Approval of California Air Plan Revisions, South Coast Air Quality Management District, 43850-43858 [2017-19693]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 181 / Wednesday, September 20, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: September 8, 2017.
Cathy Stepp,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 7.
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, EPA amends 40 CFR part 52
as set forth below:
Subpart CC—Nebraska
2. Amend § 52.1420(e) by adding
entries ‘‘(32)’’, ‘‘(33)’’ and ‘‘(34)’’ in
numerical order to read as follows:
■
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
§ 52.1420
*
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Identification of Plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED NEBRASKA NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS
Name of nonregulatory
SIP provision
Applicable
geographic or
nonattainment
area
State
submittal
date
*
(32) Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2010 NO2
NAAQS.
*
Statewide ...........
(33) Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS.
Statewide ...........
8/22/13
9/20/17, [Insert Federal
Register citation].
(34) Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2010
PM2.5 NAAQS.
Statewide ...........
2/22/16
9/20/17, [Insert Federal
Register citation].
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2016–0215; FRL–9967–45–
Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan
Revisions, South Coast Air Quality
Management District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking final action 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.
DATES: This rule will be effective on
October 20, 2017.
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2/7/13
*
9/20/17, [Insert Federal
Register citation].
Explanation
*
*
*
[EPA–R07–OAR–2017–0477;
FRL–9967–95-Region 7]. This action addresses the following CAA
elements 110(a)(2) (A) through (C), (D) (i) (I)—
Prongs 1 and 2, (D)(i)(II)—prong 3, (D)(ii), (E)
through (H), and (J) through (M).
[EPA–R07–OAR–2017–0477;
FRL–9967–95-Region 7]. This action addresses the following CAA
elements 110(a)(2) (A) through (C), (D) (i) (II)—
Prong 3, (D) (ii), (E) through (H), and (J) through
(M).
[EPA–R07–OAR–2017–0477;
FRL–9967–95-Region 7]. This action addresses the following CAA
elements 110(a)(2) (A) through (C), (D) (i) (II)—
Prong 3, (D) (ii), (E) through (H), and (J) through
(M).
The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket No.
EPA–R09–OAR–2016–0215. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov Web
site. Although listed on the Web site,
some information is not publicly
available, e.g., Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available through https://
www.regulations.gov, or please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section for
additional availability information.
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. 2017–19931 Filed 9–19–17; 8:45 am]
SUMMARY:
*
EPA approval date
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. Proposed Action
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
III. Final Action
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
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I. Proposed Action
On June 15, 2017 (82 FR 27451),
under section 110(k)(3) of the Clean Air
Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’), the EPA proposed
to approve the ‘‘2016 AQMP Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
Demonstration’’ (‘‘2016 AQMP RACT
SIP’’), submitted to the EPA by the
California Air Resources Board (CARB)
on July 18, 2014 1 for approval as a
revision to the California SIP, as
supplemented by the public draft
versions of the ‘‘Supplemental RACM/
RACT Analysis for the NOX RECLAIM
Program’’ (‘‘2017 RACT Supplement’’)
and two negative declarations submitted
by CARB on May 22, 2017.2 We had
previously proposed a partial approval
and partial disapproval of the 2016 Air
1 The SCAQMD adopted its 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP on June 4, 2014.
2 CARB’s May 22, 2017 submittal contained
public draft versions of the 2017 RACT Supplement
and negative declarations along with a request that
the EPA provide parallel processing of the
documents concurrently with the state’s public
process. See footnote 1 in our June 15, 2017
proposed rule. In our June 15, 2017 proposed rule,
we erroneously described the 2017 RACT
Supplement as including the two negative
declarations. The 2017 RACT Supplement includes
additional emissions analyses and two appendices
that contain certain permit conditions for two
specific stationary sources in Coachella Valley but
does not include the negative declarations. The
negative declarations were included in CARB’s May
22, 2017 submittal but as a separate document.
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Quality Management Plan (AQMP)
RACT SIP,3 but withdrew that proposal
because we found that the 2017 RACT
Supplement and recent amendments to
certain District rules adequately
addressed the deficiency that had been
the basis for the earlier proposed partial
disapproval. References herein to the
‘‘proposed rule’’ or ‘‘proposed action’’
refer to our proposed action published
on June 15, 2017, unless otherwise
stated.
Our proposed rule was based on our
evaluation of the public draft versions of
the 2017 RACT Supplement and
negative declarations, and we indicated
that we would not take final action until
CARB submitted the final adopted
versions to the EPA as a SIP revision.
On July 7, 2017, the SCAQMD held a
public hearing and approved the 2017
RACT Supplement and two negative
declarations and submitted the approval
package to CARB for adoption and
submittal to the EPA. On July 26, 2017,
the CARB Executive Officer adopted the
2017 RACT Supplement and negative
declarations as a revision to the
California SIP and, on July 27, 2017,
submitted them to the EPA for approval,
thereby satisfying the condition 4 for
final EPA action.
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 published on November 3,
2016 (81 FR 76547).5 The final versions
of the 2017 RACT Supplement (which
includes additional analyses and certain
permit conditions for two specific
stationary sources in Coachella Valley)
and negative declarations include nonsubstantive changes from the public
draft versions that were the basis for our
June 15, 2017 proposed rule. Lastly,
CARB’s July 27, 2017 SIP revision
submittal includes documentation of the
public process followed by the
SCAQMD to approve the 2017 RACT
Supplement and related negative
declarations and documentation of the
adoption by CARB of the 2017 RACT
Supplement and negative declarations
as revisions to the California SIP.
On August 7, 2017, we found the 2017
RACT Supplement including certain
conditions from permits for two specific
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3 See
81 FR 76547 (November 3, 2016).
explained in our June 15, 2017 proposed
rulemaking, the EPA is following established
procedures for parallel processing that allows us to
approve a state provision so long as it was adopted
as proposed with no significant changes.
5 As noted above, we have withdrawn our
November 3, 2016 proposed rule. See the summary
section of our June 15, 2017 proposed rule at 82 FR
27451.
4 As
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stationary sources located in Coachella
Valley, and two negative declarations
met the completeness criteria in 40 CFR
part 51, appendix V.6 Today, we take
final action on the 2016 AQMP RACT
SIP submitted on July 18, 2014 as
supplemented by the 2017 RACT
Supplement and negative declarations
submitted on July 27, 2017.
In our proposed rule, we explained
that CAA sections 182(b)(2) and (f)
require that SIPs for ozone
nonattainment areas classified as
Moderate or above implement RACT for
any source covered by a Control
Techniques Guidelines 7 (CTG)
document and for any major source of
volatile organic compounds (VOC) or
nitrogen oxides (NOX).8 The EPA’s
implementing regulations for the 2008
ozone NAAQS explain how these RACT
requirements will be applied in areas
classified as Moderate or above for the
2008 ozone NAAQS. See 40 CFR
51.1112.
We further explained that the areas
under discussion here are subject to the
RACT requirement as the South Coast
Air Basin (‘‘South Coast’’) is classified
as an Extreme nonattainment area and
the Coachella Valley portion of
Riverside County (‘‘Coachella Valley’’)
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). SCAQMD implements the RACT
requirements for South Coast and
Coachella Valley because it is
authorized under state law to regulate
stationary sources in those areas.
Therefore, the SCAQMD must, at a
minimum, adopt requirements to
achieve emissions reductions equivalent
to 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
6 As previously indicated in our June 15, 2017
proposed rulemaking, SCAQMD’s 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP was deemed complete by operation of
law on January 18, 2015.
7 CTGs provide the EPA’s recommendations on
how to control emissions of VOC from a specific
type of product or process in an ozone
nonattainment area. Each CTG includes emissions
limitations based on RACT to address ozone
nonattainment area requirements.
8 VOC and NO together produce ground-level
X
ozone, smog and particulate matter (PM), which
harm human health and the environment.
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ozone nonattainment area (CAA section
182(d) and (f)).
In our proposed rule, we evaluated
the 2016 AQMP RACT Demonstration,
2017 RACT Supplement and negative
declarations in light of the above
requirements and concluded that,
collectively, they meet the RACT
requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and (f) and 40 CFR 51.1112 for the
South Coast and Coachella Valley
nonattainment areas for the 2008 ozone
standard. In this document, we provide
a summary of our evaluation. For a more
detailed discussion, please see the
proposed rule at 82 FR 27451, pages
27453 through 27455.
First, based on our review of the
documentation provided by the
SCAQMD in the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
and the negative declarations, we agreed
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 or are covered by
negative declarations for which we were
proposing approval. In this action, we
affirm the finding we made in the
proposed rule with respect to the CTG
portion of the RACT requirement and
approve the two negative declarations as
a revision to the California SIP.
Next, with respect to major stationary
sources of VOC or NOX emissions, we
divided the evaluation into three parts:
major non-CTG VOC and NOX
stationary sources that are subject to
District’s command-and-control VOC
and NOX rules, major sources located in
the South Coast that are subject to the
District’s cap-and-trade program
referred to as the Regional Clean Air
Incentives Market (‘‘RECLAIM’’)
program, and major sources located in
Coachella Valley that are subject to
RECLAIM.
With respect to the first part of the
evaluation of RACT for major sources,
we reviewed the information provided
by the District regarding new major Title
V sources receiving permits since the
District’s previous RACT SIP approval
and agreed with the District 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. We affirm
that finding in this final action.
In connection with the second part of
the evaluation, we described RECLAIM
as a program adopted by the District to
reduce emissions from the largest
stationary sources of NOX and sulfur
oxides (SOX) emissions through a
market-based trading program that
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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. We noted that
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; 9 that
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; 10 and
that, 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.
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,11 and, consistent with our
longstanding interpretation of the CAA,
we approved the RECLAIM program in
1998 and then, as amended, in 2006 and
2011, based in part on the conclusion
that RECLAIM continued to satisfy
9 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. For additional
background, see the technical support document
(TSD) associated with our June 15, 2017 proposed
rule explaining how SCAQMD’s RECLAIM
program, as amended in 2015, fulfills the RACT
requirement based on the District’s re-evaluation of
the 2015 BARCT reassessment in terms of RACT,
rather than BARCT.
10 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).
11 See 59 FR 16690 (April 7, 1994) and the EPA’s,
‘‘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).
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RACT requirements.12 More recently, in
the Agency’s 2008 Ozone SIP
Requirements Rule, 80 FR 12264, at
12278–12283 (March 6, 2015), the EPA
re-affirmed its longstanding
interpretation that a market-based cap
and trade program may satisfy RACT
requirements by ensuring equal
aggregate reductions; and in this action,
we are approving SIP revisions that rely
in part on such a program to meet the
RACT requirement because we find the
program consistent with our 2008
Ozone SIP Requirements Rule.
As noted above, state law 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, found
that additional reduction opportunities
existed due to the advancement of
control technology, and amended the
RECLAIM rules (i.e., District Regulation
XX) to reduce the facility annual
allocations (in the aggregate) for NOX
from 34.2 tons per day (tpd) to 26.5 tpd.
