Approval of California Air Plan Revisions, South Coast Air Quality Management District, 27451-27456 [2017-12469]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 114 / Thursday, June 15, 2017 / Proposed Rules
Paragraph 6003 Class E Airspace
Designated as an Extension to a Class C
Surface Area.
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ANE CT E3 Windsor Locks, CT [Amended]
Bradley International Airport, CT
(Lat. 41°56′21″ N., long 72°41′00″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from the
surface within 3.2 miles each side of the 224
bearing from Bradley International Airport,
extending from the 5-mile radius to 9.6 miles
southwest of the Bradley International
Airport.
Paragraph 6005 Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From 700 Feet or More
Above the Surface of the Earth.
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ANE CT E5 Windsor Locks, CT [Amended]
Bradley International Airport, CT
(Lat. 41°56′21″ N., long. 72°41′00″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 10.9-mile
radius of Bradley International Airport.
Issued in College Park, Georgia, on June 7,
2017.
Debra L. Hogan,
Acting Manager, Operations Support Group,
Eastern Service Center, Air Traffic
Organization.
[FR Doc. 2017–12332 Filed 6–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2016–0215; FRL–9963–78–
Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan
Revisions, South Coast Air Quality
Management District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
revisions to the South Coast Air Quality
Management District (SCAQMD or
District) portion of the California State
Implementation Plan (SIP). These
revisions concern the District’s
demonstration regarding Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
requirements for the 2008 8-hour ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard
(NAAQS) in the South Coast Air Basin
and Coachella Valley ozone
nonattainment areas. The EPA had
previously proposed to partially
approve and partially disapprove
SCAQMD’s RACT SIP demonstration.
However, since publication of the
proposed rule, SCAQMD has addressed
the identified deficiency that was the
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SUMMARY:
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basis for the proposed partial
disapproval by completing additional
analysis and by submitting the analysis
to the EPA as a supplement to the RACT
demonstration. Because the
supplemental analysis adequately
addresses the deficiency, the EPA is
withdrawing the previous proposed
action and is now proposing full
approval of SCAQMD’s RACT SIP
demonstration for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS, as recently supplemented. The
action proposed herein is based on a
public draft version of the SCAQMD
RACT supplement, and the EPA will not
take final action until submittal of the
final version of the SCAQMD RACT
supplement as a revision of the
California SIP.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by
July 17, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R09–
OAR–2016–0215 at https://
www.regulations.gov/, or via email to
Andrew Steckel, Rulemaking Office
Chief at Steckel.Andrew@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be removed or edited
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://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stanley Tong, EPA Region IX, (415)
947–4122, tong.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. The State’s Submittal
A. What documents did the State submit?
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B. Are there other versions of these
documents?
C. What is the purpose of the submitted
documents?
II. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the
submitted documents?
B. Do the documents meet the evaluation
criteria?
C. Public Comment and Proposed Action
III. Incorporation by Reference
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. The State’s Submittal
A. What documents did the State
submit?
On June 6, 2014, the SCAQMD
adopted the ‘‘2016 AQMP) Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
Demonstration’’ (‘‘2016 AQMP RACT
SIP’’), and on July 18, 2014, the
California Air Resources Board (CARB)
submitted it to the EPA for approval as
a revision to the California SIP. On
January 18, 2015, the submittal of the
2016 AQMP RACT SIP was deemed
complete by operation of law.
On May 22, 2017, CARB submitted
the District’s public draft version of the
‘‘Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis
for the NOX RECLAIM Program’’ (‘‘2017
RACT Supplement’’) along with a
request for parallel processing.1 The
District prepared the 2017 RACT
Supplement to address a deficiency that
the EPA had identified in the 2016
AQMP RACT SIP and that was the basis
for the EPA’s proposed partial
disapproval of that submittal published
on November 3, 2016 (81 FR 76547).
The 2017 RACT Supplement includes
additional emissions analysis, two
negative declarations, and certain
conditions from permits for two specific
stationary sources located in Coachella
Valley. As noted in footnote 1 of this
document, under our parallel processing
procedure, the EPA proposes action on
a public draft version of a SIP revision
but will take final action only after the
final version is adopted and submitted
to the EPA for approval. In this instance,
we are proposing action based on the
public draft version of the 2017 RACT
Supplement submitted by CARB on May
22, 2017 and will not take final action
until the final version of the 2017 RACT
1 Under the EPA’s ‘‘parallel processing’’
procedure, the EPA proposes rulemaking action
concurrently with the state’s proposed rulemaking.
If the state’s proposed rule is changed, the EPA will
evaluate that subsequent change and may publish
another notice of proposed rulemaking. If no
significant change is made, the EPA will publish a
final rulemaking on the rule after responding to any
submitted comments. Final rulemaking action by
the EPA will occur only after the rule has been fully
adopted by California and submitted formally to the
EPA for incorporation into the SIP. See 40 CFR part
51, appendix V.
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 114 / Thursday, June 15, 2017 / Proposed Rules
Supplement is adopted and submitted
to the EPA. CARB’s May 22, 2017 letter
indicates that the District Board is
scheduled to consider approval of the
2017 RACT Supplement and associated
documents on July 7, 2017, and if it is
approved, CARB will submit the final
package to the EPA.
B. Are there other versions of these
documents?
There are no previous versions of the
documents described above in the
SCAQMD portion of the California SIP
for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
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C. What is the purpose of the submitted
documents?
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
and nitrogen oxides (NOX) together
produce ground-level ozone, smog and
particulate matter (PM), which harm
human health and the environment.
Section 110(a) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA or ‘‘Act’’) requires states to submit
regulations that control VOC and NOX
emissions. CAA sections 182(b)(2) and
(f) require that SIPs for 1-hour ozone
nonattainment areas classified as
moderate or above implement RACT for
any source covered by a Control
Techniques Guidelines 2 (CTG)
document and for any major source of
VOC or NOX. The EPA’s implementing
regulations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS
extend the same RACT requirement to
areas classified as moderate or above for
the 2008 ozone NAAQS. See 40 CFR
51.1112.
The SCAQMD is subject to the RACT
requirement as it is authorized under
state law to regulate stationary sources
in the South Coast Air Basin (‘‘South
Coast’’), which is classified as an
extreme nonattainment area, and in the
Coachella Valley portion of Riverside
County (‘‘Coachella Valley’’), which is
classified as a severe-15 nonattainment
area for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS
(40 CFR 81.305); 77 FR 30088 at 30101
and 30103 (May 21, 2012). Therefore,
the SCAQMD must, at a minimum,
adopt RACT-level controls for all
sources covered by a CTG document
and for all major non-CTG sources of
VOC or NOX within the two
nonattainment areas. Any stationary
source that emits or has the potential to
emit at least 10 tons per year of VOC or
NOX is a major stationary source in an
extreme ozone nonattainment area (CAA
section 182(e) and (f)), and any
stationary source that emits or has the
potential to emit at least 25 tons per
year of VOC or NOX is a major
stationary source in a severe ozone
2 CTGs
are used to help define VOC RACT.
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nonattainment area (CAA section 182(d)
and (f)).
Section III.D of the preamble to the
EPA’s final rule to implement the 2008
ozone NAAQS (80 FR 12264, March 6,
2015) discusses RACT requirements. It
states, in part, that RACT SIPs must
contain adopted RACT regulations,
certifications where appropriate that
existing provisions are RACT, and/or
negative declarations that no sources in
the nonattainment area are covered by a
specific CTG source category, and that
states must submit appropriate
supporting information for their RACT
submissions as described in the EPA’s
implementation rule for the 1997 ozone
NAAQS. See id., at 12278; 70 FR 71612,
at 71652 (November 29, 2005).
The submitted documents provide
SCAQMD’s analyses of its compliance
with the CAA section 182 RACT
requirements for the 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. CARB also intends the 2017
RACT Supplement to address the EPA’s
April 14, 2016 (81 FR 22025)
disapproval of the reasonably available
control measures/RACT (RACM/RACT)
demonstration for the South Coast for
the 2006 fine PM (PM2.5) NAAQS.
Today’s rulemaking addresses the RACT
requirement for the 2008 ozone
standard, not the RACM/RACT
requirement for the PM2.5 NAAQS. The
EPA will address the latter requirement
in a separate rulemaking. The EPA’s
technical support documents (TSDs)
evaluating the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
and the 2017 RACT Supplement have
more information about the District’s
submissions and the EPA’s evaluation
thereof.
II. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating submitted
documents?
SIP rules must be enforceable (see
CAA section 110(a)(2)), must not
interfere with applicable requirements
concerning attainment and reasonable
further progress or other CAA
requirements (see CAA section 110(l)),
and must not modify certain SIP control
requirements in nonattainment areas
without ensuring equivalent or greater
emissions reductions (see CAA section
193). Generally, SIP rules must require
RACT for each category of sources
covered by a CTG document as well as
each major source of VOC or NOX in
ozone nonattainment areas classified as
moderate or above (see CAA section
182(b)(2) and (f), and 40 CFR 51.1112).
The SCAQMD regulates an extreme
ozone nonattainment area (i.e., the
South Coast Air Basin) and a severe
ozone nonattainment area (i.e.,
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Coachella Valley) (see 40 CFR 81.305),
so the District’s rules must implement
RACT.
Guidance and policy documents that
we use to evaluate enforceability,
revision/relaxation and rule stringency
requirements for the applicable criteria
pollutants include the following:
1. ‘‘State Implementation Plans; General
Preamble for the Implementation of Title
I of the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990,’’ 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992); 57
FR 18070 (April 28, 1992);
2. ‘‘Issues Relating to VOC Regulation
Cutpoints, Deficiencies, and Deviations,’’
EPA, May 25, 1988 (the Bluebook,
revised January 11, 1990);
3. ‘‘Guidance Document for Correcting
Common VOC & Other Rule
Deficiencies,’’ EPA Region 9, August 21,
2001 (the Little Bluebook);
4. ‘‘State Implementation Plans; Nitrogen
Oxides Supplement to the General
Preamble; Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 Implementation of Title I; Proposed
Rule,’’ (the NOX Supplement), 57 FR
55620, November 25, 1992;
5. Memorandum from William T. Harnett to
Regional Air Division Directors, (May 18,
2006), ‘‘RACT Qs & As—Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
Questions and Answers’’;
6. ‘‘Implementation of the 2008 National
Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Ozone: State Implementation Plan
Requirements’’ (80 FR 12264; March 6,
2015); and
7. ‘‘Final Rule to Implement the 8-hour
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard –Phase 2’’ (70 FR 71612;
November 29, 2005).
B. Do the documents meet the
evaluation criteria?
The 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and 2017
RACT Supplement build on the
District’s previous RACT SIP
demonstrations: The 2006 RACT SIP (73
FR 76947, December 18, 2008), the 2007
AQMP (77 FR 12674, March 1, 2012)
and the 2012 AQMP (79 FR 52526,
September 3, 2014). The 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP concludes, after a review and
evaluation of more than 30 rules
recently developed by other ozone
nonattainment air districts, that
SCAQMD’s current rules meet the EPA’s
criteria for RACT acceptability and
inclusion in the SIP for the 2008 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. The 2017 RACT
Supplement adds to the 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP by including two negative
declarations, and by including certain
permit conditions for two major NOX
sources in Coachella Valley, and by
providing a demonstration for how
District rules meet the RACT
requirement for major NOX sources in
the South Coast.
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1. CTG Source Categories—South Coast
and Coachella Valley
With regards to CTG source
categories, based on its research of the
District’s permit databases and
telephone directories for sources in the
District for the 2007 AQMP, the 2012
AQMP, and the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP,
the SCAQMD concluded that all
identified sources subject to a CTG are
subject to District rules that establish
control requirements meeting or
exceeding RACT. Because District rules
apply in both the South Coast and
Coachella Valley, the District’s
conclusion in this regard extends to
both nonattainment areas.
Where there are no existing sources
covered by a particular CTG document,
states may, in lieu of adopting RACT
requirements for those sources, adopt
negative declarations certifying that
there are no such sources in the relevant
nonattainment area. The SCAQMD did
not include any negative declarations in
the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP; however,
subsequent to its 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
submittal, the EPA had several
discussions with the SCAQMD and
concluded there may be two CTG
categories where the District has no
sources applicable to the CTGs: (1)
Surface Coating Operations at
Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Facilities
CTG; and (2) the paper coating portion
of the 2007 Paper, Film, and Foil
Coatings CTG. Based on further
investigation, the District has agreed
that negative declarations for the two
CTG categories are warranted and has
included them in the 2017 RACT
Supplement.3
Based on our review and evaluation of
the documentation provided by the
SCAQMD in the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
(and earlier plans) and in the 2017
RACT Supplement, we agree that
existing District rules approved in the
SIP meet or are more stringent than the
corresponding CTG limits and
applicability thresholds for each
category of VOC sources covered by a
CTG document, other than the two CTG
documents discussed above. As
discussed in our TSD, we conclude that
existing District rules require the
implementation of RACT for each
category of VOC sources covered by a
CTG document (other than the two
discussed above) located in the South
Coast and Coachella Valley. For the
Surface Coating Operations at
3 SCAQMD, ‘‘Negative Declaration for Control
Techniques Guidelines of Surface Coating
Operations at Shipbuilding and Ship Repair
Facilities, and Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings,’’ May
2017, included at the back of the 2017 RACT
Supplement.
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Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Facilities
CTG and the paper coating portion of
the 2007 Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings
CTG, we have reviewed the District’s
evaluation of its sources as described in
the 2017 RACT Supplement and concur
with the District’s findings. As such, we
propose approval of the District’s two
negative declarations included in the
2017 RACT Supplement.
2. Major Stationary Sources of VOC or
NOX Emissions (Other than RECLAIM
Facilities)—South Coast and Coachella
Valley
With respect to major stationary
sources of VOC or NOX emissions, the
District provided supplemental
information identifying 21 new major
Title V sources since its 2006 RACT SIP
certification and provided a list of
equipment at these facilities that emit
greater than 5 tons per year. The District
concluded that all the identified
equipment were covered by commandand-control VOC or NOX rules that
implement RACT. The District’s efforts
to identify all new major sources
appears to be thorough, and we agree
that the District’s command-and-control
VOC and NOX rules approved in the SIP
require implementation of RACT for all
major non-CTG VOC and NOX sources
in the South Coast and Coachella Valley
to which those rules apply. Generally,
major NOX sources in the South Coast
and two major NOX sources in
Coachella Valley are not subject to the
District’s command-and-control rules,
but are subject to a set of rules
establishing a cap-and-trade program.4
Our evaluation of these sources for
compliance with the RACT requirement
is covered in the following sections of
this document.
3. RECLAIM Facilities in the South
Coast
Within the South Coast, major NOX
sources are included in SCAQMD’s
Regulation XX (‘‘Regional Clean Air
Incentives Market (RECLAIM)’’)
program. The District adopted the
RECLAIM program in 1993 to reduce
emissions from the largest stationary
sources of NOX and sulfur oxides (SOX)
emissions through a market-based
trading program that establishes annual
declining NOX and SOX allocations (also
called ‘‘facility caps’’) and allows
covered facilities to comply with their
facility caps by installing pollution
control equipment, changing operations,
or purchasing RECLAIM trading credits
4 Certain sources such as fire-fighting facilities,
police facilities, and public transit remain covered
under SCAQMD’s command-and-control rules and
are exempted from the cap-and-trade program. See
Rule 2001.
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(RTCs) from the RECLAIM market.
Section 40440 of the California Health
and Safety Code (CH&SC) requires the
District to monitor advances in best
available retrofit control technology
(BARCT) and periodically to reassess
the overall facility caps to ensure that
the facility caps are equivalent, in the
aggregate, to BARCT emission levels
imposed on affected sources.5 Facilities
subject to RECLAIM are exempted from
a number of District command-andcontrol (also referred to as
‘‘prohibitory’’) rules that otherwise
apply to sources of NOX and SOX
emissions in the South Coast.6 With
certain exceptions, facilities located
outside of the South Coast but within
SCAQMD jurisdiction (e.g., facilities in
Coachella Valley) are not included in
the RECLAIM program. As of the 2015
compliance year, the most recent
compliance year fully audited, there are
approximately 268 facilities in the
RECLAIM NOX program.7
Under longstanding EPA
interpretation of the CAA, a marketbased cap and trade program may satisfy
RACT requirements by ensuring that the
level of emission reductions resulting
from implementation of the program
will be equal, in the aggregate, to those
reductions expected from the direct
application of RACT on all affected
sources within the nonattainment area.8
The EPA approved the RECLAIM
program into the California SIP in June
1998 based in part on a conclusion that
the NOX emission caps in the program
satisfied the RACT requirements of CAA
section 182(b)(2) and (f) for covered
NOX emission sources in the aggregate.9
In 2005 and 2010, the District adopted
revisions to the RECLAIM program,
which the EPA approved in 2006 and
2011, respectively, based in part on
conclusions that the revisions continued
5 BARCT is defined as ‘‘an emission limitation
that is based on the maximum degree of reduction
achievable taking into account environmental,
energy, and economic impacts by each class or
category of source.’’ CH&SC section 40406. For the
purposes of comparison, the EPA defines RACT as
the lowest emission limitation that a particular
source is capable of meeting by the application of
control technology that is reasonably available
considering technological and economic feasibility.
