18, 2014,
rulemaking. The EPA will continue to
evaluate and process the pending permit
applications unless the applicant
submits a written request to transfer
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permitting authority to TCEQ prior to
Region 6 issuing a final permit decision
under 40 CFR 124.15(b).
(3) The EPA will retain authority over
any permit for ‘‘anyway’’ sources or
‘‘anyway’’ modifications that was issued
by the EPA or for ‘‘anyway’’ permit
applications denied by the EPA for
which either the time for filing an
administrative appeal has not expired or
all administrative and judicial appeals
processes have not been completed.
Except that, the EPA will not retain
authority over a permit if an applicant
submits a written request to the EPA to
withdraw the permit application while
an administrative appeal is pending and
Region 6 then withdraws the permit
under 40 CFR 124.19(j) or the EAB
grants a voluntary remand under 40 CFR
124.19(j) or another appropriate remedy.
III. Response to Comments
We received comments from Air
Alliance Houston, the Greater Houston
Partnership (GHP), the House Bill 788
Working Group (HB 788 Working
Group), Sierra Club, Texas Chemical
Council (TCC), Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ), Texas
Industry Project (TIP), the Texas Oil and
Gas Association (TXOGA), the Texas
Pipeline Association (TPA), and public
citizens on our February 18, 2014
proposal. All comments received on the
February 18, 2014, proposed action are
available in the public docket to this
rulemaking. Following is our summary
of each comment relating to the FIP
action and our response. The EPA notes
that the comments and our responses to
comments that relate solely to the SIP
action are in the separate but
simultaneous final approval notice of
those revisions. Comments and
responses that relate to both actions are
found in both final documents.
Comment 1: The TCEQ, GHP, HB 788
Working Group, TCC, TIP, and TPA
submitted comments supportive of our
proposed action and urge the EPA to
proceed with final approval and rescind
the associated FIP.
Response 1: The EPA appreciates the
support of the commenters. No changes
have been made to the final FIP action
as a result of these comments.
Comment 2: The TCC encouraged the
EPA to make the FIP rescission effective
immediately upon approval of the SIP.
As support, the commenters referenced
the EPA’s final approval action of the
Wyoming GHG PSD Program at 78 FR
69998, November 22, 2013.
Response 2: The EPA interprets the
comment as a request that the EPA make
the final approval of the rescission of
the GHG PSD FIP and final approval of
the GHG PSD SIP effective immediately
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upon publication in the Federal
Register pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act Section (APA), 5 U.S.C.
Section 553(d). As explained more fully
in Section IV of this document and in
Comment/Response 3, the EPA finds
that today’s final FIP action and the
separate but simultaneous final SIP
approval action be made effective
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register.
The EPA also wishes to clarify that
the Wyoming action, cited in the
comment as precedent for an immediate
effective action, does not utilize Section
553(d) of the APA. The EPA’s November
22, 2013 final approval of the Wyoming
GHG PSD Program and FIP rescission
were both effective 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register.
Specifically, the Wyoming action was
published on November 22, 2013, and
the SIP approval and FIP rescission
were effective on December 23, 2013.
Comment 3: TXOGA requested that
the final SIP approval and the FIP
rescission be effective on the date of
Federal Register publication rather than
waiting 30 days after publication. TIP
commented that the EPA should invoke
the ‘‘good cause’’ exception in the APA
to make the final approval and FIP
rescission immediately effective upon
publication. TIP suggested that using
the good cause exception would: (1)
‘‘level the playing field’’ between Texas
GHG permitting and GHG permitting in
states with EPA-approved GHG
permitting programs; (2) provide
economic benefits by allowing
consolidation of air permitting for Texas
GHG sources at the TCEQ; (3) relieve a
restriction imposed by the FIP; and (4)
is procedural in nature and does not
change substantive requirements for
GHG PSD permitting.
Response 3: The EPA agrees that this
is an appropriate circumstance to make
this rule effective immediately upon
publication, pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
Section 553(d) of the APA. As detailed
in Section III of the final FIP action and
in Section III of the separate but
simultaneous final SIP approval, we
have determined that both the final
rescission of the GHG PSD FIP and the
separate but simultaneous approval of
the GHG PSD SIP be effective
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register. An immediate
effective date is authorized under the
APA at 5 U.S.C. Sections 553(d)(1) and
553(d)(3). Section 553(d)(1) provides
that rulemaking actions may become
effective less than 30 days after
publication if the rule ‘‘grants or
recognizes an exemption or relieves a
restriction,’’ and Section 553(d)(3)
allows an effective date less than 30
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days after publication ‘‘as otherwise
provided by the agency for good cause
found and published with the rule.’’
First, an immediate effective date is
authorized for the rescission of the GHG
PSD FIP under Section 553(d)(1),
because this rulemaking relieves the
requirement that sources obtain both a
federal permit and a state issued permit.
The immediate effective date helps to
relieve the restriction on TCEQ’s ability
to issue single GHG PSD permits and
will eliminate the dual EPA/TCEQ PSD
permit system, which in turn, promotes
a more efficient single permitting
authority process. Second, we have
determined there is ‘‘good cause’’ under
Section 553(d)(3) to make this rule
effective immediately because it will
allow Texas to begin processing
complete PSD GHG applications that
meet the appropriate federal PSD
requirements immediately and it will
allow the regulated community to
receive PSD permits containing GHG
limits, issued by Texas, as soon as
possible. An immediate effective date
provides Texas with undelayed
authority to regulate GHG emissions in
PSD permits issued to ‘‘anyway’’
sources and allows Texas to become the
sole PSD permitting authority in the
State, except in three limited
circumstances, as described above. In
addition, an expedited transition of the
GHG PSD program from the EPA to
Texas creates a more efficient use of
EPA and State resources, and creates
certainty for the regulated community
and public. The EPA and the TCEQ
have worked closely to ensure Texas has
adequate authority and resources to
administer the GHG PSD permitting
program without a 30 day delay, which
is normally the time required for
affected parties to adjust their behavior
and prepare before the final rule takes
effect. The EPA has determined that
moving as expeditiously as practicable
to consolidate GHG PSD permitting with
the TCEQ PSD permitting program is
supported here as the State has the
authority and resources to administer
the GHG PSD permitting program. The
EPA finds that the above reasons
support an effective date prior to 30
days after the date of publication under
5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) of the APA for
both today’s final FIP action and the
separate but simultaneous final SIP
approval action. We have revised the
effective date of our final FIP action as
a result of these comments.
Comment 4: The EPA should state for
the record that GHG permits issued by
the EPA may be amended by the TCEQ
once permitting authority is delegated.
Response 4: As stated in our proposed
approval, the TCEQ submitted a letter
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on January 13, 2014, (available in the
docket for this rulemaking) that
provided clarity and assurances that the
TCEQ has the general authority under
the Texas Clean Air Act to administer
the EPA-issued GHG PSD permits,
including revising or amending those
permits in the future. Specifically, the
‘‘TCEQ will assume full PSD
responsibility for the administration and
implementation of final GHG PSD
permits issued by the EPA upon
notification from the EPA that all
administrative and judicial appeal
processes have expired or have been
completed or concluded . . . assuming
full PSD responsibility includes the
authority to . . . process and issue any
and all subsequent PSD permit actions
relating to such permits (e.g.,
amendments).’’ See 79 FR 9123, 9132.
February 18, 2014. The EPA addresses
the commenter’s statement about
delegation of permitting authority in our
separate but simultaneous final SIP
approval also published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register. No
changes were made to the final FIP
action as a result of these comments.
Comment 5: One commenter found it
difficult to provide specific comments
due to the pending Supreme Court
decision on GHG and asked that the
EPA discuss the impact, if any, of the
pending Supreme Court decision
around GHG.
Response 5: See Section II of today’s
final action for a detailed discussion.
Although not specifically referenced in
the comment, we believe the
commenter’s reference to ‘‘pending
supreme court decision around GHG’’
refers to the following case before the
Supreme Court of the United States:
Case 121146; Utility Air Regulatory
Group v. The Environmental Protection
Agency and consolidated cases. The
Supreme Court of the United States
decided this case on June 23, 2014. In
summary, the Supreme Court affirmed
in part and reversed in part the lower
court’s decision on the applicability of
the PSD Program to GHGs, rejecting the
application of the PSD program to
additional sources based only on GHG
emissions but affirming the applicability
of BACT to GHGs emitted by sources
otherwise required to obtain PSD
permits based on emissions of other
pollutants. Accordingly, the decision
has influenced our final action on the
April 16, 2014 SIP submittal. In our
separate but simultaneous SIP action,
the EPA is proceeding with the
finalization of the majority of the
revisions to the Texas SIP. However, in
order to proceed consistent with the
Court’s decision, the EPA is taking no
action at this time on portions of the
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April 16, 2014 submittal that provided
for the permitting of ‘‘Step 2,’’ ‘‘nonanyway’’ sources. Please see our final
separate but simultaneous SIP final
notice for a more detailed discussion.
Comment 6: Public citizens submitted
several comments regarding the EPA’s
proposed approval of the GHG PSD SIP,
the rescission of the GHG PSD FIP, and
the transition process to be used when
transferring permitting authority to the
TCEQ. Specifically, the commenters are
concerned that the transition process is
lacking the ‘‘voice’’ of the people on
whether the public feels it is the right
of the applicant/company to be able to
choose the EPA or the TCEQ as the
permitting authority without the
public’s input on pending applications.
The commenters urged the EPA to retain
the FIP permitting authority in sensitive
nonattainment areas such as in Brazoria
County, Texas. Finally, the commenters
submitted information regarding ozone
monitor siting and air quality in Clute,
water quality impacts in the Galveston
Bay, and maps identifying locations of
proposed GHG PSD permits.
Response 6: While the EPA
appreciates the commenter’s concerns
about the public having a voice in the
selection of a permit authority, we
believe the appropriate regulatory and
permit transition procedures are in
place to ensure any GHG PSD permit,
whether issued by the EPA or the TCEQ,
complies with all federal PSD
requirements, including opportunities
for public input. Further, the EPA
offered an opportunity for review and
comment on our proposed
determination that the TCEQ has the
requisite authority to address GHGs in
the PSD program in Texas upon
approval of the SIP and corresponding
rescission of the majority of the FIP for
GHGs. We received no comments on
this specific issue. In the separate, but
simultaneous final SIP action published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, we are approving the majority
of revisions to the Texas PSD SIP,
except with the noted exceptions where
we are taking no action at this time on
certain revisions that appear to no
longer be appropriate after the Supreme
Court’s UARG v. EPA ruling. Because of
this, the EPA finds the TCEQ has the
necessary legal and regulatory
provisions in place to successfully
implement the appropriate federal
requirements for GHG PSD permitting.
