Air Plan Approval; Douglas, Arizona; Second 10-Year Sulfur Dioxide Maintenance Plan, 6996-7002 [2018-03270]
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implications for federalism or Indian
tribes, please contact the person listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) requires
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their discretionary regulatory actions. In
particular, the Act addresses actions
that may result in the expenditure by a
State, local, or tribal government, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector of
$100,000,000 (adjusted for inflation) or
more in any one year. Though this
proposed rule would not result in such
an expenditure, we do discuss the
effects of this rule elsewhere in this
preamble.
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F. Environment
We have analyzed this proposed rule
under Department of Homeland
Security Directive 023–01, which guides
the Coast Guard in complying with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321–4370f), and have
made a preliminary determination that
this action is one of a category of actions
that do not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the human
environment. This proposed rule
involves a safety zone enforced at
various times over a seven day period
that would prohibit entry within 200
yards of a moored vessel. Normally such
actions are categorically excluded from
further review under paragraph L60(a)
of Appendix A, Table 1 of DHS
Instruction Manual 023–01–001–01,
Rev. 01. A preliminary Record of
Environmental Consideration
supporting this determination is
available in the docket where indicated
under ADDRESSES. We seek any
comments or information that may lead
to the discovery of a significant
environmental impact from this
proposed rule.
G. Protest Activities
The Coast Guard respects the First
Amendment rights of protesters.
Protesters are asked to contact the
person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section to
coordinate protest activities so that your
message can be received without
jeopardizing the safety or security of
people, places, or vessels.
V. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
We view public participation as
essential to effective rulemaking, and
will consider all comments and material
received during the comment period.
Your comment can help shape the
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outcome of this rulemaking. If you
submit a comment, please include the
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indicate the specific section of this
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suggestion or recommendation.
We encourage you to submit
comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
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in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
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List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 165
Harbors, Marine safety, Navigation
(water), Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Security measures,
Waterways.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard proposes to
amend 33 CFR part 165 as follows:
PART 165—REGULATED NAVIGATION
AREAS AND LIMITED ACCESS AREAS
1. The authority citation for part 165
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1231; 50 U.S.C. 191;
33 CFR 1.05–1, 6.04–1, 6.04–6, and 160.5;
Department of Homeland Security Delegation
No. 0170.1.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
section—
Captain of the Port means the
Commander, Sector North Carolina.
Designated representative means a
Coast Guard Patrol Commander,
including a Coast Guard commissioned,
warrant, or petty officer designated by
the Captain of the Port North Carolina
(COTP) for the enforcement of the safety
zone.
Participants means persons and
vessels involved in support of the gantry
crane off load.
(c) Regulations. (1) The general
regulations governing safety zones in
§ 165.23 apply to the area described in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) With the exception of participants,
entry into or remaining in this safety
zone is prohibited unless authorized by
the COTP North Carolina or the COTP
North Carolina’s designated
representative. All other vessels must
depart the zone immediately.
(3) To request permission to remain
in, enter, or transit through the safety
zone, contact the COTP North Carolina
or the COTP North Carolina’s
representative through the Coast Guard
Sector North Carolina Command Duty
Officer, Wilmington, North Carolina, at
telephone number 910–343–3882, or on
VHF–FM marine band radio channel 13
(165.65 MHz) or channel 16 (156.8
MHz).
(d) Enforcement. The U.S. Coast
Guard may be assisted in the patrol and
enforcement of the safety zone by
Federal, State, and local agencies.
(e) Enforcement Period. This
regulation will be enforced at various
times for seven days once the transport
vessel is moored at its berth—beginning
April 1, 2018 or alternatively, March
29th, 30th, 31st, April 2nd, 3rd, or 4th,
2018.
Dated: February 2, 2018.
Bion B. Stewart,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port North Carolina.
[FR Doc. 2018–03267 Filed 2–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
2. Add § 165.T05–0024 to read as
follows:
■
§ 165.T05–0024 Safety Zone, Cape Fear
River, Wilmington, NC
(a) Location. The following area is a
safety zone: all navigable waters of the
Cape Fear River within 200 yards
around the vessel transporting the two
new Post-Panamax gantry cranes to the
North Carolina State Port Authority in
Wilmington, North Carolina while the
vessel is moored at the North Carolina
State Port in Wilmington, North
Carolina.
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0537; FRL–9974–
58—Region 9]
Air Plan Approval; Douglas, Arizona;
Second 10-Year Sulfur Dioxide
Maintenance Plan
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
Proposed rule.
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve,
as part of the State Implementation Plan
(SIP) for the State of Arizona, the second
10-year maintenance plan for the
Douglas maintenance area for the 1971
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS or ‘‘standards’’) for sulfur
dioxide (SO2).
DATES: Any comments on this proposal
must be received by March 19, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R09–
OAR–2017–0537 at https://
www.regulations.gov, or via email to
Ashley Graham, Air Planning Office at
graham.ashleyr@epa.gov. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments
cannot be removed or edited from
Regulations.gov. For either manner of
submission, the EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (e.g., audio or video) must
be accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ashley Graham, EPA Region IX, (415)
972–3877, graham.ashleyr@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, the words
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
SUMMARY:
B. Has the State met the substantive
maintenance plan requirements?
IV. Proposed Action and Request for Public
Comment
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Action
We are proposing to approve the
second 10-year maintenance plan for the
Douglas, Arizona SO2 maintenance area
(‘‘Douglas maintenance area’’).1
Specifically, the EPA is proposing to
approve the Douglas second 10-year
maintenance plan for the 1971 NAAQS
for SO2 under sections 110 and 175A of
the Clean Air Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’) based
on our determination that the plan
fulfills all relevant requirements.
II. Background
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Table of Contents
A. What NAAQS are considered in
today’s rulemaking?
The NAAQS are health-based and
welfare-based standards for certain
ambient air pollutants. SO2 is the
pollutant that is the subject of this
action, and it is among the ambient air
pollutants for which we have
established health-based standards. SO2
causes adverse health effects by
reducing lung function, increasing
respiratory illness, altering the lung’s
defenses, and aggravating existing
cardiovascular disease. Children, the
elderly, and people with asthma are the
most vulnerable. SO2 emissions also
contribute to acidic deposition, damage
to crops and vegetation, and corrosion
of natural and man-made materials.
In 1971 the EPA established both
short- and long-term primary NAAQS
for SO2. The short-term (24-hour)
standard of 0.14 parts per million (ppm)
was not to be exceeded more than once
per year. The long-term standard
specifies an annual arithmetic mean not
to exceed 0.030 ppm.2 See 40 CFR 50.4.
In 2010 the EPA revised the primary
SO2 NAAQS by establishing a new 1hour standard of 75 parts per billion.
The EPA revoked the existing 1971
primary standards at that time because
they would not provide additional
public health protection (75 FR 35550,
June 22, 2010). Today’s action relates
only to the revoked 1971 NAAQS. The
State has requested that we act on this
maintenance plan.3
I. Summary of Action
II. Background
A. What NAAQS are considered in today’s
rulemaking?
B. What is the background for this action?
C. What are the applicable provisions for
second 10-year maintenance plans for
SO2?
III. The EPA’s Evaluation of the Arizona
Submittal
A. Did the State meet the CAA procedural
requirements?
1 For the definition of the Douglas maintenance
area, see 40 CFR 81.303.
2 Secondary NAAQS are promulgated to protect
public welfare. The secondary 1971 SO2 NAAQS (3hour) of 0.5 ppm is not to be exceeded more than
once per year. The Douglas area was not classified
nonattainment for the secondary standard, and this
action relates only to the primary 1971 SO2
NAAQS.
3 This action is consistent with the CAA’s antibacksliding provisions. The EPA’s final rule on
revocation of the 1971 SO2 NAAQS discussed that
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B. What is the background for this
action?
1. When was the nonattainment area
established?
The Douglas maintenance area is
located in southern Cochise County near
the U.S.-Mexico border. On March 3,
1978, for lack of a State
recommendation, we designated
Cochise County as a primary SO2
nonattainment area based on monitored
violations of the primary SO2 NAAQS in
the county between 1975 and 1977 (43
FR 8968, March 3, 1978). At the request
of the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality (ADEQ), the
nonattainment area was subsequently
reduced to three townships in and
around Douglas (44 FR 21261, April 10,
1979). Thus, the nonattainment area was
composed of the following townships:
T23S, R27E; T24S, R27E; and T24S,
R28E. The remaining townships in
Cochise County, T23S, R26E; T23S,
R28E; and T24S, R26E, were designated
as areas that ‘‘cannot be classified.’’