44 FR 53762 (September 17, 1979). As such, we
generally find that BARCT level of control meets or
exceeds RACT level of control.
6 See District Rule 2001 (‘‘Applicability’’), as
amended May 6, 2005. Exemptions from RECLAIM,
such as the exemption for certain facilities located
in Coachella Valley, are listed in Rule 2001(i).
7 See page 4 of the 2017 RACT Supplement.
8 59 FR 16690 (April 7, 1994) and the EPA,
‘‘Improving Air Quality with Economic Incentive
Programs,’’ EPA–452/R–01–001 (January 2001), at
Section 16.7 and 80 FR 12264, 12279 (March 6,
2015).
9 61 FR 57834 (November 8, 1996) and 63 FR
32621 (June 15, 1998).
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to satisfy RACT requirements.10 We
refer to the current NOX RECLAIM
program as approved into the SIP as the
‘‘2010 RECLAIM program.’’ 11
The 2016 AQMP RACT SIP relies on
the 2010 RECLAIM program to satisfy
the RACT requirements for major NOX
sources in the South Coast. With respect
to such sources, we initially concluded,
as described in our November 3, 2016
proposed rule, 81 FR 76547, at 76549,
that the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP had
failed to demonstrate that the 2010
RECLAIM program had achieved NOX
emissions reductions equal, in the
aggregate, to those reductions expected
from the direct application of RACT on
all major NOX sources in the South
Coast. We based our initial conclusion
on information contained in SCAQMD’s
December 2015 Draft Final Staff Report
(‘‘2015 staff report’’) revising Regulation
XX that indicated that further
reductions in the NOX RECLAIM
emissions cap were needed to achieve
BARCT.12 Given that BARCT level of
control by definition meets or exceeds
RACT level of control, we could have
safely concluded that the 2010
RECLAIM program meets RACT level of
control if it had been demonstrated to
meet, in the aggregate, BARCT level of
control. In light of the information in
the 2015 staff report, however, there was
evidence that the RECLAIM program
had not achieved BARCT level of
control, and thus we had inadequate
basis to conclude that the 2010
RECLAIM program had achieved RACT
level of control. The use of the BARCT
level of control, rather than RACT, as
the criterion for approval or disapproval
was necessary for the purposes of the
November 3, 2016 proposed rule
because no specific demonstration of
RECLAIM as meeting the RACT
10 71 FR 51120 (August 29, 2006) and 76 FR
50128 (August 12, 2011).
11 The RECLAIM program is codified by the
District in Regulation XX, which includes a number
of individual rules, such as Rule 2001
(‘‘Applicability’’) and Rule 2002 (‘‘Allocations for
Oxides of Nitrogen (NOX) and Oxides of Sulfur
(SOX)’’ and many others. Herein, we refer to the
‘‘2010 RECLAIM program,’’ because the most recent
SIP-approved RECLAIM rule amendments were
adopted by the District on November 5, 2010. The
2010 amendments only affected certain sections of
Rule 2002 pertaining to SOX emissions, and thus,
the ‘‘2010 RECLAIM program’’ reflects other
amendments by the District that we approved prior
to that time and that were unaffected by the 2010
amendments. For instance, with respect to NOX
allocations, the most recent SIP-approved
amendments that are part of the ‘‘2010 RECLAIM
program’’ were adopted by the District on January
7, 2005.
12 Draft Final Staff Report, Proposed Amendments
to Regulation XX Regional Clean Air Initiatives
Market (RECLAIM) NOX RECLAIM, December 4,
2015 https://www.aqmd.gov/docs/default-source/
Agendas/Governing-Board/2015/2015-dec4030.pdf?sfvrsn=9.
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requirement had been submitted as part
of the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP.
In response to our November 3, 2016
proposed partial disapproval of the
South Coast RACT demonstration, and
also to respond to the EPA’s April 14,
2016 disapproval of the South Coast
RACM/RACT demonstration for the
2006 PM2.5 NAAQS, both of which were
premised on the same deficient showing
with respect to major NOX sources in
the South Coast that are subject to
RECLAIM, the District has provided, in
the 2017 RACT Supplement, a specific
demonstration of how the 2010
RECLAIM program has achieved, in the
aggregate, RACT level of control for
major NOX sources in the South Coast.
In the 2017 RACT Supplement, the
District has also evaluated the
amendments in the RECLAIM program
adopted by the District in 2015 and
2016 for compliance with the RACT
requirement.13
When the NOX RECLAIM program
was first adopted, RECLAIM facilities
were issued NOX annual allocations that
declined annually from 1993 until 2003
and remained constant after 2003. The
ending RTC allocation (for all program
sources) in 2003 was set at 34.2 tons per
day (tpd). The annual allocations
reflected the levels of BARCT to be in
place at the RECLAIM facilities, and
were the result of a BARCT analysis
conducted in 1993.
As noted above, state law also
requires the District to monitor
advances in BARCT and to periodically
reassess the overall facility caps to
ensure that RECLAIM facilities achieve
the same or greater emission reductions
that would have occurred under a
command-and-control approach. In
2005, the District examined the
RECLAIM program and found that
additional reduction opportunities
existed due to the advancement of
control technology.
As part of the 2005 NOX BARCT
reassessment, the District examined the
most stringent emission limits in other
air pollution control district rules and
other requirements for equipment
categories in the RECLAIM program in
an effort to determine the appropriate
mass emission reductions to reflect
BARCT. District staff also examined
types of retrofit technologies that had
13 On March 17, 2017, CARB submitted amended
RECLAIM rules reflecting revisions adopted by the
District on December 4, 2015 (significant revisions
reducing total NOX RTC holdings by 12 tpd by
2022), February 5, 2016 (minor revisions to certain
definitions), and October 7, 2016 (new provisions
intended to prevent the majority of facility
shutdown credits from entering the market) to the
EPA as a revision to the California SIP. The EPA
has recently proposed to approve the amended
rules. See 82 FR 25996 (June 6, 2017).
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been achieved in practice regardless of
whether these controls are required in
SIP approved rules. As a result, the
District identified new BARCT levels for
six source categories in the NOX
RECLAIM program and established a
new ending RTC allocation of 26.5 tpd,
which represented the allowable
programmatic emissions after BARCT
implementation. The methodology for
determining the ending RTC allocation
relied on using actual emissions that are
adjusted for growth and BARCT. Under
amended rules adopted by the District
in 2005, the facility annual allocations
(in the aggregate) were reduced in
annual increments from 34.2 tpd to 26.5
tpd between 2007 and 2011.
To demonstrate that the 2010
RECLAIM program (reflecting 2005 NOX
RECLAIM rule amendments)
implemented RACT, the District reexamined the BARCT reevaluation that
it conducted in 2005 and determined
that, for certain source categories, the
BARCT allocation level was essentially
equivalent to RACT, but that, for certain
other source categories, the BARCT
allocation level was beyond RACT
because there were no other rules in the
District itself or any other California air
district for these specific categories that
were more stringent than the limits
established under the original RECLAIM
program in 1993 (and fully
implemented by 2003). The District recalculated a hypothetical ending annual
RTC allocation (of 30.9 tpd) reflecting
RACT implementation (rather than
BARCT) and determined that, based on
audited actual NOX emissions in 2012,
the 2010 RECLAIM program achieved a
16% reduction in actual NOX emissions
from RECLAIM sources from 2006 to
2012 whereas only a 9.6% reduction
(i.e., 34.2 tpd down to 30.9 tpd) was
necessary to meet the RACT
requirement. On that basis, the District
concludes, in the 2017 RACT
Supplement, that the 2010 RECLAIM
program met the RACT requirement for
major NOX sources in the South Coast.