Therefore, we are simultaneously
rescinding the Texas GHG PSD FIP but
for three limited circumstances for
retained federal permitting authority,
and approving the majority of revisions
to the Texas SIP in a separate but
simultaneous final action published
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elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register. Upon the effective date of both
of these actions, the TCEQ will have the
authority to process applications and
issue GHG PSD permits except for the
three limited circumstances where the
EPA is retaining federal permitting
authority. As stated in the EPA’s
February 18, 2014, proposal and
transition document referenced in that
action, the EPA contacted each GHG
PSD permit applicant who had
submitted an application to the EPA at
the time of our proposed approval. We
provided these permit applicants the
opportunity to elect either the EPA or
the TCEQ as the issuer of its GHG
permit by May 15, 2014. All permit
applicants submitted a request for
permitting authority by the deadline of
May 15, 2014. For the permit
applications that have been submitted
since the EPA’s proposed approval, the
EPA is retaining permitting authority
and will continue evaluating and
processing these permit applications
unless and until the applicant submits
a written request to transfer to the
TCEQ, the EPA issues a final permit, or
the applicant withdraws the permit
application from the EPA’s
consideration. The EPA Region 6 GHG
Web site has been updated to identify
which permit applications have been
retained by the EPA for processing and
those which have been transferred to the
TCEQ. We will continue to update this
Web site as applicants make their
decisions regarding permitting
authority. Upon the effective date of our
final SIP approval and simultaneous FIP
rescission, the EPA will no longer
accept applications for GHG PSD
permits in Texas. From that point
forward, the TCEQ will be the only
permitting authority for GHG PSD
permits in Texas, with the exception of
the three limited circumstances where
the EPA retained authority over a permit
application or issued permit that has not
exhausted all administrative and
judicial appeals. Both the EPA and the
TCEQ are required to issue GHG PSD
permits that satisfy federal requirements
for PSD permitting. In the instances
where a permit applicant elected to
transfer the permitting authority to the
TCEQ and the EPA has already public
noticed a draft permit and received
comments, the EPA intends to contact
each commenter to advise them to
resubmit comments to the TCEQ
pursuant to 30 TAC Sections 39.412 and
55.152.
Second, in our separate but
simultaneous final PSD SIP action
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, we are finding the
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TCEQ has adopted regulations sufficient
to regulate emissions of GHGs from
‘‘anyway’’ major emitting sources under
the Texas PSD program. As part of the
Texas PSD SIP approval final action, a
GHG PSD permit application will be
subject to the Texas SIP-approved
public notice and comment procedures
that are consistent with the EPA’s
federal PSD public notice requirements
at 40 CFR 51.166(q). For new GHG PSD
permit applications processed by the
TCEQ and those applications transferred
to the TCEQ for which the EPA has not
proposed a draft permit, the Texas SIPapproved public notice process will
involve two opportunities for public
comment under 30 TAC Sections 39.418
and 39.419 for the Notice of Receipt of
Application and Intent to Obtain Permit
(NORI) and the Notice of Application
and Preliminary Decision (NAPD). For
the subset of permit applications that
are transferred to the TCEQ after the
EPA has already proposed a draft
permit, these applications will either
use the NORI and NAPD or will go
through a Combined Public Notice
under 30 TAC Section 39.412.
Opportunity for public review and
comment will be provided in all
instances where the TCEQ is the
permitting authority for a GHG PSD
permit application.
We would like to correct one
statement from the commenter
concerning nonattainment permitting,
which is that the EPA should retain the
GHG PSD FIP permitting authority in
sensitive nonattainment areas. There are
no GHG nonattainment areas; the EPA
was the permitting authority only for
GHG PSD permits. The TCEQ has been,
and continues to be, the permitting
authority for Nonattainment New
Source Review (NNSR) permits in
Texas. In Brazoria County, the EPA was
the permitting authority for the GHG
PSD permits but the TCEQ was the
permitting authority for the NNSR
permitting program and all other nonGHG PSD pollutants.
After review and consideration of the
additional materials submitted by the
citizens, the EPA has determined that
the data submitted regarding ozone
monitors and air quality in Clute, water
quality in Galveston Bay, and maps
identifying locations of the proposed
GHG PSD permit applications, are
beyond the scope of our review and are
not relevant to our rescission of the
GHG PSD FIP.
No changes were made to the final FIP
action as a result of these comments.
Comment 7: Several commenters
submitted comments regarding the
EPA’s document titled ‘‘Transition
Process for Transferring GHG PSD
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Permitting Authority to TCEQ.’’ These
comments are summarized below:
A. Comments about notification to
companies regarding the Transition
Process:
Æ TCC suggests that the EPA clarify
that letters sent to applicants will not be
mailed until the final rule has been
published in the Texas Register, on or
about April 17, 2014.
Æ TCC requests that the EPA post a
message or announcement on its Web
site indicating that letters concerning
the transition process have been
submitted to any of the GHG applicants.
B. Comments about the deadline for
selecting a permitting authority under
the Transition Process:
Æ TCC suggests the EPA not impose a
firm 30-day decision deadline because
of concerns that permit applicants
selecting the TCEQ as the permitting
authority may experience delay in
processing of applications if the FIP
rescission is delayed.
Æ TCC requests that the EPA clarify
whether a permit applicant will have
the opportunity to request additional
time beyond 30 days to submit a
response regarding permitting authority.
C. Comments about the Transition
Process for Issued Permits: TCC, TIP,
and TXOGA requested that the EPA
reconsider the transition process, such
that permit applications currently being
reviewed in the Environmental Appeals
Board (EAB) could be transferred to
TCEQ.
Response 7: The EPA appreciates the
comments on the Transition Process we
will be using to transfer GHG PSD
permitting authority to the TCEQ upon
the effective date of rescission of the
GHG PSD FIP and our simultaneous
approval of the majority of the Texas
GHG PSD SIP. After consideration of the
comments and in light of the recent
UARG v. EPA decision, we have
determined it necessary to amend, in
part, our Transition Process and EPA’s
proposed retained authority under the
FIP. Below are our specific responses to
the comments raised regarding the
Transition Process and how the EPA
finds it necessary to amend, in part, our
retained authority under today’s final
FIP rescission.
Response 7A: For permit applicants
with applications submitted at the time
of our February 18, 2014 proposal, we
are making no changes to the Transition
Process. The EPA has provided
adequate notice to those initial permit
applicants regarding the Transition
Process. The EPA mailed letters to each
GHG permit applicant on file with the
EPA on March 27, 2014, requesting a
response no later than May 15, 2014.
Those letters are available for public
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access in the docket for this rulemaking
action. By communicating with our
initial permit applicants immediately
following the March 26, 2014 TCEQ
Commissioners vote to adopt the GHG
PSD revisions, we provided our initial
permit applicants with a reasonable
amount of time to weigh individual
business considerations and respond
with a permitting authority request. The
letters were delivered to the applicants
via the U.S. Postal delivery and email,
ensuring multiple means of
communication with each applicant.
Additionally, our Region 6 GHG Web
site was updated to indicate the
availability for review and comment on
the EPA’s proposed approval of the
Texas GHG PSD SIP, rescission of the
Texas GHG PSD FIP, and Transition
Process. No changes were made to the
final FIP action as a result of these
comments.
The EPA recognizes that since the
time of our proposed rulemaking, we
have received additional permit
applications and those permit
applicants were not afforded a similar
opportunity to select a permitting
authority by the May 15, 2014, deadline
specified in the Transition Process. For
these permit applications submitted
after the February 18, 2014, proposal,
the EPA is retaining the permitting
authority until the EPA either issues a
final permit and all subsequent
administrative and judicial appeals are
exhausted, or the applicant submits a
written request to be transferred to the
TCEQ, or the applicant withdraws the
permit application from the EPA’s
consideration.
Response 7B: The EPA does not
believe it is necessary to extend the
deadline for requesting a transfer of
permitting authority beyond the May 15,
2014 deadline, as specified in our
Transition Process for the initial permit
applications that were submitted at the
time of our February 18, 2014 proposed
action. We received written permit
authority requests from all permit
applicants, submitted to the EPA, at the
time of the proposed notice by the
specified May 15, 2014, deadline.
However, in consideration of these
comments and in light of the UARG v.
EPA decision, we have decided that for
any permit application that was
submitted after our proposed
rulemaking, the EPA will retain
permitting authority and continue to
process and evaluate any pending
permit application for an ‘‘anyway’’
source or modification unless or until
the applicant submits a written request
to transfer the authority to the TCEQ or
the applicant withdraws the application
from the EPA’s consideration. There is
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no 30-day time period for decision
imposed on these permit applicants.
Rather the applicant can make an
informed business decision through
consultation with the EPA and the
TCEQ, up until the EPA has issued a
final permit. The EPA’s retained
authority under the FIP was revised as
a result of these comments.
Response 7C: At this time, we intend
to transfer all initial permit applications
and related materials to the TCEQ where
a permit applicant requested the transfer
in writing by May 15, 2014, as specified
in the Transition Process. Additionally,
as discussed above in Responses 6A and
6B, for any permit application
submitted after our February 18, 2014,
proposed rulemaking, the EPA will
transfer the permit application and
related materials to the TCEQ where the
permit applicant submits a written
request to the EPA to transfer to the
TCEQ. The EPA will confirm the
transfer of the permit application by
providing a letter to the TCEQ and the
permit applicant wherein we transfer
the permit application, related
materials, and state that we consider the
request for transfer a withdrawal of the
application that removes the application
from review and further action by the
EPA. As discussed in our February 18,
2014, proposed rulemaking, the EPA’s
permitting authority ‘‘will cease upon
an applicant’s written request to the
EPA withdrawing the pending permit
application before a final determination
is made.’’ See 79 FR 9123, 9133. A final
determination on the permit is made
when all administrative and judicial
appeals processes have been exhausted.
The EPA will retain permitting
authority for ‘‘anyway’’ GHG PSD
permits that are issued or for ‘‘anyway’’
permit applications denied by the EPA
for which either the time for filing an
administrative appeal has not expired or
all administrative and judicial appeals
processes have not been completed. As
stated in our Transition Process, a GHG
PSD permit applicant has the ability to
withdraw the permit application before
the EPA and submit a new application
to the TCEQ at any time until the permit
becomes final. Because a permit does
not become final until agency review
procedures are exhausted, an applicant
can withdraw an application while a
permit is under EAB review. No changes
were made to the final FIP action as a
result of these comments, but we have
modified the authority retained by EPA
in the FIP for certain permit
applications for other reasons.
Comment 8: Sierra Club submitted
several comments and supporting
exhibits requesting that the EPA not
approve the GHG PSD SIP and rescind
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the FIP until the TCEQ submits
clarifications regarding access to
judicial review for GHG PSD permits.
First, Sierra Club commented that if the
commission acts on a GHG permit, then
the Texas regulations appear to require
a party to go through the contested case
hearing process in order to exhaust
administrative remedies, which is
necessary to later seek judicial review.
However, HB 788 removes the
opportunity for a contested case hearing
for GHG permits. As a result, the TCEQ
has not adequately clarified the process
to exhaust all administrative remedies
before seeking judicial review when the
commission acts on a GHG permit.
Response 8: Because judicial review
of PSD permits is important and
necessary under the Act, we have
reevaluated the Texas judicial review
process as it applies to GHG PSD
permits issued by the TCEQ. 77 FR
65305, at 65307 (Oct. 26, 2012).3 The
TCEQ provided a letter to the EPA dated
May 30, 2014 4 to clarify the judicial
review process and the associated
administrative remedies with respect to
the GHG PSD permits issued by Texas.
This letter explains the processes to
exhaust administrative remedies and
confirms that Texas law provides an
opportunity for judicial review of all
GHG PSD permits issued by the TCEQ.
Texas regulations do not require a party
to go through the contested case hearing
process in order to exhaust
administrative remedies when the
commission acts on a GHG permit.
Section 50.119(b) provides that ‘‘[i]f the
commission acts on an application,
§ 80.272 [Motion for Rehearing] of this
title applies.’’ Further, Section
50.119(c)(3) provides that motions for
rehearing may be filed on ‘‘the
commission’s decision on an
application.’’ Section 80.272 is a
procedural provision that sets out the
process for filing a motion for rehearing
after the commission makes a decision
on a permit. State law allows the TCEQ
to establish a motion for rehearing via
3 ‘‘[W]e interpret the CAA to require an
opportunity for judicial review of a decision to
grant or deny a PSD permit, whether issued by EPA
or by a State under a SIP-approved or delegated
PSD program. See 61 FR 1880, 1882 (Jan. 24, 1996)
(EPA’s proposed disapproval of Virginia’s PSD
program SIP revision due to State law standing
requirements that limited judicial review); 72 FR
72617, 72619 (December 21, 2007) (in approving
South Dakota’s PSD program, EPA stated: ‘‘We
interpret the statute and regulations to require at
minimum an opportunity for state judicial review
of PSD permits’’).’’ 77 FR at 65307.
