Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Pennsylvania; Regulatory Amendments Addressing Reasonably Available Control Technology Requirements Under the 1997 and 2008 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 20274-20292 [2019-09478]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 90 / Thursday, May 9, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
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Dated: May 2, 2019.
Karyn A. Temple,
Register of Copyrights and Director of the
U.S. Copyright Office.
Approved by:
Carla D. Hayden,
Librarian of Congress.
[FR Doc. 2019–09555 Filed 5–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R03–OAR–2017–0290; FRL–9993–36–
Region 3]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Pennsylvania; Regulatory
Amendments Addressing Reasonably
Available Control Technology
Requirements Under the 1997 and 2008
8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking action on a state
implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted by the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania). This
revision consists of regulatory
amendments intended to meet certain
reasonably available control technology
(RACT) requirements under the 1997
and 2008 8-hour ozone national ambient
air quality standards (NAAQS). EPA is
approving most parts of the
Pennsylvania SIP revision as meeting
RACT requirements under the Clean Air
Act (CAA), while conditionally
approving certain provisions, based
upon Pennsylvania’s commitment to
submit additional enforceable measures
that meet RACT. This action is being
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SUMMARY:
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taken in accordance with the
requirements of the CAA.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
June 10, 2019. Pennsylvania must meet
the conditions of this approval by May
9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
Number EPA–R03–OAR–2017–0290. All
documents in the docket 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 (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: Mr.
Joseph Schulingkamp, Planning and
Implementation Branch (3AD30), Air
and Radiation Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region III, 1650 Arch Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103. The
telephone number is (215) 814–2021.
Mr. Schulingkamp can also be reached
via electronic mail at or by email at
schulingkamp.joseph@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On March 14, 2018 (83 FR 11155),
EPA published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) for a SIP revision
from the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania. In the NPRM, EPA
proposed to partially conditionally
approve and partially approve a
Pennsylvania RACT SIP revision for the
1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
The formal SIP revision was submitted
by the Pennsylvania Department of
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75
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60
Environmental Protection (PADEP) on
May 16, 2016.
RACT requirements apply to any
ozone nonattainment areas classified as
Moderate or higher (Serious, Severe or
Extreme) under CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and 182(f). Section 184(b)(1)(B) of the
CAA also applies RACT to all areas
located within ozone transport regions
established pursuant to section 184 of
the CAA. The entire Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania is part of the Ozone
Transport Region (OTR) established
under section 184 of the CAA and thus
is subject statewide to the RACT
requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2)
and 182(f), pursuant to section 184(b).
The May 16, 2016 SIP submittal intends
to satisfy sections 182(b)(2)(C), 182(f),
and 184 of the CAA for both the 1997
and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS for all
major nitrogen oxides (NOx) and
volatile organic compound (VOC)
sources in Pennsylvania not subject to
control technique guidelines (CTG) (i.e.,
VOC non-CTG sources), except glass
melting furnaces, ethylene production
plants, surface active agents
manufacturing, and mobile equipment
repair and refinishing.
II. Summary of SIP Revision and EPA’s
Proposed Actions
The May 16, 2016 Pennsylvania SIP
revision includes the Pennsylvania
regulations in 25 Pa. Code sections
129.96–129.100 titled ‘‘Additional
RACT Requirements for Major Sources
of NOx and VOCs’’ (the RACT II Rule)
and amendments to 25 Pa. Code section
121.1, including related definitions, to
be incorporated into the Pennsylvania
SIP. These regulatory amendments were
adopted by PADEP on April 23, 2016
and effective on the same date upon
publication in the Pennsylvania
Bulletin. The May 16, 2016 SIP revision
was submitted to satisfy certain CAA
RACT requirements under both the 1997
and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS for
specific source categories.
The RACT II Rule applies statewide to
existing major NOX and/or VOC sources
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in Pennsylvania, except those subject to
other Pennsylvania regulations, as
specified in 25 Pa. Code 129.96(a)–(b).1
The RACT II Rule exempts all VOC
source categories for which PADEP had
adopted CTG RACT regulations at the
time the RACT II Rule was finalized, as
well as three non-CTG VOC source
categories: (1) Ethylene production
plants, (2) surface active agents
manufacturing, and (3) mobile
equipment repair and refinishing; and
glass melting furnaces as major NOx
sources. In the NPRM, EPA proposed to
find that the applicability requirements
of 25 Pa. Code section 129.96 are
necessary to implement the RACT
requirements within the RACT II Rule.
The RACT II Rule requirements apply
to any emissions unit or process at an
affected major source having a potential
to emit (PTE) of 1 ton per year (TPY) or
more of NOX and/or VOC. In the context
of the rule, existing major sources are
those already in existence as of July 20,
2012 or any major sources installed or
modified after July 20, 2012, which
became a major source before January 1,
2017. The RACT II Rule establishes a
compliance date of January 1, 2017, as
provided in paragraphs in 129.97(a) and
129.99(d)(4), with some exceptions.
Section 129.97 of the RACT II Rule
establishes NOX and VOC emission
limits or operational requirements on
certain types of emissions units in the
affected major sources which
Pennsylvania presumes to meet RACT,
thus referred to in the rule as
presumptive RACT.
Affected emissions units include
combustion units, process heaters,
combustion turbines, stationary internal
combustion engines, cement kilns,
municipal waste combustors, and
municipal solid waste landfills. In the
NPRM, EPA proposed to find that the
presumptive requirements of 25 Pa.
Code section 129.97 represent RACT for
the NOX and VOC source categories
affected by these provisions.
Affected major sources subject to the
presumptive requirements of 25 Pa.
Code section 129.97 that cannot comply
with the applicable presumptive NOX
limits for any given emissions units,
may choose one of two alternative
compliance options to establish RACT.
Such sources may either propose an
alternative NOX emissions limit based
on averaging NOX emissions from
multiple sources, under 25 Pa. Code
section 129.98, or else propose an
alternative source-specific emission
1 In the context of the RACT II Rule, the terms
‘‘major NOX emitting facility’’ and ‘‘major VOC
emitting facility,’’ as defined in 25 Pa Code section
121.1, are used to refer to major stationary sources.
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NOX or VOC limit or RACT
requirement, under 25 Pa. Code section
129.99. In the NPRM, EPA proposed to
find that 25 Pa. Code section 129.98 is
not sufficient to address RACT for
sources seeking averaging, without the
specific NOX averaging provisions for
any affected sources being submitted to
EPA for SIP approval. Also, in the
NPRM, EPA proposed to find that 25 Pa.
Code section 129.99 is not approvable
by itself without further information on
specific sources, along with the sourcespecific limits being submitted to EPA
for SIP approval. By letter dated
September 22, 2017, PADEP committed
to address the problems with sections
129.98 and 129.99, as later identified in
the NPRM, by submitting any facilityspecific terms and conditions regarding
emissions averaging to EPA as a source
specific SIP revision and submitting all
source-specific RACT determinations
under section 129.99 to EPA as SIP
revisions within 12 months of EPA’s
final approval. Therefore, EPA proposed
to conditionally approve the provisions
in 25 Pa. Code sections 129.98 and
129.99.
25 Pa. Code section 129.100 of the
RACT II Rule establishes compliance
demonstration and recordkeeping
requirements for affected sources.
Specific monitoring and testing
requirements are established for sources
complying with presumptive RACT
requirements under section 129.97.
Recordkeeping requirements are
established under section 129.100(d) for
any affected sources under the RACT II
Rule. In the NPRM, EPA proposed to
find that the compliance demonstration
requirements of 25 Pa. Code section
129.100 are necessary to implement the
RACT requirements of section 129.97.
Also, additional compliance
demonstration requirements for NOX
averaging or source-specific RACT
alternative limits will be established by
PADEP or the local permitting agency
on a source-specific basis, in accordance
with sections 129.98 and 129.99,
respectively, and consistent with
section 129.100.
Any definitions related to the RACT
II Rule are codified in 25 Pa. Code
section 121.1. The definitional changes
in 25 Pa. Code section 121.1 are
consistent with requirements in the
RACT II Rule and thus we proposed to
approve under CAA section 110. EPA
proposed that the amended provisions
in 25 Pa. Code section 121.1 and the
adopted provisions in 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.96, 129.97, 129.100 of the
RACT II Rule are approvable, in
accordance with requirements in CAA
sections 110, 172, 182, and 184, and
meet RACT for the affected major
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sources of non-CTG VOC and major
sources of NOX for both the 1997 and
2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS. EPA
proposed conditional approval of 25 Pa.
Code sections 129.98 and 129.99 for the
reasons stated in this section and in the
NPRM in more detail.
III. Public Comments and EPA’s
Reponses
During the comment period, EPA
received relevant comments from eight
separate entities: The Connecticut
Department of Energy and
Environmental Protection (CTDEEP),
Friends of Pennsylvania (FOP), GenOn
Energy, Inc. (GenOn), the Maryland
Department of Environment (MDE), the
State of New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection (NJDEP), the
New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation (NYDEC),
Olympus Power, LLC (Olympus Power),
and Sierra Club (SC). EPA also received
twelve irrelevant or non-adverse
comments from anonymous sources
which will not be addressed here. The
relevant comments and EPA’s response
are discussed in this section of this
rulemaking action.
A. Presumptive RACT
Comment 1: Several commenters
argue that PADEP’s presumptive limits
for certain source categories do not
represent RACT. The commenters state
that more stringent NOX RACT limits
have been adopted by other states for
coal-fired utility boilers, such as in New
York and Connecticut’s rules.
Commenters also suggest there are more
stringent limits adopted for combustion
turbines and stationary internal
combustion turbines.
Response 1: EPA disagrees with the
commenters that PADEP’s presumptive
NOX RACT limits are not adequate as
RACT. In making RACT determinations,
EPA has encouraged states to rely on
current EPA guidance, including CTGs
and Alternative Control Techniques
(ACTs), 2 and any other information
available at the time of development of
the RACT SIP. See 78 FR 34178 at
34192. States have the discretion to
adopt more stringent limits as RACT for
similar sources when considering what
emissions reductions of NOX and VOC
are necessary for timely attainment of
the ozone NAAQS (i.e., beyond RACT
reductions).
Based on existing EPA guidance, EPA
determined that the RACT II Rule’s
presumptive requirements generally
represent emission limitations
2 EPA uses CTGs to presumptively define VOC
RACT while ACTs describe available control
technologies and their respective cost effectiveness.
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achievable through implementation of
reasonably available control
technologies considering technical and
economic feasibility. In addition, EPA
reviewed NOX emissions limits in effect
in adjacent OTR states for certain source
categories addressed by Pennsylvania’s
rule for comparison purposes. EPA
concluded that PADEP’s presumptive
limits are comparable to other states’
limits, denoting that while some states
may have adopted more stringent limits
for similar categories, other states have
also adopted less stringent controls.
However, nothing in the CAA requires
Pennsylvania’s RACT limits to be as
stringent as neighboring states’ limits.
Some states may have adopted more
stringent controls for similar source
categories given needs for ozone
reduction to achieve attainment within
their particular state or to go ‘‘beyond
RACT’’ for the state’s internal reasons.
For instance, it is also worth noting that
Connecticut’s 22a–174–22e rule
established NOX presumptive limits that
would become effective in two phases
on June 1, 2018 for 2008 RACT
requirements and June 1, 2022; and EPA
only considered the June 1, 2018 control
requirements under this regulation to be
adequate and needed to meet 2008
ozone RACT.3 EPA continues to find
that Pennsylvania’s presumptive NOX
limits are reasonable for the source
categories evaluated for the reasons
described in detail in our NPRM and
TSD. EPA’s determination considered
for each source category the emission
rates achieved by different NOX control
technologies as discussed in the
guidance documents and summarized in
the TSD, and limits that other states
have adopted to meet RACT.
In addition, PADEP received similar
comments from Connecticut and New
Jersey on its proposed RACT II Rule,
asserting that each state had adopted
more stringent presumptive NOX limits
for coal-fired boilers than Pennsylvania.
In its response, PADEP asserted that it
‘‘reviewed and considered RACT
regulations from various states when
evaluating what constitutes reasonably
available control technology for the
types of sources affected by the final
rulemaking.’’ PADEP stated that
‘‘[s]ource categories in Pennsylvania are
diverse, with numerous sources having
varying characteristics differing from
those of the other Mid-Atlantic States,’’
and that it ‘‘evaluated its source
categories and determined the
presumptive RACT requirements to be
3 See 82 FR 16776. In addition, EPA notes that
Connecticut has areas in more severe nonattainment
with the ozone NAAQS than Pennsylvania and as
such may need more NOX reductions.
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adequate.’’ Further, after considering
comments received, PADEP determined
that the NOX limits for coal-fired boilers
with a rated heat input equal to or
greater than 250 million British Thermal
Units (MMBTU) per hour (MMBTU/hr)
could be revised to reflect more
stringent RACT. PADEP revised the
presumptive NOX limit from coal-fired
boilers that are circulating fluidized bed
combustion units (CFBs) from 0.20
pounds per MMBTU (lbs/MMBTU) to
0.16 lbs/MMBTU. PADEP also adopted
additional presumptive RACT
requirements for coal-fired boilers with
selective non-catalytic reduction (SNCR)
and selective catalytic reduction (SCR),
established in subparagraph
129.97(g)(1)(vii) and 129.97(g)(1)(viii).
See PADEP’s Response to Comments
Document, Comments #61 and #75.4
Thus, EPA believes that PADEP
considered and addressed technically
and economically feasible rates for
RACT as well as considered rates
established for RACT in neighboring
states in its development of the
presumptive limits for the RACT II Rule.
EPA recognizes that other states have
adopted more stringent RACT standards
for source categories similar to those in
Pennsylvania. However, that fact alone
is not sufficient to conclude that
PADEP’s presumptive limits are not
acceptable or reasonable as RACT.
States have the discretion to adopt more
stringent limits as RACT for similar
sources when considering the emissions
reductions of NOX and VOC necessary
for timely attainment of the ozone
NAAQS, or to adopt ‘‘beyond RACT’’
limits for their own internal reasons.
RACT requirements for ozone do not
require Pennsylvania to adopt the same
level of control as the most stringent
state in the OTR or country; what is
instead required is emission limitations
reflecting what is the lowest achievable
rate considering technological and
economic feasibility.5 Each state should
set RACT limits considering what it
determines reasonable for its sources. In
general, the actual cost, emission
reduction, and cost-effectiveness levels
that an individual source will
experience in meeting the RACT
requirements will vary from unit to unit
and from area to area. These factors will
4 PADEP’s Response to Comments Document is
available in the docket for this rulemaking action
at www.regulations.gov, Docket #EPA–R03–OAR–
2017–0290, document #EPA–R03–OAR–2017–
0290–0004 (hereafter referred to as Docket item
#0004).
5 See December 9, 1976 memorandum from Roger
Strelow, Assistant Administrator for Air and Waste
Management, to Regional Administrators,
‘‘Guidance for Determining Acceptability of SIP
Regulations in Non-Attainment Areas,’’ and also 44
FR 53762; September 17, 1979.
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differ from unit to unit because the
sources themselves vary in age,
condition, and size, among other
considerations and, in many cases, will
differ from state to state.6 EPA believes
that PADEP determined presumptive
limits based on its evaluation of
technical and economic feasibility of
controls and determination of what is
reasonable for each source category.7
Comment 2: One commenter argues
that PADEP’s presumptive limits for
municipal waste combustors (MWCs) do
not represent RACT for several reasons.
The commenter argues that for mass
burn waterwall type MWCs using SNCR
as a control, states have adopted more
stringent NOX limits of 150 parts per
million by volume, dry basis (ppmvd).
Also, the commenter states that neither
PADEP nor EPA considered the NOX
RACT limit of 150 ppmvd that was
adopted by NJDEP. The commenter
argues that Pennsylvania should have
established NOX presumptive limits for
MWCs for each type of combustor
technology, which is how states and
EPA typically regulate MWCs
considering that NOX emissions vary by
each technology.
Response 2: EPA disagrees with
commenter’s assertion that PADEP’s
presumptive NOX RACT limit of 180
ppmvd for MWC is not adequate as
RACT. PADEP’s NOx presumptive limit
of 180 ppmvd at 7 percent (%) oxygen
(O2) for MWC is reasonable as RACT,
based on NOX emission rates
established by other states’ regulations
and in EPA’s New Source Performance
Standards (NSPS) at 40 CFR part 60,
subparts Cb and Eb. In the NSPS, EPA
has established NOX limits for MWCs
ranging from 150 to 250 ppmvd at 7%
O2 after considering the best system of
emissions reduction (BSER). Also, as
noted in the TSD, OTR states have
adopted NOX limits for MWCs ranging
from 120 to 372 ppmvd at 7% O2, with
different averaging periods. PADEP’s
presumptive RACT limit for MWCs is
comparable to EPA’s most stringent
NOX limit for MWCs in the NSPS and
is comparable to the most stringent
limits adopted by other states given that
factual scenarios regarding technical
and economic feasibility for controls for
MWCs can vary amongst states. EPA has
no reason to believe that Pennsylvania
did not consider the existing controls at
the MWCs, such as SNCR, when
determining RACT. For large MWCs
with SNCR, other states have
established average daily NOX limits as
6 See EPA’s March 16, 1994 Memorandum ‘‘CostEffective Nitrogen Oxides (NOX) Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)’’.
7 See 46 PaB 2037.
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high as 250 ppmvd; thus,
Pennsylvania’s limit of 180 ppmvd is
more stringent for sources with SNCR
than some states. Finally, EPA does not
believe that MWCs must be exclusively
regulated by type of combustor. In
EPA’s MWC regulations for NOX
emission limits, EPA set limits
according to the type of combustor and
also set a single NOX limit that applies
regardless of combustor type. See 40
CFR part 60, subparts Cb and Eb.
In determining RACT, states should
also consider any information received
during the public comments. EPA
reviewed the comments received by
PADEP during the state’s public
comment period on the RACT II Rule.
PADEP initially proposed that MWCs
meet RACT by complying with the
limits EPA established in the NSPS at
40 CFR part 60, subpart Cb or Subpart
Eb, which range from 180 to 250 ppmvd
at 7% O2. In response to comments,
PADEP re-evaluated NOX emissions
data from its MWCs and concluded that
a NOX emission limit of 180 ppmvd at
7% O2, the lowest limit in the NSPS,
was more representative of actual
emissions achieved across the fleet of
MWCs in Pennsylvania, and therefore
revised the final rule to adopt this NOX
limit as presumptive RACT. See
PADEP’s Response to Comments
Document, Docket item #0004,
Comments #121. Thus, EPA believes
Pennsylvania considered for MWCs
technical and economic feasibility in
setting lowest achievable emission rate
for MWCs by considering what was
achieved by MWCs within the
Commonwealth and thus EPA finds the
presumptive RACT rate reasonable.
Finally, while EPA recognizes that
other states have adopted more stringent
RACT standards for MWCs, that fact
alone is not sufficient to conclude that
PADEP’s presumptive limits are not
acceptable or reasonable as RACT as
previously discussed. States have the
discretion to adopt more stringent limits
as RACT for similar sources considering
the level of emissions reductions of NOX
and VOC necessary to timely attain the
ozone NAAQS (i.e., beyond RACT
reductions). Requiring Pennsylvania to
adopt the same level of control as the
most stringent state is not always
necessary to satisfy the statutory
mandate for RACT. EPA continues to
find that Pennsylvania’s presumptive
NOX limit for MWCs is reasonable and
represents RACT.
Comment 3: Several commenters state
that coal-fired boilers with SCR in
Pennsylvania are capable of achieving
lower rates than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU. One
commenter recommends that EPA
disapprove the presumptive limit for
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coal-fired boilers with SCR and impose
a limit of 0.09 lbs/MMBTU, while
another commenter proposes a limit of
0.07 lbs/MMBTU. Both commenters
reference NOX actual emissions data
included as part of the comments and
assert that NOX emission rates lower
than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU have been
historically achieved by units in
Pennsylvania. One commenter included
NOX emissions data that represents the
‘‘best performing ozone season
emissions rate’’ (in lbs/MMBTU) for 13
coal-fired boilers in Pennsylvania
equipped with SCR during 2005 to
2017. The second commenter provided
NOX emissions data for monthly average
NOX rates lower than 0.017 lbs/MMBTU
during 2005 to 2017 for 10 coal-fired
boilers in Pennsylvania equipped with
SCR.
Response 3: EPA disagrees that a more
stringent NOX RACT limit than 0.12 lbs/
MMBTU is needed for Pennsylvania to
meet RACT for coal-fired boilers with
SCR, based on the data provided and
absent any other technical justification
to support a more stringent limit. The
NOX emissions data sets provided by
the commenter are not sufficient to
conclude that a lower NOX emissions
rate, such as 0.07 or 0.09 lbs/MMBTU,
is consistently achievable or sustainable
to make Pennsylvania’s conclusions
unreasonable. RACT involves an
evaluation of what is technically and
economically feasible for sources; thus,
consideration of whether emission
limits are consistently achievable with
controls that are cost effective and
under consideration is a reasonable
consideration for Pennsylvania. EPA
acknowledges that historically, some
individual coal-fired electric generating
units (EGUs) with SCR in Pennsylvania
have been able to achieve lower rates
than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU as indicated in
the commenters’ data. However, in
evaluating fleet-wide NOX emissions
and determining an adequate achievable
NOX RACT emissions limit for all units
in Pennsylvania, the lowest historical
rate at any particular unit at a specific
point in time may not be a rate that can
be consistently achieved by other units.
EPA does not require RACT limits to be
the lowest achievable emissions rate,
but the lowest achievable emission rates
considering technical and economical
limitations.
In previous RACT guidance to states,
EPA estimated that coal-fired boilers
with SCR are expected to generate NOX
emissions rates ranging from 0.10 to
0.25 lbs/MMBTU, depending on the
type of boiler and whether the boiler is
equipped or not with additional
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combustion controls.8 Also, as part of
the 2016 Cross-State Air Pollution Rule
(CSAPR) Update, EPA determined that
0.10 lbs/MMBTU is an achievable NOX
emissions rate during ozone season for
coal-fired electric generating units
(EGUs) with SCR.9 As part of the CSAPR
Update, EPA analyzed NOX reduction
potential and corresponding NOX ozone
season emissions budgets at utility
boilers (i.e., EGUs) based on NOX
emissions rates that can be consistently
achieved for the units with SCRs that
were not currently being optimized or
which were currently idled at the time
of EPA’s analysis (i.e., 2016). To
determine the NOX emissions rate that
could be consistently achieved, EPA
evaluated coal-fired NOX ozone season
emission data for EGUs from 2009
through 2015 and calculated an average
NOX ozone season emissions rate across
the fleet of coal-fired EGUs with SCR for
each of these seven years. The 0.1 rate
represents the third lowest fleet-wide
average coal-fired EGU NOX ozone
season emissions rate for coal-fired
EGUs with SCR. It is worth noting that
EPA considered and rejected the lowest
or second lowest ozone season NOX
rates, because it determined that these
rates may reflect new SCR systems and/
or existing SCR systems with all new
components (e.g., due to simultaneous
replacement of multiple layers of
catalyst rather than routine replacement
of a single layer).10 Therefore, reliance
alone on the lowest historical emissions
rate to evaluate the feasibility and cost
effectiveness of controls would likely
overestimate the emissions reductions
and, consequently, underestimate the
costs to restart idled or unoptimized
controls because some EGUs have
significantly curtailed their hours of
operation, for various reasons, since the
time when the low levels of NOX
emissions were achieved. Furthermore,
SCR controls can become less effective
at NOX removal as they age and may not
be as efficient as when first installed, so
the lowest historically achieved rate is
not always technically feasible. It is not
unreasonable for Pennsylvania to have
considered a slightly different NOX
8 EPA’s ACT Document ‘‘NO Emissions
X
Document ‘‘NOX Emissions from Utility Boilers’’
(EPA–453/R–94–023; March 1994). It is possible
that further technological advancements may have
been proven to result in lower NOX emissions levels
than those reported in EPA’s ACT.
9 See 81 FR 74504, 74543 (October 26, 2016)
(addressing interstate transport of ozone for 2008
ozone NAAQS).
10 Data from these new systems are not
representative of ongoing achievable NOX rates
considering that some SCR systems may have some
broken-in components and routine maintenance
schedules entailing replacement of individual
components.
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emission rate for RACT considering
such technological and economic
feasibility issues than what EPA has
deemed achievable as an ozone seasononly NOX rate (0.10 lbs/MMBTU), when
averaging over a shorter time period
such as 30 days.
Even when considering lowest
achievable rates, the data sets provided
by the commenters are not sufficient to
support the assertion that a NOX rate of
0.07 or 0.09 lbs/MMBTU, respectively,
or in fact any other rate lower than 0.12
lbs/MMBTU, is consistently achievable
in Pennsylvania. The first commenter,
the Sierra Club, only considered data for
the limited instances where the lowest
NOX rates have been achieved and did
not consider any other periods during
the 2003 to 2012 timeframe.11 For
example, in Table 2 of Sierra Club’s
comments, the commenter presented the
data from multiple units at multiple
facilities on a monthly basis. The
commenter then appeared to sort the
data in terms of average NOX rate from
the lowest rate to the highest rate but
limited the data to those units and
months where the average NOX rate was
less than or equal to 0.07 lbs/MMBTU.
By doing this, the commenter does not
take into account the months where a
unit is operating at a rate above 0.07 lbs/
MMBTU skewing the data in a way that
tends to show these units are able to
comply with a lower emissions limit at
all times. Furthermore, by sorting the
data in this way, the commenter
obscures important information such as
which facilities and units were
evaluated, and the range of years or
months evaluated; thus, the incomplete
data set submitted by the commenter
was not sufficient for EPA to determine
that Pennsylvania’s RACT is not
permissibly or reasonably set at 0.12 lb/
MMBtu.
The second commenter, the MDE,
provided the best performing ozone
season NOX emissions rates during 2005
to 2017, but only considered emissions
rates of certain facilities and certain
units that were specifically lower than
0.09 lbs/MMBTU. The NOX rates
provided by the commenter were ozone
season averages, not 30-day rolling
averages. PADEP’s coal-fired emission
limit of 0.12 lbs/MMBTU is required on
a 30-day rolling basis and is applicable
on a continuous basis throughout the
year (not just during ozone season).
Therefore, the data provided by MDE is
not comparable to the form of
Pennsylvania’s RACT emission
limitation.
11 See
Tables 2 and 3 of Sierra Club’s comments,
dated April 13, 2018.
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Finally, states must establish
presumptive NOX emission limits for
RACT that are reasonably achievable for
the entire fleet of units within any
source category. Both commenters only
included data below certain thresholds,
so only some of the data from these
units was shown, making it hard to
judge the overall representativeness of
the data. In its SIP revision, PADEP
confirmed that the presumptive RACT
NOX limits for coal-fired boilers ‘‘are
achievable and sustainable during the
expected life of the affected unit using
technologies that are both technically
and economically feasible.’’ 12 Absent
any conflicting technical information,
EPA continues to believe that a NOX
emissions rate of 0.12 lbs/MMBTU on a
30-day rolling average, year-round, is
reasonable and consistently achievable
by Pennsylvania’s coal-fired boilers
with SCR, representative of SCR
operation, and adequate for representing
RACT for these units based on
Pennsylvania’s analysis.
Comment 4: One commenter contends
that EPA cannot approve the provision
in 25 Pa Code section 129.97(g)(1)(viii)
applicable to coal-fired boilers with
SCR, because there is no adequate basis
for the minimum SCR operating
temperature and the minimum
operating temperature of 600 °F is
contradicted by facts concerning SCR
operation and inlet temperature. The
commenter argues that neither EPA nor
Pennsylvania have justified that a
temperature-based exemption is
necessary or that 600 °F is the correct
threshold for such exception. The
commenter states that EPA did not
mention this ‘‘loophole’’ in its proposal.
