Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Arkansas; Approval of Regional Haze State Implementation Plan Revision for NOX, 5927-5940 [2018-02147]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
to apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where the EPA or
an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the 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 April 13, 2018.
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Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Ammonia,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
oxides, Ozone, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: January 24, 2018.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Part 52, 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
§ 52.220
Identification of plan—in part.
2. Section 52.220 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(439)(ii)(B)(6) to
read as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(439) * * *
(ii) * * *
(B) * * *
(6) The PM2.5-related portions of
Appendix VI (‘‘Reasonably Available
Control Measures (RACM)
Demonstration’’) of the Final 2012 Air
Quality Management Plan (December
2012).
*
*
*
*
*
■
§ 52.237
[Amended]
3. Section 52.237 is amended by
removing and reserving paragraph (a)(7).
■
[FR Doc. 2018–02677 Filed 2–9–18; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2015–0189; FRL–9973–30–
Region 6]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Arkansas;
Approval of Regional Haze State
Implementation Plan Revision for NOX
for Electric Generating Units in
Arkansas
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
is finalizing an approval of a revision to
the Arkansas State Implementation Plan
(SIP) submitted by the State of Arkansas
through the Arkansas Department of
Environmental Quality (ADEQ) that
addresses regional haze for the first
planning period. ADEQ submitted this
revision to address certain requirements
of the Clean Air Act (CAA) and the
EPA’s regional haze rules for the
protection of visibility. The EPA is
taking final action to approve the State’s
SIP revision, which addresses nitrogen
oxide (NOX) best available retrofit
technology (BART) requirements for the
Arkansas Electric Cooperative
Corporation (AECC) Bailey Plant Unit 1;
AECC McClellan Plant Unit 1; the
American Electric Power/Southwestern
Electric Power Company (AEP/
SWEPCO) Flint Creek Plant Boiler No.
1; Entergy Arkansas, Inc. (Entergy) Lake
Catherine Plant Unit 4; Entergy White
Bluff Plant Units 1 and 2 and the
Auxiliary Boiler. The SIP revision also
addresses reasonable progress
requirements for NOX for the Entergy
Independence Plant Units 1 and 2. In
conjunction with this final approval, we
are finalizing in a separate rulemaking,
which is also being published in this
Federal Register, our withdrawal of
federal implementation plan (FIP)
emission limits for NOX that would
otherwise apply to these nine units.
DATES: This rule is effective on March
14, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket No.
EPA–R06–OAR–2015–0189. All
documents in the dockets are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
SUMMARY:
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is not placed on the internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the EPA Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202–2733.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dayana Medina, 214–665–7241.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. The Regional Haze Program
B. Our Previous Actions
C. CSAPR as an Alternative to SourceSpecific NOX BART
II. Summary of Final Action
III. Response to Comments
A. Reliance on CSAPR-Better-Than BART
Rule
B. Reasonable Progress
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
D. Legal
E. General
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
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I. Background
A. The Regional Haze Program
Regional haze is visibility impairment
that is produced by a multitude of
sources and activities that are located
across a broad geographic area and emit
fine particulates (PM2.5) (e.g., sulfates,
nitrates, organic carbon (OC), elemental
carbon (EC), and soil dust), and their
precursors (e.g., sulfur dioxide (SO2),
nitrogen oxides (NOX), and in some
cases, ammonia (NH3) and volatile
organic compounds (VOCs)). Fine
particle precursors react in the
atmosphere to form PM2.5, which
impairs visibility by scattering and
absorbing light. Visibility impairment
reduces the clarity, color, and visible
distance that can be seen. PM2.5 can also
cause serious adverse health effects and
mortality in humans; it also contributes
to environmental effects such as acid
deposition and eutrophication.
Data from the existing visibility
monitoring network, ‘‘Interagency
Monitoring of Protected Visual
Environments’’ (IMPROVE), shows that
visibility impairment caused by air
pollution occurs virtually all of the time
at most national parks and wilderness
areas. In 1999, the average visual range 1
in many Class I areas (i.e., national
parks and memorial parks, wilderness
areas, and international parks meeting
certain size criteria) in the western
1 Visual range is the greatest distance, in
kilometers or miles, at which a dark object can be
viewed against the sky.
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United States was 100–150 kilometers,
or about one-half to two-thirds of the
visual range that would exist under
estimated natural conditions.2 In most
of the eastern Class I areas of the United
States, the average visual range was less
than 30 kilometers, or about one-fifth of
the visual range that would exist under
estimated natural conditions. CAA
programs have reduced emissions of
some haze-causing pollution, lessening
some visibility impairment and
resulting in partially improved average
visual ranges.3
CAA requirements to address the
problem of visibility impairment
continue to be implemented. In Section
169A of the 1977 Amendments to the
CAA, Congress created a program for
protecting visibility in the nation’s
national parks and wilderness areas.
This section of the CAA establishes as
a national goal the prevention of any
future, and the remedying of any
existing, man-made impairment of
visibility in 156 national parks and
wilderness areas designated as
mandatory Class I Federal areas.4
Congress added section 169B to the
CAA in 1990 to address regional haze
issues, and the EPA promulgated
regulations addressing regional haze in
1999. The Regional Haze Rule 5 revised
the existing visibility regulations to add
provisions addressing regional haze
impairment and established a
comprehensive visibility protection
program for Class I areas. The
requirements for regional haze, found at
40 CFR 51.308 and 51.309, are included
in our visibility protection regulations at
2 64
FR 35715 (July 1, 1999).
interactive ‘‘story map’’ depicting efforts and
recent progress by EPA and states to improve
visibility at national parks and wilderness areas
may be visited at: https://arcg.is/29tAbS3.
4 Areas designated as mandatory Class I Federal
areas consist of National Parks exceeding 6,000
acres, wilderness areas and national memorial parks
exceeding 5,000 acres, and all international parks
that were in existence on August 7, 1977. 42 U.S.C.
7472(a). In accordance with section 169A of the
CAA, EPA, in consultation with the Department of
Interior, promulgated a list of 156 areas where
visibility is identified as an important value. 44 FR
69122 (November 30, 1979). The extent of a
mandatory Class I area includes subsequent changes
in boundaries, such as park expansions. 42 U.S.C.
7472(a). Although states and tribes may designate
as Class I additional areas which they consider to
have visibility as an important value, the
requirements of the visibility program set forth in
section 169A of the CAA apply only to ‘‘mandatory
Class I Federal areas.’’ Each mandatory Class I
Federal area is the responsibility of a ‘‘Federal Land
Manager.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7602(i). When we use the term
‘‘Class I area’’ in this action, we mean a ‘‘mandatory
Class I Federal area.’’
5 Here and elsewhere in this document, the term
‘‘Regional Haze Rule,’’ refers to the 1999 final rule
(64 FR 35714), as amended in 2005 (70 FR 39156,
July 6, 2005), 2006 (71 FR 60631, October 13, 2006),
2012 (77 FR 33656, June 7, 2012), and January 10,
2017 (82 FR 3078).
3 An
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40 CFR 51.300–51.309. The requirement
to submit a regional haze SIP applies to
all 50 states, the District of Columbia,
and the Virgin Islands. States were
required to submit the first
implementation plan addressing
regional haze visibility impairment no
later than December 17, 2007.6
Section 169A of the CAA directs
states to evaluate the use of retrofit
controls at certain larger, often undercontrolled, older stationary sources in
order to address visibility impacts from
these sources. Specifically, section
169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA requires states
to revise their SIPs to contain such
measures as may be necessary to make
reasonable progress toward the natural
visibility goal, including a requirement
that certain categories of existing major
stationary sources 7 built between 1962
and 1977 procure, install and operate
BART controls. Larger ‘‘fossil-fuel fired
steam electric plants’’ are one of these
source categories. Under the Regional
Haze Rule, states are directed to conduct
BART determinations for ‘‘BARTeligible’’ sources that may be
anticipated to cause or contribute to any
visibility impairment in a Class I area.
The evaluation of BART for electric
generating units (EGUs) that are located
at fossil-fuel fired power plants having
a generating capacity in excess of 750
megawatts must follow the ‘‘Guidelines
for BART Determinations Under the
Regional Haze Rule’’ at appendix Y to
40 CFR part 51 (hereinafter referred to
as the ‘‘BART Guidelines’’). Rather than
requiring source-specific BART
controls, states also have the flexibility
to adopt an emissions trading program
or other alternative program as long as
the alternative provides for greater
progress towards improving visibility
than BART.
B. Our Previous Actions
Arkansas submitted a SIP revision on
September 9, 2008, to address the
requirements of the first regional haze
implementation period. On August 3,
2010, Arkansas submitted a SIP revision
with non-substantive revisions to the
Arkansas Pollution Control and Ecology
Commission (APCEC) Regulation 19,
Chapter 15; this Chapter identified the
BART-eligible and subject-to-BART
sources in Arkansas and established
BART emission limits for subject-toBART sources. On September 27, 2011,
the State submitted supplemental
information to address the regional haze
6 See 40 CFR 51.308(b). EPA’s regional haze
regulations require subsequent updates to the
regional haze SIPs. 40 CFR 51.308(g)–(i).
7 See 42 U.S.C. 7491(g)(7) (listing the set of
‘‘major stationary sources’’ potentially subject-toBART).
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requirements. We are hereafter referring
to these regional haze submittals
collectively as the ‘‘2008 Arkansas
Regional Haze SIP.’’ On March 12, 2012,
we partially approved and partially
disapproved the 2008 Arkansas
Regional Haze SIP.8 On September 27,
2016, we published a FIP addressing the
disapproved portions of the 2008
Arkansas Regional Haze SIP (the
Arkansas Regional Haze FIP).9 Among
other things, the FIP established NOX
emission limits under the BART
requirements for Bailey Unit 1;
McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler No.
1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; and White
Bluff Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary
Boiler. The FIP also established NOX
emission limits under the reasonable
progress requirements for Independence
Units 1 and 2.
Following the issuance of the
Arkansas Regional Haze FIP, the State of
Arkansas and several industry parties
filed petitions for reconsideration and
an administrative stay of the final rule.10
We announced in April 2017 our
decision to convene a proceeding to
reconsider several elements of the FIP,
including the appropriate compliance
dates for the NOX emission limits for
Flint Creek Unit 1, White Bluff Units 1
and 2, and Independence Units 1 and
2.11 EPA also published a document in
the Federal Register on April 25, 2017,
administratively staying the
effectiveness of the 18-month NOX
compliance dates in the FIP for these
units for a period of 90 days.12 On July
13, 2017, the EPA published a proposed
rule to extend the NOX compliance
dates for Flint Creek Unit 1, White Bluff
Units 1 and 2, and Independence Units
1 and 2, by 21 months to January 27,
2020.13 14
8 77
FR 14604.
FR 66332; see also 81 FR 68319 (October 4,
2016) (correction).
10 See the docket associated with this proposed
rulemaking for a copy of the petitions for
reconsideration and administrative stay submitted
by the State of Arkansas; Entergy Arkansas Inc.,
Entergy Mississippi Inc., and Entergy Power LLC
(collectively ‘‘Entergy’’); AECC; and the Energy and
Environmental Alliance of Arkansas (EEAA).
11 Letter from E. Scott Pruitt, Administrator, EPA,
to Nicholas Jacob Bronni and Jamie Leigh Ewing,
Arkansas Attorney General’s Office (April 14, 2017).
A copy of this letter is included in the docket,
https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPAR06-OAR-2015-0189-0240.
12 82 FR 18994.
13 82 FR 32284.
14 EPA has not taken final action on the July 13,
2017 proposed rule. This final action approving the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision together
with the separate final action that EPA is taking to
withdraw the source-specific NOX emission limits
for the nine EGUs in the Arkansas Regional Haze
FIP, make it unnecessary to finalize our July 13,
2017 proposed rule to revise the NOX compliance
dates in the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
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On July 12, 2017, Arkansas submitted
a proposed SIP revision with a request
for parallel processing, addressing the
NOX requirements for Bailey Unit 1,
McClellan Unit 1, Flint Creek Boiler No.
1, Lake Catherine Unit 4, White Bluff
Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler,
and Independence Units 1 and 2
(Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision or Arkansas NOX SIP revision).
In our March 12, 2012 final action on
the 2008 Arkansas Regional Haze SIP,
we disapproved the State’s sourcespecific NOX BART determinations for
Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1; Flint
Creek Boiler No. 1; Lake Catherine Unit
4; White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and its
auxiliary boiler.15 In that same action,
we also made the determination that the
State did not satisfy the statutory and
regulatory requirements for the
reasonable progress analysis. We
promulgated a FIP on September 27,
2016, that established source-specific
NOX BART emission limits for these
seven EGUs and NOX emission limits
under reasonable progress for
Independence Units 1 and 2 to address
the disapproved portions of the 2008
Arkansas Regional Haze SIP submittal.
Arkansas’ proposed July 2017
Regional Haze NOX SIP revision
addressed the NOX BART requirements
for Arkansas’ EGUs by relying on
participation in the Cross State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR) ozone season
NOX trading program as an alternative
to BART. The July 2017 Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision proposal also made
the determination that no additional
NOX emission controls for Arkansas
sources, beyond participation in
CSAPR’s ozone season NOX trading
program, are required for ensuring
reasonable progress in Arkansas. As
noted above, the July 2017 Regional
Haze SIP revision addresses NOX
requirements for the same EGUs for
which we established source-specific
NOX emission limits in our September
27, 2016 FIP. In a document published
in the Federal Register on September
11, 2017, we proposed to approve the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision.16 On October 31, 2017, we
received ADEQ’s final NOX SIP revision
addressing BART and reasonable
progress requirements for NOX for EGUs
in Arkansas for the first implementation
period. The final Arkansas Regional
Haze NOX SIP revision we received on
October 31, 2017, did not contain
significant changes from the state’s
proposed SIP revision. Therefore, it is
15 77
16 82
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FR 42627.
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5929
appropriate for us to take final action, as
proposed, on the final SIP revision.
C. CSAPR as an Alternative to SourceSpecific NOX BART
In 2005, the EPA published the Clean
Air Interstate Rule (CAIR), which
required 27 states and the District of
Columbia to reduce emissions of SO2
and NOX from affected electric
generating units (EGUs) that
significantly contribute to or interfere
with maintenance of the 1997 national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS)
for fine particulates and/or 8-hour ozone
in any downwind state.17 EPA
demonstrated that CAIR would achieve
greater reasonable progress toward the
national visibility goal than would
BART; therefore, states could rely on
CAIR as an alternative to BART for SO2
and NOX at EGUs.18 Although Arkansas
was subject to certain NOX requirements
of CAIR, including the state-wide ozone
season NOX budget but not the annual
NOX budget, and although this would
have been sufficient for Arkansas to rely
on CAIR to satisfy NOX BART, it elected
not to rely on CAIR in its 2008 Regional
Haze SIP to satisfy the NOX BART
requirement for its EGUs.
On July 11, 2008, the D.C. Circuit
found CAIR was fatally flawed and on
December 23, 2008, the Court remanded
CAIR to EPA without vacatur to
‘‘preserve the environmental benefits
provided by CAIR.’’ 19 In 2011, acting on
the D.C. Circuit’s remand, we
promulgated the Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR) to replace CAIR
and issued FIPs to implement the rule
in CSAPR-subject states.20 Arkansas
EGUs are covered under CSAPR for
ozone season NOX.21
In 2012, we issued a limited
disapproval of several states’ regional
haze SIPs because of reliance on CAIR
as an alternative to EGU BART for SO2
and/or NOX.22 We also determined that
CSAPR would provide for greater
reasonable progress than BART and
amended the Regional Haze Rule to
allow for CSAPR participation as an
alternative to source-specific SO2 and/or
NOX BART for EGUs, on a pollutantspecific basis.23 As Arkansas did not
17 70
FR 25161 (May 12, 2005).
FR 39104, 39139 (July 6, 2005).
19 North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 901 (D.C.
Cir. 2008), modified, 550 F.3d 1176, 1178 (D.C. Cir.
2008).
20 76 FR 48207 (August 8, 2011).
21 76 FR 82219 (December 30, 2011).
22 The limited disapproval triggered the EPA’s
obligation to issue a FIP or approve a SIP revision
to correct the relevant deficiencies within 2 years
of the final limited disapproval action. CAA section
110(c)(1); 77 FR 33642, at 33654 (June 7, 2012).
23 See 40 CFR 51.308(e)(4).
18 70
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rely on CAIR to satisfy the NOX BART
requirements in the 2008 Regional Haze
SIP, Arkansas was not included in the
EPA’s limited disapproval of regional
haze SIPs that relied on CAIR to satisfy
certain regional haze requirements.24 As
noted above, in the 2012 rulemaking in
which we promulgated those limited
disapprovals, the EPA also promulgated
FIPs to replace reliance on CAIR with
reliance on CSAPR in many of those
regional haze SIPs; however, Arkansas
was likewise not included in that FIP
action.
CSAPR has been subject to extensive
litigation, and on July 28, 2015, the DC
Circuit issued a decision generally
upholding CSAPR but remanding
without vacating the CSAPR emissions
budgets for a number of states.25 On
October 26, 2016, we finalized an
update to CSAPR that addresses the
1997 ozone NAAQS portion of the
remand as well as the CAA
requirements addressing interstate
transport for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.26
Additionally, three states, Alabama,
Georgia, and South Carolina, have
adopted or committed to adopt SIPs to
continue their participation in the
CSAPR program, including adoption on
a voluntary basis of state SO2 emission
budgets equal to those state’s remanded
SO2 emission budgets. On November 10,
2016, we proposed a rule intended to
address the remainder of the court’s
remand as it relates to Texas.27 This
separate proposed rule included an
assessment of the impacts of the set of
actions that the EPA had taken or
expected to take in response to the D.C.
Circuit’s remand on our 2012
demonstration that participation in
CSAPR provides for greater reasonable
progress than BART. Based on that
assessment, the EPA proposed that
states may continue to rely on CSAPR
as an alternative to BART on a
pollutant-specific basis. On September
29, 2017, we finalized our proposed
finding that the EPA’s 2012 analytical
demonstration remains valid and that
participation in CSAPR, as it now exists,
meets the Regional Haze Rule’s criteria
for an alternative to BART.28 In the
October 2017 Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision, the state relies on
CSAPR as an alternative to BART for
control of NOX from EGUs.
24 See
77 FR 33642, at 33654.
ozone season NOX budgets were not
included in the remand. EME Homer City
Generation v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 138 (D.C. Cir.
2015).
26 81 FR74504 (October 26, 2016).
27 81 FR 78954 (November 10, 2016).
28 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
25 Arkansas’
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II. Summary of Final Action
This action finalizes our proposed
approval of the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision, which relies on EPA’s
determination that CSAPR provides for
greater reasonable progress than BART
to address the NOX BART requirements
for Arkansas EGUs. Consistent with 40
CFR 51.308(e)(4), Arkansas makes the
determination that since the Arkansas
EGUs are currently subject to the
CSAPR requirements for ozone-season
NOX, the State need not have source
specific requirements for subject-toBART EGUs to install, operate, and
maintain BART for NOX. We find that
it is appropriate for Arkansas to rely on
participation in the CSAPR ozone
season NOX trading program to satisfy
the NOX BART requirements for
Arkansas EGUs. EPA’s 2012
determination and our September 29,
2017 final rulemaking make the finding
that the EPA’s 2012 analytical
demonstration remains valid and that
participation in CSAPR, as it now exists,
meets the Regional Haze Rule’s criteria
for an alternative to BART.29 Arkansas’
reliance on CSAPR addresses the NOX
BART requirements for Bailey Unit 1;
McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler No.