On the date of enactment of the 1990
CAA Amendments, SO2 areas meeting
the conditions of section 107(d) of the
Act were designated nonattainment for
the SO2 NAAQS by operation of law.
Section 107(d) describes the processes
by which nonattainment areas are
designated, including the pre-existing
SO2 nonattainment areas. Thus, the
Douglas area remained nonattainment
for the primary SO2 NAAQS following
enactment of the 1990 CAA
Amendments on November 15, 1990.
2. When was the Douglas area
redesignated for SO2?
In 2006 we redesignated the Douglas
area using the criteria for SO2
nonattainment areas that have
discontinued ambient monitoring
following the closure of the major point
source that caused the air quality
violations (71 FR 9941, February 28,
2006). The criteria are described in a
memorandum from John Seitz titled
‘‘Redesignation of Sulfur Dioxide
Nonattainment Areas in the Absence of
Monitored Data,’’ (‘‘Seitz Memo’’).4
maintenance SIPs would continue being
implemented by states until they are subsumed by
new planning and control requirements associated
with the revised NAAQS, and that the revoked SO2
NAAQS would be retained for one year following
the effective date of the initial designations for the
2010 SO2 NAAQS in areas designated attainment
(75 FR 35520, June 22, 2010). On January 9, 2018,
Cochise County was designated Attainment/
Unclassifiable for the 2010 SO2 NAAQS (83 FR
1098).
4 Memorandum dated October 18, 2000, from
John Seitz, Director, EPA Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, to Regional Office Air
Division Directors, Subject: Redesignation of Sulfur
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During its operation, the Phelps
Dodge Douglas Reduction Works
Smelter (PDDRWS) was the largest point
source in the Douglas SO2
nonattainment area, emitting
approximately 330,000 tons of SO2 in
1985 and contributing more than 99
percent of total SO2 emissions that year.
On January 15, 1987, the PDDRWS was
permanently deactivated. The facility
was completely dismantled by 1991. On
January 30, 1992, the ADEQ confirmed
that the facility was dismantled and no
longer existed at the former site. On
February 28, 2006, the EPA finalized
approval of the maintenance plan and
redesignation request for the Douglas
area, effective May 1, 2006 (71 FR 9941).
3. What is the current status of the area?
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The remaining SO2 point sources in
the Douglas maintenance area consist of
the Arizona Public Service Fairview
Generating Station, which has a facilitywide potential to emit (PTE) of about 70
tons per year (tpy) of SO2; the Bisbee
Douglas International and Douglas
Municipal airports; and the Arizona
State Prison Complex at Douglas. The
50-kilometer (km) buffer area required
by the Seitz Memo to be evaluated
includes areas within Arizona and
Mexico. Most of the point sources in the
Arizona portion are airports; non-airport
sources include the Lhoist North
America mine/lime plant, the Freeport
Copper Queen mine, and the Fiesta
Canning Co. food processing plant. The
non-airport sources have a combined
PTE of 4,425 tpy SO2. The largest
contributors of SO2 in the Mexican
portion of the 50-km buffer area are the
Agua Prieta II power plant and the
Mexicana de Cobre mine/lime plant,
which as of 2014, have estimated
facility-wide PTEs of 30 tpy SO2 and
1,852 tpy SO2, respectively.5
Currently, no ambient SO2 monitors
operate in the Douglas area. However,
we do not expect the cumulative impact
of the sources in and around Douglas to
cause a violation of the NAAQS because
the area’s emissions are sufficiently low.
No new sources of SO2 that are similar
in size to the PDDRWS have located in
the area since our redesignation of the
area to attainment in 2006.
Dioxide Nonattainment Areas in the Absence of
Monitored Data.
5 Maintenance Plan Renewal, 1971 Sulfur Dioxide
National Ambient Air Quality Standards, Douglas
Maintenance Area (2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan), page A–21. Prior to 2014, the
Mexicana de Cobre facility included two boilers
and a kiln, with an estimated PTE of 1,065 tpy SO2.
In 2014, a second kiln was authorized at Mexicana
de Cobre, resulting in a post-2014 estimated facilitywide PTE of about 1,852 tpy.
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C. What are the applicable provisions
for second 10-year maintenance plans
for SO2?
1. What are the statutory provisions?
Section 175A of the CAA provides the
general framework for maintenance
plans. The initial 10-year maintenance
plan must provide for maintenance of
the NAAQS for at least 10 years after
redesignation, including any additional
control measures necessary to ensure
such maintenance. In addition,
maintenance plans are to contain
contingency provisions necessary to
assure the prompt correction of a
violation of the NAAQS that occurs after
redesignation. The contingency
measures must include, at a minimum,
a requirement that the state will
implement all control measures
contained in the nonattainment SIP
prior to redesignation.
Section 175A(b) of the CAA requires
states to submit a subsequent
maintenance plan revision (‘‘second 10year maintenance plan’’) eight years
after redesignation. The Act requires
only that this second 10-year
maintenance plan maintain the
applicable NAAQS for 10 years after the
expiration of the first 10-year
maintenance plan. Beyond these
provisions, section 175A of the CAA
does not define the content of a second
10-year maintenance plan.
Section 110 of the CAA requires states
to make SIP revisions available for
public review and comment and to hold
a public hearing or provide the public
the opportunity to request a public
hearing. The Act requires the plan be
adopted by the state and submitted to
the EPA by the governor or his/her
designee.
2. What general EPA guidance applies to
SO2 maintenance plans?
The primary guidance on
maintenance plans and redesignation
requests is a September 4, 1992
memorandum from John Calcagni, titled
‘‘Procedures for Processing Requests to
Redesignate Areas to Attainment’’
(‘‘Calcagni Memo’’).6 Specific guidance
on SO2 redesignations also appears in a
January 26, 1995 memorandum from
Sally L. Shaver, titled ‘‘Attainment
Determination Policy for Sulfur Dioxide
Nonattainment Areas’’ (‘‘Shaver
Memo’’).7
6 Memorandum dated September 4, 1992, from
John Calcagni, Director, EPA Air Quality
Management Division, to Regional Office Air
Division Directors, Subject: Procedures for
Processing Requests to Redesignate Areas to
Attainment.
7 Memorandum dated January 26, 1995, from
Sally L. Shaver, Director, EPA Air Quality Strategies
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Guidance on SO2 maintenance plan
requirements for an area lacking
monitored ambient data, and where the
area’s historic violations were caused by
a major point source that is no longer in
operation, is found in the Seitz Memo
(see section II.C.2). The Seitz Memo
exempts eligible areas from the
maintenance plan requirements of
continued ambient air quality
monitoring.
While the Seitz Memo primarily
addresses redesignations, we find it is
appropriate to apply the Seitz Memo to
second 10-year maintenance plans for
areas that were redesignated in
accordance with the memo and
continue to experience similar
conditions to those at the time of
redesignation.
3. What are the requirements for
maintenance plans for single-source SO2
nonattainment areas in the absence of
monitored data?
Our historic redesignation policy for
SO2 has called for eight quarters of clean
ambient air quality data as a
prerequisite to redesignation of any area
to attainment. The Seitz Memo provides
guidance on SO2 maintenance plan
requirements for an area lacking
monitored ambient data and where the
area’s historic violations were caused by
a major point source that is no longer in
operation. To allow for these areas to
qualify for redesignation to attainment,
this policy requires that the
maintenance plan address otherwise
applicable provisions, and include:
(1) Emissions inventories representing
actual emissions when violations
occurred, current emissions, and
emissions projected to the tenth year
after redesignation; all three inventories
should include estimates of emissions
in, and within a 50-km buffer zone of,
the nonattainment area boundaries;
(2) dispersion modeling showing that
no SO2 NAAQS violations will occur
over the next 10 years and that the
retired source was the dominant cause
of the high concentrations in the past;
(3) evidence that if the retired source
resumes operation, it would be
considered a new source and be
required to obtain a permit under the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) provisions of the CAA; and
(4) a commitment to resume
monitoring before any major SO2 source
commences operation.
and Standards Division, to Regional Office Air
Division Directors, Subject: Attainment
Determination Policy for Sulfur Dioxide
Nonattainment Areas.