4 Clarification Letter from Mr. Richard A. Hyde,
P.E., Executive Director, TCEQ to Mr. Ron Curry,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 6 (May 30,
2014) (hereinafter ‘‘Judicial Review Clarification
Letter’’. This letter is available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
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regulation, even when there is no
statutory right to a contested case
hearing.5 Section 50.119(c) does not
require a contested case hearing for a
motion for rehearing to be available. We
recognize that the judicial review
process under Texas law differs from
the administrative and judicial review
processes available for PSD permit
decisions under 40 CFR Part 124
(opportunity to petition for
administrative review by the EPA’s
Environmental Appeals Board (EAB))
and section 307(b) of the CAA
(opportunity to seek review before the
federal Circuit Court of Appeals) when
the EPA or a delegated agency under 40
CFR 52.21 is the PSD permit issuer.
However, the CAA does not require that
the process for judicial review of the
grant or denial of a PSD permit issued
under a SIP approved PSD program be
identical to that provided when the EPA
or a delegated agency is the PSD permit
issuer under 40 CFR 52.21. 77 FR 65305
at 65307 (Oct. 26, 2012). No revisions
were made to the final FIP action as a
result of this comment.
IV. Effective Date of Final Action
The EPA has determined that today’s
final FIP action and the separate but
simultaneous final approval of the
majority of the Texas GHG PSD SIP are
effective immediately upon publication
under 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) of the
APA. The expedited effective date for
this final FIP action and the separate but
simultaneous SIP approval action is
authorized under both 5 U.S.C. Section
553(d)(1) and 553(d)(3) of the APA.
Section 553(d)(1) allows an effective
date less than 30 days after publication
if a substantive rule relieves a
‘‘restriction.’’ Section 553(d)(3) allows
an effective date less than 30 days after
publication ‘‘as otherwise provided by
the agency for good cause found and
published with the rule.’’ The EPA has
determined that it is appropriate to
make both final actions effective upon
publication because the final removal of
the Texas GHG PSD FIP and the
separate but simultaneous final
approval of the majority of Texas GHG
PSD SIP will both relieve a permitting
restriction and there is ‘‘good cause’’ to
allow Texas to begin processing PSD
GHG applications that meet the
appropriate federal PSD requirements
immediately. Final immediate action
relieves a restriction by promoting an
efficient single GHG permit process,
supports an efficient use of EPA and
5 Tex. Air Control Bd. v. Travis Cnty, 502 SW.2d
213, 215 (Tex. Civ. App.-Austin 1973, no writ); see
also, Sproles Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Smith, 130
SW.2d 1087, 1088 (Tex. Civ. App.-Austin 1939, writ
ref d).
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State resources, and creates certainty for
the regulated community and public. It
provides Texas with undelayed
authority to regulate major GHG
emitting sources, and the EPA and
TCEQ have worked closely to ensure the
State has adequate authority and
resources to administer the GHG
permitting program without a 30 day
delay, which is normally the time
required for affected parties to adjust
their behavior and prepare before a final
rule takes effect. The EPA has
determined that moving as
expeditiously as practicable to
consolidate GHG PSD permitting with
the TCEQ is consistent with the State’s
authority and resources to administer
the GHG PSD permitting program. The
EPA finds that the above reasons
support an effective date prior to thirty
days after the date of publication under
5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) for both today’s
final FIP action and the separate but
simultaneous final SIP approval action
by establishing good cause for making
the rule immediately effective and
demonstrating that the rule relieves a
restriction.
V. Final Action
The EPA is rescinding the GHG PSD
FIP for Texas at 40 CFR 52.2305(a) and
(b), with three limited circumstances for
retained authority for ‘‘anyway’’ source
permit applications as specified in the
new section of 40 CFR 52.2305(d). First,
the EPA retains GHG PSD permitting
authority for any pending ‘‘anyway’’
permit applications where the permit
applicant submitted a written request to
remain with the EPA for permit
issuance by the deadline specified in
our Transition Process. Second, the EPA
will retain GHG PSD permitting
authority for ‘‘anyway’’ source permit
applications submitted after February
18, 2014, unless or until the applicant
submits a written request transferring
the permitting authority to the TCEQ.
Finally, the EPA will retain GHG PSD
permitting authority for any issued
‘‘anyway’’ permit or ‘‘anyway’’ permit
application denied by the EPA 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 publication date of the EPA’s final
actions to rescind the GHG FIP and
simultaneously approve the TCEQ’s
PSD SIP submittal. Note, even for those
cases where the EPA announces it will
retain GHG PSD permitting authority
over an ‘‘anyway’’ application, this
authority will cease upon an applicant’s
written request to the EPA withdrawing
the pending permit application before a
final determination is made. The EPA
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Region 6 GHG Web site identifies the
permit applications where the EPA
retains GHG permitting authority. We
intend to update this Web site as we
process the pending permit applications
and transfer the issued permits to the
TCEQ for implementation. When all
permit applications have been
processed and transferred to the TCEQ,
the EPA will, in a separate action, revise
40 CFR 52.2305 to remove the
remaining GHG PSD FIP authority at
§ 52.2305(a) and (b).
Consistent with the UARG v. EPA
decision, the EPA does not find it
appropriate at this time to act on
revisions to the Texas SIP providing the
authority to regulate and permit non‘‘anyway’’ sources and modifications of
GHGs. Therefore, the EPA will not
transfer issued non-‘‘anyway’’ source
permits to the TCEQ. The EPA will also
not continue to process or evaluate
pending permit applications for ‘‘nonanyway’’ sources or modifications.
Our final action today also finds that
through a letter dated January 13, 2014,
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 any new PSD pollutants.
Therefore, the EPA rescinds the PSD FIP
for Newly Regulated Pollutants for
Texas at 40 CFR 52.2305(c).
As explained in our February 18, 2014
proposal (see 79 FR 9123), this action is
made possible because of our separate
but simultaneous final action being
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register to approve the majority
of the Texas PSD SIP revisions, which
updates the Texas SIP to provide for the
regulation of GHG emissions for
‘‘anyway’’ sources, and clarifies the
applicability of BACT for all PSD permit
applications. The EPA has made the
determination that the majority of
revisions to the Texas SIP are
approvable because the revisions meet
all applicable requirements of the CAA,
and EPA implementing regulations that
were not affected by the recent U.S.
Supreme Court decision in UARG v.
EPA. We noted that we are taking no
action at this time other certain
revisions that appear to no longer be
needed in light of that decision. The
EPA also has determined under the
authority of 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) of
the APA, to make this final FIP action
and the separate but simultaneous final
PSD SIP approval action effective upon
November 10, 2014. Upon the effective
date of today’s final FIP action and the
separate but simultaneous final PSD SIP
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approval, the TCEQ will immediately
assume responsibility for GHG PSD
permitting, with the exception of the
three limited circumstances where the
EPA is retaining GHG PSD permitting
authority under the FIP, as described
this final FIP action. As such, all new
GHG PSD permit applications will be
submitted to and processed by the
TCEQ.
The EPA is finalizing this action
under Section 110 and Part C of the Act.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This FIP withdrawal action is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
the terms of Executive Order 12866 (58
FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and is
therefore not subject to review under
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 (76
FR 3821, January 21, 2011).
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This FIP withdrawal action does not
impose an information collection
burden under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. because this partial FIP
rescission under Section 110 and Part C
of the CAA will not in-and-of itself
create any new information collection
burdens but simply transfers the
permitting authority from EPA to the
State. Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b). Because this final action does
not impose an information collection
burden, the Paperwork Reduction Act
does not apply.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action will not
impose any requirements on small
entities. This rule will transfer the
majority of GHG PSD permitting
responsibility from the EPA to the State
of Texas. This final rule applies to large
emitters of GHGs that tend to be large
sources. The result of this final action,
however, simply is to transfer the
majority of authority to administer the
PSD program for GHGs from EPA to the
State of Texas and does not create any
new requirements. The substantive
requirement for a source to obtain a PSD
permit prior to construction of a new
major source of GHGs or modification of
an existing major source that will
significantly increase GHGs is not
changed by this final FIP action. This
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final FIP action will not impose any
new requirements on small entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. This action removes the
majority of a Federal plan and transfers
most permitting responsibility of GHG
emissions from the EPA to the State of
Texas. Small governments are not
impacted.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This FIP withdrawal action does not
have federalism implications. It will not
have substantial direct effects on Texas,
on the relationship between the national
government and the State of Texas, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between the
EPA and State and local governments,
the EPA specifically solicited comment
on the proposed action from State and
local officials. The EPA received no
adverse comments from state or local
governments on this rulemaking but
only comments in support from the
State.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications, as specified in Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000). In this action, the EPA is not
addressing any Tribal Implementation
Plans. This action is limited to the
withdrawal of the majority of the Texas
GHG PSD FIP. Thus, Executive Order
13175 does not apply to this action.
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G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because the EPA is withdrawing the
majority of the federal GHG PSD FIP in
Texas as authorized by the CAA.
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H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22,
2001), because it is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
This final rule does not provide the
EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate,
disproportionate human health or
environmental effects, using practicable
and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994).
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
the EPA will submit a rule report to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. The CRA allows the issuing
agency to make a rule effective sooner
than otherwise provided by the CRA if
the agency makes a good cause finding
that notice and comment rulemaking
procedures are impracticable,
unnecessary or contrary to the public
interest (5 U.S.C. 808(2)). The EPA has
made a good cause finding for this rule
as discussed in Section IV (Effective
Date of Final Action), including the
basis for that finding.
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by January 9, 2015. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the
Administrator of this final rule does not
affect the finality of this action for the
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed, and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. See CAA
section 307(b)(2); 5 U.S.C. 7607(b)(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
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Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Dated: October 30, 2014.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Environmental Protection
Agency amends 40 CFR Part 52 as
follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for Part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart SS—Texas
2. Section 52.2305 is amended by
removing and reserving paragraph (c)
and by adding paragraph (d) to read as
follows.
■
§ 52.2305 What are the requirements of the
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) to issue
permits under the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration requirements to sources that
emit greenhouse gases?
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The authority provided in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section is
rescinded except in the three limited
circumstances described in paragraphs
(d)(1) through (3) of this section:
(1) The EPA will retain permitting
authority for all GHG PSD permit
applications for major sources and
major modifications required to obtain
PSD permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs submitted to
the EPA where the permit applicant
submitted a written request by May 15,
2014, that the EPA continue processing
the application.
(2) The EPA will retain permitting
authority for all GHG PSD permit
applications for major sources and
major modifications required to obtain
PSD permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs submitted to
the EPA after February 18, 2014, unless
and until the applicant submits to the
EPA a written request to transfer the
permitting authority to TCEQ (or
withdraws the application) prior to
issuance of a final permit decision
under 40 CFR 124.15(b).
(3) The EPA will retain permitting
authority for GHG PSD permits issued
by the EPA for major sources and major
modifications required to obtain PSD
permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs and GHG
PSD permit applications denied by the
EPA for major sources and major
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modifications required to obtain PSD
permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs 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
November 10, 2014. Except that the EPA
will not retain authority over a permit
if an applicant submits a written request
to the EPA to withdraw the permit
application while an administrative
appeal is pending and the Regional
Administrator then withdraws the
permit under 40 CFR 124.19(j) or the
Environmental Appeals Board grants a
voluntary remand under 40 CFR
124.19(j) or another appropriate remedy.