1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff
Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler.
We also find that Arkansas reasonably
determined that additional NOX control
measures are not needed to ensure
reasonable progress for the first
implementation period. Given the level
of visibility impairment due to NOX
emissions from Arkansas point sources
at the state’s two Class I areas, Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo, on the 20%
worst days, additional NOX controls for
Arkansas point sources are not
anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas on the 20% worst days.30
29 82
FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
also recognized that sources in
Arkansas impact the two Class I areas in Missouri:
Hercules Glade Wilderness Area and Mingo
Wilderness Area. Arkansas provided the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources with an
opportunity for consultation on the proposed
Arkansas NOX SIP revision, including an
opportunity to discuss Missouri’s assessment of the
impact of the proposed SIP revision on reasonable
progress at Missouri Class I areas. The Missouri
Department of Natural Resources did not have
comments on the proposed SIP revision and did not
pursue consultation. Additionally, Arkansas looked
at the most recent five-year rolling average of
observed visibility impairment on the 20% haziest
days for Missouri’s Class I areas and concluded that
the visibility progress observed at the IMPROVE
monitors indicates that sources in Arkansas are not
interfering with the achievement of Missouri’s 2018
RPGs for Hercules Glades and Mingo. Taking these
things into consideration, Arkansas made the
determination that no additional NOX reductions
from Arkansas sources are required to improve
30 Arkansas
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In light of this, and considering that
Arkansas EGUs are participating in
CSAPR for ozone season NOX, we are
finalizing our determination that
Arkansas’ decision to screen out
Arkansas point sources from further
evaluation of additional NOX controls is
reasonable and we are finalizing our
approval of Arkansas’ determination
that no additional NOX controls, beyond
Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR
for ozone season NOX, are necessary to
satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for
the first implementation period.
We are finalizing our approval of the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision as we have found it to meet the
applicable provisions of the Act and
EPA regulations and it is consistent
with EPA guidance. We received
comments from three commenters on
our proposed approval. Our response to
the substantive comments we received
are summarized in Section III. We have
fully considered all significant
comments on our proposed action on
the SIP revision submittal, and have
concluded that no changes to our final
determination are warranted.
We are approving the October 2017
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision submitted by ADEQ as we have
determined that it meets the regional
haze SIP requirements, including the
reasonable progress requirements in
§ 51.308(d) and the BART requirements
in § 51.308(e). In conjunction with this
final approval, we are finalizing in a
separate rulemaking, which is also being
published in this Federal Register, our
withdrawal of FIP emission limits for
NOX that would otherwise apply to the
nine affected units.
III. Response to Comments
The public comments received on our
proposed rule are included in the
publicly posted docket associated with
this action at www.regulations.gov. We
reviewed all public comments that we
received on the proposed action. Below,
we provide a summary of certain
comments and our responses. The
comments and our responses thereto are
contained in a separate document titled
the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
Revision Response to Comments.
A. Reliance on CSAPR-Better-ThanBART Rule
Comment: ADEQ proposes to rely on
ozone-season NOX reductions under the
updated CSAPR in lieu of the sourcespecific BART emission limits that EPA
finalized as part of its 2016 regional
visibility in Missouri Class I areas for the first
implementation period.
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haze FIP. ADEQ relies on a ‘‘back-of-theenvelope’’ calculation of anticipated
emission reductions, and asserts that
EPA’s updated 2018 Arkansas ozone
season NOX emission budgets under the
CSAPR update achieve a greater
reduction in NOX emissions than do
implementation of NOX BART controls
included in the Arkansas Regional Haze
FIP. Without any further analysis,
ADEQ suggests that compliance with
the 2018 CSAPR ozone season
allocations for Arkansas EGUs satisfies
the BART requirements of the Regional
Haze Rule.
Response: This comment is in relation
to ADEQ’s comparison of anticipated
NOX emissions reductions based on the
CSAPR emission budgets versus the
anticipated NOX emissions reductions
from the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
We did not base our proposed approval
of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision on the
state’s comparison of the anticipated
NOX reductions in Arkansas from
CSAPR against those anticipated from
the FIP. Furthermore, in response to
comments that the state received during
its state rulemaking process, ADEQ
proceeded to remove from its final SIP
revision the comparison of anticipated
NOX emissions reductions under the FIP
versus CSAPR because such information
is not necessary for EPA approval of the
SIP.31 With regard to the comment that
ADEQ did not adequately support its
determination that compliance with the
2018 CSAPR ozone season allocations
for Arkansas EGUs satisfies the BART
requirements, we disagree that ADEQ
was required to undertake a statespecific analysis of whether reliance on
CSAPR provides for greater reasonable
progress than BART; as allowed under
40 CFR 51.308(e)(4), Arkansas is relying
on EPA’s determination that CSAPR
provides for greater reasonable progress
than BART to address the NOX BART
requirements for its EGUs. Arkansas’
EGUs are currently subject to the
CSAPR requirements for ozone-season
NOX, the State need not require subjectto-BART EGUs to install, operate, and
maintain BART for NOX. As explained
above, although the D.C. Circuit
remanded the CSAPR emissions budgets
of certain states in 2015, we recently
reaffirmed our determination that
participation in CSAPR, as it now exists,
continues to meet the Regional Haze
Rule’s criteria for an alternative to
BART.32
31 See final Arkansas NO SIP revision, Tab E
X
(Public Comment Period Documentation,
Responsive Summary for State Implementation Plan
Revision, p. 20).
32 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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Comment: Arkansas’ proposal
unlawfully exempts sources from
installing BART controls without going
through the exemption process Congress
prescribed. The visibility protection
provisions of the Clean Air Act include
a ‘‘requirement’’ that certain sources
‘‘install, and operate’’ BART controls.
Congress specified the standard by
which sources could be exempted from
the BART requirements, which is that
the source is not ‘‘reasonably
anticipated to cause or contribute to a
significant impairment of visibility’’ in
any Class I area. Appropriate federal
land managers must concur with any
proposed exemption. Neither EPA nor
Arkansas has demonstrated that the
Arkansas EGUs subject to BART meet
the standards for an exemption. Nor has
EPA or the state obtained the
concurrence of federal land managers.
Therefore, Arkansas must require
source-specific BART for each power
plant subject to BART.
Response: To the extent the comment
is directed to prior final agency actions
allowing states to rely on alternatives to
BART generally or on CSAPR
specifically to meet the BART
requirements, this comment falls
outside of the scope of our action here.
Objections that the use of BART
alternatives does not comply with 42
U.S.C. 7491(b)(2)(A) do not properly
pertain to this action, but instead to our
past regulatory actions that provided for
BART alternatives.33 We do note that
the Arkansas SIP does not exempt the
EGUs from BART but rather relies on
EPA’s determination that states may rely
on CSAPR as an alternative means of
meeting the BART requirements.
Comment: Even if Arkansas could
meet a BART statutory exemption test,
the state cannot rely on CSAPR because
of flaws in the rule that purport to show
that CSAPR makes more reasonable
progress than BART (the ‘‘Better than
BART’’ rule). EPA’s regulations purport
to allow the use of an alternative
program in lieu of source-specific BART
only if the alternative makes ‘‘greater
reasonable progress’’ than would BART.
To demonstrate greater reasonable
progress, a state or EPA must show that
the alternative program does not cause
visibility to decline in any Class I area
and results in an overall improvement
in visibility relative to BART at all
33 See the June 7, 2012 final rulemaking where we
made the determination that CSAPR provides for
greater reasonable progress than BART (77 FR
33642). See also our September 29, 2017 final
rulemaking where we made the finding that the
EPA’s 2012 analytical demonstration remains valid
and that participation in CSAPR, as it now exists,
meets the Regional Haze Rule’s criteria for an
alternative to BART (82 FR 45481).
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5931
affected Class I areas. Here, EPA claims
that its 2012 ‘‘Better than BART’’ rule
demonstrated that CSAPR achieves
greater reasonable progress than BART.
EPA compared CSAPR to BART in the
Better than BART rule by using CSAPR
allocations that are more stringent than
now required as well as by using
presumptive BART limits that are less
stringent than required under the
statute. These assumptions tilted the
scales in favor of CSAPR. It would be
arbitrary and capricious for EPA to rely
on such an inaccurate, faulty
comparison to conclude that CSAPR
will achieve greater reasonable progress
than will BART. Even under EPA’s
skewed comparison, CSAPR achieves
barely more visibility improvement than
BART at the Breton and Caney Creek
National Wilderness Areas. If EPA had
modeled accurate BART limits and upto-date CSAPR allocations, then EPA
would likely find that CSAPR would
lead to less visibility improvement than
BART.
EPA cannot lawfully rely on the
Better than BART rule because the rule
is based on a version of CSAPR that no
longer exists. Accordingly, any
conclusion that EPA made in the 2012
Better than BART rule regarding
whether CSAPR achieves greater
reasonable progress than BART is no
longer valid. Since 2012, EPA has
significantly changed the allocations
and the compliance deadlines for
CSAPR. Of particular relevance here,
after 2012, EPA increased the total
ozone season CSAPR allocations for
every covered EGU in Arkansas. EPA
also extended the compliance deadlines
by three years, such that the phase 1
emissions budgets take effect in 2015–
2016 and the phase 2 emissions budgets
take effect in 2017 and beyond.
In addition to EPA’s increased
emissions budgets and extended
compliance timeline, the D.C. Circuit’s
decision in EME Homer City Generation
v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 130–32 (D.C. Cir.
2015), which invalidated the SO2 or
NOX emission budgets for thirteen
states, has fundamentally undermined
the rationale underlying EPA’s Better
than BART rule. Specifically, the Court
invalidated the 2014 SO2 emission
budgets for Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina, and Texas, and the 2014 NOX
emission budgets for Florida, Maryland,
New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina,
Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia. As
explained in our initial brief in the stillpending challenge to the CSAPR Better
than BART rule, the effect of Homer City
is to pull the rug out from under EPA’s
BART exemption rule. EPA’s finding
that CSAPR would produce better
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visibility improvement than BART was
premised on the existence of all the
state-specific emission budgets adopted
in the Transport Rule. Because the D.C.
Circuit has now invalidated many of
those budgets, the BART exemption rule
is left without the factual basis on
which it relied.
Response: As we had proposed, our
finalized determination that CSAPR
participation will resolve the NOX
BART requirements for Arkansas EGUs
is based on a separately proposed and
recently finalized action that affirms
that participation in CSAPR, as it now
exists, continues to meet the Regional
Haze Rule’s criteria for an alternative to
BART.34 This comment is directed to
the separately proposed action that was
finalized on September 29, 2017, and
therefore, falls outside of the scope of
our action here.
Comment: Arkansas’s reliance on
CSAPR as an alternative to BART is
unlawful because the emissions
reductions achieved by CSAPR in
Arkansas are limited to five months of
the year—the ozone season. Under the
Regional Haze Rule, BART represents a
year-round limit on emissions. Given
that CSAPR does not limit annual NOX
emissions from Arkansas sources, but
instead only applies to Arkansas sources
for five months out of the year, CSAPR
cannot satisfy the Regional Haze Rule’s
requirement that sources meet the ‘‘best
system of continuous emission
reduction’’ for NOX. In fact, as noted in
EPA’s Technical Support Document for
the proposed disapproval of Arkansas’s
2008 SIP, the adverse impacts of
Arkansas NOX emissions on visibility
‘‘tend to be a large component of
visibility impairment during the winter
months’’—i.e., outside of the ozone
season. Thus, NOX emissions reductions
that are effective only during the ozone
season will not address the visibility
impact due to wintertime ammonium
nitrate at Breton Island or other Class I
areas in neighboring states.
Even within the five-month ozone
season, CSAPR allows for temporal
variability such that a facility could
emit at high levels within a shorter time
period, creating higher than anticipated
visibility impacts. Because of the high
degree of variability and flexibility,
power plants may exercise options that
would lead to little or no emission
reductions. For example, a facility in
Arkansas might purchase emission
credits from a source beyond the air
shed of the Class I area the Arkansas
source impairs. Because CSAPR
requirements only pertain to the
Arkansas source for a fraction of the
34 82
FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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year, that source may be even more
incentivized to purchase emission
credits from elsewhere than a source in
a fully covered CSAPR state. Thus,
without knowing which Arkansas EGUs
will reduce pollutants by what amounts
under CSAPR, or when they will do so,
and because these emissions reductions
are applicable for less than half the year,
Arkansas simply cannot know the
impact of CSAPR upon Breton and other
affected Class I areas.
For these reasons, reliance on CSAPR
to satisfy the NOX BART requirements
is unlawful. EPA should disapprove
Arkansas’ reliance on CSAPR to satisfy
the NOX requirements.
Response: These comments fall
outside the scope of this rulemaking. In
2012, when we finalized our
determination that CSAPR provides for
greater reasonable progress than BART,
we considered comments that the
imposition of BART would require yearround operation of NOX controls but
that under CSAPR there would be no
assurance that controls would operate
outside of the ozone season. The basis
for our decision to allow Arkansas and
other states covered by CSAPR for ozone
season only to rely on participation in
that program to satisfy NOX BART is
explained in that rulemaking.35
Comment: Arkansas purports to
satisfy the regulatory requirements for a
BART alternative by relying on ozoneseason budgets for NOX that no longer
exist. To rely on CSAPR as an
alternative to BART, Arkansas must
demonstrate that the version of CSAPR
that is now in effect, and will be in
effect at the time of the final rule, makes
greater reasonable progress than BART.
Having failed to make that
demonstration, Arkansas has not met its
burden to show that CSAPR will
achieve greater reasonable progress than
source-specific BART. More troubling,
Arkansas’ reliance on the CSAPR
‘‘Better than BART’’ rule fails to account
for, or even mention, the possibility that
CSAPR or the ‘‘Better than BART’’ rule
will not exist in any form when the SIP
is finalized.
Response: As we had proposed, our
finalized determination that CSAPR
participation will resolve NOX BART
requirements for Arkansas EGUs is
based on a separately proposed and
finalized action taken in 2012. On
September 29, 2017, we affirmed our
proposed finding that the EPA’s 2012
analytical demonstration remains valid
and that participation in CSAPR, as it
now exists, meets the Regional Haze
Rule’s criteria for an alternative to
35 77
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BART.36 This comment falls outside of
the scope of our action here.
Comment: When evaluating a state’s
BART determination, the EPA looks at
existing requirements and cannot rely
on potential future actions in its
decision to approve or disapprove a
state SIP. As EPA recognizes in the
proposed approval, the agency cannot
finalize Arkansas’ proposed SIP until
EPA finalizes its finding that CSAPR
continues to be better than BART as an
alternative to source-specific EGU BART
for NOX. Although EPA, on September
29, 2017, finalized a rule purporting to
conclude that ozone-season NOX
limitations under CSAPR continue to be
‘‘better than BART’’ for eligible EGUs in
Arkansas, EPA failed to include any of
the documentation or analyses
supporting that finding in this docket.
As such, EPA cannot approve
Arkansas’s SIP proposal unless and
until those analyses are included in the
docket and the public has a meaningful
opportunity to comment on those
materials.
Response: We included the notice of
proposed rulemaking addressing
whether CSAPR continues to be better
than BART following changes to the
budgets of certain states in our docket
for this action because of its relevance
to Arkansas’ proposed SIP revision.37
As explained in our proposed approval
of Arkansas’ SIP revision, EPA would be
able to approve regional haze SIP
submissions that rely on participation in
CSAPR as an alternative to BART only
if it were to finalize its proposed rule or
to otherwise determine that
participation in CSPAR remains a viable
BART alternative.38 We accordingly
made clear that a final determination
that CSAPR participation will resolve
the NOX BART requirements for
Arkansas’ EGUs is based on a separately
proposed and finalized action. The
supporting materials and analyses
underlying that action are contained in
the docket for that action, and the
public has had a meaningful
opportunity to comment on that
determination.
Comment: EPA should approve the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision because it satisfies the criteria
of the Regional Haze program. The
states, not EPA, play the lead role in
designing and implementing [the]
regional haze programs. EPA may
disapprove a SIP only if it does not
satisfy the minimum criteria of Section
36 82
FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
the document in the docket titled
‘‘AR020.0250 CSAPR Better than BART Proposed
Rulemaking, dated November 10, 2016.’’
38 82 FR at 42629.
37 See
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110 of the Clean Air Act. Accordingly,
EPA has no authority to question the
wisdom of a State’s choices of emission
limitations if they are part of a plan
which satisfies the standards of Section
110(a)(2), and has no authority to
disapprove of a SIP ‘‘simply on a
preference for a particular control
measure. The SIP revision meets the
requirements of the Regional Haze
Program and must be approved. ADEQ’s
determination that compliance with the
CSAPR ozone season NOX trading
program requirements satisfies NOX
BART and any reasonable progress
obligations for the state’s EGUs is
consistent with the Regional Haze Rule,
is appropriate considering the minimal
role that NOX emissions play in
visibility impairment in Arkansas’ Class
I areas, and would eliminate the
unnecessary and duplicative
requirements currently imposed by the
Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support of our proposed
approval of the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision. As we had proposed,
we are finalizing our approval of the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision.
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B. Reasonable Progress
Comment: The State attempts to
justify the elimination of reasonable
progress controls on Independence by
claiming that the CSAPR allocations for
NOX will result in greater reductions in
NOX emissions than the FIP would. The
State’s rationale has no basis in law or
in fact. To begin, there is no statutory or
regulatory provision which allows states
to rely on CSAPR in lieu of conducting
a four-factor analysis of reasonable
progress. While EPA has issued a rule
that purports to allow states to rely on
CSAPR in lieu of imposing sourcespecific controls on BART sources, EPA
has not issued a comparable rule for
reasonable progress.
Moreover, the State’s comparison of
NOX reductions under CSAPR versus
the FIP is flawed. The State compares
CSAPR allocations to binding
reductions which must occur under the
FIP, based on legally enforceable
emissions limits. This compares apples
to oranges. As the name suggest, CSAPR
allocations are not emissions limits,
they are initial entitlements to emit
certain amounts of pollution. Sources
can emit more than their initial
allocations, because CSAPR allows both
intra- and inter-state trading of
allowances. Thus, it is highly
misleading to treat CSAPR allocations as
binding emission limits which can be
compared directly to the emission limits
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and reductions under the Arkansas
Regional Haze FIP.
ADEQ further claims in its SIP that it
‘‘anticipates that some EGUs will choose
to install combustion controls to comply
with CSAPR that would reduce
emissions year-round, not just in the
ozone season.’’ ADEQ provides no
evidence for this assumption. More
importantly, ADEQ wrongly conflates
installation of controls with operation
and optimized operation of controls.
