Air Plan Approval; TN; Reasonably Available Control Measures and Redesignation for the TN Portion of the Chattanooga 1997 Annual PM2.5, 56418-56422 [2015-23382]
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Using supplied air from the surface
versus using air from cylinders stored
underground; or delivering surfacesupplied air through a borehole directly
into a built-in-place refuge versus
compressed air lines run through the
mine.
3. Discuss options for piping air over
several miles through a mine to provide
a clean air supply and sufficient air
pressure to a built-in-place refuge when
a borehole directly into the refuge is
unavailable. What issues remain to be
addressed for the protection of piping
used to provide compressed air to a
refuge?
4. What are the risks and benefits to
miners’ safety, if any, if a constant air
supply from the surface is provided to
a refuge and exhausted from the refuge
into the mine, as opposed to exhausting
to the surface?
5. What are the advantages and
disadvantages of using SCBAs with
refill stations as compared to using
SCSRs with caches in escapeways?
6. Discuss and describe new and
improved technology for built-in-place
refuges’ designs. What is the impact of
these designs on the cost of built-inplace refuges? For example, would a
moveable wall or other modular design
make the use of a built-in-place refuge
more feasible and economical?
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
B. Miners’ Ability To Communicate
During Escape
Miners’ ability to communicate with
each other can be critical during mine
emergencies. Under existing rules,
miners use self-contained self-rescue
(SCSR) escape respirators that have a
mouthpiece. A self-contained breathing
apparatus (SCBA) has a full-face
respirator mask. Miners must remove
the mouthpiece of an SCSR to speak, or
remove the full-face respirator mask of
an SCBA to communicate clearly. These
actions expose miners to deadly gases in
the mine atmosphere.
7. Discuss the challenges associated
with providing two-way communication
when using escape SCBAs or SCSRs.
What technologies, such as voice
amplifiers or wireless communication
systems, are available for escape SCBAs
or SCSRs that can enhance voice
communication among miners?
8. Discuss how this technology can be
integrated with a mine’s two-way postaccident communication system.
MSHA will accept written responses,
data, and information for the record
from any interested party, including
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those not participating in the public
meeting, through November 16, 2015.
Joseph A. Main,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety
and Health.
[FR Doc. 2015–23448 Filed 9–17–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–43–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2014–0904; FRL–9934–26–
Region 4]
Air Plan Approval; TN; Reasonably
Available Control Measures and
Redesignation for the TN Portion of the
Chattanooga 1997 Annual PM2.5
Nonattainment Area
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Proposed rule; supplemental.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing two separate
but related actions pertaining to the
Tennessee portion of the Chattanooga
nonattainment area for the 1997 annual
fine particulate matter (PM2.5) national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS)
(hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘Chattanooga TN–GA–AL Area’’ or
‘‘Area’’). First, EPA is proposing to
approve the portion of the attainment
plan state implementation plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the State of
Tennessee, through the Tennessee
Department of Environment and
Conservation (TDEC), on October 15,
2009, that addresses reasonably
available control measures (RACM),
including reasonably available control
technology (RACT), for the Tennessee
portion of the Area. EPA is not
proposing to act on the portions of the
SIP revision that are unrelated to
RACM. Second, EPA is supplementing
the Agency’s March 27, 2015, proposed
approval of Tennessee’s November 13,
2014, redesignation request for the
Tennessee portion of the Area by
proposing that approval of the RACM
portion of the aforementioned SIP
revision satisfies the applicable RACM
requirements for redesignation under
the Clean Air Act (CAA or Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2014–0904, by one of the
following methods:
1. www.regulations.gov: Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
SUMMARY:
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2. Email: R4-ARMS@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (404) 562–9019.
4. Mail: ‘‘EPA–R04–OAR–2014–
0904,’’ Air Regulatory Management
Section, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides
and Toxics Management Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Lynorae
Benjamin, Chief, Air Regulatory
Management Section, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides
and Toxics Management Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Regional Office’s normal hours of
operation. The Regional Office’s official
hours of business are Monday through
Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding
Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R04–OAR–2014–
0904. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit through
www.regulations.gov or email,
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected. The
www.regulations.gov Web site is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an email comment directly
to EPA without going through
www.regulations.gov, your email
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
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Docket: All documents in the
electronic docket are listed in the
www.regulations.gov index. Although
listed in the index, some information
may not be publicly available, i.e., CBI
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 in www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the Air Regulatory
Management Section, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides
and Toxics Management Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960. EPA
requests that if at all possible, 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 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., excluding Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joel
Huey, Air Planning and Implementation
Branch, Air, Pesticides and Toxics
Management Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960. Mr.
Huey’s phone number is (404) 562–
9104. He can also be reached via
electronic mail at huey.joel@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Background
On July 18, 1997, EPA promulgated
the first air quality standards for PM2.5.
EPA promulgated an annual standard at
a level of 15 micrograms per cubic meter
(mg/m3) (based on a 3-year average of
annual mean PM2.5 concentrations) and
a 24-hour standard of 65 mg/m3 (based
on a 3-year average of the 98th
percentile of 24-hour concentrations).
See 62 FR 36852. On January 5, 2005,
and supplemented on April 14, 2005,
EPA designated Hamilton County in
Tennessee, in association with counties
in Alabama and Georgia in the
Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area, as
nonattainment for the 1997 Annual
PM2.5 NAAQS. See 70 FR 944 and 70 FR
19844, respectively. Designation of an
area as nonattainment for PM2.5 starts
the process for a state to develop and
submit to EPA an attainment plan SIP
revision under title I, part D of the CAA.
This SIP revision must include, among
other elements, a demonstration of how
the NAAQS will be attained in the
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nonattainment area as expeditiously as
practicable, but no later than the
attainment date required by the CAA.
EPA designated all 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS areas under title I, part D,
subpart 1 (hereinafter ‘‘Subpart 1’’).