We have reviewed the District’s
evaluation of the 2010 RECLAIM
program for compliance with the RACT
requirement and find that the District’s
approach, assumptions, and calculation
methods are reasonable. Based on the
District’s analysis, we conclude that the
NOX RECLAIM program, as amended in
2005, provided for NOX reductions
equivalent, in the aggregate, to those
reductions expected from the direct
application of RACT on all major NOX
sources in the South Coast.
However, the emissions limits that
form the basis for the District’s reexamination of the RECLAIM program
as described above are predicated on the
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2005 BARCT reevaluation of the
program. To comply with the RACT
requirement for the 2008 ozone
standard, for which designations were
promulgated in 2012, the RECLAIM
program had to be re-evaluated post2012 for potential improvements in
control technology since 2005. In 2015,
the District conducted such a
reevaluation and amended the
RECLAIM rules to establish a new
ending RTC allocation of 14.5 tpd
(reflecting BARCT implementation) to
be achieved incrementally from 2017
through 2022.
In the 2017 RACT Supplement, the
District also provides a demonstration of
how the RECLAIM program, as
amended in 2015, meets the RACT
requirement in the aggregate. To do so,
the District performed a similar type of
analysis as that described above for the
2005 RECLAIM amendments to
determine a hypothetical ending RTC
allocation reflecting RACT
implementation (rather than BARCT) of
14.8 tpd. Because the ending RTC
allocation (adopted by the District in
2015 and implementing BARCT) of 14.5
tpd is less than (i.e., more stringent
than) the hypothetical RTC allocation
(implementing RACT) of 14.8 tpd, the
District concludes that the program as
amended in 2015 meets the RACT
requirement.
We have reviewed the District’s
approach, assumptions, and methods to
the updated RECLAIM program and
agree that, as amended in 2015, the
RECLAIM program provides for
emissions reductions equivalent, in the
aggregate, to those reductions expected
from the direct application of RACT on
all major NOX sources in the South
Coast and thereby meets the RACT
requirement for such sources for the
purposes of the 2008 ozone standard.14
We also agree with the District that
RECLAIM rule amendments in October
14 While not required for our evaluation of the
2016 AQMP RACT SIP and 2017 RACT Supplement
for compliance with the RACT requirement for the
South Coast and Coachella Valley for the 2008
ozone standard, we also take note of several recent
developments that pertain to the RECLAIM
program. On March 3, 2017, the District adopted the
2016 Air Quality Management Plan and in so doing
directed staff to modify the 2016 AQMP NOX
RECLAIM measure to achieve an additional 5 tpd
NOX emission reduction as soon as feasible, and not
later than 2025, to transition the RECLAIM program
to a command-and-control regulatory structure
requiring BARCT level controls as soon as
practicable. See SCAQMD, Resolution No. 17–2 (‘‘A
Resolution of the South Coast Air Quality
Management District (SCAQMD or District)
Governing Board certifying the Final Program
Environmental Impact Report (PEIR) for the 2016
Air Quality Management Plan (AQMP or Plan), and
adopting the 2016 AQMP, which is to be submitted
into the California State Implementation Plan
(SIP)’’), March 3, 2017, page 17.
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2016 help to ensure the success of the
program in achieving BARCT-equivalent
(and RACT-equivalent) reductions by
preventing the majority of facility
shutdown RTCs from entering the
market and delaying the installation of
pollution controls at other NOX
RECLAIM facilities.
4. RECLAIM Facilities in Coachella
Valley
As noted above, unlike major NOX
sources in the South Coast, major NOX
sources in Coachella Valley are
generally not eligible to participate in
the RECLAIM program but rather are
subject to the District’s prohibitory
rules.15 The RECLAIM rules, however,
establish an exception for electric
generating facilities in Coachella Valley
that submit complete permit
applications on or after January 1, 2001.
Such facilities may elect to enter the
RECLAIM program, and to date, two
facilities in Coachella Valley have
elected to enter the program.
In our November 3, 2016 proposed
rule, we did not extend the deficiency
we identified in the RACT
demonstration for the South Coast to
Coachella Valley because we found that
the two RECLAIM facilities that are
located there were both equipped with
control technology that meets or
exceeds RACT level of control.16 The
basic premise for our proposed
conclusion in this regard was that the
RACT requirement was met through
permit conditions requiring RACT level
of control because such permit
conditions are enforceable because they
were issued under SIP-approved New
Source Review (NSR) rules. However,
our rationale was mistaken. Generally,
NSR permit conditions alone are not
sufficient to meet the RACT requirement
even where the conditions require
control technology that represent RACT
level of control because permit
conditions are subject to revision
outside of the SIP revision process and
because permits can expire whereas SIP
limits must be permanent until revised
or rescinded through a SIP revision. On
the other hand, permit conditions that
require RACT level of control at a given
facility may suffice to meet the RACT
requirement if they are submitted as a
SIP revision and approved into the SIP.
In subsequent communications with
the District, we noted our mistaken
rationale with respect to RACT
compliance and the two Coachella
Valley facilities. In response, the District
15 District Regulation XX (‘‘Regional Clean Air
Incentives Market (RECLAIM)’’, Rule 2001
(‘‘Applicability’’), paragraph (i)(1)(I).
16 See footnote 8 of our November 3, 2016
proposed rule at 81 FR 76547, at 76549.
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27455
reviewed the permits for the facilities
and included the relevant permit
conditions for each as appendices A and
B to the 2017 RACT Supplement. The
permit conditions submitted by the
District pertain to specified NOX
emission limits ranging from 2.5 to 5
parts per million (ppm) for the gas
turbines, control technology (selective
catalytic reduction (SCR)), and
monitoring, among other elements. The
District’s analysis indicates that SCR is
generally identified as an emission
control technology to achieve ‘‘best
available control technology’’ emission
limits in the range of 2 to 5 ppm for gas
turbines, and thus the controls meet or
exceed the requirements for RACT. We
have reviewed the permit conditions
(and SCAQMD’s analysis) and find that
they provide for RACT level of control
(or better) at the two RECLAIM facilities
in Coachella Valley. As such, we
propose to approve the permit
conditions as part of the SIP.
C. Public Comment and Proposed
Action
As authorized in section 110(k)(3) of
the Act, and based on the rationale
discussed above, the EPA proposes to
approve the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and
2017 RACT Supplement, including the
RACT demonstrations provided in the
two documents, negative declarations
for two CTG source categories, and
certain permit conditions for two power
plants in Coachella Valley, because we
believe they fulfill the RACT SIP
requirements under CAA sections
182(b) and (f) and 40 CFR 51.1112 for
the South Coast and Coachella Valley
for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. As noted
above, our proposed action relies upon
our evaluation of the public draft
version of the 2017 RACT Supplement
and we will not take final action until
it is adopted and submitted to us as a
revision to the California SIP. If the
2017 RACT Supplement that we have
evaluated were to be revised
significantly prior to adoption and
submittal, we will need to reconsider
our proposed action accordingly. We are
withdrawing our previous proposal (61
FR 76547, November 3, 2016) to
partially approve and partially
disapprove the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
and are now proposing full approval
because we have concluded that the
2016 AQMP RACT SIP, as
supplemented by the 2017 RACT
Supplement, now meets the relevant
CAA requirements.17 If you submitted
17 Although we are withdrawing our November 3,
2016 proposed action, our TSD associated with that
proposed action still contains pertinent information
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comments on our previous proposed
action and believe that those comments
remain relevant, you will need to
resubmit your comments within the
public comment period for today’s
proposed action.
We will accept comments from the
public on this proposal until July 17,
2017. If we take final action to approve
the submitted documents, our final
action will incorporate them into the
federally-enforceable SIP.
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III. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is proposing to
include in a final EPA rule regulatory
text that includes incorporation by
reference. In accordance with
requirements of 1 CFR 51.5, the EPA is
proposing to incorporate by reference
certain permit conditions for two
stationary sources in Coachella Valley
as described above in preamble. The
EPA has made, and will continue to
make, these materials available through
www.regulations.gov and at the EPA
Region IX Office (please contact the
person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble for more information).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, the EPA’s role is to
approve state choices, provided that
they meet the criteria of the Clean Air
Act. Accordingly, this proposed action
merely proposes to approve SIP
revisions 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 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
that summarizes our evaluation of SCAQMD’s 2016
AQMP RACT SIP.