[FR Doc. 2014–26315 Filed 11–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R10–OAR–2014–0140, FRL–9918–97–
Region 10]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Alaska:
Infrastructure Requirements for the
1997 and 2006 Fine Particulate Matter
and 2008 Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards
listed in the index, some information
may not be publicly available, i.e.,
Confidential Business Information or
other information the disclosure of
which is restricted by statute. Certain
other material, such as copyrighted
material, is not placed on the Internet
and will be publicly available only in
hard copy form. Publicly available
docket materials are available either
electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
EPA Region 10, Office of Air, Waste,
and Toxics, AWT–150, 1200 Sixth
Avenue, Seattle, Washington 98101. The
EPA requests that you contact the
person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section to
schedule your inspection. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
excluding federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristin Hall at: (206) 553–6357,
hall.kristin@epa.gov, or the above EPA,
Region 10 address.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, it is
intended to refer to the EPA.
Information is organized as follows:
Table of Contents
AGENCY:
I. Background
II. Response to Comment
III. Final Action
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
The EPA is approving the
Alaska State Implementation Plan (SIP)
as meeting specific infrastructure
requirements of the Clean Air Act (CAA)
for the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS) promulgated for
fine particulate matter (PM2.5) on July
18, 1997 and October 17, 2006, and for
ozone on March 12, 2008. Whenever a
new or revised NAAQS is promulgated,
the CAA requires states to submit a plan
for the implementation, maintenance
and enforcement of such NAAQS. The
plan is required to address basic
program elements, including but not
limited to regulatory structure,
monitoring, modeling, legal authority,
and adequate resources necessary to
implement, maintain, and enforce the
standards. These elements are referred
to as infrastructure requirements.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
December 10, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket
Identification No. EPA–R10–OAR–
2014–0140. All documents in the docket
are listed on the https://
www.regulations.gov Web site. Although
I. Background
Section 110 of the CAA specifies the
general requirements for states to submit
SIPs to implement, maintain and
enforce the NAAQS and the EPA’s
actions regarding approval of those SIPs.
On July 9, 2012 and March 29, 2011,
Alaska made SIP submissions to the
EPA demonstrating that the Alaska SIP
meets the infrastructure requirements of
the CAA for the 1997 PM2.5, 2006 PM2.5,
and 2008 ozone NAAQS. On July 16,
2014, we proposed approval of the
Alaska SIP as meeting the following
CAA section 110(a)(2) infrastructure
elements for the 1997 PM2.5, 2006 PM2.5,
and 2008 ozone NAAQS: (A), (B), (C),
(D)(ii), (E), (F), (H), (J), (K), (L), and (M)
(79 FR 41496). We also proposed
approval of the Alaska SIP as meeting
the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) as it applies to
prevention of significant deterioration
and visibility for the 2006 PM2.5 and
2008 ozone NAAQS. In addition, we
proposed approval of the Alaska SIP as
meeting the requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(G) for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS.
An explanation of the CAA
requirements and implementing
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY:
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regulations that are met by these SIP
submissions, a detailed explanation of
the submissions, and the EPA’s reasons
for the proposed action were provided
in the notice of proposed rulemaking on
July 16, 2014, and will not be restated
here (79 FR 41496). Below we address
a recent court decision related to the
application of PSD permitting
requirements to greenhouse gases
(GHGs) and why we believe the decision
does not impact this action.
With respect to CAA section
110(a)(2)(C) and (J), the EPA interprets
the CAA to require each state to make
an infrastructure SIP submission for a
new or revised NAAQS that
demonstrates that the state has a
complete PSD permitting program
meeting the current requirements for all
regulated NSR pollutants. The
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) may also be satisfied
by demonstrating the state has a
complete PSD permitting program
correctly addressing all regulated NSR
pollutants. Alaska has shown that it
currently has a PSD program in place
that covers all regulated NSR pollutants,
including GHGs.
On June 23, 2014, the United States
Supreme Court issued a decision
addressing the application of PSD
permitting requirements to GHG
emissions. Utility Air Regulatory Group
v. Environmental Protection Agency,
134 S.Ct. 2427. The Supreme Court said
that the EPA may not treat GHGs as an
air pollutant for purposes of
determining whether a source is a major
source required to obtain a PSD permit.
The Court also said that the EPA could
continue to require that PSD permits,
otherwise required based on emissions
of pollutants other than GHGs, contain
limitations on GHG emissions based on
the application of Best Available
Control Technology (BACT). In order to
act consistently with its understanding
of the Court’s decision pending further
judicial action to effectuate the decision,
the EPA is not continuing to apply the
EPA regulations that would require that
SIPs include permitting requirements
that the Supreme Court found
impermissible. Specifically, the EPA is
not applying the requirement that a
state’s SIP-approved PSD program
require that sources obtain PSD permits
when GHGs are the only pollutant (i)
that the source emits or has the
potential to emit above the major source
thresholds, or (ii) for which there is a
significant emissions increase and a
significant net emissions increase from
a modification (e.g. 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(v)).
The EPA anticipates a need to revise
federal PSD rules in light of the
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 217 (Monday, November 10, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 66641-66651]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-26315]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2013-0808; FRL-9912-50-OAR]
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.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is taking final
action to rescind a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) for Texas for
greenhouse gas (GHG) Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD)
permitting, with three limited circumstances for retained federal
permitting authority. We are removing the majority of the GHG PSD FIP
because in a separate but simultaneous action being published elsewhere
in this issue of the Federal Register, we are finalizing approval of
the majority of revisions to the Texas State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submitted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to
the EPA on October 5, 2010, and April 16, 2014, that address the
state's authority to regulate GHGs and establish an approvable GHG PSD
permitting program. The EPA is finalizing this action under Section 110
and Part C of the Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: This final rule is effective on November 10, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2013-0808. All documents in the docket are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in
the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g.,
Confidential Business Information or other information whose disclosure
is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted
material, is not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available
only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through https://www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the Air Planning Section (6PD-L), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202-
2733. Contact the person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
paragraph below to make an appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Adina Wiley, Air Permits Section (6PD-
R), telephone (214) 665-2115, email wiley.adina@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document wherever ``we,''
``us,'' or ``our'' is used, we mean the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Recent UARG v. EPA U.S. Supreme Court Decision
A. Overview of the Decision and Implications for this Action
B. Changes to the Transition Process as a Result of the UARG v.
EPA Decision
III. Response to Comments
IV. Effective Date of Final Action
V. Final Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
[[Page 66642]]
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
I. Background
The background for today's final action to rescind the Texas GHG
PSD FIP, but for three limited circumstances, and the background for
the separate but simultaneous final action also being published today
to approve the majority of revisions to the Texas SIP, are discussed in
detail in our February 18, 2014, proposal (79 FR 9123). In that
document, we proposed to approve portions of two revisions to the Texas
SIP submitted by the TCEQ on October 5, 2010, and December 2, 2013. The
December 2, 2013, submittal was a request for parallel processing of
revisions proposed by the TCEQ on October 23, 2013. Our February 18,
2014, proposed approval and accompanying Technical Support Document
provide the EPA's evaluation of the October 5, 2010, and December 2,
2013, revisions to the Texas SIP that would provide for the regulation
of GHG emissions in the Texas PSD program and clarify the applicability
of BACT for all PSD permit applications. We preliminarily determined
that the revisions were consistent with the CAA and the EPA's
regulations and guidance for the permitting of GHG emissions in the PSD
program. Therefore, we proposed approval of the SIP revisions and
simultaneously proposed to rescind the GHG PSD Federal Implementation
Plan (FIP) for Texas with the exception of the three limited
circumstances for retained federal permitting authority.
The December 2, 2013, submittal was a request for parallel
processing; meaning that the EPA proposed a rulemaking action on a
proposed SIP revision concurrently with the State's public review
process. As discussed in our separate but simultaneous final approval
action on the Texas SIP revisions published elsewhere in this issue of
the Federal Register, the EPA evaluated the April 16, 2014, final Texas
SIP submittal and determined that the changes made by the TCEQ at
adoption are not material changes to the regulations that we proposed
to approve; and therefore do not alter our rationale presented in the
February 18, 2014 proposed approval. By extension, the underlying
rationale for the proposed rescission of the majority of the Texas GHG
PSD FIP remains unchanged from proposal. However, as discussed in
Section II of this final FIP rescission and the separate but
simultaneous final SIP approval, the EPA is not acting on certain
sections of the April 16, 2014, submittal that are no longer necessary
after the recent United States Supreme Court decision, UARG v. EPA.
In this action, the EPA is finalizing only the rescission of the
majority of the Texas GHG PSD FIP. We are also finalizing in a separate
but simultaneous action published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register the approval of the majority of the above referenced
revisions to the Texas PSD SIP. Therefore, as of the effective date of
this final action, the TCEQ becomes the primary permitting authority
for GHGs, except in the three limited circumstances described this
final action. As explained in our separate but simultaneous final SIP
action, we explain in the final notice the recent United States Supreme
Court decision, Utility Air Regulatory Group (UARG) v. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) (No. 12-1146). We discuss in that notice that
we are finalizing the majority of the proposed approval of the Texas
SIP revisions but are not acting on certain sections of the submittal
that appear no longer necessary after the decision. Please see that
notice for further discussion.
II. Recent UARG v. EPA U.S. Supreme Court Decision
A. Overview of the Decision and Implications for This Action
On June 23, 2014, the United States Supreme Court issued a decision
addressing the application of stationary source permitting requirements
to GHGs in Utility Air Regulatory Group (UARG) v. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) (No. 12-1146). The Supreme Court held that the
EPA may not treat GHGs as an air pollutant for purposes of determining
whether a source is a major source required to obtain a PSD permit, but
that the EPA could continue to require that PSD permits, otherwise
required based on a source's emissions of conventional pollutants
(``anyway'' sources), contain limitations on GHG emissions based on the
application of the BACT.
The Supreme Court reversed in part and affirmed in part the
decision of the D.C. Circuit Court that upheld several EPA actions
addressing PSD permitting requirements for greenhouse gases including
the Tailoring Rule.\1\ Although the Supreme Court concluded that ``EPA
exceeded its statutory authority when it interpreted the Clean Air Act
to require PSD and Title V permitting for stationary sources based on
their greenhouse gas emissions,'' 134 S.Ct. at 2449, it did not
specifically identify particular provisions of the EPA regulations it
was striking down. Thus, pending further action by the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (the D.C.
Circuit) and EPA action to revise the regulations in accordance with a
more specific remedy ordered by the D.C. Circuit, the provisions of 40
CFR 51.166 that provide criteria for EPA approval of state PSD permit
programs remain in the Code of Federal Regulations. This includes 40
CFR 51.166(b)(48)(v), which addresses permitting of ``Step 2'' sources
that emit greenhouse gases in excess of 100,000 tons per year and no
other pollutants over the major source thresholds. In light of UARG,
the EPA is not requiring PSD permits, either directly or through state
implementation plans for sources emitting greenhouse gases at any level
unless a source emits a regulated pollutant other than greenhouse gases
above the statutory major source thresholds. That means that the EPA
will not apply or enforce regulations that would require states to
include in their SIPs a requirement that ``Step 2'' sources obtain PSD
permits. Thus, despite the fact that 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(v) remains in
the Code of Federal Regulations at this time, in light of the Supreme
Court's decision the EPA is not taking action on the provisions of the
Texas SIP that would require a stationary source to obtain a PSD permit
if GHGs are the only pollutant (i) that the source emits or has the
potential to emit above the major source thresholds, or (ii) for which
there is a significant emissions increase and a significant net
emissions increase from a modification.
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\1\ See ``Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Title V
Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule; Final Rule.'' 75 FR 31514 June 3,
2010. See also our February 18, 2014, Proposal (79 FR 9123) for a
full background discussion.