Subpart 1 contains the general
requirements for nonattainment areas
for criteria pollutants and is less
prescriptive than the other subparts of
title I, part D. On April 25, 2007, EPA
promulgated a rule, codified at 40 CFR
part 51, subpart Z, to implement the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS under Subpart 1
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘‘1997
PM2.5 Implementation Rule’’).1 See 72 FR
20586. On October 15, 2009, Tennessee
submitted an attainment plan SIP
revision pursuant to Subpart 1 and the
1997 PM2.5 Implementation Rule that
addressed RACM and contained a
reasonable further progress (RFP) plan,
base-year and attainment-year emissions
inventories, and contingency measures
for the Area.
On May 31, 2011 (76 FR 31239), EPA
published a final determination that the
Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area had
attained the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS
based upon quality-assured and
certified ambient air monitoring data for
the 2007–2009 time period. In that
determination and in accordance with
the 1997 PM2.5 Implementation Rule at
40 CFR 51.1004(c), EPA suspended the
requirements for the Chattanooga TNGA-AL Area to submit attainment
demonstrations and associated RACM,
RFP plans, contingency measures, and
other planning SIPs related to
attainment of the 1997 Annual PM2.5
NAAQS, so long as the Area continues
to attain the 1997 Annual PM2.5
NAAQS. See 40 CFR 52.2231(c); 76 FR
31239.
Tennessee submitted a request to EPA
on November 13, 2014, to redesignate
the State’s portion of the Chattanooga
TN-GA-AL Area to attainment for the
1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and to
approve a SIP revision containing a
maintenance plan for the Tennessee
1 On
January 4, 2013, in Natural Resources
Defense Council v. EPA, 706 F.3d 428 (D.C. Cir.
2013), the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) found
that EPA erred in implementing the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS pursuant solely to the general
implementation provisions of Subpart 1 rather than
the particulate matter-specific provisions of title I,
part D, subpart 4. The court remanded both the
1997 PM2.5 Implementation Rule and the final rule
entitled ‘‘Implementation of the New Source
Review (NSR) Program for Particulate Matter Less
than 2.5 Micrometers (PM2.5)’’ (73 FR 28321, May
16, 2008) to EPA to address this error.
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portion of the Area. EPA proposed to
approve the redesignation request and
the related SIP revision in an action
signed on March 11, 2015, based, in
part, on the Agency’s longstanding
interpretation that Subpart 1
nonattainment planning requirements,
including RACM, are not ‘‘applicable’’
for purposes of CAA section
107(d)(3)(E)(ii) once an area is attaining
the NAAQS and, therefore, need not be
approved into the SIP before EPA can
redesignate the area. See 80 FR 16331
(March 27, 2015).
On March 18, 2015, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
(Sixth Circuit) issued an opinion in
Sierra Club v. EPA, 781 F.3d 299 (6th
Cir. 2015), that is inconsistent with this
longstanding interpretation regarding
section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii). In its decision,
the Court vacated EPA’s redesignation
of the Indiana and Ohio portions of the
Cincinnati-Hamilton nonattainment area
to attainment for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
because EPA had not yet approved
Subpart 1 RACM for the Cincinnati Area
into the Indiana and Ohio SIPs.2 The
Court concluded that ‘‘a State seeking
redesignation ‘shall provide for the
implementation’ of RACM/RACT, even
if those measures are not strictly
necessary to demonstrate attainment
with the PM2.5 NAAQS . . . . If a State
has not done so, EPA cannot ‘fully
approve[]’ the area’s SIP, and
redesignation to attainment status is
improper.’’ Sierra Club, 781 F.3d at 313.
II. What are EPA’s proposed actions?
EPA is bound by the Sixth Circuit’s
decision in Sierra Club v. EPA within
the Court’s jurisdiction unless it is
overturned.3 Although EPA continues to
believe that Subpart 1 RACM is not an
applicable requirement under section
107(d)(3)(E) for an area that has already
attained the 1997 Annual PM2.5
NAAQS, EPA is proposing two separate
but related actions regarding the
Tennessee portion of the Chattanooga
2 The Court issued an amended decision on July
14, 2015, revising some of the legal aspects of the
Court’s analysis of the relevant statutory provisions
(section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii) and section 172(c)(1)) but
maintaining its prior holding that section 172(c)(1)
‘‘unambiguously requires implementation of
RACM/RACT prior to redesignation . . . even if
those measures are not strictly necessary to
demonstrate attainment with the PM2.5 NAAQS.’’
See Sierra Club v. EPA, Nos. 12–3169, 12–3182, 12–
3420 (6th Cir. July 14, 2015).
3 The states of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and
Tennessee are located within the Sixth Circuit’s
jurisdiction.
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TN-GA-AL Area in response to the
Court’s decision.4 5
First, EPA is proposing to approve the
portion of the State’s October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision that
addresses RACM under Subpart 1 for
the Tennessee portion of the Area.
Second, EPA is supplementing the
Agency’s proposed approval of
Tennessee’s November 13, 2014,
redesignation request for the Area by
proposing that approval of the RACM
portion of the aforementioned SIP
revision satisfies the Subpart 1 RACM
requirement in accordance with section
107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA. More detail on
EPA’s rationale for these proposed
actions is provided below.
III. What is EPA’s analysis of the state’s
RACM submittal?
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a. Subpart 1 RACM Requirements
Subpart 1 requires that each
attainment plan ‘‘provide for the
implementation of all reasonably
available control measures as
expeditiously as practicable (including
such reductions in emissions from the
existing sources in the area as may be
obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available
control technology), and shall provide
for attainment of the national primary
ambient air quality standards.’’ See CAA
section 172(c)(1). EPA interprets RACM,
including RACT, under section 172(c)(1)
as measures that are both reasonably
available and necessary to demonstrate
attainment as expeditiously as
practicable in the nonattainment area.