In 2015, the District conducted another
reevaluation and amended the
RECLAIM rules to further reduce the
NOX allocations (in the aggregate) from
26.5 tpd to 14.5 tpd to be achieved
through downward incremental
adjustments from 2017 through 2022. At
the time of our proposed rule, the EPA
had only proposed to approve the
RECLAIM rules that reflect the 2015
amendments reducing the aggregate
facility allocations to 14.5 tpd of NOX,
but the Agency has since taken final
action, and the RECLAIM rules, as
amended in 2015, are now approved
into the California SIP.13
In the 2017 RACT Supplement, the
District provided a demonstration of
how the RECLAIM program, as
amended in 2015, meets the RACT
requirement in the aggregate. To do so,
the District re-examined the BARCT
reevaluation that it conducted in 2015
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
12 71 FR 51120 (August 29, 2006) and 76 FR
50128 (August 12, 2011).
13 See pre-publication version of the final rule,
approving the 2015 amended RECLAIM rules, that
was signed on August 15, 2017 by the Acting
Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX.
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RECLAIM program in effect prior to the
2015 amendments. The District then recalculated hypothetical facility annual
allocations (in the aggregate) reflecting
RACT implementation (rather than
BARCT) of 14.8 tpd. Because the facility
annual allocations (in the aggregate) for
NOX adopted by the District in 2015
(implementing BARCT) of 14.5 tpd is
less than (i.e., more stringent than) the
hypothetical allocations (implementing
RACT) of 14.8 tpd, the District
concluded that the program as amended
in 2015 meets the RACT requirement.
In our proposed rule, based on our
review of the District’s approach,
assumptions, and methods to the
updated RECLAIM program, we agreed
that, as amended in 2015, the RECLAIM
program provides for emissions
reductions greater, 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 affirm that
finding in this final action and approve
the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP, as
supplemented in the 2017 RACT
Supplement.
Lastly, with respect to the two major
NOX sources in Coachella Valley that
are not otherwise subject to District
RACT-level command-and-control
regulations, we proposed approval of
certain permit conditions that were
included in appendices A and B to the
2017 RACT Supplement. As described
in the proposed rule, the permit
conditions submitted by the District for
these facilities (both of which are
electric generating facilities) 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 indicated 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 reviewed
the permit conditions (and SCAQMD’s
14 We also agree with the District that RECLAIM
rule amendments in October 2016 help to ensure
the success of the program in achieving BARCTequivalent (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. The EPA recently approved
RECLAIM amendments, including the October 2016
amendments, as a revision to the California SIP. See
pre-publication version of the final rule approving
the RECLAIM rule amendments signed on August
15, 2017.
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analysis) and found that they provide
for RACT level of control (or better) at
the two subject facilities in Coachella
Valley. In this action, we affirm that
finding and are approving into the SIP
the submitted permit conditions for the
two specific major NOX sources in
Coachella Valley.
For more background information and
a more extensive discussion of the 2016
AQMP RACT Demonstration, the 2017
RACT Supplement, and negative
declarations and our evaluation of them
for compliance with CAA RACT
requirements, please see our proposed
rule and related technical support
document (TSD).
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II. Public Comments and EPA
Responses
The EPA’s proposed action provided
a 30-day public comment period which
ended on July 17, 2017. During this
period, we received comments from
Earthjustice, which submitted
comments on behalf of the Sierra
Club.15 In the following paragraphs, we
summarize the comments and provide
our responses.
Comment #1: Earthjustice contends
that a cap-and-trade program, such as
RECLAIM, can never provide the basis
for compliance with the RACT
requirement in CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and 182(f) based on the plain language
of the CAA that, according to
Earthjustice, requires all major sources
to implement RACT, i.e., RACT must be
met by each individual major source
and cannot be met by achieving
equivalent levels of emission reductions
across the nonattainment area. In
support of this contention, Earthjustice
highlights the word ‘‘all’’ in CAA
section 182(b)(2) in connection with
implementation of RACT at major
sources and cites legislative history for
the CAA Amendments of 1990 that
purports to emphasize the applicability
of the RACT requirement to all major
sources of NOX in an ozone
nonattainment area.
Earthjustice also views the EPA’s
longstanding definition of RACT as
supporting an interpretation of the
RACT requirement as applicable to each
and every major NOX source, not a
collective emission limitation for an
entire class of sources located across a
nonattainment area or an entire state or
region. Earthjustice also claims that
reliance on emissions trading to meet
the RACT requirement for major NOX
sources is tantamount to creating a NOX
15 Earthjustice submitted a letter dated July 17,
2017, on behalf of the Sierra Club. These comments
are in the docket at www.regulations.gov, docket ID
EPA–R09–OAR–2016–0215.
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exemption that is inconsistent with the
explicit NOX exemptions found at CAA
section 182(f). Lastly, Earthjustice cites
the EPA’s November 3, 2016 proposed
rule as further support that emissions
averaging in the South Coast does not
actually provide RACT-level reductions.
Response #1: We disagree that a capand-trade program can never be
approved as meeting the RACT
requirement of CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and 182(f). First, we note that our action
today is consistent with our past
approval actions on the RECLAIM rules
and amendments as meeting the RACT
requirement and, more recently, with
our SIP requirements rule for the 2008
ozone standard (‘‘2008 Ozone SIP
Requirements Rule’’) that indicates that
a cap-and-trade approach remains a
viable option to comply with the RACT
requirement. More specifically, in our
final 2008 Ozone SIP Requirements
Rule, we indicated that states have the
option of conducting a technical
analysis for a nonattainment area
considering the emissions controls
required by a regional cap-and-trade
program, and demonstrating that
compliance by certain sources
participating in the cap-and-trade
program results in actual emission
reductions in the particular
nonattainment area that are equal to or
greater than the emission reductions
that would result if RACT were applied
to an individual source or source
category within the nonattainment area.
See 80 FR 12264, at 12279 (March 6,
2015). For additional discussion of this
option, please see our proposed 2008
Ozone SIP Requirements Rule at 78 FR
34178, at 34192–34193 (June 6, 2013).16
Second, CAA section 182(b)(2), in
relevant part, provides that the state
shall submit a revision to the SIP to
include provisions to require the
implementation of RACT under section
172(c)(1) of this title with respect to,
among other categories, all other major
stationary sources of VOC that are
located in the area, and Section 182(f)
extends the requirements for major
stationary sources of VOC to major
stationary sources of NOX, unless
16 The EPA’s position that states may comply
with the RACT requirement in the aggregate
through a cap-and-trade program is part of the
ongoing legal challenge to our 2008 ozone
implementation rule filed in the D.C. Circuit Court
of Appeals. In the consolidated case, South Coast
Air Quality Management District v. EPA, D.C. Cir.,
No. 15–1115, the environmental petitioners object
to reliance on cap-and-trade programs to meet the
section 182 RACT requirement. The Agency’s
arguments in support of its interpretation of the
RACT requirement with respect to cap-and-trade
programs are found in the respondent’s brief dated
September 13, 2016. Oral argument in the D.C.
Circuit for the national case is scheduled for
September 14, 2017.
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43853
exempted under the terms of section
182(f). As such, CAA section 172(c)(1) is
explicitly brought into section 182(b)(2)
and affects how it is interpreted.
Specifically, section 172(c)(1), in
relevant part, requires SIP revisions for
nonattainment areas to ‘‘provide for the
implementation of all reasonably
available control measures as
expeditiously as practicable (including
such reductions in emissions from
existing sources in the area as may be
obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available
control technology).’’
The plain language of section
172(c)(1)—‘‘such reductions . . . as may
be obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available
control technology’’—does not require
reductions from each individual source
but rather only requires areas to achieve
the same level of emissions reductions
from stationary sources that installing
reasonably available control technology
would yield. In other words, as long as
the level of emissions reductions
obtained in the area from stationary
sources equals or exceeds the level of
emissions reductions that would be
achieved through implementation of
RACT at existing sources, then the
RACT requirement of section 172(c)(1)
are met. See NRDC v. EPA, 571 F.3d
1245, 1256–58 (D.C. Cir. 2009).
Section 182(b)(2) simply prescribes a
more specific bar for the required level
of emissions reductions that must be
obtained. With respect to major
stationary sources of NOX, the bar for
the required level of emissions
reductions that must be obtained is
calculated based on the emissions
reductions that can be achieved through
implementation of RACT at major
stationary sources of NOX. Consistent
with section 172(c)(1), the emissions
reductions need not come from the
major NOX sources themselves so long
as an equal or greater level of emissions
reductions are obtained within the area.
As such, the plain language of sections
172(c)(1) and 182(b)(2) allows a capand-trade program to meet the RACT
requirements of those sections for major
NOX sources so long as the overall
emissions reductions that are obtained
equal or exceed that level of emissions
reductions that would have been
obtained through implementation of
RACT at the major NOX sources
themselves. The plain language of the
CAA supporting the EPA’s
interpretation negates the need to
consult the legislative history cited by
Earthjustice in its comment.
The area-wide—rather than
individual, source-specific—nature of
the RACT requirement is reinforced by
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CAA section 182(b)(2), which requires
states to revise their SIPs to adopt RACT
‘‘with respect to’’ specified categories of
VOC sources. The plain language of that
provision does not mandate emission
reductions from each individual source.
In contrast, the next subsection of that
same provision imposes individual,
source-specific requirements by
mandating that State Implementation
Plans ‘‘require all owners or operators of
gasoline dispensing systems to install
and operate . . . a system for gasoline
vapor recovery. . . .’’ See CAA section
182(b)(3).
Third, Earthjustice cites the EPA’s
longstanding definition of RACT as
support for its position, however, the
definition cited in the comment does
not require an individual, sourcespecific application of control
technology. Instead, it is used solely as
the beginning point for the extrapolation
of the total reductions that each
nonattainment area must achieve to
satisfy the section 172(c)(1) RACT
requirement.
Fourth, we also disagree with the
claim that reliance on emissions trading
to meet the RACT requirement for major
NOX sources is tantamount to creating a
NOX exemption and that such an
exemption is inconsistent with the
explicit NOX exemptions found at CAA
section 182(f). The RECLAIM program
in the South Coast provides no
exemption per se for major NOX
sources. Each such source must install
controls or purchase credits sufficient to
meet their annual allocation.
Lastly, we acknowledge Earthjustice’s
comment that our November 3, 2016
rulemaking proposed to partially
disapprove the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
because of deficiencies in the RECLAIM
rules. However, our proposed partial
disapproval was not based on the fact
that RECLAIM is an emissions averaging
program but rather on the evidence at
hand that suggested that the thencurrent SIP RECLAIM program did not
actually provide for the emissions
reductions necessary to achieve RACTlevel reductions. Since then, the District
has amended, and the EPA has
approved, the RECLAIM rules to
achieve greater aggregate emissions
reductions from the sources in the
program, and based on the District’s
evaluation of the amended program as
set forth in the 2017 RACT Supplement,
we have concluded that the RECLAIM
rules, as amended, meet the RACT
requirement in sections 182(b)(2) and
182(f) with respect to major stationary
sources of NOX in the South Coast.
Comment #2: Earthjustice contends
that approval of the South Coast RACT
demonstration would be arbitrary and
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capricious because the RECLAIM rules,
as amended in 2015, do not achieve
aggregate emissions reductions of NOX
equivalent to those that would be
achieved through implementation of
RACT level of control at each major
NOX source in the South Coast.