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The Supreme Court also affirmed the lower court's decision that the
BACT requirement applies to GHG emissions from new and modified sources
that trigger PSD permitting obligations on the basis of their emissions
of air pollutants other than GHG (also known as ``Step 1'' or
``anyway'' sources). The Court concluded that ``EPA may continue to
treat greenhouse gases as a `pollutant subject to regulation under [the
Clean Air Act]' for purposes of requiring BACT for `anyway' sources.''
134 S.Ct. at 2449. Accordingly, the PSD BACT requirement continues to
apply to greenhouse gas emissions from any new
[[Page 66643]]
or modified source that is otherwise subject to PSD requirements as a
result of its emissions of a criteria pollutant (i.e. to an ``anyway''
source), and EPA will continue to implement existing regulations that
limit application of the statutory BACT requirement to greenhouse gases
where the construction project to be completed would emit at or above a
level of 75,000 tpy of CO2e as provided in 40 CFR
51.166(b)(48)(iv).
The EPA and D.C. Circuit have long recognized, and the D.C.
Circuit's decision affirmed by the Supreme Court further confirmed,
that PSD requirements apply to emissions of PSD pollutants ``by
automatic operation of'' the Clean Air Act. Coalition for Responsible
Regulation v. EPA, 684 F.3f 102, 115 (D.C. Cir. 2012). The Supreme
Court rejected ``a greenhouse-gas-inclusive interpretation of the PSD
and Title V triggers,'' because the CAA does not allow the Agency to
``treat greenhouse gases as a pollutant for purposes of defining a
`major emitting facility' (or a `modification' thereof) in the PSD
context.'' 134 S.Ct. at 2442, 2449. But the Court did not question the
longstanding interpretation of the EPA and the D.C. Circuit court that
the CAA PSD permitting requirements automatically apply to major source
emissions of pollutants that are ``subject to regulation'' under the
Act. 134 S.Ct. at 2442 n. 6. See also UARG, 134 S.Ct. at 2435 (``it is
unlawful to construct or modify a `major emitting facility' in `any
area to which [the PSD program] applies' without first obtaining a
permit.''). To the contrary, UARG affirmed the portion of the D.C.
Circuit's decision holding that the BACT requirement clearly applies to
greenhouse gas emissions from ``anyway'' sources and that such PSD
requirements apply to sources automatically by operation of the Clean
Air Act. Accordingly, the EPA does not interpret UARG to alter the
settled understanding that the BACT requirement automatically applies
to a pollutant (including greenhouse gases) once it becomes subject to
regulation under the Clean Air Act. Thus, consistent with the Supreme
Court's holding that EPA can ``continue to'' require compliance with
the BACT requirement in the Clean Air Act, 134 S.Ct. 2449, the EPA will
continue to apply the BACT requirement to greenhouse gases under its
existing regulations applicable to EPA's review of state implementation
plans, including 40 CFR 51.166(j), 40 CFR 51.166(b)(12), 40 CFR
51.166(b)(49), and 40 CFR 51.166(b)(48)(i)-(iv).
The Supreme Court noted that the EPA could exercise its discretion
to limit application of BACT to sources with the potential to emit
greenhouse gases above a de minimis threshold, but that if EPA wished
to do so, it would need to justify such threshold for application of
BACT to GHGs on proper grounds. The Court observed that when EPA
established the existing 75,000 tpy threshold the Agency did not
characterize it as a de minimis level. 134 S.Ct. at 2449. Rather, that
threshold represents a level that EPA determined to be both
administratively feasible for permitting authorities to implement and
reasonable for sources to comply with. 75 FR 31514, 31560 (June 3,
2010). EPA is considering additional action to establish a de minimis
threshold for application of the BACT requirement to GHGs. Pending
additional action by EPA addressing the threshold for application of
the BACT requirement to greenhouse gases, the Agency will continue to
apply the existing regulations that require a state PSD program to
apply the PSD BACT requirement to GHG emissions from ``anyway'' sources
that emit or have the potential to emit 75,000 tons per year tpy or
more of GHG on a carbon dioxide (CO2e) basis. With respect
to modified ``anyway'' sources, the EPA is presently reading its
regulations to require that state PSD programs apply the PSD BACT
requirements to GHG if both of the following circumstances are present:
(1) The modification is otherwise subject to PSD for a pollutant other
than GHG; (2) the modification results in a GHG emissions increase and
a net GHG emissions increase equal to or greater than 75,000 tpy
CO2e and greater than zero on a mass basis.
Based on information submitted by TCEQ, EPA concluded in its Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking that TCEQ had provided sufficient assurance that
it has the legal authority, personnel, and funding to implement PSD
permitting requirements for greenhouse gases. Following the UARG
decision, the State of Texas has argued in litigation before the D.C.
Circuit that GHGs are not presently subject to regulation under the PSD
program and that EPA must conduct additional rulemaking to establish a
de minimis level before the BACT requirement can be applied to
greenhouse gas emissions in PSD permits required for construction at
anyway sources. Nevertheless, the TCEQ has communicated to the EPA that
it ``continues to pursue EPA approval of [its] SIP submittal . . . so
our agency has the full authority to implement the greenhouse gas
permitting program in Texas.'' \2\ The State has further stated that
``[r]egardless of litigation positions, we are currently advocating and
might pursue in the future, we think it is necessary for TCEQ to assume
this permitting role and issue PSD permits for greenhouse gas
emissions.'' Based on information supplied by TCEQ before the proposed
rule and this additional assurance, EPA concludes that Texas intends to
implement the PSD permitting requirements for greenhouse gases
consistent with EPA's understanding of those requirements, as
articulated above, and that TCEQ continues to have sufficient legal
authority to do so. Furthermore, TCEQ has provided sufficient assurance
that it will commit the personnel and funding necessary to issue PSD
permits addressing greenhouse gases, notwithstanding the State's
ongoing efforts to persuade the court that such permits are not
required under the Clean Air Act until EPA conducts further rulemaking.
EPA's rescission of the majority of the FIP and its approval of the
majority of the Texas GHG SIP are predicated on the understanding that
the State of Texas will implement the PSD program requirements for
greenhouse gases in accordance with TCEQ's representations.
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\2\ On October 1, 2014, the TCEQ sent EPA Region 6 a
clarification letter in light of the UARG v. EPA decision. That
letter is also posted in the public docket to this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, therefore, the EPA is taking no action on the portion of
the Texas SIP submittal requiring sources to obtain PSD permits based
solely on their emissions of GHGs, but is otherwise finalizing its
rescission of the majority of the FIP and its approval of the majority
of the Texas SIP submittals as discussed in the separate final SIP
action published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register.
B. Changes to the Transition Process as a Result of the UARG v. EPA
Decision
The EPA must also consider how the July 23, 2014, Supreme Court
decision in UARG v. EPA will impact our final FIP rescission and
simultaneous SIP actions. In our February 18, 2014, proposed rulemaking
we identified the following three possible circumstances for retaining
federal GHG PSD permitting authority: (1) The EPA would retain
permitting authority for any pending permit application where the
permit applicant submitted a written request to remain with EPA for
permit issuance, (2) the EPA would retain permitting authority for any
pending permit applications where the permit
[[Page 66644]]
applicant did not submit a written request regarding permit authority
and the EPA had made a proposed determination through a public-noticed
draft permit upon the signature date of the EPA's rescission of the GHG
PSD FIP, and (3) the EPA would retain permitting authority over any
permit that was issued but had not yet completed the administrative and
judicial review process. In conjunction with our February 18, 2014,
proposal we issued the ``Transition Process for Pending GHG PSD Permit
Applications and Issued GHG PSD Permits Upon Rescission of the GHG PSD
FIP'' (the Transition Process). As specified in this Transition
Process, the EPA sent letters to each existing pending permit applicant
requesting a written response by May 15, 2014, regarding whether EPA
should retain responsibility for processing the permitting application
or transfer it to the TCEQ. We received such a response by the May 15,
2014 deadline from all of the initial GHG PSD permit applicants.
Since the time of our proposed rulemaking, we have received
additional GHG PSD permit applications. For the purposes of the
Transition Process and our final action today rescinding the Texas GHG
PSD FIP, these GHG permit applicants would be considered pending permit
applications. According to our February 18, 2014, proposed action, the
EPA would retain authority over any of these permit applications where
we had not proposed a draft permit at the time of final signature on
the FIP rescission. However, because of the Supreme Court's UARG v.
EPA, this has created some delay in the issuance of a final action on
the proposed Texas SIP approval and FIP rescission. As such, these
pending permit applicants were not afforded the same opportunity to
communicate with the EPA that was provided to the other permit
applications, submitted to the EPA, at the time of our February 18,
2014, proposed approval. We believe it is appropriate to modify our
retained FIP authorities such that the EPA will retain permitting
authority for any pending permit application submitted after our
February 18, 2014, proposal that did not respond in writing to the EPA
by May 15, 2014, regardless of whether the EPA has published public
notice of a proposed permit. We will retain the permitting authority
and proceed with our evaluation and processing of the permit
application until the applicant submits a written request to be
transferred to the TCEQ, withdraws its application, or the EPA issues a
final and effective permit.
In this circumstance, the EPA will consider a request for transfer
to be a withdrawal of the application that removes the application from
review and further action by EPA Region 6. As discussed in our February
18, 2014, proposed rulemaking, the EPA's permitting authority ``will
cease upon an applicant's written request to the EPA withdrawing the
pending permit application before a final determination is made.'' See
79 FR 9123, 9133. For those applications transferred to the TCEQ for
which the EPA has not proposed a draft permit, the Texas SIP-approved
public notice process will involve two opportunities for public comment
under 30 TAC Sections 39.418 and 39.419 for the Notice of Receipt of
Application and Intent to Obtain Permit (NORI) and the Notice of
Application and Preliminary Decision (NAPD). In the instances where a
permit applicant requests that EPA transfer the permit application to
the TCEQ and Region 6 has already public noticed a draft permit, an
additional public notice will be necessary to initiate and complete the
permitting process in accordance with the process required under Texas
procedures approved in the SIP. If the EPA has received any public
comments on its draft permit, the EPA intends to contact each commenter
to advise them to resubmit comments to the TCEQ pursuant to 30 TAC
Sections 39.412 and 55.152.
The EPA's Region 6 will consider such a request to transfer a
permit application until the time that Region 6 issues a final permit
decision under 40 CFR 124.15(b) of the EPA's regulations. After this
point in the permitting process, interested parties who commented on
the draft permit will have 30 days to request an administrative appeal
of the permit before the EPA Environmental Appeals Board (EAB) under 40
CFR 124.19. During this 30 day period, the EPA will retain authority
over the permit and will no longer consider any requests to transfer a
permit application. If no party petitions the EAB for review, the
permit will become final and effective under 40 CFR 124.15(b). At this
point, Region 6 will transfer administration of the final and effective
permit to TCEQ. If a party petitions the EAB for review of a final
permit decision by Region 6, the EPA will retain authority over the
permit until administrative and judicial review proceedings are
exhausted with one exception. If a petition for review has been filed
with the EAB, the permit does not become final and effective, and EPA
Region 6 will still have the opportunity to withdraw the permit or
request that the EAB grant a voluntary remand under 40 CFR 124.19(j).
An applicant that wishes to withdraw a permit under EAB review must
provide written notice to the EAB that it is doing so. If an applicant
wishes for Region 6 to initiate this withdrawal process while
administrative review of a permit is pending before the EAB, the
applicant will need to communicate with Region 6 in writing that it
seeks to withdraw its permit application. The applicant may submit a
new permit application to TCEQ after withdrawing its application from
the EPA in this manner, but the EPA will not transfer a permit
application at this point in the process. If a permit decision is
remanded to Region 6 by the EAB, the permit applicant may also request
withdrawal of its permit application prior to Region 6 issuing a final
permit after remand, but Region 6 will also not transfer a permit
application at this point in the process. Once the final permit
decision is issued under 40 CFR 124.19(i)(2), the EPA would retain
authority under the FIP until the period for seeking judicial review
has expired or any judicial review proceedings are completed.