The commenter also argues that EPA’s
allowance of a temperature exemption is
in direct contrast to prior actions by
EPA, in which EPA recognized that a
minimum SCR operating temperature
varies significantly between EGUs and
required utilities to supply more
technical data to support any
accommodation of this parameter. See
81 FR 21735 (April 13, 2016).
Response 4: EPA recognizes that
neither Pennsylvania nor EPA explained
in detail why the minimum SCR
temperature exemption in
127.97(g)(1)(viii) for coal-fired boilers is
adequate for RACT. However, EPA
disagrees that our determination to
accept this exemption as part of
Pennsylvania’s presumptive limits for
coal-fired combustion units is arbitrary
or capricious. As proposed in the
NPRM, EPA finds that Pennsylvania’s
determination to limit the application of
the SCR limit when inlet temperature is
less than 600 °F is consistent with the
optimum operating temperature of SCRs
used generally by coal-fired boilers and
reasonable as part of the presumptive
RACT limitation. The temperature at the
inlet to the SCR provides a good
indication of catalytic reduction
performance, because it indicates that
the gas stream is at sufficient
temperature to initiate reduction of NOX
on the catalyst. EPA finds that the NOX
reduction reaction of an SCR is effective
only within a given temperature range.
If the inlet temperature (i.e., of the
process gas stream) is too high, it may
cause NOX generation in the SCR rather
than NOX reductions. (Reference:
https://www3.epa.gov/ttnchie1/mkb/
documents/B_15a.pdf). The use of a
catalyst in the SCR process lowers the
temperature range required to maximize
the NOX reduction reaction. At
temperatures below the specified range,
the reaction kinetics decrease, and
ammonia passes through the SCR
(ammonia slip), but there is little effect
on nitrous oxide (N2O) formation. At
temperatures above the specified range,
nitrous oxide (N2O) formation increases
and catalyst sintering and deactivation
occurs, but little ammonia slip occurs.
It has been proven that for the majority
of commercial catalysts (metal oxides),
the typical operating temperatures for
the SCR process range from 480 °F to
800 °F (250–430 °C). The rate of NOX
removal increases with temperature up
to a maximum between 700 °F and
750 °F (370–400 °C). (Reference: https://
www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/
2017-12/documents/scrcostmanual
chapter7thedition_
2016revisions2017.pdf; see Reference
[46].)
In addition, EPA noted in its response
to comments on the May 2016 updates
to the Cost Control Manual for the SCR
chapter that, while the temperature of
480 ° to 800 °F is a fairly wide range and
is dependent on catalyst type, this range
is not reflective of general optimum
range. EPA concluded that 480 ° to 800
°F is an ‘‘operating’’ range and that 700 °
to 750 °F was an optimum temperature
range.13 It has been proven that the NOX
removal efficiency decreases more
drastically when temperatures are lower
than the optimal operating range; at 600
°F, the expected NOX removal efficiency
of an SCR has already decreased to 77%
and at 550 °F the removal efficiency
drops to 63%. Therefore, even if
Pennsylvania were to lower the
12 See PADEP’s Response to Comments
Document, Docket item #0004, Comment #10, Page
23.
13 See EPA, Air Pollution Cost Control Manual,
Section 4—NOX Controls, Chapter 2 at section 2.2.2.
May 2016, updated November 2017.
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temperature at which a SCR was to
begin operating by 50 °F, the reductions
achieved would be only slightly better
than those achieved with Low NOX
burners with Overfired Air (40–60%
reduction) which is already required to
be installed by the existing
Pennsylvania SIP. Thus, EPA finds
Pennsylvania’s selection of 600 °F
requirement for coal-fired boiler RACT
reasonable based on noted efficiencies
with SCRs at such temperatures and
based on technical and economic
considerations from use of additional
catalyst to achieve diminishing NOX
removal.
In the NPRM, EPA recognized that the
SCR limit is not applicable at all times,
given the temperature condition
provided. Nevertheless, EPA disagrees
that this qualifies as a ‘‘loophole’’ of the
regulation. As discussed in the TSD in
support of our proposed action, any
affected boiler with SCR or SNCR is also
required to comply at all times with the
boiler type limits in section
129.97(g)(1)(vi), which in practice
would be applicable in any instances
where the SCR or SNCR is not in
operation. For instance, a coal-fired
boiler that has an SCR in place would
be subject in practice to two sets of
RACT NOX limits: (1) The SCR limit of
0.12 lbs/MMBTU when the inlet
temperature to the control is equal to or
greater than 600 °F; and (2) the boiler
type limit (0.16, 0.35, or 0.40 lbs/
MMBTU depending on type of boiler) at
any other times when the inlet
temperature to the control is less than
600 °F. EPA finds that this control
approach is practical and acceptable to
satisfy RACT for boilers with SCR and
SNCR, as it ensures applicability of
RACT year-round, while requiring the
lowest NOX emissions limit considering
the technical feasibility of existing NOX
controls. As stated in our TSD for the
NPRM, in our engineering judgment and
based upon acknowledged technical
limitations of SCR and SNCR, EPA
agrees with PADEP’s determination that
SCR or SNCR cannot result in lower
NOX emission rates at those lower
operating temperatures. See page 21 of
the TSD.
Comment 5: The commenter claims
that section 129.97(g)(1)(viii) of the
RACT II Rule has allowed Pennsylvania
utilities since 2017 to use the minimum
temperature-exemption for coal-fired
boilers with SCR to intentionally avoid
operating controls at night. The
commenter provides NOX emissions and
heat input rating from one particular
EGU coal-fired boiler, Cheswick, and
alleges that it depicts a typical practice
and typical emission rate from the coalfired EGU boilers with SCR in
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Pennsylvania subject to the RACT II
Rule.
Response 5: As discussed in the prior
response, the RACT II Rule’s
temperature exception in section
129.97(g)(1)(viii) does not allow coalfired boilers equipped with SCR to
avoid all NOX controls. Although any
coal-fired boiler with SCR is not subject
to the 0.12 lbs/MMBTU RACT emission
limitation when inlet temperature is
below 600 °F, these boilers must still
comply at all times with the
presumptive limits in section
129.97(g)(1)(vi), which vary based upon
the furnace configuration or boiler type.
The Cheswick unit is a tangentially
coal-fired boiler equipped with low
NOX burners (LNB) with separated
overfire air (SOFA) and SCR. As such,
the unit is required to comply with two
presumptive NOX limits under the
RACT II Rule: 0.12 lbs/MMBTU when
inlet temperature to the SCR is above
600 °F, and 0.35 lbs/MMBTU at all other
times. See section 129.97(g)(1)(vii) and
(vi)(B). EPA notes that a reduction of
heat input at night for Cheswick is not
unusual for a coal-fired EGU boiler as
the reduction in heat input can be
driven by lower demand for electricity;
thus reduced heat input could lead to
temperatures below 600 °F and below
what is optimal for SCR operation.
Comment 6: One commenter claims
Pennsylvania’s rule does not require a
reporting requirement for the exhaust
temperature of units equipped with
SCR, and that without this information
the public will not be able to know
whether or not such units are complying
with the applicable emission limits. The
commenter claims the lack of this
reporting requirement renders
calculating compliance with the 30-day
average difficult and, overall, violates
the CAA’s requirement that RACT be
enforceable.
Response 6: EPA disagrees with the
commenter. Although PADEP’s RACT II
Rule does not establish RACT-specific
reporting requirements for each source
category, Pennsylvania has the generic
recordkeeping requirements at section
129.100(d) requiring that a source
subject to sections 129.96–129.99 ‘‘keep
records to demonstrate compliance with
§ § 129.96–129.99 that include sufficient
data and calculations to demonstrate
that the requirements of §§ 129.96–
129.99 are met.’’ See 25 Pa Code
129.100(d). EPA finds that the
compliance demonstration requirements
of 129.100(d) require sources to keep
sufficient records to demonstrate
meeting RACT limits. PADEP may
establish more specific requirements for
individual sources, as needed, through
the operating permit process.
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Comment 7: One commenter argues
that EPA should disapprove the PA
RACT II Rule’s provision in section
129.97(g)(1)(ix) concerning coal-fired
boilers with SNCR, based on the
inadequate information provided as part
of the ‘‘illegal and improperly
submitted’’ supplemental
documentation. The commenter asserts
that PADEP’s supplemental
documentation does not justify why
PADEP did not impose an emission
limitation for coal-fired boilers in
Pennsylvania, but simply identifies the
six Circulating Fluidized Bed (CFB)
boilers with SNCR in Pennsylvania
subject to this requirement. Commenter
asserts that in an attempt to support that
the 0.16 lbs/MMBTU presumptive limit
for any coal-fired CFB boiler is also
adequate for coal-fired boilers with
SNCR, PADEP argues that CFB boilers
without SCR have been able to achieve
lower NOX emission reductions than
CFBs with SNCR. Commenter also
points to several EPA guidance
documents supporting that additional
reductions can be achieved at EGU
boilers through operation of SNCR.
Response 7: EPA disagrees with the
commenter regarding the RACT
emission limitation for coal-fired boilers
with SNCR. As explained in the NPRM
and TSD, such boilers are subject to
emission limitations (including a
numeric limitation and a requirement to
operate SNCR) that Pennsylvania set
considering technical and economic
feasibility. Thus, EPA finds these
emission limitations reasonable as
explained in more detail in the NPRM
and TSD. Sufficient information is
available to support this conclusion—all
coal-fired boilers with SNCR are
required to comply with both the
numeric emission limitations of section
129.97(g)(1)(vi) and the work practice
standard under 129.97(g)(1)(ix). In
addition, Pennsylvania considered
limits from other states and the current
limits in place at these sources.
Furthermore, EPA does not agree that
the supplemental September 2017
submittal from PADEP is illegal or was
improperly submitted. PADEP’s
September 26, 2017 submittal included
Pennsylvania’s commitment to submit
any facility-wide or system-wide NOX
averaging plans to EPA for SIP approval
and to submit to EPA for SIP approval
any permits issued under section 129.99
to support the conditional approval of
129.98 and 129.99 for the SIP. This
commitment in Pennsylvania’s
supplement meets requirements for a
commitment under CAA section
110(k)(4). The commenter has not
provided sufficient information as to
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why Pennsylvania’s supplemental
information is ‘‘illegal.’’ See Response to
Comment #34. Nevertheless, EPA has
sufficient information in the TSD and in
the docket generally to support our
conclusion that Pennsylvania’s RACT II
Rule is reasonable including the RACT
limitation for coal-fired boilers with
SNCR as the Rule includes a work
practice requirement as an emission
limitation (as the Rule requires
operation of the SNCR) as well as a
numeric restriction on emissions as an
emission limitation in section
129.97(g)(1)(vi). See also Response to
Comment #8.
Comment 8: Commenters allege that
EPA cannot approve the presumptive
provision contained in 129.97(g)(1)(ix)
for coal-fired boilers with SNCR because
the provision lacks a numeric emission
limit. One commenter added the rule
also failed to have a requirement to
optimize the existing SNCR control.
Another commenter argued that
Pennsylvania should have been able to
set a numeric emission limit because
such limits exist for other similar units
with SNCR in place and a numeric
emission limit is required to meet EPA’s
definition of ‘‘RACT.’’
Response 8: RACT generally requires
the establishment of ‘‘emission
limitations.’’ Since the 1970’s, EPA has
consistently defined ‘‘RACT’’ as the
lowest emission limit that a particular
source is capable of meeting by the
application of the control technology
that is reasonably available considering
technological and economic
feasibility.14 However, EPA disagrees
that an emission limitation is required
to be numeric to meet RACT for all
source categories. CAA section 302(k)
defines an emissions limitation as ‘‘a
requirement established by the State or
the Administrator which limits the
quantity, rate, or concentration of
emissions of air pollutants on a
continuous basis including any
requirement relating to the operation or
maintenance of a source to assure
continuous emission reduction, and any
design, equipment, work practice or
operational standard promulgated under
this chapter.’’ The requirement of 25 Pa.
Code 129.97(g)(1)(ix), to operate the
system (i.e., coal-fired boilers with
SNCR) with the injection of reagents,
qualifies as a work practice standard or
an operational requirement; thus, the
provision meets the definition of
‘‘emission limitation’’ under CAA
14 See December 9, 1976 memorandum from
Roger Strelow, Assistant Administrator for Air and
Waste Management, to Regional Administrators,
‘‘Guidance for Determining Acceptability of SIP
Regulations in Non-Attainment Areas,’’ and also 44
FR 53762; September 17, 1979.
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section 307. Thus, Pennsylvania has
established a RACT emission limitation
for coal-fired boilers with SNCR. In
addition, these boilers are also subject to
boiler type presumptive RACT limits
(0.16, 0.35, 0.40, or 0.45 lbs/MMBTU) in
129.97(g)(v) and (vi). Thus, coal-fired
units are subject to both numerical
limits and work practice standards
which reasonably establish RACT as an
‘‘emission limitation’’ considering
technical and economic feasibility. EPA
also disagrees with the commenter’s
assertion that EPA should require
language to ensure optimum operation
of SNCR controls because this is not
required for RACT-level control. EGUs
are required to optimize emission
control for NOx (including SCR and
SNCR) for interstate ozone transport
requirements for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. See 83 FR 50444 (October 5,
2018) (Response to Clean Air Act
Section 126(b) Petitions from Delaware
and Maryland) (stating EGU sources
would have already optimized emission
controls like SCR and SNCR when EPA
finalized the CSAPR Update in 2016 to
address interstate transport of ozone (81
FR 745504 (October 26, 2016)).
B. NOX Averaging
Comment 9: The commenter asserts
that Pennsylvania’s NOX averaging
formula in section 129.98(e) does not
adequately set an alternative emissions
limit, as required by this provision in
129.98. The commenter argues that the
allowable NOX mass emissions defined
by the formula (Eiallowable) in 129.98
should be ‘‘fixed,’’ rather than changing
with operating scenarios. The
commenter further requests that EPA
disapprove section 129.98 because this
formula is unenforceable due to the
unspecified method of calculation, and
because PADEP’s interpretation of these
provisions provided as part of the
supplemental document is clearly
different from the plain language of the
rule.
Response 9: As discussed in the
NPRM and TSD, EPA identified
deficiencies in the NOX averaging
provisions of the RACT II Rule
including the need for enforceable
conditions. As previously discussed,
Pennsylvania committed in the
September 26, 2017 letter ‘‘. . . to
submit the terms and conditions dealing
with emission averaging to EPA as
facility specific SIP revisions to address
EPA’s concerns.’’ September 26, 2017
submittal, p. 2. EPA is conditionally
approving 129.98 under CAA 110(k)
based on this commitment. Thus, EPA
agrees to a limited extent with the
comment regarding whether 129.98
adequately established how to compute
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the alternative NOX limit. The
submission of alternative NOX limits
and relevant compliance demonstration
requirements for approval into the SIP
would allow EPA to determine if each
NOX averaging plan and underlying
alternative NOX limit is adequate for
RACT. In addition, any alternative
limits provided by PADEP would need
to be enforceable to obtain EPA
approval into the SIP.
EPA does not agree with commenter
that for the alternative NOX emissions
limit to be adequate and/or enforceable,
it must necessarily be a ‘‘fixed’’ limit.
EPA has, in the past, approved emission
limitations based on equations where
certain variables within the equation
change based on various aspects, such
as type of fuel being used, operating
modes, or other specific conditions.15 16
EPA believes that, as long as all possible
variables to be used are properly
identified and the equation is
sufficiently constrained, the equation
can be used to establish an alternative
emission limit and that limit can be
enforceable.
Regarding the comment that
Pennsylvania’s interpretation of the
enforceability of averaging provisions in
129.98 is somehow different in the
September 2017 letter to EPA than what
is in the terms of 25 Pa. Code 129.98,
EPA has addressed the enforceability
issues relating to averaging in 129.98
through the conditional approval and
through Pennsylvania’s commitment to
submit all such plans to EPA for SIP
approval. Pennsylvania’s interpretation
in the September 2017 letter regarding
terms in 129.98 is not germane as EPA
is conditionally approving 129.98 based
on Pennsylvania’s commitment to
submit averaging plans to EPA for SIP
approval in response to EPA’s identified
deficiencies in the NPRM regarding
averaging.
Comment 10: The commenter
identified various concerns with the
equation provided in section 129.98(e)
to estimate an alternative limit for NOX
emissions averaging. First, the
commenter argues that the equation is
unenforceable because it does not
properly explain how to calculate
15 See Air Plan Approval; Georgia; Miscellaneous
Revisions, July 28, 2017 (82 FR 35106); specifically,
Rule 391–3–1–.02(2)(e) which establishes allowable
particulate matter emission limits for sources based
on process input weight.
16 See Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality
Implementation Plans; Montana; Regional Haze
Federal Implementation Plan, September 12, 2017
(82 FR 42738); specifically, the best available
retrofit technology (BART) particulate matter
emission rate for the Trident cement kiln which is
based on the concentration of particulate matter,
volumetric flow rate of the effluent gas, and total
kiln clinker production.
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allowable NOX mass emissions for each
affected emission unit. The commenter
also indicates that if PADEP allows the
use of actual heat input to calculate both
actual NOX emissions (Eiactual) and
allowable NOX emissions (Eiallowable), the
source will never be found in violation
of the NOX averaging plan, as
mathematically both sides of the
equation would increase proportionally.
Response 10: EPA agrees with the
commenter to the extent that EPA
already identified concerns with the
equation provided in 129.98(e) given its
lack of specificity. These concerns led to
our conditionally approving 129.98
based upon Pennsylvania’s commitment
to submit to EPA for inclusion in the
SIP permits which will employ these
NOX averaging provisions. In order for
section 129.98 to become fully
approved, PADEP must provide to EPA
for approval into the SIP the alternative
emission limits adopted under section
129.98 and related compliance
demonstration requirements.
EPA does not have sufficient
information to assess if actual heat input
will in fact be used in calculating both
actual and allowable NOX emissions.
Eiactual is defined in section 129.98(e) as
‘‘the actual NOx mass emissions,
including emissions during start-ups,
shutdowns and malfunctions, for air
contamination source i on a 30-day
rolling basis.’’ (italics added). Eiactual
cannot represent the ‘‘actual NOx mass
emissions’’ if the actual heat input is not
used in the calculation, so using
allowable heat input in calculating
actual emissions would be illogical.
EPA also believes that PADEP intends to
use actual heat inputs when calculating
Eiallowable, along with the presumptive
RACT emission rate (or more stringent
emission rate applicable to the source).
PADEP’s September 26, 2017
commitment submittal states that ‘‘[t]he
allowable mass emissions are calculated
each hour using the presumptive NOx
RACT emission limit (or more-stringent
limit, if applicable) and the actual heat
input from the Department certified
CEMS.’’ P. 1 (italics added). However,
the RACT regulations do not expressly
specify whether actual heat input or
allowable heat input will be used in
calculating Eiallowable. This is one of
several identified concerns which led to
EPA’s conditional approval of section
129.98, and Pennsylvania’s commitment
to submit NOX averaging plans for
approval into the SIP, with each plan
including an enforceable alternative
emissions limit and compliance
demonstration requirements.
Comment 11: One commenter
requests EPA require that NOX
averaging emissions limitations
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established under 25 Pa. Code section
129.98(e) be based on emissions rates
(lbs/MMBTU), instead of mass
emissions (lbs).
Response 11: EPA disagrees with
commenter’s request because there is no
requirement in the CAA that RACT
emission limitations for NOX averaging
be based on emissions rates, as opposed
to NOX mass emissions. Although EPA
allows the use of NOX averaging to meet
RACT for NOX sources, no specific
additional regulatory requirements
concerning how to implement a NOX
averaging scheme were adopted by EPA.
Therefore, EPA believes that PADEP
should have flexibility in choosing how
to express the NOX averaging limits, as
long as PADEP can demonstrate that the
same level of RACT emission reductions
will be achieved.17
Comment 12: The commenter asserts
that the system-wide and facility-wide
averaging equations do not set an
‘‘alternative limitation,’’ which
commenter claims is required by the
plain language of the RACT II Rule.
Commenter asserts that the Rule
requires facilities to ‘‘calculate the
alternative facility-wide or system-wide
NOX RACT emission limit . . . .’’
Commenter further states that only the
equation in 129.98(e) characterizes
averaging as a method for demonstrating
compliance, while this is not the plain
reading of the remainder of section
129.98.
Response 12: Because the Commenter
did not cite to the particular section or
sentence of the RACT II Rule which is
being interpreted or quoted, EPA can
only use its best judgment to surmise
that the language in section 129.98(e) is
the source of the quoted language.
Section 129.98(e) states ‘‘[t]he owner or
operator shall calculate the alternative
facility-wide or system-wide NOX RACT
emissions limitation using a 30-day
rolling average for the air contamination
sources included in the application for
the operating permit or plan approval,
. . . .’’ There is no other language in
section 129.98 which is similar to the
Commenter’s quote. EPA believes that
the term ‘‘emission limitation’’ in
section 129.98(e) should be interpreted
as ‘‘Eiallowable,’’ and that the calculation
of Eiallowable results in a total NOX mass
emission limitation for all of the sources
included in the averaging plan, while
commenter is expecting the averaging
plan to have an overall emission rate
limit, expressed as lbs NOX/million Btu
heat input, for the sources. When
section 128.98(e) is considered in its
entirety, rather than considering just a
portion of one sentence, there is no
17 See
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conflict between the equations in
129.98(e) and the language of Section
129.98 overall. As discussed in the
March 14, 2018 NPRM, EPA proposed to
conditionally approve the NOX
averaging provisions in section 129.98
given concerns about the specificity of
the equation in 129.98(e) and the
compliance demonstration requirements
within the rule. In this action, EPA is
finalizing that conditional approval
based on Pennsylvania’s commitment to
submit permits with NOX averaging to
EPA for SIP approval. Section 129.98(e)
states that an alternative limit calculated
by the owner or operator must be in the
operating permit modification or plan
approval, and section 129.98(g) requires
that the application for such an
averaging plan should contain, ‘‘. . .
methods for demonstrating
compliance. . . .’’ The SIP submittal
should therefore address the emission
limitation and the compliance
demonstration issues.
Comment 13: One commenter states
that an averaging plan is a method of
demonstrating compliance with
presumptive NOX limits in section
129.97, allowing sources to demonstrate
compliance as a group of emissions
sources rather than as individual
emissions sources.
Response 13: EPA agrees that sources
can use section 129.98 to apply for an
averaging plan covering multiple units
or sources. However, EPA does not
agree that the averaging plan or equation
in section 129.98 will directly show
compliance with the presumptive RACT
limits applicable to each source in the
plan. The averaging plan or equation in
section 129.98 is instead intended to
demonstrate that the resulting NOX
emissions using a 30-day rolling average
would not be greater than NOX
emissions from the group of included
sources if they each complied with the
applicable presumptive NOX RACT
emissions limit in section 129.97.
Section 129.98(g) requires that the
application for such an averaging plan
should contain, ‘‘methods for
demonstrating compliance. . . .’’ The
fact that the application must have a
method for determining compliance
shows that section 129.98 does not, in
its text, have a method for determining
compliance with section 129.97. The
presumptive limits in section 129.97
otherwise applicable to each source
must be used as a factor in the Eiallowable
equation (unless a lower emission limit
applies to a source) in 129.98 but will
not be used on the Eiactual side of the
equation. Instead, actual mass emissions
from each source in the plan, as
determined by CEMS or other means, on
any given day will be added together on
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the Eiactual side of the equation. Thirty
days of Eiactual daily mass emissions will
be added together and divided by 30,
and 30 days of daily Eiallowable mass
emissions will be added together and
divided by 30. The resultant 30-day
average of Eiactual emissions on any given
day must be less than or equal to the 30day average of Eiallowable emissions on the
same day. It will not be possible under
this averaging scheme to determine
whether the individual hourly emission
rate of each source/unit met the
presumptive RACT limit in section
129.97 for that source. Thus, the
provisions of 129.98 provide the
formula to set the alternative NOX
emission limitation for sources who will
comply with the alternative NOX
emission limitation in lieu of the
presumptive rates in 129.97.
As previously discussed, EPA is
concerned that section 129.98 lacks a
definitive method for demonstrating
how the 30-day rolling average mass
NOX emission limitation allowed by
129.98 will be less than or equal to the
NOX emissions that would have been
emitted if all the sources complied with
the source specific RACT limits of
129.97, so PADEP has committed to
submit these averaging plans to EPA for
approval into the SIP. The adequacy of
the compliance demonstration
provisions will be assessed through both
the state public notice process and
EPA’s review of such SIP revisions.
Thus, EPA disagrees with the
commenter that any of the assertions
prevent EPA from conditionally
approving 129.98 as part of
Pennsylvania’s RACT.
Comment 14: One commenter asserts
that PADEP’s NOX averaging provisions
in section 129.98 do not require the
establishment of an alternative NOX
emissions limit; and therefore, there is
no need to submit averaging plans as
separate SIP revisions to EPA.
Response 14: EPA disagrees that
Pennsylvania’s NOX averaging
provisions do not require establishment
of an alternative NOX emission limit. As
discussed in the March 14, 2018 NPRM,
EPA proposed to determine that the
NOX averaging equation in section
129.98(e) does ’’ . . . not clearly specify
how to properly establish an alternative
RACT limit.’’ 83 FR 11160. To do so,
EPA would need to know, at the least,
what facilities and units are involved in
each plan, the applicable limits in each
plan, if multiple fuels are used, or any
other information necessary to calculate
‘‘Eiallowable.’’ EPA also expressed
concerns about the lack of compliance
demonstration requirements in the rule.
In addressing these deficiencies, PADEP
committed to submit as SIP revisions
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any alternative emissions limits and
compliance demonstration requirements
approved under section 129.98. EPA has
proposed approval of section 129.98
with the condition that PADEP meets
this commitment to submit additional
enforceable provisions for approval into
the SIP during which time the
alternative NOX emissions limit will be
clearly established.
Comment 15: Two commenters allege
that Pennsylvania’s rule provides
system-wide or facility-wide NOX
averaging as a means of demonstrating
compliance with the applicable
emission limits included in the rule;
and requests EPA to review the
averaging provisions contained in EPA’s
Acid Rain Program (at 40 CFR 76.11)
and the Mercury and Air Toxics Rule
(MATS rule) (at 40 CFR 63.10009) that
allow averaging as a means of
demonstrating compliance.
Response 15: EPA disagrees with the
commenters that Pennsylvania’s rule
provides averaging as a means of
determining compliance. As previously
stated, Pennsylvania’s rule specifically
directs the owner or operator to
determine the ‘‘alternative facility-wide
or system-wide NOX RACT emission
limitation.’’ This language requiring the
owner/operator to determine an
alternative emission limitation shows
that the provisions of 25 Pa. Code
129.98 are not a means of demonstrating
compliance but rather a means to
determine an alternative emission
limitation applicable to the
corresponding facility or system.
Furthermore, section 76.11(a)(3) of the
Acid Rain Program regulations require
that each unit in an averaging plan must
have a contemporaneous annual
emission limitation, and, also requires
that specific information be submitted
that is not specified in section 129.98,
such as annual heat input limits and an
alternative annual emission limitation
for each unit. The equation is only one
part of the Acid Rain Program
provisions, and if PADEP’s section
129.98 regulation included the
additional information and other
requirements of the Acid Rain Program
regulations, the equation might present
an acceptable option.
Regarding the MATS rule equation at
40 CFR 63.10009, EPA notes there are
many additional limitations in that
section which are not present in section
129.98, such as groupings of similar
sources, as well as multiple equations
(6) specifically geared toward each
grouping. In the absence of further
explanation by the commenter as to how
these equations can be usefully applied
to the section 129.98 averaging program,
EPA does not see the MATS rule
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averaging scheme as useful to resolving
EPA’s concerns.
