Withdrawal of Finding of Substantial Inadequacy of Implementation Plan and of Call for Texas State Implementation Plan Revision-Affirmative Defense Provisions, 7232-7246 [2020-01477]
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40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2018–0770; FRL–10004–
01–Region 6]
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Fraud, Penalties.
§ 36.4340
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
Withdrawal of Finding of Substantial
Inadequacy of Implementation Plan
and of Call for Texas State
Implementation Plan Revision—
Affirmative Defense Provisions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final action.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Region 6 Regional Administrator finds
that the affirmative defense provisions
in the State Implementation Plan (SIP)
for the State of Texas applicable to
excess emissions that occur during
certain upset events and unplanned
maintenance, startup, and shutdown
activities are consistent with CAA
requirements. Accordingly, EPA Region
6 is withdrawing the SIP call issued to
Texas that was published on June 12,
2015. This action is limited to the SIP
call issued to Texas and does not
otherwise change or alter the EPA’s June
12, 2015 action.
DATES: This final action is effective on
March 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R06–OAR–2018–0770. 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 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 either electronically through
https://www.regulations.gov or in hard
copy at the EPA Region 6 Office, 1201
Elm Street, Suite 500, Dallas, Texas
75270.
SUMMARY:
Mr.
Alan Shar, EPA Region 6 Office, SO2
and Regional Haze Section (6ARSH),
1201 Elm Street, Suite 500, Dallas, TX
75270, 214–665–6691, Shar.Alan@
epa.gov. To inspect the hard copy
materials, please schedule an
appointment with Alan Shar.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Definitions
For the purpose of this document, the
following definitions apply:
i. The word Act or initials CAA mean or
refer to the Clean Air Act.
ii. The initials EPA mean or refer to the
United States Environmental Protection
Agency.
iii. The initials MSS mean unplanned
Maintenance, Startup or Shutdown activities,
specific to Texas regulations.
iv. The term Malfunction means a sudden
and unavoidable breakdown of process or
control equipment.
v. The initials NAAQS mean National
Ambient Air Quality Standards.
vi. The initials NESHAP mean National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants.
vii. The initials OAQPS mean the Office of
Air Quality Planning and Standards.
viii. The initials OMB mean the Office of
Management and Budget.
ix. The initials PSD mean Prevention of
Significant Deterioration.
x. The terms EPA Region 6 and Region 6
refer to the United States Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 6, located in
Dallas, Texas.
xi. The initials RTC mean Response To
Comment.
xii. The initials SIP mean State
Implementation Plan.
xiii. The word State means the State of
Texas, unless the context indicates
otherwise.
xiv. The initials STEERS mean the State of
Texas Environmental Electronic Reporting
System.
xv. The term Shutdown means, generally,
the cessation of operation of a source.
xvi. The initials SSM mean Startup,
Shutdown, or Malfunction.
xvii. The term Startup means, generally,
the setting in operation of a source.
xviii. The initials TAC mean the Texas
Administrative Code.
xix. The initials TCEQ mean the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of the Final Action
II. Background
A. Clean Air Act and the Texas SIP
B. Affirmative Defense Provisions in the
Texas SIP
III. Evaluation of the Affirmative Defense
Provisions in the Texas SIP
A. Summary of Proposal
B. Final Action
C. Comments and Responses
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of the Final Action
In this document, Region 6 is making
a finding that the affirmative defense
provisions in Texas’s SIP applicable to
excess emissions that occur during
upsets (30 TAC 101.222(b)), unplanned
events (30 TAC 101.222(c)), upsets with
respect to opacity limits (30 TAC
101.222(d)), and unplanned events with
respect to opacity limits (30 TAC
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101.222(e)) do not make Texas’s SIP
substantially inadequate to meet the
requirements of the Act. Accordingly,
Region 6 is withdrawing the SIP call
issued to Texas that was published on
June 12, 2015 (80 FR 33968–9).
II. Background
The background for this action is
discussed in detail in our April 29, 2019
(84 FR 17986) proposed action. In that
document, Region 6 invited comment
on its belief that the best policy may be
to permit certain affirmative defense
provisions in SIPs, consistent with the
court’s decision in Luminant Generation
v. EPA, 714 F.3d 841 (5th Cir. 2013),
cert. denied, 134 S. Ct. 387 (2013). See
84 FR 17990. Region 6 recognized that
such a policy, if adopted, would depart
from the policy set forth in the EPA’s
2015 Startup, Shutdown and
Malfunction (SSM) SIP Action.1 EPA
Region 6 also proposed to make a
finding that the affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP applicable
to excess emissions that occur during
certain upset events 2 and unplanned
maintenance, startup, or shutdown
activities 3 would be consistent with
CAA requirements if the alternative
interpretation were adopted.
Accordingly, Region 6 proposed to
withdraw the SIP call 4 issued to Texas
that was published on June 12, 2015.
The 60-day public comment period
closed on June 28, 2019, and Region 6
received numerous comments on the
proposed action. The public comments
are included in the publicly posted
docket associated with this action at
www.regulations.gov. Region 6 reviewed
all public comments received on the
proposed action and considered them
before finalizing this action. In this
preamble, Region 6 provides a summary
of certain significant comments received
on the 2019 Proposal and the Region’s
response to those comments. The
Response To Comment (RTC) document
for this action summarizes and responds
to all other relevant comments received.
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1 See
section XI.F of the Statement of the EPA’s
SSM SIP Policy as of 2015 as set forth in ‘‘State
Implementation Plans: Response to Petition for
Rulemaking; Restatement and Update of EPA’s SSM
Policy Applicable to SIPs; Findings of Substantial
Inadequacy; and SIP Calls To Amend Provisions
Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of
Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction; Final Rule’’
(80 FR 33840, 33981–2).
2 See 30 TAC 101.1(110).
3 See 301 TAC 101.1(109).
4 ‘‘State Implementation Plans: Response to
Petition for Rulemaking; Restatement and Update of
EPA’s SSM Policy Applicable to SIPs; Findings of
Substantial Inadequacy; and SIP Calls to Amend
Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions During
Periods of Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction;
Final Rule.’’ (80 FR 33840), June 12, 2015. (2015
SSM SIP Action).
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The RTC document may be found in the
docket for this action.
B. Affirmative Defense Provisions in the
Texas SIP
A. Clean Air Act and the Texas SIP
As stated above, the EPA approved
the affirmative defense provisions found
at 30 TAC 101.222(b)–(e) as a revision
to the Texas SIP in November 2010.10
These provisions provide a narrowly
tailored affirmative defense for
emissions that exceed applicable
emissions limitations that occur during
upsets and unplanned MSS activities
and are considered functionally
equivalent to malfunctions. That is, the
affirmative defense provisions in the
EPA-approved Texas SIP apply to
unplanned and unavoidable upset
events and unplanned MSS activities
that are not part of normal or routine
operations and arise from sudden and
unforeseeable events beyond the control
of the operator. In addition, the
affirmative defense provisions are
inapplicable to emission events
determined to be excessive 11 based on
a number of criteria including
frequency, duration, and impact on
human health, and are unavailable in
criminal actions or civil enforcement
actions seeking administrative technical
orders and actions for injunctive relief.