See 40 CFR 51.1010(a).6 A state must
adopt, as RACM, measures that are
reasonably available considering
technical and economic feasibility if,
4 Pursuant to 40 CFR 56.5(b), the EPA Region 4
Regional Administrator signed a memorandum on
July 20, 2015, seeking concurrence from the
Director of EPA’s Air Quality Policy Division
(AQPD) in the Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards to act inconsistent with EPA’s
interpretation of CAA sections 107(d)(3)(E) and
172(c)(1) when taking action on pending and future
redesignation requests in Kentucky and Tennessee
because the Region is bound by the Sixth Circuit’s
decision in Sierra Club v. EPA. The AQPD Director
issued her concurrence on July 22, 2015. The July
20, 2015, memorandum with AQPD concurrence is
located in the docket for today’s proposed actions.
5 On September 3, 2015, the Sixth Circuit denied
the petitions for rehearing en banc of this portion
of its opinion that were filed by EPA, the state of
Ohio, and industry groups from Ohio. Sierra Club
v. EPA, Nos. 12–3169, 12–3182, 12–3420, Doc.
136–1 (6th Cir. Sept. 3, 2015).
6 Subpart 1 RACM requirements at 40 CFR
51.1010 were not at issue in the D.C. Circuit’s
remand of the PM2.5 implementation rule in the
January 2013 Natural Resources Defense Council v.
EPA decision and are therefore not subject to the
Court’s remand. Cf. NRDC v. EPA, 571 F.3d 1245,
1252–53 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (upholding a substantially
similar interpretation of Subpart 1 RACM in the
context of ozone implementation regulations).
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considered collectively, they would
advance the attainment date by one year
or more. See 40 CFR 51.1010(b).
The PM2.5 Implementation Rule
requires that the Subpart 1 RACM
portion of the attainment plan SIP
revision include the list of potential
measures that a state considered and
information sufficient to show that the
state met all requirements for the
determination of what constitutes
RACM in a specific nonattainment area.
See 40 CFR 51.1010(a). Any measures
that are necessary to meet these
requirements which are not already
either federally promulgated, part of the
state’s implementation plan, or
otherwise creditable in SIPs must be
submitted in enforceable form as part of
a state’s attainment plan SIP revision for
the area. As discussed above, an
attainment determination suspends the
requirement for a PM2.5 nonattainment
area to submit an attainment plan SIP
revision so long as the area continues to
attain the PM2.5 NAAQS. See 40 CFR
51.1004(c).
b. Proposed Action on RACM Based
Upon Attainment of the NAAQS
EPA is proposing to approve the
portion of Tennessee’s October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision that
addresses Subpart 1 RACM for the
State’s portion of the Area on the basis
that the Area has attained the 1997
Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and, therefore, no
emission reduction measures are
necessary to satisfy Subpart 1 RACM. As
noted above, EPA has determined that
the Area has attaining data for the 1997
Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and met the
standard by the April 5, 2010,
attainment date. See 77 FR 31239.
Because the Area has attained the
standard, there are no emissions
controls that could advance the
attainment date; thus, no emissions
controls are necessary to satisfy Subpart
1 RACM pursuant to 40 CFR 51.1010
(defining RACM as the level of control
necessary to advance the attainment
date by one year or more).
c. Proposed Action on RACM Based
Upon the State’s Control Evaluation
Additionally, the portion of
Tennessee’s October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision that
addresses Subpart 1 RACM for the
State’s portion of the Area is approvable
on the basis that the SIP revision
demonstrates that no additional
reasonably available controls would
have advanced the attainment date
projected therein.
Through participation in the regional
planning efforts of the Visibility
Improvement States and Tribal
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Association of the Southeast (VISTAS)
and the Association for Southeastern
Integrated Planning (ASIP), Tennessee
determined that existing measures and
measures planned for implementation
by 2009 would result in the Chattanooga
TN-GA-AL Area attaining the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS by the end of 2009. Air
quality modeling conducted by ASIP
indicated that the Area would attain the
annual NAAQS in 2009 based upon
projected emissions reductions from
sources within the Area after 2002 (the
base year of the nonattainment
emissions inventory). As discussed in
Chapter 2.0 of the October 15, 2009, SIP
revision, the State, in consultation with
VISTAS and ASIP, considered the
following existing federally enforceable
measures in projecting the emissions
inventory used for the 2009 modeling:
Tier 2 vehicle standards; heavy-duty
gasoline and diesel highway vehicle
standards; large nonroad diesel engine
standards; nonroad spark-ignition
engines and recreational engines
standards; NOX SIP call; and the Clean
Air Interstate Rule.
In Tennessee’s RACM analysis, which
appears in chapter 4.0 of the October 15,
2009, SIP revision, the State discusses
its evaluation of sources of PM2.5 and its
precursors within the Tennessee portion
of the Area and its determination that
these sources were meeting Subpart 1
RACM levels of emissions control. As
discussed above, a State must show that
all Subpart 1 RACM (including RACT
for stationary sources) necessary to
demonstrate attainment as expeditiously
as practicable have been adopted and
must consider the cumulative impact of
implementing available measures to
determine whether a particular emission
reduction measure or set of measures is
required to be adopted as RACM.
Potential measures that are reasonably
available considering technical and
economic feasibility must be adopted as
RACM if, considered collectively, they
would advance the attainment date by
one year or more. Because the
attainment demonstration in
Tennessee’s attainment plan SIP
revision showed attainment of the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS in the Chattanooga TNGA-AL Area by the end of 2009, only
measures that would advance the
attainment date to the end of 2008
would be considered as Subpart 1
RACM.7
7 As noted in the preamble to the PM
2.5
Implementation Rule, if a ‘‘State could not achieve
significant emissions reductions by the beginning of
2008 due to time needed to implement reasonable
measures or other factors, then it could be
concluded that reasonably available local measures
would not advance the attainment date.’’ See 72 FR
20617.
