Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Pennsylvania; Attainment Plan for the Lower Beaver Valley Nonattainment Area for the 2008 Lead National Ambient Air Quality Standard, 3078-3082 [2016-00871]
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TABLE 165.929—Continued
Location 1
Event
Enforcement date and time 2
(j) December Safety Zones
(1) New Years Eve Fireworks.
1 All
2 As
Chicago, IL. All waters of Monroe Harbor and Lake Michigan within
the arc of a circle with a 1,000-foot radius from the fireworks
launch site located on a barge in approximate position 41°52.683′
N., 087°36.617′ W.
coordinates listed in Table 165.929 reference Datum NAD 1983.
noted in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the enforcement dates and times for each of the listed safety zones are subject to change.
Dated: December 18, 2015.
A.B. Cocanour,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Lake Michigan.
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R03–OAR–2015–0112; FRL–9941–27–
Region 3]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Pennsylvania; Attainment Plan for the
Lower Beaver Valley Nonattainment
Area for the 2008 Lead National
Ambient Air Quality Standard
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
state implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted by the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania) for the
purpose of demonstrating attainment of
the 2008 lead national ambient air
quality standard (NAAQS) in the Lower
Beaver Valley 2008 lead nonattainment
area (Lower Beaver Valley Area or
Area). The attainment plan includes the
base year emissions inventory, modeling
demonstration of attainment with the
lead NAAQS, and an analysis of
reasonably available control measures
(RACM), reasonably available control
technology (RACT), and reasonable
further progress (RFP). The attainment
plan also includes contingency
measures for the Lower Beaver Valley
Area which include parts of a Consent
Order and Agreement (COA) between
Horsehead Corporation (Horsehead) and
the Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection (PADEP).
This action is being taken under the
Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before February 19, 2016.
SUMMARY:
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Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R03–
OAR–2015–0112 at https://
www.regulations.gov, or via email to
fernandez.cristina@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed
from Regulations.gov. For either manner
of submission, the EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gerallyn Duke, (215) 814–2084, or by
email at duke.gerallyn@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
January 15, 2015, PADEP submitted a
revision to its SIP for the purpose of
demonstrating attainment of the 2008
lead NAAQS in the Lower Beaver Valley
Area in accordance with requirements
in sections 172 and 192 of the CAA.
Pennsylvania’s lead attainment plan for
the Area includes a base year emissions
inventory, a modeling demonstration of
attainment with the 2008 lead NAAQS,
an analysis of RACM, RACT, and RFP,
and contingency measures. The lead
attainment plan also includes
paragraphs 3, 5, and 6 of a COA, dated
November 21, 2012, between Horsehead
ADDRESSES:
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and PADEP that demonstrates how
Pennsylvania will achieve and maintain
compliance with the 2008 lead NAAQS.
EPA has determined that Pennsylvania’s
attainment plan for the 2008 lead
NAAQS for the Lower Beaver Valley
Area meets the applicable requirements
of the CAA in sections 172 and 192.
Thus, EPA is proposing to approve
Pennsylvania’s attainment plan for the
Lower Beaver Valley Area.
EPA’s analysis and findings are
discussed for each applicable
requirement in this rulemaking action.
Additional details on the base year
inventory and modeling portions of the
attainment demonstration are contained
in two Technical Support Documents
(TSDs) for this proposed action.
I. Background
On November 12, 2008 (73 FR 66964),
EPA revised the lead NAAQS, lowering
the level from 1.5 micrograms per cubic
meter (mg/m3) to 0.15 mg/m3 calculated
over a three-month rolling average. EPA
established the 2008 lead NAAQS based
on significant evidence and numerous
health studies demonstrating that
serious health effects are associated
with exposures to lead emissions.
On November 22, 2010, EPA
designated Vanport and Potter
Townships in Beaver County,
Pennsylvania as the Lower Beaver
Valley Area for its nonattainment status
with the 2008 lead NAAQS. The design
value used for this designation was
based on monitoring data from 2007–
2009. On November 22, 2011, EPA
revised the lead NAAQS designation for
the Area based on 2008–2010
monitoring data by adding Center
Township to the Area. 76 FR 72097.
Under sections 191(a) and 192 of the
CAA, Pennsylvania is required to
submit a SIP revision with a plan for
how the Area will attain the 2008 lead
NAAQS, as expeditiously as practicable,
but no later than December 31, 2015.
Horsehead owned and operated a
permitted zinc production plant in
Potter Township, Pennsylvania (the
Monaca Smelter or Facility). This
Facility was the only industrial source
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of lead emissions over 0.5 tons per year
(tpy) in the Area. On November 21,
2012, PADEP and Horsehead entered
into a COA which required Horsehead
to permanently discontinue, on or
before October 1, 2014, production of
zinc metal from its electrothermic
furnace line (Furnace Plant), the
sintering line (Sinter Plant), and
secondary material operations. After
these units shut down permanently, the
COA provided that Horsehead would be
subject to an aggregate potential lead
emission rate of 0.1 tpy over each
consecutive 12-month rolling period
from all of its remaining stationary and
fugitive emission sources at the Facility.
However, in May 2014, Horsehead
permanently ceased operations at
additional major sources of emissions at
the Facility, including the Larvik
Furnaces and Refinery Feed Pot, which
were not required under the COA to be
shut down. Horsehead’s zinc dust sizing
circuit, whose emissions are considered
insignificant, is allowed to continue to
operate periodically, subject to the 0.1
tpy facility-wide limit contained in its
federally-enforceable permit as well as
in the COA.
II. Summary of SIP Revision
On January 15, 2015, the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
through the PADEP submitted an
attainment plan for the Lower Beaver
Valley Area as a SIP revision which
includes the base year emissions
inventory and an attainment
demonstration. The attainment
demonstration includes: technical
analyses that locate, identify, and
quantify sources of lead emissions
which contributed to violations of the
2008 lead NAAQS; a modeling analysis
of an emissions control strategy that
demonstrates attainment with the 2008
lead NAAQS by the attainment year
2015; and an analysis of RACT, RACM
and RFP, and contingency measures for
the Lower Beaver Valley Area. The SIP
revision also includes paragraphs 3, 5,
and 6 of the COA between Horsehead
and PADEP as measures for the
attainment plan. EPA’s analysis of the
submitted attainment plan includes a
review of the pollutant addressed,
emissions inventory requirements,
modeling, RACM, RACT, and RFP
requirements, and contingency
measures for the Lower Beaver Valley
Area.