Under the UARG v. EPA decision, the U.S. Supreme Court stated that
the EPA may not treat GHG as an air pollutant for purposes of
determining whether a source is a major source required to obtain a PSD
permit. Therefore, consistent with our understanding of the Supreme
Court's decision, the EPA will no longer process pending permit
applications for ``non-anyway'' sources or modifications. The EPA will
also not transfer the permitting authority for ``non-anyway'' sources
or modifications or any issued ``non-anyway'' permits to the TCEQ.
After the completion of the GHG litigation in the D.C. Circuit, the EPA
will determine the best course of disposition of these issued ``non-
anyway'' permits.
In summary, the EPA is finalizing retained permitting authority in
the following circumstances:
(1) The EPA will continue to be the permitting authority for a
pending permit application for an ``anyway'' source or ``anyway''
modification where the permit applicant submitted a written request by
May 15, 2014, that the EPA remain as the permitting authority.
(2) The EPA will continue to be the permitting authority for any
pending permit applications for ``anyway'' sources or ``anyway''
modifications submitted after the February 18, 2014, rulemaking. The
EPA will continue to evaluate and process the pending permit
applications unless the applicant submits a written request to transfer
[[Page 66645]]
permitting authority to TCEQ prior to Region 6 issuing a final permit
decision under 40 CFR 124.15(b).
(3) The EPA will retain authority over any permit for ``anyway''
sources or ``anyway'' modifications that was issued by the EPA or for
``anyway'' permit applications denied by the EPA for which either the
time for filing an administrative appeal has not expired or all
administrative and judicial appeals processes have not been completed.
Except that, the EPA will not retain authority over a permit if an
applicant submits a written request to the EPA to withdraw the permit
application while an administrative appeal is pending and Region 6 then
withdraws the permit under 40 CFR 124.19(j) or the EAB grants a
voluntary remand under 40 CFR 124.19(j) or another appropriate remedy.
III. Response to Comments
We received comments from Air Alliance Houston, the Greater Houston
Partnership (GHP), the House Bill 788 Working Group (HB 788 Working
Group), Sierra Club, Texas Chemical Council (TCC), Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ), Texas Industry Project (TIP), the Texas
Oil and Gas Association (TXOGA), the Texas Pipeline Association (TPA),
and public citizens on our February 18, 2014 proposal. All comments
received on the February 18, 2014, proposed action are available in the
public docket to this rulemaking. Following is our summary of each
comment relating to the FIP action and our response. The EPA notes that
the comments and our responses to comments that relate solely to the
SIP action are in the separate but simultaneous final approval notice
of those revisions. Comments and responses that relate to both actions
are found in both final documents.
Comment 1: The TCEQ, GHP, HB 788 Working Group, TCC, TIP, and TPA
submitted comments supportive of our proposed action and urge the EPA
to proceed with final approval and rescind the associated FIP.
Response 1: The EPA appreciates the support of the commenters. No
changes have been made to the final FIP action as a result of these
comments.
Comment 2: The TCC encouraged the EPA to make the FIP rescission
effective immediately upon approval of the SIP. As support, the
commenters referenced the EPA's final approval action of the Wyoming
GHG PSD Program at 78 FR 69998, November 22, 2013.
Response 2: The EPA interprets the comment as a request that the
EPA make the final approval of the rescission of the GHG PSD FIP and
final approval of the GHG PSD SIP effective immediately upon
publication in the Federal Register pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act Section (APA), 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d). As explained more
fully in Section IV of this document and in Comment/Response 3, the EPA
finds that today's final FIP action and the separate but simultaneous
final SIP approval action be made effective immediately upon
publication in the Federal Register.
The EPA also wishes to clarify that the Wyoming action, cited in
the comment as precedent for an immediate effective action, does not
utilize Section 553(d) of the APA. The EPA's November 22, 2013 final
approval of the Wyoming GHG PSD Program and FIP rescission were both
effective 30 days after publication in the Federal Register.
Specifically, the Wyoming action was published on November 22, 2013,
and the SIP approval and FIP rescission were effective on December 23,
2013.
Comment 3: TXOGA requested that the final SIP approval and the FIP
rescission be effective on the date of Federal Register publication
rather than waiting 30 days after publication. TIP commented that the
EPA should invoke the ``good cause'' exception in the APA to make the
final approval and FIP rescission immediately effective upon
publication. TIP suggested that using the good cause exception would:
(1) ``level the playing field'' between Texas GHG permitting and GHG
permitting in states with EPA-approved GHG permitting programs; (2)
provide economic benefits by allowing consolidation of air permitting
for Texas GHG sources at the TCEQ; (3) relieve a restriction imposed by
the FIP; and (4) is procedural in nature and does not change
substantive requirements for GHG PSD permitting.
Response 3: The EPA agrees that this is an appropriate circumstance
to make this rule effective immediately upon publication, pursuant to 5
U.S.C. Section 553(d) of the APA. As detailed in Section III of the
final FIP action and in Section III of the separate but simultaneous
final SIP approval, we have determined that both the final rescission
of the GHG PSD FIP and the separate but simultaneous approval of the
GHG PSD SIP be effective immediately upon publication in the Federal
Register. An immediate effective date is authorized under the APA at 5
U.S.C. Sections 553(d)(1) and 553(d)(3). Section 553(d)(1) provides
that rulemaking actions may become effective less than 30 days after
publication if the rule ``grants or recognizes an exemption or relieves
a restriction,'' and Section 553(d)(3) allows an effective date less
than 30 days after publication ``as otherwise provided by the agency
for good cause found and published with the rule.'' First, an immediate
effective date is authorized for the rescission of the GHG PSD FIP
under Section 553(d)(1), because this rulemaking relieves the
requirement that sources obtain both a federal permit and a state
issued permit. The immediate effective date helps to relieve the
restriction on TCEQ's ability to issue single GHG PSD permits and will
eliminate the dual EPA/TCEQ PSD permit system, which in turn, promotes
a more efficient single permitting authority process. Second, we have
determined there is ``good cause'' under Section 553(d)(3) to make this
rule effective immediately because it will allow Texas to begin
processing complete PSD GHG applications that meet the appropriate
federal PSD requirements immediately and it will allow the regulated
community to receive PSD permits containing GHG limits, issued by
Texas, as soon as possible. An immediate effective date provides Texas
with undelayed authority to regulate GHG emissions in PSD permits
issued to ``anyway'' sources and allows Texas to become the sole PSD
permitting authority in the State, except in three limited
circumstances, as described above. In addition, an expedited transition
of the GHG PSD program from the EPA to Texas creates a more efficient
use of EPA and State resources, and creates certainty for the regulated
community and public. The EPA and the TCEQ have worked closely to
ensure Texas has adequate authority and resources to administer the GHG
PSD permitting program without a 30 day delay, which is normally the
time required for affected parties to adjust their behavior and prepare
before the final rule takes effect. The EPA has determined that moving
as expeditiously as practicable to consolidate GHG PSD permitting with
the TCEQ PSD permitting program is supported here as the State has the
authority and resources to administer the GHG PSD permitting program.
The EPA finds that the above reasons support an effective date prior to
30 days after the date of publication under 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) of
the APA for both today's final FIP action and the separate but
simultaneous final SIP approval action. We have revised the effective
date of our final FIP action as a result of these comments.
Comment 4: The EPA should state for the record that GHG permits
issued by the EPA may be amended by the TCEQ once permitting authority
is delegated.
Response 4: As stated in our proposed approval, the TCEQ submitted
a letter
[[Page 66646]]
on January 13, 2014, (available in the docket for this rulemaking) that
provided clarity and assurances that the TCEQ has the general authority
under the Texas Clean Air Act to administer the EPA-issued GHG PSD
permits, including revising or amending those permits in the future.
Specifically, the ``TCEQ will assume full PSD responsibility for the
administration and implementation of final GHG PSD permits issued by
the EPA upon notification from the EPA that all administrative and
judicial appeal processes have expired or have been completed or
concluded . . . assuming full PSD responsibility includes the authority
to . . . process and issue any and all subsequent PSD permit actions
relating to such permits (e.g., amendments).'' See 79 FR 9123, 9132.
February 18, 2014. The EPA addresses the commenter's statement about
delegation of permitting authority in our separate but simultaneous
final SIP approval also published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register. No changes were made to the final FIP action as a
result of these comments.
Comment 5: One commenter found it difficult to provide specific
comments due to the pending Supreme Court decision on GHG and asked
that the EPA discuss the impact, if any, of the pending Supreme Court
decision around GHG.
Response 5: See Section II of today's final action for a detailed
discussion. Although not specifically referenced in the comment, we
believe the commenter's reference to ``pending supreme court decision
around GHG'' refers to the following case before the Supreme Court of
the United States: Case 121146; Utility Air Regulatory Group v. The
Environmental Protection Agency and consolidated cases. The Supreme
Court of the United States decided this case on June 23, 2014. In
summary, the Supreme Court affirmed in part and reversed in part the
lower court's decision on the applicability of the PSD Program to GHGs,
rejecting the application of the PSD program to additional sources
based only on GHG emissions but affirming the applicability of BACT to
GHGs emitted by sources otherwise required to obtain PSD permits based
on emissions of other pollutants. Accordingly, the decision has
influenced our final action on the April 16, 2014 SIP submittal. In our
separate but simultaneous SIP action, the EPA is proceeding with the
finalization of the majority of the revisions to the Texas SIP.
However, in order to proceed consistent with the Court's decision, the
EPA is taking no action at this time on portions of the April 16, 2014
submittal that provided for the permitting of ``Step 2,'' ``non-
anyway'' sources. Please see our final separate but simultaneous SIP
final notice for a more detailed discussion.
Comment 6: Public citizens submitted several comments regarding the
EPA's proposed approval of the GHG PSD SIP, the rescission of the GHG
PSD FIP, and the transition process to be used when transferring
permitting authority to the TCEQ. Specifically, the commenters are
concerned that the transition process is lacking the ``voice'' of the
people on whether the public feels it is the right of the applicant/
company to be able to choose the EPA or the TCEQ as the permitting
authority without the public's input on pending applications. The
commenters urged the EPA to retain the FIP permitting authority in
sensitive nonattainment areas such as in Brazoria County, Texas.
Finally, the commenters submitted information regarding ozone monitor
siting and air quality in Clute, water quality impacts in the Galveston
Bay, and maps identifying locations of proposed GHG PSD permits.