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affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide the EPA with the
discretionary authority to address
disproportionate human health or
environmental effects with practical,
appropriate, and legally permissible
methods under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
to apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where the EPA or
an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the proposed rule does
not have tribal implications and will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 7, 2017.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2017–12469 Filed 6–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0218; FRL–9963–56–
Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan
Revisions, Placer County Air Pollution
Control District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
Proposed rule.
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
revisions to the Placer County Air
Pollution Control District (PCAPCD or
‘‘the District’’) portion of the California
State Implementation Plan (SIP). These
revisions concern the District’s
demonstration regarding Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
requirements for the 1997 and 2008 8hour ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS), and
negative declarations for the polyester
resin source category for the 2008 8hour ozone standard. We are proposing
action on local SIP revisions under the
Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act). We are
taking comments on this proposal and
plan to follow with a final action.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by
July 17, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R09–
OAR–2017–0218 at https://
www.regulations.gov, or via email to
Andrew Steckel, Rulemaking Office
Chief at steckel.andrew@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be removed or edited
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:
Nicole Law, EPA Region IX, (415) 947–
4126, law.nicole@epa.gov or Stanley
Tong, EPA Region IX, (415) 947–4122,
tong.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
SUMMARY:
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[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 114 (Thursday, June 15, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27451-27456]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-12469]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2016-0215; FRL-9963-78-Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan Revisions, South Coast Air
Quality Management District
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve revisions to the South Coast Air Quality Management District
(SCAQMD or District) portion of the California State Implementation
Plan (SIP). These revisions concern the District's demonstration
regarding Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) requirements
for the 2008 8-hour ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS)
in the South Coast Air Basin and Coachella Valley ozone nonattainment
areas. The EPA had previously proposed to partially approve and
partially disapprove SCAQMD's RACT SIP demonstration. However, since
publication of the proposed rule, SCAQMD has addressed the identified
deficiency that was the basis for the proposed partial disapproval by
completing additional analysis and by submitting the analysis to the
EPA as a supplement to the RACT demonstration. Because the supplemental
analysis adequately addresses the deficiency, the EPA is withdrawing
the previous proposed action and is now proposing full approval of
SCAQMD's RACT SIP demonstration for the 2008 ozone NAAQS, as recently
supplemented. The action proposed herein is based on a public draft
version of the SCAQMD RACT supplement, and the EPA will not take final
action until submittal of the final version of the SCAQMD RACT
supplement as a revision of the California SIP.
DATES: Any comments must arrive by July 17, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R09-
OAR-2016-0215 at https://www.regulations.gov/, or via email to Andrew
Steckel, Rulemaking Office Chief at Steckel.Andrew@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the online instructions
for submitting comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be removed or
edited 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://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stanley Tong, EPA Region IX, (415)
947-4122, tong.stanley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us'' and
``our'' refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. The State's Submittal
A. What documents did the State submit?
B. Are there other versions of these documents?
C. What is the purpose of the submitted documents?
II. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the submitted documents?
B. Do the documents meet the evaluation criteria?
C. Public Comment and Proposed Action
III. Incorporation by Reference
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. The State's Submittal
A. What documents did the State submit?
On June 6, 2014, the SCAQMD adopted the ``2016 AQMP) Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT) Demonstration'' (``2016 AQMP RACT
SIP''), and on July 18, 2014, the California Air Resources Board (CARB)
submitted it to the EPA for approval as a revision to the California
SIP. On January 18, 2015, the submittal of the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP was
deemed complete by operation of law.
On May 22, 2017, CARB submitted the District's public draft version
of the ``Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis for the NOX RECLAIM
Program'' (``2017 RACT Supplement'') along with a request for parallel
processing.\1\ The District prepared the 2017 RACT Supplement to
address a deficiency that the EPA had identified in the 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP and that was the basis for the EPA's proposed partial disapproval
of that submittal published on November 3, 2016 (81 FR 76547). The 2017
RACT Supplement includes additional emissions analysis, two negative
declarations, and certain conditions from permits for two specific
stationary sources located in Coachella Valley. As noted in footnote 1
of this document, under our parallel processing procedure, the EPA
proposes action on a public draft version of a SIP revision but will
take final action only after the final version is adopted and submitted
to the EPA for approval. In this instance, we are proposing action
based on the public draft version of the 2017 RACT Supplement submitted
by CARB on May 22, 2017 and will not take final action until the final
version of the 2017 RACT
[[Page 27452]]
Supplement is adopted and submitted to the EPA. CARB's May 22, 2017
letter indicates that the District Board is scheduled to consider
approval of the 2017 RACT Supplement and associated documents on July
7, 2017, and if it is approved, CARB will submit the final package to
the EPA.
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\1\ Under the EPA's ``parallel processing'' procedure, the EPA
proposes rulemaking action concurrently with the state's proposed
rulemaking. If the state's proposed rule is changed, the EPA will
evaluate that subsequent change and may publish another notice of
proposed rulemaking. If no significant change is made, the EPA will
publish a final rulemaking on the rule after responding to any
submitted comments. Final rulemaking action by the EPA will occur
only after the rule has been fully adopted by California and
submitted formally to the EPA for incorporation into the SIP. See 40
CFR part 51, appendix V.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Are there other versions of these documents?
There are no previous versions of the documents described above in
the SCAQMD portion of the California SIP for the 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
C. What is the purpose of the submitted documents?
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) and nitrogen oxides
(NOX) together produce ground-level ozone, smog and
particulate matter (PM), which harm human health and the environment.
Section 110(a) of the Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act'') requires states to
submit regulations that control VOC and NOX emissions. CAA
sections 182(b)(2) and (f) require that SIPs for 1-hour ozone
nonattainment areas classified as moderate or above implement RACT for
any source covered by a Control Techniques Guidelines \2\ (CTG)
document and for any major source of VOC or NOX. The EPA's
implementing regulations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS extend the same RACT
requirement to areas classified as moderate or above for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. See 40 CFR 51.1112.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ CTGs are used to help define VOC RACT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SCAQMD is subject to the RACT requirement as it is authorized
under state law to regulate stationary sources in the South Coast Air
Basin (``South Coast''), which is classified as an extreme
nonattainment area, and in the Coachella Valley portion of Riverside
County (``Coachella Valley''), which is classified as a severe-15
nonattainment area for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS (40 CFR 81.305); 77
FR 30088 at 30101 and 30103 (May 21, 2012). Therefore, the SCAQMD must,
at a minimum, adopt RACT-level controls for all sources covered by a
CTG document and for all major non-CTG sources of VOC or NOX
within the two nonattainment areas. Any stationary source that emits or
has the potential to emit at least 10 tons per year of VOC or
NOX is a major stationary source in an extreme ozone
nonattainment area (CAA section 182(e) and (f)), and any stationary
source that emits or has the potential to emit at least 25 tons per
year of VOC or NOX is a major stationary source in a severe
ozone nonattainment area (CAA section 182(d) and (f)).
Section III.D of the preamble to the EPA's final rule to implement
the 2008 ozone NAAQS (80 FR 12264, March 6, 2015) discusses RACT
requirements. It states, in part, that RACT SIPs must contain adopted
RACT regulations, certifications where appropriate that existing
provisions are RACT, and/or negative declarations that no sources in
the nonattainment area are covered by a specific CTG source category,
and that states must submit appropriate supporting information for
their RACT submissions as described in the EPA's implementation rule
for the 1997 ozone NAAQS. See id., at 12278; 70 FR 71612, at 71652
(November 29, 2005).
The submitted documents provide SCAQMD's analyses of its compliance
with the CAA section 182 RACT requirements for the 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. CARB also intends the 2017 RACT Supplement to address the EPA's
April 14, 2016 (81 FR 22025) disapproval of the reasonably available
control measures/RACT (RACM/RACT) demonstration for the South Coast for
the 2006 fine PM (PM2.5) NAAQS. Today's rulemaking addresses
the RACT requirement for the 2008 ozone standard, not the RACM/RACT
requirement for the PM2.5 NAAQS. The EPA will address the
latter requirement in a separate rulemaking. The EPA's technical
support documents (TSDs) evaluating the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and the 2017
RACT Supplement have more information about the District's submissions
and the EPA's evaluation thereof.
II. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating submitted documents?
SIP rules must be enforceable (see CAA section 110(a)(2)), must not
interfere with applicable requirements concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress or other CAA requirements (see CAA section
110(l)), and must not modify certain SIP control requirements in
nonattainment areas without ensuring equivalent or greater emissions
reductions (see CAA section 193). Generally, SIP rules must require
RACT for each category of sources covered by a CTG document as well as
each major source of VOC or NOX in ozone nonattainment areas
classified as moderate or above (see CAA section 182(b)(2) and (f), and
40 CFR 51.1112). The SCAQMD regulates an extreme ozone nonattainment
area (i.e., the South Coast Air Basin) and a severe ozone nonattainment
area (i.e., Coachella Valley) (see 40 CFR 81.305), so the District's
rules must implement RACT.
Guidance and policy documents that we use to evaluate
enforceability, revision/relaxation and rule stringency requirements
for the applicable criteria pollutants include the following:
1. ``State Implementation Plans; General Preamble for the
Implementation of Title I of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990,''
57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992); 57 FR 18070 (April 28, 1992);
2. ``Issues Relating to VOC Regulation Cutpoints, Deficiencies, and
Deviations,'' EPA, May 25, 1988 (the Bluebook, revised January 11,
1990);
3. ``Guidance Document for Correcting Common VOC & Other Rule
Deficiencies,'' EPA Region 9, August 21, 2001 (the Little Bluebook);
4. ``State Implementation Plans; Nitrogen Oxides Supplement to the
General Preamble; Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 Implementation of
Title I; Proposed Rule,'' (the NOX Supplement), 57 FR
55620, November 25, 1992;
5. Memorandum from William T. Harnett to Regional Air Division
Directors, (May 18, 2006), ``RACT Qs & As--Reasonably Available
Control Technology (RACT) Questions and Answers'';
6. ``Implementation of the 2008 National Ambient Air Quality
Standards for Ozone: State Implementation Plan Requirements'' (80 FR
12264; March 6, 2015); and
7. ``Final Rule to Implement the 8-hour Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standard -Phase 2'' (70 FR 71612; November 29, 2005).
B. Do the documents meet the evaluation criteria?
The 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and 2017 RACT Supplement build on the
District's previous RACT SIP demonstrations: The 2006 RACT SIP (73 FR
76947, December 18, 2008), the 2007 AQMP (77 FR 12674, March 1, 2012)
and the 2012 AQMP (79 FR 52526, September 3, 2014). The 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP concludes, after a review and evaluation of more than 30 rules
recently developed by other ozone nonattainment air districts, that
SCAQMD's current rules meet the EPA's criteria for RACT acceptability
and inclusion in the SIP for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The 2017 RACT
Supplement adds to the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP by including two negative
declarations, and by including certain permit conditions for two major
NOX sources in Coachella Valley, and by providing a
demonstration for how District rules meet the RACT requirement for
major NOX sources in the South Coast.
[[Page 27453]]
1. CTG Source Categories--South Coast and Coachella Valley
With regards to CTG source categories, based on its research of the
District's permit databases and telephone directories for sources in
the District for the 2007 AQMP, the 2012 AQMP, and the 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP, the SCAQMD concluded that all identified sources subject to a CTG
are subject to District rules that establish control requirements
meeting or exceeding RACT. Because District rules apply in both the
South Coast and Coachella Valley, the District's conclusion in this
regard extends to both nonattainment areas.
Where there are no existing sources covered by a particular CTG
document, states may, in lieu of adopting RACT requirements for those
sources, adopt negative declarations certifying that there are no such
sources in the relevant nonattainment area. The SCAQMD did not include
any negative declarations in the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP; however,
subsequent to its 2016 AQMP RACT SIP submittal, the EPA had several
discussions with the SCAQMD and concluded there may be two CTG
categories where the District has no sources applicable to the CTGs:
(1) Surface Coating Operations at Shipbuilding and Ship Repair
Facilities CTG; and (2) the paper coating portion of the 2007 Paper,
Film, and Foil Coatings CTG. Based on further investigation, the
District has agreed that negative declarations for the two CTG
categories are warranted and has included them in the 2017 RACT
Supplement.\3\
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\3\ SCAQMD, ``Negative Declaration for Control Techniques
Guidelines of Surface Coating Operations at Shipbuilding and Ship
Repair Facilities, and Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings,'' May 2017,
included at the back of the 2017 RACT Supplement.
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Based on our review and evaluation of the documentation provided by
the SCAQMD in the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP (and earlier plans) and in the
2017 RACT Supplement, we agree that existing District rules approved in
the SIP meet or are more stringent than the corresponding CTG limits
and applicability thresholds for each category of VOC sources covered
by a CTG document, other than the two CTG documents discussed above. As
discussed in our TSD, we conclude that existing District rules require
the implementation of RACT for each category of VOC sources covered by
a CTG document (other than the two discussed above) located in the
South Coast and Coachella Valley. For the Surface Coating Operations at
Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Facilities CTG and the paper coating
portion of the 2007 Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings CTG, we have
reviewed the District's evaluation of its sources as described in the
2017 RACT Supplement and concur with the District's findings. As such,
we propose approval of the District's two negative declarations
included in the 2017 RACT Supplement.
2. Major Stationary Sources of VOC or NOX Emissions (Other
than RECLAIM Facilities)--South Coast and Coachella Valley
With respect to major stationary sources of VOC or NOX
emissions, the District provided supplemental information identifying
21 new major Title V sources since its 2006 RACT SIP certification and
provided a list of equipment at these facilities that emit greater than
5 tons per year. The District concluded that all the identified
equipment were covered by command-and-control VOC or NOX
rules that implement RACT. The District's efforts to identify all new
major sources appears to be thorough, and we agree that the District's
command-and-control VOC and NOX rules approved in the SIP
require implementation of RACT for all major non-CTG VOC and
NOX sources in the South Coast and Coachella Valley to which
those rules apply. Generally, major NOX sources in the South
Coast and two major NOX sources in Coachella Valley are not
subject to the District's command-and-control rules, but are subject to
a set of rules establishing a cap-and-trade program.\4\ Our evaluation
of these sources for compliance with the RACT requirement is covered in
the following sections of this document.
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\4\ Certain sources such as fire-fighting facilities, police
facilities, and public transit remain covered under SCAQMD's
command-and-control rules and are exempted from the cap-and-trade
program. See Rule 2001.
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3. RECLAIM Facilities in the South Coast
Within the South Coast, major NOX sources are included
in SCAQMD's Regulation XX (``Regional Clean Air Incentives Market
(RECLAIM)'') program. The District adopted the RECLAIM program in 1993
to reduce emissions from the largest stationary sources of
NOX and sulfur oxides (SOX) emissions through a
market-based trading program that establishes annual declining
NOX and SOX allocations (also called ``facility
caps'') and allows covered facilities to comply with their facility
caps by installing pollution control equipment, changing operations, or
purchasing RECLAIM trading credits (RTCs) from the RECLAIM market.
Section 40440 of the California Health and Safety Code (CH&SC) requires
the District to monitor advances in best available retrofit control
technology (BARCT) and periodically to reassess the overall facility
caps to ensure that the facility caps are equivalent, in the aggregate,
to BARCT emission levels imposed on affected sources.\5\ Facilities
subject to RECLAIM are exempted from a number of District command-and-
control (also referred to as ``prohibitory'') rules that otherwise
apply to sources of NOX and SOX emissions in the
South Coast.\6\ With certain exceptions, facilities located outside of
the South Coast but within SCAQMD jurisdiction (e.g., facilities in
Coachella Valley) are not included in the RECLAIM program. As of the
2015 compliance year, the most recent compliance year fully audited,
there are approximately 268 facilities in the RECLAIM NOX
program.\7\
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\5\ BARCT is defined as ``an emission limitation that is based
on the maximum degree of reduction achievable taking into account
environmental, energy, and economic impacts by each class or
category of source.'' CH&SC section 40406. For the purposes of
comparison, the EPA defines RACT as the lowest emission limitation
that a particular source is capable of meeting by the application of
control technology that is reasonably available considering
technological and economic feasibility. 44 FR 53762 (September 17,
1979). As such, we generally find that BARCT level of control meets
or exceeds RACT level of control.