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III. The EPA’s Evaluation of the
Arizona Submittal
A. Did the State meet the CAA
procedural requirements?
On December 14, 2016, the ADEQ
submitted to the EPA the ‘‘Maintenance
Plan Renewal, 1971 Sulfur Dioxide
National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, Douglas Maintenance Area’’
(‘‘2016 Douglas Second Maintenance
Plan’’). The State verified that it had
adhered to its SIP adoption procedures
in Appendix C to the 2016 Douglas
Second Maintenance Plan, which
includes the notice of public hearing,
the agenda for the December 9, 2016
public hearing, the sign-in sheet, the
public hearing officer certification and
transcript of the hearing, and the State’s
responsiveness summary.
On June 14, 2017, the 2016 Douglas
Second Maintenance Plan was deemed
complete by operation of law. See 40
CFR part 51, Appendix V, for the EPA’s
completeness criteria, which must be
satisfied before formal review of the SIP.
B. Has the State met the substantive
maintenance plan requirements?
1. Were the area’s violations caused by
a major point source of SO2 Emissions
that is no longer in operation?
As discussed above, the only major
source of SO2 emissions within the
Douglas nonattainment area was the
PDDRWS, which ceased operation in
1987. When the facility was in operation
in 1985, the source emitted
approximately 330,000 tons of SO2. The
last recorded 24-hour or annual average
exceedances of the primary NAAQS
occurred in 1986, the last year of
extensive monitoring. All but one
monitor were removed before 1987 and
all the remaining monitors owned and
operated by Phelps Dodge and by the
ADEQ near the PDDRWS were removed
by 1988. The smelter operating permits
expired, the smelting equipment was
removed over a period of years, and the
smelter was completely dismantled by
1991. No new sources of SO2 that are
similar in size to the PDDRWS have
located in the area. Thus, Douglas meets
this criterion for review under the Seitz
Memo.
2. Has the State met the requirements
for second 10-year maintenance plans?
The 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan covers the second 10
years of the 20-year maintenance period,
as required by section 175A(b) of the
CAA. As discussed below, the State has
addressed the requirements in the Seitz
Memo for emissions inventories,
modeling, permitting of major new
sources, and agreement to commence
monitoring if a new major source locates
in the Douglas area. We provide more
details on each requirement and how
the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance
Plan meets each requirement in the
following sections.
a. Emissions Inventories
On December 14, 2001, the ADEQ
submitted to the EPA the ‘‘Douglas
Sulfur Dioxide State Implementation
and Maintenance Plan’’ and request to
redesignate the area to attainment
(‘‘2001 Douglas Maintenance Plan’’).
Following our request for additional
information on emissions inventories
and modeling, the ADEQ submitted a
series of supplements to the EPA
containing additional and revised
technical information to support its
redesignation request. The ADEQ’s
‘‘Douglas Sulfur Dioxide Nonattainment
Area State Implementation Plan,
Emissions Inventory and Air Quality
Dispersion Modeling Update, September
2005’’ (‘‘2005 Supplement’’) included
emissions inventories for sources in,
and within 50 km of, the Douglas
maintenance area for 1985 when
6999
PDDRWS was operating and SO2
NAAQS violations occurred.
In addition to reproducing emissions
for 1985, the 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan includes an
emissions inventory representing
current emissions for 2011 for sources
in, and within 50 km of, the Douglas
maintenance area. The ADEQ rolled the
base 2011 inventory forward to generate
an inventory for 2015, the final year of
the first maintenance period, and
similarly developed inventories for
2020, 2025, and 2030 to extend through
the second 10-year maintenance period.
The emissions inventories in the 2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan (see
Section 3 and technical support
document in Appendix A) include
estimates of SO2 from all relevant source
categories, which the plan divides
among stationary, mobile, event-related,
and area source categories. The ADEQ
used the EPA’s 2011 National Emissions
Inventory and 2008 Inventario Nacional
´
de Emisiones de Mexico to identify
point sources in, and within 50 km of,
the maintenance area. The plan includes
a description of current facility types,
emitting equipment, permitted
emissions limits, operating rates, and
emissions calculation methods.
Table 1 presents a summary of actual
SO2 emissions for 1985 and 2011, and
projected emissions for 2030 for sources
in, and within 50-km of, the Douglas
SO2 maintenance area. When the
smelter was in operation in 1985, SO2
emissions exceeded 330,000 tons. The
ADEQ identified 965 tons of SO2
emissions in, and within 50-km of, the
Douglas SO2 maintenance area in 2011,
and projected a maximum of 6,380 tons
of SO2 emissions in 2030 based on
growth projections and facility PTEs.
Point source emissions in 2011 are
lower than projected emissions in 2030
because facilities have not operated at
their maximum PTE in recent years.
TABLE 1—ACTUAL (1985 AND 2011) AND PROJECTED (2030) DOUGLAS MAINTENANCE AREA SO2 EMISSIONS (IN tpy) a
Source category
Maintenance Area ...........................................
50-km buffer ....................................................
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Total .........................................................
a Source:
1985
2011
2030
Area, Mobile, and Event Sources ..................
Point ...............................................................
Point (U.S.) .....................................................
Point (Mexico) ................................................
93.02
330,000.14
21.02
904.84
5.60
0.30
0.43
959.02
3.22
69.75
4,424.98
1,882.25
.........................................................................
331,019.02
965.35
6,380.20
2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, Tables 7, 8, and 10.
Based on our review of the emissions
inventories in the 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, including the
supporting information in Appendix A,
we conclude that the inventories are
complete, accurate, and consistent with
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applicable CAA provisions and the Seitz
Memo.
b. Dispersion Modeling
Past EPA policy memoranda on SO2
redesignations recommend dispersion
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modeling to show that the NAAQS is
met and will be maintained. The Seitz
Memo recommends dispersion
modeling of all point sources within 50
km of the nonattainment area boundary.
Screening modeling can be used to
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conservatively estimate each source’s
contribution to average SO2
concentrations in the area.
For the 2005 Supplement to the 2001
Douglas Maintenance Plan, screening
dispersion modeling was performed
using the SCREEN3 model run with
conservative assumptions about source
parameters and meteorology. In the
2005 Supplement, the ADEQ identified
seven existing stationary sources in, and
within 50 km of, the Douglas
nonattainment area. The modeling
analysis for emissions projected to 2015
indicated that the impact of these
sources would not exceed 61 percent
and 64 percent of the 1971 annual and
24-hour SO2 NAAQS, respectively.
The Seitz Memo also requires a
modeling analysis that shows that the
retired point sources were the dominant
sources contributing to high SO2
concentrations in the airshed. Since the
emissions of non-smelter sources in the
area had changed relatively little since
the time that the smelter ceased
operations, this same screening
modeling was used to show that the
smelter was the dominant source
contributing to past high SO2
concentrations.
For the 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, the ADEQ conducted
a modeling analysis similar to the
analysis for the 2005 Supplement. Five
facilities for which SO2 emissions were
projected to total at least 0.5 tpy in any
future year were modeled. The ADEQ
used the conservative approach of
assuming that each facility would emit
the maximum allowable SO2 in each
future year. Other point sources were
not modeled because of their small or
negligible emissions; however, the
collective impacts of such sources, in
addition to area, mobile, and biogenic
sources, were estimated based on SO2
concentrations observed by ambient air
monitors in neighboring counties.
The ADEQ used the EPArecommended AERSCREEN dispersion
model (version 15181) to estimate the
SO2 impacts of the five facilities on
maintenance in the Douglas planning
area.8 AERSCREEN provides
conservatively high concentration
estimates by using worst case
meteorology from among a range of
meteorological conditions. The ADEQ
used the conservative approach of
summing the maximum AERSCREEN
concentrations from each source,
8 AERSCREEN has replaced SCREEN3 as the
EPA’s preferred screening model. See memorandum
dated April 11, 2011, from Tyler Fox, Leader, U.S.
EPA Air Quality Modeling Group to EPA Regional
Modeling Contacts, Subject: AERSCREEN Released
as EPA Recommended Screening Model, in the
docket for today’s action.
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effectively assuming all concentration
maxima occur at the same time and
place. The results of the AERSCREEN
modeling indicate a cumulative
potential impact from 2015 to 2030 of
the existing sources of less than 61
percent and 77 percent of the 1971
annual and 24-hour SO2 NAAQS,
respectively. See 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, p. 41–43.