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Based on the emissions inventory and
other information, the State identified
the categories of sources that should be
evaluated for controls. These categories
include permitted stationary sources;
gasoline dispensing facilities; on-road
mobile sources; non-road and stationary
internal combustion engines; open
burning; and home heating with wood.
With regard to permitted stationary
sources, Tennessee noted that
conservative sensitivity modeling,
conducted by the Georgia Institute of
Technology, showed that completely
eliminating emissions of PM2.5, nitrogen
oxides, and sulfur dioxide from nonutility point sources in the Tennessee
portion of the Area would result in only
small reductions in PM2.5
concentrations (0.06 mg/m3 to 0.25 mg/
m3). Nevertheless, Tennessee performed
a detailed analysis of each major source
operating in the State’s portion of the
Area and determined that RACT levels
of emission control were already in
place.8 This analysis, and the results of
sensitivity modeling, indicated that no
additional reductions were available
from local permitted stationary sources
that would result in attainment in 2008
rather than 2009. For gasoline
dispensing facilities, Tennessee deemed
the use of Stage 1 vapor recovery to be
the RACT level of emissions control.
Tennessee stated that the existing
federally-approved inspection and
maintenance program constitutes RACM
for on-road mobile sources and that
non-road mobile sources and stationary
internal combustion engines are
regulated by Federal rules. Regarding
open burning, Chattanooga’s federallyapproved local implementation plan
requires open burning permits, bans
open burning from May 1 through
September 30, and prohibits the burning
of brush cleared for road building and
trash in the Tennessee portion of the
Area. The State also determined that
only 712 households (0.6 percent of the
total households in the Tennessee
portion of the Area) were heating
primarily with wood and that
accelerated replacement of older wood
burning stoves would not advance the
attainment date given the ‘‘small portion
of households using wood hearing, the
mild local climate, and the normal
purchases of Subpart AAA compliant
wood burning stoves in the
nonattainment area.’’
Through this evaluation, Tennessee
determined that, for each category of
potential measures, there were either no
additional emission reductions that
could be achieved or no emission
8 See Appendix 12 of the SIP submittal for a
detailed discussion of the State’s analysis.
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reduction measures that could be
practicably implemented in time to
advance attainment to the end of 2008.
EPA has reviewed the RACM portion of
Tennessee’s October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision and agrees
with the State’s conclusion that no
additional emissions reductions were
available from local sources that would
have advanced the projected 2009
attainment date.
IV. Why is EPA supplementing its
proposed redesignation of the area?
EPA’s March 11, 2015, proposal to
approve Tennessee’s redesignation
request for the Tennessee portion of the
Area was based, in part, on the Agency’s
longstanding interpretation that Subpart
1 RACM need not be approved into a
SIP before redesignation to attainment if
the subject area is attaining the NAAQS.
See 80 FR 16331. Although EPA
disagrees with the portion of the Sixth
Circuit’s opinion in Sierra Club v. EPA
that is inconsistent with this
interpretation, the Agency is bound by
this decision within the Court’s
jurisdiction unless it is overturned and
must first approve Subpart 1 RACM into
Tennessee’s SIP before it can
redesignate the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL
Area to attainment. Therefore, EPA is
supplementing its redesignation
proposal to now rely on approval of the
RACM portion of the State’s October 15,
2009, attainment plan SIP revision.
V. Proposed Actions
EPA has reviewed the RACM portion
of Tennessee’s October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision and
proposes to approve it on the basis that
it is consistent with the CAA, the CAA’s
implementing regulations, and EPA
guidance for attainment demonstration
submittals. EPA is also supplementing
its March 27, 2015, proposed approval
of the State’s November 13, 2014,
redesignation request for the Tennessee
portion of the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL
Area by proposing that approval of the
RACM portion of the aforementioned
SIP revision satisfies the Subpart 1
RACM requirement in accordance with
section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA. Today’s
proposed actions are focused solely on
addressing the Sixth Circuit’s decision
in Sierra Club v. EPA and do not reopen
any other aspect of the March 27, 2015,
proposal for comment.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
Act and applicable Federal regulations.
See 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
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Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely proposes to approve state law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by state law. For
that reason, this action:
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The SIP is not approved to apply on
any Indian reservation land or in any
other area where EPA or an Indian tribe
has demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian
country, the rule does not have tribal
implications as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), nor will it impose substantial
direct costs on tribal governments or
preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
E:\FR\FM\18SEP1.SGM
18SEP1
56422
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 181 / Friday, September 18, 2015 / Proposed Rules
Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: September 9, 2015.
Heather McTeer Toney,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. 2015–23382 Filed 9–17–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 62
[EPA–R07–OAR–2015–0514; FRL–9933–96–
Region 7]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans for
Designated Facilities and Pollutants;
Missouri; Sewage Sludge Incinerators
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 62
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
revisions to the state plan for designated
facilities and pollutants developed
under sections 111(d) and 129 of the
Clean Air Act for the State of Missouri.
This proposed action will amend the
state plan to include a new plan and
associated rule implementing the
emissions guidelines for Commercial
and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration
(CISWI) Units.