1. Emissions Inventory Requirements
States are required under section
172(c)(3) of the CAA for nonattainment
areas to develop comprehensive,
accurate, and current inventories of
actual emissions from all sources of the
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relevant pollutant or pollutants in the
relevant nonattainment area. These
inventories provide a detailed
accounting of all emissions and
emission sources by relevant pollutant
and its precursors. In the November 12,
2008 lead NAAQS rulemaking, EPA
finalized the emissions inventory
requirements. These inventory
requirements at 40 CFR 51.117(e)
require, among other things, that the SIP
inventory include all sources that emit
0.5 or more tons of lead emissions per
year, that the inventory is subject to
public hearing requirements, and that
the inventory is included in the SIP.
Section 172(c)(3) of the CAA requires
that an identification of emissions from
all sources of lead in the nonattainment
area be submitted with attainment
plans. The base year inventory is
typically one of the years in which the
area was designated for the standard
and includes emissions from stationary
point and nonpoint sources. EPA
recommends using either 2010 or 2011
as the base year, but does provide
flexibility for using other inventory
years if states can show another year is
more appropriate. Additionally, EPA
guidance provides that actual emissions
should be used for purposes of the base
year inventory.1
Pennsylvania’s lead attainment plan
for Lower Beaver Valley Area evaluates
lead emissions in the Area, which
includes sources in the area bounded by
Vanport, Potter, and Center Townships
in Beaver County. There are no
precursors for lead which EPA requires
to be considered for the lead attainment
plan required by section 172 of the
CAA.
Pennsylvania developed its base-year
inventory using data from 2010, the year
the Area was designated nonattainment,
for stationary source lead emissions. For
the nonpoint sources of lead emissions,
PADEP submitted EPA’s 2011 National
Emissions Inventory (NEI) v2 data as a
surrogate for the 2010 inventory, since
inventories for nonpoint source
emissions are only prepared every three
years (2008, 2011) and 2011 was the
most recent inventory available.
The only source of lead emissions
above 0.5 tpy within the Lower Beaver
Valley Area was the Monaca Smelter.
The only other stationary source of lead
emissions in the Lower Beaver Valley
Area was AES Beaver Valley, a 125–MW
coal-fired cogeneration plant, though its
lead emissions are less than 0.5 tpy.
Another source of lead emissions above
1 See
‘‘Addendum to the 2008 Lead NAAQS
Implementation Questions and Answers’’ dated
August 10, 2012, which is included in EPA’s SIP
Toolkit located at www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/
implement.html.
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0.5 tpy, an electric generating unit
(EGU), Bruce Mansfield Power Station
(Bruce Mansfield), is located in the
adjacent municipality of Shippingsport.
The monitor associated with Bruce
Mansfield was in attainment with the
2008 lead NAAQS, demonstrating it had
no impact on the Lower Beaver Valley
Area, so Bruce Mansfield was not
included in the Inventory.
Horsehead produced high purity zinc
oxide and high grade zinc metal at the
Facility. Two sources emitted the
majority of lead emissions from the
Facility: the Sinter Plant and the
Furnace Plant. Roughly ninety-five
percent of the Facility’s 2010 lead
emissions which volatilized during
processing were point sources and the
remaining five percent escaped as
fugitive emissions. Estimates used for
calculating 2010 fugitive lead emissions
at the Sinter Plant were based on
estimates from samples collected during
2007 and 2008. PADEP considered
estimates of 2010 fugitive emissions to
be conservative because improvements
made in fugitive emission control at the
Facility, including controls installed at
the Sinter Plant since 2008, were not
factored into the analysis for 2010
fugitive emissions.
Table 1 identifies the 2010 base year
emissions inventory for the Lower
Beaver Valley Area. In 2010, lead
emissions from point sources or stacks
in the Area totaled 5.5961 tons. Lead
emissions from nonpoint sources,
including mobile sources, also were
included in the lead inventory but
found by PADEP to be insignificant.
There are no other sources of lead
emissions in the Area above 0.5 tpy of
lead emissions nor smaller sources.
According to Pennsylvania’s inventory,
the Monaca Smelter’s emissions
comprised almost all of the lead
emissions in the Area in 2010.
TABLE 1—2010 BASE YEAR LOWER
BEAVER VALLEY NONATTAINMENT
AREA EMISSIONS INVENTORY
Source
Lead emissions
(tpy)
Monaca Smelter ...............
AES Beaver Valley Plant ..
5.5531
0.0430
Subtotal for Point
Sources ..................
Nonpoint Sources .............
5.5961
0.0009
Total ...........................
5.5970
Additional information regarding the
emissions inventory for the Area and
EPA’s analysis of the inventory in
accordance with CAA requirements in
CAA section 172(c) and 40 CFR
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51.117(e) can be found in the TSD for
the Base Year Inventory for the Lower
Beaver Valley Area which is included in
the docket for this proposed action
(EPA–R03–OAR–2015–0112) and is
available online at www.regulations.gov.
EPA finds that the 2010 base year
emissions inventory prepared by
Pennsylvania and included in the
January 15, 2015 SIP submission for
Lower Beaver Valley Area meets the
requirements of section 172(c)(3) of the
CAA and the corresponding regulations
at 40 CFR 51.117(e).
2. Attainment Planning Modeling
Section 172 of the CAA and the lead
control strategy regulations found at 40
CFR 51.117 require states to employ
atmospheric dispersion modeling for the
demonstration of attainment of the lead
NAAQS as expeditiously as practicable.
40 CFR 51.117(a) requires a
demonstration that the attainment plan
will attain the NAAQS in the areas in
the vicinity of point sources listed in 40
CFR 51.117(a)(1) as well as any other
area with lead concentrations in excess
of the NAAQS per 40 CFR 1.117(a)(2).
The demonstration must meet the
requirements of 40 CFR 51.112 and
51.117 as well as appendix W of 40 CFR
part 51 and include inventory data,
modeling results, and emissions
reduction analyses on which the state
has based its projected attainment. All
these requirements comprise the
‘‘attainment demonstration’’ that is
required for lead nonattainment areas.
PADEP performed an air-dispersion
modeling analysis to predict the
maximum predicted three-month rolling
lead concentration using emission
inventories representing two facilities,
Monaca Smelter and AES Beaver Valley.
PADEP used reported lead emissions in
2010 for the base year and projected
(future) lead emissions for 2015 because
2015 is the attainment year for the 2008
lead NAAQS. Horsehead’s 2010
emissions include point and fugitive
emission sources.
Projected emissions were determined
based on the November 21, 2012 COA
for Horsehead, which contains a plantwide lead emission limit of 0.1 tpy for
the Facility, as well as maximum
throughput information and allowable
lead emissions from AES Beaver Valley
under its current permit. Only point
source emissions were calculated for
AES Beaver Valley, as only point source
emissions were reported from AES.