One way that the ADEQ modeling was
potentially not conservative was in its
assumption of simple terrain. Terrain
with elevations above stack height, i.e.,
‘‘complex terrain,’’ can sometimes
experience higher air quality impacts
than simple terrain. While the Douglas
Maintenance Area has low relief, it is
not flat; it has a few isolated modest
hills and elevations increase on its
eastern edge towards the Perilla
Mountains. To ensure that predicted
SO2 concentrations meet the NAAQS
when terrain variability is considered,
the EPA re-ran AERSCREEN for the
sources with the largest maximum
allowable emissions.9 Using a
conservative approach that assumes
worst-case meteorology and that all
facility maxima occur at the same time,
while more realistically accounting for
where each facility maxima occurs in
space, the EPA modeled maximum 24hour and annual SO2 concentrations in
the Douglas maintenance area that are
below the NAAQS. The EPA’s modeling
results support the ADEQ’s finding of
continued attainment through 2030.
c. Treatment of New Sources of SO2
Emissions
Section 172(c)(5) of the CAA requires
New Source Review permits prior to the
construction and operation of new
major stationary sources and prior to
major modifications at existing major
stationary sources in nonattainment
areas. However, in attainment areas,
major sources and major modifications
require PSD permits in accordance with
section 165 of the CAA. The PSD
program requires stationary sources to
apply the best available control
technology (BACT) and ensure that
projects will not cause or contribute to
a violation of a NAAQS or a maximum
allowable increase.
The ADEQ has a PSD permitting
program (i.e., Arizona Administrative
Code (A.A.C.) R18–2–406) that was
established to preserve the air quality in
areas where ambient standards have
been met. The PSD program requires
stationary sources to undergo
preconstruction review, install BACT,
9 A modeling technical support document, which
is available in the docket to this action, provides a
detailed discussion of our analysis and findings.
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and conduct modeling demonstrating
protection of the SO2 NAAQS. The
program applies to any major source or
major modification in the Douglas area.
New minor sources are required to
obtain a permit under A.A.C. R18–2–
334, Arizona’s Minor New Source
Review program. Updates to the State’s
PSD and Minor New Source Review
programs were approved into the SIP on
November 2, 2015 (80 FR 67319). Thus,
the ADEQ’s existing PSD program
satisfies the preconstruction permit
provision of the Seitz Memo.
d. Commitment To Resume Monitoring
The ADEQ commits to resume
monitoring before any major source of
SO2 commences to operate in the
Douglas maintenance area. See 2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, p.
26. Moreover, the PSD permit program
requires that permit applicants conduct
preconstruction monitoring to identify
baseline concentrations. Together, these
commitments address the monitoring
provision of the Seitz Memo.
3. Other CAA Requirements
a. Contingency Plan
As discussed above, section 175A of
the CAA sets forth the statutory
requirements for maintenance plans,
and the Calcagni, Seitz, and Shaver
memos cited above contain specific EPA
guidance. The only maintenance plan
element not covered by the Seitz Memo
is the contingency provisions element.
Section 175A(d) of the CAA requires
that maintenance plans contain
contingency provisions deemed
necessary by the Administrator to assure
that the state will promptly correct any
violation of the standards that occurs
after the redesignation of the area as an
attainment area. The Calcagni Memo
provides additional guidance, noting
that although a state is not required to
have fully-adopted contingency
measures that will take effect without
further action by the state for the
maintenance plan to be approved, the
maintenance plan should ensure that
the contingency measures are adopted
expeditiously once they are triggered.
Specifically, the maintenance plan
should clearly identify the measures to
be adopted, include a schedule and
procedure for adoption and
implementation of the measures, and
contain a specific time limit for action
by the state. In addition, the state
should identify specific indicators or
triggers that will be used to determine
when the contingency measures need to
be implemented.
The 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan includes the State’s
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commitment to continue to track
maintenance of the SO2 NAAQS
through updates to the emissions
inventory. See 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, p. 44–45.
Additionally, the ADEQ commits to
reestablish an appropriate air quality
monitoring network before any major
source of SO2 begins operations in the
Douglas maintenance area. See 2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, p.
26.
Since there are no remaining sources
of SO2 emissions that are similar in size
to the PDDRWS, the primary cause of
any potential future violations of the
1971 SO2 NAAQS in the area would be
from modified or new point sources.
The ADEQ’s current operating permit
program places limits on SO2 emissions
from existing sources. Should a new
facility be constructed in the Douglas
area or an existing facility want to
upgrade or increase SO2 emissions, the
facility would also be subject to PSD as
required by the Calcagni Memo.
Furthermore, the ADEQ anticipates no
relaxation of any implemented control
measures used to attain and maintain
the NAAQS, and they commit to submit
to us any changes to rules or emission
limits applicable to SO2 sources. The
ADEQ also commits to maintain the
necessary resources to promptly correct
any violations of the provisions
contained in the 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan.
Upon review of the contingency plan
summarized above, we find that the
ADEQ has established a contingency
plan for the Douglas area that satisfies
the requirements of the CAA section
175A(d) and the Calcagni Memo.
b. Transportation and General
Conformity
Conformity is required under section
176(c) of the CAA to ensure that federal
actions are consistent with (‘‘conform
to’’) the purpose of the SIP. Conformity
to the purpose of the SIP means that
federal activities will not cause new air
quality violations, worsen existing
violations, or delay timely attainment of
the relevant NAAQS or interim
reductions and milestones. Conformity
applies to areas that are designated
nonattainment and to maintenance
areas. The requirement to determine
conformity applies to transportation
plans, programs, and projects
developed, funded, or approved under
Title 23 U.S.C. and the Federal Transit
Act (‘‘transportation conformity’’), and
to other federally supported or funded
projects (‘‘general conformity’’).
Transportation conformity applies to
projects that require Federal Highway
Administration or Federal Transit
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Administration funding. 40 CFR part 93
describes the requirements for federal
actions related to transportation plans,
programs, and projects to conform to the
purposes of the SIP. Because the EPA
does not consider SO2 a transportationrelated criteria pollutant, only the
requirements related to general
conformity apply to the Douglas area.10
Section 176(c)(4) of the CAA
establishes the framework for general
conformity. Besides ensuring that
federal actions not covered by the
transportation conformity rule will not
interfere with the SIP, the general
conformity regulations encourage
consultation between the federal agency
and the state or local air pollution
control agencies before and during the
environmental review process; public
notification of and access to federal
agency conformity determinations; and
air quality review of individual federal
actions.
Section 176(c) of the CAA requires the
states to revise their SIPs to establish
criteria and procedures to ensure that
federally supported or funded projects
in nonattainment and maintenance
areas ‘‘conform’’ to the air quality
planning goals in the applicable SIP.
State implementation plan revisions
intended to meet the conformity
requirements in section 176(c) are
referred to as ‘‘conformity SIPs.’’ In
2005 Congress amended section 176(c),
and under the amended conformity
provisions, states are no longer required
to submit conformity SIPs for general
conformity, and the conformity SIP
requirements for transportation
conformity have been reduced to
include only those relating to
consultation, enforcement, and
enforceability. See CAA section
176(c)(4)(E).
The EPA believes it is reasonable to
interpret the conformity SIP
requirements as not applying for
purposes of a redesignation request
under section 107(d)(3)(E)(v) because
state conformity rules are still required
after redesignation and federal
conformity rules apply where state rules
have not been approved. See Wall v.
EPA, 265 F. 3d 426 (6th Cir. 2001),
upholding this interpretation. Because
the Douglas area has already been
redesignated for the 1971 SO2 NAAQS,
we believe it is reasonable to apply the
interpretation of conformity SIP
requirements as not applying for the
purposes of redesignation to the
approval of the Douglas second 10-year
maintenance plan.
Criteria for making determinations
and provisions for general conformity
10 See
PO 00000
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7001
are contained in A.A.C. R18–2–1438.
Arizona has an approved general
conformity SIP (64 FR 19916, April 23,
1999).
The ADEQ commits in the 2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan to
review and comment, as appropriate, on
any federal agency draft general
conformity determination it receives
consistent with 40 CFR 93.155 for any
federal plans or actions in the Douglas
area, although none are currently
planned for the area. See 2016 Douglas
Second Maintenance Plan, p. 20.
IV. Proposed Action and Request for
Public Comment
The EPA is proposing to approve the
Douglas second 10-year SO2
maintenance plan under sections 110
and 175A of the CAA. As authorized in
section 110(k)(3) of the Act, the EPA is
proposing to approve the submitted SIP
revision because it fulfills all relevant
requirements.