DATES: Comments on this proposed
action must be received in writing by
October 19, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R07–
OAR–2015–0514, by mail to Paula
Higbee, Environmental Protection
Agency, Air Planning and Development
Branch, 11201 Renner Boulevard,
Lenexa, Kansas 66219. Comments may
also be submitted electronically or
through hand delivery/courier by
following the detailed instructions in
the ADDRESSES section of the direct final
rule located in the rules section of this
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paula Higbee, Environmental Protection
Agency, Air Planning and Development
Branch, 11201 Renner Boulevard,
Lenexa, Kansas 66219 at 913–551–7028
or by email at higbee.paula@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
final rules section of this Federal
Register, EPA is approving the state’s
SIP revision as a direct final rule
without prior proposal because the
Agency views this as a noncontroversial
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:14 Sep 17, 2015
Jkt 235001
revision amendment and anticipates no
relevant adverse comments to this
action. A detailed rationale for the
approval is set forth in the direct final
rule. If no relevant adverse comments
are received in response to this action,
no further activity is contemplated in
relation to this action. If EPA receives
relevant adverse comments, the direct
final rule will be withdrawn and all
public comments received will be
addressed in a subsequent final rule
based on this proposed action. EPA will
not institute a second comment period
on this action. Any parties interested in
commenting on this action should do so
at this time. Please note that if EPA
receives adverse comment on part of
this rule and if that part can be severed
from the remainder of the rule, EPA may
adopt as final those parts of the rule that
are not the subject of an adverse
comment. For additional information,
see the direct final rule which is located
in the rules section of this Federal
Register.
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Commercial and
industrial solid waste incinerators,
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: September 3, 2015.
Becky Weber,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 7.
[FR Doc. 2015–23384 Filed 9–17–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 15, 73, and 74
[MB Docket No. 15–146; GN Docket No. 12–
268; DA 15–918]
Preserving Vacant Channels in the
UHF Television Band for Unlicensed
Use
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Media
Bureau of the Federal Communications
Commission (Commission) provides
notice of the revised comment and reply
comment deadlines in this proceeding.
The comment period in this proceeding
has previously been suspended pending
action in the Commission’s incentive
auction proceeding and the Media
Bureau announces that it has been
restarted and the new deadlines for
filing comments and reply comments.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Comments Due: September 30,
2015. Reply Comments Due: October 30,
2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by MB Docket No. 15–146
and GN Docket No. 12–268, by any of
the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Federal Communications
Commission’s Web site: https://
www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail
(although we continue to experience
delays in receiving U.S. Postal Service
mail.) All filings must be addressed to
the Commission’s Secretary, Office of
the Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
• People with Disabilities: Contact the
FCC to request reasonable
accommodations (accessible format
documents, sign language interpreters,
CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov
or phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–
418–0432.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shaun Maher, Shaun.Maher@fcc.gov of
the Media Bureau, Video Division, (202)
418–2324, and Paul Murray,
Paul.Murray@fcc.gov of the Office of
Engineering and Technology, (202) 418–
0688.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Media Bureau’s Order,
DA 15–918, adopted August 12, 2015, in
MB Docket No. 15–146 (Order). The full
text of the Order is available for
inspection and copying during regular
business hours in the FCC Reference
Center, 445 12th Street SW., Room CY–
A257, Portals II, Washington, DC 20554.
This document is available in
alternative formats (computer diskette,
large print, audio record, and Braille).
Persons with disabilities who need
documents in these formats may contact
the FCC by email: FCC504@fcc.gov or
phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–418–
0432.
DATES:
Synopsis
1. On June 16, 2015, the Commission
released a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 30 FCC Rcd 6711 (2015) in
MB Docket No. 15–146 (Vacant Channel
NPRM) seeking comment on rules to
preserve vacant television channels for
shared use by white space devices and
wireless microphones. On July 29, 2015,
the Media Bureau, in an Order, DA 15–
867, on delegated authority, suspended
the comment and reply comment
E:\FR\FM\18SEP1.SGM
18SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 181 (Friday, September 18, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 56418-56422]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-23382]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R04-OAR-2014-0904; FRL-9934-26-Region 4]
Air Plan Approval; TN; Reasonably Available Control Measures and
Redesignation for the TN Portion of the Chattanooga 1997 Annual PM2.5
Nonattainment Area
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION: Proposed rule; supplemental.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing two
separate but related actions pertaining to the Tennessee portion of the
Chattanooga nonattainment area for the 1997 annual fine particulate
matter (PM2.5) national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS) (hereinafter referred to as the ``Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area''
or ``Area''). First, EPA is proposing to approve the portion of the
attainment plan state implementation plan (SIP) revision submitted by
the State of Tennessee, through the Tennessee Department of Environment
and Conservation (TDEC), on October 15, 2009, that addresses reasonably
available control measures (RACM), including reasonably available
control technology (RACT), for the Tennessee portion of the Area. EPA
is not proposing to act on the portions of the SIP revision that are
unrelated to RACM. Second, EPA is supplementing the Agency's March 27,
2015, proposed approval of Tennessee's November 13, 2014, redesignation
request for the Tennessee portion of the Area by proposing that
approval of the RACM portion of the aforementioned SIP revision
satisfies the applicable RACM requirements for redesignation under the
Clean Air Act (CAA or Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on or before October 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R04-
OAR-2014-0904, by one of the following methods:
1. www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line instructions for
submitting comments.
2. Email: R4-ARMS@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (404) 562-9019.
4. Mail: ``EPA-R04-OAR-2014-0904,'' Air Regulatory Management
Section, Air Planning and Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides and
Toxics Management Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW., Atlanta, Georgia 30303-8960.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Lynorae Benjamin, Chief, Air
Regulatory Management Section, Air Planning and Implementation Branch,
Air, Pesticides and Toxics Management Division, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW., Atlanta, Georgia
30303-8960. Such deliveries are only accepted during the Regional
Office's normal hours of operation. The Regional Office's official
hours of business are Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R04-OAR-
2014-0904. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Do not submit through www.regulations.gov or
email, information that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected.