Even if it were true that some EGUs will
install controls to comply with CSAPR,
ADEQ provides no reason to assume
that EGUs will operate those controls
when they are not legally required to do
so. ADEQ has advanced no basis for
assuming that Arkansas EGUs will
spend additional money to run NOX
controls or optimize them to reduce
NOX when they are not required to do
so, i.e., outside of the CSAPR ozone
season. Thus, there is no record basis for
assuming that CSAPR will reduce NOX
emissions in Arkansas outside of the
ozone season.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that Arkansas is relying on
CSAPR in lieu of conducting an
appropriate reasonable progress
analysis. In assessing the need for
additional NOX controls to address
reasonable progress, Arkansas focused
its reasonable progress assessment on
the Central Regional Air Planning
(CENRAP) 39 Comprehensive Air
Quality Model with extensions (CAMx)
source apportionment modeling,40 and
observed that a small portion of total
light extinction is due to nitrate (NO3)
from Arkansas sources and that this
portion is driven by on-road sources and
not point sources. Arkansas notes that
the source apportionment data show
that NO3 from Arkansas point sources
contributes less than 0.5% of the total
light extinction at Caney Creek and
Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst days in
2002, and that, for the first
implementation period, NOX is not a
key pollutant contributing to visibility
impairment at Arkansas’ Class I areas on
those days. Based on the above
observations, Arkansas reached the
conclusion that, for the first
39 In developing their Regional Haze SIP and
RPGs, Arkansas and potentially impacted States
collaborated through CENRAP. Each State
developed its Regional Haze Plans and RPGs based
on the CENRAP modeling. The CENRAP modeling
was based in part on the emissions reductions each
state intended to achieve by 2018.
40 CENRAP utilized CAMx with its Particulate
Source Apportionment Technology (PSAT) tool to
provide estimated contributions to visibility
impairment at Class I areas by source region (e.g.,
states) and major source category for both the
baseline and future case (i.e., 2018) visibility
modeling.
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implementation period, additional NOX
controls for Arkansas point sources are
not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas on the 20% worst days in
view of the amount of visibility
impairment attributed to these sources.
Given the level of visibility impairment
due to NOX from Arkansas point sources
at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on
the 20% worst days and considering
that Arkansas EGUs are participating in
CSAPR for ozone season NOX, Arkansas
decided to screen out Arkansas point
sources from further evaluation of
additional NOX controls, thereby not
evaluating the four reasonable progress
factors for point sources with respect to
NOX in the first implementation period.
With regard to the comment that ‘‘the
State’s comparison of NOX reductions
under CSAPR versus the FIP is flawed,’’
we note that we did not base our
proposed approval of the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision on the state’s comparison of
these NOX reductions. In its draft SIP
revision, ADEQ compared anticipated
NOX emission reductions under CSAPR
as compared to the source-specific
BART determinations required by EPA’s
FIP in assessing the need for additional
reductions in NOX to ensure reasonable
progress. However, in its final SIP,
ADEQ did not include this information
as part of its rationale. We note that our
proposed approval of Arkansas’ SIP
revision did not rely on this comparison
of emissions. As a result, the adequacy
of ADEQ’s assessment is irrelevant to
their final action or to our review of the
final SIP. The commenter’s statements
questioning ADEQ’s assumptions that
Arkansas EGUs will install and operate
NOX combustion controls to comply
with CSAPR for ozone-season NOX and
operate those controls year-round
appear to be in the context of the
commenter’s contention that ADEQ’s
comparison of NOX reductions under
CSARP versus the Arkansas FIP is
flawed. As noted above, the adequacy of
ADEQ’s comparison of NOX emissions
reductions in the proposed SIP revision
is irrelevant to their final action or to
our review of the final SIP.
Comment: The State failed to consider
any of the four statutory factors for
reasonable progress and the reasonable
progress analysis is therefore unlawful
and not approvable. Arkansas
recognizes that ‘‘the RHR requires states
to consider four factors: (1) Cost of
compliance, (2) the time necessary for
compliance, (3) the energy and non-air
quality environmental impacts of
compliance, and (4) the remaining
useful life of potentially affected
sources,’’ but then the State proceeds to
ignore all four reasonable progress
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factors for point sources in its
reasonable progress analysis for NOX.
The Clean Air Act provides that in
determining reasonable progress there
shall be taken into consideration the
costs of compliance, the time necessary
for compliance, and the energy and
nonair quality environmental impacts of
compliance, and the remaining useful
life of any existing source subject to
such requirements. The Act contains no
exception to this requirement. The SIP
fails to consider these four statutory
factors, and therefore violates the Clean
Air Act. In particular, for NOX
emissions, the SIP contains no analysis
of the four factors. For emissions of
other pollutants, the SIP contains only
a single sentence claiming that the cost
effectiveness for control of POA and CM
species from many individual small
sources is difficult to quantify.
The SIP’s failure to consider any of
the four factors for NOX controls is
particularly egregious given that the
State acknowledges that EPA has
already issued a final rule containing a
four-factor analysis for the
Independence plant, which resulted in
a requirement that Independence install
and operate low-NOX burners. The State
has produced no evidence that EPA’s
four-factor analysis was incorrect in any
way, because the State does not analyze
any of the four factors which EPA
considered.
Response: We agree that the CAA and
the Regional Haze Rule provide that in
determining reasonable progress, states
‘‘shall take into consideration the costs
of compliance, the time necessary for
compliance, the energy and non-air
quality environmental impacts of
compliance, and the remaining useful
life of any existing source subject to
such requirements.’’ 41 However, in
cases where it has been demonstrated
that a particular pollutant or source
category does not contribute
significantly to visibility impairment at
affected Class I areas, it may be
appropriate to end the analysis at that
point, without the need to evaluate the
four statutory factors for potential
controls to address that pollutant and/
or source category. For example, EPA’s
‘‘Guidance for Setting Reasonable
Progress Goals Under the Regional Haze
Program’’ provides that the reasonable
progress analysis involves identification
of key pollutants and source categories
that contribute to visibility impairment
at the Class I area; the guidance
provides that once the key pollutants
contributing to visibility impairment at
each Class I area have been identified,
41 42 U.S.C. 7491(g)(1). See also 40 CFR
51.308(d)(1)(i)(A).
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the sources or source categories
responsible for emitting these pollutants
or pollutant precursors can also be
determined.42 The reasonable progress
factors are then to be applied to the key
pollutants and sources or source
categories contributing to visibility
impairment at each affected Class I area.
As we discussed on our proposed action
on the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision, taking into consideration that
states have significant discretion in
determining what sources to analyze for
controls under reasonable progress, we
proposed to agree with the state that it
is reasonable for Arkansas to reach the
conclusion that, for the first
implementation period, additional NOX
controls for Arkansas point sources are
not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas in view of the amount of
visibility impairment attributed to these
sources.43 Given the level of visibility
impairment due to NOX from Arkansas
point sources at Caney Creek and Upper
Buffalo on the 20% worst days and
considering that Arkansas EGUs are
participating in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX, we find that it is reasonable for
Arkansas to screen out Arkansas point
sources from further evaluation of
additional NOX controls and therefore
not have to evaluate the four reasonable
progress factors for point sources with
respect to NOX in the first
implementation period.
Arkansas’ conclusions with regard to
the percentage contribution to light
extinction from NO3 on the 20% worst
days is generally consistent with the
findings we made in the Arkansas
Regional Haze FIP.44 In the FIP, we
made the finding that NO3 due to NOX
emissions from point sources is not
considered a driver of regional haze at
Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the
20% worst days, contributing only
approximately 3% of the total light
extinction, as projected by CENRAP’s
CAMx source apportionment
modeling.45 We also stated in the FIP
proposal that because of the small
contribution of NO3 from point sources
to the total light extinction at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20%
worst days, we did not expect that NOX
controls under the reasonable progress
requirements would offer as much
improvement on these days compared to
SO2 controls.46 However, in the FIP, we
42 EPA’s ‘‘Guidance for Setting Reasonable
Progress Goals Under the Regional Haze Program,’’
p. 3–1 (June 1, 2007).
43 82 FR 42633.
44 81 FR 66332; see also 81 FR 68319 (October 4,
2016) (correction).
45 80 FR 18996.
46 80 FR 18996.
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decided to look at 2011 National
Emissions Inventory (NEI) data for NOX
for Arkansas point sources to determine
if there are any large point sources that
are reasonable candidates for evaluation
under the four reasonable progress
factors. Based on this assessment, we
proceeded with an analysis of the four
reasonable progress factors for NOX
controls for the Independence facility as
we reasoned that it is the second largest
point source of NOX emissions in the
state and potentially one of the largest
single contributors to visibility
impairment at Class I areas in
Arkansas.47 We also conducted
CALPUFF modeling to determine the
maximum 98th percentile visibility
impacts from the Independence facility
and the predicted visibility
improvement due to NOX controls at the
facility. That analysis revealed that low
NOX burner controls would be costeffective and would result in an
improvement of the 98th percentile
visibility impacts from the
Independence facility at Caney Creek
and Upper Buffalo, and we finalized
NOX controls for the Independence
facility under the reasonable progress
requirements.48 In the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision, the state takes a different
approach in arriving at its decision that
no additional NOX controls for Arkansas
point sources are necessary under
reasonable progress for the first
implementation period. In its
evaluation, Arkansas places greater
emphasis on its assessment of the
relative contributions to light extinction
of sources within the State than it does
on its assessment of the relative
contributions of all sources (i.e., sources
both in and outside Arkansas). Arkansas
focused its assessment on the CENRAP’s
CAMx source apportionment modeling
and reaches the conclusion that, for the
first implementation period, additional
NOX controls for Arkansas point sources
are not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas on the 20% worst days in
view of the amount of visibility
impairment attributed to these sources.
Therefore, Arkansas determined that no
additional NOX controls beyond EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX are necessary to satisfy the
reasonable progress requirements for
Arkansas sources in the first planning
period. In future planning periods,
Arkansas will have to reevaluate the
benefit of NOX reductions, which will
likely become more important as other
pollutants are reduced. We believe
Arkansas is within its discretion to take
47 80
48 81
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FR 66332.
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a different approach than we did in the
Arkansas FIP, and that the approach
Arkansas has taken to determine
whether additional NOX controls are
necessary under reasonable progress is
reasonable and therefore, approvable.
The Clean Air Act gave EPA the power
to identify pollutants and set air quality
standards. Congress gave states ‘‘the
primary responsibility for implementing
those standards.’’ Luminant Generation
Co. v. EPA, 675 F.3d 917, 921 (5th Cir.
2012). (internal quotation marks
omitted); see 42 U.S.C. 7407(a) (‘‘Each
State shall have the primary
responsibility for assuring air quality
within [its] entire geographic area.’’); id.
section 7401(a)(3) (‘‘[A]ir pollution
prevention . . . is the primary
responsibility of States and local
governments.’’). The states have ‘‘wide
discretion’’ in formulating SIPs. Union
Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 250
(1976).
We are finalizing our approval of
Arkansas’ determination that Arkansas
EGU participation in CSAPR for ozone
season NOX is sufficient to satisfy the
reasonable progress requirements for
NOX in Arkansas for the first
implementation period.
Comment: The State’s reasonable
progress analysis unlawfully fails to
consider whether measures are needed
to make reasonable progress at Class I
areas outside Arkansas. The State’s
analysis is unlawful, regardless of
whether the old or new version of the
Regional Haze rule applies here. The
prior version of the Regional Haze rule
required each state to make an
independent determination of the
measures needed to make reasonable
progress at out-of-state Class I areas.
After noting the statutory goal to
eliminate all human-caused visibility
impairment, EPA observed that ‘‘it
would be impossible to achieve this goal
if upwind states did not have the same
responsibility to address their visibility
impairing emissions and achieve
reasonable progress in downwind Class
I areas as the downwind states
themselves.’’
The current version of the regional
haze rule clarifies, but does not alter,
this obligation. As EPA noted in the
2017 revisions to the regional haze rule,
states have an ‘‘independent obligation
to include in their SIPs enforceable
emission limits and other measures that
are necessary to make reasonable
progress at all affected Class I areas, as
determined by considering the four
factors.’’ Despite the requirement to
consider whether measures are needed
to make reasonable progress at out of
state Class I areas, the State’s analysis
focuses exclusively on the two Class I
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areas within Arkansas. Yet the State
acknowledges that emissions from
Arkansas sources impact visibility at
Class I areas in Missouri. EPA’s analysis
of the SIP revision commits the same
mistake as the SIP revision itself. EPA
fails to analyze whether the State has
complied with Clean Air Act
requirements to determine whether
measures are needed to make reasonable
progress at out-of-state Class I areas. By
failing to consider whether measures are
necessary to make reasonable progress
at Missouri Class I areas, the draft SIP
violates the Regional Haze Rule, and is
unapprovable.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that Arkansas failed to
consider whether additional controls are
necessary to make reasonable progress
in Class I areas outside the state. The
Arkansas NOX SIP revision recognizes
that sources in Arkansas impact the two
Class I areas in Missouri: Hercules
Glade Wilderness Area and Mingo
Wilderness Area. Arkansas also explains
that ‘‘[t]he most recent five-year rolling
average of observed visibility
impairment on the twenty percent
haziest days at Hercules Glades
Wilderness Area beat Missouri’s 2018
RPG for that Class I area and the most
recent five year-rolling average of
observed visibility impairment on the
twenty percent haziest days at Mingo
Wilderness Area is on track to beat
Missouri’s RPG for that Class I area.’’ 49
Arkansas concludes that the visibility
progress observed at the IMPROVE
monitors indicates that sources in
Arkansas are not interfering with the
achievement of Missouri’s 2018 RPGs
for Hercules Glades and Mingo
Wilderness Areas, and that no
additional controls are therefore needed
on Arkansas sources to ensure
reasonable progress at Missouri’s Class
I areas.50 Furthermore, Arkansas
provided Missouri with an opportunity
for consultation on the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision.51 Arkansas sent a letter
dated June 14, 2017, to the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
providing notification and electronic
access to the proposed SIP revision, and
providing an opportunity to discuss
Missouri’s assessment of the impact of
the proposed SIP revision on reasonable
progress at Missouri Class I areas.52
Missouri DNR did not have comments
on Arkansas’ proposed SIP revision.
49 See final Arkansas NO SIP revision, Section
X
IV.C, p. 23.
50 See final Arkansas NO SIP revision, Section
X
IV.C, p. 23.
51 See final Arkansas NO SIP revision, Section
X
V.C, p. 25.
52 See final Arkansas NO SIP revision, Tab E.
X
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5935
Comment: The Arkansas Regional
Haze NOX SIP revision determines that
controls for reasonable progress are not
necessary for the first planning period.
The Clean Air Act requires that regional
haze implementation plans contain
measures ‘‘necessary to make reasonable
progress toward meeting the national
goal’’ of no manmade visibility
impairment. In its regulations
implementing the Regional Haze
program, EPA established that, in
setting a reasonable progress goal, the
State must consider the uniform rate of
improvement in visibility and the
emission reduction measures needed to
achieve it for the period covered by the
implementation plan. EPA has further
explained in its guidance for setting
reasonable progress goals that states
should take into account the fact that
the long-term goal of no manmade
impairment encompasses several
planning periods and that it is
reasonable for the state to defer
reductions to later planning periods in
order to maintain a consistent glidepath
toward the long-term goal. Mandating
emissions controls that are not
necessary to make reasonable progress
during the planning period contradicts
this statutory and regulatory scheme.
Reasonable progress controls during
the first planning period clearly are not
necessary for Arkansas sources.
Interagency Monitoring of Protected
Visual Environments (IMPROVE)
monitoring data show that the haze
index has been consistently below the
glidepath in Arkansas’ Class I areas—
Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo—and
Entergy’s analysis demonstrates that it is
projected to remain so through the end
of the second planning period.
Even if controls were required for
reasonable progress during the first
planning period, NOX controls on
Arkansas EGUs are not necessary, as
they will provide minimal visibility
improvement in Arkansas’ Class I areas.
As EPA’s own analysis indicates, the
contribution of Arkansas point sources’
nitrate emissions to visibility
impairment in Arkansas’ Class I areas is
insignificant. According to EPA’s
analysis, nitrate from all point sources
included in the regional modeling is
projected to account for only 3% of the
total light extinction at the Caney Creek
and Upper Buffalo Class I areas, with
nitrate from Arkansas point sources
being responsible for only 0.27% of the
total light extinction at Caney Creek and
0.14% at Upper Buffalo. As a result,
NOX controls on Arkansas EGUs during
the first planning period are not
necessary to make reasonable progress
towards natural visibility conditions.
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Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support of our proposed
approval of Arkansas’ reasonable
progress determination for NOX. As we
had proposed, given the level of
visibility impairment due to NOX from
Arkansas point sources at Caney Creek
and Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst
days and considering that Arkansas
EGUs are participating in CSAPR for
ozone season NOX, we are finalizing our
determination that Arkansas’ decision to
screen out Arkansas point sources from
further evaluation of additional NOX
controls is reasonable and we are
finalizing our approval of Arkansas’
determination that Arkansas EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX is sufficient to satisfy the
reasonable progress requirements for
NOX in Arkansas for the first
implementation period.
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
Comment: EPA asserts that in the SIP
revision, Arkansas takes a different, but
nonetheless equally reasonable,
approach to determine whether
additional controls are necessary under
reasonable progress. But EPA ignores
that the State’s ‘‘different’’ approach
would result in more air pollution and
worse air quality relative to the existing
FIP. As a result, the State’s reasonable
progress determination violates the
Clean Air Act’s ‘‘anti-backsliding’’
requirement under 42 U.S.C. 7410(l),
and is therefore unapprovable.
In the 2016 FIP, EPA determined that
reasonable progress requires that
Independence Units 1 and 2 meet NOX
emission limits based on the use of lowNOX burners and separated over-fire air
controls. Now, the State proposes a SIP
that would replace those NOX emission
limits with nothing. Eliminating the
requirement that a source meet an
emission limit necessarily would result
in greater air pollution and worse
visibility impairment at affected Class I
areas. Section 110(l) of the Clean Air
Act prevents a plan revision that would
weaken the existing FIP requirements in
this manner.
Section 110(l) states that the
Administrator shall not approve a
revision of a plan if the revision would
interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress or any other
applicable requirement of this chapter.
Section 110(l) is the Act’s ‘‘antibacksliding’’ provision. The antibacksliding provision prohibits plan
revisions that would interfere with
attainment of the NAAQS or other
‘‘applicable requirements’’ of the Act.
Section 110(l) prohibits plan revisions
that would interfere with an existing
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requirement to make reasonable further
progress, including a BART
determination, as the Act’s ‘‘applicable
requirement[s]’’ include the regional
haze program’s BART requirements.
When determining whether a plan
revision interferes with NAAQS
attainment, EPA has interpreted section
110(l) as preventing plan revisions that
would increase overall air pollution or
worsen air quality. For example, the
Eleventh Circuit has upheld EPA’s
section 110(l) interpretation as
prohibiting plan revisions that would
increase emissions or worsen air
quality. In Kentucky Resources Council,
Inc. v. EPA, 467 F.3d 986 (6th Cir.