Earthjustice summarized that, as a part
of the District’s rule development
process culminating in the 2015
RECLAIM amendments, SCAQMD
analyzed whether its program achieved
Best Available Retrofit Control
Technology (BARCT) controls. The
commenter points out that the District’s
analysis identified refineries as having
the largest total NOX emissions and as
holding the largest percentage of RTCs,
but that the RECLAIM program had
excess RTCs that resulted in refinery
facilities not needing to achieve actual
emission reductions.
Earthjustice points out that
SCAQMD’s BARCT assessment
concluded that a 14 tpd ‘‘shave’’ from
the program was needed to be
equivalent to a traditional commandand-control regulatory approach.
Earthjustice further asserts that if
readily available BARCT equipment
were applied to sources of pollution in
the program, emissions would have
been at 9.5 tpd instead of 20.7 tpd.
Earthjustice comments that, although
the SCAQMD staff recommended a 14
tpd shave, the Governing Board adopted
a 12 tpd shave instead. Earthjustice
further states that the record shows that
the 12 tpd shave does not sufficiently
result in RACT level controls for the
NOX RECLAIM universe and that the
EPA has a record before it showing that
at least a 14 tpd shave is necessary to
achieve what the District confirmed was
necessary to assure implementation of
RACT-equivalent level of controls that
the BARCT assessment demonstrated
was necessary. Moreover, Earthjustice
states that the record shows that the
pace of the shave interferes with
attainment of the 2006 PM2.5 standard.
Response #2: We disagree with
Earthjustice’s implication that the terms
RACT and BARCT are interchangeable
and its assertion that the record shows
a 14 tpd shave is needed to meet RACT.
BARCT is a term used by the State of
California and 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.’’ 17 [Emphasis added.] By
17 California Health and Safety Code section
40406. Available at: https://leginfo.legislature.
ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?
sectionNum=40406.&lawCode=HSC.
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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). The
EPA has historically not treated these
terms interchangeably and has generally
found that BARCT level of control meets
or exceeds RACT level of control.18
We note that SCAQMD determined in
its December 4, 2015 Draft Final Staff
Report that only four out of an estimated
51 boilers/heaters were retrofitted with
selective catalytic reduction to reduce
NOX emissions to comply with
BARCT.19 The staff report does not
discuss RACT in the context of the
RECLAIM program. Therefore, we
disagree with the commenter that the
December 4, 2015 Draft Final Staff
Report or elsewhere in the record that
SCAQMD had determined that the 2015
amendments to the RECLAIM program
fail to implement RACT. The TSD
associated with our June 15, 2017
proposed rule explains how the
RECLAIM program, as amended in
2015, fulfills the RACT requirement
based on the District’s re-evaluation of
the 2015 BARCT reassessment in terms
of RACT, rather than BARCT. We find
the District evaluation of the amended
RECLAIM program to be acceptable as
the basis to conclude that the amended
program provides equivalent emissions
reductions in the aggregate to those that
would be achieved through
implementation of RACT at all major
NOX sources in the South Coast.
Lastly, we disagree with Earthjustice’s
assertion that the EPA should not
approve the South Coast RACT
demonstration because the pace of the
NOX shave would interfere with
18 See for example, 68 FR 52512 (September 4,
2003, comment #14: ‘‘What is the difference
between BARCT and RACT? . . . BARCT is defined
under California state law and not under the CAA.
This is a state-only requirement. As it happens,
BARCT is more stringent than RACT’’, available at
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2003-09-04/pdf/
03-22444.pdf; and 77 FR 31200 (May 25, 2012),
response to comment 26: ‘‘A review of both terms
[Federal best available control technology (BACT)
and California BARCT] shows that the definition of
BARCT contains the same key elements of the
Federal BACT definition . . . An air emission
limitation that applies to existing sources and is
based on the maximum degree of reduction
achievable, taking into account environmental,
energy, and economic impacts by each class or
category of sources’’, available at https://
www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-05-25/pdf/201212500.pdf. A BACT level of control is a more
stringent than a RACT level of control.
19 See Draft Final Staff Report, Proposed
Amendments to Regulation XX Regional Clean Air
Incentives Market (RECLAIM)—NOX RECLAIM,
dated December 4, 2015, (page 78) available at:
https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPAR09-OAR-2017-0259-0021.
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attainment of the 2006 PM2.5 standard.
This final rule addresses a requirement
applicable to ozone nonattainment
areas, not PM2.5 areas. With respect to
the latter pollutant, the EPA will
consider the pace of NOX reductions in
the 2015 RECLAIM rule amendments in
the context of our evaluation of the
reasonable further progress (RFP) and
attainment demonstrations in the PM2.5
portion of the recently submitted 2016
South Coast Air Quality Management
Plan.
Comment #3: Earthjustice contends
that the District has failed to remedy the
problem of credits from shutdowns that
have occurred prior to 2016 and notes
that such credits have had the effect of
depressing credit prices and thereby
allowing major sources, particularly
refineries, to avoid installation of
BARCT/RACT controls like SCRs.
Earthjustice identifies California
Portland Cement as one of the most
significant shutdown facilities whose
credits (2.5 tons per day) have led to
this problem and contends that
refineries and other facilities continue
to use credits from that shutdown
facility to avoid installation of BARCT/
RACT controls. To remedy this problem,
Earthjustice asserts that the pre-2016
credits, including those from California
Portland Cement, must be removed to
achieve BARCT/RACT level of control.
Response #3: The RECLAIM rule
amendments adopted by the District in
2016 were enacted specifically to avoid
the effect of shutdown credits
depressing credit prices and allowing
sources to avoid installation of pollution
controls, but we recognize that the 2016
amendments act prospectively and do
not address credits from shutdowns that
occurred prior to the amendments.
Nonetheless, the 12-tpd shave in the
NOX annual allotments enacted by the
District in 2015 discounts RTCs to a
much greater extent than necessary to
simply address the significant market
effect of credits from pre-2016
shutdowns. As such, the problem has
been adequately addressed and the
associated disincentive to install
controls has been removed.20
Comment #4: Earthjustice contends
that, while in some cases BARCT may
exceed RACT, BARCT does not exceed
RACT with respect to the District’s 2015
BARCT assessment controls because the
20 See 2017 RACT Supplement, page 19:
‘‘Facilities, such as refineries, that typically
purchased RTCs in the past to offset emissions will
now be required to install pollution controls due to
a greater shift of the shave to the refinery sector (i.e.,
56% shave for the refinery sector). The 2016
RECLAIM amendments, which addressed RECLAIM
facility shutdowns, would prevent an excess
amount of RTCs resulting from shutdowns from
being introduced into the market.’’
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BARCT level controls established in the
2015 BARCT analysis are cost-effective
and have been achieved in practice.
Earthjustice objects to the District’s
general approach to distinguishing
between BARCT and RACT-level
controls in the 2017 RACT Supplement
as artificially narrow on the grounds
that the analysis only focuses on
regulations that are adopted by either
SCAQMD or other California Air
Districts. Earthjustice objects to this
approach because the District itself has
generally abandoned adopting
command-and-control regulations for
NOX RECLAIM facilities and the limited
geographic focus of the evaluation on
California-only air districts for more
stringent controls is not supported by
the Clean Air Act. The focus on rules,
Earthjustice contends, distracts from the
actual technology, which the District
has determined are cost effective and
have been used in practice. More
specifically, Earthjustice states that the
District ‘‘has not articulated how the
seven of ten BARCT level controls fail
to meet the RACT determination.’’
Lastly, Earthjustice asserts that the
RECLAIM program has a number of
features that together keep credit prices
low, which inhibits the installation of
controls.
Response #4: We agree that, in its
2015 BARCT reassessment, the District
identified 10 equipment categories as
capable of further emissions reductions
(beyond the 2005 NOX emission factors)
and that the District’s analysis was
based on retrofit technologies that the
District had concluded were costeffective and achieved in practice.
However, the District’s determinations
in this regard were for BARCT, not
RACT, i.e., the emission limitations and
associated retrofit technologies were
found by the District to be cost-effective
and achieved in practice to reduce
emissions to the maximum degree of
reduction achievable, not to the degree
of reduction achievable through
reasonably available controls.
There is no universal method for
evaluating a cap-and-trade program for
RACT equivalence, and we find the
District’s approach, i.e., distinguishing
between BARCT and RACT on the basis
of whether the BARCT controls have
been adopted by the District itself or any
other California Air District, to be
reasonable. The commenter objects to
the District’s basic approach as too
narrow because the District should have
considered the rules adopted by air
agencies in other states. However, we
believe that the SCAQMD’s approach is
reasonable because the SCAQMD has,
for the purposes of meeting other CAA
requirements such as demonstrating
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43855
attainment, continued to tighten
emission limits in its own commandand-control rules to reduce emissions
from many of the same types of sources
that are included in the RECLAIM
program,21 and the emission limits in its
own command-and-control rules thus
provide a basis for comparison with
RECLAIM emissions factors. Also, the
larger California Air Districts, such as
the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air
Pollution Control District, are similar to
the SCAQMD in that they have been
designated nonattainment for the ozone
NAAQS for several decades and have
conducted several rounds of RACT
review for their rules, which, therefore,
provide another appropriate basis of
comparison with RECLAIM emissions
factors.
Nonetheless, while we believe the
SCAQMD’s approach in the 2017 RACT
Supplement is reasonable, we have
provided additional review of the seven
RECLAIM categories for which the
District concluded that the 2005
RECLAIM factors represent RACT level
of control. The seven categories include
four from the refinery sector: Fluid
catalytic cracking units (FCCUs), boilers
and heaters, coke calciners, and sulfur
recovery unit/tail gas (SRU/TG)
incinerators, and three from the nonrefinery sector: Glass melting furnaces,
sodium silicate furnaces, and metal
heating treating.
At the outset, we note that, while the
EPA has not established a simple costeffectiveness threshold to determine
RACT in all applications, the
incremental cost effectiveness estimates
for three of the seven categories
(refinery boilers and heaters, coke
calciners, and SRU/TG incinerators) to
achieve 2015 BARCT (relative to the
2005 BARCT) exceed $22,000 per ton 22
and are well above any such estimates
that the Agency has generally
considered appropriate for determining
RACT.23 As such, we agree with the
21 See, for example, Rule 1146 (Emissions of
Oxides of Nitrogen from Industrial, Institutional,
and Commercial Boilers, Steam Generators, and
Process Heaters), which was amended most recently
on September 5, 2008 to reduce NOX limits. (The
District has further amended Rule 1146 in 2013 but
the 2013 amendments did not affect the NOX
limits.)
22 The incremental cost estimates are found in
table 1 (page 6) of agenda item number 30
(Proposed Amendments to NOX RECLAIM Program
(Regulation XX)) for the SCAQMD’s board meeting
on December 4, 2015. This table was also included
on page 5 of Earthjustice’s July 17, 2017 comment
letter.
23 For EPA statements on cost effectiveness in the
RACT context, please see the EPA’s final
implementation rule for the 1997 8-hour ozone
NAAQS at 70 FR 71612, at 71654–71655 (November
29, 2005). The RACT discussion in the final
implementation rule for the 2008 ozone NAAQS is
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District that the 2005 RECLAIM factors
for these three categories represent at
least RACT level of control. We provide
our review of the four other categories
in the following paragraphs.