Comment 16: One commenter
disagrees with EPA’s interpretation that
section 129.98 requires the
establishment of alternative emissions
limitations for individual sources. The
commenter urges EPA to recognize that
the presumptive limits of section 129.97
are being used to establish RACT
compliance requirements, including the
averaging provisions, and that therefore
these requirements should meet RACT.
The commenter asserts that the NOX
averaging provisions in section 129.98
should be adequate for approval into the
SIP, because EPA has found that the
multiple fuel presumptive provision of
section 129.97(g)(4) is approvable. The
commenter contends that the multiple
fuel presumptive provision is similar to
the NOX averaging provisions, as they
both establish weighted averaged limits.
The commenter also claims that EPA’s
proposed rulemaking action makes the
RACT II Rule costlier to implement and
comply with and less flexible.
Response 16: The fact that EPA has
approved the source specific RACT
limits in section 129.97 does not mean
that an averaging plan which uses those
limits to calculate an alternative limit is
necessarily approvable. EPA must
clarify that, as proposed in our NPRM,
we do not expect new unit-specific
emission limits (other than the unitspecific limit required by presumptive
RACT) to be established for each unit
covered under a system-wide or facilitywide NOX averaging plan, but rather
that an alternative limit must be
determined for each plan, which would
cover the non-complying unit and any
other participating units. This is
required by PADEP under 25 Pa. Code
section 129.98(e): ‘‘The owner or
operator shall calculate the alternative
facility-wide or system-wide NOX RACT
emissions limitation using a 30-day
rolling average for the air contamination
sources included in the application
(. . .) by using the following equation to
sum the emissions for all of the sources
included in the NOX emissions
averaging plan.’’
EPA agrees with the commenter that
the presumptive emission limits in
section 129.97 are used in developing
the alternative NOX limit under an
averaging plan, as required by section
129.98(e); however, EPA disagrees that
they are used to establish RACT
compliance requirements. As plainly
stated in section 129.98(e), the owner or
operator shall calculate an alternative
facility-wide or system-wide NOX
emission limitation. Second, according
to section 129.98(a), the averaging
provisions of section 129.98 may only
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be utilized if one or more sources
covered under such a plan are unable to
meet the presumptive limits under
section 129.97, and this unit would be
in violation of the applicable NOX limit
in section 129.97.
EPA disagrees with the commenter’s
assertion that the averaging provisions
of section 129.98(e) are similar to those
under the multiple fuel firing provisions
in section 129.97(g)(4). The
mathematical formula in section
129.97(g)(4) is a weighted average
formula where a value is computed
resulting from the multiplication of each
component by a factor reflecting its
frequency of use. The formula in section
129.98 computes an alternative limit
that is not a weighted average or even
a mathematical average, as the section’s
title may imply, but a summation of all
NOX mass emissions from each unit
covered under the averaging plan. Thus,
the two formulae described by the
commenter are not similar in nature and
are not comparable. Also, the most
substantive difference between these
two requirements is that the NOX
averaging provisions of section 129.98
require an owner or operator to establish
an alternative limit covering multiple
units, including any NOX units unable
to meet presumptive RACT and any
other participating units under such
averaging plan; whereas section
129.97(g)(4) establishes a presumptive
RACT requirement for a single
emissions unit. This need to establish
an alternative limit under the variable
‘‘Eiallowable’’ in the equation of section
129.98(e) is one of the main differences
between the two provisions.
Furthermore, EPA identified several
deficiencies in the averaging provisions
of section 129.98 that prevent its full
approval, but those deficiencies were
not present in the multiple fuel
provisions of 129.97(g)(4). Namely, EPA
found that the averaging provisions of
section 129.98 do not clearly specify
how to properly establish an alternative
RACT limit (under the variable
‘‘Eiallowable’’) and do not specify sufficient
compliance demonstration requirements
for sources seeking to comply with these
provisions. Therefore, these provisions
were not found adequate to meet RACT.
EPA disagrees with the commenter’s
presumption that if section 129.97(g)(4)
meets RACT, so should section 129.98.
Finally, although the commenter
claims that EPA’s proposed action raises
the cost for affected sources with regard
to implementation and compliance of
the RACT II Rule, the commenter failed
to specify how EPA’s action would
increase costs on facilities choosing
system-wide or facility-wide averaging.
Given the lack of specificity and lack of
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analysis on how EPA’s action requiring
Pennsylvania to submit plans for SIP
approval raises costs on sources, EPA
provides no further answer.
Comment 17: The commenter argues
that NOX averaging plans under section
129.98 must provide explicit emissions
limits for individual emissions units
consistent with the reasonably
achievable controls, and further
recommends using historical achievable
NOX rates as the basis for establishing
these limits. Furthermore, the
commenter asserts that the averaging
plan must show that the resulting NOX
emission limits from the averaging plans
are more stringent than the presumptive
limits that would be in effect otherwise.
Response 17: EPA disagrees with the
commenter on each of its assertions.
First, EPA disagrees that averaging must
provide explicit emissions limitations
for individual sources. In fact, under its
longstanding RACT policy, EPA has
allowed NOX averaging, recognizing that
it would allow states the flexibility of
establishing RACT without requiring the
imposition of source-specific controls or
consequently source-specific emissions
limits. EPA has allowed averaging for
RACT purposes, as long as the state can
achieve NOX reductions less than or
equal to those that would be achieved
if individual RACT emission rates were
required for each individual source.
Limitations on individual sources
would restrict flexibility for meeting
RACT requirements.
EPA disagrees that averaging must
result in more stringent NOX limitations
than the presumptive limits, as this is
not required under the longstanding
EPA provisions permitting averaging.
See South Coast Air Quality Mgmt. Dist.
v. EPA, 882 F.3d 1138, 1154 (D.C. Cir.
2018) (addressing averaging within
EPA’s ozone implementation rule). EPA
finds that section 129.98 requires that
the overall level of NOX emissions from
units participating in an averaging plan
should be less than or equal to the total
NOX emissions which would have been
emitted if each source complied with its
applicable presumptive RACT limit. See
25 Pa. Code 129.98(e).
Comment 18: The commenter urges
EPA to deny the approval of any NOX
averaging plan as a revision to the SIP,
if the plan does not provide sufficient
justification for demonstrating that an
emissions unit cannot meet the
applicable presumptive RACT limit.
Response 18: EPA concurs with
commenter that section 129.98(a)
requires PADEP to determine that the
facility is not able to comply with
presumptive RACT in order to allow a
source to comply with the provisions in
129.98. Pennsylvania has committed to
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submitting permits with the NOX
averaging plans to EPA for SIP approval
and EPA will review whether sources
demonstrated compliance with
requirements in 129.98 when such plans
are before EPA for SIP approval.
Comment 19: One commenter asserts
that although NOX averaging applies to
NOX emitting units that cannot comply
with the presumptive limits, section
129.98 does not impose any detailed
requirements for showing that an
affected NOX emissions unit cannot
comply with the presumptive NOX
RACT limits. Commenter argues that
this lack of specific requirements allows
the owner or operator of the affected
emissions units to make this
determination without providing any
justification. Commenter further
suggests such demonstration should be
based on the evaluation of past
performance for the non-complying
unit.
Response 19: EPA agrees that section
129.98 does not specifically describe
how a source must demonstrate that it
is unable to meet the applicable
presumptive limit, in order to qualify
for averaging under section 129.98.
However, the inability to meet the limit
remains a requirement within 129.98 for
Pennsylvania to evaluate before granting
the alternative NOX plan. In addition,
based on Pennsylvania’s September
2017 commitment to ‘‘submit the terms
and conditions dealing with emissions
averaging to EPA as facility specific SIP
revisions,’’ EPA will review the terms of
each plan and whether the provisions in
129.98 were met. See Pennsylvania’s
September 26, 2017 submittal, p .2.
Comment 20: One commenter states
that PADEP’s averaging provisions
allow unbounded discretion to the
owner or operator in choosing which
units may be able to participate in an
averaging plan, which then allows
inappropriate averaging. The
commenter also contends that such
discretion would allow, for example,
that coal-fired boilers with existing
controls, such as SCR or SNCR, avoid
fully optimizing existing controls; or
that averaging occurs across different
fuel types.
Response 20: EPA agrees in part with
the commenter’s statement that section
129.98 grants the owner or operator the
ability to determine which units should
be averaged together; however, EPA
disagrees with commenter’s proposition
that such discretion should cause EPA
to disapprove this SIP revision. EPA
believes that such discretion is
consistent with EPA’s RACT policy,
which allows states to use averaging for
RACT purposes as long as the level of
NOX reductions due to averaging is
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equivalent to, or greater than, the level
of reductions otherwise achieved by
individual application of RACT. As
noted in EPA’s responses above, Section
129.98(a) requires that an owner or
operator seeking to use NOX averaging
must first show that one (or more) units
to be included in the averaging plan
cannot comply with the presumptive
RACT limits applicable to the unit
before an averaging plan can be
considered. In addition, system-wide
averaging is only allowed among
sources under common control of the
same owner or operator and located
within the same ozone nonattainment
area. Further, section 129.98(c) requires
that the other sources participating in a
NOX averaging plan are subject to a NOX
emissions limitation under section
129.97. Provided these conditions are
met, the owner or operator of an affected
source (i.e., the source with a noncompliant unit) may select which and
how many other emissions units would
be included in the averaging plan.
PADEP has also stated as part of the SIP
submittal that an owner or operator of
an affected source complying with a
NOX averaging plan must demonstrate
that the NOX emissions for other units
included in the averaging plan are
below the applicable limits in section
129.97 in order to provide the cushion
for averaging the excess emissions of the
noncomplying source.18 Thus, the
discretion provided under section
129.98 to choose which units participate
in a NOX averaging plan is not
unbounded and would not allow
‘‘inadequate averaging,’’ as the
commenter proposes.
EPA recognizes that PADEP’s NOX
averaging may allow units to avoid the
installation of additional controls or
optimization of existing controls.
However, nothing in the CAA, its
regulations or EPA guidance requires
installation of additional controls or
optimization of existing controls to meet
ozone RACT requirements. By allowing
states to use NOX averaging, EPA
intended to provide additional
flexibility in establishing RACT, as long
as RACT level reductions are achieved
for the nonattainment area. EPA does
not believe that averaging across
combustion units firing different fuels is
inappropriate, nor does the commenter
provide any analysis supporting this
statement.
Comment 21: One commenter asserts
that the RACT II Rule, as written, limits
system-wide averaging to areas
designated nonattainment under CAA
section 107, but that PADEP appears to
18 See PADEP’s Responses to Comments
Document, Comments #137, #138, #142, and #194.
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be considering the rest of the
Commonwealth as one giant
nonattainment area. The commenter
argues that because the RACT II Rule
does not have its own definition of
‘‘nonattainment area,’’ Pennsylvania’s
general definition in section 121.1
applies. Section 121.1 defines
‘‘nonattainment area’’ as those areas
designated by EPA under CAA section
107.
Response 21: Pennsylvania’s RACT II
Rule allows emissions averaging to take
place under two specific scenarios. In
response to comments submitted by
EPA during the state rulemaking
process, PADEP clarified its
interpretation of section 129.98 in the
preamble to the final regulations. See 46
PaB 2036. First, for areas formally
designated as nonattainment under CAA
section 107, PADEP intended to limit
emissions averaging to sources under
common control or ownership within
that formally designated nonattainment
area, as this comports with established
caselaw. See Nat. Res. Def. Council v.
EPA, 571 F.3d 1245 (D.C. Cir. 2009)
(holding that the NOX SIP call trading
plan cannot be used for RACT averaging
because emission reductions needed for
a nonattainment area must come from
same nonattainment area). Second, EPA
believes PADEP intended to allow
emissions averaging among sources
under common control/ownership that
were outside of those areas ‘‘formally
designated’’ nonattainment, but inside
the state boundaries (i.e., within the
OTR attainment areas and treated as
Moderate nonattainment for SIP
planning purposes in accordance with
CAA section 184). That is, sources
within an area formally designated as
nonattainment under CAA section 107
could use emissions averaging with
another source in the same area, and
sources outside those formally
designated nonattainment areas could
use emissions averaging with other
sources that are in similar attainment
areas (but within the OTR area), but no
emissions averaging is allowed between
sources in an area formally designated
as nonattainment under section 107 and
sources in areas designated
unclassifiable or attainment within the
Commonwealth, but within the OTR.
C. Compliance Demonstration
Requirements
Comment 22: The commenter notes
that the provisions in section
129.98(g)(3) and 129.98(j) refer to the
compliance demonstration requirements
in section 129.100; however, the
commenter states section 129.100 has
no specific requirements for sources in
an averaging plan.
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Response 22: As noted in the NPRM,
EPA identified its concerns regarding
the provisions establishing compliance
demonstration requirements for sources
seeking to comply with NOX averaging
in sections 129.98 and 129.100 of the
RACT II Rule. For this reason, EPA is
requiring PADEP as part of our
conditional approval to submit for
approval into the SIP any compliance
demonstration requirements for sources
subject to section 129.98. This will
ensure that the alternative NOX limits
under section 129.98 are practically and
Federally enforceable, pursuant to CAA
section 110(a)(2)(A).
Comment 23: The commenter
contends that section 129.99(d)(6) refers
to the compliance demonstration
requirements in section 129.100;
however, no specific requirements are
specified for these affected sources
under section 129.100. The commenter
also contends that without existing
compliance demonstration
requirements, it is unclear how PADEP
will be able to approve enforceable
alternative RACT proposal, and that
consequently EPA should disapprove
section 129.99 of the regulation.
Response 23: EPA notes that section
129.99(d)(6) requires a source seeking to
comply with source-specific RACT to
‘‘[i]nclude in the RACT proposal
methods for demonstrating compliance
and (emphasis added) recordkeeping
and reporting requirements in
accordance with § 129.100 (relating to
compliance demonstration and
recordkeeping requirements) for each air
contamination source included in the
RACT proposal.’’ Section 129.100(d)
and (i) establish recordkeeping and
reporting requirements for all sources
subject to the RACT II Rule. In addition,
section 129.99(d)(1) requires the written
RACT proposal to follow the procedures
in 129.92(a)(1)–(5) and (7)–(10). Section
129.92(a)(7) requires a RACT proposal
to include the ‘‘testing, monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting procedures
proposed to demonstrate compliance
with RACT.’’ See 129.92(a)(7). As
Pennsylvania has committed to
submitting all additional source-specific
RACT SIP provisions containing sourcespecific RACT limits approved by
PADEP under 129.99 to EPA for
approval into the Pennsylvania SIP,
EPA can further evaluate compliance
demonstration when such alternatives
are submitted for SIP approval.
Comment 24: One commenter
contends that section 129.100 does not
prescribe specific recordkeeping
requirements to determine compliance
with the applicable RACT requirements
in sections 129.96 to 129.99; and for that
reason, urges EPA to disapprove this
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section of the RACT II Rule. Commenter
argues that PADEP should have
identified specific requirements for
determining compliance with
presumptive RACT and NOX averaging,
such as fuel monitoring and hours of
operation, while for alternative sourcespecific limits, it should have specified
that compliance methods would be
determined on a case-by-case basis.
Response 24: Neither EPA’s
implementation rule for the 1997 ozone
standard nor the implementation rule
for the 2008 ozone standard specifically
identify those parameters, measures, or
data which a source must record in
order to demonstrate compliance with
RACT limits developed by the states.
See 40 CFR part 51, subparts X and AA.
EPA has issued general statements in
preambles for rulemakings other than
the ozone implementation rules
mentioned above discussing the
monitoring and recordkeeping
requirements generally necessary for
any SIP and for NOX RACT SIPs, but
these do not identify specific parameters
that must be monitored/recorded for
various types of sources in order to
prove compliance, and instead directs
the state to identify those parameters.
See 57 FR 13498, 13502 (April 16, 1992)
(General Preamble for the
Implementation of Title I of the [CAA]
Amendments of 1990); 57 FR 55620,
55624—55625 (Nov. 25, 1992) (Nitrogen
Oxides Supplement to the General
Preamble for the 1990 Amendments).
The commenter cites two such
parameters—fuel usage and/or hours of
operation—which could have been
specified in Pennsylvania’s RACT
regulations for NOX averaging and
presumptive RACT. While EPA agrees
that for many sources these two
parameters are useful to determine
compliance, EPA does not expect that a
state’s RACT SIP regulation identify, for
each type of source, each parameter
which must or might be monitored by
that source in order to show compliance
with the RACT limit. EPA believes that
the operating permits issued by the
Commonwealth will specify the
parameters that need to be monitored to
show RACT compliance. The
Pennsylvania SIP also has other
recordkeeping requirements besides the
RACT II Rule (25 Pa. Code sections
129.96–129.100) which require
recordkeeping useful for determining
compliance with the RACT limits. For
example, Pennsylvania has emission
reporting requirements, found at 25 Pa.
Code 135.1–135.5, which require almost
every stationary source of any size to
maintain and make available records
which ‘‘. . . may include records of
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production, fuel usage, maintenance of
production or pollution control
equipment or other information
determined by the Department to be
necessary for identification and
quantification of potential and actual air
contaminant emissions. If direct
recordkeeping is not possible or
practical, sufficient records shall be
kept, to provide the needed information
by indirect means.’’ 25 Pa. Code 135.5.
In addition, Pennsylvania has special
monitoring provisions for sources that
have or are likely to have ‘‘substantial
impacts’’ on the maintenance of ambient
air quality standards. 25 Pa. Code
139.51–139.53. These requirements
include regular testing for emissions or
the installation of continuous emission
monitoring systems (25 Pa. Code 139.52)
and reporting of such testing to PADEP,
including ‘‘. . . information regarding
test methods, test conditions, operating
conditions of the source or other
information which may be necessary to
properly evaluate the results of
emissions monitoring performed at a
source.’’ 25 Pa. Code 139.53(b).
Pennsylvania’s SIP also has
permitting requirements (called Plan
Applications and Plan Approvals)
which require any ‘‘air contamination
source’’ to obtain a plan approval from
PADEP prior to constructing, modifying,
reactivating, or installing an air
pollution control device on such source.
25 Pa. Code 127.11. A plan application
must, inter alia, ‘‘(3) Show that the
source will be equipped with reasonable
and adequate facilities to monitor and
record the emissions of air contaminants
and operating conditions which may
affect the emissions of air contaminants
and that the records are being and will
continue to be maintained . . .’’ 25 Pa.
Code 127.12(a)(3). The permit (plan
approval) must contain the monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements in 25 Pa. Code 139, any
such requirements in Article III
(Pennsylvania’s Air regulations), and
any other CAA monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements required. 25 Pa. Code
127.12b(c). Finally, the operating permit
requirements for major sources in 25 Pa.
Code 127.401–127.406 also contain
similar monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements. See 25 Pa. Code
127.411(a)(4), 127.441(c), and 127.442.
EPA believes that given the lack of
specific requirements in EPA’s RACT
regulations for the 1997 or 2008 ozone
NAAQS, the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements of
Pennsylvania’s RACT II Rule in 25 Pa.
Code 129.100 are sufficient for approval
of the RACT SIP. Also, Pennsylvania
has many other monitoring and
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recordkeeping requirements potentially
applicable to RACT sources that provide
ample authority to Pennsylvania,
through various mechanisms, to obtain
any information necessary to show
compliance with the RACT limits. Thus,
EPA does not believe Pennsylvania’s
RACT regulations must be disapproved,
in whole or in part, for lack of
specificity concerning monitoring and
recordkeeping to show RACT
compliance.
D. Averaging Time for Compliance
Demonstration
Comment 25: Commenters allege that
EPA failed to consider the averaging
times of Pennsylvania’s NOX
presumptive emission limits.
Commenters contend that a 30-day
averaging period is too lenient and
inconsistent with RACT in other OTR
states, which use averaging periods as
short as 1-hour or 24-hours averages.
Commenters also allege that 30-day NOX
averaging may allow sources to emit
more NOX on days when conditions are
conducive to ozone formation that
might lead to an exceedance of the
NAAQS.
Response 25: EPA disagrees with the
commenters. During EPA’s review of
Pennsylvania’s RACT II Rule, EPA
compared Pennsylvania’s presumptive
limits with those of other OTR states. In
Appendix B of EPA’s TSD, EPA
provided the emission limits for other
OTR states while noting the difference
between those states’ rules and
Pennsylvania’s rule below each table in
the TSD.
PADEP determined that a 30-day
rolling average limit addresses problems
faced by certain owners and operators,
including variability in fuel source,
emission spikes during start-ups,
shutdowns, and malfunctions, and other
unavoidable circumstances. PADEP
determined that these situations are not
indicative of normal operations and so
it would not be appropriate to require
facilities to show compliance with the
presumptive NOX RACT emission limit
over a 1-hour or 8-hour averaging period
as such variability would affect
technical and economic feasibility of
sources to meet the presumptive limits
making compliance either technically
infeasible or cost ineffective. PADEP
selected the 30-day rolling average to
ensure technical and economic
feasibility for Pennsylvania sources to
meet RACT. PADEP reasons that to
maintain compliance with a 30-day
rolling average, sources will have to
operate below the allowable standard on
some days in order to account for
potential days of higher emissions.
PADEP also notes that EPA has
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E. Cost Effectiveness
Comment 26: One commenter
contends that PADEP did not perform
any cost effectiveness evaluation while
setting the presumptive limits and
argues that EPA cannot supplement a
state’s faulty or deficient SIP. The
commenter alleges that EPA’s
performance of a cost-effective analysis
in the second TSD shows both the
necessity for such an analysis and that
PADEP did not perform a costeffectiveness analysis and therefore
Pennsylvania’s SIP revisions lacked an
adequate RACT evaluation.
Response 26: EPA disagrees that
PADEP did not perform any costeffectiveness evaluation when
establishing presumptive limits under
the RACT II Rule. PADEP relied on a
cost-effectiveness of $2,800 per ton of
NOX controlled and $5,500 per ton of
VOC controlled for the presumptive
limits in the RACT II Rule.19 As
mentioned in PADEP’s final rulemaking,
Pennsylvania’s Environmental Quality
Board (EQB) stated that the Regulatory
Analysis Form (RAF) was ‘‘replete with
substantive information regarding
emissions data, cost-effectiveness
numbers, public health information,
statutory requirements, small business
information and other types of analyses
to demonstrate that the regulations are
legally required, in the public interest,
economically and technologically
feasible, and will reduce emissions.’’
The EQB also stated ‘‘[t]he presumptive
RACT emission limitations were
established based on cost-effectiveness
of available control technology. . . .’’
Thus, EPA believes that PADEP did in
fact perform a cost-effectiveness
evaluation in order to determine what
emission limitations and control
technologies were technologically and
economically feasible.
Also, EPA disagrees that it
‘‘supplemented’’ the state’s SIP
submission by performing and referring
to its own analysis of cost for very large
coal-fired boilers with SCR and SNCR in
the second TSD. EPA performed this
analysis in support of our evaluation of
the reasonableness of PADEP’s costeffectiveness threshold of $2,800 per ton
of NOx controlled and the resulting
emission limits derived for coal-fired
boilers in the RACT II Rule. EPA
focused its evaluation on this source
category because it is the largest NOX
emitting sector in Pennsylvania. EPA’s
evaluation in the TSD supported our
conclusion that Pennsylvania’s RACT
was reasonable and does not indicate
that Pennsylvania’s SIP was therefore
inadequate or lacking information.
Comment 27: Two commenters
claimed that Pennsylvania’s cost
effectiveness thresholds for NOX and/or
VOC were too low compared to
adjoining states (New York, New Jersey,
and Delaware) in the OTR and states
sharing nonattainment areas with
Pennsylvania. One commenter referred
to New York’s threshold of $5,000 to
$5,500 per ton of NOX for coal-fired
units and pointed to New Jersey’s and
Delaware’s consideration of best
available control technology (BACT) as
cost effective controls to meet RACT,
even when not using specific costeffectiveness benchmarks.
Response 27: EPA is aware that
Pennsylvania considered costeffectiveness levels that are lower than
other states in the OTR when
developing the RACT II Rule; however,
states have the discretion to determine
what costs are considered reasonable
when establishing RACT for its sources.
For these reasons, EPA has not set a
single cost, emission reduction, or costeffectiveness figure to fully define costeffectiveness in meeting the NOX RACT
requirement. Therefore, each state must
make and defend its own determination
on how to weigh these values in
establishing RACT.
PADEP relied on a cost-effectiveness
of $2,800 per ton of NOX controlled and
$5,500 per ton of VOC controlled for the
presumptive limits in the RACT II
Rule.20 In considering similar comments
received during its proposal of the rule
concerning cost-effectiveness, PADEP
determined that ‘‘[e]ven with an
additional 25% margin, the upper
bound cost-effectiveness threshold
would not be any greater than $3,500
per ton NOX controlled’’ and ‘‘$7,000
per ton VOC controlled,’’ and that
‘‘[a]pplying these new thresholds does
not have an effect on the add-on control
technology decisions for the
presumptive RACT requirements
established in the final rulemaking.’’
PADEP concluded that the RACT
presumptive limits included in final
form of the RACT II Rule ‘‘are
comparable to emission limits included
in other states’ RACT regulations as
well.’’ 21
Further, while cost effectiveness is an
important consideration, it must be
noted that other factors should be
integrated into a RACT analysis, such as
emission reductions and environmental
impact. As stated above, Pennsylvania
determined higher cost thresholds did
not impact feasible add on control
technology. And, as discussed earlier,
EPA believes that PADEP’s presumptive
limits are reasonable as they reflect
control levels achieved by the
application and consideration of
available control technologies, after
considering both the economic and
technological circumstances of
Pennsylvania’s own sources. EPA also
finds that Pennsylvania’s presumptive
limits are comparable to those adopted
in other states for similar sources.22
19 See PADEP’s Responses to Comments
Document, Docket item #0004 Comments #13 and
#111.
20 See PADEP’s Responses to Comments
Document, Docket item #0004, Comments #13 and
#111.
21 See PADEP’s Responses to Comments
Document, Docket item #0004, Comment #13
22 See EPA’s TSD, section IV.C.
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approved 30-day rolling averages as
‘‘short-term’’ RACT limitations in SIP
revisions submitted by New York and
Wisconsin. See 75 FR 64155 (October
19, 2010) for Wisconsin and 78 FR
41846 (July 12, 2013) for New York.
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F. Alternative Compliance Schedules
Comment 28: One commenter argues
that sources petitioning for alternative
compliance schedules, as allowed under
section 129.97 and 129.99, should be
required to submit the alternative
compliance dates and interim emissions
limits to EPA for inclusion in the SIP.
Commenter further argues that without
incorporating these into the SIP,
facilities would be liable for violating
the SIP-approved compliance deadline
of Jan 1, 2017 and the applicable
presumptive limits.
Response 28: Regarding section
129.99, section 129.99(h) explicitly
states that alternative RACT
requirements or emission limitations
requested under subparts 129.99(a), (b)
and (c) and approved under 129.99(f)
will be submitted to EPA for approval
into the SIP. Pennsylvania has also
committed to submitting to EPA all
source-specific RACT determinations
under section 129.99 for approval as a
SIP revision within 12 months of EPA’s
final rulemaking. Therefore, the
commenter’s concern that alternative
compliance schedules issued under
section 129.99 should be submitted to
EPA for approval as part of the SIP is
already being addressed by the language
of section 129.99(h) and Pennsylvania’s
September 26, 2017 committal to submit
permits with schedules under 129.99 to
EPA for inclusion in the SIP; PADEP
will be submitting any section 129.99
alternative compliance schedule and the
emission limits to EPA as a formal SIP
revision. EPA will evaluate and act
accordingly on any SIP revision
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submitted with alternative compliance
schedules in a future rulemaking action.