2006), EPA interpreted section 110(l) as
allowing the agency to approve a plan
revision that weakened some existing
control measures while strengthening
others, but only ‘‘[a]s long as actual
emissions in the air are not increased.’’
The court upheld EPA’s interpretation,
which ‘‘allow[ed] the agency to approve
a [state implementation plan] SIP
revision unless the agency finds it will
make the air quality worse.’’ The
Seventh Circuit has also upheld EPA’s
interpretation in Indiana v. EPA, 796
F.3d 803, 812 (7th Cir. 2015). Moreover,
in a short discussion regarding a
challenge to the Nevada regional haze
plan in WildEarth Guardians v. EPA,
759 F.3d 1064, 1074 (9th Cir. 2014), the
Ninth Circuit suggested that a haze plan
that ‘‘weakens or removes any pollution
controls’’ would violate section 110(l).
The existing reasonable progress
determination in the FIP requires
Independence Units 1 and 2 to meet
emission limits based on the use of lowNOX burners and separated over-fire air.
These pollution reductions must occur
by April 27, 2018. EPA has proposed to
extend the compliance deadline for this
requirement, but has not proposed to
alter the emission limits themselves.
Even if the deadline extension is
finalized, the final FIP for Arkansas
requires Independence Units 1 and 2 to
reduce NOX emissions. The draft SIP
would eliminate the FIP requirements
for Independence without imposing any
other requirement that would achieve
equal or greater reductions in NOX
emissions from Independence.
Response: We disagree that the
Arkansas NOX SIP revision violates the
CAA’s requirements under section
110(l). As discussed in our proposed
approval of the Arkansas NOX SIP
revision, we believe an approval of the
SIP revision and concurrent withdrawal
of the corresponding parts of the FIP, as
proposed, will meet the Clean Air Act’s
110(1) provisions. Generally, a SIP
revision may be approved under section
110(l) if EPA finds that it will at least
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preserve status quo air quality,
particularly where the pollutants at
issue are those for which an area has not
been designated nonattainment.53
Approval of the Arkansas NOX SIP
revision is not expected to interfere with
attainment and maintenance of any of
the NAAQS within the state of
Arkansas. No areas in Arkansas are
currently designated nonattainment for
any NAAQS pollutants. The SIP
revision we are approving would allow
Arkansas to rely on compliance with
CSAPR for ozone-season NOX to satisfy
the NOX BART requirement for
Arkansas EGUs and makes the
determination that no additional NOX
controls beyond EGU participation in
CSAPR for ozone season NOX are
necessary to satisfy the reasonable
progress requirements for NOX for
Arkansas sources. While the commenter
is correct that the Arkansas NOX SIP
revision we are approving does not
require source-specific NOX controls
under reasonable progress for
Independence Units 1 and 2, as was
required by the FIP, we note that those
units are subject to CSAPR for ozone
season NOX and their NOX emissions
will thus be addressed through
participation in the CSAPR ozone
season NOX program. Further, the
CSAPR 2018 NOX ozone season
allocations for Arkansas sources are
more stringent than the 2017
allocations. As all areas in Arkansas are
attaining all the NAAQS even with
current emissions levels, compliance
with the CSAPR 2018 NOX ozone season
more stringent allocations will not
interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment or
reasonable further progress toward
attainment of the NAAQS. We are not
aware of any basis for concluding or
demonstrating that the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision, when implemented, would
interfere with the continued attainment
of all the NAAQS in Arkansas.
We also do not find that our approval
of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision, as
proposed, will interfere with the
applicable CAA regional haze
requirements for BART or reasonable
progress because our action is supported
by an evaluation that those CAA
regional haze requirements for BART
and reasonable progress are met.
Specifically, EPA has made the
determination that Arkansas EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozoneseason NOX satisfies the NOX BART
requirements for Arkansas EGUs,
consistent with 40 CFR 51.308(e)(4). On
September 29, 2017, we affirmed our
proposed finding that the EPA’s 2012
53 78
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analytical demonstration remains valid
and that participation in CSAPR, as it
now exists, meets the Regional Haze
Rule’s criteria for an alternative to
BART. With regard to reasonable
progress for regional haze, the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision includes an
assessment of anthropogenic sources of
visibility impairment and arrives at the
determination that given the level of
contribution to light extinction from
NOX due to Arkansas point sources,
Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR
for ozone season NOX is sufficient to
satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for
the first implementation period. The
Independence facility, on which the FIP
imposed source specific NOX controls
under the reasonable progress
requirements, is subject to CSAPR for
ozone season NOX. Even though we are
approving the Arkansas NOX SIP
revision and concurrently withdrawing
the source-specific NOX controls in the
FIP for the Independence facility, the
NOX emissions from the Independence
facility will still be addressed under the
regional haze reasonable progress
requirements through participation in
the CSAPR ozone season NOX emissions
trading program. In addition, all
Arkansas EGUs with a nameplate
capacity of 25 megawatts or greater
participate in the CSAPR ozone season
NOX emissions trading program. This
means that many EGUs that were not
subject to control requirements under
the FIP are required under the CSAPR
trading program to comply with specific
NOX emissions allocations during the
ozone season.
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D. Legal
Comment: To be approvable, any SIP
must include enforceable emissions
limitations, compliance schedules, and
other measures as necessary to achieve
the reasonable progress goals. The
agency recognized in disapproving
Arkansas’s 2011 SIP package, that when
evaluating a state’s BART
determination, the EPA looks at existing
requirements and cannot rely on
potential future actions in its decision to
approve or disapprove a state SIP. Here,
EPA’s proposed approval is
impermissibly based on future
contingencies that have not occurred.
Indeed, the agency recognized in the
proposal that it cannot take a final
action until the state completes its
rulemaking process, adopts its final
regulations, and submits these final
adopted regulations as a revision to the
Arkansas SIP. Because EPA’s proposed
action relies on potential future state
actions, it cannot be approved.
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Response: We disagree with
comments that we are relying on
potential future state actions in taking
final action. CSAPR is an existing
program that the state of Arkansas is
participating in for NOX. The Arkansas
SIP revision relies on participation in
CSAPR to meet the requirements of NOX
BART, as well as the fact that NOX is
not the driver of visibility impairment
on the 20% worst days, in their
determination under reasonable
progress, that no other NOX controls are
needed. Future decisions on trading as
part of its current participation in
CSAPR are not considered future state
actions. Current participation in CSAPR
is the state action that EPA’s proposed
action is based upon.
Further, our proposed approval was
based on a proposed SIP revision
submitted by ADEQ on July 12, 2017,
with a request for parallel processing.
As we explained in our September 11,
2017 proposal, we proposed action on
the SIP revision at the same time that
ADEQ was completing the
corresponding public comment and
rulemaking process at the state level.54
We explained that the July 2017 SIP
revision request would not be complete
and would not meet all the SIP
approvability criteria until the state
completes the public process and
submits the final, adopted SIP revision
with a letter from the Governor or
Governor’s designee to EPA.55 In our
September 11, 2017 proposal, we
proposed to approve the SIP revision
request after completion of the state
public process and final submittal of the
SIP revision. On October 31, 2017, we
received ADEQ’s final SIP revision
addressing BART and reasonable
progress requirements for NOX for EGUs
in Arkansas for the first implementation
period. The final Arkansas Regional
Haze NOX SIP revision we received on
October 31, 2017 did not contain
significant changes from the state’s
proposed SIP revision. Therefore, it is
appropriate for us to take final action, as
proposed, on the final SIP revision.
E. General
Comment: The proposed rule contains
certain calculation errors, which,
although sufficiently minor that they do
not affect EPA’s conclusions, should be
corrected. EPA states that total light
extinction on the 20% worst days in
2002 was 115.87 Mm¥1 for Caney Creek
and 115 Mm¥1 for Upper Buffalo. These
values are inconsistent with CENRAP
PSAT results, which are 133.93 Mm¥1
and 131.79 Mm¥1, respectively. EPA’s
54 82
FR at 42629.
55 Id.
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5937
values appear to exclude certain source
categories, namely Initial Conditions,
Boundary Conditions, Secondary
Organic Aerosols—Anthropogenic, and
Secondary Organic Aerosols—Biogenic.
EPA does not explain why these
categories are or should be excluded
when calculating light extinction on the
20% worst days in 2002. Further, EPA
does include these categories in its
calculation of other values, such as the
87.05 Mm¥1 value for the SO4
contribution at Caney Creek, which
accounts for 3.32 Mm¥1 from the
Boundary Conditions source category.
Because the total light extinction values
form the basis for many other values in
EPA’s analysis, errors in the total light
extinction values carry over into the
derivative values.
The proposed rule also contains a
number of miscalculations unrelated to
the total light extinction error. These
miscalculations relate to EPA’s
characterization of the CENRAP PSAT
results. While sufficiently minor that
they do not affect the outcome of EPA’s
determination, Entergy lists these errors
here in the interest of correcting the
record:
• EPA states that the remaining
source categories each contribute
between 2% and 6% of total light
extinction at Arkansas’ Class I areas.
The high-end rounded value should be
changed from 6% to 7%, as the true
range is 1.83% to 6.72%, pursuant to
the CENRAP PSAT results.
• EPA states that the PSAT results
show that natural, on-road, and nonroad sources are projected to continue to
contribute a very small portion of total
light extinction at Arkansas’ Class I
areas on the 20% worst days in 2018.
According to the CENRAP PSAT results,
the contribution of natural, on-road, and
non-road sources is 8.5% to 9.4% of the
total light extinction. This amount
should not be characterized as ‘‘a very
small portion.’’
• EPA states that the other species
(i.e., NO3, POA, EC, soil, and CM) are
also projected to have reductions in
their contribution to total light
extinction at Caney Creek and Upper
Buffalo in 2018. This statement is true
for all the species except soil, which
actually increases in 2018 for both Class
I areas according to the CENRAP PSAT
results.
• EPA states that the other source
categories in Arkansas each contribute
between 7% and 14% to light extinction
attributed to Arkansas sources at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo. According to
the CENRAP PSAT results, the correct
range is 7% to 8%.
• EPA states that CM from Arkansas
sources, primarily area sources,
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contribute approximately 1 and 2% of
total light extinction at Caney Creek and
Upper Buffalo, respectively. According
to the CENRAP PSAT results, the value
for Upper Buffalo is 2.68% (which
would round to 3%).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter pointing out errors and
other mischaracterizations of light
extinction values presented in our
proposed action. We acknowledge these
errors. As pointed out by the
commenter, these errors are minor in
nature and do not affect our proposed
and final determinations on the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision.
• The commenter is correct that our
proposed action stated that total light
extinction on the 20% worst days in
2002 was 115.87 Mm ¥1 for Caney Creek
and 115 Mm ¥1 for Upper Buffalo.56
However, as pointed out by the
commenter, these cited values did not
include initial conditions, boundary
conditions, and secondary organic
matter. As we noted in our proposed
action on the 2008 Arkansas Regional
Haze SIP,57 the correct total visibility
extinction on the 20% worst days in
2002, including contributions from
initial conditions, boundary conditions,
and secondary organic matter, is 133.93
Mm ¥1 at Caney Creek 58 and 131.79
Mm ¥1 at Upper Buffalo.59
• The commenter pointed out that we
stated in our proposal that the PSAT
results show that natural, on-road, and
non-road sources are projected to
contribute a very small portion of total
light extinction at Arkansas’ Class I
areas on the 20% worst days in 2018.60
The commenter further points out that
the combined contribution of these
three source categories is 8.5% and
9.4% at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo,
which the commenter says should not
be characterized as ‘‘a very small
portion.’’ While we agree with the
commenter that the combined
contribution of the three source
categories is not ‘‘very small,’’ we would
like to clarify that the statement made
in our proposal referred to the
contribution of each individual source
category at each Class I area. For
example, the natural source category
contributes approximately 2.47% of the
total light extinction at Caney Creek and
2.6% at Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst
days in 2018; the on-road source
category contributes approximately
1.68% of the total light extinction at
56 82
FR at 42630.
FR at 64186 (October 17, 2011).
58 76 FR at 64214.
59 76 FR at 64215.
60 82 FR 42631.
57 76
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Caney Creek and 1.82% at Upper
Buffalo; and the on-road source category
contributes approximately 4.38% of the
total light extinction at Caney Creek and
4.93% at Upper Buffalo.
• The commenter pointed out that
our statement that the light extinction
due to species other than SO4 is
projected to decrease in 2018 on the
20% worst days at Caney Creek and
Upper Buffalo is correct for all species
except soil. The commenter is correct,
as the light extinction due to soil is
projected to increase slightly in 2018 on
the 20% worst days at both Class I
areas.61 The commenter points out that
according to the CENRAP PSAT results,
CM from Arkansas sources contribute
approximately 2.68% of the total light
extinction at Upper Buffalo, not 2%, as
stated in our proposal.62 The
commenter is correct. The CM
contribution from all Arkansas source
categories is 3.53 Mm ¥1, out of a total
light extinction of 131.79 Mm ¥1, which
is a contribution of approximately
2.68%.
IV. Final Action
We are approving a revision to the
Arkansas SIP submitted on October 31,
2017, as meeting the regional haze
requirements for the first
implementation period. This action
includes the finding that the submittal
meets the applicable regional haze
requirements as set forth in sections
169A and 169B of the CAA and 40 CFR
51.300–51.308. The EPA is approving
the SIP revision submittal as meeting
the following: the core requirements for
regional haze SIPs found in 40 CFR
51.308(d) such as the reasonable
progress requirement for NOX; the NOX
BART requirements for regional haze
visibility impairment with respect to
emissions of visibility impairing
pollutants from EGUs in 40 CFR
51.308(e); and the requirement for
coordination with state and Federal
Land Managers in § 51.308(i). We are
approving ADEQ’s reliance on CSAPR
participation for ozone season NOX to
meet the NOX BART requirement for
EGUs. Arkansas’ reliance on CSAPR
addresses the NOX BART requirements
for Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1;
Flint Creek Boiler No. 1; Lake Catherine
Unit 4; White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and
the Auxiliary Boiler.
We also agree that Arkansas’
conclusion that given the relatively
small level of visibility impairment due
to NOX from Arkansas point sources at
Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the
20% worst days, for the first
61 76
62 82
PO 00000
FR at 64214–64215; see Tables 8 and 10.
FR at 42631.
Frm 00068
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
implementation period, additional NOX
controls for Arkansas point sources are
not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas on the 20% worst days is
reasonable. In light of the level of
visibility impairment due to NOX from
Arkansas point sources at Caney Creek
and Upper Buffalo and considering that
Arkansas EGUs are participating in
CSAPR for ozone season NOX, we are
finalizing our determination that
Arkansas’ decision to screen out
Arkansas point sources from further
evaluation of additional NOX controls is
reasonable and we are finalizing our
approval of Arkansas’ determination
that no additional NOX controls, beyond
Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR
for ozone season NOX, are necessary to
satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for
the first implementation period.
Concurrent with our final approval of
the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision, we are finalizing in a separate
rulemaking our final action to withdraw
those portions of the Arkansas Regional
Haze FIP at 40 CFR 52.173 that impose
NOX requirements on Bailey Unit 1;
McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler No.
1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff
Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler;
and Independence Units 1 and 2.63
We find that an approval of the SIP
revision meets the Clean Air Act’s
110(1) provisions. No areas in Arkansas
are currently designated nonattainment
for any NAAQS pollutants. Approval of
the Arkansas NOX SIP revision will not
interfere with continued attainment of
all the NAAQS within the state of
Arkansas. The SIP revision we are
approving would allow Arkansas to rely
on compliance with CSAPR for ozoneseason NOX to satisfy the NOX BART
requirement for Arkansas EGUs and
makes the determination that no
additional NOX controls beyond EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX are necessary to satisfy the
reasonable progress requirements for
NOX for Arkansas sources. We also find
that our approval of the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision will not interfere with the
applicable CAA regional haze
requirements for BART because our
action is supported by an evaluation
EPA made in a separate rulemaking 64
that the CAA requirement for BART can
be satisfied through participation in
63 Our final action withdrawing part of the
Arkansas Regional Haze FIP is also being published
in this Federal Register.
64 On September 29, 2017, we finalized our
proposed finding that the EPA’s 2012 analytical
demonstration remains valid and that participation
in CSAPR, as it now exists, meets the Regional Haze
Rule’s criteria for an alternative to BART.
E:\FR\FM\12FER1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
CSAPR. We also find that our approval
of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision will
not interfere with the applicable CAA
regional haze requirements for
reasonable progress because the
Arkansas NOX SIP revision includes an
assessment of anthropogenic sources of
visibility impairment and arrives at the
determination that given the level of
contribution to light extinction from
NOX due to Arkansas point sources,
Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR
for ozone season NOX is sufficient to
satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for
the first implementation period. The
Independence facility, on which the FIP
imposed source specific NOX controls
under the reasonable progress
requirements, is subject to CSAPR for
ozone season NOX. Even though we are
approving the Arkansas NOX SIP
revision and concurrently withdrawing
the source-specific NOX controls in the
FIP for the Independence facility, the
NOX emissions from the Independence
facility will still be addressed under the
regional haze reasonable progress
requirements through participation in
the CSAPR ozone season NOX emissions
trading program.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
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 state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason,
this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• Is not an Executive Order 13771 (82
FR 9339, February 2, 2017) regulatory
action because SIP approvals are
exempted under Executive Order 12866;
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
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18:49 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
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, described in
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
to apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where EPA or an
Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the rule does not have
tribal implications 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. 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
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5939
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 April 13, 2018.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Air pollution control, Best available
retrofit technology, Environmental
protection, Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Regional haze,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Visibility.
Dated: January 24, 2018.
Anne Idsal,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
Title 40, chapter I, 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 E—Arkansas
2. In § 52.170, paragraph (e) is
amended by adding the entry ‘‘Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP Revision’’ at the
end of the third table titled ‘‘EPAApproved Non-Regulatory Provisions
and Quasi-Regulatory Measures in the
Arkansas SIP’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 52.170
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
E:\FR\FM\12FER1.SGM
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*
*
5940
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
EPA-APPROVED NON-REGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES IN THE ARKANSAS SIP
Applicable
geographic or
nonattainment
area
Name of
SIP provision
*
Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP Revision.
*
Statewide ............
State
submittal/
effective
date
*
10/31/2017
EPA
approval
date
Explanation
*
*
*
*
2/12/2018, [Insert FedRegional Haze SIP submittal addressing NOX
eral Register citation].
BART requirements for Arkansas EGUs and reasonable progress requirements for NOX for the
first implementation period.
3. In § 52.173, paragraphs (e) and (f)
are added to read as follows:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
§ 52.173
40 CFR Part 52
■
Visibility protection.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Measures addressing best available
retrofit technology (BART) for electric
generating unit (EGU) emissions of
nitrogen oxides (NOX). The BART
requirements for EGU NOX emissions
are satisfied by § 52.184 and the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP
Revision approved February 12, 2018,
[Insert Federal Register citation].