First, with respect to FCCUs, the
District’s 2015 BARCT staff report
compiled and evaluated emissions
limits adopted throughout the U.S. and
internationally.24 The most stringent
limits for FCCUs identified therein are
in the 8–10 ppm range, which is
equivalent to the 85% reduction that
was included in the 2005 RECLAIM
amendments for this category.25 As
such, we find that the 2005 RECLAIM
factors for refinery FCCUs reflect RACT
level of control. For comparison
purposes, the 2015 BARCT RECLAIM
factor for FCCUs is 2 ppm.
Second, with respect to glass melting
furnaces, the RECLAIM NOX factor for
the container glass melting category
prior to the 2015 RECLAIM
amendments was 1.2 pound of NOX per
ton of glass pulled.26 The EPA agrees
that this limit meets RACT since it is
consistent with the 1.5 pound of NOX
per ton of glass limit 27 we approved for
San Joaquin Valley Unified Air
Pollution Control District’s Rule 4354
(‘‘Glass Melting Furnaces’’) as
implementing RACT for an Extreme
ozone nonattainment area. For
comparison purposes, the 2015 BARCT
RECLAIM factor for glass melting
furnaces is 80% reduction (or 0.24 lb/
ton glass produced).
Third, with respect to metal heat
treating furnaces, the 2005 RECLAIM
BARCT emission factor for this category
is 45 ppm.28 We find that this limit is
consistent with the 60 ppm limit for
metal melting furnaces in the District’s
corresponding command-and-control
rule, Rule 1147 (‘‘NOX Reductions from
Miscellaneous Sources’’).29 The 2015
found at 80 FR 12264, at 12278–12283 (March 6,
2015).
24 See appendix A to the SCAQMD staff report,
which is attachment H to agenda item number 30
(Proposed Amendments to NOX RECLAIM Program
(Regulation XX)) for the December 4, 2015
SCAQMD board meeting.
25 Email from Kevin Orellana, Air Quality
Specialist, Planning, Rule Development, and Area
Sources, SCAQMD, August 22, 2017.
26 See SCAQMD Rule 2002, Table 1.
27 See our TSD supporting approval of Rule 4354
amended September 16, 2010, 76 FR 53640 (August
29, 2011) which includes a review of NOX limits
for glass melting furnaces in other states and in the
RACT/BACT/Lowest Available Emission Rate
clearinghouse available at https://
www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?
documentId=EPA-R09-OAR-2011-0412-0004&
contentType=pdf.
28 See SCAQMD Rule 2002, Table 3.
29 Rule 1147 was first adopted by SCAQMD on
December 5, 2008 and amended on September 9,
2011. These amendments were approved into the
SIP in 75 FR 46845 (August 4, 2010), and 81 FR
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BARCT RECLAIM factor for metal heat
treating furnaces >150 MMBtu/hr is 9
ppm.
Fourth, with respect to sodium
silicate furnaces, we note that the
incremental emissions reductions (0.09
tons per day) are too small to affect the
conclusion of the analysis because the
SCAQMD’s ending allocation under the
2015 RECLAIM amendments of 14.5
tons per day is 0.3 tons per day less (i.e.,
more stringent) than the hypothetical
ending allocation reflecting RACT level
of control (i.e., 14.8 tons per day). Thus,
even if we were to assume that the 2015
RECLAIM factor for this category (80%
reduction) represents RACT, the
SCAQMD’s 2015 ending allocation (14.5
tons per day) would still be less than the
hypothetical ending allocation reflecting
RACT level of control (14.8 minus 0.09
or 14.71 tons per day).
Therefore, we do not believe that the
comment has demonstrated that
controls that SCAQMD labels BARCT,
can be assumed to also be RACT.
Rather, we think it is appropriate to
generally rely on the more involved
RACT analysis performed by different
agencies at the time of rule adoption or
preparation of a RACT SIP. As such, we
believe it is reasonable to assume that a
control is beyond RACT if it has not yet
been adopted by air districts in
California.
Lastly, with respect to the issue of
excess credits in the RECLAIM market
and related delays in the installation of
controls, please see our response to
comment #3.30
Comment #5: Citing CAA section
110(a)(2)(E), Earthjustice asserts that the
EPA can only approve a SIP revision if
it determines that the provision is not
inconsistent with state law. Earthjustice
contends that the current proposal
violates California law because it is not
equivalent to BARCT and does not
achieve command-and-control
equivalence as mandated by California’s
Health and Safety Code. As such,
Earthjustice contends that the EPA
cannot make the determination required
in section 110 of the Act that the
approval not interfere with compliance
with state law.
95472 (December 28, 2016) respectively.
SCAQMD’s July 7, 2017 amendments to Rule 1147
have not been submitted to EPA for SIP approval.
30 We note also that the 2016 South Coast Air
Quality Management Plan provides for further NOX
reductions from RECLAIM sources. More
specifically, in adopting the plan, the District
committed to modify the RECLAIM program to
achieve an additional 5 tpd NOX emission
reduction as soon as feasible, but no later than
2025, and to transition the RECLAIM program to a
command-and-control regulatory structure. See
footnote 14 of our proposed rule.
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Response #5: We disagree that we
must determine under CAA section 110
that a SIP or SIP revision is not
inconsistent with state law, or that the
approval would not interfere with
compliance with state law, prior to
approval. Rather, in reviewing SIPs and
SIP revisions, the EPA must determine
that the SIP or SIP revision is supported
by necessary assurances that the state or
relevant local or regional agency has
adequate legal authority under state and
local law to carry out the SIP or SIP
revision (and is not prohibited by any
provision of federal or state law from
carrying out such SIP or portion
thereof).31
First, alleged inconsistency with state
law is relevant to the EPA in the context
of our SIP review only if it undermines
the legal authority under state or local
law to carry out the SIP. In this instance,
compliance with the RACT requirement
in the South Coast depends in part on
the legal authority of the SCAQMD to
carry out the RECLAIM rules, as
amended in 2015 and 2016,32 and as to
the amended RECLAIM rules, the EPA
has been provided the necessary
assurances by CARB that the District has
the legal authority to carry out the rules.
See CARB Executive Order S–17–002
(dated March 16, 2017) adopting the
amended 2015 and 2016 RECLAIM rules
as a revision to the California SIP.33 For
that reason, we find that the 2016
AQMP RACT SIP, as supplemented by
the 2017 RACT Supplement and
negative declarations, is supported by
adequate legal authority and, thus,
meets the corresponding requirements
in CAA section 110(a)(2)(E).
III. Final Action
Under section 110(k)(3) of the Act,
and for the reasons set forth in the
proposed rule and summarized above,
the EPA is taking final action to approve
certain revisions to the California SIP
submitted by CARB to address the
RACT requirements for the 2008 ozone
standard for the South Coast and
Coachella Valley nonattainment areas.
More specifically, we are approving the
RACT demonstration in the 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP, as supplemented in the 2017
RACT Supplement, certain permit
conditions for two power plants in
Coachella Valley included with the
2017 RACT Supplement, and two
31 See
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E).
noted previously, the EPA has approved the
2015 and 2016 amended RECLAIM rules in a
separate rulemaking.
33 The Executive Order states the District is
authorized by California Health and Safety Code
(H&SC) section 40001 to adopt and enforce the rules
identified in Enclosure A (i.e., the amended
RECLAIM rules).
32 As
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negative declarations (for the CTG for
shipbuilding and repair operations and
for the paper coating portion of the CTG
for paper, film and film coatings)
because collectively they fulfill 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.
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IV. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is finalizing
regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In
accordance with the requirements of 1
CFR 51.5, the EPA is finalizing the
incorporation by reference of certain
permit conditions for two stationary
sources in Coachella Valley described in
the amendments to 40 CFR part 52 set
forth below. The EPA, has made, and
will continue to make, these documents
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).
V. 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 action merely
approves SIP revisions as meeting
federal requirements and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Public Law 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
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• 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, this 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).
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. The EPA will
submit a report containing this action
and other required information to the
U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States prior to
publication of the rule in the Federal
Register. A major rule cannot take effect
until 60 days after it is published in the
Federal Register. This action is not a
‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by November 20,
2017. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of
this final rule does not affect the finality
of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time
within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action. This action may not be
challenged later in proceedings to
PO 00000
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43857
enforce its requirements (see section
307(b)(2)).
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: August 29, 2017.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Chapter I, title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart F—California
2. Section 52.220 is amended by
adding paragraphs (c)(449)(ii)(C) and
(c)(492) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.220
Identification of plan—in part.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(449) * * *
(ii) * * *
(C) South Coast Air Quality
Management District.
(1) South Coast Air Quality
Management District, ‘‘2016 AQMP
Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT) Demonstration,’’
dated May 22, 2014.
*
*
*
*
*
(492) The following plan revisions
were submitted on July 27, 2017 by the
Governor’s designee.
(i) Incorporation by reference. (A)
South Coast Air Quality Management
District.
(1) Appendix A to the Supplemental
RACM/RACT Analysis for the NOX
RECLAIM Program, Facility Permit to
Operate, 63500 19th Ave., North Palm
Springs, CA 92258, title page, table of
contents, section A (page 1), and section
D (pages 1–21), adopted on July 7, 2017.
(2) Appendix B to the Supplemental
RACM/RACT Analysis for the NOX
RECLAIM Program, Facility Permit to
Operate, 15775 Melissa Land Rd, North
Palm Springs, CA 92258, title page,
table of contents, section A (page 1), and
section D (pages 1–49), adopted on July
7, 2017.
(ii) Additional materials. (A) South
Coast Air Quality Management District.
E:\FR\FM\20SER1.SGM
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43858
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 181 / Wednesday, September 20, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
(1) Attachment B (‘‘Supplemental
RACM/RACT Analysis for the NOX
RECLAIM Program (May 2017)’’),
excluding Appendices A and B.
(2) Attachment C (‘‘Negative
Declaration for Control Techniques
Guidelines of Surface Coating
Operations at Shipbuilding and Repair
Facilities, and Paper, Film and Foil
Coatings (May 2017)’’).
■ 3. Section 52.222 is amended by
adding paragraph (a)(13) to read as
follows:
§ 52.222
Negative declarations.
(a) * * *
(13) South Coast Air Quality
Management District.
(i) Negative declarations for the 2008
ozone standard: Control Techniques
Guidelines for Shipbuilding and Ship
Repair Operations (Surface Coating)
including (published on August 27,
1996) and EPA 453/R–94–032
Alternative Control Techniques
Document: Surface Coating Operations
at Shipbuilding and Ship Repair
Facilities; paper coating portion of EPA
453/R–07–003 Control Techniques
Guidelines for Paper, Film, and Foil
Coatings.
(ii) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2017–19693 Filed 9–19–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
Coast Guard
46 CFR Part 67
[USCG–2016–0531]
Vessel Documentation Regulations—
Technical Amendments
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Coast Guard is making
technical amendments to its vessel
documentation regulations. A Certificate
of Documentation, which is required for
the operation of a vessel in certain
trades, serves as evidence of vessel
nationality, and permits a vessel to be
subject to preferred mortgages. The
amendments make non-substantive
edits to align Coast Guard regulations
with current vessel documentation
statutes, correct typographical errors,
and align procedural requirements with
current Coast Guard practice.