PADEP did not include emissions from
Bruce Mansfield in its modeling for the
attainment demonstration because prior
modeling had demonstrated Bruce
Mansfield did not contribute to
nonattainment in the Area. Lead
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emissions from nonpoint sources and
mobile source were also examined, but
found to be insignificant, so they were
not included in the lead modeling
demonstration. The modeling was
conducted in accordance with 40 CFR
part 51, Appendix W—Guideline on Air
Quality Models.
The final modeled lead concentration
for the future attainment year of 2015 is
the maximum projected three-month
average lead concentration of 0.0274 mg/
m3 plus the background monitored
concentration of 0.05 mg/m3 from the
Shippingport monitor. This yields a
projected lead concentration of
approximately 0.08 mg/m3, which is
significantly lower than the NAAQS of
0.15 mg/m3.
Modeling for attainment was based
primarily on the lead emissions
expected in December 31, 2015. Due to
monitored violations in 2013 and early
2014, the Area will not attain the
NAAQS by 2015 based on ambient air
quality over 36 consecutive three-month
periods. However, closure of Horsehead
operations in 2014 will facilitate
attainment of the 2008 lead NAAQS by
2017. More detailed information on the
modeling system tools and documents
used for the model attainment
demonstration for the Area and EPA’s
analysis of PADEP’s attainment
modeling conducted for the Area can be
found on the EPA Technology Transfer
Network Support Center for Regulatory
Atmospheric Modeling (SCRAM)
(https://www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/), in
Pennsylvania’s January 15, 2015
submittal, and in the TSD for the
modeling portion of the proposed SIP in
the docket for this proposed action
(EPA–R03–OAR–2015–0112) and
available online at www.regulations.gov.
EPA finds the modeling was conducted
in accordance with requirements for a
modeled attainment demonstration in
the CAA and in 40 CFR 51.112 and 117
and in appendix W of 40 CFR part 51.
3. RACM, RACT, and RFP
Section 172(c)(1) of the CAA requires
nonattainment areas to implement all
RACM, including emissions reductions
through the adoption of RACT, as
expeditiously as practicable. EPA
interprets this as requiring
consideration of all available controls
and to implement all measures in the
nonattainment area that are determined
to be reasonably available. However,
EPA believes it would be unreasonable
to require that a plan which
demonstrates attainment include all
technologically and economically
available control measures even though
such measures would not expedite
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attainment. See 58 FR 67751 (December
22, 1993).
In March 2012, EPA issued guidance
titled, ‘‘Guide to Developing Reasonably
Available Control Measures for
Controlling Lead Emissions’’ (RACM
Guidance).2 Pennsylvania performed a
RACM analysis in compliance with the
RACM Guidance. The shutdown of the
Monaca Smelter Sinter Plant, Furnace
Plant, and secondary materials
operations on May 19, 2014 are discrete
control measures that have already
occurred. Pennsylvania has determined
that the shutdown of those operations at
the Monaca Smelter, along with a plantwide lead emission limit of 0.1 tpy
required in the COA, addresses RACM
based on the significant decrease in
emissions that will result.
The 2012 COA also incorporates
requirements for control of fugitive
emissions from the Monaca Smelter,
and PADEP has determined that all
known significant sources of lead
emissions from the Facility have been
eliminated, controlled, or found
ineffective or not viable, consistent with
EPA’s RACM Guidance (which also
addresses RACT). Because Horsehead
agreed in the COA to discontinue metal
production operation at the site by
October 14, 2014, PADEP considered
further investment in additional control
strategies to not be reasonable or cost
effective. Thus, PADEP has determined
that no additional control measures
such as RACT are required at the
Monaca Smelter. EPA has reviewed
PADEP’s determinations and analysis
and finds it reasonable for RACM and
RACT at the Monaca Smelter.
EPA set a threshold of 0.5 tpy for lead
sources to undergo a RACT analysis. 73
FR 67038. Because the lead emissions
from the AES Beaver Valley facility are
well below 0.5 tpy, PADEP concluded
no RACT review is required for that
facility and EPA finds PADEP’s
conclusion reasonable for AES Beaver
Valley.
Section 172(c)(2) of the CAA also
requires areas designated as
nonattainment for criteria pollutants to
include a demonstration of RFP for
meeting air quality standards in
attainment plans. Section 171(1) of the
CAA defines RFP as annual incremental
reductions in emissions of the relevant
air pollutants as required by Part D of
Title I of the CAA, or emission
reductions that may reasonably be
required by EPA to ensure attainment of
2 https://www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/pdfs/
2012ImplementationGuide.pdf.
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the applicable NAAQS by the applicable
date.3
As stated in the final lead NAAQS
rule (73 FR 67038), RFP is satisfied by
the strict adherence to a compliance
schedule which is expected to
periodically yield significant emission
reductions. Pennsylvania’s control
strategy in the Lower Beaver Valley
Area is not staggered or phased.
Nonattainment of the 2008 lead NAAQS
is primarily attributable to a single
source, the Monaca Smelter, whose
major operations shut down in May
2014. Ambient air quality
concentrations dropped at or below
attainment levels immediately after
Horsehead shut down these operations
at the Facility, thus fulfilling RFP
requirements for the Lower Beaver
Valley Area. All of the Area’s ambient
air quality monitors reported lead
concentrations below the 2008 lead
NAAQS for the three-month rolling
average for May through July, 2014. The
monitor located in Center Township
and associated with the Monaca Smelter
showed a 2013 design value of 0.25 mg/
m3, which exceeds the lead NAAQS
limit of 0.15 mg/m3.4 However, the
maximum three-month rolling average
ambient lead concentration for the fivemonth period since the closure of the
Monaca Smelter was 0.02 mg/m3. See
Table 3 to Pennsylvania’s January 15,
2015 SIP submittal.
With continued implementation of
RACM, i.e., continued shutdown of the
primary lead emitting units at the
Monaca Smelter and the COA emissions
limit of 0.1 tpy for the Facility, lead
emissions at the Facility are expected to
stay well below 0.1 tpy and ambient
lead concentrations in the Area are
expected to continue to remain well
below the NAAQS limit. Thus, EPA
finds that Pennsylvania has
demonstrated that RFP has been
addressed.
4. Contingency Measures
In accordance with section 172(c)(9)
of the CAA, contingency measures are
required as additional measures to be
implemented in the event that an area
fails to make RFP or fails to attain a
standard by its attainment date. These
measures must be fully adopted rules or
control measures that can be
implemented quickly and without
additional EPA or state action and
should contain trigger mechanisms and
3 Incremental reductions in lead emissions are not
specified in Part D of Title I of the CAA.