For alternative compliance schedules
in section 129.97(k), EPA believes that
PADEP intends to submit all such
alternative compliance schedules to
EPA for approval into the SIP. EPA
finds the schedules discussed in section
129.97(k) are also included within the
scope of section 129.99 (and thus within
Pennsylvania’s September 26, 2017
commitment) because section 129.99(i)
addresses how sources can get an
alternative RACT requirement or
alternative RACT emission limit when
installing an air cleaning device and
section 129.99(i) provides the process
and details needed for sources to
petition PADEP for an alternative.
Section 129.97(k) provides one such
alternative RACT requirement within
the meaning of section 129.99(i) as it
provides that sources which cannot
meet presumptive limits without
installing an air cleaning device may
petition PADEP for additional time to
comply. Thus, any source seeking an
alternative under section 129.97(k)
(because it needs to install an air
cleaning device) is also subject to
section 129.99 (via 129.99(i) as a source
seeking an alternative RACT
requirement due to installation of an air
cleaning device), and PADEP has
committed in its September 26, 2017
letter to sending all such alternative
RACT proposals to EPA for SIP
approval.
Sources that did not need to install
equipment and/or modify permits to
meet the presumptive RACT
requirements in 25 Pa. Code 129.96
were required to comply with
presumptive RACT by the January 1,
2017 deadline. Existing sources that
could not meet presumptive RACT
without installation of an air cleaning
device were required to petition PADEP
to request an alternative compliance
schedule by October 24, 2016 and
include a compliance schedule no
longer than three years from the date of
PADEP’s approval of the petition, with
interim emission limits and compliance
dates. 25 Pa. Code 129.97(k). PADEP
provided a list to EPA on March 22,
2019 of sources receiving alternative
compliance schedules under 25 Pa.
Code 127.97(k) or 127.99(i) showing that
eight of the nine sources are presently
complying with presumptive RACT
requirements or more stringent emission
limits known as ‘‘best available
technology’’ limits to which new
sources in Pennsylvania are subject. The
ninth source will achieve full
compliance with presumptive RACT by
Fall of 2019. EPA has included the list
from Pennsylvania in the docket for this
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rulemaking action available online at
www.regulations.gov.
Given the relatively small number of
sources seeking alternative compliance
schedules under 25 Pa. Code 129.97(k),
the majority of sources currently in
compliance with presumptive RACT
and the remaining source complying
with presumptive RACT imminently,
and given PADEP’s commitment to have
permits issued under 25 Pa. Code
127.99 (inclusive of 127.97(k)) included
in the SIP, the extensions of time
granted by PADEP’s regulations after the
January 1, 2017 RACT compliance
deadline are not unreasonable as RACT
is being implemented within the
Commonwealth. Moreover, there is no
ability for EPA to ‘‘turn back the clock’’
and have these sources comply by 2017
at this date. For these reasons, EPA
believes that the provisions in 127.97
and 129.99 regarding compliance dates
are reasonable and approvable (with the
caveat that 127.99 is subject to
conditional approval for submission of
permits for SIP approval) for RACT as
compliance is complete or nearly
complete. EPA will evaluate and act
accordingly on any permits submitted to
EPA for SIP-approval at a future time
through a future rulemaking action.
Comment 29: Commenter argues that
for sources receiving alternative
compliance schedules under sections
129.97 or 129.99 extending beyond
January 1, 2017, PADEP should be
required to submit the alternative
compliance dates and interim emissions
limits to EPA for possible approval into
the SIP. Commenter urges EPA to
confirm that alternative compliance
schedules or limits are not Federally
enforceable, unless PADEP submits
them to EPA and EPA approves them
into the SIP.
Response 29: In 25 Pa. Code section
129.99(h), PADEP explicitly states that
PADEP will submit the alternative
RACT requirement or RACT emission
limitation requested to EPA for approval
into the SIP. In addition, PADEP has
committed to submitting to EPA any
alternative RACT schedules and
proposals received under section
129.99, which includes those submitted
under 25 Pa. Code 127.97(k) as
discussed in response to prior
comments. EPA will evaluate and act
accordingly on any alternative
compliance schedule or alternative
RACT emission limit submitted for SIPapproval at a future time through a
future rulemaking action. EPA will
evaluate the reasonableness of any
extension of time for RACT compliance
beyond Pennsylvania’s January 1, 2017
deadline when the SIP is submitted to
EPA. In response to Comment #28, EPA
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addressed the timing of sources
complying with alternative RACT.
Regarding Federal enforceability, EPA
agrees that any alternative RACT
emission limits and/or alternative
compliance schedules approved by
PADEP which are not submitted to EPA
for approval into the SIP would not be
Federally-enforceable under the SIP;
however, these limits may be included
in some other type of Federallyenforceable permit.
Comment 30: One commenter argues
that EPA cannot approve section
129.99(i)(2)(v) for sources petitioning
alternative compliance schedules,
because it allows a compliance date
later than January 1, 2017, as required
by EPA’s ozone implementation
regulation in 40 CFR 51.1112(a)(3).
Commenter states that EPA must
disapprove this provision of the
regulation, as it is in violation of EPA’s
own regulations.
Response 30: EPA issued the 2008
ozone attainment designations for
numerous areas of the country,
including designating five areas in
Pennsylvania as Marginal
nonattainment areas, on May 21, 2012.
See 77 FR 30088 and 40 CFR 81.339. On
March 6, 2015, EPA issued its final rule
for implementation of the 2008 ozone
NAAQS (the ‘‘2008 Ozone SIP
Requirements Rule’’). See 80 FR 12264
and 40 CFR 51.1100–51.1103. The 2008
Ozone SIP Requirements Rule set a
deadline for submission of RACT SIP
revisions for VOC and NOX of two years
after the designations effective date of
July 20, 2012 or July 20, 2014 and a
deadline for implementation of RACT of
January 1, 2017. See 77 FR 30088 and
40 CFR 51.1112(a)(2). After EPA issued
the 2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule,
PADEP submitted its SIP revision on
May 16, 2016 to implement the RACT
requirements for the 1997 and 2008
ozone NAAQS. These regulations
became final at the state level on April
23, 2016.
Sources in Pennsylvania subject to
RACT for the 1997 and 2008 ozone
NAAQS generally had slightly more
than seven months from the state
effective date of Pennsylvania’s RACT
regulations to meet the January 1, 2017
deadline. Advance planning by RACT
sources in reliance upon Pennsylvania’s
proposed RACT limits before they
became final at the state level on April
23, 2016 would have been imprudent
because Pennsylvania both lowered and
raised the presumptive RACT limits for
multiple types of sources following the
public comment period, which
illustrates the uncertainty sources faced
while trying to plan for implementation
of RACT standards. For a list of changes
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to the presumptive limits following
Pennsylvania’s proposal, see Table 1.
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TABLE 1—CHANGES IN PRESUMPTIVE LIMITS FROM PROPOSAL TO FINAL
Presumptive citation (129.97)
Proposed limit
(g)(1)(i)—Natural gas unit, heat input ≥50 MMBTU/hr ...................................................
(g)(1)(vi)(A)—coal fired CFB unit ≥250 MMBTU/hr ........................................................
(g)(2)(i)(B)—combined cycle turbine ≥1,000 bhp, <180 MW; fuel oil ............................
(g)(2)(i)(C)—combined cycle turbine ≥1,000 bhp, <180 MW; natural gas .....................
(g)(2)(i)(D)—combined cycle turbine ≥1,000 bhp, <180 MW; fuel oil ............................
(g)(2)(iv)(B)—simple cycle turbine ≥6,000 bhp; fuel oil ..................................................
(g)(3)(i)(B)—lean burn stationary internal combustion engine, ≥500 bhp; Natural gas
or noncommercial gaseous fuel.
(g)(1)(vii)—new limit for solid fuel fired combustion units ≥50 MMBTU/hr ....................
(g)(1)(viii)—new limit for coal fired units with SCR; when ≥ 600°F ................................
(g)(1)(ix)—new work practice standard for coal fired units with SNCR .........................
(g)(2)(iii)(A), (B), (C), and (D)—simple cycle turbine ≥1,000 bhp, <6,000 bhp; firing
natural gas or fuel oil.
0.08 lbs/MMBTU .............
0.20 lbs/MMBTU .............
75 ppmvd NOX ................
2 ppmvd VOC .................
2 ppmvd VOC .................
75 ppmvd NOX ................
0.4 grams VOC/bhp-hr ...
0.10 lbs/MMBTU.
0.16 lbs/MMBTU.
96 ppmvd NOX.
5 ppmvd VOC.
9 ppmvd VOC.
96 ppmvd NOX.
1.0 grams VOC/bhp-hr.
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
0.25 lbs/MMBTU.
0.12 lbs/MMBTU.
Inject ammonia.
150 ppmvd NOX 9 ppmvd
VOC.
Pennsylvania sources relying on the
presumptive limits in Pennsylvania’s
proposed RACT II Rule could find
themselves ordering equipment to meet
RACT limits that they didn’t need
because they could meet the increased
limit in the final rule without additional
equipment or could find themselves
ordering inadequate equipment to meet
a NOX limit that was lowered by the
final rule.
On April 6, 2017, EPA proposed
approval of revisions to Connecticut’s
RACT regulations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. See 83 FR 16772. These
revisions included new NOX limits for
MWCs with a compliance date of
August 2, 2017, and new NOX limits for
boilers, turbines, and reciprocating
internal combustion engines (RICE) with
a compliance date of June 1, 2018. See
83 FR 16772, 16773 (April 6, 2017).
Among other reasons, EPA justified
these compliance deadlines beyond the
January 1, 2017 Federal regulatory
deadline because the sources subject to
the new RACT limits were a small
subset of all the facilities subject to
RACT and were already subject to RACT
controls in the SIP that would be further
tightened by the new revisions. See 83
FR 16772, 16776. EPA also justified the
post-January 2017 dates based on the
fact that it was impossible for sources to
retroactively meet the January 1, 2017
deadline, and agreed with Connecticut’s
determination that given the August 2,
2016 and December 22, 2016 state
effective dates for the new MWC limits
and combustor limits, respectively, it
would not be reasonable to require
immediate compliance. Likewise, for
Pennsylvania, EPA finds it would be
impossible for sources today to
retroactively meet the January 1, 2017
deadline for implementation of RACT.
Like Connecticut, Pennsylvania had also
implemented in its SIP RACT
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requirements on all major sources of
NOx and VOCs for the prior 1-hour
ozone NAAQS. See 40 CFR 52.2020(d).
In addition, for sources needing
installation of controls to meet
requirements of the RACT II Rule after
the Rule became state effective in 2016,
such sources needed time to select
controls, apply for permits and
implement, install and begin operating
such controls to meet RACT II Rule
limits.
For the above reasons, EPA finds the
provisions in Pennsylvania’s rules
providing for additional time to comply
in 25 Pa. Code section 127.97 and
127.99 allowed sources installing new
emission controls to meet RACT a
reasonable time to comply. Thus, EPA is
approving the provisions in 129.97 and
conditionally approving the provisions
of 129.99.
G. Other Comments
Comment 31: The commenter asks
whether section 129.96(d), which states
that the requirements of sections
129.96–129.100 do not apply to the
owner and operator of a facility which
is not a major NOX or major VOC
emitting facility on or before January 1,
2017, would allow an otherwise major
NOX or VOC source to obtain a synthetic
minor permit before 1/1/17 to avoid
2008 RACT, then ‘‘shed’’ its minor
status after 1/1/17 and remain not
subject to 2008 RACT. The commenter
argues that facilities that become
synthetic minor NOX or VOC sources
before January 1, 2017 to avoid RACT
should take enforceable permit limits
and that such limits should be
submitted to EPA for approval into the
SIP.
Response 31: EPA acknowledges that,
generally, major sources may take
enforceable restrictions to reduce their
facility-wide potential emissions to
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Final limit
avoid the definition of a major NOX or
VOC source. However, EPA interprets
that because the RACT II Rule is only
applicable to sources that met the
‘‘major NOX/VOC source definition’’ by
January 1, 2017, any major sources
without Federally-enforceable
restrictions by such date must be
required to comply with the RACT II
Rule.
Furthermore, if any facility which
takes such restrictions seeks to later
‘‘shed’’ its minor source status after
January 1, 2017, the facility would then
become a major source through its
‘‘modification’’ and would then be
subject to the RACT II Rule via 25 Pa
Code 129.96(b). This subsection requires
facilities that become a major source to
be subject to the RACT II Rule which
has ongoing applicability. Thus, EPA
believes it is unnecessary to require
enforceable restrictions to be submitted
to EPA for SIP approval as the facility
would be subject to the RACT II Rule if
it shed its minor limits and became a
major source of NOX or VOC.
Comment 32: The commenter argues
that EPA’s approval of section
129.97(b)(1)(i)–(iii), requiring biennial
tune-up for units between 20 to 50
MMBTU/hr, would be backsliding as
there are similar RACT provisions
previously approved in the
Pennsylvania SIP, in 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.91–95, that are more
stringent because they require annual
tune-ups.
Response 32: EPA disagrees with the
commenter’s assertion that EPA is
allowing ‘‘backsliding’’ by approving
the provisions in section 129.97(b)(1).
Commenter seems to be referring to the
provisions in 129.92(b)(2)(i)–(iii), which
also require tune-up for units between
20 to 50 MMBTU/hr, but on an annual
basis. EPA acknowledges that the
requirements in section 129.92(b)(2)(i)–
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(iii) require an annual tune-up, while
section 129.97(b)(1)(i)–(iii) only requires
a tune-up once every two years.
However, EPA does not believe that
relaxation of the SIP is occurring
because section 129.97(i) requires
sources to comply with section 129.97
unless a RACT permit issued prior to
April 23, 2016 under 129.91–95 has
more stringent requirements or limits.
Based on the requirement in section
129.97(i), individual sources in
Pennsylvania with RACT permits issued
prior to April 23, 2016 would not be
backsliding because they would remain
subject to the more stringent annual
tune-up requirements of 129.92(b)(2)(i)–
(iii). Only relatively newer sources (not
subject to the prior RACT requirement
for annual tune up) would be subject to
the biennial tune-up requirements of
section 129.97(b)(1)(i)–(iii). Thus, EPA
believes any relaxation concerns with
respect to tune-up requirements for
units between 20 to 50 MMBTU/hr are
fully addressed by the provisions of
section 129.97(i).
Comment 33: Commenter requests
EPA to justify how the provisions in
section 129.97(c) and (d), requiring
owners or operators to install, maintain,
and operate the source in accordance
with the manufacturer’s specifications
and with good operating practices, are
enforceable as a practical matter.
Response 33: The requirement to
‘‘install, maintain and operate the
source in accordance with the
manufacturer’s specifications’’ is a
practically enforceable requirement as
the manufacturer specifications for
control equipment at any particular
source are usually available and
defined. A requirement to operate in
line with ‘‘good operating practices’’ is
practically enforceable because good
operating practices can be defined
within a source or industry. This is
consistent with EPA’s prior approval of
similar RACT provisions for the
Commonwealth.
Comment 34: One commenter alleges
that EPA cannot rely on the document
titled ‘‘PADEP’s RACT II Supplemental
Submittal’’ for its rulemaking action, as
this document did not undergo adequate
public participation as a SIP revision, as
required in 40 CFR 51.102, 51.103,
51.104 and Appendix V.
Response 34: EPA is relying only on
that portion of PADEP’s September 26,
2017 submittal (titled ‘‘PADEP’s RACT
II Supplemental Submittal’’) that
contains PADEP’s commitments to
further supplement the SIP within one
year of EPA’s final conditional approval.
Information in PADEP’s supplemental
submittal that is not relevant to
PADEP’s commitment to address EPA’s
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conditions is not needed nor relied
upon in EPA’s rulemaking herein. The
nature of a conditional approval under
CAA section 110(k)(4) is such that when
EPA’s review of a formal SIP submission
identifies a deficiency in the SIP that
could be remedied by state action
within one year of the final conditional
approval, the NPRM sets forth the
conditions the state must satisfy within
one year to correct the deficiencies. The
state must provide a committal letter to
EPA stating that it will fulfill EPA’s
requirements for the commitment. The
opportunity for public comment upon
the adequacy of EPA’s conditions and
the ability of the state to meet those
conditions occurs during the public
comment period announced by the
NPRM. EPA does not consider a state’s
conditional approval committal letter to
be a SIP revision under 40 CFR
51.102(a), 51.103, 51.104, or the
completeness criteria in Appendix V to
Part 51. The provisions in Appendix V
related to requirements for states to
conduct public hearing and follow state
administrative procedural requirements
relate to the plan submitted by the state.
Pennsylvania complied with
requirements in 40 CFR part 51 and
Appendix V relating to submission of its
‘‘plan’’ or SIP submittal (i.e., the May
16, 2016 SIP submittal which includes
provisions in 25 Pa. Code 121.1, 129.96,
129.97, 129.98, 129.99 and 129.100).
Pennsylvania’s supplemental material
from September 2017 was additional
supportive information Pennsylvania
had regarding its RACT provisions and
was about Pennsylvania’s commitment
to submit alternative RACT
requirements and emission limitations
to EPA for SIP approval. Thus, EPA
disagrees with the commenter that
Pennsylvania’s September 26, 2017
provision to EPA needed to undergo
additional ‘‘public participation as a SIP
revision.’’
Comment 35: The commenter claims
EPA should better define the
conditional nature of EPA’s approval
and EPA should fully develop methods
and conditions which Pennsylvania
would need to address for full approval.
Response 35: EPA disagrees with the
commenter. EPA’s NPRM clearly
specified what PADEP needed to do to
correct the deficiencies identified in the
NPRM relating to section 129.98 NOX
averaging provision and section 129.99
for alternative RACT requirements or
emission limitations. See 83 FR 11155,
11160–62. EPA has also restated the
conditions and deficiencies in this
rulemaking. See Section II of this
rulemaking action.
Comment 36: The commenter claims
that section 129.98 and 129.99 do not
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20289
conform with CAA section 110(a)(2)(A),
as they are not practically and Federally
enforceable, and recommends EPA to
disapprove these provisions until
Pennsylvania adopts specific
enforceable measures.
Response 36: The commenter has not
provided adequate argument, analysis,
or specific information for EPA to
account for this comment. Thus, no
further response is needed. However,
EPA will note that we are conditionally
approving section 129.98 and 129.99
based on the deficiencies we identified
in the NPRM and based on
Pennsylvania’s commitment to submit
permits and plans to EPA for SIP
approval. With respect to the issue of
practical enforceability as it pertains to
section 110(a)(2)(A), EPA finds that
section 129.99 is practically enforceable,
as the regulation lays out the process for
sources to obtain source-specific RACT
requirements for affected sources.
PADEP would then subsequently submit
to EPA such permits for approval into
the SIP. EPA proposed conditional
approval of section 129.99 because it
lacked a date certain by which PADEP
would submit the relevant sourcespecific RACT SIP revisions to EPA.
As discussed in detail in the NPRM
and in this action, EPA did have
concerns with enforceability of 129.98
and thus we are conditionally approving
129.98. EPA’s conditional approval of
these provisions will ensure that
practical, enforceable RACT emissions
limits are established under 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.98 and 129.99, consistent
with CAA section 110(a)(2)(A).
Comment 37: Commenter believes
that the required elements of section
110(a)(2) of CAA have been fully
addressed by PADEP’s SIP submittal for
the RACT II Rule, particularly referring
to section 110(a)(2)(A), (C), and (F). The
commenter asserts that a specific
method of compliance is not required
under section 110(a)(2), if the applicable
emission limits and related
requirements are already part of the
rule.
Response 37: EPA identified
deficiencies in 25 Pa. Code section
129.98 pertaining to the requirement in
CAA section 110(a)(2)(A) for enforceable
limits because 129.98 did not
adequately establish how to compute an
alternative NOX emissions limitation
and/or adequately specify the methods
for demonstrating compliance and
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for emissions averaging.
EPA’s conditional approval of 25 Pa.
Code section 129.98 will ensure that
practical enforceable emissions limits
for CAA 110(a)(2) are established as
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RACT through SIP approval of each
averaging plan.
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IV. Terms of the Conditional Approval
On September 26, 2017, PADEP
submitted a letter detailing its
commitments to provide additional SIP
revisions to correct various deficiencies
identified by EPA as present in the May
16, 2016 SIP submittal. In that letter,
PADEP committed to submitting to EPA,
for approval into the SIP, any facilitywide or system-wide averaging plan
approved under 25 Pa. Code section
129.98 and any source-specific RACT
determinations under 25 Pa. Code
section 129.99. PADEP committed to
submitting these additional SIP
revisions within 12 months of EPA’s
final conditional approval.
Therefore, as authorized in CAA
section 110(k)(3) and (k)(4),
Pennsylvania shall submit the following
as source-specific SIP revisions for
EPA’s approval as a condition of
approval of 25 Pa. Code 128 and 129 in
the May 16, 2016 SIP revision: (1) All
facility-wide or system-wide averaging
plans approved by PADEP under 25 Pa.
Code section 129.98 including, but not
limited to, any terms and conditions
that ensure the enforceability of the
averaging plan as a practical matter (e.g.,
any monitoring, reporting,
recordkeeping, or testing requirements);
and (2) all source-specific RACT
determinations approved by PADEP
under 25 Pa. Code section 129.99,
including any alternative compliance
schedules approved under section
129.97(k) and 129.99(i); the sourcespecific RACT determinations
submitted to EPA for approval into the
SIP should include any terms and
conditions that ensure the enforceability
of the source-specific RACT emission
limitation as a practical matter (e.g., any
monitoring, reporting, recordkeeping, or
testing requirements).
V. Final Action
EPA is fully approving 25 Pa. Code
sections 121.1, 129.96, 129.97, and
129.100 as meeting certain aspects of
major stationary source RACT in CAA
section 172, 182, and 184 for the 1997
and 2008 ozone NAAQS submitted May
16, 2016. EPA is also conditionally
approving 25 Pa. Code sections 129.98
and 129.99 based on the commitment
provided by Pennsylvania to submit
additional SIP revisions to address the
deficiencies identified by EPA in the
May 16, 2016 SIP revision. Upon
submission of all elements intended to
meet the conditions identified in
Section IV of this rulemaking action,
Pennsylvania must submit a SIP
revision certifying that it has met all
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conditions. Once EPA has determined
that Pennsylvania has satisfied these
conditions, EPA shall remove the
conditional nature of this approval and
Pennsylvania’s 1997 and 2008 8-hour
ozone RACT SIP revision will, at that
time, receive a full approval status.
Should Pennsylvania fail to meet the
conditions specified in Section IV, the
final conditional approval of 25 Pa.
Code sections 129.98 and 129.99 shall
automatically convert to a disapproval
and EPA will issue a finding of
disapproval. A finding of disapproval
would start an 18-month clock to apply
sanctions under CAA section 179(b) and
a two-year clock for a Federal
implementation plan under CAA
section 110(c)(1).
VI. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, EPA is finalizing
regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In
accordance with requirements of 1 CFR
51.5, EPA is finalizing the incorporation
by reference of the following sections of
25 Pa. Code with a state effective date
of April 23, 2016: 25 Pa. Code section
121.1, 129.96, 129.97, 129.98, 129.99
and 129.100; the list of definitions
contained in 121.1 and the changes
being made can be found in the TSD for
this rulemaking action. EPA has made,
and will continue to make, these
materials generally available through
www.regulations.gov and at the EPA
Region III Office (please contact the
person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble for more information).
Therefore, these materials have been
approved by EPA for inclusion in the
SIP, have been incorporated by
reference by EPA into that plan, are
fully Federally enforceable under
sections 110 and 113 of the CAA as of
the effective date of the final rulemaking
of EPA’s approval, and will be
incorporated by reference in the next
update to the SIP compilation.23
VII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. General Requirements
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
CAA and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely approves state law as meeting
Federal requirements and does not
23 62
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Frm 00052
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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, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
B. Submission to Congress and the
Comptroller General
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
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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).
review may be filed and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action. This action, on Pennsylvania’s
RACT II Rule, may not be challenged
later in proceedings to enforce its
requirements. (See section 307(b)(2).)
C. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by July 8, 2019. 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
Dated: April 25, 2019.
Cosmo Servidio,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
State citation
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
40 CFR part 52 is amended as follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
2. In § 52.2020, the table in paragraph
(c)(1) is amended by adding:
■ a. Under ‘‘Chapter 121—General
Provisions,’’ an entry for ‘‘Section
121.1’’ after an existing entry for
‘‘Section 121.1’’; and
■ b. Under ‘‘Chapter 129—Standards for
Sources,’’ after the entry for ‘‘129.95’’, a
subheading entitled ‘‘Additional RACT
Requirements for Major Sources of NOX
and VOCs’’ and the entries ‘‘Section
129.96’’ through ‘‘Section 129.100’’ in
numerical order.
The additions read as follows:
■
*
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
State effective
date
Subpart NN—Pennsylvania
§ 52.2020
■
Title/subject
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
EPA approval date
Identification of plan.
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
*
*
Additional explanation/ § 52.2063 citation
Title 25—Environmental Protection Article III—Air Resources
Chapter 121—General Provisions
*
Section 121.1 .................
*
*
*
*
*
4/23/16
4/23/16
Section 129.97 ...............
Presumptive RACT requirements, RACT
emission limitations,
and petition for alternative compliance
schedule.
Facility-wide or systemwide NOX emissions
averaging plan general requirements.
Alternative RACT proposal and petition for
alternative compliance schedule.
Compliance demonstration and recordkeeping requirements.
4/23/16
Section 129.100 .............
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*
*
Revises the following definitions: ‘‘CEMS—Continuous emission monitoring system,’’ ‘‘Major
NOX emitting facility,’’ ‘‘Major VOC emitting
facility,’’ and ‘‘Stationary internal combustion
engine or stationary reciprocating internal
combustion engine.’’ Adds new definitions for
the following terms: ‘‘Process heater,’’ ‘‘Refinery gas,’’ ‘‘Regenerative cycle combustion
turbine,’’ ‘‘Simple cycle combustion turbine,’’
and ‘‘Stationary combustion turbine.’’
*
*
*
Additional RACT Requirements for Major Sources of NOX and VOCs
Applicability ..................
Section 129.99 ...............
*
*
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
*
*
Chapter 129—Standards for Sources
Section 129.96 ...............
Section 129.98 ...............
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*
*
Definitions ....................
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*
*
*
*
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
New section.
4/23/16
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
Conditionally
approved.
52.2023(m).
See
40
CFR
4/23/16
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
Conditionally
approved.
52.2023(m).
See
40
CFR
4/23/16
5/9/19, [insert Federal
Register citation].
New section.
Frm 00053
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New section.
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State citation
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
3. Section 52.2023 is amended by
adding reserved paragraph (l) and
adding paragraph (m) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.2023
State effective
date
Title/subject
EPA approval date
*
Additional explanation/ § 52.2063 citation
*
(7) * * *
(iv) Delivery or performance schedule.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2019–09628 Filed 5–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1301–00–D
Approval status.
*
*
*
*
*
(m) EPA conditionally approves
Pennsylvania’s 25 Pa Code sections
129.98 and 129.99 submitted on May 16,
2016 to address the reasonably available
control technology (RACT) requirements
under CAA sections 182(b)(2)(C), 182(f),
and 184 under the 1997 and 2008
8-hour ozone NAAQS. Pursuant to CAA
section 110(k)(4), this conditional
approval is based upon a September 26,
2017 letter from Pennsylvania to submit
to EPA, no later than 12 months from
EPA’s final conditional approval,
additional SIP revisions to address the
deficiencies identified. The SIP
revisions, to be submitted by
Pennsylvania, include:
(1) All facility-wide or system-wide
averaging plans approved by PADEP
under 25 Pa Code 129.98 including but
not limited to any terms and conditions
that ensure the enforceability of the
averaging plan as a practical matter, and
(2) All source-specific RACT
determinations approved by PADEP
under 25 Pa Code 129.99, including any
alternative compliance schedules
approved under §§ 129.97(k) and
129.99(i); the source-specific RACT
determinations submitted to EPA for
approval into the SIP shall include any
terms and conditions that ensure the
enforceability of the source-specific
RACT emission limitation as a practical
matter.