Response 6: While the EPA appreciates the commenter's concerns
about the public having a voice in the selection of a permit authority,
we believe the appropriate regulatory and permit transition procedures
are in place to ensure any GHG PSD permit, whether issued by the EPA or
the TCEQ, complies with all federal PSD requirements, including
opportunities for public input. Further, the EPA offered an opportunity
for review and comment on our proposed determination that the TCEQ has
the requisite authority to address GHGs in the PSD program in Texas
upon approval of the SIP and corresponding rescission of the majority
of the FIP for GHGs. We received no comments on this specific issue. In
the separate, but simultaneous final SIP action published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register, we are approving the majority of
revisions to the Texas PSD SIP, except with the noted exceptions where
we are taking no action at this time on certain revisions that appear
to no longer be appropriate after the Supreme Court's UARG v. EPA
ruling. Because of this, the EPA finds the TCEQ has the necessary legal
and regulatory provisions in place to successfully implement the
appropriate federal requirements for GHG PSD permitting. Therefore, we
are simultaneously rescinding the Texas GHG PSD FIP but for three
limited circumstances for retained federal permitting authority, and
approving the majority of revisions to the Texas SIP in a separate but
simultaneous final action published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register. Upon the effective date of both of these actions, the
TCEQ will have the authority to process applications and issue GHG PSD
permits except for the three limited circumstances where the EPA is
retaining federal permitting authority. As stated in the EPA's February
18, 2014, proposal and transition document referenced in that action,
the EPA contacted each GHG PSD permit applicant who had submitted an
application to the EPA at the time of our proposed approval. We
provided these permit applicants the opportunity to elect either the
EPA or the TCEQ as the issuer of its GHG permit by May 15, 2014. All
permit applicants submitted a request for permitting authority by the
deadline of May 15, 2014. For the permit applications that have been
submitted since the EPA's proposed approval, the EPA is retaining
permitting authority and will continue evaluating and processing these
permit applications unless and until the applicant submits a written
request to transfer to the TCEQ, the EPA issues a final permit, or the
applicant withdraws the permit application from the EPA's
consideration. The EPA Region 6 GHG Web site has been updated to
identify which permit applications have been retained by the EPA for
processing and those which have been transferred to the TCEQ. We will
continue to update this Web site as applicants make their decisions
regarding permitting authority. Upon the effective date of our final
SIP approval and simultaneous FIP rescission, the EPA will no longer
accept applications for GHG PSD permits in Texas. From that point
forward, the TCEQ will be the only permitting authority for GHG PSD
permits in Texas, with the exception of the three limited circumstances
where the EPA retained authority over a permit application or issued
permit that has not exhausted all administrative and judicial appeals.
Both the EPA and the TCEQ are required to issue GHG PSD permits that
satisfy federal requirements for PSD permitting. In the instances where
a permit applicant elected to transfer the permitting authority to the
TCEQ and the EPA has already public noticed a draft permit and received
comments, the EPA intends to contact each commenter to advise them to
resubmit comments to the TCEQ pursuant to 30 TAC Sections 39.412 and
55.152.
Second, in our separate but simultaneous final PSD SIP action
published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, we are
finding the
[[Page 66647]]
TCEQ has adopted regulations sufficient to regulate emissions of GHGs
from ``anyway'' major emitting sources under the Texas PSD program. As
part of the Texas PSD SIP approval final action, a GHG PSD permit
application will be subject to the Texas SIP-approved public notice and
comment procedures that are consistent with the EPA's federal PSD
public notice requirements at 40 CFR 51.166(q). For new GHG PSD permit
applications processed by the TCEQ and those applications transferred
to the TCEQ for which the EPA has not proposed a draft permit, the
Texas SIP-approved public notice process will involve two opportunities
for public comment under 30 TAC Sections 39.418 and 39.419 for the
Notice of Receipt of Application and Intent to Obtain Permit (NORI) and
the Notice of Application and Preliminary Decision (NAPD). For the
subset of permit applications that are transferred to the TCEQ after
the EPA has already proposed a draft permit, these applications will
either use the NORI and NAPD or will go through a Combined Public
Notice under 30 TAC Section 39.412. Opportunity for public review and
comment will be provided in all instances where the TCEQ is the
permitting authority for a GHG PSD permit application.
We would like to correct one statement from the commenter
concerning nonattainment permitting, which is that the EPA should
retain the GHG PSD FIP permitting authority in sensitive nonattainment
areas. There are no GHG nonattainment areas; the EPA was the permitting
authority only for GHG PSD permits. The TCEQ has been, and continues to
be, the permitting authority for Nonattainment New Source Review (NNSR)
permits in Texas. In Brazoria County, the EPA was the permitting
authority for the GHG PSD permits but the TCEQ was the permitting
authority for the NNSR permitting program and all other non-GHG PSD
pollutants.
After review and consideration of the additional materials
submitted by the citizens, the EPA has determined that the data
submitted regarding ozone monitors and air quality in Clute, water
quality in Galveston Bay, and maps identifying locations of the
proposed GHG PSD permit applications, are beyond the scope of our
review and are not relevant to our rescission of the GHG PSD FIP.
No changes were made to the final FIP action as a result of these
comments.
Comment 7: Several commenters submitted comments regarding the
EPA's document titled ``Transition Process for Transferring GHG PSD
Permitting Authority to TCEQ.'' These comments are summarized below:
A. Comments about notification to companies regarding the
Transition Process:
[cir] TCC suggests that the EPA clarify that letters sent to
applicants will not be mailed until the final rule has been published
in the Texas Register, on or about April 17, 2014.
[cir] TCC requests that the EPA post a message or announcement on
its Web site indicating that letters concerning the transition process
have been submitted to any of the GHG applicants.
B. Comments about the deadline for selecting a permitting authority
under the Transition Process:
[cir] TCC suggests the EPA not impose a firm 30-day decision
deadline because of concerns that permit applicants selecting the TCEQ
as the permitting authority may experience delay in processing of
applications if the FIP rescission is delayed.
[cir] TCC requests that the EPA clarify whether a permit applicant
will have the opportunity to request additional time beyond 30 days to
submit a response regarding permitting authority.
C. Comments about the Transition Process for Issued Permits: TCC,
TIP, and TXOGA requested that the EPA reconsider the transition
process, such that permit applications currently being reviewed in the
Environmental Appeals Board (EAB) could be transferred to TCEQ.
Response 7: The EPA appreciates the comments on the Transition
Process we will be using to transfer GHG PSD permitting authority to
the TCEQ upon the effective date of rescission of the GHG PSD FIP and
our simultaneous approval of the majority of the Texas GHG PSD SIP.
After consideration of the comments and in light of the recent UARG v.
EPA decision, we have determined it necessary to amend, in part, our
Transition Process and EPA's proposed retained authority under the FIP.
Below are our specific responses to the comments raised regarding the
Transition Process and how the EPA finds it necessary to amend, in
part, our retained authority under today's final FIP rescission.
Response 7A: For permit applicants with applications submitted at
the time of our February 18, 2014 proposal, we are making no changes to
the Transition Process. The EPA has provided adequate notice to those
initial permit applicants regarding the Transition Process. The EPA
mailed letters to each GHG permit applicant on file with the EPA on
March 27, 2014, requesting a response no later than May 15, 2014. Those
letters are available for public access in the docket for this
rulemaking action. By communicating with our initial permit applicants
immediately following the March 26, 2014 TCEQ Commissioners vote to
adopt the GHG PSD revisions, we provided our initial permit applicants
with a reasonable amount of time to weigh individual business
considerations and respond with a permitting authority request. The
letters were delivered to the applicants via the U.S. Postal delivery
and email, ensuring multiple means of communication with each
applicant. Additionally, our Region 6 GHG Web site was updated to
indicate the availability for review and comment on the EPA's proposed
approval of the Texas GHG PSD SIP, rescission of the Texas GHG PSD FIP,
and Transition Process. No changes were made to the final FIP action as
a result of these comments.
The EPA recognizes that since the time of our proposed rulemaking,
we have received additional permit applications and those permit
applicants were not afforded a similar opportunity to select a
permitting authority by the May 15, 2014, deadline specified in the
Transition Process. For these permit applications submitted after the
February 18, 2014, proposal, the EPA is retaining the permitting
authority until the EPA either issues a final permit and all subsequent
administrative and judicial appeals are exhausted, or the applicant
submits a written request to be transferred to the TCEQ, or the
applicant withdraws the permit application from the EPA's
consideration.
Response 7B: The EPA does not believe it is necessary to extend the
deadline for requesting a transfer of permitting authority beyond the
May 15, 2014 deadline, as specified in our Transition Process for the
initial permit applications that were submitted at the time of our
February 18, 2014 proposed action. We received written permit authority
requests from all permit applicants, submitted to the EPA, at the time
of the proposed notice by the specified May 15, 2014, deadline.
However, in consideration of these comments and in light of the
UARG v. EPA decision, we have decided that for any permit application
that was submitted after our proposed rulemaking, the EPA will retain
permitting authority and continue to process and evaluate any pending
permit application for an ``anyway'' source or modification unless or
until the applicant submits a written request to transfer the authority
to the TCEQ or the applicant withdraws the application from the EPA's
consideration. There is
[[Page 66648]]
no 30-day time period for decision imposed on these permit applicants.
Rather the applicant can make an informed business decision through
consultation with the EPA and the TCEQ, up until the EPA has issued a
final permit. The EPA's retained authority under the FIP was revised as
a result of these comments.
Response 7C: At this time, we intend to transfer all initial permit
applications and related materials to the TCEQ where a permit applicant
requested the transfer in writing by May 15, 2014, as specified in the
Transition Process. Additionally, as discussed above in Responses 6A
and 6B, for any permit application submitted after our February 18,
2014, proposed rulemaking, the EPA will transfer the permit application
and related materials to the TCEQ where the permit applicant submits a
written request to the EPA to transfer to the TCEQ. The EPA will
confirm the transfer of the permit application by providing a letter to
the TCEQ and the permit applicant wherein we transfer the permit
application, related materials, and state that we consider the request
for transfer a withdrawal of the application that removes the
application from review and further action by the EPA. As discussed in
our February 18, 2014, proposed rulemaking, the EPA's permitting
authority ``will cease upon an applicant's written request to the EPA
withdrawing the pending permit application before a final determination
is made.'' See 79 FR 9123, 9133. A final determination on the permit is
made when all administrative and judicial appeals processes have been
exhausted. The EPA will retain permitting authority for ``anyway'' GHG
PSD permits that are issued or for ``anyway'' permit applications
denied by the EPA for which either the time for filing an
administrative appeal has not expired or all administrative and
judicial appeals processes have not been completed. As stated in our
Transition Process, a GHG PSD permit applicant has the ability to
withdraw the permit application before the EPA and submit a new
application to the TCEQ at any time until the permit becomes final.
Because a permit does not become final until agency review procedures
are exhausted, an applicant can withdraw an application while a permit
is under EAB review. No changes were made to the final FIP action as a
result of these comments, but we have modified the authority retained
by EPA in the FIP for certain permit applications for other reasons.
Comment 8: Sierra Club submitted several comments and supporting
exhibits requesting that the EPA not approve the GHG PSD SIP and
rescind the FIP until the TCEQ submits clarifications regarding access
to judicial review for GHG PSD permits. First, Sierra Club commented
that if the commission acts on a GHG permit, then the Texas regulations
appear to require a party to go through the contested case hearing
process in order to exhaust administrative remedies, which is necessary
to later seek judicial review. However, HB 788 removes the opportunity
for a contested case hearing for GHG permits. As a result, the TCEQ has
not adequately clarified the process to exhaust all administrative
remedies before seeking judicial review when the commission acts on a
GHG permit.
Response 8: Because judicial review of PSD permits is important and
necessary under the Act, we have reevaluated the Texas judicial review
process as it applies to GHG PSD permits issued by the TCEQ. 77 FR
65305, at 65307 (Oct. 26, 2012).\3\ The TCEQ provided a letter to the
EPA dated May 30, 2014 \4\ to clarify the judicial review process and
the associated administrative remedies with respect to the GHG PSD
permits issued by Texas. This letter explains the processes to exhaust
administrative remedies and confirms that Texas law provides an
opportunity for judicial review of all GHG PSD permits issued by the
TCEQ. Texas regulations do not require a party to go through the
contested case hearing process in order to exhaust administrative
remedies when the commission acts on a GHG permit. Section 50.119(b)
provides that ``[i]f the commission acts on an application, Sec.