4 The monitoring data for 2010–2013 is included
in appendix A of Pennsylvania’s January 15, 2015
SIP submittal and uses data queried from the Air
Quality System (AQS) Data Mart Database at
https://aqs.epa.gov/api.
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an implementation schedule.5 In
addition, these measures should be ones
that are not already included in the SIP
control strategy for attaining the
standard. See 73 FR 67038 (November
12, 2008).
The contingency measures in
Pennsylvania’s SIP submittal are
primarily focused on control of fugitive
dust because there is no longer an
operating source with emissions above
0.5 tpy of lead in the Area. The SIP
submittal provides for contingency
measures in the COA with Horsehead
which would apply should Horsehead
continue operations at units not
required to be shut down under the
COA, and should PADEP determine that
these operations cause or significantly
contribute to ongoing lead NAAQS
exceedances. These measures include
source testing and reporting, wetting
down roads in the facility, installing
and operating a vehicle washing facility
near material storage and handling
areas, and retrofitting baghouses, or
alternative control measures approved
by PADEP.6
The SIP submittal also states that
should PADEP determine that specific
activities at the Monaca Smelter or at
other sources in the Area are likely to
have caused an exceedance of the lead
NAAQS, or if PADEP documents a
violation of Pennsylvania’s fugitive dust
regulations at 25 PA Code Section 123.1
or 123.2, additional control measures
would be triggered. Specifically, PADEP
can enforce those regulations and
require the party whose actions likely
have caused the exceedance or whose
actions resulted in a violation to
mitigate the impact on the 2008 lead
NAAQS by implementing additional
control measures. Such control
measures may include paving,
vegetating, watering, or chemically
stabilizing traffic paths; periodic
cleaning of paved roads; wet
suppression at bulldozing sites and soil
piles; vehicle washing at property exits;
and covering soil-bearing trucks.
The January 15, 2015 SIP submittal
provides the following process for
triggering the above contingency
5 See EPA document titled ‘‘Addendum to the
2008 Lead NAAQS Implementation Questions and
Answers’’ dated August 10, 2012, included in EPA’s
SIP Toolkit at https://www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/
pdfs/20120810qanda.pdf.
6 Horsehead’s COA does not require closure or
shut down of the Larvik Furnaces, the Refinery
Feed Pot, and zinc dust sizing circuit. Thus, the
COA includes contingency measures applicable to
the Facility. The COA is included in the PADEP SIP
submittal. Upon final approval of the SIP, the
COA’s terms will be federally enforceable as part of
the Pennsylvania SIP. The COA is available in the
docket for this rulemaking which is available online
at www.regulations.gov.
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measures. Any single sample result
exceeding 0.15mg/m3 at a monitor in the
Lower Beaver Valley Area would trigger
investigation by PADEP to determine
what specific activities have caused the
increased concentration level (because
the only significant stationary source of
lead emissions is no longer in
operation). Should PADEP determine, as
the result of observations by PADEP or
receipt of a complaint, that specific
activities are likely to have caused an
exceedance or violation, PADEP will
notify the party that an action appears
to be adversely affecting the NAAQS or
violating Pennsylvania regulations.
Corrective action in the form of
contingency measures would follow,
involving enforcement as appropriate.
Pennsylvania’s SIP submission further
provides that persistent lead
exceedances at any monitor would
trigger increased sampling frequency at
the monitor where such an exceedance
occurred.7 Four or more sample results
within any three-month rolling period
reported to exceed 0.15mg/m3 would
trigger expanded ambient air monitoring
and investigation as needed to identify
the potential source(s) and address the
source of the exceedance.
Section 172(c)(5) of the CAA requires
permits for the construction and
operation of new and modified major
stationary sources anywhere in a
nonattainment area. The Pennsylvania
SIP includes provisions consistent with
the federal requirements, set forth at 40
CFR 51.165, for nonattainment new
source review (NSR).
PADEP’s SIP submittal states that
NSR permitting requirements in its SIP
ensure that no new or modified sources
will cause or contribute to a NAAQS
violation by requiring, as part of the
NSR permit, a demonstration that such
a violation will not occur. See 25 Pa.
Code § 127.81 and 127.201–127.217. If
Horsehead or any entity proposes to
restart or modify operations or construct
and operate other activities at the
Facility that would result in increased
lead emissions, such changes would
trigger NSR permitting requirements
which include measures to minimize
emissions and prevent NAAQS
violations.
In summary, EPA finds these
contingency measure triggers and
actions will help ensure compliance
with the 2008 lead NAAQS and meet
the requirements of section 172(c)(9) of
the CAA to ensure continued attainment
7 Sampling would increase from once every six
days to every three days if results from two samples
during any three-month rolling period exceed 0.15
mg/m3. Sampling frequency would further increase
to daily if results from three samples during any
three-month period exceed 0.15 mg/m3.
E:\FR\FM\20JAP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 12 / Wednesday, January 20, 2016 / Proposed Rules
of the NAAQS if any events occur
interfering with attainment. EPA finds
PADEP’s SIP submittal contains
adequate contingency measures if the
Area fails to attain the NAAQS or fails
to achieve RFP because the only
significant stationary source of lead
emissions is no longer in operation,
Pennsylvania’s existing rules related to
control of fugitive dusts and permitting
are sufficient to minimize emissions and
prevent NAAQS violations, and
additional measures are not reasonably
available to serve as contingency
measures.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
III. Proposed Action
EPA finds the January 15, 2015 SIP
submittal attainment plan for the Lower
Beaver Valley Area meets the applicable
requirements of the CAA for attainment
plans in section 172 and 192 of the CAA
and in implementing regulations
including 40 CFR 51.112 and 51.117.
EPA is proposing to approve the
Pennsylvania SIP revision attainment
plan for the Lower Beaver Valley Area
for the 2008 lead NAAQS including the
attainment demonstration, base year
emissions inventory, RACM/RACT and
RFP analyses, and contingency
measures.
EPA is soliciting public comments on
the issues discussed in this document.
These comments will be considered
before taking final action.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
CAA and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely approves state law as meeting
Federal requirements and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:49 Jan 19, 2016
Jkt 238001
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).
In addition, this proposed rule to
approve Pennsylvania’s SIP revision
containing the attainment plan for the
2008 lead NAAQS in the Lower Beaver
Valley Area, does not have tribal
implications as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), because the SIP is not approved
to apply in Indian country located in the
state, and EPA notes that it will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law.
Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
ACTION:
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) is
considering the establishment of a
disaster deductible, requiring a
predetermined level of financial or other
commitment from a Recipient (Grantee),
generally the State, Tribal, or Territorial
government, before FEMA will provide
assistance under the Public Assistance
Program when authorized by a
Presidential major disaster declaration.