DATES: This final rule is effective
September 20, 2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information about this document, call or
sradovich on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:10 Sep 19, 2017
Jkt 241001
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Basis, Purpose, and Good Cause Exception
to Notice and Comment Requirements
III. Petition for Rulemaking
IV. Discussion of the Rule
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Abbreviations
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
COD Certificate of Documentation
NVDC National Vessel Documentation
Center
OMB Office of Management and Budget
Pub. L. Public Law
§ Section
U.S.C. United States Code
II. Basis, Purpose, and Good Cause
Exception to Notice and Comment
Requirements
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
ACTION:
email Ms. Andrea Heck, National Vessel
Documentation Center, U.S. Coast
Guard; telephone 304–271–2461, email
Andrea.M.Heck@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The legal basis of this rulemaking is
provided by Title 46 of United States
Code (U.S.C.), section 2103. Section
2103 gives the Secretary of the
department in which the Coast Guard is
operating regulatory authority to carry
out the provisions of Title 46, subtitle II
(Vessels and Seamen) of the U.S.C., in
which vessel documentation statutes are
located. The Secretary’s authority is
delegated to the Coast Guard by
Department of Homeland Security
Delegation No. 0170.1, para. II (92.a).
The purpose of this rule is to make nonsubstantive edits to: (1) Align the Coast
Guard’s vessel documentation
regulations with current statutes on that
subject; (2) correct typographical errors;
and (3) align procedural requirements
with current Coast Guard practice.
We did not publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking for this rule.
Under Title 5 of United States Code
(U.S.C.) section 553(b)(A), the Coast
Guard finds that this rule is exempt
from notice and public comment
rulemaking requirements, because these
changes involve rules of agency
organization, procedure, or practice. In
addition, the Coast Guard finds that
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
notice and comment procedures are
unnecessary under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), as
this rule consists only of technical and
editorial corrections, organizational, and
conforming amendments, and that these
changes will have no substantive effect
on the public. Under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3),
the Coast Guard finds that, for the same
reasons, good cause exists for making
this final rule effective upon publication
in the Federal Register.
III. Petition for Rulemaking
On October 18, 2013, the Maritime
Law Association, a private group
consisting primarily of maritime
lawyers, petitioned the Coast Guard to
open a rulemaking to make numerous
changes to our vessel documentation
regulations.1 The Coast Guard granted
the petition on November 6, 2013, and
shortly thereafter, began working with
members of the Maritime Law
Association to identify specifically what
changes should be made. Many of the
changes the group requested involve
significant substantive changes that may
be the subject of future regulatory
action. However, part of the review
process also revealed several instances
where the Coast Guard could currently
make non-substantive technical
corrections.
IV. Discussion of the Rule
‘‘Vessel documentation’’ refers to the
system under which a vessel receives a
Government certificate of
documentation (COD). This certificate is
required for the operation of a vessel of
at least 5 net tons in certain trades
including: (1) Fisheries on the navigable
waters of the United States or its
Exclusive Economic Zone; (2) foreign
trade or trade with U.S. overseas
territories; and (3) coastwise trade (trade
between U.S. ports without leaving U.S.
territorial waters) as described in 46
U.S.C. 12102 and 46 U.S.C. chapter 121,
subchapter II. The COD is also a
required element, in 46 U.S.C. 31322, to
establish a vessel’s entitlement to
preferred mortgage status. Under 46
U.S.C. 31326, preferred mortgages have
priority over other liens on vessels, and
they offer an enhancement to the
security available to lenders.
This final rule makes 35 nonsubstantive changes to 19 sections in 46
CFR part 67. The changes correct
omissions, misspellings, or inaccurate
references caused by unintentional
typographical errors and make small
edits for additional clarity. The changes
also update referenced material, such as
1 Docket ID: USCG–2013–0942, available at
https://www.regulations.gov/docket?D=USCG–
2013–0942.
E:\FR\FM\20SER1.SGM
20SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 181 (Wednesday, September 20, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 43850-43858]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-19693]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2016-0215; FRL-9967-45-Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan Revisions, South Coast Air
Quality Management District
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is taking final
action 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.
DATES: This rule will be effective on October 20, 2017.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket No. EPA-R09-OAR-2016-0215. All documents in the docket are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed on
the Web site, some information is not publicly available, e.g.,
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket
materials are available through https://www.regulations.gov, or please
contact the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section for additional availability information.
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. Proposed Action
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
III. Final Action
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Proposed Action
On June 15, 2017 (82 FR 27451), under section 110(k)(3) of the
Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act''), the EPA proposed to approve the ``2016
AQMP Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) Demonstration''
(``2016 AQMP RACT SIP''), submitted to the EPA by the California Air
Resources Board (CARB) on July 18, 2014 \1\ for approval as a revision
to the California SIP, as supplemented by the public draft versions of
the ``Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis for the NOX RECLAIM
Program'' (``2017 RACT Supplement'') and two negative declarations
submitted by CARB on May 22, 2017.\2\ We had previously proposed a
partial approval and partial disapproval of the 2016 Air
[[Page 43851]]
Quality Management Plan (AQMP) RACT SIP,\3\ but withdrew that proposal
because we found that the 2017 RACT Supplement and recent amendments to
certain District rules adequately addressed the deficiency that had
been the basis for the earlier proposed partial disapproval. References
herein to the ``proposed rule'' or ``proposed action'' refer to our
proposed action published on June 15, 2017, unless otherwise stated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The SCAQMD adopted its 2016 AQMP RACT SIP on June 4, 2014.
\2\ CARB's May 22, 2017 submittal contained public draft
versions of the 2017 RACT Supplement and negative declarations along
with a request that the EPA provide parallel processing of the
documents concurrently with the state's public process. See footnote
1 in our June 15, 2017 proposed rule. In our June 15, 2017 proposed
rule, we erroneously described the 2017 RACT Supplement as including
the two negative declarations. The 2017 RACT Supplement includes
additional emissions analyses and two appendices that contain
certain permit conditions for two specific stationary sources in
Coachella Valley but does not include the negative declarations. The
negative declarations were included in CARB's May 22, 2017 submittal
but as a separate document.
\3\ See 81 FR 76547 (November 3, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our proposed rule was based on our evaluation of the public draft
versions of the 2017 RACT Supplement and negative declarations, and we
indicated that we would not take final action until CARB submitted the
final adopted versions to the EPA as a SIP revision. On July 7, 2017,
the SCAQMD held a public hearing and approved the 2017 RACT Supplement
and two negative declarations and submitted the approval package to
CARB for adoption and submittal to the EPA. On July 26, 2017, the CARB
Executive Officer adopted the 2017 RACT Supplement and negative
declarations as a revision to the California SIP and, on July 27, 2017,
submitted them to the EPA for approval, thereby satisfying the
condition \4\ for final EPA action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ As explained in our June 15, 2017 proposed rulemaking, the
EPA is following established procedures for parallel processing that
allows us to approve a state provision so long as it was adopted as
proposed with no significant changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 published
on November 3, 2016 (81 FR 76547).\5\ The final versions of the 2017
RACT Supplement (which includes additional analyses and certain permit
conditions for two specific stationary sources in Coachella Valley) and
negative declarations include non-substantive changes from the public
draft versions that were the basis for our June 15, 2017 proposed rule.
Lastly, CARB's July 27, 2017 SIP revision submittal includes
documentation of the public process followed by the SCAQMD to approve
the 2017 RACT Supplement and related negative declarations and
documentation of the adoption by CARB of the 2017 RACT Supplement and
negative declarations as revisions to the California SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ As noted above, we have withdrawn our November 3, 2016
proposed rule. See the summary section of our June 15, 2017 proposed
rule at 82 FR 27451.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On August 7, 2017, we found the 2017 RACT Supplement including
certain conditions from permits for two specific stationary sources
located in Coachella Valley, and two negative declarations met the
completeness criteria in 40 CFR part 51, appendix V.\6\ Today, we take
final action on the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP submitted on July 18, 2014 as
supplemented by the 2017 RACT Supplement and negative declarations
submitted on July 27, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ As previously indicated in our June 15, 2017 proposed
rulemaking, SCAQMD's 2016 AQMP RACT SIP was deemed complete by
operation of law on January 18, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In our proposed rule, we explained that CAA sections 182(b)(2) and
(f) require that SIPs for ozone nonattainment areas classified as
Moderate or above implement RACT for any source covered by a Control
Techniques Guidelines \7\ (CTG) document and for any major source of
volatile organic compounds (VOC) or nitrogen oxides
(NOX).\8\ The EPA's implementing regulations for the 2008
ozone NAAQS explain how these RACT requirements will be applied in
areas classified as Moderate or above for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. See 40
CFR 51.1112.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ CTGs provide the EPA's recommendations on how to control
emissions of VOC from a specific type of product or process in an
ozone nonattainment area. Each CTG includes emissions limitations
based on RACT to address ozone nonattainment area requirements.
\8\ VOC and NOX together produce ground-level ozone,
smog and particulate matter (PM), which harm human health and the
environment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We further explained that the areas under discussion here are
subject to the RACT requirement as the South Coast Air Basin (``South
Coast'') is classified as an Extreme nonattainment area and the
Coachella Valley portion of Riverside County (``Coachella Valley'') 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).
SCAQMD implements the RACT requirements for South Coast and Coachella
Valley because it is authorized under state law to regulate stationary
sources in those areas. Therefore, the SCAQMD must, at a minimum, adopt
requirements to achieve emissions reductions equivalent to 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)).
In our proposed rule, we evaluated the 2016 AQMP RACT
Demonstration, 2017 RACT Supplement and negative declarations in light
of the above requirements and concluded that, collectively, they meet
the RACT requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2) and (f) and 40 CFR
51.1112 for the South Coast and Coachella Valley nonattainment areas
for the 2008 ozone standard. In this document, we provide a summary of
our evaluation. For a more detailed discussion, please see the proposed
rule at 82 FR 27451, pages 27453 through 27455.
First, based on our review of the documentation provided by the
SCAQMD in the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP and the negative declarations, we
agreed 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
or are covered by negative declarations for which we were proposing
approval. In this action, we affirm the finding we made in the proposed
rule with respect to the CTG portion of the RACT requirement and
approve the two negative declarations as a revision to the California
SIP.
Next, with respect to major stationary sources of VOC or
NOX emissions, we divided the evaluation into three parts:
major non-CTG VOC and NOX stationary sources that are
subject to District's command-and-control VOC and NOX rules,
major sources located in the South Coast that are subject to the
District's cap-and-trade program referred to as the Regional Clean Air
Incentives Market (``RECLAIM'') program, and major sources located in
Coachella Valley that are subject to RECLAIM.
With respect to the first part of the evaluation of RACT for major
sources, we reviewed the information provided by the District regarding
new major Title V sources receiving permits since the District's
previous RACT SIP approval and agreed with the District 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. We affirm that finding in this final action.