In the context of an enforcement
proceeding,12 an affirmative defense is a
response or defense put forward by a
defendant, who bears the burden of
proof, and the merits of which are
independently and objectively
evaluated in a judicial or administrative
proceeding. See section IV.A of the
proposed action for more information
(84 FR 17991–92). The EPA’s 2010
approval of the Texas SIP revision
adding these affirmative defense
provisions was subsequently challenged
in court and upheld as reasonable under
the Act by the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit in Luminant. 714 F.3d
841.
The CAA creates a framework for
cooperative state and Federal programs
to prevent and control air pollution
providing states with the ‘‘primary
responsibility’’ for prevention and
control of air pollution and flexibility
for specific state needs and priorities.5
The Act requires the EPA to identify
pollutants that could endanger the
public health and welfare and to
establish national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS), which the EPA has
done for six criteria pollutants. Each
state prepares a State Implementation
Plan (SIP) that identifies the controls
and programs the state will use to attain
and maintain the NAAQS.6 In Texas,
the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ) is the
State agency responsible for
implementing the requirements of the
CAA related to SIPs. Since the EPA’s
approval of the initial Texas SIP in
1972, there has been a separate
regulatory control strategy for
unauthorized emissions 7 due to
malfunction events based on the
acknowledgement that imposition of
civil penalties may not be appropriate
every time unauthorized emissions
result from such events. The regulatory
regime has evolved since 1972, with
each iteration tightening requirements.
In 2005, TCEQ adopted the affirmative
defenses found at 30 TAC 101.222(b)–
(e).8 The EPA approved these
affirmative defense provisions related to
upsets and unplanned maintenance,
startup, or shutdown (MSS) activities as
a revision to the Texas SIP in November
2010.9 The EPA subsequently issued a
SIP call for these provisions as part of
its 2015 SSM SIP Action based on the
position that the affirmative defense
provisions made the SIP substantially
inadequate to meet the requirements of
the Act. The 2015 SSM SIP Action
included SIP calls for 45 jurisdictions in
36 states. For more information
concerning the SIP call issued to Texas,
see section II.(C) of the proposed action
(84 FR at 17988). On March 15, 2017,
TCEQ petitioned the EPA to reconsider
the SIP call issued to Texas in the 2015
SSM SIP Action.
5 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3); 42 U.S.C. 7407(a); Train v.
NRDC, 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975).
6 42 U.S.C. 7407(a) & 7410(a).
7 See 30 TAC 101.1(108).
8 See 30 Texas Register 8884 (Dec. 30, 2005),
codified at 30 TAC 101.222.
9 75 FR 68989 (Nov. 10, 2010).
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10 Id.
11 To determine whether an emissions event or
emissions events are excessive, the following
factors are evaluated: (1) The frequency of the
facility’s emissions events; (2) the cause of the
emissions event; (3) the quantity and impact on
human health or the environment of the emissions
event; (4) the duration of the emissions event; (5)
the percentage of a facility’s total annual operating
hours during which emissions events occur; and (6)
the need for startup, shutdown, and maintenance
activities. See 30 TAC 101.222(a). The current EPAapproved Texas SIP does not provide any
affirmative defense for an emissions event or
emissions events that are determined to be
excessive emission events. Such events trigger a
requirement to develop a corrective action plan and
are subject to a penalty action. See 30 TAC 101.223.
12 See Appendix 2 of the RTC document, found
in the docket for this action, for more information
on how TCEQ implements Texas affirmative
defense provisions.
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III. Evaluation of the Affirmative
Defense Provisions in the Texas SIP
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A. Summary of Proposal
Pursuant to 40 CFR 56.5(b), on
October 16, 2018, Region 6 received
EPA headquarters concurrence to
convene a proceeding for
reconsideration of the SIP call issued to
Texas and to undertake a rulemaking
pursuant to this reconsideration that
may deviate from the EPA’s national
policy that provisions providing an
affirmative defense to civil penalties for
excess emissions during periods of
startup, shutdown, malfunction, or
maintenance are not consistent with
CAA requirements. In the proposal,
Region 6 explained that in light of the
Luminant decision, a more appropriate
policy approach may be to permit
certain affirmative defense provisions in
the SIPs of states in Region 6, and
invited comment on this issue. Region
6 explained that it may be inappropriate
to impose a civil penalty on sources for
sudden and unavoidable emissions
caused by circumstances beyond the
control of the owner or operator. Region
6 recognized that even equipment that
is properly designed and maintained
can sometimes fail. Further, because the
specific affirmative defense provisions
in the Texas SIP apply only to excess
emissions that cannot be avoided by a
source operator,13 removing these
affirmative defense provisions from SIPs
will not reduce emissions and therefore
would not result in an environmental or
public health or welfare benefit.
In the proposal, Region 6 analyzed 30
TAC 101.222(b), 30 TAC 101.222(c), 30
TAC 101.222(d) and 30 TAC 101.222(e)
to see if such provisions were consistent
with CAA requirements according to the
policy under consideration. Based on
this analysis, Region 6 proposed to
determine that these provisions were
consistent with CAA requirements and
therefore are permissible components of
a SIP if Region 6 were to adopt the new
policy under consideration.
B. Final Action
As explained in the proposal, Region
6 invited comment on whether to adopt
a policy that certain affirmative defense
provisions are generally permissible in
SIPs in states in Region 6. However,
after reviewing the comments received
on Region 6’s proposal, including on the
regionwide policy under consideration,
Region 6 has decided to limit this final
action to the specific Texas affirmative
defense provisions that were the subject
13 See 30 TAC 101.222(b)(2), 30 TAC
101.222(c)(2), 30 TAC 101.222(d)(2), and 30 TAC
101.222(e)(2).
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of the 2015 SSM SIP Action and for
which Texas filed a petition for
reconsideration. Region 6 is not herein
announcing any alternative CAA
interpretation that would be applicable
outside of Texas; Region 6 will
determine whether to adopt a similar or
other alternative interpretation for other
Region 6 states if and when the need for
such a determination arises in the
future.
After considering the public
comments received, Region 6 is
finalizing its proposed determination
that 30 TAC 101.222(b), 30 TAC
101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d), and 30
TAC 101.222(e) are permissible
affirmative defense provisions. As
outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
the EPA views all emissions that are in
excess of applicable limitations as
violations. Nevertheless, Region 6
recognizes that imposition of a penalty
for sudden and unavoidable
malfunctions caused by circumstances
beyond the control of the owner or
operator may not be appropriate. In the
context of unplanned events or
malfunctions, Region 6 is cognizant of
the reality that even process equipment
or a control device that is properly
designed, maintained, and operated can
sometimes fail. At the same time, as
outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
the EPA has a fundamental
responsibility under the CAA to ensure
that SIPs provide for attainment and
maintenance of the NAAQS and
protection of air quality increments in
the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) program. After
balancing these considerations, Region 6
has concluded that the Texas SIP
provisions containing affirmative
defenses are appropriately narrowly
tailored and will not undermine the
fundamental requirement of attainment
and maintenance of the NAAQS, or any
other requirement of the CAA.
In its 2010 approval, Region 6
determined that the Texas affirmative
defense provisions met the criteria
outlined in the 1999 Guidance,14 which
was the relevant guidance at the time
outlining how the EPA would assess the
approvability of affirmative defense
provisions in SIPs. That guidance set
forth the EPA’s thinking at the time that
if affirmative defense provisions met
specific enumerated criteria, they
generally would be consistent with the
14 ‘‘State Implementation Plans: Policy Regarding
Excess Emissions During Malfunctions, Startup,
and Shutdown,’’ Memorandum from Steven A.