We will accept comments from the
public on this proposal for 30 days from
the date of publication of this notice,
and we will consider any relevant
comments in taking final action on
today’s proposal.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
Act and applicable federal regulations.
See 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely approves state law as meeting
federal requirements and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this 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
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affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide the 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).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: February 2, 2018.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region
IX.
[FR Doc. 2018–03270 Filed 2–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R10–OAR–2016–0749; FRL–9974–
59—Region 10]
Approval and Promulgation of State
Implementation Plans; Alaska;
Regional Haze Progress Report
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
revision to the Alaska Regional Haze
State Implementation Plan (SIP),
submitted by the State of Alaska on
March 10, 2016. Alaska submitted its
Regional Haze Progress Report
(‘‘progress report’’ or ‘‘report’’) and a
negative declaration stating that further
revision of the existing regional haze
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SUMMARY:
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SIP is not needed at this time. Alaska
submitted both the progress report and
the negative declaration in the form of
implementation plan revisions as
required by federal regulations. The
progress report addresses the federal
Regional Haze Rule (RHR) requirements
under the Clean Air Act (CAA) to
submit a report describing progress in
achieving reasonable progress goals
(RPGs) established for regional haze and
a determination of the adequacy of the
state’s existing plan addressing regional
haze. We are also proposing to approve
minor updates to the Enhanced Smoke
Management Plan, Long-Term Strategy,
and Commitment to Future 308 Plan
Revision sections of the regional haze
SIP, submitted concurrently with the
progress report.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before March 19, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R10–
OAR–2016–0749 at https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
The EPA may publish any comment
received to its public docket. Do not
submit electronically any information
you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff
Hunt, Air Planning Unit, Office of Air
and Waste (OAW–150), Environmental
Protection Agency—Region 10, 1200
Sixth Ave., Seattle, WA 98101;
telephone number: (206) 553–0256,
email address: hunt.jeff@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, it is
intended to refer to the EPA.
I. Background
Alaska submitted its initial regional
haze SIP to the EPA on March 29, 2011,
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for the first regional haze planning
period ending in 2018, which the EPA
approved on February 14, 2013.1 Five
years after submittal of the initial
regional haze plan, states are required to
submit progress reports that evaluate
progress towards the RPGs for each
mandatory Class I Federal area 2 (Class
I area) within the state and in each Class
I area outside the state which may be
affected by emissions from within the
state. 40 CFR 51.308(g). States are also
required to submit, at the same time as
the progress report, a determination of
the adequacy of the state’s existing
regional haze plan. 40 CFR 51.308(h).
On March 10, 2016, the Alaska
Department of Environmental
Conservation (ADEC) submitted as a SIP
revision a report on the progress made
in the first implementation period
towards the RPGs for Class I areas. EPA
is proposing to approve Alaska’s
progress report on the basis that it
satisfies the requirements of 40 CFR
51.308. We also propose to find that
Alaska’s progress report demonstrates
that the state’s long-term strategy and
emission control measures in the
existing regional haze SIP are sufficient
to enable Alaska to meet all established
RPGs for 2018.
II. Context for Understanding Alaska’s
Progress Report
To facilitate a better understanding of
Alaska’s progress report as well as the
EPA’s evaluation of it, this section
provides background on the regional
haze program in Alaska.
A. Framework for Measuring Progress
The EPA has established a metric for
determining visibility conditions at
Class I areas referred to as the ‘‘deciview
index,’’ which is measured in
deciviews, as defined in 40 CFR 51.301.
The deciview index is calculated using
monitoring data collected from the
Interagency Monitoring of Protected
Visual Environments (IMPROVE)
network monitors. Alaska has four Class
I areas within its borders: Denali
National Park and Preserve, Tuxedni
National Wildlife Refuge, Simeonof
Wilderness Area, and the Bering Sea
Wilderness Area. In developing its
initial regional haze SIP, Alaska
determined, and the EPA in its approval
agreed, that due to lack of proximity to
other states, visibility in Alaska’s Class
I areas is not affected by emission
1 See
78 FR 10546.
designated as mandatory Class I Federal
areas consist of national parks exceeding 6000
acres, wilderness areas and national memorial parks
exceeding 5000 acres, and all international parks
that were in existence on August 7, 1977 (42 U.S.C.
7472(a)). Listed at 40 CFR part 81 subpart D.
2 Areas
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[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 33 (Friday, February 16, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 6996-7002]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-03270]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2017-0537; FRL-9974-58--Region 9]
Air Plan Approval; Douglas, Arizona; Second 10-Year Sulfur
Dioxide Maintenance Plan
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
[[Page 6997]]
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve, as part of the State Implementation Plan (SIP) for the State
of Arizona, the second 10-year maintenance plan for the Douglas
maintenance area for the 1971 National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS or ``standards'') for sulfur dioxide (SO2).
DATES: Any comments on this proposal must be received by March 19,
2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R09-
OAR-2017-0537 at https://www.regulations.gov, or via email to Ashley
Graham, Air Planning Office at [email protected]. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be removed or
edited from Regulations.gov. For either manner of submission, the EPA
may publish any comment received to its public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Multimedia submissions (e.g., audio or video) must be
accompanied by a written comment. The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include discussion of all points you wish
to make. The EPA will generally not consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary submission (i.e., on the web,
cloud, or other file sharing system). For additional submission
methods, please contact the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general guidance
on making effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ashley Graham, EPA Region IX, (415)
972-3877, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, the words ``we,''
``us,'' or ``our'' refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of Action
II. Background
A. What NAAQS are considered in today's rulemaking?
B. What is the background for this action?
C. What are the applicable provisions for second 10-year
maintenance plans for SO2?
III. The EPA's Evaluation of the Arizona Submittal
A. Did the State meet the CAA procedural requirements?
B. Has the State met the substantive maintenance plan
requirements?
IV. Proposed Action and Request for Public Comment
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of Action
We are proposing to approve the second 10-year maintenance plan for
the Douglas, Arizona SO2 maintenance area (``Douglas
maintenance area'').\1\ Specifically, the EPA is proposing to approve
the Douglas second 10-year maintenance plan for the 1971 NAAQS for
SO2 under sections 110 and 175A of the Clean Air Act (CAA or
``Act'') based on our determination that the plan fulfills all relevant
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For the definition of the Douglas maintenance area, see 40
CFR 81.303.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
A. What NAAQS are considered in today's rulemaking?
The NAAQS are health-based and welfare-based standards for certain
ambient air pollutants. SO2 is the pollutant that is the
subject of this action, and it is among the ambient air pollutants for
which we have established health-based standards. SO2 causes
adverse health effects by reducing lung function, increasing
respiratory illness, altering the lung's defenses, and aggravating
existing cardiovascular disease. Children, the elderly, and people with
asthma are the most vulnerable. SO2 emissions also
contribute to acidic deposition, damage to crops and vegetation, and
corrosion of natural and man-made materials.
In 1971 the EPA established both short- and long-term primary NAAQS
for SO2. The short-term (24-hour) standard of 0.14 parts per
million (ppm) was not to be exceeded more than once per year. The long-
term standard specifies an annual arithmetic mean not to exceed 0.030
ppm.\2\ See 40 CFR 50.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Secondary NAAQS are promulgated to protect public welfare.
The secondary 1971 SO2 NAAQS (3-hour) of 0.5 ppm is not
to be exceeded more than once per year. The Douglas area was not
classified nonattainment for the secondary standard, and this action
relates only to the primary 1971 SO2 NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2010 the EPA revised the primary SO2 NAAQS by
establishing a new 1-hour standard of 75 parts per billion. The EPA
revoked the existing 1971 primary standards at that time because they
would not provide additional public health protection (75 FR 35550,
June 22, 2010). Today's action relates only to the revoked 1971 NAAQS.
The State has requested that we act on this maintenance plan.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ This action is consistent with the CAA's anti-backsliding
provisions. The EPA's final rule on revocation of the 1971
SO2 NAAQS discussed that maintenance SIPs would continue
being implemented by states until they are subsumed by new planning
and control requirements associated with the revised NAAQS, and that
the revoked SO2 NAAQS would be retained for one year
following the effective date of the initial designations for the
2010 SO2 NAAQS in areas designated attainment (75 FR
35520, June 22, 2010). On January 9, 2018, Cochise County was
designated Attainment/Unclassifiable for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS (83 FR 1098).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. What is the background for this action?