(f) Other measures addressing
reasonable progress. The reasonable
progress requirements for NOX
emissions are satisfied by the Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP Revision
approved February 12, 2018, [Insert
Federal Register citation].
[FR Doc. 2018–02147 Filed 2–9–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
[EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0573; FRL–9973–55Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan
Revisions, Mojave Desert Air Quality
Management District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking final action to
approve a revision to the Mojave Desert
Air Quality Management District
(MDAQMD) portion of the California
State Implementation Plan (SIP). This
revision concerns emissions of volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) from marine
and pleasure craft coating operations.
We are approving a local rule that
regulates these emission sources under
the Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act).
DATES: This rule is effective on March
14, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0573. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
SUMMARY:
Although listed in the index, 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:
Arnold Lazarus, EPA Region IX, (415)
972- 3024, lazarus.arnold@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. EPA Action
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Proposed Action
On November 17, 2017 (82 FR 54307),
the EPA proposed to approve the
following rule into the California SIP.
TABLE 1—SUBMITTED RULE
Local agency
Rule No.
Rule title
Amended
Submitted
MDAQMD ..........
1106
Marine and Pleasure Craft Coating Operations ...........................................
10/24/2016
02/24/2017
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
We proposed to approve this rule
because we determined that it complies
with the relevant CAA requirements.
Our proposed action contains more
information on the rule and our
evaluation.
II. Public Comments and EPA
Responses
The EPA’s proposed action provided
a 30-day public comment period. During
this period, we received three comments
stating, inter alia, that birds and bats are
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18:49 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
killed by wind and solar facilities, that
federal agencies should address wildfire
risks, and that California should
regulate emissions from wildfires. These
comments fail to identify any specific
issue that is germane to our action on
the Mojave Desert Marine and Pleasure
Craft Coating Operations Rule.
III. EPA Action
No comments were submitted that
change our assessment of the rule as
described in our proposed action.
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Therefore, as authorized in section
110(k)(3) of the Act, the EPA is fully
approving this rule into the California
SIP.
In addition, the EPA is fixing
typographical errors in Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations, Section
52.220, subparagraph (c)(350)(i). On
June 30, 2017, the EPA took final action
to approve an updated version of Great
Basin Unified Air Pollution Control
District Rule 431 into the California SIP
(82 FR 29762). In that action, we
E:\FR\FM\12FER1.SGM
12FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 29 (Monday, February 12, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 5927-5940]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02147]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2015-0189; FRL-9973-30-Region 6]
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Arkansas;
Approval of Regional Haze State Implementation Plan Revision for NOX
for Electric Generating Units in Arkansas
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is finalizing an approval of a
revision to the Arkansas State Implementation Plan (SIP) submitted by
the State of Arkansas through the Arkansas Department of Environmental
Quality (ADEQ) that addresses regional haze for the first planning
period. ADEQ submitted this revision to address certain requirements of
the Clean Air Act (CAA) and the EPA's regional haze rules for the
protection of visibility. The EPA is taking final action to approve the
State's SIP revision, which addresses nitrogen oxide (NOX)
best available retrofit technology (BART) requirements for the Arkansas
Electric Cooperative Corporation (AECC) Bailey Plant Unit 1; AECC
McClellan Plant Unit 1; the American Electric Power/Southwestern
Electric Power Company (AEP/SWEPCO) Flint Creek Plant Boiler No. 1;
Entergy Arkansas, Inc. (Entergy) Lake Catherine Plant Unit 4; Entergy
White Bluff Plant Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler. The SIP
revision also addresses reasonable progress requirements for
NOX for the Entergy Independence Plant Units 1 and 2. In
conjunction with this final approval, we are finalizing in a separate
rulemaking, which is also being published in this Federal Register, our
withdrawal of federal implementation plan (FIP) emission limits for
NOX that would otherwise apply to these nine units.
DATES: This rule is effective on March 14, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket No. EPA-R06-OAR-2015-0189. All documents in the dockets are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website. Although listed in
the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g.,
Confidential Business Information or other information whose disclosure
is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted
material,
[[Page 5928]]
is not placed on the internet and will be publicly available only in
hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are available
either electronically through https://www.regulations.gov or in hard
copy at the EPA Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 700, Dallas, Texas
75202-2733.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dayana Medina, 214-665-7241.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document ``we,'' ``us,'' and
``our'' means the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. The Regional Haze Program
B. Our Previous Actions
C. CSAPR as an Alternative to Source-Specific NOX
BART
II. Summary of Final Action
III. Response to Comments
A. Reliance on CSAPR-Better-Than BART Rule
B. Reasonable Progress
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
D. Legal
E. General
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
A. The Regional Haze Program
Regional haze is visibility impairment that is produced by a
multitude of sources and activities that are located across a broad
geographic area and emit fine particulates (PM2.5) (e.g.,
sulfates, nitrates, organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), and
soil dust), and their precursors (e.g., sulfur dioxide
(SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOX), and in some cases,
ammonia (NH3) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs)). Fine
particle precursors react in the atmosphere to form PM2.5,
which impairs visibility by scattering and absorbing light. Visibility
impairment reduces the clarity, color, and visible distance that can be
seen. PM2.5 can also cause serious adverse health effects
and mortality in humans; it also contributes to environmental effects
such as acid deposition and eutrophication.
Data from the existing visibility monitoring network, ``Interagency
Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments'' (IMPROVE), shows that
visibility impairment caused by air pollution occurs virtually all of
the time at most national parks and wilderness areas. In 1999, the
average visual range \1\ in many Class I areas (i.e., national parks
and memorial parks, wilderness areas, and international parks meeting
certain size criteria) in the western United States was 100-150
kilometers, or about one-half to two-thirds of the visual range that
would exist under estimated natural conditions.\2\ In most of the
eastern Class I areas of the United States, the average visual range
was less than 30 kilometers, or about one-fifth of the visual range
that would exist under estimated natural conditions. CAA programs have
reduced emissions of some haze-causing pollution, lessening some
visibility impairment and resulting in partially improved average
visual ranges.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Visual range is the greatest distance, in kilometers or
miles, at which a dark object can be viewed against the sky.
\2\ 64 FR 35715 (July 1, 1999).
\3\ An interactive ``story map'' depicting efforts and recent
progress by EPA and states to improve visibility at national parks
and wilderness areas may be visited at: https://arcg.is/29tAbS3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAA requirements to address the problem of visibility impairment
continue to be implemented. In Section 169A of the 1977 Amendments to
the CAA, Congress created a program for protecting visibility in the
nation's national parks and wilderness areas. This section of the CAA
establishes as a national goal the prevention of any future, and the
remedying of any existing, man-made impairment of visibility in 156
national parks and wilderness areas designated as mandatory Class I
Federal areas.\4\ Congress added section 169B to the CAA in 1990 to
address regional haze issues, and the EPA promulgated regulations
addressing regional haze in 1999. The Regional Haze Rule \5\ revised
the existing visibility regulations to add provisions addressing
regional haze impairment and established a comprehensive visibility
protection program for Class I areas. The requirements for regional
haze, found at 40 CFR 51.308 and 51.309, are included in our visibility
protection regulations at 40 CFR 51.300-51.309. The requirement to
submit a regional haze SIP applies to all 50 states, the District of
Columbia, and the Virgin Islands. States were required to submit the
first implementation plan addressing regional haze visibility
impairment no later than December 17, 2007.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Areas designated as mandatory Class I Federal areas consist
of National Parks exceeding 6,000 acres, wilderness areas and
national memorial parks exceeding 5,000 acres, and all international
parks that were in existence on August 7, 1977. 42 U.S.C. 7472(a).
In accordance with section 169A of the CAA, EPA, in consultation
with the Department of Interior, promulgated a list of 156 areas
where visibility is identified as an important value. 44 FR 69122
(November 30, 1979). The extent of a mandatory Class I area includes
subsequent changes in boundaries, such as park expansions. 42 U.S.C.
7472(a). Although states and tribes may designate as Class I
additional areas which they consider to have visibility as an
important value, the requirements of the visibility program set
forth in section 169A of the CAA apply only to ``mandatory Class I
Federal areas.'' Each mandatory Class I Federal area is the
responsibility of a ``Federal Land Manager.'' 42 U.S.C. 7602(i).
When we use the term ``Class I area'' in this action, we mean a
``mandatory Class I Federal area.''
\5\ Here and elsewhere in this document, the term ``Regional
Haze Rule,'' refers to the 1999 final rule (64 FR 35714), as amended
in 2005 (70 FR 39156, July 6, 2005), 2006 (71 FR 60631, October 13,
2006), 2012 (77 FR 33656, June 7, 2012), and January 10, 2017 (82 FR
3078).
\6\ See 40 CFR 51.308(b). EPA's regional haze regulations
require subsequent updates to the regional haze SIPs. 40 CFR
51.308(g)-(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 169A of the CAA directs states to evaluate the use of
retrofit controls at certain larger, often under-controlled, older
stationary sources in order to address visibility impacts from these
sources. Specifically, section 169A(b)(2)(A) of the CAA requires states
to revise their SIPs to contain such measures as may be necessary to
make reasonable progress toward the natural visibility goal, including
a requirement that certain categories of existing major stationary
sources \7\ built between 1962 and 1977 procure, install and operate
BART controls. Larger ``fossil-fuel fired steam electric plants'' are
one of these source categories. Under the Regional Haze Rule, states
are directed to conduct BART determinations for ``BART-eligible''
sources that may be anticipated to cause or contribute to any
visibility impairment in a Class I area. The evaluation of BART for
electric generating units (EGUs) that are located at fossil-fuel fired
power plants having a generating capacity in excess of 750 megawatts
must follow the ``Guidelines for BART Determinations Under the Regional
Haze Rule'' at appendix Y to 40 CFR part 51 (hereinafter referred to as
the ``BART Guidelines''). Rather than requiring source-specific BART
controls, states also have the flexibility to adopt an emissions
trading program or other alternative program as long as the alternative
provides for greater progress towards improving visibility than BART.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See 42 U.S.C. 7491(g)(7) (listing the set of ``major
stationary sources'' potentially subject-to-BART).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Our Previous Actions
Arkansas submitted a SIP revision on September 9, 2008, to address
the requirements of the first regional haze implementation period. On
August 3, 2010, Arkansas submitted a SIP revision with non-substantive
revisions to the Arkansas Pollution Control and Ecology Commission
(APCEC) Regulation 19, Chapter 15; this Chapter identified the BART-
eligible and subject-to-BART sources in Arkansas and established BART
emission limits for subject-to-BART sources. On September 27, 2011, the
State submitted supplemental information to address the regional haze
[[Page 5929]]
requirements. We are hereafter referring to these regional haze
submittals collectively as the ``2008 Arkansas Regional Haze SIP.'' On
March 12, 2012, we partially approved and partially disapproved the
2008 Arkansas Regional Haze SIP.\8\ On September 27, 2016, we published
a FIP addressing the disapproved portions of the 2008 Arkansas Regional
Haze SIP (the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP).\9\ Among other things, the
FIP established NOX emission limits under the BART
requirements for Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler
No. 1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; and White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and the
Auxiliary Boiler. The FIP also established NOX emission
limits under the reasonable progress requirements for Independence
Units 1 and 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 77 FR 14604.
\9\ 81 FR 66332; see also 81 FR 68319 (October 4, 2016)
(correction).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the issuance of the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP, the State
of Arkansas and several industry parties filed petitions for
reconsideration and an administrative stay of the final rule.\10\ We
announced in April 2017 our decision to convene a proceeding to
reconsider several elements of the FIP, including the appropriate
compliance dates for the NOX emission limits for Flint Creek
Unit 1, White Bluff Units 1 and 2, and Independence Units 1 and 2.\11\
EPA also published a document in the Federal Register on April 25,
2017, administratively staying the effectiveness of the 18-month
NOX compliance dates in the FIP for these units for a period
of 90 days.\12\ On July 13, 2017, the EPA published a proposed rule to
extend the NOX compliance dates for Flint Creek Unit 1,
White Bluff Units 1 and 2, and Independence Units 1 and 2, by 21 months
to January 27, 2020.\13\ \14\
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\10\ See the docket associated with this proposed rulemaking for
a copy of the petitions for reconsideration and administrative stay
submitted by the State of Arkansas; Entergy Arkansas Inc., Entergy
Mississippi Inc., and Entergy Power LLC (collectively ``Entergy'');
AECC; and the Energy and Environmental Alliance of Arkansas (EEAA).
\11\ Letter from E. Scott Pruitt, Administrator, EPA, to
Nicholas Jacob Bronni and Jamie Leigh Ewing, Arkansas Attorney
General's Office (April 14, 2017). A copy of this letter is included
in the docket, https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-R06-OAR-2015-0189-0240.
\12\ 82 FR 18994.
\13\ 82 FR 32284.
\14\ EPA has not taken final action on the July 13, 2017
proposed rule. This final action approving the Arkansas Regional
Haze NOX SIP revision together with the separate final
action that EPA is taking to withdraw the source-specific
NOX emission limits for the nine EGUs in the Arkansas
Regional Haze FIP, make it unnecessary to finalize our July 13, 2017
proposed rule to revise the NOX compliance dates in the
Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 12, 2017, Arkansas submitted a proposed SIP revision with a
request for parallel processing, addressing the NOX
requirements for Bailey Unit 1, McClellan Unit 1, Flint Creek Boiler
No. 1, Lake Catherine Unit 4, White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and the
Auxiliary Boiler, and Independence Units 1 and 2 (Arkansas Regional
Haze NOX SIP revision or Arkansas NOX SIP
revision). In our March 12, 2012 final action on the 2008 Arkansas
Regional Haze SIP, we disapproved the State's source-specific
NOX BART determinations for Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1;
Flint Creek Boiler No. 1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff Units 1
and 2 and its auxiliary boiler.\15\ In that same action, we also made
the determination that the State did not satisfy the statutory and
regulatory requirements for the reasonable progress analysis. We
promulgated a FIP on September 27, 2016, that established source-
specific NOX BART emission limits for these seven EGUs and
NOX emission limits under reasonable progress for
Independence Units 1 and 2 to address the disapproved portions of the
2008 Arkansas Regional Haze SIP submittal.
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\15\ 77 FR 14604.
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Arkansas' proposed July 2017 Regional Haze NOX SIP
revision addressed the NOX BART requirements for Arkansas'
EGUs by relying on participation in the Cross State Air Pollution Rule
(CSAPR) ozone season NOX trading program as an alternative
to BART. The July 2017 Regional Haze NOX SIP revision
proposal also made the determination that no additional NOX
emission controls for Arkansas sources, beyond participation in CSAPR's
ozone season NOX trading program, are required for ensuring
reasonable progress in Arkansas. As noted above, the July 2017 Regional
Haze SIP revision addresses NOX requirements for the same
EGUs for which we established source-specific NOX emission
limits in our September 27, 2016 FIP. In a document published in the
Federal Register on September 11, 2017, we proposed to approve the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision.\16\ On October 31,
2017, we received ADEQ's final NOX SIP revision addressing
BART and reasonable progress requirements for NOX for EGUs
in Arkansas for the first implementation period. The final Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP revision we received on October 31,
2017, did not contain significant changes from the state's proposed SIP
revision. Therefore, it is appropriate for us to take final action, as
proposed, on the final SIP revision.
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\16\ 82 FR 42627.
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C. CSAPR as an Alternative to Source-Specific NOX BART
In 2005, the EPA published the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR),
which required 27 states and the District of Columbia to reduce
emissions of SO2 and NOX from affected electric
generating units (EGUs) that significantly contribute to or interfere
with maintenance of the 1997 national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS) for fine particulates and/or 8-hour ozone in any downwind
state.\17\ EPA demonstrated that CAIR would achieve greater reasonable
progress toward the national visibility goal than would BART;
therefore, states could rely on CAIR as an alternative to BART for
SO2 and NOX at EGUs.\18\ Although Arkansas was
subject to certain NOX requirements of CAIR, including the
state-wide ozone season NOX budget but not the annual
NOX budget, and although this would have been sufficient for
Arkansas to rely on CAIR to satisfy NOX BART, it elected not
to rely on CAIR in its 2008 Regional Haze SIP to satisfy the
NOX BART requirement for its EGUs.
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\17\ 70 FR 25161 (May 12, 2005).
\18\ 70 FR 39104, 39139 (July 6, 2005).
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On July 11, 2008, the D.C. Circuit found CAIR was fatally flawed
and on December 23, 2008, the Court remanded CAIR to EPA without
vacatur to ``preserve the environmental benefits provided by CAIR.''
\19\ In 2011, acting on the D.C. Circuit's remand, we promulgated the
Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) to replace CAIR and issued FIPs
to implement the rule in CSAPR-subject states.\20\ Arkansas EGUs are
covered under CSAPR for ozone season NOX.\21\
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\19\ North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 901 (D.C. Cir. 2008),
modified, 550 F.3d 1176, 1178 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
\20\ 76 FR 48207 (August 8, 2011).
\21\ 76 FR 82219 (December 30, 2011).
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In 2012, we issued a limited disapproval of several states'
regional haze SIPs because of reliance on CAIR as an alternative to EGU
BART for SO2 and/or NOX.\22\ We also determined
that CSAPR would provide for greater reasonable progress than BART and
amended the Regional Haze Rule to allow for CSAPR participation as an
alternative to source-specific SO2 and/or NOX
BART for EGUs, on a pollutant-specific basis.\23\ As Arkansas did not
[[Page 5930]]
rely on CAIR to satisfy the NOX BART requirements in the
2008 Regional Haze SIP, Arkansas was not included in the EPA's limited
disapproval of regional haze SIPs that relied on CAIR to satisfy
certain regional haze requirements.\24\ As noted above, in the 2012
rulemaking in which we promulgated those limited disapprovals, the EPA
also promulgated FIPs to replace reliance on CAIR with reliance on
CSAPR in many of those regional haze SIPs; however, Arkansas was
likewise not included in that FIP action.
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\22\ The limited disapproval triggered the EPA's obligation to
issue a FIP or approve a SIP revision to correct the relevant
deficiencies within 2 years of the final limited disapproval action.
CAA section 110(c)(1); 77 FR 33642, at 33654 (June 7, 2012).
\23\ See 40 CFR 51.308(e)(4).
\24\ See 77 FR 33642, at 33654.
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CSAPR has been subject to extensive litigation, and on July 28,
2015, the DC Circuit issued a decision generally upholding CSAPR but
remanding without vacating the CSAPR emissions budgets for a number of
states.\25\ On October 26, 2016, we finalized an update to CSAPR that
addresses the 1997 ozone NAAQS portion of the remand as well as the CAA
requirements addressing interstate transport for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS.\26\ Additionally, three states, Alabama, Georgia, and South
Carolina, have adopted or committed to adopt SIPs to continue their
participation in the CSAPR program, including adoption on a voluntary
basis of state SO2 emission budgets equal to those state's
remanded SO2 emission budgets. On November 10, 2016, we
proposed a rule intended to address the remainder of the court's remand
as it relates to Texas.\27\ This separate proposed rule included an
assessment of the impacts of the set of actions that the EPA had taken
or expected to take in response to the D.C. Circuit's remand on our
2012 demonstration that participation in CSAPR provides for greater
reasonable progress than BART. Based on that assessment, the EPA
proposed that states may continue to rely on CSAPR as an alternative to
BART on a pollutant-specific basis. On September 29, 2017, we finalized
our proposed finding that the EPA's 2012 analytical demonstration
remains valid and that participation in CSAPR, as it now exists, meets
the Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an alternative to BART.\28\ In
the October 2017 Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision,
the state relies on CSAPR as an alternative to BART for control of
NOX from EGUs.