Herman, Assistant Administrator for Enforcement
and Compliance Assurance, and Robert Perciasepe,
Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, to
EPA Regional Administrators, September 20, 1999
(1999 Guidance).
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fundamental requirements of the CAA.
Region 6 finds that the Texas affirmative
defense provisions still meet the criteria
from that memo, namely that the
‘‘defendant’’ has the burden of proof of
demonstrating that:
1. The excess emissions were caused by a
sudden, unavoidable breakdown of
technology, beyond the control of the owner
or operator;
2. The excess emissions (a) did not stem
from any activity or event that could have
been foreseen and avoided, or planned for,
and (b) could not have been avoided by better
operation and maintenance practices;
3. To the maximum extent practicable the
air pollution control equipment or processes
were maintained and operated in a manner
consistent with good practice for minimizing
emissions;
4. Repairs were made in an expeditious
fashion when the operator knew or should
have known that applicable emission
limitations were being exceeded. Off-shift
labor and overtime must have been utilized,
to the extent practicable, to ensure that such
repairs were made as expeditiously as
practicable;
5. The amount and duration of the excess
emissions (including any bypass) were
minimized to the maximum extent
practicable during periods of such emissions;
6. All possible steps were taken to
minimize the impact of the excess emissions
on ambient air quality;
7. All emission monitoring systems were
kept in operation if at all possible;
8. The owner or operator’s actions in
response to the excess emissions were
documented by properly signed,
contemporaneous operating logs, or other
relevant evidence;
9. The excess emissions were not part of
a recurring pattern indicative of inadequate
design, operation, or maintenance; and
10. The owner or operator properly and
promptly notified the appropriate regulatory
authority.
The affirmative defense provisions in
the Texas SIP related to non-excessive
upset events that were approved in
2010, and that were subsequently made
the subject of the SIP call issued in 2015
include a series of specific criteria
enumerated in 30 TAC 101.222(b)(1)–
(b)(11):
‘‘(1) the owner or operator complies with
the requirements of § 101.201 of this title
(relating to Emissions Event Reporting and
Recordkeeping Requirements). In the event
the owner or operator fails to report as
required by § 101.201(a)(2) or (3), (b), or (e)
of this title, the commission will initiate
enforcement for such failure to report and for
the underlying emissions event itself. This
subsection does not apply when there are
minor omissions or inaccuracies that do not
impair the commission’s ability to review the
event according to this rule, unless the owner
or operator knowingly or intentionally
falsified the information in the report;
(2) the unauthorized emissions were
caused by a sudden, unavoidable breakdown
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of equipment or process, beyond the control
of the owner or operator;
(3) the unauthorized emissions did not
stem from any activity or event that could
have been foreseen and avoided or planned
for, and could not have been avoided by
better operation and maintenance practices
or technically feasible design consistent with
good engineering practice;
(4) the air pollution control equipment or
processes were maintained and operated in
a manner consistent with good practice for
minimizing emissions and reducing the
number of emissions events;
(5) prompt action was taken to achieve
compliance once the operator knew or
should have known that applicable emission
limitations were being exceeded, and any
necessary repairs were made as expeditiously
as practicable;
(6) the amount and duration of the
unauthorized emissions and any bypass of
pollution control equipment were minimized
and all possible steps were taken to minimize
the impact of the unauthorized emissions on
ambient air quality;
(7) all emission monitoring systems were
kept in operation if possible;
(8) the owner or operator actions in
response to the unauthorized emissions were
documented by contemporaneous operation
logs or other relevant evidence;
(9) the unauthorized emissions were not
part of a frequent or recurring pattern
indicative of inadequate design, operation, or
maintenance;
(10) the percentage of a facility’s total
annual operating hours during which
unauthorized emissions occurred was not
unreasonably high; and
(11) the unauthorized emissions did not
cause or contribute to an exceedance of the
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS), prevention of significant
deterioration (PSD) increments, or to a
condition of air pollution.’’
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In Section 16, Table VII of the TSD 15
prepared in conjunction with the final
rule approving 30 TAC 101.222(a)–(g) of
the Texas SIP (‘‘2010 final action’’)
(November 10, 2010, 75 FR 68989),
Region 6 compared the criteria in 30
TAC 101.222(b)(1)–(b)(11) with the
affirmative defense criteria outlined
above and included in the EPA’s 1999
Guidance. In the 2010 final action,
Region 6 concluded that the criteria in
30 TAC 101.222(b) are very similar to
those of the 1999 Guidance. Because
EPA’s thinking at the time was that, if
affirmative defense provisions met the
specific enumerated criteria from the
1999 Guidance, they generally would be
consistent with the fundamental
requirements of the CAA, and so Region
6 approved the affirmative defense
provisions into the Texas SIP.16 As
15 See Document ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2006–
0132–0018 at www.regulations.gov.
16 Affirmative defense criteria similar to those
found in 30 TAC 101.222(b)(1)–(b)(10) (for nonexcessive upset events) may be found at 30 TAC
101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d), and 30 TAC
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discussed previously, that approval
action was upheld by the Fifth Circuit.
See Luminant, 714 F.3d 841.
In addition, 30 TAC 101.222(f) states
that meeting the affirmative defense
criteria does not remove any obligations
to comply with any other existing
permit, rule, or order provisions that are
applicable to an emissions event or a
maintenance, startup, or shutdown
activity. It also states that an affirmative
defense cannot apply to violations of
federally promulgated performance or
technology-based standards, such as
those found in 40 CFR parts 60, 61, and
63. Additionally, the affirmative defense
is available only for emissions that have
been reported or recorded.
Furthermore, 30 TAC 101.222(g)
states that evidence of any past event
with respect to which an owner or
operator invoked the affirmative defense
provision shall nonetheless be
admissible in litigation proceedings and
can be considered as relevant to
demonstrate a frequent or recurring
pattern of events, even if all of the
criteria to receive an affirmative defense
are proven.
As outlined above, Region 6 is herein
reaffirming the determination that these
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP are very similar to, and
compatible with, the criteria outlined in
the 1999 Guidance. Because the
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP pertaining to upsets and
unplanned events (malfunctions) are
narrowly tailored, properly drafted,
limited in scope or application, and
effective in practice, EPA Region 6 finds
that 30 TAC 101.222(b), 30 TAC
101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d) and 30
TAC 101.222(e) are consistent with CAA
requirements for SIPs and permissible
affirmative defense provisions.
C. Comments and Responses
In this subsection, Region 6 provides
a summary of certain significant
comments received on the 2019
Proposal and the Region’s response to
those comments. The RTC document,
found in the docket for this action,
summarizes and responds to all other
relevant comments received.
1. Comments Alleging That EPA Region
6’s Proposed Action Is Inconsistent
With the CAA and D.C. Circuit
Precedent
Comment: Commenters alleged that
the proposal is inconsistent with CAA
sections 304(a) and 113(e). The
commenters asserted that the EPA
101.222(e) (for unplanned MSS activity, excess
opacity events, and opacity events resulting from
unplanned MSS activity, respectively).
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cannot allow the affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP because
those provisions directly conflict with
Congress’s exclusive grant of
jurisdiction to the federal district courts
to provide remedies in civil suits
brought under the CAA for violations of
emissions standards. The commenters
noted that under CAA section 304,
Congress gave ‘‘any person’’ the right to
sue over violations of emission
standards established in SIPs. Citing to
language in the NRDC opinion, the
commenters noted that CAA section 304
creates a private right of action, and it
is the judiciary, not any executive
agency, that determines the scope—
including the available remedies—of
judicial power vested by the CAA.
NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055 (D.C. Cir.
2014). The commenters also pointed to
CAA section 113(e), noting that
Congress expressly requires courts to
consider enumerated penalty
assessment criteria when they decide
the amount of civil penalties to apply
when they find a violation of an
emission limitation; weighing these
criteria, courts decide on a case-by-case
basis what penalty, if any, is
appropriate. The commenters also cited
to congressional intent by noting that
CAA section 304(a) was amended in
1990 to provide district courts with the
new authority to apply civil penalties,
because Congress felt it was necessary
for deterrence, restitution, and
retribution. The commenters concluded
that affirmative defenses which, if
proven, prohibit federal district courts
from imposing penalties are
irreconcilable with this congressional
intent.
The commenters also took issue with
the EPA’s statement in the proposal that
‘‘states have latitude to define in their
SIPs what constitutes an enforceable
emission limitation, so long as the SIP
meets all applicable CAA
requirements.’’ 17 The commenters
assert that the EPA’s claim is wrong for
two reasons: (1) The CAA requires civil
penalties be available as relief in a
citizen enforcement case, so a SIP that
limits that ability does not meet all the
applicable CAA requirements; and (2)
affirmative defense provisions are
neither emission limitations nor control
measures, but rather ancillary
provisions that purport to limit the
liability of a violating source, which is
inconsistent with congressionally
created remedies for violations of
emission standards.
Response: Region 6 disagrees with the
commenters. This action is not illegal,
arbitrary, or inconsistent with any
17 84
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FR 17990 (April 29, 2019).
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requirement of the CAA. The Act
provides that, in the case of EPA
enforcement and citizen suits, a federal
district court ‘‘shall have jurisdiction’’
to assess civil penalties; in assessing the
amount of a civil penalty, the court
must consider the penalty assessment
criteria outlined in CAA section 113(e).
In 2013, in reviewing Region 6’s
approval of the same Texas SIP
provisions in question here, the
Luminant court held that approval was
based upon a permissible interpretation
of CAA section 113 and deserved
deference. Region 6 acknowledges that
an effective enforcement program must
be able to collect penalties to deter
avoidable violations. However, Region 6
also acknowledges—as did the
Luminant court—that, despite good
practices, sources may be unable to
meet emission limitations during
periods of unplanned malfunctions due
to events beyond the control of the
owner or operator. The EPA finds it
reasonable to determine that a SIP can
provide for an affirmative defense
against civil penalties for circumstances
where it is not feasible to meet the
applicable emission limits, and the
narrowly tailored criteria that the source
must prove can ensure that the source
has made every effort to comply with
those emission limitations. This is
consistent with the CAA because the
criteria set forth in the Texas SIP that a
source must meet to assert the
affirmative defenses are consistent with
the penalty assessment criteria
identified in CAA section 113, which
are considered by the courts and the
EPA in determining whether or not to
assess a civil penalty for violations, and,
if so, the amount. The Luminant court
upheld the EPA’s approval of the Texas
affirmative defense provisions on that
basis. See Luminant 714 F.3d 853
(acknowledging that the Texas
affirmative defense criteria are
consistent with the penalty assessment
criteria in CAA section 113).
In addition, the EPA’s role, with
respect to a SIP revision, is focused on
reviewing the submission to determine
whether it meets the applicable criteria
of the CAA, and, where it does, section
110(k)(3) of the Act requires the EPA to
approve the submission. In the context
of a SIP, the EPA is not, as a matter of
law or policy, exercising discretion to
establish its own requirements for the
state to implement beyond the
requirements contained in the CAA.
CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)–(B) requires
states to submit SIPs with emission
limits and other control measures
necessary or appropriate to meet CAA
requirements, and CAA section
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110(a)(2)(C) requires SIPs to include ‘‘a
program to provide for the enforcement’’
of those emission control measures. In
light of the latitude provided to states by
Congress in CAA section 110 for
NAAQS implementation, Region 6 has
determined that inclusion of Texas’s
affirmative defense provision in the SIP
is appropriate due to the latitude that
states have to define in their SIPs what
constitutes an enforceable emission
limitation, so long as the SIP meets all
applicable CAA requirements.
As explained in the proposal for this
action, the differences in scope and
relative balance of state and federal
authority between CAA sections 110
and 112 suggest that the D.C. Circuit’s
reasoning in NRDC with respect to
limits on federal agency authority under
CAA section 110 does not address the
distinct question of whether a state may
include affirmative defense provisions
as part of its overall strategy for
inclusion in their SIP submissions to the
EPA under CAA section 110. In the
Luminant case, the environmental
petitioners raised the same basic
argument that was key to the D.C.
Circuit’s NRDC holding: Environmental
petitioners argued that the EPA’s
approval of the Texas affirmative
defense SIP provision conflicts with the
CAA’s provision that, in the case of EPA
enforcement and citizen suits, a federal
district court ‘‘shall have jurisdiction’’
to assess a ‘‘civil penalty.’’ 42 U.S.C.
7413(b); 7604(a). The Fifth Circuit,
however, upheld as ‘‘neither contrary to
law nor in excess of [the EPA’s]
statutory authority’’ the EPA’s position
that the Texas provision at issue here is
narrowly tailored and consistent with
the penalty assessment criteria in CAA
section 113(e). In addition, the Fifth
Circuit stated that the availability of the
affirmative defense in the Texas SIP
‘‘does not negate the district court’s
jurisdiction to assess civil penalties
using the criteria outlined in [CAA
section 113(e)], . . . it simply provides
a defense, under narrowly defined
circumstances, if and when penalties
are assessed.’’ Luminant, 714 F.3d at
853 fn.9.
The commenters noted that Congress
amended CAA section 304(a) in 1990 to
provide courts the additional authority
to assess civil penalties in citizen suit
actions because civil penalties were
thought necessary for deterrence. Even
accepting this characterization of
Congress’s intent, it has no bearing on
the permissibility of the Texas
affirmative defense provisions because
the use of those provisions is limited to
malfunctions, which are sudden,
unavoidable, and beyond the control of
the owner or operator. Among other
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factors, in order to use the Texas
affirmative defense, a source owner or
operator must show that all possible
steps were taken to minimize the impact
of the unauthorized emissions on air
quality. Malfunctions, as defined in the
Texas affirmative defense provision,
cannot be deterred. Therefore, Region 6
maintains that in light of the Luminant
decision, the appropriate policy is to
consider the Texas affirmative defense
provisions to be consistent with CAA
requirements.
Comment: The commenters asserted
that the EPA fails to rationally explain
why following the NRDC decision’s
statutory interpretation is inappropriate
in light of Luminant. The commenters
also noted EPA’s claim that the
application of the NRDC decision may
be ‘‘particularly inappropriate’’ in light
of Luminant is unexplained and
conflicts with the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
Furthermore, the commenters alleged
that the proposal’s change in position
on affirmative defenses from the
position expressed in the 2015 SSM SIP
Action is irrational and cannot be
reconciled with NRDC. Commenters
particularly noted that the proposal fails
to explain why the NRDC court’s
acknowledgment of Luminant matters or
why it matters that Luminant upheld the
EPA’s prior interpretation at Chevron
step two.