[FR Doc. 2019–09478 Filed 5–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
48 CFR Ch. 1
Types of Contracts
CFR Correction
In Title 48 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, Chapter 1 (Parts 1 to 51),
revised as of October 1, 2018, on page
389, in § 16.505, paragraph (a)(7)(iv) is
reinstated to read as follows:
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■
§ 16.505
*
Ordering.
*
*
(a) * * *
VerDate Sep<11>2014
*
*
15:58 May 08, 2019
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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1002 and 1312
[Docket No. EP 743]
Water Carrier Tariff Filing Procedures
Surface Transportation Board.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) adopts a new
procedure for water carriers operating in
the noncontiguous domestic trade to
electronically publish, file, and keep
tariffs available for public inspection.
DATES: This rule is effective on June 8,
2019.
ADDRESSES: Requests for information or
questions regarding this final rule
should reference Docket No. EP 743 and
be submitted via the Board’s e-filing
format or in writing addressed to: Chief,
Section of Administration, Office of
Proceedings, Surface Transportation
Board, 395 E Street SW, Washington, DC
20423–0001. Any person using e-filing
should attach a document and otherwise
comply with the instructions found on
the Board’s website at www.stb.gov at
the E-Filing link.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Higgins at 202–245–0284.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In April
2017, the Board established its
Regulatory Reform Task Force (RRTF) to
comply with the spirit of Executive
Order 13777. The primary objective of
the RRTF is to identify Board rules and
practices that are burdensome,
unnecessary, or outdated and to
recommend how they should be
addressed. See Regulatory Reform Task
Force, EP 738 (STB served June 20,
2017). The RRTF identified the current
water carrier tariff regulations at 49 CFR
part 1312 as imposing unnecessary costs
on the carriers as well as the Board. See
RRTF 90-Day Status Report (issued May
25, 2017); RRTF Status Report (issued
SUMMARY:
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*
*
Nov. 21, 2017).1 Water carriers
operating in the noncontiguous
domestic trade 2 are required to publish,
file, and keep available for public
inspection tariffs setting forth their
rates, charges, rules, and classifications.
49 U.S.C. 13702(a)–(b).3 The Board’s
current regulations for filing water
carrier tariffs contemplate the filings of
tariffs with the Board in paper format.
However, the Board has granted Special
Tariff Authority—relief from the current
regulations on a case-by-case basis—to
allow water carriers to file their tariffs
in alternative electronic formats,
typically email.4 For many carriers,
these email submissions are a daily
occurrence.
The Board issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking that proposed to update the
regulations to allow water carriers 5 to
electronically publish, file, and keep
tariffs available for public inspection.
Water Carrier Tariff Filing Procedures
(NPRM), EP 743 (STB served Dec. 21,
2018) (83 FR 66229).6 The Board
received comments on the NPRM from
Tropical Shipping and Construction Co.,
Ltd. (Tropical), The Pasha Group
(Pasha), and TOTE, LLC (TOTE). After
considering the comments, the Board is
adopting the rule proposed in the
NPRM, without substantive change, as a
final rule. The text of the final rule is
below.
Proposed Rule. The NPRM proposed
to revise 49 CFR part 1312 to include
regulations which would allow water
carriers to publish, file, and keep their
tariffs electronically, but would also
continue to allow water carriers the
option of filing their tariffs in paper
format. Specifically, under the proposal,
a water carrier would be permitted to
comply with the filing requirement in
1 These status reports can be accessed on the
Board’s website.
2 Noncontiguous domestic trade means
‘‘transportation subject to jurisdiction under
chapter 135 involving traffic originating in or
destined to Alaska, Hawaii, or a territory or
possession of the United States.’’ 49 U.S.C.
13102(17).
3 Section 13702(a)(1) includes an exception from
the tariff filing requirement for bulk cargo, forest
products, recycled metal scrap, waste paper, and
paper waste.
4 Under 49 CFR 1312.2(e), a water carrier may
apply for Special Tariff Authority.
5 Many water carriers use third-party service
providers to manage and maintain their tariffs on
the internet.
6 The NPRM provides additional information on
the background of water carrier tariff requirements.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 90 (Thursday, May 9, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 20274-20292]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-09478]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R03-OAR-2017-0290; FRL-9993-36-Region 3]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Pennsylvania; Regulatory Amendments Addressing Reasonably Available
Control Technology Requirements Under the 1997 and 2008 8-Hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is taking action on
a state implementation plan (SIP) revision submitted by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania). This revision consists of
regulatory amendments intended to meet certain reasonably available
control technology (RACT) requirements under the 1997 and 2008 8-hour
ozone national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS). EPA is approving
most parts of the Pennsylvania SIP revision as meeting RACT
requirements under the Clean Air Act (CAA), while conditionally
approving certain provisions, based upon Pennsylvania's commitment to
submit additional enforceable measures that meet RACT. This action is
being taken in accordance with the requirements of the CAA.
DATES: This final rule is effective on June 10, 2019. Pennsylvania must
meet the conditions of this approval by May 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID
Number EPA-R03-OAR-2017-0290. All documents in the docket 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 (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: Mr. Joseph Schulingkamp, Planning and
Implementation Branch (3AD30), Air and Radiation Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Region III, 1650 Arch Street,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103. The telephone number is (215) 814-
2021. Mr. Schulingkamp can also be reached via electronic mail at or by
email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On March 14, 2018 (83 FR 11155), EPA published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) for a SIP revision from the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania. In the NPRM, EPA proposed to partially conditionally
approve and partially approve a Pennsylvania RACT SIP revision for the
1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The formal SIP revision was submitted
by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) on
May 16, 2016.
RACT requirements apply to any ozone nonattainment areas classified
as Moderate or higher (Serious, Severe or Extreme) under CAA sections
182(b)(2) and 182(f). Section 184(b)(1)(B) of the CAA also applies RACT
to all areas located within ozone transport regions established
pursuant to section 184 of the CAA. The entire Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania is part of the Ozone Transport Region (OTR) established
under section 184 of the CAA and thus is subject statewide to the RACT
requirements of CAA sections 182(b)(2) and 182(f), pursuant to section
184(b). The May 16, 2016 SIP submittal intends to satisfy sections
182(b)(2)(C), 182(f), and 184 of the CAA for both the 1997 and 2008 8-
hour ozone NAAQS for all major nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile
organic compound (VOC) sources in Pennsylvania not subject to control
technique guidelines (CTG) (i.e., VOC non-CTG sources), except glass
melting furnaces, ethylene production plants, surface active agents
manufacturing, and mobile equipment repair and refinishing.
II. Summary of SIP Revision and EPA's Proposed Actions
The May 16, 2016 Pennsylvania SIP revision includes the
Pennsylvania regulations in 25 Pa. Code sections 129.96-129.100 titled
``Additional RACT Requirements for Major Sources of NOx and VOCs'' (the
RACT II Rule) and amendments to 25 Pa. Code section 121.1, including
related definitions, to be incorporated into the Pennsylvania SIP.
These regulatory amendments were adopted by PADEP on April 23, 2016 and
effective on the same date upon publication in the Pennsylvania
Bulletin. The May 16, 2016 SIP revision was submitted to satisfy
certain CAA RACT requirements under both the 1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS for specific source categories.
The RACT II Rule applies statewide to existing major NOX
and/or VOC sources
[[Page 20275]]
in Pennsylvania, except those subject to other Pennsylvania
regulations, as specified in 25 Pa. Code 129.96(a)-(b).\1\ The RACT II
Rule exempts all VOC source categories for which PADEP had adopted CTG
RACT regulations at the time the RACT II Rule was finalized, as well as
three non-CTG VOC source categories: (1) Ethylene production plants,
(2) surface active agents manufacturing, and (3) mobile equipment
repair and refinishing; and glass melting furnaces as major NOx
sources. In the NPRM, EPA proposed to find that the applicability
requirements of 25 Pa. Code section 129.96 are necessary to implement
the RACT requirements within the RACT II Rule.
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\1\ In the context of the RACT II Rule, the terms ``major
NOX emitting facility'' and ``major VOC emitting
facility,'' as defined in 25 Pa Code section 121.1, are used to
refer to major stationary sources.
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The RACT II Rule requirements apply to any emissions unit or
process at an affected major source having a potential to emit (PTE) of
1 ton per year (TPY) or more of NOX and/or VOC. In the
context of the rule, existing major sources are those already in
existence as of July 20, 2012 or any major sources installed or
modified after July 20, 2012, which became a major source before
January 1, 2017. The RACT II Rule establishes a compliance date of
January 1, 2017, as provided in paragraphs in 129.97(a) and
129.99(d)(4), with some exceptions.
Section 129.97 of the RACT II Rule establishes NOX and
VOC emission limits or operational requirements on certain types of
emissions units in the affected major sources which Pennsylvania
presumes to meet RACT, thus referred to in the rule as presumptive
RACT.
Affected emissions units include combustion units, process heaters,
combustion turbines, stationary internal combustion engines, cement
kilns, municipal waste combustors, and municipal solid waste landfills.
In the NPRM, EPA proposed to find that the presumptive requirements of
25 Pa. Code section 129.97 represent RACT for the NOX and
VOC source categories affected by these provisions.
Affected major sources subject to the presumptive requirements of
25 Pa. Code section 129.97 that cannot comply with the applicable
presumptive NOX limits for any given emissions units, may
choose one of two alternative compliance options to establish RACT.
Such sources may either propose an alternative NOX emissions
limit based on averaging NOX emissions from multiple
sources, under 25 Pa. Code section 129.98, or else propose an
alternative source-specific emission NOX or VOC limit or
RACT requirement, under 25 Pa. Code section 129.99. In the NPRM, EPA
proposed to find that 25 Pa. Code section 129.98 is not sufficient to
address RACT for sources seeking averaging, without the specific
NOX averaging provisions for any affected sources being
submitted to EPA for SIP approval. Also, in the NPRM, EPA proposed to
find that 25 Pa. Code section 129.99 is not approvable by itself
without further information on specific sources, along with the source-
specific limits being submitted to EPA for SIP approval. By letter
dated September 22, 2017, PADEP committed to address the problems with
sections 129.98 and 129.99, as later identified in the NPRM, by
submitting any facility-specific terms and conditions regarding
emissions averaging to EPA as a source specific SIP revision and
submitting all source-specific RACT determinations under section 129.99
to EPA as SIP revisions within 12 months of EPA's final approval.
Therefore, EPA proposed to conditionally approve the provisions in 25
Pa. Code sections 129.98 and 129.99.
25 Pa. Code section 129.100 of the RACT II Rule establishes
compliance demonstration and recordkeeping requirements for affected
sources. Specific monitoring and testing requirements are established
for sources complying with presumptive RACT requirements under section
129.97. Recordkeeping requirements are established under section
129.100(d) for any affected sources under the RACT II Rule. In the
NPRM, EPA proposed to find that the compliance demonstration
requirements of 25 Pa. Code section 129.100 are necessary to implement
the RACT requirements of section 129.97. Also, additional compliance
demonstration requirements for NOX averaging or source-
specific RACT alternative limits will be established by PADEP or the
local permitting agency on a source-specific basis, in accordance with
sections 129.98 and 129.99, respectively, and consistent with section
129.100.
Any definitions related to the RACT II Rule are codified in 25 Pa.
Code section 121.1. The definitional changes in 25 Pa. Code section
121.1 are consistent with requirements in the RACT II Rule and thus we
proposed to approve under CAA section 110. EPA proposed that the
amended provisions in 25 Pa. Code section 121.1 and the adopted
provisions in 25 Pa. Code sections 129.96, 129.97, 129.100 of the RACT
II Rule are approvable, in accordance with requirements in CAA sections
110, 172, 182, and 184, and meet RACT for the affected major sources of
non-CTG VOC and major sources of NOX for both the 1997 and
2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS. EPA proposed conditional approval of 25 Pa.
Code sections 129.98 and 129.99 for the reasons stated in this section
and in the NPRM in more detail.
III. Public Comments and EPA's Reponses
During the comment period, EPA received relevant comments from
eight separate entities: The Connecticut Department of Energy and
Environmental Protection (CTDEEP), Friends of Pennsylvania (FOP), GenOn
Energy, Inc. (GenOn), the Maryland Department of Environment (MDE), the
State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP), the
New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYDEC),
Olympus Power, LLC (Olympus Power), and Sierra Club (SC). EPA also
received twelve irrelevant or non-adverse comments from anonymous
sources which will not be addressed here. The relevant comments and
EPA's response are discussed in this section of this rulemaking action.
A. Presumptive RACT
Comment 1: Several commenters argue that PADEP's presumptive limits
for certain source categories do not represent RACT. The commenters
state that more stringent NOX RACT limits have been adopted
by other states for coal-fired utility boilers, such as in New York and
Connecticut's rules. Commenters also suggest there are more stringent
limits adopted for combustion turbines and stationary internal
combustion turbines.
Response 1: EPA disagrees with the commenters that PADEP's
presumptive NOX RACT limits are not adequate as RACT. In
making RACT determinations, EPA has encouraged states to rely on
current EPA guidance, including CTGs and Alternative Control Techniques
(ACTs), \2\ and any other information available at the time of
development of the RACT SIP. See 78 FR 34178 at 34192. States have the
discretion to adopt more stringent limits as RACT for similar sources
when considering what emissions reductions of NOX and VOC
are necessary for timely attainment of the ozone NAAQS (i.e., beyond
RACT reductions).
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\2\ EPA uses CTGs to presumptively define VOC RACT while ACTs
describe available control technologies and their respective cost
effectiveness.
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Based on existing EPA guidance, EPA determined that the RACT II
Rule's presumptive requirements generally represent emission
limitations
[[Page 20276]]
achievable through implementation of reasonably available control
technologies considering technical and economic feasibility. In
addition, EPA reviewed NOX emissions limits in effect in
adjacent OTR states for certain source categories addressed by
Pennsylvania's rule for comparison purposes. EPA concluded that PADEP's
presumptive limits are comparable to other states' limits, denoting
that while some states may have adopted more stringent limits for
similar categories, other states have also adopted less stringent
controls. However, nothing in the CAA requires Pennsylvania's RACT
limits to be as stringent as neighboring states' limits.
Some states may have adopted more stringent controls for similar
source categories given needs for ozone reduction to achieve attainment
within their particular state or to go ``beyond RACT'' for the state's
internal reasons. For instance, it is also worth noting that
Connecticut's 22a-174-22e rule established NOX presumptive
limits that would become effective in two phases on June 1, 2018 for
2008 RACT requirements and June 1, 2022; and EPA only considered the
June 1, 2018 control requirements under this regulation to be adequate
and needed to meet 2008 ozone RACT.\3\ EPA continues to find that
Pennsylvania's presumptive NOX limits are reasonable for the
source categories evaluated for the reasons described in detail in our
NPRM and TSD. EPA's determination considered for each source category
the emission rates achieved by different NOX control
technologies as discussed in the guidance documents and summarized in
the TSD, and limits that other states have adopted to meet RACT.
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\3\ See 82 FR 16776. In addition, EPA notes that Connecticut has
areas in more severe nonattainment with the ozone NAAQS than
Pennsylvania and as such may need more NOX reductions.
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In addition, PADEP received similar comments from Connecticut and
New Jersey on its proposed RACT II Rule, asserting that each state had
adopted more stringent presumptive NOX limits for coal-fired
boilers than Pennsylvania. In its response, PADEP asserted that it
``reviewed and considered RACT regulations from various states when
evaluating what constitutes reasonably available control technology for
the types of sources affected by the final rulemaking.'' PADEP stated
that ``[s]ource categories in Pennsylvania are diverse, with numerous
sources having varying characteristics differing from those of the
other Mid-Atlantic States,'' and that it ``evaluated its source
categories and determined the presumptive RACT requirements to be
adequate.'' Further, after considering comments received, PADEP
determined that the NOX limits for coal-fired boilers with a
rated heat input equal to or greater than 250 million British Thermal
Units (MMBTU) per hour (MMBTU/hr) could be revised to reflect more
stringent RACT. PADEP revised the presumptive NOX limit from
coal-fired boilers that are circulating fluidized bed combustion units
(CFBs) from 0.20 pounds per MMBTU (lbs/MMBTU) to 0.16 lbs/MMBTU. PADEP
also adopted additional presumptive RACT requirements for coal-fired
boilers with selective non-catalytic reduction (SNCR) and selective
catalytic reduction (SCR), established in subparagraph
129.97(g)(1)(vii) and 129.97(g)(1)(viii). See PADEP's Response to
Comments Document, Comments #61 and #75.\4\ Thus, EPA believes that
PADEP considered and addressed technically and economically feasible
rates for RACT as well as considered rates established for RACT in
neighboring states in its development of the presumptive limits for the
RACT II Rule.
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\4\ PADEP's Response to Comments Document is available in the
docket for this rulemaking action at www.regulations.gov, Docket
#EPA-R03-OAR-2017-0290, document #EPA-R03-OAR-2017-0290-0004
(hereafter referred to as Docket item #0004).
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EPA recognizes that other states have adopted more stringent RACT
standards for source categories similar to those in Pennsylvania.
However, that fact alone is not sufficient to conclude that PADEP's
presumptive limits are not acceptable or reasonable as RACT. States
have the discretion to adopt more stringent limits as RACT for similar
sources when considering the emissions reductions of NOX and
VOC necessary for timely attainment of the ozone NAAQS, or to adopt
``beyond RACT'' limits for their own internal reasons. RACT
requirements for ozone do not require Pennsylvania to adopt the same
level of control as the most stringent state in the OTR or country;
what is instead required is emission limitations reflecting what is the
lowest achievable rate considering technological and economic
feasibility.\5\ Each state should set RACT limits considering what it
determines reasonable for its sources. In general, the actual cost,
emission reduction, and cost-effectiveness levels that an individual
source will experience in meeting the RACT requirements will vary from
unit to unit and from area to area. These factors will differ from unit
to unit because the sources themselves vary in age, condition, and
size, among other considerations and, in many cases, will differ from
state to state.\6\ EPA believes that PADEP determined presumptive
limits based on its evaluation of technical and economic feasibility of
controls and determination of what is reasonable for each source
category.\7\
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\5\ See December 9, 1976 memorandum from Roger Strelow,
Assistant Administrator for Air and Waste Management, to Regional
Administrators, ``Guidance for Determining Acceptability of SIP
Regulations in Non-Attainment Areas,'' and also 44 FR 53762;
September 17, 1979.
\6\ See EPA's March 16, 1994 Memorandum ``Cost-Effective
Nitrogen Oxides (NOX) Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT)''.
\7\ See 46 PaB 2037.
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Comment 2: One commenter argues that PADEP's presumptive limits for
municipal waste combustors (MWCs) do not represent RACT for several
reasons. The commenter argues that for mass burn waterwall type MWCs
using SNCR as a control, states have adopted more stringent
NOX limits of 150 parts per million by volume, dry basis
(ppmvd). Also, the commenter states that neither PADEP nor EPA
considered the NOX RACT limit of 150 ppmvd that was adopted
by NJDEP. The commenter argues that Pennsylvania should have
established NOX presumptive limits for MWCs for each type of
combustor technology, which is how states and EPA typically regulate
MWCs considering that NOX emissions vary by each technology.
Response 2: EPA disagrees with commenter's assertion that PADEP's
presumptive NOX RACT limit of 180 ppmvd for MWC is not
adequate as RACT. PADEP's NOx presumptive limit of 180 ppmvd at 7
percent (%) oxygen (O2) for MWC is reasonable as RACT, based
on NOX emission rates established by other states'
regulations and in EPA's New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) at 40
CFR part 60, subparts Cb and Eb. In the NSPS, EPA has established
NOX limits for MWCs ranging from 150 to 250 ppmvd at 7%
O2 after considering the best system of emissions reduction
(BSER). Also, as noted in the TSD, OTR states have adopted
NOX limits for MWCs ranging from 120 to 372 ppmvd at 7%
O2, with different averaging periods. PADEP's presumptive
RACT limit for MWCs is comparable to EPA's most stringent
NOX limit for MWCs in the NSPS and is comparable to the most
stringent limits adopted by other states given that factual scenarios
regarding technical and economic feasibility for controls for MWCs can
vary amongst states. EPA has no reason to believe that Pennsylvania did
not consider the existing controls at the MWCs, such as SNCR, when
determining RACT. For large MWCs with SNCR, other states have
established average daily NOX limits as
[[Page 20277]]
high as 250 ppmvd; thus, Pennsylvania's limit of 180 ppmvd is more
stringent for sources with SNCR than some states. Finally, EPA does not
believe that MWCs must be exclusively regulated by type of combustor.
In EPA's MWC regulations for NOX emission limits, EPA set
limits according to the type of combustor and also set a single
NOX limit that applies regardless of combustor type. See 40
CFR part 60, subparts Cb and Eb.
In determining RACT, states should also consider any information
received during the public comments. EPA reviewed the comments received
by PADEP during the state's public comment period on the RACT II Rule.
PADEP initially proposed that MWCs meet RACT by complying with the
limits EPA established in the NSPS at 40 CFR part 60, subpart Cb or
Subpart Eb, which range from 180 to 250 ppmvd at 7% O2. In
response to comments, PADEP re-evaluated NOX emissions data
from its MWCs and concluded that a NOX emission limit of 180
ppmvd at 7% O2, the lowest limit in the NSPS, was more
representative of actual emissions achieved across the fleet of MWCs in
Pennsylvania, and therefore revised the final rule to adopt this
NOX limit as presumptive RACT. See PADEP's Response to
Comments Document, Docket item #0004, Comments #121. Thus, EPA believes
Pennsylvania considered for MWCs technical and economic feasibility in
setting lowest achievable emission rate for MWCs by considering what
was achieved by MWCs within the Commonwealth and thus EPA finds the
presumptive RACT rate reasonable.
Finally, while EPA recognizes that other states have adopted more
stringent RACT standards for MWCs, that fact alone is not sufficient to
conclude that PADEP's presumptive limits are not acceptable or
reasonable as RACT as previously discussed. States have the discretion
to adopt more stringent limits as RACT for similar sources considering
the level of emissions reductions of NOX and VOC necessary
to timely attain the ozone NAAQS (i.e., beyond RACT reductions).
Requiring Pennsylvania to adopt the same level of control as the most
stringent state is not always necessary to satisfy the statutory
mandate for RACT. EPA continues to find that Pennsylvania's presumptive
NOX limit for MWCs is reasonable and represents RACT.
Comment 3: Several commenters state that coal-fired boilers with
SCR in Pennsylvania are capable of achieving lower rates than 0.12 lbs/
MMBTU. One commenter recommends that EPA disapprove the presumptive
limit for coal-fired boilers with SCR and impose a limit of 0.09 lbs/
MMBTU, while another commenter proposes a limit of 0.07 lbs/MMBTU. Both
commenters reference NOX actual emissions data included as
part of the comments and assert that NOX emission rates
lower than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU have been historically achieved by units in
Pennsylvania. One commenter included NOX emissions data that
represents the ``best performing ozone season emissions rate'' (in lbs/
MMBTU) for 13 coal-fired boilers in Pennsylvania equipped with SCR
during 2005 to 2017. The second commenter provided NOX
emissions data for monthly average NOX rates lower than
0.017 lbs/MMBTU during 2005 to 2017 for 10 coal-fired boilers in
Pennsylvania equipped with SCR.
Response 3: EPA disagrees that a more stringent NOX RACT
limit than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU is needed for Pennsylvania to meet RACT for
coal-fired boilers with SCR, based on the data provided and absent any
other technical justification to support a more stringent limit. The
NOX emissions data sets provided by the commenter are not
sufficient to conclude that a lower NOX emissions rate, such
as 0.07 or 0.09 lbs/MMBTU, is consistently achievable or sustainable to
make Pennsylvania's conclusions unreasonable. RACT involves an
evaluation of what is technically and economically feasible for
sources; thus, consideration of whether emission limits are
consistently achievable with controls that are cost effective and under
consideration is a reasonable consideration for Pennsylvania. EPA
acknowledges that historically, some individual coal-fired electric
generating units (EGUs) with SCR in Pennsylvania have been able to
achieve lower rates than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU as indicated in the commenters'
data. However, in evaluating fleet-wide NOX emissions and
determining an adequate achievable NOX RACT emissions limit
for all units in Pennsylvania, the lowest historical rate at any
particular unit at a specific point in time may not be a rate that can
be consistently achieved by other units. EPA does not require RACT
limits to be the lowest achievable emissions rate, but the lowest
achievable emission rates considering technical and economical
limitations.
In previous RACT guidance to states, EPA estimated that coal-fired
boilers with SCR are expected to generate NOX emissions
rates ranging from 0.10 to 0.25 lbs/MMBTU, depending on the type of
boiler and whether the boiler is equipped or not with additional
combustion controls.\8\ Also, as part of the 2016 Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR) Update, EPA determined that 0.10 lbs/MMBTU is an
achievable NOX emissions rate during ozone season for coal-
fired electric generating units (EGUs) with SCR.\9\ As part of the
CSAPR Update, EPA analyzed NOX reduction potential and
corresponding NOX ozone season emissions budgets at utility
boilers (i.e., EGUs) based on NOX emissions rates that can
be consistently achieved for the units with SCRs that were not
currently being optimized or which were currently idled at the time of
EPA's analysis (i.e., 2016). To determine the NOX emissions
rate that could be consistently achieved, EPA evaluated coal-fired
NOX ozone season emission data for EGUs from 2009 through
2015 and calculated an average NOX ozone season emissions
rate across the fleet of coal-fired EGUs with SCR for each of these
seven years. The 0.1 rate represents the third lowest fleet-wide
average coal-fired EGU NOX ozone season emissions rate for
coal-fired EGUs with SCR. It is worth noting that EPA considered and
rejected the lowest or second lowest ozone season NOX rates,
because it determined that these rates may reflect new SCR systems and/
or existing SCR systems with all new components (e.g., due to
simultaneous replacement of multiple layers of catalyst rather than
routine replacement of a single layer).\10\ Therefore, reliance alone
on the lowest historical emissions rate to evaluate the feasibility and
cost effectiveness of controls would likely overestimate the emissions
reductions and, consequently, underestimate the costs to restart idled
or unoptimized controls because some EGUs have significantly curtailed
their hours of operation, for various reasons, since the time when the
low levels of NOX emissions were achieved. Furthermore, SCR
controls can become less effective at NOX removal as they
age and may not be as efficient as when first installed, so the lowest
historically achieved rate is not always technically feasible. It is
not unreasonable for Pennsylvania to have considered a slightly
different NOX
[[Page 20278]]
emission rate for RACT considering such technological and economic
feasibility issues than what EPA has deemed achievable as an ozone
season-only NOX rate (0.10 lbs/MMBTU), when averaging over a
shorter time period such as 30 days.
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\8\ EPA's ACT Document ``NOX Emissions Document
``NOX Emissions from Utility Boilers'' (EPA-453/R-94-023;
March 1994). It is possible that further technological advancements
may have been proven to result in lower NOX emissions
levels than those reported in EPA's ACT.
\9\ See 81 FR 74504, 74543 (October 26, 2016) (addressing
interstate transport of ozone for 2008 ozone NAAQS).
\10\ Data from these new systems are not representative of
ongoing achievable NOX rates considering that some SCR
systems may have some broken-in components and routine maintenance
schedules entailing replacement of individual components.