\6\ See District Rule 2001 (``Applicability''), as amended May
6, 2005. Exemptions from RECLAIM, such as the exemption for certain
facilities located in Coachella Valley, are listed in Rule 2001(i).
\7\ See page 4 of the 2017 RACT Supplement.
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Under longstanding EPA interpretation of the CAA, a market-based
cap and trade program may satisfy RACT requirements by ensuring that
the level of emission reductions resulting from implementation of the
program will be equal, in the aggregate, to those reductions expected
from the direct application of RACT on all affected sources within the
nonattainment area.\8\ The EPA approved the RECLAIM program into the
California SIP in June 1998 based in part on a conclusion that the
NOX emission caps in the program satisfied the RACT
requirements of CAA section 182(b)(2) and (f) for covered
NOX emission sources in the aggregate.\9\ In 2005 and 2010,
the District adopted revisions to the RECLAIM program, which the EPA
approved in 2006 and 2011, respectively, based in part on conclusions
that the revisions continued
[[Page 27454]]
to satisfy RACT requirements.\10\ We refer to the current
NOX RECLAIM program as approved into the SIP as the ``2010
RECLAIM program.'' \11\
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\8\ 59 FR 16690 (April 7, 1994) and the EPA, ``Improving Air
Quality with Economic Incentive Programs,'' EPA-452/R-01-001
(January 2001), at Section 16.7 and 80 FR 12264, 12279 (March 6,
2015).
\9\ 61 FR 57834 (November 8, 1996) and 63 FR 32621 (June 15,
1998).
\10\ 71 FR 51120 (August 29, 2006) and 76 FR 50128 (August 12,
2011).
\11\ The RECLAIM program is codified by the District in
Regulation XX, which includes a number of individual rules, such as
Rule 2001 (``Applicability'') and Rule 2002 (``Allocations for
Oxides of Nitrogen (NOX) and Oxides of Sulfur
(SOX)'' and many others. Herein, we refer to the ``2010
RECLAIM program,'' because the most recent SIP-approved RECLAIM rule
amendments were adopted by the District on November 5, 2010. The
2010 amendments only affected certain sections of Rule 2002
pertaining to SOX emissions, and thus, the ``2010 RECLAIM
program'' reflects other amendments by the District that we approved
prior to that time and that were unaffected by the 2010 amendments.
For instance, with respect to NOX allocations, the most
recent SIP-approved amendments that are part of the ``2010 RECLAIM
program'' were adopted by the District on January 7, 2005.
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The 2016 AQMP RACT SIP relies on the 2010 RECLAIM program to
satisfy the RACT requirements for major NOX sources in the
South Coast. With respect to such sources, we initially concluded, as
described in our November 3, 2016 proposed rule, 81 FR 76547, at 76549,
that the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP had failed to demonstrate that the 2010
RECLAIM program had achieved NOX emissions reductions equal,
in the aggregate, to those reductions expected from the direct
application of RACT on all major NOX sources in the South
Coast. We based our initial conclusion on information contained in
SCAQMD's December 2015 Draft Final Staff Report (``2015 staff report'')
revising Regulation XX that indicated that further reductions in the
NOX RECLAIM emissions cap were needed to achieve BARCT.\12\
Given that BARCT level of control by definition meets or exceeds RACT
level of control, we could have safely concluded that the 2010 RECLAIM
program meets RACT level of control if it had been demonstrated to
meet, in the aggregate, BARCT level of control. In light of the
information in the 2015 staff report, however, there was evidence that
the RECLAIM program had not achieved BARCT level of control, and thus
we had inadequate basis to conclude that the 2010 RECLAIM program had
achieved RACT level of control. The use of the BARCT level of control,
rather than RACT, as the criterion for approval or disapproval was
necessary for the purposes of the November 3, 2016 proposed rule
because no specific demonstration of RECLAIM as meeting the RACT
requirement had been submitted as part of the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP.
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\12\ Draft Final Staff Report, Proposed Amendments to Regulation
XX Regional Clean Air Initiatives Market (RECLAIM) NOX
RECLAIM, December 4, 2015 https://www.aqmd.gov/docs/default-source/Agendas/Governing-Board/2015/2015-dec4-030.pdf?sfvrsn=9.
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In response to our November 3, 2016 proposed partial disapproval of
the South Coast RACT demonstration, and also to respond to the EPA's
April 14, 2016 disapproval of the South Coast RACM/RACT demonstration
for the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS, both of which were premised on the
same deficient showing with respect to major NOX sources in
the South Coast that are subject to RECLAIM, the District has provided,
in the 2017 RACT Supplement, a specific demonstration of how the 2010
RECLAIM program has achieved, in the aggregate, RACT level of control
for major NOX sources in the South Coast. In the 2017 RACT
Supplement, the District has also evaluated the amendments in the
RECLAIM program adopted by the District in 2015 and 2016 for compliance
with the RACT requirement.\13\
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\13\ On March 17, 2017, CARB submitted amended RECLAIM rules
reflecting revisions adopted by the District on December 4, 2015
(significant revisions reducing total NOX RTC holdings by
12 tpd by 2022), February 5, 2016 (minor revisions to certain
definitions), and October 7, 2016 (new provisions intended to
prevent the majority of facility shutdown credits from entering the
market) to the EPA as a revision to the California SIP. The EPA has
recently proposed to approve the amended rules. See 82 FR 25996
(June 6, 2017).
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When the NOX RECLAIM program was first adopted, RECLAIM
facilities were issued NOX annual allocations that declined
annually from 1993 until 2003 and remained constant after 2003. The
ending RTC allocation (for all program sources) in 2003 was set at 34.2
tons per day (tpd). The annual allocations reflected the levels of
BARCT to be in place at the RECLAIM facilities, and were the result of
a BARCT analysis conducted in 1993.
As noted above, state law also requires the District to monitor
advances in BARCT and to periodically reassess the overall facility
caps to ensure that RECLAIM facilities achieve the same or greater
emission reductions that would have occurred under a command-and-
control approach. In 2005, the District examined the RECLAIM program
and found that additional reduction opportunities existed due to the
advancement of control technology.
As part of the 2005 NOX BARCT reassessment, the District
examined the most stringent emission limits in other air pollution
control district rules and other requirements for equipment categories
in the RECLAIM program in an effort to determine the appropriate mass
emission reductions to reflect BARCT. District staff also examined
types of retrofit technologies that had been achieved in practice
regardless of whether these controls are required in SIP approved
rules. As a result, the District identified new BARCT levels for six
source categories in the NOX RECLAIM program and established
a new ending RTC allocation of 26.5 tpd, which represented the
allowable programmatic emissions after BARCT implementation. The
methodology for determining the ending RTC allocation relied on using
actual emissions that are adjusted for growth and BARCT. Under amended
rules adopted by the District in 2005, the facility annual allocations
(in the aggregate) were reduced in annual increments from 34.2 tpd to
26.5 tpd between 2007 and 2011.
To demonstrate that the 2010 RECLAIM program (reflecting 2005
NOX RECLAIM rule amendments) implemented RACT, the District
re-examined the BARCT reevaluation that it conducted in 2005 and
determined that, for certain source categories, the BARCT allocation
level was essentially equivalent to RACT, but that, for certain other
source categories, the BARCT allocation level was beyond RACT because
there were no other rules in the District itself or any other
California air district for these specific categories that were more
stringent than the limits established under the original RECLAIM
program in 1993 (and fully implemented by 2003). The District re-
calculated a hypothetical ending annual RTC allocation (of 30.9 tpd)
reflecting RACT implementation (rather than BARCT) and determined that,
based on audited actual NOX emissions in 2012, the 2010
RECLAIM program achieved a 16% reduction in actual NOX
emissions from RECLAIM sources from 2006 to 2012 whereas only a 9.6%
reduction (i.e., 34.2 tpd down to 30.9 tpd) was necessary to meet the
RACT requirement. On that basis, the District concludes, in the 2017
RACT Supplement, that the 2010 RECLAIM program met the RACT requirement
for major NOX sources in the South Coast.