FEMA believes the deductible model
would incentivize Recipients to make
meaningful improvements in disaster
planning, fiscal capacity for disaster
response and recovery, and risk
mitigation, while contributing to more
effective stewardship of taxpayer
dollars. For example, Recipients could
potentially receive credit toward their
deductible requirement through
proactive pre-event actions such as
adopting enhanced building codes,
establishing and maintaining a disaster
relief fund or self-insurance plan, or
adoption of other measures that reduce
the Recipient’s risk from disaster events.
The deductible model would increase
stakeholder investment and
participation in disaster recovery and
building for future risk, thereby
strengthening our nation’s resilience to
disaster events and reducing the cost of
disasters long term. FEMA seeks
comment on all aspects of the
deductible concept.
DATES: Comments must be received by
March 21, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be
identified by docket ID FEMA–2016–
0003 and may be submitted by one of
the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Regulatory Affairs Division, Office of
Chief Counsel, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 8NE, 500 C Street
SW., Washington, DC 20472–3100.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jotham Allen, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20472, 202–646–1957.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
44 CFR Part 206
I. Public Participation
[Docket ID FEMA–2016–0003]
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket ID. Regardless of the method
used for submitting comments or
material, all submissions will be posted,
without change, to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov, and will include
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Lead.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: December 30, 2015.
Shawn M. Garvin,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2016–00871 Filed 1–19–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
RIN 1660–AA84
Establishing a Deductible for FEMA’s
Public Assistance Program
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\20JAP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 12 (Wednesday, January 20, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 3078-3082]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-00871]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R03-OAR-2015-0112; FRL-9941-27-Region 3]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Pennsylvania; Attainment Plan for the Lower Beaver Valley Nonattainment
Area for the 2008 Lead National Ambient Air Quality Standard
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve a state implementation plan (SIP) revision submitted by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania) for the purpose of
demonstrating attainment of the 2008 lead national ambient air quality
standard (NAAQS) in the Lower Beaver Valley 2008 lead nonattainment
area (Lower Beaver Valley Area or Area). The attainment plan includes
the base year emissions inventory, modeling demonstration of attainment
with the lead NAAQS, and an analysis of reasonably available control
measures (RACM), reasonably available control technology (RACT), and
reasonable further progress (RFP). The attainment plan also includes
contingency measures for the Lower Beaver Valley Area which include
parts of a Consent Order and Agreement (COA) between Horsehead
Corporation (Horsehead) and the Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection (PADEP). This action is being taken under the
Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: Written comments must be received on or before February 19,
2016.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R03-
OAR-2015-0112 at https://www.regulations.gov, or via email to
fernandez.cristina@epa.gov. For comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed from Regulations.gov. For either
manner of submission, the EPA may publish any comment received to its
public docket. Do not submit electronically any information you
consider to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be accompanied by a written
comment. The written comment is considered the official comment and
should include discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will
generally not consider comments or comment contents located outside of
the primary submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or other file sharing
system). For additional submission methods, please contact the person
identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the full
EPA public comment policy, information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on making effective comments, please
visit https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gerallyn Duke, (215) 814-2084, or by
email at duke.gerallyn@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On January 15, 2015, PADEP submitted a
revision to its SIP for the purpose of demonstrating attainment of the
2008 lead NAAQS in the Lower Beaver Valley Area in accordance with
requirements in sections 172 and 192 of the CAA. Pennsylvania's lead
attainment plan for the Area includes a base year emissions inventory,
a modeling demonstration of attainment with the 2008 lead NAAQS, an
analysis of RACM, RACT, and RFP, and contingency measures. The lead
attainment plan also includes paragraphs 3, 5, and 6 of a COA, dated
November 21, 2012, between Horsehead and PADEP that demonstrates how
Pennsylvania will achieve and maintain compliance with the 2008 lead
NAAQS. EPA has determined that Pennsylvania's attainment plan for the
2008 lead NAAQS for the Lower Beaver Valley Area meets the applicable
requirements of the CAA in sections 172 and 192. Thus, EPA is proposing
to approve Pennsylvania's attainment plan for the Lower Beaver Valley
Area.
EPA's analysis and findings are discussed for each applicable
requirement in this rulemaking action. Additional details on the base
year inventory and modeling portions of the attainment demonstration
are contained in two Technical Support Documents (TSDs) for this
proposed action.
I. Background
On November 12, 2008 (73 FR 66964), EPA revised the lead NAAQS,
lowering the level from 1.5 micrograms per cubic meter ([mu]g/m\3\) to
0.15 [mu]g/m\3\ calculated over a three-month rolling average. EPA
established the 2008 lead NAAQS based on significant evidence and
numerous health studies demonstrating that serious health effects are
associated with exposures to lead emissions.
On November 22, 2010, EPA designated Vanport and Potter Townships
in Beaver County, Pennsylvania as the Lower Beaver Valley Area for its
nonattainment status with the 2008 lead NAAQS. The design value used
for this designation was based on monitoring data from 2007-2009. On
November 22, 2011, EPA revised the lead NAAQS designation for the Area
based on 2008-2010 monitoring data by adding Center Township to the
Area. 76 FR 72097. Under sections 191(a) and 192 of the CAA,
Pennsylvania is required to submit a SIP revision with a plan for how
the Area will attain the 2008 lead NAAQS, as expeditiously as
practicable, but no later than December 31, 2015.
Horsehead owned and operated a permitted zinc production plant in
Potter Township, Pennsylvania (the Monaca Smelter or Facility). This
Facility was the only industrial source
[[Page 3079]]
of lead emissions over 0.5 tons per year (tpy) in the Area. On November
21, 2012, PADEP and Horsehead entered into a COA which required
Horsehead to permanently discontinue, on or before October 1, 2014,
production of zinc metal from its electrothermic furnace line (Furnace
Plant), the sintering line (Sinter Plant), and secondary material
operations. After these units shut down permanently, the COA provided
that Horsehead would be subject to an aggregate potential lead emission
rate of 0.1 tpy over each consecutive 12-month rolling period from all
of its remaining stationary and fugitive emission sources at the
Facility. However, in May 2014, Horsehead permanently ceased operations
at additional major sources of emissions at the Facility, including the
Larvik Furnaces and Refinery Feed Pot, which were not required under
the COA to be shut down. Horsehead's zinc dust sizing circuit, whose
emissions are considered insignificant, is allowed to continue to
operate periodically, subject to the 0.1 tpy facility-wide limit
contained in its federally-enforceable permit as well as in the COA.