In connection with the second part of the evaluation, we described
RECLAIM as a program adopted by the District to reduce emissions from
the largest stationary sources of NOX and sulfur oxides
(SOX) emissions through a market-based trading program that
[[Page 43852]]
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. We noted that 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; \9\ that 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; \10\ and that, 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 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. For additional background, see the
technical support document (TSD) associated with our June 15, 2017
proposed rule explaining how SCAQMD's RECLAIM program, as amended in
2015, fulfills the RACT requirement based on the District's re-
evaluation of the 2015 BARCT reassessment in terms of RACT, rather
than BARCT.
\10\ 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).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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,\11\ and, consistent with our longstanding
interpretation of the CAA, we approved the RECLAIM program in 1998 and
then, as amended, in 2006 and 2011, based in part on the conclusion
that RECLAIM continued to satisfy RACT requirements.\12\ More recently,
in the Agency's 2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule, 80 FR 12264, at
12278-12283 (March 6, 2015), the EPA re-affirmed its longstanding
interpretation that a market-based cap and trade program may satisfy
RACT requirements by ensuring equal aggregate reductions; and in this
action, we are approving SIP revisions that rely in part on such a
program to meet the RACT requirement because we find the program
consistent with our 2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 59 FR 16690 (April 7, 1994) and the EPA's, ``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).
\12\ 71 FR 51120 (August 29, 2006) and 76 FR 50128 (August 12,
2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, state law 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, found
that additional reduction opportunities existed due to the advancement
of control technology, and amended the RECLAIM rules (i.e., District
Regulation XX) to reduce the facility annual allocations (in the
aggregate) for NOX from 34.2 tons per day (tpd) to 26.5 tpd.
In 2015, the District conducted another reevaluation and amended the
RECLAIM rules to further reduce the NOX allocations (in the
aggregate) from 26.5 tpd to 14.5 tpd to be achieved through downward
incremental adjustments from 2017 through 2022. At the time of our
proposed rule, the EPA had only proposed to approve the RECLAIM rules
that reflect the 2015 amendments reducing the aggregate facility
allocations to 14.5 tpd of NOX, but the Agency has since
taken final action, and the RECLAIM rules, as amended in 2015, are now
approved into the California SIP.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See pre-publication version of the final rule, approving
the 2015 amended RECLAIM rules, that was signed on August 15, 2017
by the Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the 2017 RACT Supplement, the District provided a demonstration
of how the RECLAIM program, as amended in 2015, meets the RACT
requirement in the aggregate. To do so, the District re-examined the
BARCT reevaluation that it conducted in 2015 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 RECLAIM program in effect prior to the 2015
amendments. The District then re-calculated hypothetical facility
annual allocations (in the aggregate) reflecting RACT implementation
(rather than BARCT) of 14.8 tpd. Because the facility annual
allocations (in the aggregate) for NOX adopted by the
District in 2015 (implementing BARCT) of 14.5 tpd is less than (i.e.,
more stringent than) the hypothetical allocations (implementing RACT)
of 14.8 tpd, the District concluded that the program as amended in 2015
meets the RACT requirement.
In our proposed rule, based on our review of the District's
approach, assumptions, and methods to the updated RECLAIM program, we
agreed that, as amended in 2015, the RECLAIM program provides for
emissions reductions greater, 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 affirm that finding in this final action and approve
the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP, as supplemented in the 2017 RACT Supplement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 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. The EPA recently approved RECLAIM
amendments, including the October 2016 amendments, as a revision to
the California SIP. See pre-publication version of the final rule
approving the RECLAIM rule amendments signed on August 15, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, with respect to the two major NOX sources in
Coachella Valley that are not otherwise subject to District RACT-level
command-and-control regulations, we proposed approval of certain permit
conditions that were included in appendices A and B to the 2017 RACT
Supplement. As described in the proposed rule, the permit conditions
submitted by the District for these facilities (both of which are
electric generating facilities) 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 indicated
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 reviewed the permit conditions
(and SCAQMD's
[[Page 43853]]
analysis) and found that they provide for RACT level of control (or
better) at the two subject facilities in Coachella Valley. In this
action, we affirm that finding and are approving into the SIP the
submitted permit conditions for the two specific major NOX
sources in Coachella Valley.
For more background information and a more extensive discussion of
the 2016 AQMP RACT Demonstration, the 2017 RACT Supplement, and
negative declarations and our evaluation of them for compliance with
CAA RACT requirements, please see our proposed rule and related
technical support document (TSD).
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
The EPA's proposed action provided a 30-day public comment period
which ended on July 17, 2017. During this period, we received comments
from Earthjustice, which submitted comments on behalf of the Sierra
Club.\15\ In the following paragraphs, we summarize the comments and
provide our responses.
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\15\ Earthjustice submitted a letter dated July 17, 2017, on
behalf of the Sierra Club. These comments are in the docket at
www.regulations.gov, docket ID EPA-R09-OAR-2016-0215.
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Comment #1: Earthjustice contends that a cap-and-trade program,
such as RECLAIM, can never provide the basis for compliance with the
RACT requirement in CAA sections 182(b)(2) and 182(f) based on the
plain language of the CAA that, according to Earthjustice, requires all
major sources to implement RACT, i.e., RACT must be met by each
individual major source and cannot be met by achieving equivalent
levels of emission reductions across the nonattainment area. In support
of this contention, Earthjustice highlights the word ``all'' in CAA
section 182(b)(2) in connection with implementation of RACT at major
sources and cites legislative history for the CAA Amendments of 1990
that purports to emphasize the applicability of the RACT requirement to
all major sources of NOX in an ozone nonattainment area.
Earthjustice also views the EPA's longstanding definition of RACT
as supporting an interpretation of the RACT requirement as applicable
to each and every major NOX source, not a collective
emission limitation for an entire class of sources located across a
nonattainment area or an entire state or region. Earthjustice also
claims that reliance on emissions trading to meet the RACT requirement
for major NOX sources is tantamount to creating a
NOX exemption that is inconsistent with the explicit
NOX exemptions found at CAA section 182(f). Lastly,
Earthjustice cites the EPA's November 3, 2016 proposed rule as further
support that emissions averaging in the South Coast does not actually
provide RACT-level reductions.
Response #1: We disagree that a cap-and-trade program can never be
approved as meeting the RACT requirement of CAA sections 182(b)(2) and
182(f). First, we note that our action today is consistent with our
past approval actions on the RECLAIM rules and amendments as meeting
the RACT requirement and, more recently, with our SIP requirements rule
for the 2008 ozone standard (``2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule'') that
indicates that a cap-and-trade approach remains a viable option to
comply with the RACT requirement. More specifically, in our final 2008
Ozone SIP Requirements Rule, we indicated that states have the option
of conducting a technical analysis for a nonattainment area considering
the emissions controls required by a regional cap-and-trade program,
and demonstrating that compliance by certain sources participating in
the cap-and-trade program results in actual emission reductions in the
particular nonattainment area that are equal to or greater than the
emission reductions that would result if RACT were applied to an
individual source or source category within the nonattainment area. See
80 FR 12264, at 12279 (March 6, 2015). For additional discussion of
this option, please see our proposed 2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule
at 78 FR 34178, at 34192-34193 (June 6, 2013).\16\
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\16\ The EPA's position that states may comply with the RACT
requirement in the aggregate through a cap-and-trade program is part
of the ongoing legal challenge to our 2008 ozone implementation rule
filed in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. In the consolidated
case, South Coast Air Quality Management District v. EPA, D.C. Cir.,
No. 15-1115, the environmental petitioners object to reliance on
cap-and-trade programs to meet the section 182 RACT requirement. The
Agency's arguments in support of its interpretation of the RACT
requirement with respect to cap-and-trade programs are found in the
respondent's brief dated September 13, 2016. Oral argument in the
D.C. Circuit for the national case is scheduled for September 14,
2017.
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Second, CAA section 182(b)(2), in relevant part, provides that the
state shall submit a revision to the SIP to include provisions to
require the implementation of RACT under section 172(c)(1) of this
title with respect to, among other categories, all other major
stationary sources of VOC that are located in the area, and Section
182(f) extends the requirements for major stationary sources of VOC to
major stationary sources of NOX, unless exempted under the
terms of section 182(f). As such, CAA section 172(c)(1) is explicitly
brought into section 182(b)(2) and affects how it is interpreted.
Specifically, section 172(c)(1), in relevant part, requires SIP
revisions for nonattainment areas to ``provide for the implementation
of all reasonably available control measures as expeditiously as
practicable (including such reductions in emissions from existing
sources in the area as may be obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available control technology).''
The plain language of section 172(c)(1)--``such reductions . . . as
may be obtained through the adoption, at a minimum, of reasonably
available control technology''--does not require reductions from each
individual source but rather only requires areas to achieve the same
level of emissions reductions from stationary sources that installing
reasonably available control technology would yield. In other words, as
long as the level of emissions reductions obtained in the area from
stationary sources equals or exceeds the level of emissions reductions
that would be achieved through implementation of RACT at existing
sources, then the RACT requirement of section 172(c)(1) are met. See
NRDC v. EPA, 571 F.3d 1245, 1256-58 (D.C. Cir. 2009).
Section 182(b)(2) simply prescribes a more specific bar for the
required level of emissions reductions that must be obtained. With
respect to major stationary sources of NOX, the bar for the
required level of emissions reductions that must be obtained is
calculated based on the emissions reductions that can be achieved
through implementation of RACT at major stationary sources of
NOX. Consistent with section 172(c)(1), the emissions
reductions need not come from the major NOX sources
themselves so long as an equal or greater level of emissions reductions
are obtained within the area. As such, the plain language of sections
172(c)(1) and 182(b)(2) allows a cap-and-trade program to meet the RACT
requirements of those sections for major NOX sources so long
as the overall emissions reductions that are obtained equal or exceed
that level of emissions reductions that would have been obtained
through implementation of RACT at the major NOX sources
themselves. The plain language of the CAA supporting the EPA's
interpretation negates the need to consult the legislative history
cited by Earthjustice in its comment.
The area-wide--rather than individual, source-specific--nature of
the RACT requirement is reinforced by
[[Page 43854]]
CAA section 182(b)(2), which requires states to revise their SIPs to
adopt RACT ``with respect to'' specified categories of VOC sources. The
plain language of that provision does not mandate emission reductions
from each individual source. In contrast, the next subsection of that
same provision imposes individual, source-specific requirements by
mandating that State Implementation Plans ``require all owners or
operators of gasoline dispensing systems to install and operate . . . a
system for gasoline vapor recovery. . . .'' See CAA section 182(b)(3).
Third, Earthjustice cites the EPA's longstanding definition of RACT
as support for its position, however, the definition cited in the
comment does not require an individual, source-specific application of
control technology. Instead, it is used solely as the beginning point
for the extrapolation of the total reductions that each nonattainment
area must achieve to satisfy the section 172(c)(1) RACT requirement.
Fourth, we also disagree with the claim that reliance on emissions
trading to meet the RACT requirement for major NOX sources
is tantamount to creating a NOX exemption and that such an
exemption is inconsistent with the explicit NOX exemptions
found at CAA section 182(f). The RECLAIM program in the South Coast
provides no exemption per se for major NOX sources. Each
such source must install controls or purchase credits sufficient to
meet their annual allocation.