We have reviewed the District's evaluation of the 2010 RECLAIM
program for compliance with the RACT requirement and find that the
District's approach, assumptions, and calculation methods are
reasonable. Based on the District's analysis, we conclude that the
NOX RECLAIM program, as amended in 2005, provided for
NOX reductions equivalent, in the aggregate, to those
reductions expected from the direct application of RACT on all major
NOX sources in the South Coast.
However, the emissions limits that form the basis for the
District's re-examination of the RECLAIM program as described above are
predicated on the
[[Page 27455]]
2005 BARCT reevaluation of the program. To comply with the RACT
requirement for the 2008 ozone standard, for which designations were
promulgated in 2012, the RECLAIM program had to be re-evaluated post-
2012 for potential improvements in control technology since 2005. In
2015, the District conducted such a reevaluation and amended the
RECLAIM rules to establish a new ending RTC allocation of 14.5 tpd
(reflecting BARCT implementation) to be achieved incrementally from
2017 through 2022.
In the 2017 RACT Supplement, the District also provides a
demonstration of how the RECLAIM program, as amended in 2015, meets the
RACT requirement in the aggregate. To do so, the District performed a
similar type of analysis as that described above for the 2005 RECLAIM
amendments to determine a hypothetical ending RTC allocation reflecting
RACT implementation (rather than BARCT) of 14.8 tpd. Because the ending
RTC allocation (adopted by the District in 2015 and implementing BARCT)
of 14.5 tpd is less than (i.e., more stringent than) the hypothetical
RTC allocation (implementing RACT) of 14.8 tpd, the District concludes
that the program as amended in 2015 meets the RACT requirement.
We have reviewed the District's approach, assumptions, and methods
to the updated RECLAIM program and agree that, as amended in 2015, the
RECLAIM program provides for emissions reductions equivalent, in the
aggregate, to those reductions expected from the direct application of
RACT on all major NOX sources in the South Coast and thereby
meets the RACT requirement for such sources for the purposes of the
2008 ozone standard.\14\
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\14\ While not required for our evaluation of the 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP and 2017 RACT Supplement for compliance with the RACT
requirement for the South Coast and Coachella Valley for the 2008
ozone standard, we also take note of several recent developments
that pertain to the RECLAIM program. On March 3, 2017, the District
adopted the 2016 Air Quality Management Plan and in so doing
directed staff to modify the 2016 AQMP NOX RECLAIM
measure to achieve an additional 5 tpd NOX emission
reduction as soon as feasible, and not later than 2025, to
transition the RECLAIM program to a command-and-control regulatory
structure requiring BARCT level controls as soon as practicable. See
SCAQMD, Resolution No. 17-2 (``A Resolution of the South Coast Air
Quality Management District (SCAQMD or District) Governing Board
certifying the Final Program Environmental Impact Report (PEIR) for
the 2016 Air Quality Management Plan (AQMP or Plan), and adopting
the 2016 AQMP, which is to be submitted into the California State
Implementation Plan (SIP)''), March 3, 2017, page 17.
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We also agree with the District that RECLAIM rule amendments in
October 2016 help to ensure the success of the program in achieving
BARCT-equivalent (and RACT-equivalent) reductions by preventing the
majority of facility shutdown RTCs from entering the market and
delaying the installation of pollution controls at other NOX
RECLAIM facilities.
4. RECLAIM Facilities in Coachella Valley
As noted above, unlike major NOX sources in the South
Coast, major NOX sources in Coachella Valley are generally
not eligible to participate in the RECLAIM program but rather are
subject to the District's prohibitory rules.\15\ The RECLAIM rules,
however, establish an exception for electric generating facilities in
Coachella Valley that submit complete permit applications on or after
January 1, 2001. Such facilities may elect to enter the RECLAIM
program, and to date, two facilities in Coachella Valley have elected
to enter the program.
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\15\ District Regulation XX (``Regional Clean Air Incentives
Market (RECLAIM)'', Rule 2001 (``Applicability''), paragraph
(i)(1)(I).
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In our November 3, 2016 proposed rule, we did not extend the
deficiency we identified in the RACT demonstration for the South Coast
to Coachella Valley because we found that the two RECLAIM facilities
that are located there were both equipped with control technology that
meets or exceeds RACT level of control.\16\ The basic premise for our
proposed conclusion in this regard was that the RACT requirement was
met through permit conditions requiring RACT level of control because
such permit conditions are enforceable because they were issued under
SIP-approved New Source Review (NSR) rules. However, our rationale was
mistaken. Generally, NSR permit conditions alone are not sufficient to
meet the RACT requirement even where the conditions require control
technology that represent RACT level of control because permit
conditions are subject to revision outside of the SIP revision process
and because permits can expire whereas SIP limits must be permanent
until revised or rescinded through a SIP revision. On the other hand,
permit conditions that require RACT level of control at a given
facility may suffice to meet the RACT requirement if they are submitted
as a SIP revision and approved into the SIP.
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\16\ See footnote 8 of our November 3, 2016 proposed rule at 81
FR 76547, at 76549.
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In subsequent communications with the District, we noted our
mistaken rationale with respect to RACT compliance and the two
Coachella Valley facilities. In response, the District reviewed the
permits for the facilities and included the relevant permit conditions
for each as appendices A and B to the 2017 RACT Supplement. The permit
conditions submitted by the District pertain to specified
NOX emission limits ranging from 2.5 to 5 parts per million
(ppm) for the gas turbines, control technology (selective catalytic
reduction (SCR)), and monitoring, among other elements. The District's
analysis indicates that SCR is generally identified as an emission
control technology to achieve ``best available control technology''
emission limits in the range of 2 to 5 ppm for gas turbines, and thus
the controls meet or exceed the requirements for RACT. We have reviewed
the permit conditions (and SCAQMD's analysis) and find that they
provide for RACT level of control (or better) at the two RECLAIM
facilities in Coachella Valley. As such, we propose to approve the
permit conditions as part of the SIP.
C. Public Comment and Proposed Action
As authorized in section 110(k)(3) of the Act, and based on the
rationale discussed above, the EPA proposes to approve the 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP and 2017 RACT Supplement, including the RACT demonstrations
provided in the two documents, negative declarations for two CTG source
categories, and certain permit conditions for two power plants in
Coachella Valley, because we believe they fulfill the RACT SIP
requirements under CAA sections 182(b) and (f) and 40 CFR 51.1112 for
the South Coast and Coachella Valley for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. As noted
above, our proposed action relies upon our evaluation of the public
draft version of the 2017 RACT Supplement and we will not take final
action until it is adopted and submitted to us as a revision to the
California SIP. If the 2017 RACT Supplement that we have evaluated were
to be revised significantly prior to adoption and submittal, we will
need to reconsider our proposed action accordingly. We are withdrawing
our previous proposal (61 FR 76547, November 3, 2016) to partially
approve and partially disapprove the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and are now
proposing full approval because we have concluded that the 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP, as supplemented by the 2017 RACT Supplement, now meets the
relevant CAA requirements.\17\ If you submitted
[[Page 27456]]
comments on our previous proposed action and believe that those
comments remain relevant, you will need to resubmit your comments
within the public comment period for today's proposed action.
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\17\ Although we are withdrawing our November 3, 2016 proposed
action, our TSD associated with that proposed action still contains
pertinent information that summarizes our evaluation of SCAQMD's
2016 AQMP RACT SIP.
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We will accept comments from the public on this proposal until July
17, 2017. If we take final action to approve the submitted documents,
our final action will incorporate them into the federally-enforceable
SIP.
III. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is proposing to include in a final EPA rule
regulatory text that includes incorporation by reference. In accordance
with requirements of 1 CFR 51.5, the EPA is proposing to incorporate by
reference certain permit conditions for two stationary sources in
Coachella Valley as described above in preamble. The EPA has made, and
will continue to make, these materials available through
www.regulations.gov and at the EPA Region IX Office (please contact the
person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this preamble for more information).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and
applicable federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this proposed action merely proposes to approve SIP
revisions 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 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 Clean Air Act; and
Does not provide the EPA with the discretionary authority
to address disproportionate human health or environmental effects with
practical, appropriate, and legally permissible methods under Executive
Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian
reservation land or in any other area where the EPA or an Indian tribe
has demonstrated that a tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the proposed rule does not have tribal implications and
will not impose substantial direct costs on tribal governments or
preempt tribal law as specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: June 7, 2017.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2017-12469 Filed 6-14-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P