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\25\ Arkansas' ozone season NOX budgets were not
included in the remand. EME Homer City Generation v. EPA, 795 F.3d
118, 138 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
\26\ 81 FR74504 (October 26, 2016).
\27\ 81 FR 78954 (November 10, 2016).
\28\ 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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II. Summary of Final Action
This action finalizes our proposed approval of the Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP revision, which relies on EPA's
determination that CSAPR provides for greater reasonable progress than
BART to address the NOX BART requirements for Arkansas EGUs.
Consistent with 40 CFR 51.308(e)(4), Arkansas makes the determination
that since the Arkansas EGUs are currently subject to the CSAPR
requirements for ozone-season NOX, the State need not have
source specific requirements for subject-to-BART EGUs to install,
operate, and maintain BART for NOX. We find that it is
appropriate for Arkansas to rely on participation in the CSAPR ozone
season NOX trading program to satisfy the NOX
BART requirements for Arkansas EGUs. EPA's 2012 determination and our
September 29, 2017 final rulemaking make the finding that the EPA's
2012 analytical demonstration remains valid and that participation in
CSAPR, as it now exists, meets the Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an
alternative to BART.\29\ Arkansas' reliance on CSAPR addresses the
NOX BART requirements for Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1;
Flint Creek Boiler No. 1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff Units 1
and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler.
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\29\ 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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We also find that Arkansas reasonably determined that additional
NOX control measures are not needed to ensure reasonable
progress for the first implementation period. Given the level of
visibility impairment due to NOX emissions from Arkansas
point sources at the state's two Class I areas, Caney Creek and Upper
Buffalo, on the 20% worst days, additional NOX controls for
Arkansas point sources are not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas Class I areas on the 20% worst
days.\30\ In light of this, and considering that Arkansas EGUs are
participating in CSAPR for ozone season NOX, we are
finalizing our determination that Arkansas' decision to screen out
Arkansas point sources from further evaluation of additional
NOX controls is reasonable and we are finalizing our
approval of Arkansas' determination that no additional NOX
controls, beyond Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX, are necessary to satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for the first
implementation period.
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\30\ Arkansas also recognized that sources in Arkansas impact
the two Class I areas in Missouri: Hercules Glade Wilderness Area
and Mingo Wilderness Area. Arkansas provided the Missouri Department
of Natural Resources with an opportunity for consultation on the
proposed Arkansas NOX SIP revision, including an
opportunity to discuss Missouri's assessment of the impact of the
proposed SIP revision on reasonable progress at Missouri Class I
areas. The Missouri Department of Natural Resources did not have
comments on the proposed SIP revision and did not pursue
consultation. Additionally, Arkansas looked at the most recent five-
year rolling average of observed visibility impairment on the 20%
haziest days for Missouri's Class I areas and concluded that the
visibility progress observed at the IMPROVE monitors indicates that
sources in Arkansas are not interfering with the achievement of
Missouri's 2018 RPGs for Hercules Glades and Mingo. Taking these
things into consideration, Arkansas made the determination that no
additional NOX reductions from Arkansas sources are
required to improve visibility in Missouri Class I areas for the
first implementation period.
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We are finalizing our approval of the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision as we have found it to meet the applicable
provisions of the Act and EPA regulations and it is consistent with EPA
guidance. We received comments from three commenters on our proposed
approval. Our response to the substantive comments we received are
summarized in Section III. We have fully considered all significant
comments on our proposed action on the SIP revision submittal, and have
concluded that no changes to our final determination are warranted.
We are approving the October 2017 Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision submitted by ADEQ as we have determined
that it meets the regional haze SIP requirements, including the
reasonable progress requirements in Sec. 51.308(d) and the BART
requirements in Sec. 51.308(e). In conjunction with this final
approval, we are finalizing in a separate rulemaking, which is also
being published in this Federal Register, our withdrawal of FIP
emission limits for NOX that would otherwise apply to the
nine affected units.
III. Response to Comments
The public comments received on our proposed rule are included in
the publicly posted docket associated with this action at
www.regulations.gov. We reviewed all public comments that we received
on the proposed action. Below, we provide a summary of certain comments
and our responses. The comments and our responses thereto are contained
in a separate document titled the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX
SIP Revision Response to Comments.
A. Reliance on CSAPR-Better-Than-BART Rule
Comment: ADEQ proposes to rely on ozone-season NOX
reductions under the updated CSAPR in lieu of the source-specific BART
emission limits that EPA finalized as part of its 2016 regional
[[Page 5931]]
haze FIP. ADEQ relies on a ``back-of-the-envelope'' calculation of
anticipated emission reductions, and asserts that EPA's updated 2018
Arkansas ozone season NOX emission budgets under the CSAPR
update achieve a greater reduction in NOX emissions than do
implementation of NOX BART controls included in the Arkansas
Regional Haze FIP. Without any further analysis, ADEQ suggests that
compliance with the 2018 CSAPR ozone season allocations for Arkansas
EGUs satisfies the BART requirements of the Regional Haze Rule.
Response: This comment is in relation to ADEQ's comparison of
anticipated NOX emissions reductions based on the CSAPR
emission budgets versus the anticipated NOX emissions
reductions from the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP. We did not base our
proposed approval of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision on the
state's comparison of the anticipated NOX reductions in
Arkansas from CSAPR against those anticipated from the FIP.
Furthermore, in response to comments that the state received during its
state rulemaking process, ADEQ proceeded to remove from its final SIP
revision the comparison of anticipated NOX emissions
reductions under the FIP versus CSAPR because such information is not
necessary for EPA approval of the SIP.\31\ With regard to the comment
that ADEQ did not adequately support its determination that compliance
with the 2018 CSAPR ozone season allocations for Arkansas EGUs
satisfies the BART requirements, we disagree that ADEQ was required to
undertake a state-specific analysis of whether reliance on CSAPR
provides for greater reasonable progress than BART; as allowed under 40
CFR 51.308(e)(4), Arkansas is relying on EPA's determination that CSAPR
provides for greater reasonable progress than BART to address the
NOX BART requirements for its EGUs. Arkansas' EGUs are
currently subject to the CSAPR requirements for ozone-season
NOX, the State need not require subject-to-BART EGUs to
install, operate, and maintain BART for NOX. As explained
above, although the D.C. Circuit remanded the CSAPR emissions budgets
of certain states in 2015, we recently reaffirmed our determination
that participation in CSAPR, as it now exists, continues to meet the
Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an alternative to BART.\32\
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\31\ See final Arkansas NOX SIP revision, Tab E
(Public Comment Period Documentation, Responsive Summary for State
Implementation Plan Revision, p. 20).
\32\ 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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Comment: Arkansas' proposal unlawfully exempts sources from
installing BART controls without going through the exemption process
Congress prescribed. The visibility protection provisions of the Clean
Air Act include a ``requirement'' that certain sources ``install, and
operate'' BART controls. Congress specified the standard by which
sources could be exempted from the BART requirements, which is that the
source is not ``reasonably anticipated to cause or contribute to a
significant impairment of visibility'' in any Class I area. Appropriate
federal land managers must concur with any proposed exemption. Neither
EPA nor Arkansas has demonstrated that the Arkansas EGUs subject to
BART meet the standards for an exemption. Nor has EPA or the state
obtained the concurrence of federal land managers. Therefore, Arkansas
must require source-specific BART for each power plant subject to BART.
Response: To the extent the comment is directed to prior final
agency actions allowing states to rely on alternatives to BART
generally or on CSAPR specifically to meet the BART requirements, this
comment falls outside of the scope of our action here. Objections that
the use of BART alternatives does not comply with 42 U.S.C.
7491(b)(2)(A) do not properly pertain to this action, but instead to
our past regulatory actions that provided for BART alternatives.\33\ We
do note that the Arkansas SIP does not exempt the EGUs from BART but
rather relies on EPA's determination that states may rely on CSAPR as
an alternative means of meeting the BART requirements.
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\33\ See the June 7, 2012 final rulemaking where we made the
determination that CSAPR provides for greater reasonable progress
than BART (77 FR 33642). See also our September 29, 2017 final
rulemaking where we made the finding that the EPA's 2012 analytical
demonstration remains valid and that participation in CSAPR, as it
now exists, meets the Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an
alternative to BART (82 FR 45481).
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Comment: Even if Arkansas could meet a BART statutory exemption
test, the state cannot rely on CSAPR because of flaws in the rule that
purport to show that CSAPR makes more reasonable progress than BART
(the ``Better than BART'' rule). EPA's regulations purport to allow the
use of an alternative program in lieu of source-specific BART only if
the alternative makes ``greater reasonable progress'' than would BART.
To demonstrate greater reasonable progress, a state or EPA must show
that the alternative program does not cause visibility to decline in
any Class I area and results in an overall improvement in visibility
relative to BART at all affected Class I areas. Here, EPA claims that
its 2012 ``Better than BART'' rule demonstrated that CSAPR achieves
greater reasonable progress than BART.
EPA compared CSAPR to BART in the Better than BART rule by using
CSAPR allocations that are more stringent than now required as well as
by using presumptive BART limits that are less stringent than required
under the statute. These assumptions tilted the scales in favor of
CSAPR. It would be arbitrary and capricious for EPA to rely on such an
inaccurate, faulty comparison to conclude that CSAPR will achieve
greater reasonable progress than will BART. Even under EPA's skewed
comparison, CSAPR achieves barely more visibility improvement than BART
at the Breton and Caney Creek National Wilderness Areas. If EPA had
modeled accurate BART limits and up-to-date CSAPR allocations, then EPA
would likely find that CSAPR would lead to less visibility improvement
than BART.
EPA cannot lawfully rely on the Better than BART rule because the
rule is based on a version of CSAPR that no longer exists. Accordingly,
any conclusion that EPA made in the 2012 Better than BART rule
regarding whether CSAPR achieves greater reasonable progress than BART
is no longer valid. Since 2012, EPA has significantly changed the
allocations and the compliance deadlines for CSAPR. Of particular
relevance here, after 2012, EPA increased the total ozone season CSAPR
allocations for every covered EGU in Arkansas. EPA also extended the
compliance deadlines by three years, such that the phase 1 emissions
budgets take effect in 2015-2016 and the phase 2 emissions budgets take
effect in 2017 and beyond.
In addition to EPA's increased emissions budgets and extended
compliance timeline, the D.C. Circuit's decision in EME Homer City
Generation v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 130-32 (D.C. Cir. 2015), which
invalidated the SO2 or NOX emission budgets for
thirteen states, has fundamentally undermined the rationale underlying
EPA's Better than BART rule. Specifically, the Court invalidated the
2014 SO2 emission budgets for Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina, and Texas, and the 2014 NOX emission budgets for
Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia. As
explained in our initial brief in the still-pending challenge to the
CSAPR Better than BART rule, the effect of Homer City is to pull the
rug out from under EPA's BART exemption rule. EPA's finding that CSAPR
would produce better
[[Page 5932]]
visibility improvement than BART was premised on the existence of all
the state-specific emission budgets adopted in the Transport Rule.
Because the D.C. Circuit has now invalidated many of those budgets, the
BART exemption rule is left without the factual basis on which it
relied.
Response: As we had proposed, our finalized determination that
CSAPR participation will resolve the NOX BART requirements
for Arkansas EGUs is based on a separately proposed and recently
finalized action that affirms that participation in CSAPR, as it now
exists, continues to meet the Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an
alternative to BART.\34\ This comment is directed to the separately
proposed action that was finalized on September 29, 2017, and
therefore, falls outside of the scope of our action here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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Comment: Arkansas's reliance on CSAPR as an alternative to BART is
unlawful because the emissions reductions achieved by CSAPR in Arkansas
are limited to five months of the year--the ozone season. Under the
Regional Haze Rule, BART represents a year-round limit on emissions.
Given that CSAPR does not limit annual NOX emissions from
Arkansas sources, but instead only applies to Arkansas sources for five
months out of the year, CSAPR cannot satisfy the Regional Haze Rule's
requirement that sources meet the ``best system of continuous emission
reduction'' for NOX. In fact, as noted in EPA's Technical
Support Document for the proposed disapproval of Arkansas's 2008 SIP,
the adverse impacts of Arkansas NOX emissions on visibility
``tend to be a large component of visibility impairment during the
winter months''--i.e., outside of the ozone season. Thus,
NOX emissions reductions that are effective only during the
ozone season will not address the visibility impact due to wintertime
ammonium nitrate at Breton Island or other Class I areas in neighboring
states.
Even within the five-month ozone season, CSAPR allows for temporal
variability such that a facility could emit at high levels within a
shorter time period, creating higher than anticipated visibility
impacts. Because of the high degree of variability and flexibility,
power plants may exercise options that would lead to little or no
emission reductions. For example, a facility in Arkansas might purchase
emission credits from a source beyond the air shed of the Class I area
the Arkansas source impairs. Because CSAPR requirements only pertain to
the Arkansas source for a fraction of the year, that source may be even
more incentivized to purchase emission credits from elsewhere than a
source in a fully covered CSAPR state. Thus, without knowing which
Arkansas EGUs will reduce pollutants by what amounts under CSAPR, or
when they will do so, and because these emissions reductions are
applicable for less than half the year, Arkansas simply cannot know the
impact of CSAPR upon Breton and other affected Class I areas.
For these reasons, reliance on CSAPR to satisfy the NOX
BART requirements is unlawful. EPA should disapprove Arkansas' reliance
on CSAPR to satisfy the NOX requirements.
Response: These comments fall outside the scope of this rulemaking.
In 2012, when we finalized our determination that CSAPR provides for
greater reasonable progress than BART, we considered comments that the
imposition of BART would require year-round operation of NOX
controls but that under CSAPR there would be no assurance that controls
would operate outside of the ozone season. The basis for our decision
to allow Arkansas and other states covered by CSAPR for ozone season
only to rely on participation in that program to satisfy NOX
BART is explained in that rulemaking.\35\
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\35\ 77 FR at 33650.
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Comment: Arkansas purports to satisfy the regulatory requirements
for a BART alternative by relying on ozone-season budgets for
NOX that no longer exist. To rely on CSAPR as an alternative
to BART, Arkansas must demonstrate that the version of CSAPR that is
now in effect, and will be in effect at the time of the final rule,
makes greater reasonable progress than BART. Having failed to make that
demonstration, Arkansas has not met its burden to show that CSAPR will
achieve greater reasonable progress than source-specific BART. More
troubling, Arkansas' reliance on the CSAPR ``Better than BART'' rule
fails to account for, or even mention, the possibility that CSAPR or
the ``Better than BART'' rule will not exist in any form when the SIP
is finalized.
Response: As we had proposed, our finalized determination that
CSAPR participation will resolve NOX BART requirements for
Arkansas EGUs is based on a separately proposed and finalized action
taken in 2012. On September 29, 2017, we affirmed our proposed finding
that the EPA's 2012 analytical demonstration remains valid and that
participation in CSAPR, as it now exists, meets the Regional Haze
Rule's criteria for an alternative to BART.\36\ This comment falls
outside of the scope of our action here.
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\36\ 82 FR 45481 (September 29, 2017).
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Comment: When evaluating a state's BART determination, the EPA
looks at existing requirements and cannot rely on potential future
actions in its decision to approve or disapprove a state SIP. As EPA
recognizes in the proposed approval, the agency cannot finalize
Arkansas' proposed SIP until EPA finalizes its finding that CSAPR
continues to be better than BART as an alternative to source-specific
EGU BART for NOX. Although EPA, on September 29, 2017,
finalized a rule purporting to conclude that ozone-season
NOX limitations under CSAPR continue to be ``better than
BART'' for eligible EGUs in Arkansas, EPA failed to include any of the
documentation or analyses supporting that finding in this docket. As
such, EPA cannot approve Arkansas's SIP proposal unless and until those
analyses are included in the docket and the public has a meaningful
opportunity to comment on those materials.
Response: We included the notice of proposed rulemaking addressing
whether CSAPR continues to be better than BART following changes to the
budgets of certain states in our docket for this action because of its
relevance to Arkansas' proposed SIP revision.\37\ As explained in our
proposed approval of Arkansas' SIP revision, EPA would be able to
approve regional haze SIP submissions that rely on participation in
CSAPR as an alternative to BART only if it were to finalize its
proposed rule or to otherwise determine that participation in CSPAR
remains a viable BART alternative.\38\ We accordingly made clear that a
final determination that CSAPR participation will resolve the
NOX BART requirements for Arkansas' EGUs is based on a
separately proposed and finalized action. The supporting materials and
analyses underlying that action are contained in the docket for that
action, and the public has had a meaningful opportunity to comment on
that determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See the document in the docket titled ``AR020.0250 CSAPR
Better than BART Proposed Rulemaking, dated November 10, 2016.''
\38\ 82 FR at 42629.
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Comment: EPA should approve the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision because it satisfies the criteria of the
Regional Haze program. The states, not EPA, play the lead role in
designing and implementing [the] regional haze programs. EPA may
disapprove a SIP only if it does not satisfy the minimum criteria of
Section
[[Page 5933]]
110 of the Clean Air Act. Accordingly, EPA has no authority to question
the wisdom of a State's choices of emission limitations if they are
part of a plan which satisfies the standards of Section 110(a)(2), and
has no authority to disapprove of a SIP ``simply on a preference for a
particular control measure. The SIP revision meets the requirements of
the Regional Haze Program and must be approved. ADEQ's determination
that compliance with the CSAPR ozone season NOX trading
program requirements satisfies NOX BART and any reasonable
progress obligations for the state's EGUs is consistent with the
Regional Haze Rule, is appropriate considering the minimal role that
NOX emissions play in visibility impairment in Arkansas'
Class I areas, and would eliminate the unnecessary and duplicative
requirements currently imposed by the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support of our proposed
approval of the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision. As
we had proposed, we are finalizing our approval of the Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP revision.
B. Reasonable Progress
Comment: The State attempts to justify the elimination of
reasonable progress controls on Independence by claiming that the CSAPR
allocations for NOX will result in greater reductions in
NOX emissions than the FIP would. The State's rationale has
no basis in law or in fact. To begin, there is no statutory or
regulatory provision which allows states to rely on CSAPR in lieu of
conducting a four-factor analysis of reasonable progress. While EPA has
issued a rule that purports to allow states to rely on CSAPR in lieu of
imposing source-specific controls on BART sources, EPA has not issued a
comparable rule for reasonable progress.
Moreover, the State's comparison of NOX reductions under
CSAPR versus the FIP is flawed. The State compares CSAPR allocations to
binding reductions which must occur under the FIP, based on legally
enforceable emissions limits. This compares apples to oranges. As the
name suggest, CSAPR allocations are not emissions limits, they are
initial entitlements to emit certain amounts of pollution. Sources can
emit more than their initial allocations, because CSAPR allows both
intra- and inter-state trading of allowances. Thus, it is highly
misleading to treat CSAPR allocations as binding emission limits which
can be compared directly to the emission limits and reductions under
the Arkansas Regional Haze FIP.