The commenters also stated that the
enforcement provisions of CAA sections
304 and 113 were the sole basis for the
NRDC court striking down affirmative
defenses, rather than the applicability of
these provisions to CAA sections 112 or
110. The commenters pointed out that
the NRDC court did not specifically
evaluate the question of whether
affirmative defenses are appropriate in
section 110 SIPs, and the commenters
disagreed with the EPA’s statement that
‘‘the NRDC decision did not foreclose
the EPA’s ability to allow affirmative
defense provisions in section 110
SIPs.’’ 18 The commenters alleged that,
as the NRDC court shows, the text,
structure, context, purpose, and history
of the CAA plainly demonstrate
Congress’s intent to give federal courts
the authority and obligation to
determine what penalties (if any) are
appropriate in enforcement cases. The
commenters asserted that the NRDC
court’s reasoning applies with equal
force to citizen suits alleging violations
of SIP emission limits and equally to
any remedy Congress gave courts
jurisdiction to order.
The commenters stated that to
provide a rational basis for its policy
reversal, the EPA must evaluate whether
18 84
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the reasoning of the NRDC decision
applies to CAA section 110 and explain
the reasons for choosing to disregard the
NRDC court’s logic. The commenters
alleged that the EPA premises its policy
reversal on a belief that CAA section
110 somehow overrides the CAA’s
enforcement provisions, relying on what
they characterize as an outdated notion
of ‘‘cooperative federalism’’ that relies
heavily on the Train and Union Electric
decisions from the 1970s, which hold in
keeping with what the commenters
characterize as the antiquated notion
that Congress deferred all specific
decisions to the states as long as the
result is compliance with national
standards. The commenters asserted
that the D.C. Circuit has since made
clear that it has not suggested that states
may develop SIPs free of extrinsic legal
constraints, including those in the CAA,
and that the EPA ignores subsequent
amendments to the CAA that resulted in
specific minimum requirements for SIPs
in the Act, including specific control
measures and permitting requirements.
The commenters noted that
demonstrating compliance with the
national standards is not the sole
measure for approval of a SIP revision.
Response: At the outset, Region 6
notes that it maintains discretion and
authority to change its CAA
interpretation from a prior position. In
FCC v. Fox, the U.S. Supreme Court
stated an agency’s obligation with
respect to changing a prior policy quite
plainly:
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We find no basis . . . for a requirement
that all agency change be subjected to more
searching review. The [Administrative
Procedure] Act mentions no such heightened
standard. And our opinion in State Farm
neither held nor implied that every agency
action representing a policy change must be
justified by reasons more substantial than
those required to adopt a policy in the first
instance.‘‘
FCC v. Fox Television Stations, 556 U.S. 502,
514 (2009).
In cases where an agency is changing
its position, the Court stated that a
reasoned explanation for the new policy
would ordinarily ‘‘display awareness
that it is changing position’’ and ‘‘show
that there are good reasons for the new
policy.’’ Id. at 515. However, the Court
held that the agency ‘‘need not
demonstrate . . . that the reasons for the
new policy are better than the reasons
for the old one; it suffices that the new
policy is permissible under the statute,
that there are good reasons for it, and
that the agency believes it to be better.’’
Id. In cases where a new policy ‘‘rests
upon factual findings that contradict
those which underlay its prior policy; or
when its prior policy has engendered
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serious reliance interests that must be
taken into account,’’ the Court found
that a more detailed justification might
be warranted than what would suffice
for a new policy. At the outset, it is
important to note that the Luminant
court upheld the EPA’s approval of the
very same affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP that are at
issue in this action.19 Furthermore, the
Luminant decision is the only existing
court precedent that addresses the
approvability of affirmative defense
provisions in SIPs. The Luminant court
held that the EPA acted consistent with
statutory authority and upheld the
EPA’s interpretation that affirmative
defenses against civil penalties are not
inconsistent with CAA section 113 if the
defense is narrowly tailored to address
unplanned, unavoidable excess
emissions in a manner that is consistent
with the penalty assessment criteria set
forth in CAA section 113(e). By contrast,
the D.C. Circuit’s NRDC decision only
evaluated the validity of an affirmative
defense provision in an emission
standard created by the EPA itself under
CAA section 112, and that decision
expressly reserved judgment regarding
the validity of an affirmative defense in
the context of a SIP approved under
CAA section 110. The NRDC ruling
explicitly states, ‘‘[w]e do not here
confront the question whether an
affirmative defense may be appropriate
in a State Implementation Plan.’’ 749
F.3d at 1064 n.2 (citing Luminant, 714
F.3d 841). Therefore, the NRDC decision
did not speak to the EPA’s ability to
allow for affirmative defense provisions
in SIPs. Texas’s narrowly tailored and
limited affirmative defense SIP
provisions for malfunctions, as upheld
by the Fifth Circuit’s Luminant
decision, are consistent with CAA
requirements and it is not necessary or
appropriate to extend the D.C. Circuit’s
reasoning in NRDC to the specific
affirmative defense provisions currently
in the Texas SIP for the reasons
discussed herein.
The commenters assert that Region 6
is reading the provisions of CAA section
110 to override the CAA’s enforcement
provisions, including CAA sections
113(b) and 304(a), but this is not true.
Rather, Region 6 is reading all of these
provisions together to authorize its
approval of certain affirmative defense
provisions in SIPs. SIPs are developed
by the states under CAA section 110 and
reflect the Act’s core principle of
19 Some commenters have noted that the claims
asserted in the Luminant decision may not be
relitigated in any future challenge to this action.
The EPA reserves the right to assert this argument
(or similar arguments) as a defense to this final
action.
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7237
cooperative federalism.20 CAA section
110 affords broad discretion to states in
how to develop and implement air
emission controls after the federal
government establishes NAAQS to be
achieved. Region 6 agrees with the
commenters’ position that the flexibility
afforded states in the development of
SIPs is not without limitations and that
demonstrating compliance with NAAQS
is not the sole measure for SIP
approvals. However, Region 6 finds the
commenters’ claims that subsequent
amendments to the CAA (concerning
control measures and permitting
requirements) were ignored are
misplaced and not relevant to this
action. Also, as noted in an earlier
response, the congressionally stated
reasons for the amendment to CAA
section 304(a) in 1990 (to provide
deterrence) are not relevant to
determining the permissibility of
affirmative defense provisions that are
limited to unavoidable, unpreventable
malfunctions (which are beyond the
control of the owner or operator and
therefore cannot be deterred). This
flexibility, and state discretion, under
CAA section 110 has been
acknowledged repeatedly by the EPA in
its actions and in court decisions on
those Agency actions.21
EPA Region 6 recognizes that the
interpretation of the CAA to allow the
Texas affirmative defenses in SIPs
conflicts with the position taken in the
2015 SSM SIP Action; however, it is
important to understand and
acknowledge that the affirmative
defense provisions for malfunctions in
the Texas SIP are a key component of
the state’s overall clean air control
strategy which has evolved since the
initial Texas SIP in 1972. See page 3 of
the TCEQ comment letter recognizing
that affirmative defense provisions are
‘‘part of a long-standing and integral
part of the Texas SIP’’.22 Recognizing
that states have latitude to define in
their SIPs what constitutes an
20 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3); 42 U.S.C. 7407(a); Train
v. NRDC, 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975).