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Even when considering lowest achievable rates, the data sets
provided by the commenters are not sufficient to support the assertion
that a NOX rate of 0.07 or 0.09 lbs/MMBTU, respectively, or
in fact any other rate lower than 0.12 lbs/MMBTU, is consistently
achievable in Pennsylvania. The first commenter, the Sierra Club, only
considered data for the limited instances where the lowest
NOX rates have been achieved and did not consider any other
periods during the 2003 to 2012 timeframe.\11\ For example, in Table 2
of Sierra Club's comments, the commenter presented the data from
multiple units at multiple facilities on a monthly basis. The commenter
then appeared to sort the data in terms of average NOX rate
from the lowest rate to the highest rate but limited the data to those
units and months where the average NOX rate was less than or
equal to 0.07 lbs/MMBTU. By doing this, the commenter does not take
into account the months where a unit is operating at a rate above 0.07
lbs/MMBTU skewing the data in a way that tends to show these units are
able to comply with a lower emissions limit at all times. Furthermore,
by sorting the data in this way, the commenter obscures important
information such as which facilities and units were evaluated, and the
range of years or months evaluated; thus, the incomplete data set
submitted by the commenter was not sufficient for EPA to determine that
Pennsylvania's RACT is not permissibly or reasonably set at 0.12 lb/
MMBtu.
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\11\ See Tables 2 and 3 of Sierra Club's comments, dated April
13, 2018.
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The second commenter, the MDE, provided the best performing ozone
season NOX emissions rates during 2005 to 2017, but only
considered emissions rates of certain facilities and certain units that
were specifically lower than 0.09 lbs/MMBTU. The NOX rates
provided by the commenter were ozone season averages, not 30-day
rolling averages. PADEP's coal-fired emission limit of 0.12 lbs/MMBTU
is required on a 30-day rolling basis and is applicable on a continuous
basis throughout the year (not just during ozone season). Therefore,
the data provided by MDE is not comparable to the form of
Pennsylvania's RACT emission limitation.
Finally, states must establish presumptive NOX emission
limits for RACT that are reasonably achievable for the entire fleet of
units within any source category. Both commenters only included data
below certain thresholds, so only some of the data from these units was
shown, making it hard to judge the overall representativeness of the
data. In its SIP revision, PADEP confirmed that the presumptive RACT
NOX limits for coal-fired boilers ``are achievable and
sustainable during the expected life of the affected unit using
technologies that are both technically and economically feasible.''
\12\ Absent any conflicting technical information, EPA continues to
believe that a NOX emissions rate of 0.12 lbs/MMBTU on a 30-
day rolling average, year-round, is reasonable and consistently
achievable by Pennsylvania's coal-fired boilers with SCR,
representative of SCR operation, and adequate for representing RACT for
these units based on Pennsylvania's analysis.
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\12\ See PADEP's Response to Comments Document, Docket item
#0004, Comment #10, Page 23.
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Comment 4: One commenter contends that EPA cannot approve the
provision in 25 Pa Code section 129.97(g)(1)(viii) applicable to coal-
fired boilers with SCR, because there is no adequate basis for the
minimum SCR operating temperature and the minimum operating temperature
of 600 [deg]F is contradicted by facts concerning SCR operation and
inlet temperature. The commenter argues that neither EPA nor
Pennsylvania have justified that a temperature-based exemption is
necessary or that 600 [deg]F is the correct threshold for such
exception. The commenter states that EPA did not mention this
``loophole'' in its proposal. The commenter also argues that EPA's
allowance of a temperature exemption is in direct contrast to prior
actions by EPA, in which EPA recognized that a minimum SCR operating
temperature varies significantly between EGUs and required utilities to
supply more technical data to support any accommodation of this
parameter. See 81 FR 21735 (April 13, 2016).
Response 4: EPA recognizes that neither Pennsylvania nor EPA
explained in detail why the minimum SCR temperature exemption in
127.97(g)(1)(viii) for coal-fired boilers is adequate for RACT.
However, EPA disagrees that our determination to accept this exemption
as part of Pennsylvania's presumptive limits for coal-fired combustion
units is arbitrary or capricious. As proposed in the NPRM, EPA finds
that Pennsylvania's determination to limit the application of the SCR
limit when inlet temperature is less than 600 [deg]F is consistent with
the optimum operating temperature of SCRs used generally by coal-fired
boilers and reasonable as part of the presumptive RACT limitation. The
temperature at the inlet to the SCR provides a good indication of
catalytic reduction performance, because it indicates that the gas
stream is at sufficient temperature to initiate reduction of
NOX on the catalyst. EPA finds that the NOX
reduction reaction of an SCR is effective only within a given
temperature range. If the inlet temperature (i.e., of the process gas
stream) is too high, it may cause NOX generation in the SCR
rather than NOX reductions. (Reference: https://www3.epa.gov/ttnchie1/mkb/documents/B_15a.pdf). The use of a catalyst
in the SCR process lowers the temperature range required to maximize
the NOX reduction reaction. At temperatures below the
specified range, the reaction kinetics decrease, and ammonia passes
through the SCR (ammonia slip), but there is little effect on nitrous
oxide (N2O) formation. At temperatures above the specified
range, nitrous oxide (N2O) formation increases and catalyst
sintering and deactivation occurs, but little ammonia slip occurs. It
has been proven that for the majority of commercial catalysts (metal
oxides), the typical operating temperatures for the SCR process range
from 480 [deg]F to 800 [deg]F (250-430 [deg]C). The rate of
NOX removal increases with temperature up to a maximum
between 700 [deg]F and 750 [deg]F (370-400 [deg]C). (Reference: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2017-12/documents/scrcostmanualchapter7thedition_2016revisions2017.pdf; see Reference
[46].)
In addition, EPA noted in its response to comments on the May 2016
updates to the Cost Control Manual for the SCR chapter that, while the
temperature of 480 [deg] to 800 [deg]F is a fairly wide range and is
dependent on catalyst type, this range is not reflective of general
optimum range. EPA concluded that 480 [deg] to 800 [deg]F is an
``operating'' range and that 700 [deg] to 750 [deg]F was an optimum
temperature range.\13\ It has been proven that the NOX
removal efficiency decreases more drastically when temperatures are
lower than the optimal operating range; at 600 [deg]F, the expected
NOX removal efficiency of an SCR has already decreased to
77% and at 550 [deg]F the removal efficiency drops to 63%. Therefore,
even if Pennsylvania were to lower the
[[Page 20279]]
temperature at which a SCR was to begin operating by 50 [deg]F, the
reductions achieved would be only slightly better than those achieved
with Low NOX burners with Overfired Air (40-60% reduction)
which is already required to be installed by the existing Pennsylvania
SIP. Thus, EPA finds Pennsylvania's selection of 600 [deg]F requirement
for coal-fired boiler RACT reasonable based on noted efficiencies with
SCRs at such temperatures and based on technical and economic
considerations from use of additional catalyst to achieve diminishing
NOX removal.
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\13\ See EPA, Air Pollution Cost Control Manual, Section 4--
NOX Controls, Chapter 2 at section 2.2.2. May 2016,
updated November 2017.
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In the NPRM, EPA recognized that the SCR limit is not applicable at
all times, given the temperature condition provided. Nevertheless, EPA
disagrees that this qualifies as a ``loophole'' of the regulation. As
discussed in the TSD in support of our proposed action, any affected
boiler with SCR or SNCR is also required to comply at all times with
the boiler type limits in section 129.97(g)(1)(vi), which in practice
would be applicable in any instances where the SCR or SNCR is not in
operation. For instance, a coal-fired boiler that has an SCR in place
would be subject in practice to two sets of RACT NOX limits:
(1) The SCR limit of 0.12 lbs/MMBTU when the inlet temperature to the
control is equal to or greater than 600 [deg]F; and (2) the boiler type
limit (0.16, 0.35, or 0.40 lbs/MMBTU depending on type of boiler) at
any other times when the inlet temperature to the control is less than
600 [deg]F. EPA finds that this control approach is practical and
acceptable to satisfy RACT for boilers with SCR and SNCR, as it ensures
applicability of RACT year-round, while requiring the lowest
NOX emissions limit considering the technical feasibility of
existing NOX controls. As stated in our TSD for the NPRM, in
our engineering judgment and based upon acknowledged technical
limitations of SCR and SNCR, EPA agrees with PADEP's determination that
SCR or SNCR cannot result in lower NOX emission rates at
those lower operating temperatures. See page 21 of the TSD.
Comment 5: The commenter claims that section 129.97(g)(1)(viii) of
the RACT II Rule has allowed Pennsylvania utilities since 2017 to use
the minimum temperature-exemption for coal-fired boilers with SCR to
intentionally avoid operating controls at night. The commenter provides
NOX emissions and heat input rating from one particular EGU
coal-fired boiler, Cheswick, and alleges that it depicts a typical
practice and typical emission rate from the coal-fired EGU boilers with
SCR in Pennsylvania subject to the RACT II Rule.
Response 5: As discussed in the prior response, the RACT II Rule's
temperature exception in section 129.97(g)(1)(viii) does not allow
coal-fired boilers equipped with SCR to avoid all NOX
controls. Although any coal-fired boiler with SCR is not subject to the
0.12 lbs/MMBTU RACT emission limitation when inlet temperature is below
600 [deg]F, these boilers must still comply at all times with the
presumptive limits in section 129.97(g)(1)(vi), which vary based upon
the furnace configuration or boiler type.
The Cheswick unit is a tangentially coal-fired boiler equipped with
low NOX burners (LNB) with separated overfire air (SOFA) and
SCR. As such, the unit is required to comply with two presumptive
NOX limits under the RACT II Rule: 0.12 lbs/MMBTU when inlet
temperature to the SCR is above 600 [deg]F, and 0.35 lbs/MMBTU at all
other times. See section 129.97(g)(1)(vii) and (vi)(B). EPA notes that
a reduction of heat input at night for Cheswick is not unusual for a
coal-fired EGU boiler as the reduction in heat input can be driven by
lower demand for electricity; thus reduced heat input could lead to
temperatures below 600 [deg]F and below what is optimal for SCR
operation.
Comment 6: One commenter claims Pennsylvania's rule does not
require a reporting requirement for the exhaust temperature of units
equipped with SCR, and that without this information the public will
not be able to know whether or not such units are complying with the
applicable emission limits. The commenter claims the lack of this
reporting requirement renders calculating compliance with the 30-day
average difficult and, overall, violates the CAA's requirement that
RACT be enforceable.
Response 6: EPA disagrees with the commenter. Although PADEP's RACT
II Rule does not establish RACT-specific reporting requirements for
each source category, Pennsylvania has the generic recordkeeping
requirements at section 129.100(d) requiring that a source subject to
sections 129.96-129.99 ``keep records to demonstrate compliance with
Sec. Sec. 129.96-129.99 that include sufficient data and calculations
to demonstrate that the requirements of Sec. Sec. 129.96-129.99 are
met.'' See 25 Pa Code 129.100(d). EPA finds that the compliance
demonstration requirements of 129.100(d) require sources to keep
sufficient records to demonstrate meeting RACT limits. PADEP may
establish more specific requirements for individual sources, as needed,
through the operating permit process.
Comment 7: One commenter argues that EPA should disapprove the PA
RACT II Rule's provision in section 129.97(g)(1)(ix) concerning coal-
fired boilers with SNCR, based on the inadequate information provided
as part of the ``illegal and improperly submitted'' supplemental
documentation. The commenter asserts that PADEP's supplemental
documentation does not justify why PADEP did not impose an emission
limitation for coal-fired boilers in Pennsylvania, but simply
identifies the six Circulating Fluidized Bed (CFB) boilers with SNCR in
Pennsylvania subject to this requirement. Commenter asserts that in an
attempt to support that the 0.16 lbs/MMBTU presumptive limit for any
coal-fired CFB boiler is also adequate for coal-fired boilers with
SNCR, PADEP argues that CFB boilers without SCR have been able to
achieve lower NOX emission reductions than CFBs with SNCR.
Commenter also points to several EPA guidance documents supporting that
additional reductions can be achieved at EGU boilers through operation
of SNCR.
Response 7: EPA disagrees with the commenter regarding the RACT
emission limitation for coal-fired boilers with SNCR. As explained in
the NPRM and TSD, such boilers are subject to emission limitations
(including a numeric limitation and a requirement to operate SNCR) that
Pennsylvania set considering technical and economic feasibility. Thus,
EPA finds these emission limitations reasonable as explained in more
detail in the NPRM and TSD. Sufficient information is available to
support this conclusion--all coal-fired boilers with SNCR are required
to comply with both the numeric emission limitations of section
129.97(g)(1)(vi) and the work practice standard under 129.97(g)(1)(ix).
In addition, Pennsylvania considered limits from other states and the
current limits in place at these sources. Furthermore, EPA does not
agree that the supplemental September 2017 submittal from PADEP is
illegal or was improperly submitted. PADEP's September 26, 2017
submittal included Pennsylvania's commitment to submit any facility-
wide or system-wide NOX averaging plans to EPA for SIP
approval and to submit to EPA for SIP approval any permits issued under
section 129.99 to support the conditional approval of 129.98 and 129.99
for the SIP. This commitment in Pennsylvania's supplement meets
requirements for a commitment under CAA section 110(k)(4). The
commenter has not provided sufficient information as to
[[Page 20280]]
why Pennsylvania's supplemental information is ``illegal.'' See
Response to Comment #34. Nevertheless, EPA has sufficient information
in the TSD and in the docket generally to support our conclusion that
Pennsylvania's RACT II Rule is reasonable including the RACT limitation
for coal-fired boilers with SNCR as the Rule includes a work practice
requirement as an emission limitation (as the Rule requires operation
of the SNCR) as well as a numeric restriction on emissions as an
emission limitation in section 129.97(g)(1)(vi). See also Response to
Comment #8.
Comment 8: Commenters allege that EPA cannot approve the
presumptive provision contained in 129.97(g)(1)(ix) for coal-fired
boilers with SNCR because the provision lacks a numeric emission limit.
One commenter added the rule also failed to have a requirement to
optimize the existing SNCR control. Another commenter argued that
Pennsylvania should have been able to set a numeric emission limit
because such limits exist for other similar units with SNCR in place
and a numeric emission limit is required to meet EPA's definition of
``RACT.''
Response 8: RACT generally requires the establishment of ``emission
limitations.'' Since the 1970's, EPA has consistently defined ``RACT''
as the lowest emission limit that a particular source is capable of
meeting by the application of the control technology that is reasonably
available considering technological and economic feasibility.\14\
However, EPA disagrees that an emission limitation is required to be
numeric to meet RACT for all source categories. CAA section 302(k)
defines an emissions limitation as ``a requirement established by the
State or the Administrator which limits the quantity, rate, or
concentration of emissions of air pollutants on a continuous basis
including any requirement relating to the operation or maintenance of a
source to assure continuous emission reduction, and any design,
equipment, work practice or operational standard promulgated under this
chapter.'' The requirement of 25 Pa. Code 129.97(g)(1)(ix), to operate
the system (i.e., coal-fired boilers with SNCR) with the injection of
reagents, qualifies as a work practice standard or an operational
requirement; thus, the provision meets the definition of ``emission
limitation'' under CAA section 307. Thus, Pennsylvania has established
a RACT emission limitation for coal-fired boilers with SNCR. In
addition, these boilers are also subject to boiler type presumptive
RACT limits (0.16, 0.35, 0.40, or 0.45 lbs/MMBTU) in 129.97(g)(v) and
(vi). Thus, coal-fired units are subject to both numerical limits and
work practice standards which reasonably establish RACT as an
``emission limitation'' considering technical and economic feasibility.
EPA also disagrees with the commenter's assertion that EPA should
require language to ensure optimum operation of SNCR controls because
this is not required for RACT-level control. EGUs are required to
optimize emission control for NOx (including SCR and SNCR) for
interstate ozone transport requirements for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. See
83 FR 50444 (October 5, 2018) (Response to Clean Air Act Section 126(b)
Petitions from Delaware and Maryland) (stating EGU sources would have
already optimized emission controls like SCR and SNCR when EPA
finalized the CSAPR Update in 2016 to address interstate transport of
ozone (81 FR 745504 (October 26, 2016)).
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\14\ See December 9, 1976 memorandum from Roger Strelow,
Assistant Administrator for Air and Waste Management, to Regional
Administrators, ``Guidance for Determining Acceptability of SIP
Regulations in Non-Attainment Areas,'' and also 44 FR 53762;
September 17, 1979.
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B. NOX Averaging
Comment 9: The commenter asserts that Pennsylvania's NOX
averaging formula in section 129.98(e) does not adequately set an
alternative emissions limit, as required by this provision in 129.98.
The commenter argues that the allowable NOX mass emissions
defined by the formula (Eiallowable) in 129.98 should be
``fixed,'' rather than changing with operating scenarios. The commenter
further requests that EPA disapprove section 129.98 because this
formula is unenforceable due to the unspecified method of calculation,
and because PADEP's interpretation of these provisions provided as part
of the supplemental document is clearly different from the plain
language of the rule.
Response 9: As discussed in the NPRM and TSD, EPA identified
deficiencies in the NOX averaging provisions of the RACT II
Rule including the need for enforceable conditions. As previously
discussed, Pennsylvania committed in the September 26, 2017 letter ``.
. . to submit the terms and conditions dealing with emission averaging
to EPA as facility specific SIP revisions to address EPA's concerns.''
September 26, 2017 submittal, p. 2. EPA is conditionally approving
129.98 under CAA 110(k) based on this commitment. Thus, EPA agrees to a
limited extent with the comment regarding whether 129.98 adequately
established how to compute the alternative NOX limit. The
submission of alternative NOX limits and relevant compliance
demonstration requirements for approval into the SIP would allow EPA to
determine if each NOX averaging plan and underlying
alternative NOX limit is adequate for RACT. In addition, any
alternative limits provided by PADEP would need to be enforceable to
obtain EPA approval into the SIP.
EPA does not agree with commenter that for the alternative
NOX emissions limit to be adequate and/or enforceable, it
must necessarily be a ``fixed'' limit. EPA has, in the past, approved
emission limitations based on equations where certain variables within
the equation change based on various aspects, such as type of fuel
being used, operating modes, or other specific
conditions.15 16 EPA believes that, as long as all possible
variables to be used are properly identified and the equation is
sufficiently constrained, the equation can be used to establish an
alternative emission limit and that limit can be enforceable.
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\15\ See Air Plan Approval; Georgia; Miscellaneous Revisions,
July 28, 2017 (82 FR 35106); specifically, Rule 391-3-1-.02(2)(e)
which establishes allowable particulate matter emission limits for
sources based on process input weight.
\16\ See Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation
Plans; Montana; Regional Haze Federal Implementation Plan, September
12, 2017 (82 FR 42738); specifically, the best available retrofit
technology (BART) particulate matter emission rate for the Trident
cement kiln which is based on the concentration of particulate
matter, volumetric flow rate of the effluent gas, and total kiln
clinker production.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding the comment that Pennsylvania's interpretation of the
enforceability of averaging provisions in 129.98 is somehow different
in the September 2017 letter to EPA than what is in the terms of 25 Pa.
Code 129.98, EPA has addressed the enforceability issues relating to
averaging in 129.98 through the conditional approval and through
Pennsylvania's commitment to submit all such plans to EPA for SIP
approval. Pennsylvania's interpretation in the September 2017 letter
regarding terms in 129.98 is not germane as EPA is conditionally
approving 129.98 based on Pennsylvania's commitment to submit averaging
plans to EPA for SIP approval in response to EPA's identified
deficiencies in the NPRM regarding averaging.
Comment 10: The commenter identified various concerns with the
equation provided in section 129.98(e) to estimate an alternative limit
for NOX emissions averaging. First, the commenter argues
that the equation is unenforceable because it does not properly explain
how to calculate
[[Page 20281]]
allowable NOX mass emissions for each affected emission
unit. The commenter also indicates that if PADEP allows the use of
actual heat input to calculate both actual NOX emissions
(Eiactual) and allowable NOX emissions
(Eiallowable), the source will never be found in violation
of the NOX averaging plan, as mathematically both sides of
the equation would increase proportionally.
Response 10: EPA agrees with the commenter to the extent that EPA
already identified concerns with the equation provided in 129.98(e)
given its lack of specificity. These concerns led to our conditionally
approving 129.98 based upon Pennsylvania's commitment to submit to EPA
for inclusion in the SIP permits which will employ these NOX
averaging provisions. In order for section 129.98 to become fully
approved, PADEP must provide to EPA for approval into the SIP the
alternative emission limits adopted under section 129.98 and related
compliance demonstration requirements.
EPA does not have sufficient information to assess if actual heat
input will in fact be used in calculating both actual and allowable
NOX emissions. Eiactual is defined in section
129.98(e) as ``the actual NOx mass emissions, including emissions
during start-ups, shutdowns and malfunctions, for air contamination
source i on a 30-day rolling basis.'' (italics added).
Eiactual cannot represent the ``actual NOx mass emissions''
if the actual heat input is not used in the calculation, so using
allowable heat input in calculating actual emissions would be
illogical. EPA also believes that PADEP intends to use actual heat
inputs when calculating Eiallowable, along with the
presumptive RACT emission rate (or more stringent emission rate
applicable to the source). PADEP's September 26, 2017 commitment
submittal states that ``[t]he allowable mass emissions are calculated
each hour using the presumptive NOx RACT emission limit (or more-
stringent limit, if applicable) and the actual heat input from the
Department certified CEMS.'' P. 1 (italics added). However, the RACT
regulations do not expressly specify whether actual heat input or
allowable heat input will be used in calculating
Eiallowable. This is one of several identified concerns
which led to EPA's conditional approval of section 129.98, and
Pennsylvania's commitment to submit NOX averaging plans for
approval into the SIP, with each plan including an enforceable
alternative emissions limit and compliance demonstration requirements.
Comment 11: One commenter requests EPA require that NOX
averaging emissions limitations established under 25 Pa. Code section
129.98(e) be based on emissions rates (lbs/MMBTU), instead of mass
emissions (lbs).
Response 11: EPA disagrees with commenter's request because there
is no requirement in the CAA that RACT emission limitations for
NOX averaging be based on emissions rates, as opposed to
NOX mass emissions. Although EPA allows the use of
NOX averaging to meet RACT for NOX sources, no
specific additional regulatory requirements concerning how to implement
a NOX averaging scheme were adopted by EPA. Therefore, EPA
believes that PADEP should have flexibility in choosing how to express
the NOX averaging limits, as long as PADEP can demonstrate
that the same level of RACT emission reductions will be achieved.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See 80 FR 12279.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 12: The commenter asserts that the system-wide and
facility-wide averaging equations do not set an ``alternative
limitation,'' which commenter claims is required by the plain language
of the RACT II Rule. Commenter asserts that the Rule requires
facilities to ``calculate the alternative facility-wide or system-wide
NOX RACT emission limit . . . .'' Commenter further states
that only the equation in 129.98(e) characterizes averaging as a method
for demonstrating compliance, while this is not the plain reading of
the remainder of section 129.98.
Response 12: Because the Commenter did not cite to the particular
section or sentence of the RACT II Rule which is being interpreted or
quoted, EPA can only use its best judgment to surmise that the language
in section 129.98(e) is the source of the quoted language. Section
129.98(e) states ``[t]he owner or operator shall calculate the
alternative facility-wide or system-wide NOX RACT emissions
limitation using a 30-day rolling average for the air contamination
sources included in the application for the operating permit or plan
approval, . . . .'' There is no other language in section 129.98 which
is similar to the Commenter's quote. EPA believes that the term
``emission limitation'' in section 129.98(e) should be interpreted as
``Eiallowable,'' and that the calculation of
Eiallowable results in a total NOX mass emission
limitation for all of the sources included in the averaging plan, while
commenter is expecting the averaging plan to have an overall emission
rate limit, expressed as lbs NOX/million Btu heat input, for
the sources. When section 128.98(e) is considered in its entirety,
rather than considering just a portion of one sentence, there is no
conflict between the equations in 129.98(e) and the language of Section
129.98 overall. As discussed in the March 14, 2018 NPRM, EPA proposed
to conditionally approve the NOX averaging provisions in
section 129.98 given concerns about the specificity of the equation in
129.98(e) and the compliance demonstration requirements within the
rule. In this action, EPA is finalizing that conditional approval based
on Pennsylvania's commitment to submit permits with NOX
averaging to EPA for SIP approval. Section 129.98(e) states that an
alternative limit calculated by the owner or operator must be in the
operating permit modification or plan approval, and section 129.98(g)
requires that the application for such an averaging plan should
contain, ``. . . methods for demonstrating compliance. . . .'' The SIP
submittal should therefore address the emission limitation and the
compliance demonstration issues.
Comment 13: One commenter states that an averaging plan is a method
of demonstrating compliance with presumptive NOX limits in
section 129.97, allowing sources to demonstrate compliance as a group
of emissions sources rather than as individual emissions sources.
Response 13: EPA agrees that sources can use section 129.98 to
apply for an averaging plan covering multiple units or sources.
However, EPA does not agree that the averaging plan or equation in
section 129.98 will directly show compliance with the presumptive RACT
limits applicable to each source in the plan. The averaging plan or
equation in section 129.98 is instead intended to demonstrate that the
resulting NOX emissions using a 30-day rolling average would
not be greater than NOX emissions from the group of included
sources if they each complied with the applicable presumptive
NOX RACT emissions limit in section 129.97. Section
129.98(g) requires that the application for such an averaging plan
should contain, ``methods for demonstrating compliance. . . .'' The
fact that the application must have a method for determining compliance
shows that section 129.98 does not, in its text, have a method for
determining compliance with section 129.97. The presumptive limits in
section 129.97 otherwise applicable to each source must be used as a
factor in the Eiallowable equation (unless a lower emission
limit applies to a source) in 129.98 but will not be used on the
Eiactual side of the equation. Instead, actual mass
emissions from each source in the plan, as determined by CEMS or other
means, on any given day will be added together on
[[Page 20282]]
the Eiactual side of the equation. Thirty days of
Eiactual daily mass emissions will be added together and
divided by 30, and 30 days of daily Eiallowable mass
emissions will be added together and divided by 30. The resultant 30-
day average of Eiactual emissions on any given day must be
less than or equal to the 30-day average of Eiallowable
emissions on the same day. It will not be possible under this averaging
scheme to determine whether the individual hourly emission rate of each
source/unit met the presumptive RACT limit in section 129.97 for that
source. Thus, the provisions of 129.98 provide the formula to set the
alternative NOX emission limitation for sources who will
comply with the alternative NOX emission limitation in lieu
of the presumptive rates in 129.97.
As previously discussed, EPA is concerned that section 129.98 lacks
a definitive method for demonstrating how the 30-day rolling average
mass NOX emission limitation allowed by 129.98 will be less
than or equal to the NOX emissions that would have been
emitted if all the sources complied with the source specific RACT
limits of 129.97, so PADEP has committed to submit these averaging
plans to EPA for approval into the SIP. The adequacy of the compliance
demonstration provisions will be assessed through both the state public
notice process and EPA's review of such SIP revisions. Thus, EPA
disagrees with the commenter that any of the assertions prevent EPA
from conditionally approving 129.98 as part of Pennsylvania's RACT.
Comment 14: One commenter asserts that PADEP's NOX
averaging provisions in section 129.98 do not require the establishment
of an alternative NOX emissions limit; and therefore, there
is no need to submit averaging plans as separate SIP revisions to EPA.
Response 14: EPA disagrees that Pennsylvania's NOX
averaging provisions do not require establishment of an alternative
NOX emission limit. As discussed in the March 14, 2018 NPRM,
EPA proposed to determine that the NOX averaging equation in
section 129.98(e) does '' . . . not clearly specify how to properly
establish an alternative RACT limit.'' 83 FR 11160. To do so, EPA would
need to know, at the least, what facilities and units are involved in
each plan, the applicable limits in each plan, if multiple fuels are
used, or any other information necessary to calculate
``Eiallowable.'' EPA also expressed concerns about the lack
of compliance demonstration requirements in the rule. In addressing
these deficiencies, PADEP committed to submit as SIP revisions any
alternative emissions limits and compliance demonstration requirements
approved under section 129.98. EPA has proposed approval of section
129.98 with the condition that PADEP meets this commitment to submit
additional enforceable provisions for approval into the SIP during
which time the alternative NOX emissions limit will be
clearly established.