ADEQ further claims in its SIP that it ``anticipates that some EGUs
will choose to install combustion controls to comply with CSAPR that
would reduce emissions year-round, not just in the ozone season.'' ADEQ
provides no evidence for this assumption. More importantly, ADEQ
wrongly conflates installation of controls with operation and optimized
operation of controls. Even if it were true that some EGUs will install
controls to comply with CSAPR, ADEQ provides no reason to assume that
EGUs will operate those controls when they are not legally required to
do so. ADEQ has advanced no basis for assuming that Arkansas EGUs will
spend additional money to run NOX controls or optimize them
to reduce NOX when they are not required to do so, i.e.,
outside of the CSAPR ozone season. Thus, there is no record basis for
assuming that CSAPR will reduce NOX emissions in Arkansas
outside of the ozone season.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that Arkansas is relying
on CSAPR in lieu of conducting an appropriate reasonable progress
analysis. In assessing the need for additional NOX controls
to address reasonable progress, Arkansas focused its reasonable
progress assessment on the Central Regional Air Planning (CENRAP) \39\
Comprehensive Air Quality Model with extensions (CAMx) source
apportionment modeling,\40\ and observed that a small portion of total
light extinction is due to nitrate (NO3) from Arkansas
sources and that this portion is driven by on-road sources and not
point sources. Arkansas notes that the source apportionment data show
that NO3 from Arkansas point sources contributes less than
0.5% of the total light extinction at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on
the 20% worst days in 2002, and that, for the first implementation
period, NOX is not a key pollutant contributing to
visibility impairment at Arkansas' Class I areas on those days. Based
on the above observations, Arkansas reached the conclusion that, for
the first implementation period, additional NOX controls for
Arkansas point sources are not anticipated to yield meaningful
visibility improvements at Arkansas Class I areas on the 20% worst days
in view of the amount of visibility impairment attributed to these
sources. Given the level of visibility impairment due to NOX
from Arkansas point sources at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20%
worst days and considering that Arkansas EGUs are participating in
CSAPR for ozone season NOX, Arkansas decided to screen out
Arkansas point sources from further evaluation of additional
NOX controls, thereby not evaluating the four reasonable
progress factors for point sources with respect to NOX in
the first implementation period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ In developing their Regional Haze SIP and RPGs, Arkansas
and potentially impacted States collaborated through CENRAP. Each
State developed its Regional Haze Plans and RPGs based on the CENRAP
modeling. The CENRAP modeling was based in part on the emissions
reductions each state intended to achieve by 2018.
\40\ CENRAP utilized CAMx with its Particulate Source
Apportionment Technology (PSAT) tool to provide estimated
contributions to visibility impairment at Class I areas by source
region (e.g., states) and major source category for both the
baseline and future case (i.e., 2018) visibility modeling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With regard to the comment that ``the State's comparison of
NOX reductions under CSAPR versus the FIP is flawed,'' we
note that we did not base our proposed approval of the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision on the state's comparison of these
NOX reductions. In its draft SIP revision, ADEQ compared
anticipated NOX emission reductions under CSAPR as compared
to the source-specific BART determinations required by EPA's FIP in
assessing the need for additional reductions in NOX to
ensure reasonable progress. However, in its final SIP, ADEQ did not
include this information as part of its rationale. We note that our
proposed approval of Arkansas' SIP revision did not rely on this
comparison of emissions. As a result, the adequacy of ADEQ's assessment
is irrelevant to their final action or to our review of the final SIP.
The commenter's statements questioning ADEQ's assumptions that Arkansas
EGUs will install and operate NOX combustion controls to
comply with CSAPR for ozone-season NOX and operate those
controls year-round appear to be in the context of the commenter's
contention that ADEQ's comparison of NOX reductions under
CSARP versus the Arkansas FIP is flawed. As noted above, the adequacy
of ADEQ's comparison of NOX emissions reductions in the
proposed SIP revision is irrelevant to their final action or to our
review of the final SIP.
Comment: The State failed to consider any of the four statutory
factors for reasonable progress and the reasonable progress analysis is
therefore unlawful and not approvable. Arkansas recognizes that ``the
RHR requires states to consider four factors: (1) Cost of compliance,
(2) the time necessary for compliance, (3) the energy and non-air
quality environmental impacts of compliance, and (4) the remaining
useful life of potentially affected sources,'' but then the State
proceeds to ignore all four reasonable progress
[[Page 5934]]
factors for point sources in its reasonable progress analysis for
NOX. The Clean Air Act provides that in determining
reasonable progress there shall be taken into consideration the costs
of compliance, the time necessary for compliance, and the energy and
nonair quality environmental impacts of compliance, and the remaining
useful life of any existing source subject to such requirements. The
Act contains no exception to this requirement. The SIP fails to
consider these four statutory factors, and therefore violates the Clean
Air Act. In particular, for NOX emissions, the SIP contains
no analysis of the four factors. For emissions of other pollutants, the
SIP contains only a single sentence claiming that the cost
effectiveness for control of POA and CM species from many individual
small sources is difficult to quantify.
The SIP's failure to consider any of the four factors for
NOX controls is particularly egregious given that the State
acknowledges that EPA has already issued a final rule containing a
four-factor analysis for the Independence plant, which resulted in a
requirement that Independence install and operate low-NOX
burners. The State has produced no evidence that EPA's four-factor
analysis was incorrect in any way, because the State does not analyze
any of the four factors which EPA considered.
Response: We agree that the CAA and the Regional Haze Rule provide
that in determining reasonable progress, states ``shall take into
consideration the costs of compliance, the time necessary for
compliance, the energy and non-air quality environmental impacts of
compliance, and the remaining useful life of any existing source
subject to such requirements.'' \41\ However, in cases where it has
been demonstrated that a particular pollutant or source category does
not contribute significantly to visibility impairment at affected Class
I areas, it may be appropriate to end the analysis at that point,
without the need to evaluate the four statutory factors for potential
controls to address that pollutant and/or source category. For example,
EPA's ``Guidance for Setting Reasonable Progress Goals Under the
Regional Haze Program'' provides that the reasonable progress analysis
involves identification of key pollutants and source categories that
contribute to visibility impairment at the Class I area; the guidance
provides that once the key pollutants contributing to visibility
impairment at each Class I area have been identified, the sources or
source categories responsible for emitting these pollutants or
pollutant precursors can also be determined.\42\ The reasonable
progress factors are then to be applied to the key pollutants and
sources or source categories contributing to visibility impairment at
each affected Class I area. As we discussed on our proposed action on
the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision, taking into
consideration that states have significant discretion in determining
what sources to analyze for controls under reasonable progress, we
proposed to agree with the state that it is reasonable for Arkansas to
reach the conclusion that, for the first implementation period,
additional NOX controls for Arkansas point sources are not
anticipated to yield meaningful visibility improvements at Arkansas
Class I areas in view of the amount of visibility impairment attributed
to these sources.\43\ Given the level of visibility impairment due to
NOX from Arkansas point sources at Caney Creek and Upper
Buffalo on the 20% worst days and considering that Arkansas EGUs are
participating in CSAPR for ozone season NOX, we find that it
is reasonable for Arkansas to screen out Arkansas point sources from
further evaluation of additional NOX controls and therefore
not have to evaluate the four reasonable progress factors for point
sources with respect to NOX in the first implementation
period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ 42 U.S.C. 7491(g)(1). See also 40 CFR 51.308(d)(1)(i)(A).
\42\ EPA's ``Guidance for Setting Reasonable Progress Goals
Under the Regional Haze Program,'' p. 3-1 (June 1, 2007).
\43\ 82 FR 42633.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arkansas' conclusions with regard to the percentage contribution to
light extinction from NO3 on the 20% worst days is generally
consistent with the findings we made in the Arkansas Regional Haze
FIP.\44\ In the FIP, we made the finding that NO3 due to
NOX emissions from point sources is not considered a driver
of regional haze at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst
days, contributing only approximately 3% of the total light extinction,
as projected by CENRAP's CAMx source apportionment modeling.\45\ We
also stated in the FIP proposal that because of the small contribution
of NO3 from point sources to the total light extinction at
Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst days, we did not expect
that NOX controls under the reasonable progress requirements
would offer as much improvement on these days compared to
SO2 controls.\46\ However, in the FIP, we decided to look at
2011 National Emissions Inventory (NEI) data for NOX for
Arkansas point sources to determine if there are any large point
sources that are reasonable candidates for evaluation under the four
reasonable progress factors. Based on this assessment, we proceeded
with an analysis of the four reasonable progress factors for
NOX controls for the Independence facility as we reasoned
that it is the second largest point source of NOX emissions
in the state and potentially one of the largest single contributors to
visibility impairment at Class I areas in Arkansas.\47\ We also
conducted CALPUFF modeling to determine the maximum 98th percentile
visibility impacts from the Independence facility and the predicted
visibility improvement due to NOX controls at the facility.
That analysis revealed that low NOX burner controls would be
cost-effective and would result in an improvement of the 98th
percentile visibility impacts from the Independence facility at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo, and we finalized NOX controls for
the Independence facility under the reasonable progress
requirements.\48\ In the Arkansas NOX SIP revision, the
state takes a different approach in arriving at its decision that no
additional NOX controls for Arkansas point sources are
necessary under reasonable progress for the first implementation
period. In its evaluation, Arkansas places greater emphasis on its
assessment of the relative contributions to light extinction of sources
within the State than it does on its assessment of the relative
contributions of all sources (i.e., sources both in and outside
Arkansas). Arkansas focused its assessment on the CENRAP's CAMx source
apportionment modeling and reaches the conclusion that, for the first
implementation period, additional NOX controls for Arkansas
point sources are not anticipated to yield meaningful visibility
improvements at Arkansas Class I areas on the 20% worst days in view of
the amount of visibility impairment attributed to these sources.
Therefore, Arkansas determined that no additional NOX
controls beyond EGU participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX are necessary to satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for Arkansas sources in the first planning period. In
future planning periods, Arkansas will have to reevaluate the benefit
of NOX reductions, which will likely become more important
as other pollutants are reduced. We believe Arkansas is within its
discretion to take
[[Page 5935]]
a different approach than we did in the Arkansas FIP, and that the
approach Arkansas has taken to determine whether additional
NOX controls are necessary under reasonable progress is
reasonable and therefore, approvable. The Clean Air Act gave EPA the
power to identify pollutants and set air quality standards. Congress
gave states ``the primary responsibility for implementing those
standards.'' Luminant Generation Co. v. EPA, 675 F.3d 917, 921 (5th
Cir. 2012). (internal quotation marks omitted); see 42 U.S.C. 7407(a)
(``Each State shall have the primary responsibility for assuring air
quality within [its] entire geographic area.''); id. section 7401(a)(3)
(``[A]ir pollution prevention . . . is the primary responsibility of
States and local governments.''). The states have ``wide discretion''
in formulating SIPs. Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 250 (1976).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ 81 FR 66332; see also 81 FR 68319 (October 4, 2016)
(correction).
\45\ 80 FR 18996.
\46\ 80 FR 18996.
\47\ 80 FR 18995.
\48\ 81 FR 66332.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are finalizing our approval of Arkansas' determination that
Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR for ozone season NOX is
sufficient to satisfy the reasonable progress requirements for
NOX in Arkansas for the first implementation period.
Comment: The State's reasonable progress analysis unlawfully fails
to consider whether measures are needed to make reasonable progress at
Class I areas outside Arkansas. The State's analysis is unlawful,
regardless of whether the old or new version of the Regional Haze rule
applies here. The prior version of the Regional Haze rule required each
state to make an independent determination of the measures needed to
make reasonable progress at out-of-state Class I areas. After noting
the statutory goal to eliminate all human-caused visibility impairment,
EPA observed that ``it would be impossible to achieve this goal if
upwind states did not have the same responsibility to address their
visibility impairing emissions and achieve reasonable progress in
downwind Class I areas as the downwind states themselves.''
The current version of the regional haze rule clarifies, but does
not alter, this obligation. As EPA noted in the 2017 revisions to the
regional haze rule, states have an ``independent obligation to include
in their SIPs enforceable emission limits and other measures that are
necessary to make reasonable progress at all affected Class I areas, as
determined by considering the four factors.'' Despite the requirement
to consider whether measures are needed to make reasonable progress at
out of state Class I areas, the State's analysis focuses exclusively on
the two Class I areas within Arkansas. Yet the State acknowledges that
emissions from Arkansas sources impact visibility at Class I areas in
Missouri. EPA's analysis of the SIP revision commits the same mistake
as the SIP revision itself. EPA fails to analyze whether the State has
complied with Clean Air Act requirements to determine whether measures
are needed to make reasonable progress at out-of-state Class I areas.
By failing to consider whether measures are necessary to make
reasonable progress at Missouri Class I areas, the draft SIP violates
the Regional Haze Rule, and is unapprovable.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that Arkansas failed to
consider whether additional controls are necessary to make reasonable
progress in Class I areas outside the state. The Arkansas
NOX SIP revision recognizes that sources in Arkansas impact
the two Class I areas in Missouri: Hercules Glade Wilderness Area and
Mingo Wilderness Area. Arkansas also explains that ``[t]he most recent
five-year rolling average of observed visibility impairment on the
twenty percent haziest days at Hercules Glades Wilderness Area beat
Missouri's 2018 RPG for that Class I area and the most recent five
year-rolling average of observed visibility impairment on the twenty
percent haziest days at Mingo Wilderness Area is on track to beat
Missouri's RPG for that Class I area.'' \49\ Arkansas concludes that
the visibility progress observed at the IMPROVE monitors indicates that
sources in Arkansas are not interfering with the achievement of
Missouri's 2018 RPGs for Hercules Glades and Mingo Wilderness Areas,
and that no additional controls are therefore needed on Arkansas
sources to ensure reasonable progress at Missouri's Class I areas.\50\
Furthermore, Arkansas provided Missouri with an opportunity for
consultation on the Arkansas NOX SIP revision.\51\ Arkansas
sent a letter dated June 14, 2017, to the Missouri Department of
Natural Resources (DNR) providing notification and electronic access to
the proposed SIP revision, and providing an opportunity to discuss
Missouri's assessment of the impact of the proposed SIP revision on
reasonable progress at Missouri Class I areas.\52\ Missouri DNR did not
have comments on Arkansas' proposed SIP revision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ See final Arkansas NOX SIP revision, Section
IV.C, p. 23.
\50\ See final Arkansas NOX SIP revision, Section
IV.C, p. 23.
\51\ See final Arkansas NOX SIP revision, Section
V.C, p. 25.
\52\ See final Arkansas NOX SIP revision, Tab E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: The Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP revision
determines that controls for reasonable progress are not necessary for
the first planning period. The Clean Air Act requires that regional
haze implementation plans contain measures ``necessary to make
reasonable progress toward meeting the national goal'' of no manmade
visibility impairment. In its regulations implementing the Regional
Haze program, EPA established that, in setting a reasonable progress
goal, the State must consider the uniform rate of improvement in
visibility and the emission reduction measures needed to achieve it for
the period covered by the implementation plan. EPA has further
explained in its guidance for setting reasonable progress goals that
states should take into account the fact that the long-term goal of no
manmade impairment encompasses several planning periods and that it is
reasonable for the state to defer reductions to later planning periods
in order to maintain a consistent glidepath toward the long-term goal.
Mandating emissions controls that are not necessary to make reasonable
progress during the planning period contradicts this statutory and
regulatory scheme.
Reasonable progress controls during the first planning period
clearly are not necessary for Arkansas sources. Interagency Monitoring
of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) monitoring data show that
the haze index has been consistently below the glidepath in Arkansas'
Class I areas--Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo--and Entergy's analysis
demonstrates that it is projected to remain so through the end of the
second planning period.
Even if controls were required for reasonable progress during the
first planning period, NOX controls on Arkansas EGUs are not
necessary, as they will provide minimal visibility improvement in
Arkansas' Class I areas. As EPA's own analysis indicates, the
contribution of Arkansas point sources' nitrate emissions to visibility
impairment in Arkansas' Class I areas is insignificant. According to
EPA's analysis, nitrate from all point sources included in the regional
modeling is projected to account for only 3% of the total light
extinction at the Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo Class I areas, with
nitrate from Arkansas point sources being responsible for only 0.27% of
the total light extinction at Caney Creek and 0.14% at Upper Buffalo.
As a result, NOX controls on Arkansas EGUs during the first
planning period are not necessary to make reasonable progress towards
natural visibility conditions.
[[Page 5936]]
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support of our proposed
approval of Arkansas' reasonable progress determination for
NOX. As we had proposed, given the level of visibility
impairment due to NOX from Arkansas point sources at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst days and considering that
Arkansas EGUs are participating in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX, we are finalizing our determination that Arkansas'
decision to screen out Arkansas point sources from further evaluation
of additional NOX controls is reasonable and we are
finalizing our approval of Arkansas' determination that Arkansas EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season NOX is sufficient to
satisfy the reasonable progress requirements for NOX in
Arkansas for the first implementation period.
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
Comment: EPA asserts that in the SIP revision, Arkansas takes a
different, but nonetheless equally reasonable, approach to determine
whether additional controls are necessary under reasonable progress.
But EPA ignores that the State's ``different'' approach would result in
more air pollution and worse air quality relative to the existing FIP.
As a result, the State's reasonable progress determination violates the
Clean Air Act's ``anti-backsliding'' requirement under 42 U.S.C.
7410(l), and is therefore unapprovable.
In the 2016 FIP, EPA determined that reasonable progress requires
that Independence Units 1 and 2 meet NOX emission limits
based on the use of low-NOX burners and separated over-fire
air controls. Now, the State proposes a SIP that would replace those
NOX emission limits with nothing. Eliminating the
requirement that a source meet an emission limit necessarily would
result in greater air pollution and worse visibility impairment at
affected Class I areas. Section 110(l) of the Clean Air Act prevents a
plan revision that would weaken the existing FIP requirements in this
manner.
Section 110(l) states that the Administrator shall not approve a
revision of a plan if the revision would interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and reasonable further progress or
any other applicable requirement of this chapter. Section 110(l) is the
Act's ``anti-backsliding'' provision. The anti-backsliding provision
prohibits plan revisions that would interfere with attainment of the
NAAQS or other ``applicable requirements'' of the Act. Section 110(l)
prohibits plan revisions that would interfere with an existing
requirement to make reasonable further progress, including a BART
determination, as the Act's ``applicable requirement[s]'' include the
regional haze program's BART requirements. When determining whether a
plan revision interferes with NAAQS attainment, EPA has interpreted
section 110(l) as preventing plan revisions that would increase overall
air pollution or worsen air quality. For example, the Eleventh Circuit
has upheld EPA's section 110(l) interpretation as prohibiting plan
revisions that would increase emissions or worsen air quality. In
Kentucky Resources Council, Inc. v. EPA, 467 F.3d 986 (6th Cir. 2006),
EPA interpreted section 110(l) as allowing the agency to approve a plan
revision that weakened some existing control measures while
strengthening others, but only ``[a]s long as actual emissions in the
air are not increased.'' The court upheld EPA's interpretation, which
``allow[ed] the agency to approve a [state implementation plan] SIP
revision unless the agency finds it will make the air quality worse.''