80.272 [Motion for Rehearing] of this title applies.'' Further, Section
50.119(c)(3) provides that motions for rehearing may be filed on ``the
commission's decision on an application.'' Section 80.272 is a
procedural provision that sets out the process for filing a motion for
rehearing after the commission makes a decision on a permit. State law
allows the TCEQ to establish a motion for rehearing via regulation,
even when there is no statutory right to a contested case hearing.\5\
Section 50.119(c) does not require a contested case hearing for a
motion for rehearing to be available. We recognize that the judicial
review process under Texas law differs from the administrative and
judicial review processes available for PSD permit decisions under 40
CFR Part 124 (opportunity to petition for administrative review by the
EPA's Environmental Appeals Board (EAB)) and section 307(b) of the CAA
(opportunity to seek review before the federal Circuit Court of
Appeals) when the EPA or a delegated agency under 40 CFR 52.21 is the
PSD permit issuer. However, the CAA does not require that the process
for judicial review of the grant or denial of a PSD permit issued under
a SIP approved PSD program be identical to that provided when the EPA
or a delegated agency is the PSD permit issuer under 40 CFR 52.21. 77
FR 65305 at 65307 (Oct. 26, 2012). No revisions were made to the final
FIP action as a result of this comment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ ``[W]e interpret the CAA to require an opportunity for
judicial review of a decision to grant or deny a PSD permit, whether
issued by EPA or by a State under a SIP-approved or delegated PSD
program. See 61 FR 1880, 1882 (Jan. 24, 1996) (EPA's proposed
disapproval of Virginia's PSD program SIP revision due to State law
standing requirements that limited judicial review); 72 FR 72617,
72619 (December 21, 2007) (in approving South Dakota's PSD program,
EPA stated: ``We interpret the statute and regulations to require at
minimum an opportunity for state judicial review of PSD
permits'').'' 77 FR at 65307.
\4\ Clarification Letter from Mr. Richard A. Hyde, P.E.,
Executive Director, TCEQ to Mr. Ron Curry, Regional Administrator,
EPA Region 6 (May 30, 2014) (hereinafter ``Judicial Review
Clarification Letter''. This letter is available in the docket for
this rulemaking.
\5\ Tex. Air Control Bd. v. Travis Cnty, 502 SW.2d 213, 215
(Tex. Civ. App.-Austin 1973, no writ); see also, Sproles Motor
Freight Line, Inc. v. Smith, 130 SW.2d 1087, 1088 (Tex. Civ. App.-
Austin 1939, writ ref d).
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IV. Effective Date of Final Action
The EPA has determined that today's final FIP action and the
separate but simultaneous final approval of the majority of the Texas
GHG PSD SIP are effective immediately upon publication under 5 U.S.C.
Section 553(d) of the APA. The expedited effective date for this final
FIP action and the separate but simultaneous SIP approval action is
authorized under both 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d)(1) and 553(d)(3) of the
APA. Section 553(d)(1) allows an effective date less than 30 days after
publication if a substantive rule relieves a ``restriction.'' Section
553(d)(3) allows an effective date less than 30 days after publication
``as otherwise provided by the agency for good cause found and
published with the rule.'' The EPA has determined that it is
appropriate to make both final actions effective upon publication
because the final removal of the Texas GHG PSD FIP and the separate but
simultaneous final approval of the majority of Texas GHG PSD SIP will
both relieve a permitting restriction and there is ``good cause'' to
allow Texas to begin processing PSD GHG applications that meet the
appropriate federal PSD requirements immediately. Final immediate
action relieves a restriction by promoting an efficient single GHG
permit process, supports an efficient use of EPA and
[[Page 66649]]
State resources, and creates certainty for the regulated community and
public. It provides Texas with undelayed authority to regulate major
GHG emitting sources, and the EPA and TCEQ have worked closely to
ensure the State has adequate authority and resources to administer the
GHG permitting program without a 30 day delay, which is normally the
time required for affected parties to adjust their behavior and prepare
before a final rule takes effect. The EPA has determined that moving as
expeditiously as practicable to consolidate GHG PSD permitting with the
TCEQ is consistent with the State's authority and resources to
administer the GHG PSD permitting program. The EPA finds that the above
reasons support an effective date prior to thirty days after the date
of publication under 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) for both today's final FIP
action and the separate but simultaneous final SIP approval action by
establishing good cause for making the rule immediately effective and
demonstrating that the rule relieves a restriction.
V. Final Action
The EPA is rescinding the GHG PSD FIP for Texas at 40 CFR
52.2305(a) and (b), with three limited circumstances for retained
authority for ``anyway'' source permit applications as specified in the
new section of 40 CFR 52.2305(d). First, the EPA retains GHG PSD
permitting authority for any pending ``anyway'' permit applications
where the permit applicant submitted a written request to remain with
the EPA for permit issuance by the deadline specified in our Transition
Process. Second, the EPA will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for
``anyway'' source permit applications submitted after February 18,
2014, unless or until the applicant submits a written request
transferring the permitting authority to the TCEQ. Finally, the EPA
will retain GHG PSD permitting authority for any issued ``anyway''
permit or ``anyway'' permit application denied by the EPA 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 publication date of the EPA's final actions to rescind
the GHG FIP and simultaneously approve the TCEQ's PSD SIP submittal.
Note, even for those cases where the EPA announces it will retain GHG
PSD permitting authority over an ``anyway'' application, this authority
will cease upon an applicant's written request to the EPA withdrawing
the pending permit application before a final determination is made.
The EPA Region 6 GHG Web site identifies the permit applications where
the EPA retains GHG permitting authority. We intend to update this Web
site as we process the pending permit applications and transfer the
issued permits to the TCEQ for implementation. When all permit
applications have been processed and transferred to the TCEQ, the EPA
will, in a separate action, revise 40 CFR 52.2305 to remove the
remaining GHG PSD FIP authority at Sec. 52.2305(a) and (b).
Consistent with the UARG v. EPA decision, the EPA does not find it
appropriate at this time to act on revisions to the Texas SIP providing
the authority to regulate and permit non-``anyway'' sources and
modifications of GHGs. Therefore, the EPA will not transfer issued non-
``anyway'' source permits to the TCEQ. The EPA will also not continue
to process or evaluate pending permit applications for ``non-anyway''
sources or modifications.
Our final action today also finds that through a letter dated
January 13, 2014, 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 any new PSD pollutants. Therefore, the EPA
rescinds the PSD FIP for Newly Regulated Pollutants for Texas at 40 CFR
52.2305(c).
As explained in our February 18, 2014 proposal (see 79 FR 9123),
this action is made possible because of our separate but simultaneous
final action being published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register to approve the majority of the Texas PSD SIP revisions, which
updates the Texas SIP to provide for the regulation of GHG emissions
for ``anyway'' sources, and clarifies the applicability of BACT for all
PSD permit applications. The EPA has made the determination that the
majority of revisions to the Texas SIP are approvable because the
revisions meet all applicable requirements of the CAA, and EPA
implementing regulations that were not affected by the recent U.S.
Supreme Court decision in UARG v. EPA. We noted that we are taking no
action at this time other certain revisions that appear to no longer be
needed in light of that decision. The EPA also has determined under the
authority of 5 U.S.C. Section 553(d) of the APA, to make this final FIP
action and the separate but simultaneous final PSD SIP approval action
effective upon November 10, 2014. Upon the effective date of today's
final FIP action and the separate but simultaneous final PSD SIP
approval, the TCEQ will immediately assume responsibility for GHG PSD
permitting, with the exception of the three limited circumstances where
the EPA is retaining GHG PSD permitting authority under the FIP, as
described this final FIP action. As such, all new GHG PSD permit
applications will be submitted to and processed by the TCEQ.
The EPA is finalizing this action under Section 110 and Part C of
the Act.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This FIP withdrawal action is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' under the terms of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October
4, 1993) and is therefore not subject to review under Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011).
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
This FIP withdrawal action does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act,
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. because this partial FIP rescission under
Section 110 and Part C of the CAA will not in-and-of itself create any
new information collection burdens but simply transfers the permitting
authority from EPA to the State. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Because this final action does not impose an information collection
burden, the Paperwork Reduction Act does not apply.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. This rule
will transfer the majority of GHG PSD permitting responsibility from
the EPA to the State of Texas. This final rule applies to large
emitters of GHGs that tend to be large sources. The result of this
final action, however, simply is to transfer the majority of authority
to administer the PSD program for GHGs from EPA to the State of Texas
and does not create any new requirements. The substantive requirement
for a source to obtain a PSD permit prior to construction of a new
major source of GHGs or modification of an existing major source that
will significantly increase GHGs is not changed by this final FIP
action. This
[[Page 66650]]
final FIP action will not impose any new requirements on small
entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. This action removes the majority of a Federal plan
and transfers most permitting responsibility of GHG emissions from the
EPA to the State of Texas. Small governments are not impacted.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This FIP withdrawal action does not have federalism implications.
It will not have substantial direct effects on Texas, on the
relationship between the national government and the State of Texas, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in Executive Order 13132.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132, and consistent with EPA
policy to promote communications between the EPA and State and local
governments, the EPA specifically solicited comment on the proposed
action from State and local officials. The EPA received no adverse
comments from state or local governments on this rulemaking but only
comments in support from the State.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). In this action,
the EPA is not addressing any Tribal Implementation Plans. This action
is limited to the withdrawal of the majority of the Texas GHG PSD FIP.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because the EPA is withdrawing the majority of
the federal GHG PSD FIP in Texas as authorized by the CAA.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355,
May 22, 2001), because it is not a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
This final rule does not provide the EPA with the discretionary
authority to address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or
environmental effects, using practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. The CRA allows the issuing agency to make a rule
effective sooner than otherwise provided by the CRA if the agency makes
a good cause finding that notice and comment rulemaking procedures are
impracticable, unnecessary or contrary to the public interest (5 U.S.C.
808(2)). The EPA has made a good cause finding for this rule as
discussed in Section IV (Effective Date of Final Action), including the
basis for that finding.
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the appropriate circuit by January 9, 2015. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule does not affect
the finality of this action for the purposes of judicial review nor
does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial review may
be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such rule or
action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. See CAA section 307(b)(2); 5 U.S.C.
7607(b)(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference, Intergovernmental relations, Lead, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: October 30, 2014.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Environmental
Protection Agency amends 40 CFR Part 52 as follows:
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
0
1. The authority citation for Part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart SS--Texas
0
2. Section 52.2305 is amended by removing and reserving paragraph (c)
and by adding paragraph (d) to read as follows.
Sec. 52.2305 What are the requirements of the Federal Implementation
Plan (FIP) to issue permits under the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration requirements to sources that emit greenhouse gases?
* * * * *
(d) The authority provided in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section is rescinded except in the three limited circumstances
described in paragraphs (d)(1) through (3) of this section:
(1) The EPA will retain permitting authority for all GHG PSD permit
applications for major sources and major modifications required to
obtain PSD permits because of emissions of pollutants other than GHGs
submitted to the EPA where the permit applicant submitted a written
request by May 15, 2014, that the EPA continue processing the
application.
(2) The EPA will retain permitting authority for all GHG PSD permit
applications for major sources and major modifications required to
obtain PSD permits because of emissions of pollutants other than GHGs
submitted to the EPA after February 18, 2014, unless and until the
applicant submits to the EPA a written request to transfer the
permitting authority to TCEQ (or withdraws the application) prior to
issuance of a final permit decision under 40 CFR 124.15(b).
(3) The EPA will retain permitting authority for GHG PSD permits
issued by the EPA for major sources and major modifications required to
obtain PSD permits because of emissions of pollutants other than GHGs
and GHG PSD permit applications denied by the EPA for major sources and
major
[[Page 66651]]
modifications required to obtain PSD permits because of emissions of
pollutants other than GHGs 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 November 10,
2014. Except that the EPA will not retain authority over a permit if an
applicant submits a written request to the EPA to withdraw the permit
application while an administrative appeal is pending and the Regional
Administrator then withdraws the permit under 40 CFR 124.19(j) or the
Environmental Appeals Board grants a voluntary remand under 40 CFR
124.19(j) or another appropriate remedy.
[FR Doc. 2014-26315 Filed 11-7-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P