21 See Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining and
Reclamation Ass’n, 452 U.S. 264, 289 (1981) (noting
that states are permitted ‘‘within limits established
by [the NAAQS], to enact and administer their own
regulatory programs, structured to meet their own
particular needs’’). See also Union Elec. Co. v. EPA,
427 U.S. 246, 250 (1976) (acknowledging that states
have ‘‘wide discretion’’ in formulating their SIPs
and that ‘‘[s]o long as national standards are met,
the state may select whatever mix of control devices
it desires’’); BCCA Appeal Grp. v. EPA, 355 F.3d
817, 822 (5th Cir. 2003) (recognizing states have
‘‘broad authority to determine the methods and
particular control strategies they will use to achieve
the statutory requirements’’) (citing Union Elec. Co.,
427 U.S. at 266).
22 Document ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2018–0770–
0018 at www.regulations.gov.
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enforceable emission limitation, Region
6 has determined that the Texas SIP
provisions are an example of how a
limited affirmative defense can be
properly crafted to be a part of an
approved SIP.
One commenter quoted the D.C.
Circuit as saying that it has avoided
suggesting ‘‘that under [section 7410]
states may develop their plans free of
extrinsic legal constraints,’’ including
those contained in the Act. Appalachian
Power Co. v. EPA, 249 F.3d 1032, 1047
(D.C. Cir. 2001). In this action, Region
6 is in no way suggesting that no
limitations exist on states’ SIP
development. As noted previously in
this response, Region 6 agrees with the
commenters’ position that the flexibility
afforded states in the development of
SIPs is not without limitations.
However, as explained elsewhere in this
action, Region 6 has determined that the
affirmative defense provisions in
Texas’s SIP are consistent with CAA
requirements.
Comment: The commenter stated that
the EPA has not explained why it would
be appropriate to prevent a federal court
from imposing civil penalties for
violation of a SIP emission limit while
preserving the right of the court to
impose civil penalties for violation of a
NESHAP. The commenter claimed that,
without a stated, logical reason for this
distinction, it is arbitrary and capricious
of the EPA to create a distinction.
Response: Region 6 disagrees with the
commenter. As explained in the
proposal, the mechanisms established
under section 112 of the CAA to control
air pollution are different than those
under section 110 in significant ways.
CAA section 110 functions within a
cooperative federalism system in which
states are required to develop plans to
attain and maintain the NAAQS and the
EPA determines whether the specific
state plans comply with the Act’s
requirements. See 42 U.S.C. 7410(a) &
(k)(4). On the other hand, CAA section
112 requires the EPA (not states) to
establish federal emission limitations
for a specific class of sources and
pollutants and strictly prescribes how
the EPA must establish those standards,
which states have little flexibility in
how to implement. See 42 U.S.C.
7412(d). More specifically, CAA section
110 requires states to adopt ‘‘emission
limitations and other control measures,
means, or techniques . . . as may be
necessary or appropriate to meet the
applicable requirements of this chapter’’
while CAA section 112 directs the EPA
to adopt standards that ‘‘require the
maximum degree of reduction in
emissions’’ that the Administrator
determines is achievable ‘‘through
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application of measures, processes,
methods, systems or techniques
including, but not limited to’’ measures
meeting a list of five requirements. Cf.
42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(a) with 7412(d)(2)
(emphases added).
Region 6 now believes that the
Agency gave insufficient weight to the
fact that Region 6’s prior approval of the
Texas affirmative defense provisions
that were subject to the 2015 SSM SIP
Action had been upheld by the Fifth
Circuit, the circuit to which review of
Texas-specific actions is specifically
assigned by Congress under CAA
section 307(b), when applying the
reasoning of NRDC to the SIP context in
the EPA’s 2014 supplemental proposal
and the 2015 SSM SIP Action. As
explained in the prior response, the
petitioners in the Luminant case argued
that the EPA’s approval of the Texas
affirmative defense SIP provision
conflicts with CAA sections 113(b) and
304(a). As discussed above, the
Luminant court was squarely presented
with the argument that affirmative
defense for malfunctions in the Texas
SIP inappropriately altered or infringed
upon federal district court jurisdiction
to assess appropriate penalties and the
court concluded that it did not, instead
holding that it is permissible to include
narrowly-tailored provisions that are
consistent with the penalty assessment
criteria in CAA section 113(e). The
Luminant court acknowledged that
‘‘states have wide discretion in
formulating their SIPs, including the
broad authority to determine the
methods and particular control
strategies they will use to achieve the
statutory requirements.’’ 714 F.3d at 845
(internal quotations deleted), citing
Union Elec., 427 U.S. at 250; BCCA
Appeal Grp., 355 F.3d at 822.
While the NRDC court clearly states
that affirmative defenses under CAA
section 112 are inappropriate, that
court’s opinion explicitly deferred
judgment on whether they were
permissible for inclusion in an
approved SIP. The only court decision
to reach the question of the
appropriateness of affirmative defenses
in SIPs is the Luminant court. Region 6
is applying this directly on-point court
decision, from the court which Congress
has assigned the role of hearing
challenges to actions applicable to
Texas, 42 U.S.C. 7606(b), to the review
of the affirmative defense provisions in
the Texas SIP, which is the Luminant
decision. Region 6 thinks the distinction
between CAA sections 110 and 112 set
forth here is reasonable under the Act.
Where the Act requires under CAA
section 112 the EPA to directly establish
federal limits that meet detailed and
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strict criteria and that are established to
further a different purpose than that of
CAA section 110, it is reasonable to take
the position that the EPA’s and a state’s
discretion is more limited than in the
section 110 context, and that only a
court should determine what penalties
should apply when those limits are
violated, as the NRDC court found.
However, when addressing limits that
have been established by the state as
part of an overall plan to address the
NAAQS under the CAA section 110
regime, and where states have primary
responsibility for and flexibility in
establishing those limits, Region 6
thinks it is reasonable for states to
include—and the EPA to approve—
certain defenses to penalties for
violations of those limits, as the
Luminant court found.
Comment: Commenters stated that the
EPA lacks the authority to disapprove
affirmative defense SIP provisions if it
finds that the SIP will ensure
compliance with the NAAQS.
Commenters referenced several court
cases where the courts stated that it is
the states and not the EPA that retain
primacy for NAAQS implementation.
Commenters stated that development of
affirmative defense provisions for SSM
periods is plainly within the states’
authority under this statutory structure,
and the EPA’s role is limited to
determining whether such SIP
provisions are approvable. Commenters
referenced CAA section 110(k)(2) and
the EPA’s previous statements in a
memorandum and stated that, in the
absence of any demonstrated link to air
quality issues rendering a SIP
substantially inadequate, any effort by
the EPA to impose its policy preference
on the states is beyond the EPA’s
authority. Furthermore, commenters
stated that there is no indication that the
Texas affirmative defense for SSM
provisions renders the Texas SIP
substantially inadequate. The
commenters alleged that the 2015 SSM
SIP Action did not reflect the EPA’s
limited role, did not defer to the state on
how to achieve CAA objectives, and
wholly fails to demonstrate that the
Texas SIP is in fact ‘‘substantially
inadequate to attain or maintain’’ the
NAAQS and meet other CAA
requirements. The commenters stated
that the EPA has failed to demonstrate
that substantial reductions in emissions
would result from eliminating
affirmative defense provisions for SSM
activities despite the reasonable design,
operation, and maintenance of
equipment to meet those requirements.