The www.regulations.gov Web site is an ``anonymous access'' system,
which means EPA will not know your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an email
comment directly to EPA without going through www.regulations.gov, your
email address will be automatically captured and included as part of
the comment that is placed in the public docket and made available on
the Internet. If you submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends that
you include your name and other contact information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties and cannot contact you for
clarification, EPA may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic
files should avoid the use of special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or viruses. For additional
information about EPA's public docket visit the EPA Docket Center
homepage at https://www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
[[Page 56419]]
Docket: All documents in the electronic docket are listed in the
www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some
information may not be publicly available, i.e., CBI 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 in
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the Air Regulatory Management
Section, Air Planning and Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides and
Toxics Management Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW., Atlanta, Georgia 30303-8960. EPA
requests that if at all possible, 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 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joel Huey, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air, Pesticides and Toxics Management Division,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303-8960. Mr. Huey's phone number is (404) 562-9104.
He can also be reached via electronic mail at huey.joel@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On July 18, 1997, EPA promulgated the first air quality standards
for PM2.5. EPA promulgated an annual standard at a level of
15 micrograms per cubic meter ([mu]g/m\3\) (based on a 3-year average
of annual mean PM2.5 concentrations) and a 24-hour standard
of 65 [mu]g/m\3\ (based on a 3-year average of the 98th percentile of
24-hour concentrations). See 62 FR 36852. On January 5, 2005, and
supplemented on April 14, 2005, EPA designated Hamilton County in
Tennessee, in association with counties in Alabama and Georgia in the
Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area, as nonattainment for the 1997 Annual
PM2.5 NAAQS. See 70 FR 944 and 70 FR 19844, respectively.
Designation of an area as nonattainment for PM2.5 starts the
process for a state to develop and submit to EPA an attainment plan SIP
revision under title I, part D of the CAA. This SIP revision must
include, among other elements, a demonstration of how the NAAQS will be
attained in the nonattainment area as expeditiously as practicable, but
no later than the attainment date required by the CAA.
EPA designated all 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS areas under title I,
part D, subpart 1 (hereinafter ``Subpart 1''). Subpart 1 contains the
general requirements for nonattainment areas for criteria pollutants
and is less prescriptive than the other subparts of title I, part D. On
April 25, 2007, EPA promulgated a rule, codified at 40 CFR part 51,
subpart Z, to implement the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS under Subpart 1
(hereinafter referred to as the ``1997 PM2.5 Implementation
Rule'').\1\ See 72 FR 20586. On October 15, 2009, Tennessee submitted
an attainment plan SIP revision pursuant to Subpart 1 and the 1997
PM2.5 Implementation Rule that addressed RACM and contained
a reasonable further progress (RFP) plan, base-year and attainment-year
emissions inventories, and contingency measures for the Area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ On January 4, 2013, in Natural Resources Defense Council v.
EPA, 706 F.3d 428 (D.C. Cir. 2013), the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) found
that EPA erred in implementing the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
pursuant solely to the general implementation provisions of Subpart
1 rather than the particulate matter-specific provisions of title I,
part D, subpart 4. The court remanded both the 1997 PM2.5
Implementation Rule and the final rule entitled ``Implementation of
the New Source Review (NSR) Program for Particulate Matter Less than
2.5 Micrometers (PM2.5)'' (73 FR 28321, May 16, 2008) to
EPA to address this error.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 31, 2011 (76 FR 31239), EPA published a final determination
that the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area had attained the 1997 Annual
PM2.5 NAAQS based upon quality-assured and certified ambient
air monitoring data for the 2007-2009 time period. In that
determination and in accordance with the 1997 PM2.5
Implementation Rule at 40 CFR 51.1004(c), EPA suspended the
requirements for the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area to submit attainment
demonstrations and associated RACM, RFP plans, contingency measures,
and other planning SIPs related to attainment of the 1997 Annual
PM2.5 NAAQS, so long as the Area continues to attain the
1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS. See 40 CFR 52.2231(c); 76 FR 31239.
Tennessee submitted a request to EPA on November 13, 2014, to
redesignate the State's portion of the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area to
attainment for the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and to approve a
SIP revision containing a maintenance plan for the Tennessee portion of
the Area. EPA proposed to approve the redesignation request and the
related SIP revision in an action signed on March 11, 2015, based, in
part, on the Agency's longstanding interpretation that Subpart 1
nonattainment planning requirements, including RACM, are not
``applicable'' for purposes of CAA section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii) once an
area is attaining the NAAQS and, therefore, need not be approved into
the SIP before EPA can redesignate the area. See 80 FR 16331 (March 27,
2015).
On March 18, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit (Sixth Circuit) issued an opinion in Sierra Club v. EPA, 781
F.3d 299 (6th Cir. 2015), that is inconsistent with this longstanding
interpretation regarding section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii). In its decision, the
Court vacated EPA's redesignation of the Indiana and Ohio portions of
the Cincinnati-Hamilton nonattainment area to attainment for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS because EPA had not yet approved Subpart 1 RACM
for the Cincinnati Area into the Indiana and Ohio SIPs.\2\ The Court
concluded that ``a State seeking redesignation `shall provide for the
implementation' of RACM/RACT, even if those measures are not strictly
necessary to demonstrate attainment with the PM2.5 NAAQS . .
. . If a State has not done so, EPA cannot `fully approve[]' the area's
SIP, and redesignation to attainment status is improper.'' Sierra Club,
781 F.3d at 313.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The Court issued an amended decision on July 14, 2015,
revising some of the legal aspects of the Court's analysis of the
relevant statutory provisions (section 107(d)(3)(E)(ii) and section
172(c)(1)) but maintaining its prior holding that section 172(c)(1)
``unambiguously requires implementation of RACM/RACT prior to
redesignation . . . even if those measures are not strictly
necessary to demonstrate attainment with the PM2.5
NAAQS.'' See Sierra Club v. EPA, Nos. 12-3169, 12-3182, 12-3420 (6th
Cir. July 14, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. What are EPA's proposed actions?