1. When was the nonattainment area established?
The Douglas maintenance area is located in southern Cochise County
near the U.S.-Mexico border. On March 3, 1978, for lack of a State
recommendation, we designated Cochise County as a primary
SO2 nonattainment area based on monitored violations of the
primary SO2 NAAQS in the county between 1975 and 1977 (43 FR
8968, March 3, 1978). At the request of the Arizona Department of
Environmental Quality (ADEQ), the nonattainment area was subsequently
reduced to three townships in and around Douglas (44 FR 21261, April
10, 1979). Thus, the nonattainment area was composed of the following
townships: T23S, R27E; T24S, R27E; and T24S, R28E. The remaining
townships in Cochise County, T23S, R26E; T23S, R28E; and T24S, R26E,
were designated as areas that ``cannot be classified.''
On the date of enactment of the 1990 CAA Amendments, SO2
areas meeting the conditions of section 107(d) of the Act were
designated nonattainment for the SO2 NAAQS by operation of
law. Section 107(d) describes the processes by which nonattainment
areas are designated, including the pre-existing SO2
nonattainment areas. Thus, the Douglas area remained nonattainment for
the primary SO2 NAAQS following enactment of the 1990 CAA
Amendments on November 15, 1990.
2. When was the Douglas area redesignated for SO2?
In 2006 we redesignated the Douglas area using the criteria for
SO2 nonattainment areas that have discontinued ambient
monitoring following the closure of the major point source that caused
the air quality violations (71 FR 9941, February 28, 2006). The
criteria are described in a memorandum from John Seitz titled
``Redesignation of Sulfur Dioxide Nonattainment Areas in the Absence of
Monitored Data,'' (``Seitz Memo'').\4\
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\4\ Memorandum dated October 18, 2000, from John Seitz,
Director, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, to
Regional Office Air Division Directors, Subject: Redesignation of
Sulfur Dioxide Nonattainment Areas in the Absence of Monitored Data.
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[[Page 6998]]
During its operation, the Phelps Dodge Douglas Reduction Works
Smelter (PDDRWS) was the largest point source in the Douglas
SO2 nonattainment area, emitting approximately 330,000 tons
of SO2 in 1985 and contributing more than 99 percent of
total SO2 emissions that year. On January 15, 1987, the
PDDRWS was permanently deactivated. The facility was completely
dismantled by 1991. On January 30, 1992, the ADEQ confirmed that the
facility was dismantled and no longer existed at the former site. On
February 28, 2006, the EPA finalized approval of the maintenance plan
and redesignation request for the Douglas area, effective May 1, 2006
(71 FR 9941).
3. What is the current status of the area?
The remaining SO2 point sources in the Douglas
maintenance area consist of the Arizona Public Service Fairview
Generating Station, which has a facility-wide potential to emit (PTE)
of about 70 tons per year (tpy) of SO2; the Bisbee Douglas
International and Douglas Municipal airports; and the Arizona State
Prison Complex at Douglas. The 50-kilometer (km) buffer area required
by the Seitz Memo to be evaluated includes areas within Arizona and
Mexico. Most of the point sources in the Arizona portion are airports;
non-airport sources include the Lhoist North America mine/lime plant,
the Freeport Copper Queen mine, and the Fiesta Canning Co. food
processing plant. The non-airport sources have a combined PTE of 4,425
tpy SO2. The largest contributors of SO2 in the
Mexican portion of the 50-km buffer area are the Agua Prieta II power
plant and the Mexicana de Cobre mine/lime plant, which as of 2014, have
estimated facility-wide PTEs of 30 tpy SO2 and 1,852 tpy
SO2, respectively.\5\
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\5\ Maintenance Plan Renewal, 1971 Sulfur Dioxide National
Ambient Air Quality Standards, Douglas Maintenance Area (2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan), page A-21. Prior to 2014, the
Mexicana de Cobre facility included two boilers and a kiln, with an
estimated PTE of 1,065 tpy SO2. In 2014, a second kiln
was authorized at Mexicana de Cobre, resulting in a post-2014
estimated facility-wide PTE of about 1,852 tpy.
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Currently, no ambient SO2 monitors operate in the
Douglas area. However, we do not expect the cumulative impact of the
sources in and around Douglas to cause a violation of the NAAQS because
the area's emissions are sufficiently low. No new sources of
SO2 that are similar in size to the PDDRWS have located in
the area since our redesignation of the area to attainment in 2006.
C. What are the applicable provisions for second 10-year maintenance
plans for SO2?
1. What are the statutory provisions?
Section 175A of the CAA provides the general framework for
maintenance plans. The initial 10-year maintenance plan must provide
for maintenance of the NAAQS for at least 10 years after redesignation,
including any additional control measures necessary to ensure such
maintenance. In addition, maintenance plans are to contain contingency
provisions necessary to assure the prompt correction of a violation of
the NAAQS that occurs after redesignation. The contingency measures
must include, at a minimum, a requirement that the state will implement
all control measures contained in the nonattainment SIP prior to
redesignation.
Section 175A(b) of the CAA requires states to submit a subsequent
maintenance plan revision (``second 10-year maintenance plan'') eight
years after redesignation. The Act requires only that this second 10-
year maintenance plan maintain the applicable NAAQS for 10 years after
the expiration of the first 10-year maintenance plan. Beyond these
provisions, section 175A of the CAA does not define the content of a
second 10-year maintenance plan.
Section 110 of the CAA requires states to make SIP revisions
available for public review and comment and to hold a public hearing or
provide the public the opportunity to request a public hearing. The Act
requires the plan be adopted by the state and submitted to the EPA by
the governor or his/her designee.
2. What general EPA guidance applies to SO2 maintenance
plans?
The primary guidance on maintenance plans and redesignation
requests is a September 4, 1992 memorandum from John Calcagni, titled
``Procedures for Processing Requests to Redesignate Areas to
Attainment'' (``Calcagni Memo'').\6\ Specific guidance on
SO2 redesignations also appears in a January 26, 1995
memorandum from Sally L. Shaver, titled ``Attainment Determination
Policy for Sulfur Dioxide Nonattainment Areas'' (``Shaver Memo'').\7\
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\6\ Memorandum dated September 4, 1992, from John Calcagni,
Director, EPA Air Quality Management Division, to Regional Office
Air Division Directors, Subject: Procedures for Processing Requests
to Redesignate Areas to Attainment.
\7\ Memorandum dated January 26, 1995, from Sally L. Shaver,
Director, EPA Air Quality Strategies and Standards Division, to
Regional Office Air Division Directors, Subject: Attainment
Determination Policy for Sulfur Dioxide Nonattainment Areas.
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Guidance on SO2 maintenance plan requirements for an
area lacking monitored ambient data, and where the area's historic
violations were caused by a major point source that is no longer in
operation, is found in the Seitz Memo (see section II.C.2). The Seitz
Memo exempts eligible areas from the maintenance plan requirements of
continued ambient air quality monitoring.
While the Seitz Memo primarily addresses redesignations, we find it
is appropriate to apply the Seitz Memo to second 10-year maintenance
plans for areas that were redesignated in accordance with the memo and
continue to experience similar conditions to those at the time of
redesignation.
3. What are the requirements for maintenance plans for single-source
SO2 nonattainment areas in the absence of monitored data?
Our historic redesignation policy for SO2 has called for
eight quarters of clean ambient air quality data as a prerequisite to
redesignation of any area to attainment. The Seitz Memo provides
guidance on SO2 maintenance plan requirements for an area
lacking monitored ambient data and where the area's historic violations
were caused by a major point source that is no longer in operation. To
allow for these areas to qualify for redesignation to attainment, this
policy requires that the maintenance plan address otherwise applicable
provisions, and include:
(1) Emissions inventories representing actual emissions when
violations occurred, current emissions, and emissions projected to the
tenth year after redesignation; all three inventories should include
estimates of emissions in, and within a 50-km buffer zone of, the
nonattainment area boundaries;
(2) dispersion modeling showing that no SO2 NAAQS
violations will occur over the next 10 years and that the retired
source was the dominant cause of the high concentrations in the past;
(3) evidence that if the retired source resumes operation, it would
be considered a new source and be required to obtain a permit under the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) provisions of the CAA;
and
(4) a commitment to resume monitoring before any major
SO2 source commences operation.