Lastly, we acknowledge Earthjustice's comment that our November 3,
2016 rulemaking proposed to partially disapprove the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP
because of deficiencies in the RECLAIM rules. However, our proposed
partial disapproval was not based on the fact that RECLAIM is an
emissions averaging program but rather on the evidence at hand that
suggested that the then-current SIP RECLAIM program did not actually
provide for the emissions reductions necessary to achieve RACT-level
reductions. Since then, the District has amended, and the EPA has
approved, the RECLAIM rules to achieve greater aggregate emissions
reductions from the sources in the program, and based on the District's
evaluation of the amended program as set forth in the 2017 RACT
Supplement, we have concluded that the RECLAIM rules, as amended, meet
the RACT requirement in sections 182(b)(2) and 182(f) with respect to
major stationary sources of NOX in the South Coast.
Comment #2: Earthjustice contends that approval of the South Coast
RACT demonstration would be arbitrary and capricious because the
RECLAIM rules, as amended in 2015, do not achieve aggregate emissions
reductions of NOX equivalent to those that would be achieved
through implementation of RACT level of control at each major
NOX source in the South Coast. Earthjustice summarized that,
as a part of the District's rule development process culminating in the
2015 RECLAIM amendments, SCAQMD analyzed whether its program achieved
Best Available Retrofit Control Technology (BARCT) controls. The
commenter points out that the District's analysis identified refineries
as having the largest total NOX emissions and as holding the
largest percentage of RTCs, but that the RECLAIM program had excess
RTCs that resulted in refinery facilities not needing to achieve actual
emission reductions.
Earthjustice points out that SCAQMD's BARCT assessment concluded
that a 14 tpd ``shave'' from the program was needed to be equivalent to
a traditional command-and-control regulatory approach. Earthjustice
further asserts that if readily available BARCT equipment were applied
to sources of pollution in the program, emissions would have been at
9.5 tpd instead of 20.7 tpd. Earthjustice comments that, although the
SCAQMD staff recommended a 14 tpd shave, the Governing Board adopted a
12 tpd shave instead. Earthjustice further states that the record shows
that the 12 tpd shave does not sufficiently result in RACT level
controls for the NOX RECLAIM universe and that the EPA has a
record before it showing that at least a 14 tpd shave is necessary to
achieve what the District confirmed was necessary to assure
implementation of RACT-equivalent level of controls that the BARCT
assessment demonstrated was necessary. Moreover, Earthjustice states
that the record shows that the pace of the shave interferes with
attainment of the 2006 PM2.5 standard.
Response #2: We disagree with Earthjustice's implication that the
terms RACT and BARCT are interchangeable and its assertion that the
record shows a 14 tpd shave is needed to meet RACT.
BARCT is a term used by the State of California and 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.'' \17\ [Emphasis
added.] By 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). The EPA has historically not treated these terms
interchangeably and has generally found that BARCT level of control
meets or exceeds RACT level of control.\18\
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\17\ California Health and Safety Code section 40406. Available
at: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=40406.&lawCode=HSC.
\18\ See for example, 68 FR 52512 (September 4, 2003, comment
#14: ``What is the difference between BARCT and RACT? . . . BARCT is
defined under California state law and not under the CAA. This is a
state-only requirement. As it happens, BARCT is more stringent than
RACT'', available at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2003-09-04/pdf/03-22444.pdf; and 77 FR 31200 (May 25, 2012), response to
comment 26: ``A review of both terms [Federal best available control
technology (BACT) and California BARCT] shows that the definition of
BARCT contains the same key elements of the Federal BACT definition
. . . An air emission limitation that applies to existing sources
and is based on the maximum degree of reduction achievable, taking
into account environmental, energy, and economic impacts by each
class or category of sources'', available at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-05-25/pdf/2012-12500.pdf. A BACT level of control
is a more stringent than a RACT level of control.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that SCAQMD determined in its December 4, 2015 Draft Final
Staff Report that only four out of an estimated 51 boilers/heaters were
retrofitted with selective catalytic reduction to reduce NOX
emissions to comply with BARCT.\19\ The staff report does not discuss
RACT in the context of the RECLAIM program. Therefore, we disagree with
the commenter that the December 4, 2015 Draft Final Staff Report or
elsewhere in the record that SCAQMD had determined that the 2015
amendments to the RECLAIM program fail to implement RACT. The TSD
associated with our June 15, 2017 proposed rule explains how the
RECLAIM program, as amended in 2015, fulfills the RACT requirement
based on the District's re-evaluation of the 2015 BARCT reassessment in
terms of RACT, rather than BARCT. We find the District evaluation of
the amended RECLAIM program to be acceptable as the basis to conclude
that the amended program provides equivalent emissions reductions in
the aggregate to those that would be achieved through implementation of
RACT at all major NOX sources in the South Coast.
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\19\ See Draft Final Staff Report, Proposed Amendments to
Regulation XX Regional Clean Air Incentives Market (RECLAIM)--
NOX RECLAIM, dated December 4, 2015, (page 78) available
at: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-R09-OAR-2017-0259-0021.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, we disagree with Earthjustice's assertion that the EPA
should not approve the South Coast RACT demonstration because the pace
of the NOX shave would interfere with
[[Page 43855]]
attainment of the 2006 PM2.5 standard. This final rule
addresses a requirement applicable to ozone nonattainment areas, not
PM2.5 areas. With respect to the latter pollutant, the EPA
will consider the pace of NOX reductions in the 2015 RECLAIM
rule amendments in the context of our evaluation of the reasonable
further progress (RFP) and attainment demonstrations in the
PM2.5 portion of the recently submitted 2016 South Coast Air
Quality Management Plan.
Comment #3: Earthjustice contends that the District has failed to
remedy the problem of credits from shutdowns that have occurred prior
to 2016 and notes that such credits have had the effect of depressing
credit prices and thereby allowing major sources, particularly
refineries, to avoid installation of BARCT/RACT controls like SCRs.
Earthjustice identifies California Portland Cement as one of the most
significant shutdown facilities whose credits (2.5 tons per day) have
led to this problem and contends that refineries and other facilities
continue to use credits from that shutdown facility to avoid
installation of BARCT/RACT controls. To remedy this problem,
Earthjustice asserts that the pre-2016 credits, including those from
California Portland Cement, must be removed to achieve BARCT/RACT level
of control.
Response #3: The RECLAIM rule amendments adopted by the District in
2016 were enacted specifically to avoid the effect of shutdown credits
depressing credit prices and allowing sources to avoid installation of
pollution controls, but we recognize that the 2016 amendments act
prospectively and do not address credits from shutdowns that occurred
prior to the amendments. Nonetheless, the 12-tpd shave in the
NOX annual allotments enacted by the District in 2015
discounts RTCs to a much greater extent than necessary to simply
address the significant market effect of credits from pre-2016
shutdowns. As such, the problem has been adequately addressed and the
associated disincentive to install controls has been removed.\20\
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\20\ See 2017 RACT Supplement, page 19: ``Facilities, such as
refineries, that typically purchased RTCs in the past to offset
emissions will now be required to install pollution controls due to
a greater shift of the shave to the refinery sector (i.e., 56% shave
for the refinery sector). The 2016 RECLAIM amendments, which
addressed RECLAIM facility shutdowns, would prevent an excess amount
of RTCs resulting from shutdowns from being introduced into the
market.''
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Comment #4: Earthjustice contends that, while in some cases BARCT
may exceed RACT, BARCT does not exceed RACT with respect to the
District's 2015 BARCT assessment controls because the BARCT level
controls established in the 2015 BARCT analysis are cost-effective and
have been achieved in practice. Earthjustice objects to the District's
general approach to distinguishing between BARCT and RACT-level
controls in the 2017 RACT Supplement as artificially narrow on the
grounds that the analysis only focuses on regulations that are adopted
by either SCAQMD or other California Air Districts. Earthjustice
objects to this approach because the District itself has generally
abandoned adopting command-and-control regulations for NOX
RECLAIM facilities and the limited geographic focus of the evaluation
on California-only air districts for more stringent controls is not
supported by the Clean Air Act. The focus on rules, Earthjustice
contends, distracts from the actual technology, which the District has
determined are cost effective and have been used in practice. More
specifically, Earthjustice states that the District ``has not
articulated how the seven of ten BARCT level controls fail to meet the
RACT determination.'' Lastly, Earthjustice asserts that the RECLAIM
program has a number of features that together keep credit prices low,
which inhibits the installation of controls.
Response #4: We agree that, in its 2015 BARCT reassessment, the
District identified 10 equipment categories as capable of further
emissions reductions (beyond the 2005 NOX emission factors)
and that the District's analysis was based on retrofit technologies
that the District had concluded were cost-effective and achieved in
practice. However, the District's determinations in this regard were
for BARCT, not RACT, i.e., the emission limitations and associated
retrofit technologies were found by the District to be cost-effective
and achieved in practice to reduce emissions to the maximum degree of
reduction achievable, not to the degree of reduction achievable through
reasonably available controls.
There is no universal method for evaluating a cap-and-trade program
for RACT equivalence, and we find the District's approach, i.e.,
distinguishing between BARCT and RACT on the basis of whether the BARCT
controls have been adopted by the District itself or any other
California Air District, to be reasonable. The commenter objects to the
District's basic approach as too narrow because the District should
have considered the rules adopted by air agencies in other states.
However, we believe that the SCAQMD's approach is reasonable because
the SCAQMD has, for the purposes of meeting other CAA requirements such
as demonstrating attainment, continued to tighten emission limits in
its own command-and-control rules to reduce emissions from many of the
same types of sources that are included in the RECLAIM program,\21\ and
the emission limits in its own command-and-control rules thus provide a
basis for comparison with RECLAIM emissions factors. Also, the larger
California Air Districts, such as the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air
Pollution Control District, are similar to the SCAQMD in that they have
been designated nonattainment for the ozone NAAQS for several decades
and have conducted several rounds of RACT review for their rules,
which, therefore, provide another appropriate basis of comparison with
RECLAIM emissions factors.
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\21\ See, for example, Rule 1146 (Emissions of Oxides of
Nitrogen from Industrial, Institutional, and Commercial Boilers,
Steam Generators, and Process Heaters), which was amended most
recently on September 5, 2008 to reduce NOX limits. (The
District has further amended Rule 1146 in 2013 but the 2013
amendments did not affect the NOX limits.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nonetheless, while we believe the SCAQMD's approach in the 2017
RACT Supplement is reasonable, we have provided additional review of
the seven RECLAIM categories for which the District concluded that the
2005 RECLAIM factors represent RACT level of control. The seven
categories include four from the refinery sector: Fluid catalytic
cracking units (FCCUs), boilers and heaters, coke calciners, and sulfur
recovery unit/tail gas (SRU/TG) incinerators, and three from the non-
refinery sector: Glass melting furnaces, sodium silicate furnaces, and
metal heating treating.