II. Summary of SIP Revision
On January 15, 2015, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania through the
PADEP submitted an attainment plan for the Lower Beaver Valley Area as
a SIP revision which includes the base year emissions inventory and an
attainment demonstration. The attainment demonstration includes:
technical analyses that locate, identify, and quantify sources of lead
emissions which contributed to violations of the 2008 lead NAAQS; a
modeling analysis of an emissions control strategy that demonstrates
attainment with the 2008 lead NAAQS by the attainment year 2015; and an
analysis of RACT, RACM and RFP, and contingency measures for the Lower
Beaver Valley Area. The SIP revision also includes paragraphs 3, 5, and
6 of the COA between Horsehead and PADEP as measures for the attainment
plan. EPA's analysis of the submitted attainment plan includes a review
of the pollutant addressed, emissions inventory requirements, modeling,
RACM, RACT, and RFP requirements, and contingency measures for the
Lower Beaver Valley Area.
1. Emissions Inventory Requirements
States are required under section 172(c)(3) of the CAA for
nonattainment areas to develop comprehensive, accurate, and current
inventories of actual emissions from all sources of the relevant
pollutant or pollutants in the relevant nonattainment area. These
inventories provide a detailed accounting of all emissions and emission
sources by relevant pollutant and its precursors. In the November 12,
2008 lead NAAQS rulemaking, EPA finalized the emissions inventory
requirements. These inventory requirements at 40 CFR 51.117(e) require,
among other things, that the SIP inventory include all sources that
emit 0.5 or more tons of lead emissions per year, that the inventory is
subject to public hearing requirements, and that the inventory is
included in the SIP.
Section 172(c)(3) of the CAA requires that an identification of
emissions from all sources of lead in the nonattainment area be
submitted with attainment plans. The base year inventory is typically
one of the years in which the area was designated for the standard and
includes emissions from stationary point and nonpoint sources. EPA
recommends using either 2010 or 2011 as the base year, but does provide
flexibility for using other inventory years if states can show another
year is more appropriate. Additionally, EPA guidance provides that
actual emissions should be used for purposes of the base year
inventory.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See ``Addendum to the 2008 Lead NAAQS Implementation
Questions and Answers'' dated August 10, 2012, which is included in
EPA's SIP Toolkit located at www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/implement.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pennsylvania's lead attainment plan for Lower Beaver Valley Area
evaluates lead emissions in the Area, which includes sources in the
area bounded by Vanport, Potter, and Center Townships in Beaver County.
There are no precursors for lead which EPA requires to be considered
for the lead attainment plan required by section 172 of the CAA.
Pennsylvania developed its base-year inventory using data from
2010, the year the Area was designated nonattainment, for stationary
source lead emissions. For the nonpoint sources of lead emissions,
PADEP submitted EPA's 2011 National Emissions Inventory (NEI) v2 data
as a surrogate for the 2010 inventory, since inventories for nonpoint
source emissions are only prepared every three years (2008, 2011) and
2011 was the most recent inventory available.
The only source of lead emissions above 0.5 tpy within the Lower
Beaver Valley Area was the Monaca Smelter. The only other stationary
source of lead emissions in the Lower Beaver Valley Area was AES Beaver
Valley, a 125-MW coal-fired cogeneration plant, though its lead
emissions are less than 0.5 tpy. Another source of lead emissions above
0.5 tpy, an electric generating unit (EGU), Bruce Mansfield Power
Station (Bruce Mansfield), is located in the adjacent municipality of
Shippingsport. The monitor associated with Bruce Mansfield was in
attainment with the 2008 lead NAAQS, demonstrating it had no impact on
the Lower Beaver Valley Area, so Bruce Mansfield was not included in
the Inventory.
Horsehead produced high purity zinc oxide and high grade zinc metal
at the Facility. Two sources emitted the majority of lead emissions
from the Facility: the Sinter Plant and the Furnace Plant. Roughly
ninety-five percent of the Facility's 2010 lead emissions which
volatilized during processing were point sources and the remaining five
percent escaped as fugitive emissions. Estimates used for calculating
2010 fugitive lead emissions at the Sinter Plant were based on
estimates from samples collected during 2007 and 2008. PADEP considered
estimates of 2010 fugitive emissions to be conservative because
improvements made in fugitive emission control at the Facility,
including controls installed at the Sinter Plant since 2008, were not
factored into the analysis for 2010 fugitive emissions.
Table 1 identifies the 2010 base year emissions inventory for the
Lower Beaver Valley Area. In 2010, lead emissions from point sources or
stacks in the Area totaled 5.5961 tons. Lead emissions from nonpoint
sources, including mobile sources, also were included in the lead
inventory but found by PADEP to be insignificant. There are no other
sources of lead emissions in the Area above 0.5 tpy of lead emissions
nor smaller sources. According to Pennsylvania's inventory, the Monaca
Smelter's emissions comprised almost all of the lead emissions in the
Area in 2010.
Table 1--2010 Base Year Lower Beaver Valley Nonattainment Area Emissions
Inventory
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lead emissions
Source (tpy)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monaca Smelter........................................ 5.5531
AES Beaver Valley Plant............................... 0.0430
-----------------
Subtotal for Point Sources........................ 5.5961
Nonpoint Sources...................................... 0.0009
-----------------
Total............................................. 5.5970
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information regarding the emissions inventory for the
Area and EPA's analysis of the inventory in accordance with CAA
requirements in CAA section 172(c) and 40 CFR
[[Page 3080]]
51.117(e) can be found in the TSD for the Base Year Inventory for the
Lower Beaver Valley Area which is included in the docket for this
proposed action (EPA-R03-OAR-2015-0112) and is available online at
www.regulations.gov. EPA finds that the 2010 base year emissions
inventory prepared by Pennsylvania and included in the January 15, 2015
SIP submission for Lower Beaver Valley Area meets the requirements of
section 172(c)(3) of the CAA and the corresponding regulations at 40
CFR 51.117(e).
2. Attainment Planning Modeling
Section 172 of the CAA and the lead control strategy regulations
found at 40 CFR 51.117 require states to employ atmospheric dispersion
modeling for the demonstration of attainment of the lead NAAQS as
expeditiously as practicable. 40 CFR 51.117(a) requires a demonstration
that the attainment plan will attain the NAAQS in the areas in the
vicinity of point sources listed in 40 CFR 51.117(a)(1) as well as any
other area with lead concentrations in excess of the NAAQS per 40 CFR
1.117(a)(2). The demonstration must meet the requirements of 40 CFR
51.112 and 51.117 as well as appendix W of 40 CFR part 51 and include
inventory data, modeling results, and emissions reduction analyses on
which the state has based its projected attainment. All these
requirements comprise the ``attainment demonstration'' that is required
for lead nonattainment areas.