[[Page 6999]]
III. The EPA's Evaluation of the Arizona Submittal
A. Did the State meet the CAA procedural requirements?
On December 14, 2016, the ADEQ submitted to the EPA the
``Maintenance Plan Renewal, 1971 Sulfur Dioxide National Ambient Air
Quality Standards, Douglas Maintenance Area'' (``2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan''). The State verified that it had adhered to its SIP
adoption procedures in Appendix C to the 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, which includes the notice of public hearing, the
agenda for the December 9, 2016 public hearing, the sign-in sheet, the
public hearing officer certification and transcript of the hearing, and
the State's responsiveness summary.
On June 14, 2017, the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan was
deemed complete by operation of law. See 40 CFR part 51, Appendix V,
for the EPA's completeness criteria, which must be satisfied before
formal review of the SIP.
B. Has the State met the substantive maintenance plan requirements?
1. Were the area's violations caused by a major point source of
SO2 Emissions that is no longer in operation?
As discussed above, the only major source of SO2
emissions within the Douglas nonattainment area was the PDDRWS, which
ceased operation in 1987. When the facility was in operation in 1985,
the source emitted approximately 330,000 tons of SO2. The
last recorded 24-hour or annual average exceedances of the primary
NAAQS occurred in 1986, the last year of extensive monitoring. All but
one monitor were removed before 1987 and all the remaining monitors
owned and operated by Phelps Dodge and by the ADEQ near the PDDRWS were
removed by 1988. The smelter operating permits expired, the smelting
equipment was removed over a period of years, and the smelter was
completely dismantled by 1991. No new sources of SO2 that
are similar in size to the PDDRWS have located in the area. Thus,
Douglas meets this criterion for review under the Seitz Memo.
2. Has the State met the requirements for second 10-year maintenance
plans?
The 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan covers the second 10 years
of the 20-year maintenance period, as required by section 175A(b) of
the CAA. As discussed below, the State has addressed the requirements
in the Seitz Memo for emissions inventories, modeling, permitting of
major new sources, and agreement to commence monitoring if a new major
source locates in the Douglas area. We provide more details on each
requirement and how the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan meets each
requirement in the following sections.
a. Emissions Inventories
On December 14, 2001, the ADEQ submitted to the EPA the ``Douglas
Sulfur Dioxide State Implementation and Maintenance Plan'' and request
to redesignate the area to attainment (``2001 Douglas Maintenance
Plan''). Following our request for additional information on emissions
inventories and modeling, the ADEQ submitted a series of supplements to
the EPA containing additional and revised technical information to
support its redesignation request. The ADEQ's ``Douglas Sulfur Dioxide
Nonattainment Area State Implementation Plan, Emissions Inventory and
Air Quality Dispersion Modeling Update, September 2005'' (``2005
Supplement'') included emissions inventories for sources in, and within
50 km of, the Douglas maintenance area for 1985 when PDDRWS was
operating and SO2 NAAQS violations occurred.
In addition to reproducing emissions for 1985, the 2016 Douglas
Second Maintenance Plan includes an emissions inventory representing
current emissions for 2011 for sources in, and within 50 km of, the
Douglas maintenance area. The ADEQ rolled the base 2011 inventory
forward to generate an inventory for 2015, the final year of the first
maintenance period, and similarly developed inventories for 2020, 2025,
and 2030 to extend through the second 10-year maintenance period.
The emissions inventories in the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance
Plan (see Section 3 and technical support document in Appendix A)
include estimates of SO2 from all relevant source
categories, which the plan divides among stationary, mobile, event-
related, and area source categories. The ADEQ used the EPA's 2011
National Emissions Inventory and 2008 Inventario Nacional de Emisiones
de M[eacute]xico to identify point sources in, and within 50 km of, the
maintenance area. The plan includes a description of current facility
types, emitting equipment, permitted emissions limits, operating rates,
and emissions calculation methods.
Table 1 presents a summary of actual SO2 emissions for
1985 and 2011, and projected emissions for 2030 for sources in, and
within 50-km of, the Douglas SO2 maintenance area. When the
smelter was in operation in 1985, SO2 emissions exceeded
330,000 tons. The ADEQ identified 965 tons of SO2 emissions
in, and within 50-km of, the Douglas SO2 maintenance area in
2011, and projected a maximum of 6,380 tons of SO2 emissions
in 2030 based on growth projections and facility PTEs. Point source
emissions in 2011 are lower than projected emissions in 2030 because
facilities have not operated at their maximum PTE in recent years.
Table 1--Actual (1985 and 2011) and Projected (2030) Douglas Maintenance Area SO2 Emissions (in tpy) a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source category 1985 2011 2030
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maintenance Area...................... Area, Mobile, and Event 93.02 5.60 3.22
Sources.
Point................... 330,000.14 0.30 69.75
50-km buffer.......................... Point (U.S.)............ 21.02 0.43 4,424.98
Point (Mexico).......... 904.84 959.02 1,882.25
-----------------------------------------------
Total............................. ........................ 331,019.02 965.35 6,380.20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Source: 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, Tables 7, 8, and 10.
Based on our review of the emissions inventories in the 2016
Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, including the supporting information
in Appendix A, we conclude that the inventories are complete, accurate,
and consistent with applicable CAA provisions and the Seitz Memo.
b. Dispersion Modeling
Past EPA policy memoranda on SO2 redesignations
recommend dispersion modeling to show that the NAAQS is met and will be
maintained. The Seitz Memo recommends dispersion modeling of all point
sources within 50 km of the nonattainment area boundary. Screening
modeling can be used to
[[Page 7000]]
conservatively estimate each source's contribution to average
SO2 concentrations in the area.
For the 2005 Supplement to the 2001 Douglas Maintenance Plan,
screening dispersion modeling was performed using the SCREEN3 model run
with conservative assumptions about source parameters and meteorology.
In the 2005 Supplement, the ADEQ identified seven existing stationary
sources in, and within 50 km of, the Douglas nonattainment area. The
modeling analysis for emissions projected to 2015 indicated that the
impact of these sources would not exceed 61 percent and 64 percent of
the 1971 annual and 24-hour SO2 NAAQS, respectively.
The Seitz Memo also requires a modeling analysis that shows that
the retired point sources were the dominant sources contributing to
high SO2 concentrations in the airshed. Since the emissions
of non-smelter sources in the area had changed relatively little since
the time that the smelter ceased operations, this same screening
modeling was used to show that the smelter was the dominant source
contributing to past high SO2 concentrations.
For the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, the ADEQ conducted a
modeling analysis similar to the analysis for the 2005 Supplement. Five
facilities for which SO2 emissions were projected to total
at least 0.5 tpy in any future year were modeled. The ADEQ used the
conservative approach of assuming that each facility would emit the
maximum allowable SO2 in each future year. Other point
sources were not modeled because of their small or negligible
emissions; however, the collective impacts of such sources, in addition
to area, mobile, and biogenic sources, were estimated based on
SO2 concentrations observed by ambient air monitors in
neighboring counties.
The ADEQ used the EPA-recommended AERSCREEN dispersion model
(version 15181) to estimate the SO2 impacts of the five
facilities on maintenance in the Douglas planning area.\8\ AERSCREEN
provides conservatively high concentration estimates by using worst
case meteorology from among a range of meteorological conditions. The
ADEQ used the conservative approach of summing the maximum AERSCREEN
concentrations from each source, effectively assuming all concentration
maxima occur at the same time and place. The results of the AERSCREEN
modeling indicate a cumulative potential impact from 2015 to 2030 of
the existing sources of less than 61 percent and 77 percent of the 1971
annual and 24-hour SO2 NAAQS, respectively. See 2016 Douglas
Second Maintenance Plan, p. 41-43.