EPA is bound by the Sixth Circuit's decision in Sierra Club v. EPA
within the Court's jurisdiction unless it is overturned.\3\ Although
EPA continues to believe that Subpart 1 RACM is not an applicable
requirement under section 107(d)(3)(E) for an area that has already
attained the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS, EPA is proposing two
separate but related actions regarding the Tennessee portion of the
Chattanooga
[[Page 56420]]
TN-GA-AL Area in response to the Court's decision.4 5
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The states of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessee are
located within the Sixth Circuit's jurisdiction.
\4\ Pursuant to 40 CFR 56.5(b), the EPA Region 4 Regional
Administrator signed a memorandum on July 20, 2015, seeking
concurrence from the Director of EPA's Air Quality Policy Division
(AQPD) in the Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards to act
inconsistent with EPA's interpretation of CAA sections 107(d)(3)(E)
and 172(c)(1) when taking action on pending and future redesignation
requests in Kentucky and Tennessee because the Region is bound by
the Sixth Circuit's decision in Sierra Club v. EPA. The AQPD
Director issued her concurrence on July 22, 2015. The July 20, 2015,
memorandum with AQPD concurrence is located in the docket for
today's proposed actions.
\5\ On September 3, 2015, the Sixth Circuit denied the petitions
for rehearing en banc of this portion of its opinion that were filed
by EPA, the state of Ohio, and industry groups from Ohio. Sierra
Club v. EPA, Nos. 12-3169, 12-3182, 12-3420, Doc. 136-1 (6th Cir.
Sept. 3, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, EPA is proposing to approve the portion of the State's
October 15, 2009, attainment plan SIP revision that addresses RACM
under Subpart 1 for the Tennessee portion of the Area. Second, EPA is
supplementing the Agency's proposed approval of Tennessee's November
13, 2014, redesignation request for the Area by proposing that approval
of the RACM portion of the aforementioned SIP revision satisfies the
Subpart 1 RACM requirement in accordance with section 107(d)(3)(E) of
the CAA. More detail on EPA's rationale for these proposed actions is
provided below.
III. What is EPA's analysis of the state's RACM submittal?
a. Subpart 1 RACM Requirements
Subpart 1 requires that each attainment plan ``provide for the
implementation of all reasonably available control measures as
expeditiously as practicable (including such reductions in emissions
from the existing sources in the area as may be obtained through the
adoption, at a minimum, of reasonably available control technology),
and shall provide for attainment of the national primary ambient air
quality standards.'' See CAA section 172(c)(1). EPA interprets RACM,
including RACT, under section 172(c)(1) as measures that are both
reasonably available and necessary to demonstrate attainment as
expeditiously as practicable in the nonattainment area. See 40 CFR
51.1010(a).\6\ A state must adopt, as RACM, measures that are
reasonably available considering technical and economic feasibility if,
considered collectively, they would advance the attainment date by one
year or more. See 40 CFR 51.1010(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Subpart 1 RACM requirements at 40 CFR 51.1010 were not at
issue in the D.C. Circuit's remand of the PM2.5
implementation rule in the January 2013 Natural Resources Defense
Council v. EPA decision and are therefore not subject to the Court's
remand. Cf. NRDC v. EPA, 571 F.3d 1245, 1252-53 (D.C. Cir. 2009)
(upholding a substantially similar interpretation of Subpart 1 RACM
in the context of ozone implementation regulations).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The PM2.5 Implementation Rule requires that the Subpart
1 RACM portion of the attainment plan SIP revision include the list of
potential measures that a state considered and information sufficient
to show that the state met all requirements for the determination of
what constitutes RACM in a specific nonattainment area. See 40 CFR
51.1010(a). Any measures that are necessary to meet these requirements
which are not already either federally promulgated, part of the state's
implementation plan, or otherwise creditable in SIPs must be submitted
in enforceable form as part of a state's attainment plan SIP revision
for the area. As discussed above, an attainment determination suspends
the requirement for a PM2.5 nonattainment area to submit an
attainment plan SIP revision so long as the area continues to attain
the PM2.5 NAAQS. See 40 CFR 51.1004(c).
b. Proposed Action on RACM Based Upon Attainment of the NAAQS
EPA is proposing to approve the portion of Tennessee's October 15,
2009, attainment plan SIP revision that addresses Subpart 1 RACM for
the State's portion of the Area on the basis that the Area has attained
the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and, therefore, no emission
reduction measures are necessary to satisfy Subpart 1 RACM. As noted
above, EPA has determined that the Area has attaining data for the 1997
Annual PM2.5 NAAQS and met the standard by the April 5,
2010, attainment date. See 77 FR 31239. Because the Area has attained
the standard, there are no emissions controls that could advance the
attainment date; thus, no emissions controls are necessary to satisfy
Subpart 1 RACM pursuant to 40 CFR 51.1010 (defining RACM as the level
of control necessary to advance the attainment date by one year or
more).
c. Proposed Action on RACM Based Upon the State's Control Evaluation
Additionally, the portion of Tennessee's October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision that addresses Subpart 1 RACM for the
State's portion of the Area is approvable on the basis that the SIP
revision demonstrates that no additional reasonably available controls
would have advanced the attainment date projected therein.
Through participation in the regional planning efforts of the
Visibility Improvement States and Tribal Association of the Southeast
(VISTAS) and the Association for Southeastern Integrated Planning
(ASIP), Tennessee determined that existing measures and measures
planned for implementation by 2009 would result in the Chattanooga TN-
GA-AL Area attaining the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS by the end of
2009. Air quality modeling conducted by ASIP indicated that the Area
would attain the annual NAAQS in 2009 based upon projected emissions
reductions from sources within the Area after 2002 (the base year of
the nonattainment emissions inventory). As discussed in Chapter 2.0 of
the October 15, 2009, SIP revision, the State, in consultation with
VISTAS and ASIP, considered the following existing federally
enforceable measures in projecting the emissions inventory used for the
2009 modeling: Tier 2 vehicle standards; heavy-duty gasoline and diesel
highway vehicle standards; large nonroad diesel engine standards;
nonroad spark-ignition engines and recreational engines standards;
NOX SIP call; and the Clean Air Interstate Rule.