Comment 15: Two commenters allege that Pennsylvania's rule provides
system-wide or facility-wide NOX averaging as a means of
demonstrating compliance with the applicable emission limits included
in the rule; and requests EPA to review the averaging provisions
contained in EPA's Acid Rain Program (at 40 CFR 76.11) and the Mercury
and Air Toxics Rule (MATS rule) (at 40 CFR 63.10009) that allow
averaging as a means of demonstrating compliance.
Response 15: EPA disagrees with the commenters that Pennsylvania's
rule provides averaging as a means of determining compliance. As
previously stated, Pennsylvania's rule specifically directs the owner
or operator to determine the ``alternative facility-wide or system-wide
NOX RACT emission limitation.'' This language requiring the
owner/operator to determine an alternative emission limitation shows
that the provisions of 25 Pa. Code 129.98 are not a means of
demonstrating compliance but rather a means to determine an alternative
emission limitation applicable to the corresponding facility or system.
Furthermore, section 76.11(a)(3) of the Acid Rain Program
regulations require that each unit in an averaging plan must have a
contemporaneous annual emission limitation, and, also requires that
specific information be submitted that is not specified in section
129.98, such as annual heat input limits and an alternative annual
emission limitation for each unit. The equation is only one part of the
Acid Rain Program provisions, and if PADEP's section 129.98 regulation
included the additional information and other requirements of the Acid
Rain Program regulations, the equation might present an acceptable
option.
Regarding the MATS rule equation at 40 CFR 63.10009, EPA notes
there are many additional limitations in that section which are not
present in section 129.98, such as groupings of similar sources, as
well as multiple equations (6) specifically geared toward each
grouping. In the absence of further explanation by the commenter as to
how these equations can be usefully applied to the section 129.98
averaging program, EPA does not see the MATS rule averaging scheme as
useful to resolving EPA's concerns.
Comment 16: One commenter disagrees with EPA's interpretation that
section 129.98 requires the establishment of alternative emissions
limitations for individual sources. The commenter urges EPA to
recognize that the presumptive limits of section 129.97 are being used
to establish RACT compliance requirements, including the averaging
provisions, and that therefore these requirements should meet RACT. The
commenter asserts that the NOX averaging provisions in
section 129.98 should be adequate for approval into the SIP, because
EPA has found that the multiple fuel presumptive provision of section
129.97(g)(4) is approvable. The commenter contends that the multiple
fuel presumptive provision is similar to the NOX averaging
provisions, as they both establish weighted averaged limits. The
commenter also claims that EPA's proposed rulemaking action makes the
RACT II Rule costlier to implement and comply with and less flexible.
Response 16: The fact that EPA has approved the source specific
RACT limits in section 129.97 does not mean that an averaging plan
which uses those limits to calculate an alternative limit is
necessarily approvable. EPA must clarify that, as proposed in our NPRM,
we do not expect new unit-specific emission limits (other than the
unit-specific limit required by presumptive RACT) to be established for
each unit covered under a system-wide or facility-wide NOX
averaging plan, but rather that an alternative limit must be determined
for each plan, which would cover the non-complying unit and any other
participating units. This is required by PADEP under 25 Pa. Code
section 129.98(e): ``The owner or operator shall calculate the
alternative facility-wide or system-wide NOX RACT emissions
limitation using a 30-day rolling average for the air contamination
sources included in the application (. . .) by using the following
equation to sum the emissions for all of the sources included in the
NOX emissions averaging plan.''
EPA agrees with the commenter that the presumptive emission limits
in section 129.97 are used in developing the alternative NOX
limit under an averaging plan, as required by section 129.98(e);
however, EPA disagrees that they are used to establish RACT compliance
requirements. As plainly stated in section 129.98(e), the owner or
operator shall calculate an alternative facility-wide or system-wide
NOX emission limitation. Second, according to section
129.98(a), the averaging provisions of section 129.98 may only
[[Page 20283]]
be utilized if one or more sources covered under such a plan are unable
to meet the presumptive limits under section 129.97, and this unit
would be in violation of the applicable NOX limit in section
129.97.
EPA disagrees with the commenter's assertion that the averaging
provisions of section 129.98(e) are similar to those under the multiple
fuel firing provisions in section 129.97(g)(4). The mathematical
formula in section 129.97(g)(4) is a weighted average formula where a
value is computed resulting from the multiplication of each component
by a factor reflecting its frequency of use. The formula in section
129.98 computes an alternative limit that is not a weighted average or
even a mathematical average, as the section's title may imply, but a
summation of all NOX mass emissions from each unit covered
under the averaging plan. Thus, the two formulae described by the
commenter are not similar in nature and are not comparable. Also, the
most substantive difference between these two requirements is that the
NOX averaging provisions of section 129.98 require an owner
or operator to establish an alternative limit covering multiple units,
including any NOX units unable to meet presumptive RACT and
any other participating units under such averaging plan; whereas
section 129.97(g)(4) establishes a presumptive RACT requirement for a
single emissions unit. This need to establish an alternative limit
under the variable ``Eiallowable'' in the equation of
section 129.98(e) is one of the main differences between the two
provisions.
Furthermore, EPA identified several deficiencies in the averaging
provisions of section 129.98 that prevent its full approval, but those
deficiencies were not present in the multiple fuel provisions of
129.97(g)(4). Namely, EPA found that the averaging provisions of
section 129.98 do not clearly specify how to properly establish an
alternative RACT limit (under the variable ``Eiallowable'')
and do not specify sufficient compliance demonstration requirements for
sources seeking to comply with these provisions. Therefore, these
provisions were not found adequate to meet RACT. EPA disagrees with the
commenter's presumption that if section 129.97(g)(4) meets RACT, so
should section 129.98.
Finally, although the commenter claims that EPA's proposed action
raises the cost for affected sources with regard to implementation and
compliance of the RACT II Rule, the commenter failed to specify how
EPA's action would increase costs on facilities choosing system-wide or
facility-wide averaging. Given the lack of specificity and lack of
analysis on how EPA's action requiring Pennsylvania to submit plans for
SIP approval raises costs on sources, EPA provides no further answer.
Comment 17: The commenter argues that NOX averaging
plans under section 129.98 must provide explicit emissions limits for
individual emissions units consistent with the reasonably achievable
controls, and further recommends using historical achievable
NOX rates as the basis for establishing these limits.
Furthermore, the commenter asserts that the averaging plan must show
that the resulting NOX emission limits from the averaging
plans are more stringent than the presumptive limits that would be in
effect otherwise.
Response 17: EPA disagrees with the commenter on each of its
assertions. First, EPA disagrees that averaging must provide explicit
emissions limitations for individual sources. In fact, under its
longstanding RACT policy, EPA has allowed NOX averaging,
recognizing that it would allow states the flexibility of establishing
RACT without requiring the imposition of source-specific controls or
consequently source-specific emissions limits. EPA has allowed
averaging for RACT purposes, as long as the state can achieve
NOX reductions less than or equal to those that would be
achieved if individual RACT emission rates were required for each
individual source. Limitations on individual sources would restrict
flexibility for meeting RACT requirements.
EPA disagrees that averaging must result in more stringent
NOX limitations than the presumptive limits, as this is not
required under the longstanding EPA provisions permitting averaging.
See South Coast Air Quality Mgmt. Dist. v. EPA, 882 F.3d 1138, 1154
(D.C. Cir. 2018) (addressing averaging within EPA's ozone
implementation rule). EPA finds that section 129.98 requires that the
overall level of NOX emissions from units participating in
an averaging plan should be less than or equal to the total
NOX emissions which would have been emitted if each source
complied with its applicable presumptive RACT limit. See 25 Pa. Code
129.98(e).
Comment 18: The commenter urges EPA to deny the approval of any
NOX averaging plan as a revision to the SIP, if the plan
does not provide sufficient justification for demonstrating that an
emissions unit cannot meet the applicable presumptive RACT limit.
Response 18: EPA concurs with commenter that section 129.98(a)
requires PADEP to determine that the facility is not able to comply
with presumptive RACT in order to allow a source to comply with the
provisions in 129.98. Pennsylvania has committed to submitting permits
with the NOX averaging plans to EPA for SIP approval and EPA
will review whether sources demonstrated compliance with requirements
in 129.98 when such plans are before EPA for SIP approval.
Comment 19: One commenter asserts that although NOX
averaging applies to NOX emitting units that cannot comply
with the presumptive limits, section 129.98 does not impose any
detailed requirements for showing that an affected NOX
emissions unit cannot comply with the presumptive NOX RACT
limits. Commenter argues that this lack of specific requirements allows
the owner or operator of the affected emissions units to make this
determination without providing any justification. Commenter further
suggests such demonstration should be based on the evaluation of past
performance for the non-complying unit.
Response 19: EPA agrees that section 129.98 does not specifically
describe how a source must demonstrate that it is unable to meet the
applicable presumptive limit, in order to qualify for averaging under
section 129.98. However, the inability to meet the limit remains a
requirement within 129.98 for Pennsylvania to evaluate before granting
the alternative NOX plan. In addition, based on
Pennsylvania's September 2017 commitment to ``submit the terms and
conditions dealing with emissions averaging to EPA as facility specific
SIP revisions,'' EPA will review the terms of each plan and whether the
provisions in 129.98 were met. See Pennsylvania's September 26, 2017
submittal, p .2.
Comment 20: One commenter states that PADEP's averaging provisions
allow unbounded discretion to the owner or operator in choosing which
units may be able to participate in an averaging plan, which then
allows inappropriate averaging. The commenter also contends that such
discretion would allow, for example, that coal-fired boilers with
existing controls, such as SCR or SNCR, avoid fully optimizing existing
controls; or that averaging occurs across different fuel types.
Response 20: EPA agrees in part with the commenter's statement that
section 129.98 grants the owner or operator the ability to determine
which units should be averaged together; however, EPA disagrees with
commenter's proposition that such discretion should cause EPA to
disapprove this SIP revision. EPA believes that such discretion is
consistent with EPA's RACT policy, which allows states to use averaging
for RACT purposes as long as the level of NOX reductions due
to averaging is
[[Page 20284]]
equivalent to, or greater than, the level of reductions otherwise
achieved by individual application of RACT. As noted in EPA's responses
above, Section 129.98(a) requires that an owner or operator seeking to
use NOX averaging must first show that one (or more) units
to be included in the averaging plan cannot comply with the presumptive
RACT limits applicable to the unit before an averaging plan can be
considered. In addition, system-wide averaging is only allowed among
sources under common control of the same owner or operator and located
within the same ozone nonattainment area. Further, section 129.98(c)
requires that the other sources participating in a NOX
averaging plan are subject to a NOX emissions limitation
under section 129.97. Provided these conditions are met, the owner or
operator of an affected source (i.e., the source with a non-compliant
unit) may select which and how many other emissions units would be
included in the averaging plan. PADEP has also stated as part of the
SIP submittal that an owner or operator of an affected source complying
with a NOX averaging plan must demonstrate that the
NOX emissions for other units included in the averaging plan
are below the applicable limits in section 129.97 in order to provide
the cushion for averaging the excess emissions of the noncomplying
source.\18\ Thus, the discretion provided under section 129.98 to
choose which units participate in a NOX averaging plan is
not unbounded and would not allow ``inadequate averaging,'' as the
commenter proposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See PADEP's Responses to Comments Document, Comments #137,
#138, #142, and #194.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA recognizes that PADEP's NOX averaging may allow
units to avoid the installation of additional controls or optimization
of existing controls. However, nothing in the CAA, its regulations or
EPA guidance requires installation of additional controls or
optimization of existing controls to meet ozone RACT requirements. By
allowing states to use NOX averaging, EPA intended to
provide additional flexibility in establishing RACT, as long as RACT
level reductions are achieved for the nonattainment area. EPA does not
believe that averaging across combustion units firing different fuels
is inappropriate, nor does the commenter provide any analysis
supporting this statement.
Comment 21: One commenter asserts that the RACT II Rule, as
written, limits system-wide averaging to areas designated nonattainment
under CAA section 107, but that PADEP appears to be considering the
rest of the Commonwealth as one giant nonattainment area. The commenter
argues that because the RACT II Rule does not have its own definition
of ``nonattainment area,'' Pennsylvania's general definition in section
121.1 applies. Section 121.1 defines ``nonattainment area'' as those
areas designated by EPA under CAA section 107.
Response 21: Pennsylvania's RACT II Rule allows emissions averaging
to take place under two specific scenarios. In response to comments
submitted by EPA during the state rulemaking process, PADEP clarified
its interpretation of section 129.98 in the preamble to the final
regulations. See 46 PaB 2036. First, for areas formally designated as
nonattainment under CAA section 107, PADEP intended to limit emissions
averaging to sources under common control or ownership within that
formally designated nonattainment area, as this comports with
established caselaw. See Nat. Res. Def. Council v. EPA, 571 F.3d 1245
(D.C. Cir. 2009) (holding that the NOX SIP call trading plan
cannot be used for RACT averaging because emission reductions needed
for a nonattainment area must come from same nonattainment area).
Second, EPA believes PADEP intended to allow emissions averaging among
sources under common control/ownership that were outside of those areas
``formally designated'' nonattainment, but inside the state boundaries
(i.e., within the OTR attainment areas and treated as Moderate
nonattainment for SIP planning purposes in accordance with CAA section
184). That is, sources within an area formally designated as
nonattainment under CAA section 107 could use emissions averaging with
another source in the same area, and sources outside those formally
designated nonattainment areas could use emissions averaging with other
sources that are in similar attainment areas (but within the OTR area),
but no emissions averaging is allowed between sources in an area
formally designated as nonattainment under section 107 and sources in
areas designated unclassifiable or attainment within the Commonwealth,
but within the OTR.
C. Compliance Demonstration Requirements
Comment 22: The commenter notes that the provisions in section
129.98(g)(3) and 129.98(j) refer to the compliance demonstration
requirements in section 129.100; however, the commenter states section
129.100 has no specific requirements for sources in an averaging plan.
Response 22: As noted in the NPRM, EPA identified its concerns
regarding the provisions establishing compliance demonstration
requirements for sources seeking to comply with NOX
averaging in sections 129.98 and 129.100 of the RACT II Rule. For this
reason, EPA is requiring PADEP as part of our conditional approval to
submit for approval into the SIP any compliance demonstration
requirements for sources subject to section 129.98. This will ensure
that the alternative NOX limits under section 129.98 are
practically and Federally enforceable, pursuant to CAA section
110(a)(2)(A).
Comment 23: The commenter contends that section 129.99(d)(6) refers
to the compliance demonstration requirements in section 129.100;
however, no specific requirements are specified for these affected
sources under section 129.100. The commenter also contends that without
existing compliance demonstration requirements, it is unclear how PADEP
will be able to approve enforceable alternative RACT proposal, and that
consequently EPA should disapprove section 129.99 of the regulation.
Response 23: EPA notes that section 129.99(d)(6) requires a source
seeking to comply with source-specific RACT to ``[i]nclude in the RACT
proposal methods for demonstrating compliance and (emphasis added)
recordkeeping and reporting requirements in accordance with Sec.
129.100 (relating to compliance demonstration and recordkeeping
requirements) for each air contamination source included in the RACT
proposal.'' Section 129.100(d) and (i) establish recordkeeping and
reporting requirements for all sources subject to the RACT II Rule. In
addition, section 129.99(d)(1) requires the written RACT proposal to
follow the procedures in 129.92(a)(1)-(5) and (7)-(10). Section
129.92(a)(7) requires a RACT proposal to include the ``testing,
monitoring, recordkeeping and reporting procedures proposed to
demonstrate compliance with RACT.'' See 129.92(a)(7). As Pennsylvania
has committed to submitting all additional source-specific RACT SIP
provisions containing source-specific RACT limits approved by PADEP
under 129.99 to EPA for approval into the Pennsylvania SIP, EPA can
further evaluate compliance demonstration when such alternatives are
submitted for SIP approval.
Comment 24: One commenter contends that section 129.100 does not
prescribe specific recordkeeping requirements to determine compliance
with the applicable RACT requirements in sections 129.96 to 129.99; and
for that reason, urges EPA to disapprove this
[[Page 20285]]
section of the RACT II Rule. Commenter argues that PADEP should have
identified specific requirements for determining compliance with
presumptive RACT and NOX averaging, such as fuel monitoring
and hours of operation, while for alternative source-specific limits,
it should have specified that compliance methods would be determined on
a case-by-case basis.
Response 24: Neither EPA's implementation rule for the 1997 ozone
standard nor the implementation rule for the 2008 ozone standard
specifically identify those parameters, measures, or data which a
source must record in order to demonstrate compliance with RACT limits
developed by the states. See 40 CFR part 51, subparts X and AA. EPA has
issued general statements in preambles for rulemakings other than the
ozone implementation rules mentioned above discussing the monitoring
and recordkeeping requirements generally necessary for any SIP and for
NOX RACT SIPs, but these do not identify specific parameters
that must be monitored/recorded for various types of sources in order
to prove compliance, and instead directs the state to identify those
parameters. See 57 FR 13498, 13502 (April 16, 1992) (General Preamble
for the Implementation of Title I of the [CAA] Amendments of 1990); 57
FR 55620, 55624--55625 (Nov. 25, 1992) (Nitrogen Oxides Supplement to
the General Preamble for the 1990 Amendments). The commenter cites two
such parameters--fuel usage and/or hours of operation--which could have
been specified in Pennsylvania's RACT regulations for NOX
averaging and presumptive RACT. While EPA agrees that for many sources
these two parameters are useful to determine compliance, EPA does not
expect that a state's RACT SIP regulation identify, for each type of
source, each parameter which must or might be monitored by that source
in order to show compliance with the RACT limit. EPA believes that the
operating permits issued by the Commonwealth will specify the
parameters that need to be monitored to show RACT compliance. The
Pennsylvania SIP also has other recordkeeping requirements besides the
RACT II Rule (25 Pa. Code sections 129.96-129.100) which require
recordkeeping useful for determining compliance with the RACT limits.
For example, Pennsylvania has emission reporting requirements, found at
25 Pa. Code 135.1-135.5, which require almost every stationary source
of any size to maintain and make available records which ``. . . may
include records of production, fuel usage, maintenance of production or
pollution control equipment or other information determined by the
Department to be necessary for identification and quantification of
potential and actual air contaminant emissions. If direct recordkeeping
is not possible or practical, sufficient records shall be kept, to
provide the needed information by indirect means.'' 25 Pa. Code 135.5.
In addition, Pennsylvania has special monitoring provisions for sources
that have or are likely to have ``substantial impacts'' on the
maintenance of ambient air quality standards. 25 Pa. Code 139.51-
139.53. These requirements include regular testing for emissions or the
installation of continuous emission monitoring systems (25 Pa. Code
139.52) and reporting of such testing to PADEP, including ``. . .
information regarding test methods, test conditions, operating
conditions of the source or other information which may be necessary to
properly evaluate the results of emissions monitoring performed at a
source.'' 25 Pa. Code 139.53(b).
Pennsylvania's SIP also has permitting requirements (called Plan
Applications and Plan Approvals) which require any ``air contamination
source'' to obtain a plan approval from PADEP prior to constructing,
modifying, reactivating, or installing an air pollution control device
on such source. 25 Pa. Code 127.11. A plan application must, inter
alia, ``(3) Show that the source will be equipped with reasonable and
adequate facilities to monitor and record the emissions of air
contaminants and operating conditions which may affect the emissions of
air contaminants and that the records are being and will continue to be
maintained . . .'' 25 Pa. Code 127.12(a)(3). The permit (plan approval)
must contain the monitoring, recordkeeping and reporting requirements
in 25 Pa. Code 139, any such requirements in Article III
(Pennsylvania's Air regulations), and any other CAA monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting requirements required. 25 Pa. Code
127.12b(c). Finally, the operating permit requirements for major
sources in 25 Pa. Code 127.401-127.406 also contain similar monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements. See 25 Pa. Code
127.411(a)(4), 127.441(c), and 127.442.
EPA believes that given the lack of specific requirements in EPA's
RACT regulations for the 1997 or 2008 ozone NAAQS, the recordkeeping
and reporting requirements of Pennsylvania's RACT II Rule in 25 Pa.
Code 129.100 are sufficient for approval of the RACT SIP. Also,
Pennsylvania has many other monitoring and recordkeeping requirements
potentially applicable to RACT sources that provide ample authority to
Pennsylvania, through various mechanisms, to obtain any information
necessary to show compliance with the RACT limits. Thus, EPA does not
believe Pennsylvania's RACT regulations must be disapproved, in whole
or in part, for lack of specificity concerning monitoring and
recordkeeping to show RACT compliance.
D. Averaging Time for Compliance Demonstration
Comment 25: Commenters allege that EPA failed to consider the
averaging times of Pennsylvania's NOX presumptive emission
limits. Commenters contend that a 30-day averaging period is too
lenient and inconsistent with RACT in other OTR states, which use
averaging periods as short as 1-hour or 24-hours averages. Commenters
also allege that 30-day NOX averaging may allow sources to
emit more NOX on days when conditions are conducive to ozone
formation that might lead to an exceedance of the NAAQS.
Response 25: EPA disagrees with the commenters. During EPA's review
of Pennsylvania's RACT II Rule, EPA compared Pennsylvania's presumptive
limits with those of other OTR states. In Appendix B of EPA's TSD, EPA
provided the emission limits for other OTR states while noting the
difference between those states' rules and Pennsylvania's rule below
each table in the TSD.
PADEP determined that a 30-day rolling average limit addresses
problems faced by certain owners and operators, including variability
in fuel source, emission spikes during start-ups, shutdowns, and
malfunctions, and other unavoidable circumstances. PADEP determined
that these situations are not indicative of normal operations and so it
would not be appropriate to require facilities to show compliance with
the presumptive NOX RACT emission limit over a 1-hour or 8-
hour averaging period as such variability would affect technical and
economic feasibility of sources to meet the presumptive limits making
compliance either technically infeasible or cost ineffective. PADEP
selected the 30-day rolling average to ensure technical and economic
feasibility for Pennsylvania sources to meet RACT. PADEP reasons that
to maintain compliance with a 30-day rolling average, sources will have
to operate below the allowable standard on some days in order to
account for potential days of higher emissions. PADEP also notes that
EPA has
[[Page 20286]]
approved 30-day rolling averages as ``short-term'' RACT limitations in
SIP revisions submitted by New York and Wisconsin. See 75 FR 64155
(October 19, 2010) for Wisconsin and 78 FR 41846 (July 12, 2013) for
New York.
E. Cost Effectiveness
Comment 26: One commenter contends that PADEP did not perform any
cost effectiveness evaluation while setting the presumptive limits and
argues that EPA cannot supplement a state's faulty or deficient SIP.
The commenter alleges that EPA's performance of a cost-effective
analysis in the second TSD shows both the necessity for such an
analysis and that PADEP did not perform a cost-effectiveness analysis
and therefore Pennsylvania's SIP revisions lacked an adequate RACT
evaluation.
Response 26: EPA disagrees that PADEP did not perform any cost-
effectiveness evaluation when establishing presumptive limits under the
RACT II Rule. PADEP relied on a cost-effectiveness of $2,800 per ton of
NOX controlled and $5,500 per ton of VOC controlled for the
presumptive limits in the RACT II Rule.\19\ As mentioned in PADEP's
final rulemaking, Pennsylvania's Environmental Quality Board (EQB)
stated that the Regulatory Analysis Form (RAF) was ``replete with
substantive information regarding emissions data, cost-effectiveness
numbers, public health information, statutory requirements, small
business information and other types of analyses to demonstrate that
the regulations are legally required, in the public interest,
economically and technologically feasible, and will reduce emissions.''
The EQB also stated ``[t]he presumptive RACT emission limitations were
established based on cost-effectiveness of available control
technology. . . .'' Thus, EPA believes that PADEP did in fact perform a
cost-effectiveness evaluation in order to determine what emission
limitations and control technologies were technologically and
economically feasible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See PADEP's Responses to Comments Document, Docket item
#0004 Comments #13 and #111.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, EPA disagrees that it ``supplemented'' the state's SIP
submission by performing and referring to its own analysis of cost for
very large coal-fired boilers with SCR and SNCR in the second TSD. EPA
performed this analysis in support of our evaluation of the
reasonableness of PADEP's cost-effectiveness threshold of $2,800 per
ton of NOx controlled and the resulting emission limits derived for
coal-fired boilers in the RACT II Rule. EPA focused its evaluation on
this source category because it is the largest NOX emitting
sector in Pennsylvania. EPA's evaluation in the TSD supported our
conclusion that Pennsylvania's RACT was reasonable and does not
indicate that Pennsylvania's SIP was therefore inadequate or lacking
information.
Comment 27: Two commenters claimed that Pennsylvania's cost
effectiveness thresholds for NOX and/or VOC were too low
compared to adjoining states (New York, New Jersey, and Delaware) in
the OTR and states sharing nonattainment areas with Pennsylvania. One
commenter referred to New York's threshold of $5,000 to $5,500 per ton
of NOX for coal-fired units and pointed to New Jersey's and
Delaware's consideration of best available control technology (BACT) as
cost effective controls to meet RACT, even when not using specific
cost-effectiveness benchmarks.
Response 27: EPA is aware that Pennsylvania considered cost-
effectiveness levels that are lower than other states in the OTR when
developing the RACT II Rule; however, states have the discretion to
determine what costs are considered reasonable when establishing RACT
for its sources. For these reasons, EPA has not set a single cost,
emission reduction, or cost-effectiveness figure to fully define cost-
effectiveness in meeting the NOX RACT requirement.
Therefore, each state must make and defend its own determination on how
to weigh these values in establishing RACT.
PADEP relied on a cost-effectiveness of $2,800 per ton of
NOX controlled and $5,500 per ton of VOC controlled for the
presumptive limits in the RACT II Rule.\20\ In considering similar
comments received during its proposal of the rule concerning cost-
effectiveness, PADEP determined that ``[e]ven with an additional 25%
margin, the upper bound cost-effectiveness threshold would not be any
greater than $3,500 per ton NOX controlled'' and ``$7,000
per ton VOC controlled,'' and that ``[a]pplying these new thresholds
does not have an effect on the add-on control technology decisions for
the presumptive RACT requirements established in the final
rulemaking.'' PADEP concluded that the RACT presumptive limits included
in final form of the RACT II Rule ``are comparable to emission limits
included in other states' RACT regulations as well.'' \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See PADEP's Responses to Comments Document, Docket item
#0004, Comments #13 and #111.
\21\ See PADEP's Responses to Comments Document, Docket item
#0004, Comment #13
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, while cost effectiveness is an important consideration, it
must be noted that other factors should be integrated into a RACT
analysis, such as emission reductions and environmental impact. As
stated above, Pennsylvania determined higher cost thresholds did not
impact feasible add on control technology. And, as discussed earlier,
EPA believes that PADEP's presumptive limits are reasonable as they
reflect control levels achieved by the application and consideration of
available control technologies, after considering both the economic and
technological circumstances of Pennsylvania's own sources. EPA also
finds that Pennsylvania's presumptive limits are comparable to those
adopted in other states for similar sources.\22\
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\22\ See EPA's TSD, section IV.C.
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F. Alternative Compliance Schedules
Comment 28: One commenter argues that sources petitioning for
alternative compliance schedules, as allowed under section 129.97 and
129.99, should be required to submit the alternative compliance dates
and interim emissions limits to EPA for inclusion in the SIP. Commenter
further argues that without incorporating these into the SIP,
facilities would be liable for violating the SIP-approved compliance
deadline of Jan 1, 2017 and the applicable presumptive limits.