PADEP performed an air-dispersion modeling analysis to predict the
maximum predicted three-month rolling lead concentration using emission
inventories representing two facilities, Monaca Smelter and AES Beaver
Valley. PADEP used reported lead emissions in 2010 for the base year
and projected (future) lead emissions for 2015 because 2015 is the
attainment year for the 2008 lead NAAQS. Horsehead's 2010 emissions
include point and fugitive emission sources.
Projected emissions were determined based on the November 21, 2012
COA for Horsehead, which contains a plant-wide lead emission limit of
0.1 tpy for the Facility, as well as maximum throughput information and
allowable lead emissions from AES Beaver Valley under its current
permit. Only point source emissions were calculated for AES Beaver
Valley, as only point source emissions were reported from AES. PADEP
did not include emissions from Bruce Mansfield in its modeling for the
attainment demonstration because prior modeling had demonstrated Bruce
Mansfield did not contribute to nonattainment in the Area. Lead
emissions from nonpoint sources and mobile source were also examined,
but found to be insignificant, so they were not included in the lead
modeling demonstration. The modeling was conducted in accordance with
40 CFR part 51, Appendix W--Guideline on Air Quality Models.
The final modeled lead concentration for the future attainment year
of 2015 is the maximum projected three-month average lead concentration
of 0.0274 [mu]g/m\3\ plus the background monitored concentration of
0.05 [mu]g/m\3\ from the Shippingport monitor. This yields a projected
lead concentration of approximately 0.08 [mu]g/m\3\, which is
significantly lower than the NAAQS of 0.15 [mu]g/m\3\.
Modeling for attainment was based primarily on the lead emissions
expected in December 31, 2015. Due to monitored violations in 2013 and
early 2014, the Area will not attain the NAAQS by 2015 based on ambient
air quality over 36 consecutive three-month periods. However, closure
of Horsehead operations in 2014 will facilitate attainment of the 2008
lead NAAQS by 2017. More detailed information on the modeling system
tools and documents used for the model attainment demonstration for the
Area and EPA's analysis of PADEP's attainment modeling conducted for
the Area can be found on the EPA Technology Transfer Network Support
Center for Regulatory Atmospheric Modeling (SCRAM) (https://www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/), in Pennsylvania's January 15, 2015 submittal, and in the
TSD for the modeling portion of the proposed SIP in the docket for this
proposed action (EPA-R03-OAR-2015-0112) and available online at
www.regulations.gov. EPA finds the modeling was conducted in accordance
with requirements for a modeled attainment demonstration in the CAA and
in 40 CFR 51.112 and 117 and in appendix W of 40 CFR part 51.
3. RACM, RACT, and RFP
Section 172(c)(1) of the CAA requires nonattainment areas to
implement all RACM, including emissions reductions through the adoption
of RACT, as expeditiously as practicable. EPA interprets this as
requiring consideration of all available controls and to implement all
measures in the nonattainment area that are determined to be reasonably
available. However, EPA believes it would be unreasonable to require
that a plan which demonstrates attainment include all technologically
and economically available control measures even though such measures
would not expedite attainment. See 58 FR 67751 (December 22, 1993).
In March 2012, EPA issued guidance titled, ``Guide to Developing
Reasonably Available Control Measures for Controlling Lead Emissions''
(RACM Guidance).\2\ Pennsylvania performed a RACM analysis in
compliance with the RACM Guidance. The shutdown of the Monaca Smelter
Sinter Plant, Furnace Plant, and secondary materials operations on May
19, 2014 are discrete control measures that have already occurred.
Pennsylvania has determined that the shutdown of those operations at
the Monaca Smelter, along with a plant-wide lead emission limit of 0.1
tpy required in the COA, addresses RACM based on the significant
decrease in emissions that will result.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ https://www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/pdfs/2012ImplementationGuide.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2012 COA also incorporates requirements for control of fugitive
emissions from the Monaca Smelter, and PADEP has determined that all
known significant sources of lead emissions from the Facility have been
eliminated, controlled, or found ineffective or not viable, consistent
with EPA's RACM Guidance (which also addresses RACT). Because Horsehead
agreed in the COA to discontinue metal production operation at the site
by October 14, 2014, PADEP considered further investment in additional
control strategies to not be reasonable or cost effective. Thus, PADEP
has determined that no additional control measures such as RACT are
required at the Monaca Smelter. EPA has reviewed PADEP's determinations
and analysis and finds it reasonable for RACM and RACT at the Monaca
Smelter.
EPA set a threshold of 0.5 tpy for lead sources to undergo a RACT
analysis. 73 FR 67038. Because the lead emissions from the AES Beaver
Valley facility are well below 0.5 tpy, PADEP concluded no RACT review
is required for that facility and EPA finds PADEP's conclusion
reasonable for AES Beaver Valley.
Section 172(c)(2) of the CAA also requires areas designated as
nonattainment for criteria pollutants to include a demonstration of RFP
for meeting air quality standards in attainment plans. Section 171(1)
of the CAA defines RFP as annual incremental reductions in emissions of
the relevant air pollutants as required by Part D of Title I of the
CAA, or emission reductions that may reasonably be required by EPA to
ensure attainment of
[[Page 3081]]
the applicable NAAQS by the applicable date.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Incremental reductions in lead emissions are not specified
in Part D of Title I of the CAA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated in the final lead NAAQS rule (73 FR 67038), RFP is
satisfied by the strict adherence to a compliance schedule which is
expected to periodically yield significant emission reductions.
Pennsylvania's control strategy in the Lower Beaver Valley Area is not
staggered or phased. Nonattainment of the 2008 lead NAAQS is primarily
attributable to a single source, the Monaca Smelter, whose major
operations shut down in May 2014. Ambient air quality concentrations
dropped at or below attainment levels immediately after Horsehead shut
down these operations at the Facility, thus fulfilling RFP requirements
for the Lower Beaver Valley Area. All of the Area's ambient air quality
monitors reported lead concentrations below the 2008 lead NAAQS for the
three-month rolling average for May through July, 2014. The monitor
located in Center Township and associated with the Monaca Smelter
showed a 2013 design value of 0.25 [mu]g/m\3\, which exceeds the lead
NAAQS limit of 0.15 [mu]g/m\3\.\4\ However, the maximum three-month
rolling average ambient lead concentration for the five-month period
since the closure of the Monaca Smelter was 0.02 [mu]g/m\3\. See Table
3 to Pennsylvania's January 15, 2015 SIP submittal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The monitoring data for 2010-2013 is included in appendix A
of Pennsylvania's January 15, 2015 SIP submittal and uses data
queried from the Air Quality System (AQS) Data Mart Database at
https://aqs.epa.gov/api.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With continued implementation of RACM, i.e., continued shutdown of
the primary lead emitting units at the Monaca Smelter and the COA
emissions limit of 0.1 tpy for the Facility, lead emissions at the
Facility are expected to stay well below 0.1 tpy and ambient lead
concentrations in the Area are expected to continue to remain well
below the NAAQS limit. Thus, EPA finds that Pennsylvania has
demonstrated that RFP has been addressed.