In Tennessee's RACM analysis, which appears in chapter 4.0 of the
October 15, 2009, SIP revision, the State discusses its evaluation of
sources of PM2.5 and its precursors within the Tennessee
portion of the Area and its determination that these sources were
meeting Subpart 1 RACM levels of emissions control. As discussed above,
a State must show that all Subpart 1 RACM (including RACT for
stationary sources) necessary to demonstrate attainment as
expeditiously as practicable have been adopted and must consider the
cumulative impact of implementing available measures to determine
whether a particular emission reduction measure or set of measures is
required to be adopted as RACM. Potential measures that are reasonably
available considering technical and economic feasibility must be
adopted as RACM if, considered collectively, they would advance the
attainment date by one year or more. Because the attainment
demonstration in Tennessee's attainment plan SIP revision showed
attainment of the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the Chattanooga TN-GA-
AL Area by the end of 2009, only measures that would advance the
attainment date to the end of 2008 would be considered as Subpart 1
RACM.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ As noted in the preamble to the PM2.5
Implementation Rule, if a ``State could not achieve significant
emissions reductions by the beginning of 2008 due to time needed to
implement reasonable measures or other factors, then it could be
concluded that reasonably available local measures would not advance
the attainment date.'' See 72 FR 20617.
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[[Page 56421]]
Based on the emissions inventory and other information, the State
identified the categories of sources that should be evaluated for
controls. These categories include permitted stationary sources;
gasoline dispensing facilities; on-road mobile sources; non-road and
stationary internal combustion engines; open burning; and home heating
with wood.
With regard to permitted stationary sources, Tennessee noted that
conservative sensitivity modeling, conducted by the Georgia Institute
of Technology, showed that completely eliminating emissions of
PM2.5, nitrogen oxides, and sulfur dioxide from non-utility
point sources in the Tennessee portion of the Area would result in only
small reductions in PM2.5 concentrations (0.06 [mu]g/m\3\ to
0.25 [mu]g/m\3\). Nevertheless, Tennessee performed a detailed analysis
of each major source operating in the State's portion of the Area and
determined that RACT levels of emission control were already in
place.\8\ This analysis, and the results of sensitivity modeling,
indicated that no additional reductions were available from local
permitted stationary sources that would result in attainment in 2008
rather than 2009. For gasoline dispensing facilities, Tennessee deemed
the use of Stage 1 vapor recovery to be the RACT level of emissions
control. Tennessee stated that the existing federally-approved
inspection and maintenance program constitutes RACM for on-road mobile
sources and that non-road mobile sources and stationary internal
combustion engines are regulated by Federal rules. Regarding open
burning, Chattanooga's federally-approved local implementation plan
requires open burning permits, bans open burning from May 1 through
September 30, and prohibits the burning of brush cleared for road
building and trash in the Tennessee portion of the Area. The State also
determined that only 712 households (0.6 percent of the total
households in the Tennessee portion of the Area) were heating primarily
with wood and that accelerated replacement of older wood burning stoves
would not advance the attainment date given the ``small portion of
households using wood hearing, the mild local climate, and the normal
purchases of Subpart AAA compliant wood burning stoves in the
nonattainment area.''
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\8\ See Appendix 12 of the SIP submittal for a detailed
discussion of the State's analysis.
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Through this evaluation, Tennessee determined that, for each
category of potential measures, there were either no additional
emission reductions that could be achieved or no emission reduction
measures that could be practicably implemented in time to advance
attainment to the end of 2008. EPA has reviewed the RACM portion of
Tennessee's October 15, 2009, attainment plan SIP revision and agrees
with the State's conclusion that no additional emissions reductions
were available from local sources that would have advanced the
projected 2009 attainment date.
IV. Why is EPA supplementing its proposed redesignation of the area?
EPA's March 11, 2015, proposal to approve Tennessee's redesignation
request for the Tennessee portion of the Area was based, in part, on
the Agency's longstanding interpretation that Subpart 1 RACM need not
be approved into a SIP before redesignation to attainment if the
subject area is attaining the NAAQS. See 80 FR 16331. Although EPA
disagrees with the portion of the Sixth Circuit's opinion in Sierra
Club v. EPA that is inconsistent with this interpretation, the Agency
is bound by this decision within the Court's jurisdiction unless it is
overturned and must first approve Subpart 1 RACM into Tennessee's SIP
before it can redesignate the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area to attainment.
Therefore, EPA is supplementing its redesignation proposal to now rely
on approval of the RACM portion of the State's October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision.
V. Proposed Actions
EPA has reviewed the RACM portion of Tennessee's October 15, 2009,
attainment plan SIP revision and proposes to approve it on the basis
that it is consistent with the CAA, the CAA's implementing regulations,
and EPA guidance for attainment demonstration submittals. EPA is also
supplementing its March 27, 2015, proposed approval of the State's
November 13, 2014, redesignation request for the Tennessee portion of
the Chattanooga TN-GA-AL Area by proposing that approval of the RACM
portion of the aforementioned SIP revision satisfies the Subpart 1 RACM
requirement in accordance with section 107(d)(3)(E) of the CAA. Today's
proposed actions are focused solely on addressing the Sixth Circuit's
decision in Sierra Club v. EPA and do not reopen any other aspect of
the March 27, 2015, proposal for comment.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. See 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this
action merely proposes to approve state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason, this action:
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to review
by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders 12866 (58
FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011);
does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian reservation land or
in any other area where EPA or an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian country, the rule does
not have tribal implications as specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000), nor will it impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
[[Page 56422]]
Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: September 9, 2015.
Heather McTeer Toney,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. 2015-23382 Filed 9-17-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P