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\8\ AERSCREEN has replaced SCREEN3 as the EPA's preferred
screening model. See memorandum dated April 11, 2011, from Tyler
Fox, Leader, U.S. EPA Air Quality Modeling Group to EPA Regional
Modeling Contacts, Subject: AERSCREEN Released as EPA Recommended
Screening Model, in the docket for today's action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One way that the ADEQ modeling was potentially not conservative was
in its assumption of simple terrain. Terrain with elevations above
stack height, i.e., ``complex terrain,'' can sometimes experience
higher air quality impacts than simple terrain. While the Douglas
Maintenance Area has low relief, it is not flat; it has a few isolated
modest hills and elevations increase on its eastern edge towards the
Perilla Mountains. To ensure that predicted SO2
concentrations meet the NAAQS when terrain variability is considered,
the EPA re-ran AERSCREEN for the sources with the largest maximum
allowable emissions.\9\ Using a conservative approach that assumes
worst-case meteorology and that all facility maxima occur at the same
time, while more realistically accounting for where each facility
maxima occurs in space, the EPA modeled maximum 24-hour and annual
SO2 concentrations in the Douglas maintenance area that are
below the NAAQS. The EPA's modeling results support the ADEQ's finding
of continued attainment through 2030.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ A modeling technical support document, which is available in
the docket to this action, provides a detailed discussion of our
analysis and findings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Treatment of New Sources of SO2 Emissions
Section 172(c)(5) of the CAA requires New Source Review permits
prior to the construction and operation of new major stationary sources
and prior to major modifications at existing major stationary sources
in nonattainment areas. However, in attainment areas, major sources and
major modifications require PSD permits in accordance with section 165
of the CAA. The PSD program requires stationary sources to apply the
best available control technology (BACT) and ensure that projects will
not cause or contribute to a violation of a NAAQS or a maximum
allowable increase.
The ADEQ has a PSD permitting program (i.e., Arizona Administrative
Code (A.A.C.) R18-2-406) that was established to preserve the air
quality in areas where ambient standards have been met. The PSD program
requires stationary sources to undergo preconstruction review, install
BACT, and conduct modeling demonstrating protection of the
SO2 NAAQS. The program applies to any major source or major
modification in the Douglas area. New minor sources are required to
obtain a permit under A.A.C. R18-2-334, Arizona's Minor New Source
Review program. Updates to the State's PSD and Minor New Source Review
programs were approved into the SIP on November 2, 2015 (80 FR 67319).
Thus, the ADEQ's existing PSD program satisfies the preconstruction
permit provision of the Seitz Memo.
d. Commitment To Resume Monitoring
The ADEQ commits to resume monitoring before any major source of
SO2 commences to operate in the Douglas maintenance area.
See 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, p. 26. Moreover, the PSD
permit program requires that permit applicants conduct preconstruction
monitoring to identify baseline concentrations. Together, these
commitments address the monitoring provision of the Seitz Memo.
3. Other CAA Requirements
a. Contingency Plan
As discussed above, section 175A of the CAA sets forth the
statutory requirements for maintenance plans, and the Calcagni, Seitz,
and Shaver memos cited above contain specific EPA guidance. The only
maintenance plan element not covered by the Seitz Memo is the
contingency provisions element. Section 175A(d) of the CAA requires
that maintenance plans contain contingency provisions deemed necessary
by the Administrator to assure that the state will promptly correct any
violation of the standards that occurs after the redesignation of the
area as an attainment area. The Calcagni Memo provides additional
guidance, noting that although a state is not required to have fully-
adopted contingency measures that will take effect without further
action by the state for the maintenance plan to be approved, the
maintenance plan should ensure that the contingency measures are
adopted expeditiously once they are triggered. Specifically, the
maintenance plan should clearly identify the measures to be adopted,
include a schedule and procedure for adoption and implementation of the
measures, and contain a specific time limit for action by the state. In
addition, the state should identify specific indicators or triggers
that will be used to determine when the contingency measures need to be
implemented.
The 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan includes the State's
[[Page 7001]]
commitment to continue to track maintenance of the SO2 NAAQS
through updates to the emissions inventory. See 2016 Douglas Second
Maintenance Plan, p. 44-45. Additionally, the ADEQ commits to
reestablish an appropriate air quality monitoring network before any
major source of SO2 begins operations in the Douglas
maintenance area. See 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan, p. 26.
Since there are no remaining sources of SO2 emissions
that are similar in size to the PDDRWS, the primary cause of any
potential future violations of the 1971 SO2 NAAQS in the
area would be from modified or new point sources. The ADEQ's current
operating permit program places limits on SO2 emissions from
existing sources. Should a new facility be constructed in the Douglas
area or an existing facility want to upgrade or increase SO2
emissions, the facility would also be subject to PSD as required by the
Calcagni Memo.
Furthermore, the ADEQ anticipates no relaxation of any implemented
control measures used to attain and maintain the NAAQS, and they commit
to submit to us any changes to rules or emission limits applicable to
SO2 sources. The ADEQ also commits to maintain the necessary
resources to promptly correct any violations of the provisions
contained in the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan.
Upon review of the contingency plan summarized above, we find that
the ADEQ has established a contingency plan for the Douglas area that
satisfies the requirements of the CAA section 175A(d) and the Calcagni
Memo.
b. Transportation and General Conformity
Conformity is required under section 176(c) of the CAA to ensure
that federal actions are consistent with (``conform to'') the purpose
of the SIP. Conformity to the purpose of the SIP means that federal
activities will not cause new air quality violations, worsen existing
violations, or delay timely attainment of the relevant NAAQS or interim
reductions and milestones. Conformity applies to areas that are
designated nonattainment and to maintenance areas. The requirement to
determine conformity applies to transportation plans, programs, and
projects developed, funded, or approved under Title 23 U.S.C. and the
Federal Transit Act (``transportation conformity''), and to other
federally supported or funded projects (``general conformity'').
Transportation conformity applies to projects that require Federal
Highway Administration or Federal Transit Administration funding. 40
CFR part 93 describes the requirements for federal actions related to
transportation plans, programs, and projects to conform to the purposes
of the SIP. Because the EPA does not consider SO2 a
transportation-related criteria pollutant, only the requirements
related to general conformity apply to the Douglas area.\10\
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\10\ See 40 CFR 93.102(b)(1).
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Section 176(c)(4) of the CAA establishes the framework for general
conformity. Besides ensuring that federal actions not covered by the
transportation conformity rule will not interfere with the SIP, the
general conformity regulations encourage consultation between the
federal agency and the state or local air pollution control agencies
before and during the environmental review process; public notification
of and access to federal agency conformity determinations; and air
quality review of individual federal actions.
Section 176(c) of the CAA requires the states to revise their SIPs
to establish criteria and procedures to ensure that federally supported
or funded projects in nonattainment and maintenance areas ``conform''
to the air quality planning goals in the applicable SIP. State
implementation plan revisions intended to meet the conformity
requirements in section 176(c) are referred to as ``conformity SIPs.''
In 2005 Congress amended section 176(c), and under the amended
conformity provisions, states are no longer required to submit
conformity SIPs for general conformity, and the conformity SIP
requirements for transportation conformity have been reduced to include
only those relating to consultation, enforcement, and enforceability.
See CAA section 176(c)(4)(E).
The EPA believes it is reasonable to interpret the conformity SIP
requirements as not applying for purposes of a redesignation request
under section 107(d)(3)(E)(v) because state conformity rules are still
required after redesignation and federal conformity rules apply where
state rules have not been approved. See Wall v. EPA, 265 F. 3d 426 (6th
Cir. 2001), upholding this interpretation. Because the Douglas area has
already been redesignated for the 1971 SO2 NAAQS, we believe
it is reasonable to apply the interpretation of conformity SIP
requirements as not applying for the purposes of redesignation to the
approval of the Douglas second 10-year maintenance plan.
Criteria for making determinations and provisions for general
conformity are contained in A.A.C. R18-2-1438. Arizona has an approved
general conformity SIP (64 FR 19916, April 23, 1999).
The ADEQ commits in the 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance Plan to
review and comment, as appropriate, on any federal agency draft general
conformity determination it receives consistent with 40 CFR 93.155 for
any federal plans or actions in the Douglas area, although none are
currently planned for the area. See 2016 Douglas Second Maintenance
Plan, p. 20.
IV. Proposed Action and Request for Public Comment
The EPA is proposing to approve the Douglas second 10-year
SO2 maintenance plan under sections 110 and 175A of the CAA.
As authorized in section 110(k)(3) of the Act, the EPA is proposing to
approve the submitted SIP revision because it fulfills all relevant
requirements.
We will accept comments from the public on this proposal for 30
days from the date of publication of this notice, and we will consider
any relevant comments in taking final action on today's proposal.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable
federal regulations. See 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this
action merely approves state law as meeting federal requirements and
does not impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state
law. For that reason, this 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
[[Page 7002]]
affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
Does not provide the 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).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: February 2, 2018.
Alexis Strauss,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2018-03270 Filed 2-15-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P