4. Contingency Measures
In accordance with section 172(c)(9) of the CAA, contingency
measures are required as additional measures to be implemented in the
event that an area fails to make RFP or fails to attain a standard by
its attainment date. These measures must be fully adopted rules or
control measures that can be implemented quickly and without additional
EPA or state action and should contain trigger mechanisms and an
implementation schedule.\5\ In addition, these measures should be ones
that are not already included in the SIP control strategy for attaining
the standard. See 73 FR 67038 (November 12, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See EPA document titled ``Addendum to the 2008 Lead NAAQS
Implementation Questions and Answers'' dated August 10, 2012,
included in EPA's SIP Toolkit at https://www3.epa.gov/airquality/lead/pdfs/20120810qanda.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The contingency measures in Pennsylvania's SIP submittal are
primarily focused on control of fugitive dust because there is no
longer an operating source with emissions above 0.5 tpy of lead in the
Area. The SIP submittal provides for contingency measures in the COA
with Horsehead which would apply should Horsehead continue operations
at units not required to be shut down under the COA, and should PADEP
determine that these operations cause or significantly contribute to
ongoing lead NAAQS exceedances. These measures include source testing
and reporting, wetting down roads in the facility, installing and
operating a vehicle washing facility near material storage and handling
areas, and retrofitting baghouses, or alternative control measures
approved by PADEP.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Horsehead's COA does not require closure or shut down of the
Larvik Furnaces, the Refinery Feed Pot, and zinc dust sizing
circuit. Thus, the COA includes contingency measures applicable to
the Facility. The COA is included in the PADEP SIP submittal. Upon
final approval of the SIP, the COA's terms will be federally
enforceable as part of the Pennsylvania SIP. The COA is available in
the docket for this rulemaking which is available online at
www.regulations.gov.
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The SIP submittal also states that should PADEP determine that
specific activities at the Monaca Smelter or at other sources in the
Area are likely to have caused an exceedance of the lead NAAQS, or if
PADEP documents a violation of Pennsylvania's fugitive dust regulations
at 25 PA Code Section 123.1 or 123.2, additional control measures would
be triggered. Specifically, PADEP can enforce those regulations and
require the party whose actions likely have caused the exceedance or
whose actions resulted in a violation to mitigate the impact on the
2008 lead NAAQS by implementing additional control measures. Such
control measures may include paving, vegetating, watering, or
chemically stabilizing traffic paths; periodic cleaning of paved roads;
wet suppression at bulldozing sites and soil piles; vehicle washing at
property exits; and covering soil-bearing trucks.
The January 15, 2015 SIP submittal provides the following process
for triggering the above contingency measures. Any single sample result
exceeding 0.15[mu]g/m\3\ at a monitor in the Lower Beaver Valley Area
would trigger investigation by PADEP to determine what specific
activities have caused the increased concentration level (because the
only significant stationary source of lead emissions is no longer in
operation). Should PADEP determine, as the result of observations by
PADEP or receipt of a complaint, that specific activities are likely to
have caused an exceedance or violation, PADEP will notify the party
that an action appears to be adversely affecting the NAAQS or violating
Pennsylvania regulations. Corrective action in the form of contingency
measures would follow, involving enforcement as appropriate.
Pennsylvania's SIP submission further provides that persistent lead
exceedances at any monitor would trigger increased sampling frequency
at the monitor where such an exceedance occurred.\7\ Four or more
sample results within any three-month rolling period reported to exceed
0.15[mu]g/m\3\ would trigger expanded ambient air monitoring and
investigation as needed to identify the potential source(s) and address
the source of the exceedance.
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\7\ Sampling would increase from once every six days to every
three days if results from two samples during any three-month
rolling period exceed 0.15 [mu]g/m\3\. Sampling frequency would
further increase to daily if results from three samples during any
three-month period exceed 0.15 [mu]g/m\3\.
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Section 172(c)(5) of the CAA requires permits for the construction
and operation of new and modified major stationary sources anywhere in
a nonattainment area. The Pennsylvania SIP includes provisions
consistent with the federal requirements, set forth at 40 CFR 51.165,
for nonattainment new source review (NSR).
PADEP's SIP submittal states that NSR permitting requirements in
its SIP ensure that no new or modified sources will cause or contribute
to a NAAQS violation by requiring, as part of the NSR permit, a
demonstration that such a violation will not occur. See 25 Pa. Code
Sec. 127.81 and 127.201-127.217. If Horsehead or any entity proposes
to restart or modify operations or construct and operate other
activities at the Facility that would result in increased lead
emissions, such changes would trigger NSR permitting requirements which
include measures to minimize emissions and prevent NAAQS violations.
In summary, EPA finds these contingency measure triggers and
actions will help ensure compliance with the 2008 lead NAAQS and meet
the requirements of section 172(c)(9) of the CAA to ensure continued
attainment
[[Page 3082]]
of the NAAQS if any events occur interfering with attainment. EPA finds
PADEP's SIP submittal contains adequate contingency measures if the
Area fails to attain the NAAQS or fails to achieve RFP because the only
significant stationary source of lead emissions is no longer in
operation, Pennsylvania's existing rules related to control of fugitive
dusts and permitting are sufficient to minimize emissions and prevent
NAAQS violations, and additional measures are not reasonably available
to serve as contingency measures.
III. Proposed Action
EPA finds the January 15, 2015 SIP submittal attainment plan for
the Lower Beaver Valley Area meets the applicable requirements of the
CAA for attainment plans in section 172 and 192 of the CAA and in
implementing regulations including 40 CFR 51.112 and 51.117. EPA is
proposing to approve the Pennsylvania SIP revision attainment plan for
the Lower Beaver Valley Area for the 2008 lead NAAQS including the
attainment demonstration, base year emissions inventory, RACM/RACT and
RFP analyses, and contingency measures.
EPA is soliciting public comments on the issues discussed in this
document. These comments will be considered before taking final action.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the CAA and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this
action merely approves state law as meeting Federal requirements and
does not impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state
law. For that reason, this proposed action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the 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).
In addition, this proposed rule to approve Pennsylvania's SIP
revision containing the attainment plan for the 2008 lead NAAQS in the
Lower Beaver Valley Area, does not have tribal implications as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
because the SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in
the state, and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Lead.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: December 30, 2015.
Shawn M. Garvin,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2016-00871 Filed 1-19-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P