The Seventh Circuit has also upheld EPA's interpretation in Indiana v.
EPA, 796 F.3d 803, 812 (7th Cir. 2015). Moreover, in a short discussion
regarding a challenge to the Nevada regional haze plan in WildEarth
Guardians v. EPA, 759 F.3d 1064, 1074 (9th Cir. 2014), the Ninth
Circuit suggested that a haze plan that ``weakens or removes any
pollution controls'' would violate section 110(l).
The existing reasonable progress determination in the FIP requires
Independence Units 1 and 2 to meet emission limits based on the use of
low-NOX burners and separated over-fire air. These pollution
reductions must occur by April 27, 2018. EPA has proposed to extend the
compliance deadline for this requirement, but has not proposed to alter
the emission limits themselves. Even if the deadline extension is
finalized, the final FIP for Arkansas requires Independence Units 1 and
2 to reduce NOX emissions. The draft SIP would eliminate the
FIP requirements for Independence without imposing any other
requirement that would achieve equal or greater reductions in
NOX emissions from Independence.
Response: We disagree that the Arkansas NOX SIP revision
violates the CAA's requirements under section 110(l). As discussed in
our proposed approval of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision, we
believe an approval of the SIP revision and concurrent withdrawal of
the corresponding parts of the FIP, as proposed, will meet the Clean
Air Act's 110(1) provisions. Generally, a SIP revision may be approved
under section 110(l) if EPA finds that it will at least preserve status
quo air quality, particularly where the pollutants at issue are those
for which an area has not been designated nonattainment.\53\ Approval
of the Arkansas NOX SIP revision is not expected to
interfere with attainment and maintenance of any of the NAAQS within
the state of Arkansas. No areas in Arkansas are currently designated
nonattainment for any NAAQS pollutants. The SIP revision we are
approving would allow Arkansas to rely on compliance with CSAPR for
ozone-season NOX to satisfy the NOX BART
requirement for Arkansas EGUs and makes the determination that no
additional NOX controls beyond EGU participation in CSAPR
for ozone season NOX are necessary to satisfy the reasonable
progress requirements for NOX for Arkansas sources. While
the commenter is correct that the Arkansas NOX SIP revision
we are approving does not require source-specific NOX
controls under reasonable progress for Independence Units 1 and 2, as
was required by the FIP, we note that those units are subject to CSAPR
for ozone season NOX and their NOX emissions will
thus be addressed through participation in the CSAPR ozone season
NOX program. Further, the CSAPR 2018 NOX ozone
season allocations for Arkansas sources are more stringent than the
2017 allocations. As all areas in Arkansas are attaining all the NAAQS
even with current emissions levels, compliance with the CSAPR 2018
NOX ozone season more stringent allocations will not
interfere with any applicable requirement concerning attainment or
reasonable further progress toward attainment of the NAAQS. We are not
aware of any basis for concluding or demonstrating that the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision, when implemented, would interfere with the
continued attainment of all the NAAQS in Arkansas.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ 78 FR 51686 at 51694 (August 21, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also do not find that our approval of the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision, as proposed, will interfere with the
applicable CAA regional haze requirements for BART or reasonable
progress because our action is supported by an evaluation that those
CAA regional haze requirements for BART and reasonable progress are
met. Specifically, EPA has made the determination that Arkansas EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone-season NOX satisfies the
NOX BART requirements for Arkansas EGUs, consistent with 40
CFR 51.308(e)(4). On September 29, 2017, we affirmed our proposed
finding that the EPA's 2012
[[Page 5937]]
analytical demonstration remains valid and that participation in CSAPR,
as it now exists, meets the Regional Haze Rule's criteria for an
alternative to BART. With regard to reasonable progress for regional
haze, the Arkansas NOX SIP revision includes an assessment
of anthropogenic sources of visibility impairment and arrives at the
determination that given the level of contribution to light extinction
from NOX due to Arkansas point sources, Arkansas EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season NOX is sufficient to
satisfy the reasonable progress requirements for NOX in
Arkansas for the first implementation period. The Independence
facility, on which the FIP imposed source specific NOX
controls under the reasonable progress requirements, is subject to
CSAPR for ozone season NOX. Even though we are approving the
Arkansas NOX SIP revision and concurrently withdrawing the
source-specific NOX controls in the FIP for the Independence
facility, the NOX emissions from the Independence facility
will still be addressed under the regional haze reasonable progress
requirements through participation in the CSAPR ozone season
NOX emissions trading program. In addition, all Arkansas
EGUs with a nameplate capacity of 25 megawatts or greater participate
in the CSAPR ozone season NOX emissions trading program.
This means that many EGUs that were not subject to control requirements
under the FIP are required under the CSAPR trading program to comply
with specific NOX emissions allocations during the ozone
season.
D. Legal
Comment: To be approvable, any SIP must include enforceable
emissions limitations, compliance schedules, and other measures as
necessary to achieve the reasonable progress goals. The agency
recognized in disapproving Arkansas's 2011 SIP package, that when
evaluating a state's BART determination, the EPA looks at existing
requirements and cannot rely on potential future actions in its
decision to approve or disapprove a state SIP. Here, EPA's proposed
approval is impermissibly based on future contingencies that have not
occurred. Indeed, the agency recognized in the proposal that it cannot
take a final action until the state completes its rulemaking process,
adopts its final regulations, and submits these final adopted
regulations as a revision to the Arkansas SIP. Because EPA's proposed
action relies on potential future state actions, it cannot be approved.
Response: We disagree with comments that we are relying on
potential future state actions in taking final action. CSAPR is an
existing program that the state of Arkansas is participating in for
NOX. The Arkansas SIP revision relies on participation in
CSAPR to meet the requirements of NOX BART, as well as the
fact that NOX is not the driver of visibility impairment on
the 20% worst days, in their determination under reasonable progress,
that no other NOX controls are needed. Future decisions on
trading as part of its current participation in CSAPR are not
considered future state actions. Current participation in CSAPR is the
state action that EPA's proposed action is based upon.
Further, our proposed approval was based on a proposed SIP revision
submitted by ADEQ on July 12, 2017, with a request for parallel
processing. As we explained in our September 11, 2017 proposal, we
proposed action on the SIP revision at the same time that ADEQ was
completing the corresponding public comment and rulemaking process at
the state level.\54\ We explained that the July 2017 SIP revision
request would not be complete and would not meet all the SIP
approvability criteria until the state completes the public process and
submits the final, adopted SIP revision with a letter from the Governor
or Governor's designee to EPA.\55\ In our September 11, 2017 proposal,
we proposed to approve the SIP revision request after completion of the
state public process and final submittal of the SIP revision. On
October 31, 2017, we received ADEQ's final SIP revision addressing BART
and reasonable progress requirements for NOX for EGUs in
Arkansas for the first implementation period. The final Arkansas
Regional Haze NOX SIP revision we received on October 31,
2017 did not contain significant changes from the state's proposed SIP
revision. Therefore, it is appropriate for us to take final action, as
proposed, on the final SIP revision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ 82 FR at 42629.
\55\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. General
Comment: The proposed rule contains certain calculation errors,
which, although sufficiently minor that they do not affect EPA's
conclusions, should be corrected. EPA states that total light
extinction on the 20% worst days in 2002 was 115.87 Mm-1 for
Caney Creek and 115 Mm-1 for Upper Buffalo. These values are
inconsistent with CENRAP PSAT results, which are 133.93 Mm-1
and 131.79 Mm-1, respectively. EPA's values appear to
exclude certain source categories, namely Initial Conditions, Boundary
Conditions, Secondary Organic Aerosols--Anthropogenic, and Secondary
Organic Aerosols--Biogenic. EPA does not explain why these categories
are or should be excluded when calculating light extinction on the 20%
worst days in 2002. Further, EPA does include these categories in its
calculation of other values, such as the 87.05 Mm-1 value
for the SO4 contribution at Caney Creek, which accounts for
3.32 Mm-1 from the Boundary Conditions source category.
Because the total light extinction values form the basis for many other
values in EPA's analysis, errors in the total light extinction values
carry over into the derivative values.
The proposed rule also contains a number of miscalculations
unrelated to the total light extinction error. These miscalculations
relate to EPA's characterization of the CENRAP PSAT results. While
sufficiently minor that they do not affect the outcome of EPA's
determination, Entergy lists these errors here in the interest of
correcting the record:
EPA states that the remaining source categories each
contribute between 2% and 6% of total light extinction at Arkansas'
Class I areas. The high-end rounded value should be changed from 6% to
7%, as the true range is 1.83% to 6.72%, pursuant to the CENRAP PSAT
results.
EPA states that the PSAT results show that natural, on-
road, and non-road sources are projected to continue to contribute a
very small portion of total light extinction at Arkansas' Class I areas
on the 20% worst days in 2018. According to the CENRAP PSAT results,
the contribution of natural, on-road, and non-road sources is 8.5% to
9.4% of the total light extinction. This amount should not be
characterized as ``a very small portion.''
EPA states that the other species (i.e., NO3,
POA, EC, soil, and CM) are also projected to have reductions in their
contribution to total light extinction at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo
in 2018. This statement is true for all the species except soil, which
actually increases in 2018 for both Class I areas according to the
CENRAP PSAT results.
EPA states that the other source categories in Arkansas
each contribute between 7% and 14% to light extinction attributed to
Arkansas sources at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo. According to the
CENRAP PSAT results, the correct range is 7% to 8%.
EPA states that CM from Arkansas sources, primarily area
sources,
[[Page 5938]]
contribute approximately 1 and 2% of total light extinction at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo, respectively. According to the CENRAP PSAT
results, the value for Upper Buffalo is 2.68% (which would round to
3%).
Response: We appreciate the commenter pointing out errors and other
mischaracterizations of light extinction values presented in our
proposed action. We acknowledge these errors. As pointed out by the
commenter, these errors are minor in nature and do not affect our
proposed and final determinations on the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision.
The commenter is correct that our proposed action stated
that total light extinction on the 20% worst days in 2002 was 115.87 Mm
-1 for Caney Creek and 115 Mm -1 for Upper
Buffalo.\56\ However, as pointed out by the commenter, these cited
values did not include initial conditions, boundary conditions, and
secondary organic matter. As we noted in our proposed action on the
2008 Arkansas Regional Haze SIP,\57\ the correct total visibility
extinction on the 20% worst days in 2002, including contributions from
initial conditions, boundary conditions, and secondary organic matter,
is 133.93 Mm -1 at Caney Creek \58\ and 131.79 Mm
-1 at Upper Buffalo.\59\
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\56\ 82 FR at 42630.
\57\ 76 FR at 64186 (October 17, 2011).
\58\ 76 FR at 64214.
\59\ 76 FR at 64215.
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The commenter pointed out that we stated in our proposal
that the PSAT results show that natural, on-road, and non-road sources
are projected to contribute a very small portion of total light
extinction at Arkansas' Class I areas on the 20% worst days in
2018.\60\ The commenter further points out that the combined
contribution of these three source categories is 8.5% and 9.4% at Caney
Creek and Upper Buffalo, which the commenter says should not be
characterized as ``a very small portion.'' While we agree with the
commenter that the combined contribution of the three source categories
is not ``very small,'' we would like to clarify that the statement made
in our proposal referred to the contribution of each individual source
category at each Class I area. For example, the natural source category
contributes approximately 2.47% of the total light extinction at Caney
Creek and 2.6% at Upper Buffalo on the 20% worst days in 2018; the on-
road source category contributes approximately 1.68% of the total light
extinction at Caney Creek and 1.82% at Upper Buffalo; and the on-road
source category contributes approximately 4.38% of the total light
extinction at Caney Creek and 4.93% at Upper Buffalo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ 82 FR 42631.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter pointed out that our statement that the
light extinction due to species other than SO4 is projected
to decrease in 2018 on the 20% worst days at Caney Creek and Upper
Buffalo is correct for all species except soil. The commenter is
correct, as the light extinction due to soil is projected to increase
slightly in 2018 on the 20% worst days at both Class I areas.\61\ The
commenter points out that according to the CENRAP PSAT results, CM from
Arkansas sources contribute approximately 2.68% of the total light
extinction at Upper Buffalo, not 2%, as stated in our proposal.\62\ The
commenter is correct. The CM contribution from all Arkansas source
categories is 3.53 Mm -1, out of a total light extinction of
131.79 Mm -1, which is a contribution of approximately
2.68%.
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\61\ 76 FR at 64214-64215; see Tables 8 and 10.
\62\ 82 FR at 42631.
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IV. Final Action
We are approving a revision to the Arkansas SIP submitted on
October 31, 2017, as meeting the regional haze requirements for the
first implementation period. This action includes the finding that the
submittal meets the applicable regional haze requirements as set forth
in sections 169A and 169B of the CAA and 40 CFR 51.300-51.308. The EPA
is approving the SIP revision submittal as meeting the following: the
core requirements for regional haze SIPs found in 40 CFR 51.308(d) such
as the reasonable progress requirement for NOX; the
NOX BART requirements for regional haze visibility
impairment with respect to emissions of visibility impairing pollutants
from EGUs in 40 CFR 51.308(e); and the requirement for coordination
with state and Federal Land Managers in Sec. 51.308(i). We are
approving ADEQ's reliance on CSAPR participation for ozone season
NOX to meet the NOX BART requirement for EGUs.
Arkansas' reliance on CSAPR addresses the NOX BART
requirements for Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler
No. 1; Lake Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and the
Auxiliary Boiler.
We also agree that Arkansas' conclusion that given the relatively
small level of visibility impairment due to NOX from
Arkansas point sources at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo on the 20%
worst days, for the first implementation period, additional
NOX controls for Arkansas point sources are not anticipated
to yield meaningful visibility improvements at Arkansas Class I areas
on the 20% worst days is reasonable. In light of the level of
visibility impairment due to NOX from Arkansas point sources
at Caney Creek and Upper Buffalo and considering that Arkansas EGUs are
participating in CSAPR for ozone season NOX, we are
finalizing our determination that Arkansas' decision to screen out
Arkansas point sources from further evaluation of additional
NOX controls is reasonable and we are finalizing our
approval of Arkansas' determination that no additional NOX
controls, beyond Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR for ozone season
NOX, are necessary to satisfy the reasonable progress
requirements for NOX in Arkansas for the first
implementation period.
Concurrent with our final approval of the Arkansas Regional Haze
NOX SIP revision, we are finalizing in a separate rulemaking
our final action to withdraw those portions of the Arkansas Regional
Haze FIP at 40 CFR 52.173 that impose NOX requirements on
Bailey Unit 1; McClellan Unit 1; Flint Creek Boiler No. 1; Lake
Catherine Unit 4; White Bluff Units 1 and 2 and the Auxiliary Boiler;
and Independence Units 1 and 2.\63\
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\63\ Our final action withdrawing part of the Arkansas Regional
Haze FIP is also being published in this Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We find that an approval of the SIP revision meets the Clean Air
Act's 110(1) provisions. No areas in Arkansas are currently designated
nonattainment for any NAAQS pollutants. Approval of the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision will not interfere with continued
attainment of all the NAAQS within the state of Arkansas. The SIP
revision we are approving would allow Arkansas to rely on compliance
with CSAPR for ozone-season NOX to satisfy the
NOX BART requirement for Arkansas EGUs and makes the
determination that no additional NOX controls beyond EGU
participation in CSAPR for ozone season NOX are necessary to
satisfy the reasonable progress requirements for NOX for
Arkansas sources. We also find that our approval of the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision will not interfere with the applicable CAA
regional haze requirements for BART because our action is supported by
an evaluation EPA made in a separate rulemaking \64\ that the CAA
requirement for BART can be satisfied through participation in
[[Page 5939]]
CSAPR. We also find that our approval of the Arkansas NOX
SIP revision will not interfere with the applicable CAA regional haze
requirements for reasonable progress because the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision includes an assessment of anthropogenic
sources of visibility impairment and arrives at the determination that
given the level of contribution to light extinction from NOX
due to Arkansas point sources, Arkansas EGU participation in CSAPR for
ozone season NOX is sufficient to satisfy the reasonable
progress requirements for NOX in Arkansas for the first
implementation period. The Independence facility, on which the FIP
imposed source specific NOX controls under the reasonable
progress requirements, is subject to CSAPR for ozone season
NOX. Even though we are approving the Arkansas
NOX SIP revision and concurrently withdrawing the source-
specific NOX controls in the FIP for the Independence
facility, the NOX emissions from the Independence facility
will still be addressed under the regional haze reasonable progress
requirements through participation in the CSAPR ozone season
NOX emissions trading program.
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\64\ On September 29, 2017, we finalized our proposed finding
that the EPA's 2012 analytical demonstration remains valid and that
participation in CSAPR, as it now exists, meets the Regional Haze
Rule's criteria for an alternative to BART.
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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 state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason, this action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21,
2011);
Is not an Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339, February 2,
2017) regulatory action because SIP approvals are exempted under
Executive Order 12866;
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, described in the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian
reservation land or in any other area where EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian
country, the rule does not have tribal implications 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. 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 April 13, 2018. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this action for the purposes of
judicial review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for
judicial review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in
proceedings to enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Air pollution control, Best available retrofit technology,
Environmental protection, Incorporation by reference, Intergovernmental
relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Regional haze, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Visibility.
Dated: January 24, 2018.
Anne Idsal,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
Title 40, chapter I, 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 E--Arkansas
0
2. In Sec. 52.170, paragraph (e) is amended by adding the entry
``Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP Revision'' at the end of
the third table titled ``EPA-Approved Non-Regulatory Provisions and
Quasi-Regulatory Measures in the Arkansas SIP'' to read as follows:
Sec. 52.170 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
[[Page 5940]]
EPA-Approved Non-Regulatory Provisions and Quasi-Regulatory Measures in the Arkansas SIP
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State
Name of SIP provision Applicable geographic or submittal/ EPA approval date Explanation
nonattainment area effective date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP Statewide................ 10/31/2017 2/12/2018, Regional Haze SIP
Revision. [Insert Federal submittal
Register addressing NOX
citation]. BART
requirements for
Arkansas EGUs
and reasonable
progress
requirements for
NOX for the
first
implementation
period.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
3. In Sec. 52.173, paragraphs (e) and (f) are added to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.173 Visibility protection.
* * * * *
(e) Measures addressing best available retrofit technology (BART)
for electric generating unit (EGU) emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOX).
The BART requirements for EGU NOX emissions are satisfied by
Sec. 52.184 and the Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP Revision
approved February 12, 2018, [Insert Federal Register citation].
(f) Other measures addressing reasonable progress. The reasonable
progress requirements for NOX emissions are satisfied by the
Arkansas Regional Haze NOX SIP Revision approved February
12, 2018, [Insert Federal Register citation].
[FR Doc. 2018-02147 Filed 2-9-18; 8:45 am]
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