Response: This action is limited to
Region 6’s review of the SIP call issued
to Texas in 2015. To the extent the
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commenters are arguing about other
aspects of the EPA’s 2015 SSM SIP
Action, that is outside the scope of this
action. Within the confines of this
action, which is limited to the Texas
affirmative defense provisions, Region 6
agrees with the commenters that the
CAA grants states considerable latitude
in fashioning a plan to ensure the
attainment and maintenance of the
NAAQS, as provided by CAA section
110. Section 110(k)(5) of the CAA
defines the basis upon which the EPA
can issue a call to a state to revise its
SIP. Section 110(k)(5) of the CAA
provides that the EPA can issue a SIP
call whenever the Agency ‘‘finds that
the applicable implementation plan for
any area is substantially inadequate to
attain or maintain the relevant
[NAAQS], . . . or to otherwise comply
with any requirement of this chapter’’
(emphasis added). Region 6 does not
consider this role and responsibility to
be limited or ministerial in nature.
However, as discussed throughout this
final action, based on an alternative
interpretation of CAA requirements,
Region 6 is now adopting the view that
the Texas affirmative defense provisions
are not substantially inadequate under
the rubric of CAA section 110(k)(5) and,
therefore, is withdrawing the SIP call for
the Texas affirmative defense provisions
issued in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
2. Comments on the Need for
Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: The commenter stated that
the EPA should not defund the
regulation and penalization of emissions
related to SSM events. The commenter
argued that mechanisms for
accountability and financial and
criminal liability should remain in
place. The commenter believes that
polluters should not escape penalties for
significant emissions that result from
scheduled maintenance, accidents, and/
or a catchall class of ‘‘furtive’’
emissions.
Response: Region 6 disagrees with the
commenter’s assertion that this action in
any way ‘‘defunds the regulation and
penalization’’ of SSM events. Rather,
our action finds that specific and
narrowly tailored affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP are not
substantially inadequate under the
rubric of CAA section 110(k)(5). As
discussed in the proposal and in this
final action, Region 6 has concluded
that the Texas affirmative defense
provisions are permissible under the
alternative interpretation of the CAA
presented here, including that CAA
section 110(a)(2) authorizes Texas to
establish emission limitations in its SIP
that include a narrowly tailored
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affirmative defense to civil penalties for
unavoidable excess emissions in a
manner consistent with the penalty
assessment criteria set forth in CAA
section 113(e), as upheld in the
Luminant decision. Under the
requirements of these provisions, Texas
will hold sources accountable for
periods of excess emissions, including
triggering penalties and corrective
action plan requirements, where
excessive emission events do not meet
the requirements of the state’s narrowly
tailored affirmative defense. With
regards to the comment that sources
should be held accountable for
significant excess emissions that result
during periods of scheduled
maintenance, Region 6 notes that
planned, scheduled maintenance events
do not meet the criteria in the Texas
affirmative defense provisions. In
addition, there are no ‘‘furtive’’ or
hidden emissions associated with the
affirmative defense provisions that are
the subject of this action because all
excess emissions are required to be
reported to Texas online through the
State of Texas Electronic Emissions
Reporting System (STEERS) and the
affirmative defense may not be asserted
for emissions that have not been
reported (see 30 TAC Chapter 101,
Subchapter F). The commenter also
argued that mechanisms for criminal
liability should remain in place. The
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP do not apply to criminal
penalties.
Comment: The commenter stated that
most excess emissions can be attributed
to accidents that could have been
avoided through better maintenance or
safety inspections. The commenter cited
research that demonstrates that just over
10% of all excess emissions events from
2002–2017 were related to unavoidable
natural disasters, and that this finding
suggests that many excess emissions
events in Texas cannot be considered
unavoidable. The commenter stated that
the proposal completely misses the
distinction between ‘‘unavoidable’’ and
truly unavoidable excess emissions
(from unavoidable natural disasters) and
thus fails to account for the deterrent
effect that a stricter regulatory
environment can have on the incidence
of excess emissions.
Response: The commenter appears to
be asserting that the only excess
emissions that can be considered
unavoidable are those that result
following natural disasters. The EPA has
never taken the position that all
emission events are avoidable except
from those that result from natural
disasters, such as tornadoes or
hurricanes. To the extent that the
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commenter is alleging that the Texas
provisions do not adequately
incentivize source owners or operators
toward responsible behavior and better
plant maintenance, Region 6 disagrees
that the proposal does not address the
distinction between unavoidable excess
emissions and excess emissions that
could have been avoided by better
maintenance in regard to affirmative
defenses. First, Region 6 observes that
all emissions occurring above any air
emission limitation in a permit, rule, or
order of the commission are deemed a
violation of the emission limitation. 30
TAC 101.1(108). An enforcement action
can be brought by the EPA, Texas, or
citizens for any such violation. The
affirmative defense provision only
provides the defendant an opportunity,
with regard to which the defendant
bears the burden of proof, to
demonstrate that the violation in
question meets the strict criteria
outlined in the Texas SIP. An
affirmative defense is only available for
non-excessive upset and unplanned
events, so source owners and operators
are incentivized to keep any emissions
that occur over applicable limitations to
a minimum to avoid being considered
excessive. In addition, in order to
successfully assert an affirmative
defense in an enforcement action, the
responsible party bears the burden to
demonstrate that the unauthorized
emissions could not have been avoided
through better operation and
maintenance practices, among a number
of other identified criteria. A citizen or
government agency has an opportunity
to rebut this demonstration in the
course of an enforcement action.
Each report of emissions that exceed
applicable limitations is evaluated by
the corresponding TCEQ field office. In
fact, as stated earlier, Texas’s regulatory
regime has evolved since 1972, with
each iteration bringing a tightening of
requirements.23
3. Comments Concerning
Appropriateness of the Regional Scope
of This Action
Comment: Commenters argued that
Region 6’s proposed action is based on
an interpretation of the CAA that varies
from national policy, and the Region is
required by law (specifically 40 CFR
56.5(b)) to obtain concurrence for such
actions from the relevant EPA
headquarters (HQ) office before taking
final action. The commenters alleged
that there is no record that the EPA has
complied with its consistency
23 See pages 2–3 of TCEQ’s petition for
reconsideration, Document ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–
2018–0770–0010 at www.regulations.gov.
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regulations in proposing to exempt
Texas from the national SSM policy,
although the commenter acknowledged
that the docket includes a letter of
concurrence signed by the Director of
OAQPS. The commenter asserted that
governing EPA guidance documents
state that where a proposed action
would have significant national policy
implications, a more complete review,
including a steering committee or
interagency review, coordination
through the appropriate HQ office, and
full concurrence by each affected EPA
section is necessary. The commenter
argued that nothing is in the record to
indicate that Region 6 has conducted
the required consultations and obtained
all requisite concurrences in order for
this action to move forward.
Commenters also argued that for an
EPA regional office to depart from a
national EPA policy on a particular
issue, it must articulate a compelling
reason that rationally explains why that
issue deserves different treatment from
other regions, but the EPA has failed to
meet this requirement. The commenter
contended that the EPA is obligated to
correct inconsistencies by standardizing
processes and policies rather than using
CAA section 301(a)(2) as a license to
institutionalize the kind of
inconsistencies that have been proposed
in EPA Regions 4 and 6, which depart
from the nationally applicable policies
in the 2015 SSM SIP Action and instead
create a patchwork of regionally
applicable CAA policies. The
commenters alleged that there is no
adequate explanation for authorizing an
alternative interpretation, including no
discussion of why an alternative
interpretation is approvable under the
regional consistency regulations.