Response 28: Regarding section 129.99, section 129.99(h) explicitly
states that alternative RACT requirements or emission limitations
requested under subparts 129.99(a), (b) and (c) and approved under
129.99(f) will be submitted to EPA for approval into the SIP.
Pennsylvania has also committed to submitting to EPA all source-
specific RACT determinations under section 129.99 for approval as a SIP
revision within 12 months of EPA's final rulemaking. Therefore, the
commenter's concern that alternative compliance schedules issued under
section 129.99 should be submitted to EPA for approval as part of the
SIP is already being addressed by the language of section 129.99(h) and
Pennsylvania's September 26, 2017 committal to submit permits with
schedules under 129.99 to EPA for inclusion in the SIP; PADEP will be
submitting any section 129.99 alternative compliance schedule and the
emission limits to EPA as a formal SIP revision. EPA will evaluate and
act accordingly on any SIP revision
[[Page 20287]]
submitted with alternative compliance schedules in a future rulemaking
action.
For alternative compliance schedules in section 129.97(k), EPA
believes that PADEP intends to submit all such alternative compliance
schedules to EPA for approval into the SIP. EPA finds the schedules
discussed in section 129.97(k) are also included within the scope of
section 129.99 (and thus within Pennsylvania's September 26, 2017
commitment) because section 129.99(i) addresses how sources can get an
alternative RACT requirement or alternative RACT emission limit when
installing an air cleaning device and section 129.99(i) provides the
process and details needed for sources to petition PADEP for an
alternative. Section 129.97(k) provides one such alternative RACT
requirement within the meaning of section 129.99(i) as it provides that
sources which cannot meet presumptive limits without installing an air
cleaning device may petition PADEP for additional time to comply. Thus,
any source seeking an alternative under section 129.97(k) (because it
needs to install an air cleaning device) is also subject to section
129.99 (via 129.99(i) as a source seeking an alternative RACT
requirement due to installation of an air cleaning device), and PADEP
has committed in its September 26, 2017 letter to sending all such
alternative RACT proposals to EPA for SIP approval.
Sources that did not need to install equipment and/or modify
permits to meet the presumptive RACT requirements in 25 Pa. Code 129.96
were required to comply with presumptive RACT by the January 1, 2017
deadline. Existing sources that could not meet presumptive RACT without
installation of an air cleaning device were required to petition PADEP
to request an alternative compliance schedule by October 24, 2016 and
include a compliance schedule no longer than three years from the date
of PADEP's approval of the petition, with interim emission limits and
compliance dates. 25 Pa. Code 129.97(k). PADEP provided a list to EPA
on March 22, 2019 of sources receiving alternative compliance schedules
under 25 Pa. Code 127.97(k) or 127.99(i) showing that eight of the nine
sources are presently complying with presumptive RACT requirements or
more stringent emission limits known as ``best available technology''
limits to which new sources in Pennsylvania are subject. The ninth
source will achieve full compliance with presumptive RACT by Fall of
2019. EPA has included the list from Pennsylvania in the docket for
this rulemaking action available online at www.regulations.gov.
Given the relatively small number of sources seeking alternative
compliance schedules under 25 Pa. Code 129.97(k), the majority of
sources currently in compliance with presumptive RACT and the remaining
source complying with presumptive RACT imminently, and given PADEP's
commitment to have permits issued under 25 Pa. Code 127.99 (inclusive
of 127.97(k)) included in the SIP, the extensions of time granted by
PADEP's regulations after the January 1, 2017 RACT compliance deadline
are not unreasonable as RACT is being implemented within the
Commonwealth. Moreover, there is no ability for EPA to ``turn back the
clock'' and have these sources comply by 2017 at this date. For these
reasons, EPA believes that the provisions in 127.97 and 129.99
regarding compliance dates are reasonable and approvable (with the
caveat that 127.99 is subject to conditional approval for submission of
permits for SIP approval) for RACT as compliance is complete or nearly
complete. EPA will evaluate and act accordingly on any permits
submitted to EPA for SIP-approval at a future time through a future
rulemaking action.
Comment 29: Commenter argues that for sources receiving alternative
compliance schedules under sections 129.97 or 129.99 extending beyond
January 1, 2017, PADEP should be required to submit the alternative
compliance dates and interim emissions limits to EPA for possible
approval into the SIP. Commenter urges EPA to confirm that alternative
compliance schedules or limits are not Federally enforceable, unless
PADEP submits them to EPA and EPA approves them into the SIP.
Response 29: In 25 Pa. Code section 129.99(h), PADEP explicitly
states that PADEP will submit the alternative RACT requirement or RACT
emission limitation requested to EPA for approval into the SIP. In
addition, PADEP has committed to submitting to EPA any alternative RACT
schedules and proposals received under section 129.99, which includes
those submitted under 25 Pa. Code 127.97(k) as discussed in response to
prior comments. EPA will evaluate and act accordingly on any
alternative compliance schedule or alternative RACT emission limit
submitted for SIP-approval at a future time through a future rulemaking
action. EPA will evaluate the reasonableness of any extension of time
for RACT compliance beyond Pennsylvania's January 1, 2017 deadline when
the SIP is submitted to EPA. In response to Comment #28, EPA addressed
the timing of sources complying with alternative RACT. Regarding
Federal enforceability, EPA agrees that any alternative RACT emission
limits and/or alternative compliance schedules approved by PADEP which
are not submitted to EPA for approval into the SIP would not be
Federally-enforceable under the SIP; however, these limits may be
included in some other type of Federally-enforceable permit.
Comment 30: One commenter argues that EPA cannot approve section
129.99(i)(2)(v) for sources petitioning alternative compliance
schedules, because it allows a compliance date later than January 1,
2017, as required by EPA's ozone implementation regulation in 40 CFR
51.1112(a)(3). Commenter states that EPA must disapprove this provision
of the regulation, as it is in violation of EPA's own regulations.
Response 30: EPA issued the 2008 ozone attainment designations for
numerous areas of the country, including designating five areas in
Pennsylvania as Marginal nonattainment areas, on May 21, 2012. See 77
FR 30088 and 40 CFR 81.339. On March 6, 2015, EPA issued its final rule
for implementation of the 2008 ozone NAAQS (the ``2008 Ozone SIP
Requirements Rule''). See 80 FR 12264 and 40 CFR 51.1100-51.1103. The
2008 Ozone SIP Requirements Rule set a deadline for submission of RACT
SIP revisions for VOC and NOX of two years after the
designations effective date of July 20, 2012 or July 20, 2014 and a
deadline for implementation of RACT of January 1, 2017. See 77 FR 30088
and 40 CFR 51.1112(a)(2). After EPA issued the 2008 Ozone SIP
Requirements Rule, PADEP submitted its SIP revision on May 16, 2016 to
implement the RACT requirements for the 1997 and 2008 ozone NAAQS.
These regulations became final at the state level on April 23, 2016.
Sources in Pennsylvania subject to RACT for the 1997 and 2008 ozone
NAAQS generally had slightly more than seven months from the state
effective date of Pennsylvania's RACT regulations to meet the January
1, 2017 deadline. Advance planning by RACT sources in reliance upon
Pennsylvania's proposed RACT limits before they became final at the
state level on April 23, 2016 would have been imprudent because
Pennsylvania both lowered and raised the presumptive RACT limits for
multiple types of sources following the public comment period, which
illustrates the uncertainty sources faced while trying to plan for
implementation of RACT standards. For a list of changes
[[Page 20288]]
to the presumptive limits following Pennsylvania's proposal, see Table
1.
Table 1--Changes in Presumptive Limits From Proposal to Final
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Presumptive citation (129.97) Proposed limit Final limit
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(g)(1)(i)--Natural gas unit, 0.08 lbs/MMBTU.... 0.10 lbs/MMBTU.
heat input >=50 MMBTU/hr.
(g)(1)(vi)(A)--coal fired CFB 0.20 lbs/MMBTU.... 0.16 lbs/MMBTU.
unit >=250 MMBTU/hr.
(g)(2)(i)(B)--combined cycle 75 ppmvd NOX...... 96 ppmvd NOX.
turbine >=1,000 bhp, <180 MW;
fuel oil.
(g)(2)(i)(C)--combined cycle 2 ppmvd VOC....... 5 ppmvd VOC.
turbine >=1,000 bhp, <180 MW;
natural gas.
(g)(2)(i)(D)--combined cycle 2 ppmvd VOC....... 9 ppmvd VOC.
turbine >=1,000 bhp, <180 MW;
fuel oil.
(g)(2)(iv)(B)--simple cycle 75 ppmvd NOX...... 96 ppmvd NOX.
turbine >=6,000 bhp; fuel oil.
(g)(3)(i)(B)--lean burn 0.4 grams VOC/bhp- 1.0 grams VOC/bhp-
stationary internal combustion hr. hr.
engine, >=500 bhp; Natural gas
or noncommercial gaseous fuel.
(g)(1)(vii)--new limit for solid N/A............... 0.25 lbs/MMBTU.
fuel fired combustion units
>=50 MMBTU/hr.
(g)(1)(viii)--new limit for coal N/A............... 0.12 lbs/MMBTU.
fired units with SCR; when >=
600[deg]F.
(g)(1)(ix)--new work practice N/A............... Inject ammonia.
standard for coal fired units
with SNCR.
(g)(2)(iii)(A), (B), (C), and N/A............... 150 ppmvd NOX 9
(D)--simple cycle turbine ppmvd VOC.
>=1,000 bhp, <6,000 bhp; firing
natural gas or fuel oil.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pennsylvania sources relying on the presumptive limits in
Pennsylvania's proposed RACT II Rule could find themselves ordering
equipment to meet RACT limits that they didn't need because they could
meet the increased limit in the final rule without additional equipment
or could find themselves ordering inadequate equipment to meet a
NOX limit that was lowered by the final rule.
On April 6, 2017, EPA proposed approval of revisions to
Connecticut's RACT regulations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. See 83 FR
16772. These revisions included new NOX limits for MWCs with
a compliance date of August 2, 2017, and new NOX limits for
boilers, turbines, and reciprocating internal combustion engines (RICE)
with a compliance date of June 1, 2018. See 83 FR 16772, 16773 (April
6, 2017). Among other reasons, EPA justified these compliance deadlines
beyond the January 1, 2017 Federal regulatory deadline because the
sources subject to the new RACT limits were a small subset of all the
facilities subject to RACT and were already subject to RACT controls in
the SIP that would be further tightened by the new revisions. See 83 FR
16772, 16776. EPA also justified the post-January 2017 dates based on
the fact that it was impossible for sources to retroactively meet the
January 1, 2017 deadline, and agreed with Connecticut's determination
that given the August 2, 2016 and December 22, 2016 state effective
dates for the new MWC limits and combustor limits, respectively, it
would not be reasonable to require immediate compliance. Likewise, for
Pennsylvania, EPA finds it would be impossible for sources today to
retroactively meet the January 1, 2017 deadline for implementation of
RACT. Like Connecticut, Pennsylvania had also implemented in its SIP
RACT requirements on all major sources of NOx and VOCs for the prior 1-
hour ozone NAAQS. See 40 CFR 52.2020(d). In addition, for sources
needing installation of controls to meet requirements of the RACT II
Rule after the Rule became state effective in 2016, such sources needed
time to select controls, apply for permits and implement, install and
begin operating such controls to meet RACT II Rule limits.
For the above reasons, EPA finds the provisions in Pennsylvania's
rules providing for additional time to comply in 25 Pa. Code section
127.97 and 127.99 allowed sources installing new emission controls to
meet RACT a reasonable time to comply. Thus, EPA is approving the
provisions in 129.97 and conditionally approving the provisions of
129.99.
G. Other Comments
Comment 31: The commenter asks whether section 129.96(d), which
states that the requirements of sections 129.96-129.100 do not apply to
the owner and operator of a facility which is not a major
NOX or major VOC emitting facility on or before January 1,
2017, would allow an otherwise major NOX or VOC source to
obtain a synthetic minor permit before 1/1/17 to avoid 2008 RACT, then
``shed'' its minor status after 1/1/17 and remain not subject to 2008
RACT. The commenter argues that facilities that become synthetic minor
NOX or VOC sources before January 1, 2017 to avoid RACT
should take enforceable permit limits and that such limits should be
submitted to EPA for approval into the SIP.
Response 31: EPA acknowledges that, generally, major sources may
take enforceable restrictions to reduce their facility-wide potential
emissions to avoid the definition of a major NOX or VOC
source. However, EPA interprets that because the RACT II Rule is only
applicable to sources that met the ``major NOX/VOC source
definition'' by January 1, 2017, any major sources without Federally-
enforceable restrictions by such date must be required to comply with
the RACT II Rule.
Furthermore, if any facility which takes such restrictions seeks to
later ``shed'' its minor source status after January 1, 2017, the
facility would then become a major source through its ``modification''
and would then be subject to the RACT II Rule via 25 Pa Code 129.96(b).
This subsection requires facilities that become a major source to be
subject to the RACT II Rule which has ongoing applicability. Thus, EPA
believes it is unnecessary to require enforceable restrictions to be
submitted to EPA for SIP approval as the facility would be subject to
the RACT II Rule if it shed its minor limits and became a major source
of NOX or VOC.
Comment 32: The commenter argues that EPA's approval of section
129.97(b)(1)(i)-(iii), requiring biennial tune-up for units between 20
to 50 MMBTU/hr, would be backsliding as there are similar RACT
provisions previously approved in the Pennsylvania SIP, in 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.91-95, that are more stringent because they require annual
tune-ups.
Response 32: EPA disagrees with the commenter's assertion that EPA
is allowing ``backsliding'' by approving the provisions in section
129.97(b)(1). Commenter seems to be referring to the provisions in
129.92(b)(2)(i)-(iii), which also require tune-up for units between 20
to 50 MMBTU/hr, but on an annual basis. EPA acknowledges that the
requirements in section 129.92(b)(2)(i)-
[[Page 20289]]
(iii) require an annual tune-up, while section 129.97(b)(1)(i)-(iii)
only requires a tune-up once every two years. However, EPA does not
believe that relaxation of the SIP is occurring because section
129.97(i) requires sources to comply with section 129.97 unless a RACT
permit issued prior to April 23, 2016 under 129.91-95 has more
stringent requirements or limits. Based on the requirement in section
129.97(i), individual sources in Pennsylvania with RACT permits issued
prior to April 23, 2016 would not be backsliding because they would
remain subject to the more stringent annual tune-up requirements of
129.92(b)(2)(i)-(iii). Only relatively newer sources (not subject to
the prior RACT requirement for annual tune up) would be subject to the
biennial tune-up requirements of section 129.97(b)(1)(i)-(iii). Thus,
EPA believes any relaxation concerns with respect to tune-up
requirements for units between 20 to 50 MMBTU/hr are fully addressed by
the provisions of section 129.97(i).
Comment 33: Commenter requests EPA to justify how the provisions in
section 129.97(c) and (d), requiring owners or operators to install,
maintain, and operate the source in accordance with the manufacturer's
specifications and with good operating practices, are enforceable as a
practical matter.
Response 33: The requirement to ``install, maintain and operate the
source in accordance with the manufacturer's specifications'' is a
practically enforceable requirement as the manufacturer specifications
for control equipment at any particular source are usually available
and defined. A requirement to operate in line with ``good operating
practices'' is practically enforceable because good operating practices
can be defined within a source or industry. This is consistent with
EPA's prior approval of similar RACT provisions for the Commonwealth.
Comment 34: One commenter alleges that EPA cannot rely on the
document titled ``PADEP's RACT II Supplemental Submittal'' for its
rulemaking action, as this document did not undergo adequate public
participation as a SIP revision, as required in 40 CFR 51.102, 51.103,
51.104 and Appendix V.
Response 34: EPA is relying only on that portion of PADEP's
September 26, 2017 submittal (titled ``PADEP's RACT II Supplemental
Submittal'') that contains PADEP's commitments to further supplement
the SIP within one year of EPA's final conditional approval.
Information in PADEP's supplemental submittal that is not relevant to
PADEP's commitment to address EPA's conditions is not needed nor relied
upon in EPA's rulemaking herein. The nature of a conditional approval
under CAA section 110(k)(4) is such that when EPA's review of a formal
SIP submission identifies a deficiency in the SIP that could be
remedied by state action within one year of the final conditional
approval, the NPRM sets forth the conditions the state must satisfy
within one year to correct the deficiencies. The state must provide a
committal letter to EPA stating that it will fulfill EPA's requirements
for the commitment. The opportunity for public comment upon the
adequacy of EPA's conditions and the ability of the state to meet those
conditions occurs during the public comment period announced by the
NPRM. EPA does not consider a state's conditional approval committal
letter to be a SIP revision under 40 CFR 51.102(a), 51.103, 51.104, or
the completeness criteria in Appendix V to Part 51. The provisions in
Appendix V related to requirements for states to conduct public hearing
and follow state administrative procedural requirements relate to the
plan submitted by the state. Pennsylvania complied with requirements in
40 CFR part 51 and Appendix V relating to submission of its ``plan'' or
SIP submittal (i.e., the May 16, 2016 SIP submittal which includes
provisions in 25 Pa. Code 121.1, 129.96, 129.97, 129.98, 129.99 and
129.100). Pennsylvania's supplemental material from September 2017 was
additional supportive information Pennsylvania had regarding its RACT
provisions and was about Pennsylvania's commitment to submit
alternative RACT requirements and emission limitations to EPA for SIP
approval. Thus, EPA disagrees with the commenter that Pennsylvania's
September 26, 2017 provision to EPA needed to undergo additional
``public participation as a SIP revision.''
Comment 35: The commenter claims EPA should better define the
conditional nature of EPA's approval and EPA should fully develop
methods and conditions which Pennsylvania would need to address for
full approval.
Response 35: EPA disagrees with the commenter. EPA's NPRM clearly
specified what PADEP needed to do to correct the deficiencies
identified in the NPRM relating to section 129.98 NOX
averaging provision and section 129.99 for alternative RACT
requirements or emission limitations. See 83 FR 11155, 11160-62. EPA
has also restated the conditions and deficiencies in this rulemaking.
See Section II of this rulemaking action.
Comment 36: The commenter claims that section 129.98 and 129.99 do
not conform with CAA section 110(a)(2)(A), as they are not practically
and Federally enforceable, and recommends EPA to disapprove these
provisions until Pennsylvania adopts specific enforceable measures.
Response 36: The commenter has not provided adequate argument,
analysis, or specific information for EPA to account for this comment.
Thus, no further response is needed. However, EPA will note that we are
conditionally approving section 129.98 and 129.99 based on the
deficiencies we identified in the NPRM and based on Pennsylvania's
commitment to submit permits and plans to EPA for SIP approval. With
respect to the issue of practical enforceability as it pertains to
section 110(a)(2)(A), EPA finds that section 129.99 is practically
enforceable, as the regulation lays out the process for sources to
obtain source-specific RACT requirements for affected sources. PADEP
would then subsequently submit to EPA such permits for approval into
the SIP. EPA proposed conditional approval of section 129.99 because it
lacked a date certain by which PADEP would submit the relevant source-
specific RACT SIP revisions to EPA.
As discussed in detail in the NPRM and in this action, EPA did have
concerns with enforceability of 129.98 and thus we are conditionally
approving 129.98. EPA's conditional approval of these provisions will
ensure that practical, enforceable RACT emissions limits are
established under 25 Pa. Code sections 129.98 and 129.99, consistent
with CAA section 110(a)(2)(A).
Comment 37: Commenter believes that the required elements of
section 110(a)(2) of CAA have been fully addressed by PADEP's SIP
submittal for the RACT II Rule, particularly referring to section
110(a)(2)(A), (C), and (F). The commenter asserts that a specific
method of compliance is not required under section 110(a)(2), if the
applicable emission limits and related requirements are already part of
the rule.
Response 37: EPA identified deficiencies in 25 Pa. Code section
129.98 pertaining to the requirement in CAA section 110(a)(2)(A) for
enforceable limits because 129.98 did not adequately establish how to
compute an alternative NOX emissions limitation and/or
adequately specify the methods for demonstrating compliance and
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for emissions averaging. EPA's
conditional approval of 25 Pa. Code section 129.98 will ensure that
practical enforceable emissions limits for CAA 110(a)(2) are
established as
[[Page 20290]]
RACT through SIP approval of each averaging plan.
IV. Terms of the Conditional Approval
On September 26, 2017, PADEP submitted a letter detailing its
commitments to provide additional SIP revisions to correct various
deficiencies identified by EPA as present in the May 16, 2016 SIP
submittal. In that letter, PADEP committed to submitting to EPA, for
approval into the SIP, any facility-wide or system-wide averaging plan
approved under 25 Pa. Code section 129.98 and any source-specific RACT
determinations under 25 Pa. Code section 129.99. PADEP committed to
submitting these additional SIP revisions within 12 months of EPA's
final conditional approval.
Therefore, as authorized in CAA section 110(k)(3) and (k)(4),
Pennsylvania shall submit the following as source-specific SIP
revisions for EPA's approval as a condition of approval of 25 Pa. Code
128 and 129 in the May 16, 2016 SIP revision: (1) All facility-wide or
system-wide averaging plans approved by PADEP under 25 Pa. Code section
129.98 including, but not limited to, any terms and conditions that
ensure the enforceability of the averaging plan as a practical matter
(e.g., any monitoring, reporting, recordkeeping, or testing
requirements); and (2) all source-specific RACT determinations approved
by PADEP under 25 Pa. Code section 129.99, including any alternative
compliance schedules approved under section 129.97(k) and 129.99(i);
the source-specific RACT determinations submitted to EPA for approval
into the SIP should include any terms and conditions that ensure the
enforceability of the source-specific RACT emission limitation as a
practical matter (e.g., any monitoring, reporting, recordkeeping, or
testing requirements).
V. Final Action
EPA is fully approving 25 Pa. Code sections 121.1, 129.96, 129.97,
and 129.100 as meeting certain aspects of major stationary source RACT
in CAA section 172, 182, and 184 for the 1997 and 2008 ozone NAAQS
submitted May 16, 2016. EPA is also conditionally approving 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.98 and 129.99 based on the commitment provided by
Pennsylvania to submit additional SIP revisions to address the
deficiencies identified by EPA in the May 16, 2016 SIP revision. Upon
submission of all elements intended to meet the conditions identified
in Section IV of this rulemaking action, Pennsylvania must submit a SIP
revision certifying that it has met all conditions. Once EPA has
determined that Pennsylvania has satisfied these conditions, EPA shall
remove the conditional nature of this approval and Pennsylvania's 1997
and 2008 8-hour ozone RACT SIP revision will, at that time, receive a
full approval status. Should Pennsylvania fail to meet the conditions
specified in Section IV, the final conditional approval of 25 Pa. Code
sections 129.98 and 129.99 shall automatically convert to a disapproval
and EPA will issue a finding of disapproval. A finding of disapproval
would start an 18-month clock to apply sanctions under CAA section
179(b) and a two-year clock for a Federal implementation plan under CAA
section 110(c)(1).
VI. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, EPA is finalizing regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In accordance with requirements of 1 CFR
51.5, EPA is finalizing the incorporation by reference of the following
sections of 25 Pa. Code with a state effective date of April 23, 2016:
25 Pa. Code section 121.1, 129.96, 129.97, 129.98, 129.99 and 129.100;
the list of definitions contained in 121.1 and the changes being made
can be found in the TSD for this rulemaking action. EPA has made, and
will continue to make, these materials generally available through
www.regulations.gov and at the EPA Region III Office (please contact
the person identified in the For Further Information Contact section of
this preamble for more information). Therefore, these materials have
been approved by EPA for inclusion in the SIP, have been incorporated
by reference by EPA into that plan, are fully Federally enforceable
under sections 110 and 113 of the CAA as of the effective date of the
final rulemaking of EPA's approval, and will be incorporated by
reference in the next update to the SIP compilation.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 62 FR 27968 (May 22, 1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. General Requirements
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the CAA and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this
action merely approves state law as meeting Federal requirements and
does not impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state
law. For that reason, this 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, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have tribal implications as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
because the SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in
the state, and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
B. Submission to Congress and the Comptroller General
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
[[Page 20291]]
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).
C. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the appropriate circuit by July 8, 2019. 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, on Pennsylvania's RACT II Rule, may not be
challenged later in proceedings to enforce its requirements. (See
section 307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: April 25, 2019.
Cosmo Servidio,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
40 CFR part 52 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 NN--Pennsylvania
0
2. In Sec. 52.2020, the table in paragraph (c)(1) is amended by
adding:
0
a. Under ``Chapter 121--General Provisions,'' an entry for ``Section
121.1'' after an existing entry for ``Section 121.1''; and
0
b. Under ``Chapter 129--Standards for Sources,'' after the entry for
``129.95'', a subheading entitled ``Additional RACT Requirements for
Major Sources of NOX and VOCs'' and the entries ``Section
129.96'' through ``Section 129.100'' in numerical order.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 52.2020 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Additional explanation/
State citation Title/subject effective date EPA approval date Sec. 52.2063 citation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title 25--Environmental Protection Article III--Air Resources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chapter 121--General Provisions
* * * * * * *
Section 121.1.................. Definitions....... 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert Revises the following
Federal Register definitions: ``CEMS--
citation]. Continuous emission
monitoring system,''
``Major NOX emitting
facility,'' ``Major
VOC emitting
facility,'' and
``Stationary internal
combustion engine or
stationary
reciprocating internal
combustion engine.''
Adds new definitions
for the following
terms: ``Process
heater,'' ``Refinery
gas,'' ``Regenerative
cycle combustion
turbine,'' ``Simple
cycle combustion
turbine,'' and
``Stationary
combustion turbine.''
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Chapter 129--Standards for Sources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Additional RACT Requirements for Major Sources of NOX and VOCs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 129.96................. Applicability..... 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert New section.
Federal Register
citation].
Section 129.97................. Presumptive RACT 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert New section.
requirements, Federal Register
RACT emission citation].
limitations, and
petition for
alternative
compliance
schedule.
Section 129.98................. Facility-wide or 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert Conditionally approved.
system-wide NOX Federal Register See 40 CFR 52.2023(m).
emissions citation].
averaging plan
general
requirements.
Section 129.99................. Alternative RACT 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert Conditionally approved.
proposal and Federal Register See 40 CFR 52.2023(m).
petition for citation].
alternative
compliance
schedule.
Section 129.100................ Compliance 4/23/16 5/9/19, [insert New section.
demonstration and Federal Register
recordkeeping citation].
requirements.
[[Page 20292]]
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
3. Section 52.2023 is amended by adding reserved paragraph (l) and
adding paragraph (m) to read as follows:
Sec. 52.2023 Approval status.
* * * * *
(m) EPA conditionally approves Pennsylvania's 25 Pa Code sections
129.98 and 129.99 submitted on May 16, 2016 to address the reasonably
available control technology (RACT) requirements under CAA sections
182(b)(2)(C), 182(f), and 184 under the 1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS. Pursuant to CAA section 110(k)(4), this conditional approval is
based upon a September 26, 2017 letter from Pennsylvania to submit to
EPA, no later than 12 months from EPA's final conditional approval,
additional SIP revisions to address the deficiencies identified. The
SIP revisions, to be submitted by Pennsylvania, include:
(1) All facility-wide or system-wide averaging plans approved by
PADEP under 25 Pa Code 129.98 including but not limited to any terms
and conditions that ensure the enforceability of the averaging plan as
a practical matter, and
(2) All source-specific RACT determinations approved by PADEP under
25 Pa Code 129.99, including any alternative compliance schedules
approved under Sec. Sec. 129.97(k) and 129.99(i); the source-specific
RACT determinations submitted to EPA for approval into the SIP shall
include any terms and conditions that ensure the enforceability of the
source-specific RACT emission limitation as a practical matter.
[FR Doc. 2019-09478 Filed 5-8-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P