At the outset, we note that, while the EPA has not established a
simple cost-effectiveness threshold to determine RACT in all
applications, the incremental cost effectiveness estimates for three of
the seven categories (refinery boilers and heaters, coke calciners, and
SRU/TG incinerators) to achieve 2015 BARCT (relative to the 2005 BARCT)
exceed $22,000 per ton \22\ and are well above any such estimates that
the Agency has generally considered appropriate for determining
RACT.\23\ As such, we agree with the
[[Page 43856]]
District that the 2005 RECLAIM factors for these three categories
represent at least RACT level of control. We provide our review of the
four other categories in the following paragraphs.
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\22\ The incremental cost estimates are found in table 1 (page
6) of agenda item number 30 (Proposed Amendments to NOX
RECLAIM Program (Regulation XX)) for the SCAQMD's board meeting on
December 4, 2015. This table was also included on page 5 of
Earthjustice's July 17, 2017 comment letter.
\23\ For EPA statements on cost effectiveness in the RACT
context, please see the EPA's final implementation rule for the 1997
8-hour ozone NAAQS at 70 FR 71612, at 71654-71655 (November 29,
2005). The RACT discussion in the final implementation rule for the
2008 ozone NAAQS is found at 80 FR 12264, at 12278-12283 (March 6,
2015).
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First, with respect to FCCUs, the District's 2015 BARCT staff
report compiled and evaluated emissions limits adopted throughout the
U.S. and internationally.\24\ The most stringent limits for FCCUs
identified therein are in the 8-10 ppm range, which is equivalent to
the 85% reduction that was included in the 2005 RECLAIM amendments for
this category.\25\ As such, we find that the 2005 RECLAIM factors for
refinery FCCUs reflect RACT level of control. For comparison purposes,
the 2015 BARCT RECLAIM factor for FCCUs is 2 ppm.
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\24\ See appendix A to the SCAQMD staff report, which is
attachment H to agenda item number 30 (Proposed Amendments to
NOX RECLAIM Program (Regulation XX)) for the December 4,
2015 SCAQMD board meeting.
\25\ Email from Kevin Orellana, Air Quality Specialist,
Planning, Rule Development, and Area Sources, SCAQMD, August 22,
2017.
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Second, with respect to glass melting furnaces, the RECLAIM
NOX factor for the container glass melting category prior to
the 2015 RECLAIM amendments was 1.2 pound of NOX per ton of
glass pulled.\26\ The EPA agrees that this limit meets RACT since it is
consistent with the 1.5 pound of NOX per ton of glass limit
\27\ we approved for San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control
District's Rule 4354 (``Glass Melting Furnaces'') as implementing RACT
for an Extreme ozone nonattainment area. For comparison purposes, the
2015 BARCT RECLAIM factor for glass melting furnaces is 80% reduction
(or 0.24 lb/ton glass produced).
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\26\ See SCAQMD Rule 2002, Table 1.
\27\ See our TSD supporting approval of Rule 4354 amended
September 16, 2010, 76 FR 53640 (August 29, 2011) which includes a
review of NOX limits for glass melting furnaces in other
states and in the RACT/BACT/Lowest Available Emission Rate
clearinghouse available at https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=EPA-R09-OAR-2011-0412-0004&contentType=pdf.
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Third, with respect to metal heat treating furnaces, the 2005
RECLAIM BARCT emission factor for this category is 45 ppm.\28\ We find
that this limit is consistent with the 60 ppm limit for metal melting
furnaces in the District's corresponding command-and-control rule, Rule
1147 (``NOX Reductions from Miscellaneous Sources'').\29\
The 2015 BARCT RECLAIM factor for metal heat treating furnaces >150
MMBtu/hr is 9 ppm.
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\28\ See SCAQMD Rule 2002, Table 3.
\29\ Rule 1147 was first adopted by SCAQMD on December 5, 2008
and amended on September 9, 2011. These amendments were approved
into the SIP in 75 FR 46845 (August 4, 2010), and 81 FR 95472
(December 28, 2016) respectively. SCAQMD's July 7, 2017 amendments
to Rule 1147 have not been submitted to EPA for SIP approval.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fourth, with respect to sodium silicate furnaces, we note that the
incremental emissions reductions (0.09 tons per day) are too small to
affect the conclusion of the analysis because the SCAQMD's ending
allocation under the 2015 RECLAIM amendments of 14.5 tons per day is
0.3 tons per day less (i.e., more stringent) than the hypothetical
ending allocation reflecting RACT level of control (i.e., 14.8 tons per
day). Thus, even if we were to assume that the 2015 RECLAIM factor for
this category (80% reduction) represents RACT, the SCAQMD's 2015 ending
allocation (14.5 tons per day) would still be less than the
hypothetical ending allocation reflecting RACT level of control (14.8
minus 0.09 or 14.71 tons per day).
Therefore, we do not believe that the comment has demonstrated that
controls that SCAQMD labels BARCT, can be assumed to also be RACT.
Rather, we think it is appropriate to generally rely on the more
involved RACT analysis performed by different agencies at the time of
rule adoption or preparation of a RACT SIP. As such, we believe it is
reasonable to assume that a control is beyond RACT if it has not yet
been adopted by air districts in California.
Lastly, with respect to the issue of excess credits in the RECLAIM
market and related delays in the installation of controls, please see
our response to comment #3.\30\
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\30\ We note also that the 2016 South Coast Air Quality
Management Plan provides for further NOX reductions from
RECLAIM sources. More specifically, in adopting the plan, the
District committed to modify the RECLAIM program to achieve an
additional 5 tpd NOX emission reduction as soon as
feasible, but no later than 2025, and to transition the RECLAIM
program to a command-and-control regulatory structure. See footnote
14 of our proposed rule.
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Comment #5: Citing CAA section 110(a)(2)(E), Earthjustice asserts
that the EPA can only approve a SIP revision if it determines that the
provision is not inconsistent with state law. Earthjustice contends
that the current proposal violates California law because it is not
equivalent to BARCT and does not achieve command-and-control
equivalence as mandated by California's Health and Safety Code. As
such, Earthjustice contends that the EPA cannot make the determination
required in section 110 of the Act that the approval not interfere with
compliance with state law.
Response #5: We disagree that we must determine under CAA section
110 that a SIP or SIP revision is not inconsistent with state law, or
that the approval would not interfere with compliance with state law,
prior to approval. Rather, in reviewing SIPs and SIP revisions, the EPA
must determine that the SIP or SIP revision is supported by necessary
assurances that the state or relevant local or regional agency has
adequate legal authority under state and local law to carry out the SIP
or SIP revision (and is not prohibited by any provision of federal or
state law from carrying out such SIP or portion thereof).\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See CAA section 110(a)(2)(E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, alleged inconsistency with state law is relevant to the EPA
in the context of our SIP review only if it undermines the legal
authority under state or local law to carry out the SIP. In this
instance, compliance with the RACT requirement in the South Coast
depends in part on the legal authority of the SCAQMD to carry out the
RECLAIM rules, as amended in 2015 and 2016,\32\ and as to the amended
RECLAIM rules, the EPA has been provided the necessary assurances by
CARB that the District has the legal authority to carry out the rules.
See CARB Executive Order S-17-002 (dated March 16, 2017) adopting the
amended 2015 and 2016 RECLAIM rules as a revision to the California
SIP.\33\ For that reason, we find that the 2016 AQMP RACT SIP, as
supplemented by the 2017 RACT Supplement and negative declarations, is
supported by adequate legal authority and, thus, meets the
corresponding requirements in CAA section 110(a)(2)(E).
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\32\ As noted previously, the EPA has approved the 2015 and 2016
amended RECLAIM rules in a separate rulemaking.
\33\ The Executive Order states the District is authorized by
California Health and Safety Code (H&SC) section 40001 to adopt and
enforce the rules identified in Enclosure A (i.e., the amended
RECLAIM rules).
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III. Final Action
Under section 110(k)(3) of the Act, and for the reasons set forth
in the proposed rule and summarized above, the EPA is taking final
action to approve certain revisions to the California SIP submitted by
CARB to address the RACT requirements for the 2008 ozone standard for
the South Coast and Coachella Valley nonattainment areas. More
specifically, we are approving the RACT demonstration in the 2016 AQMP
RACT SIP, as supplemented in the 2017 RACT Supplement, certain permit
conditions for two power plants in Coachella Valley included with the
2017 RACT Supplement, and two
[[Page 43857]]
negative declarations (for the CTG for shipbuilding and repair
operations and for the paper coating portion of the CTG for paper, film
and film coatings) because collectively they fulfill 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.
IV. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is finalizing regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In accordance with the requirements of 1
CFR 51.5, the EPA is finalizing the incorporation by reference of
certain permit conditions for two stationary sources in Coachella
Valley described in the amendments to 40 CFR part 52 set forth below.
The EPA, has made, and will continue to make, these documents 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).
V. 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 action merely approves SIP revisions as meeting
federal requirements and does not impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that reason, this action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21,
2011);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public Law 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, this 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).
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. The EPA will submit a report containing this action and
other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, petitions for
judicial review of this action must be filed in the United States Court
of Appeals for the appropriate circuit by November 20, 2017. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such
rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings
to enforce its requirements (see section 307(b)(2)).
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: August 29, 2017.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Chapter I, title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended
as follows:
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart F--California
0
2. Section 52.220 is amended by adding paragraphs (c)(449)(ii)(C) and
(c)(492) to read as follows:
Sec. 52.220 Identification of plan--in part.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(449) * * *
(ii) * * *
(C) South Coast Air Quality Management District.
(1) South Coast Air Quality Management District, ``2016 AQMP
Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) Demonstration,'' dated
May 22, 2014.
* * * * *
(492) The following plan revisions were submitted on July 27, 2017
by the Governor's designee.
(i) Incorporation by reference. (A) South Coast Air Quality
Management District.
(1) Appendix A to the Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis for the
NOX RECLAIM Program, Facility Permit to Operate, 63500 19th
Ave., North Palm Springs, CA 92258, title page, table of contents,
section A (page 1), and section D (pages 1-21), adopted on July 7,
2017.
(2) Appendix B to the Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis for the
NOX RECLAIM Program, Facility Permit to Operate, 15775
Melissa Land Rd, North Palm Springs, CA 92258, title page, table of
contents, section A (page 1), and section D (pages 1-49), adopted on
July 7, 2017.
(ii) Additional materials. (A) South Coast Air Quality Management
District.
[[Page 43858]]
(1) Attachment B (``Supplemental RACM/RACT Analysis for the
NOX RECLAIM Program (May 2017)''), excluding Appendices A
and B.
(2) Attachment C (``Negative Declaration for Control Techniques
Guidelines of Surface Coating Operations at Shipbuilding and Repair
Facilities, and Paper, Film and Foil Coatings (May 2017)'').
0
3. Section 52.222 is amended by adding paragraph (a)(13) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.222 Negative declarations.
(a) * * *
(13) South Coast Air Quality Management District.
(i) Negative declarations for the 2008 ozone standard: Control
Techniques Guidelines for Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Operations
(Surface Coating) including (published on August 27, 1996) and EPA 453/
R-94-032 Alternative Control Techniques Document: Surface Coating
Operations at Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Facilities; paper coating
portion of EPA 453/R-07-003 Control Techniques Guidelines for Paper,
Film, and Foil Coatings.
(ii) [Reserved]
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2017-19693 Filed 9-19-17; 8:45 am]
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