Response: To the extent the
commenters are raising concerns with
the recent action proposed by EPA
Region 4 concerning SSM SIP
provisions in North Carolina, that is
outside the scope of this action and
Region 6 provides no response. With
respect to the concerns raised
concerning this Region 6 action, which
is limited in scope to Texas, Region 6
did follow the procedures outlined in
the regional consistency regulations at
40 CFR 56.5(b), as explained in the
proposal and acknowledged by
commenters. Specifically, before
granting Texas’s petition for
reconsideration and before our proposed
action, the Region 6 Regional
Administrator sought and received EPA
headquarters concurrence to deviate
from the national policy announced in
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the 2015 SSM SIP Action.24 Before
finalization of this action, the Region 6
Regional Administrator again sought
and received EPA headquarters
concurrence to deviate from national
policy in this final action.25 The
substance of the commenters’ allegation
appears to be directed at Region 6’s
alleged failure to follow the document
titled ‘‘Revisions to State
Implementation Plans—Procedures for
Approval/Disapproval Actions,’’
OAQPS No. 1.2–005A, referenced in 40
CFR 56.5(c). However, the regional
consistency regulations only require
following this guideline ‘‘in reviewing
State Implementation Plans.’’ In this
action, the Region is not reviewing a SIP
submission from a state under section
110(k)(3), but rather is withdrawing a
SIP call issued pursuant to section
110(k)(5). Therefore, the provisions of
40 CFR 56.5(c) are not applicable. Even
if this action fell under the auspices of
40 CFR 56.5(c), that regulation requires
the region to follow ‘‘OAQPS No. 1.2–
005A, or revision thereof.’’ OAQPS No.
1.2–005A is a guideline from 1975 that
has been updated multiple times. EPA
Region 6 did follow the most recent
iteration of the EPA’s internal SIP
review process for ensuring national
consistency, which is the EPA’s 2018
SIP Consistency Issues Guide.
The commenters also argue that
Region 6 failed to follow the regional
consistency regulations by not
providing a ‘‘compelling reason’’ for the
region to deviate from the national
policy outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP
Action. Nothing in the EPA’s regional
consistency regulations or CAA section
301(a)(2) require a ‘‘compelling reason’’
to underpin regional deviation from
national policy. All that is required is
that the region seek EPA headquarters
concurrence for the action it intends to
take, when such action deviates from
national policy, and that has been done
here. Moreover, the EPA’s Office of Air
and Radiation reviewed a draft of this
final action and determined that the
circumstances and rationale set forth in
this action provided a reasonable basis
to concur on Region 6’s deviation from
the national policy outlined in the 2015
SSM SIP Action.
Comment: The commenter stated that,
although Region 6 relies heavily on the
Fifth Circuit Luminant decision in order
to apply a new CAA interpretation for
all Region 6 states, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, and Arkansas are not in the
Fifth Circuit. The commenter states that
24 See Document ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2018–
0770–0009.pdf, pages 3–4 at www.regulations.gov.
25 See EPA Docket ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2018–
0770 at www.regulations.gov.
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this is arbitrary and capricious since
there is no basis for treating the SIPs
from these three states differently than
the SIPs from states in other EPA
regions.
Response: In the April 2019 proposal,
Region 6 noted that it was considering
adopting a regionwide policy that
certain affirmative defense SIP
provisions are consistent with CAA
requirements, but noted that it would
consider whether it would apply any
regionwide policy to others states in
Region 6 in separate actions. However,
after reviewing the public comments
received, EPA Region 6 has decided to
limit its deviation from national policy
regarding affirmative defenses only as to
the SSM SIP call for Texas since the
Texas provisions were previously
upheld by the Fifth Circuit in the
Luminant decision, and Region 6 is not
herein announcing any policy with
respect to the remaining Region 6 states.
Therefore, at this time in all Region 6
states except Texas, the policy remains
unchanged from what was announced
in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
Comment: The commenters noted
that, as the EPA recognized in the 2015
SSM SIP Action, the agency’s legal
interpretation of CAA requirements
concerning permissible SIP provisions
to address emissions during SSM events
was a ‘‘nationally applicable rule.’’ The
commenters noted that petitions
challenging aspects of the SIP call or its
SSM policy were required to be filed in
the D.C. Circuit. The commenters
suggested that Region 6 must
acknowledge that the proposal at issue
is part of the same nationally applicable
regulation under CAA section 307(b)(1)
for the following reasons:
(1) The Region 6 proposal adopts a
policy that varies from the national
policy and announces a substantive
change to determining whether
affirmative defense provisions in SIPs
are approvable. This reversal effectively
amends the EPA’s national SSM policy
and is therefore nationally applicable;
(2) Although the proposal ostensibly
only applies to states in Region 6, the
EPA is using it to announce a
substantial change to the CAA’s SIP
requirements. Furthermore, the proposal
necessarily applies to the 17 states
covered by the affirmative defense
aspect of the 2015 SSM SIP Action. That
the EPA chose to promulgate a new
national policy in a Federal Register
document that only applies to Region 6
does not preclude the courts from
examining the underlying substance and
applicability of the rule.
Response: Region 6 is not establishing
a new national policy; rather, Region 6
is taking action associated with specific
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SIP provisions within the Texas SIP that
are applicable only within a single state,
Texas. Region 6 is simply reexamining
the effect of the Luminant decision and
the findings and statements made by
that Court as it applies to the exact
Texas SIP provisions that were the
subject of the EPA’s finding of
substantial inadequacy in the 2015 SSM
SIP Action, as well as the nature and
statements made by the NRDC court,
and concluding that it is not necessary
to extend the reach of the NRDC
decision to the particular affirmative
defense provisions at issue in the Texas
SIP. As the D.C. Circuit has recently
explained, ‘‘[t]he court need look only
to the face of the agency action, not its
practical effects, to determine whether
an action is nationally applicable.’’
Sierra Club v. EPA, 926 F.3d 844, 849
(D.C. Cir. 2019) (citing Dalton Trucking,
808 F.3d 875, 881 (D.C. Cir. 2015) and
Am. Road & Transp. Builders Ass’n v.
EPA, 705 F.3d 453, 456 (D.C. Cir. 2013)).
On its face, this action is locally
applicable because it is determining that
specific provisions in the Texas SIP that
are applicable only in Texas are
consistent with CAA requirements and
therefore withdrawing a SIP call issued
to Texas in 2015. This action has
immediate or legal effect only for and
within Texas. If the EPA were to rely on
the statutory interpretation set forth in
this action in another potential future
final agency action, the statutory
interpretation would be subject to
judicial review upon challenge of that
later action.
Comment: The commenters claimed
that even if the EPA’s proposal was not
nationally applicable, the EPA must still
make and publish a finding that the
proposed amendment to the national
SSM SIP call and policy established in
that rule is based on a determination of
nationwide scope and effect, as the
proposal is in fact based on several
determinations of nationwide scope and
effect, the authority for which is given
to the Administrator under the CAA.
The commenters contended that the
proposal is indisputably based on the
EPA’s determinations about the
nationwide validity of the nationally
applicable 2015 SSM SIP Action. The
commenters remarked that in the
proposal, Region 6, by seeking HQ
concurrence to propose an action
inconsistent with national policy,
admits that the proposal is, in fact,
based on a determination of nationwide
scope and effect. The commenters
asserted that a determination of
nationwide scope and effect is
furthermore appropriate where a
regionally applicable action
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encompasses two or more judicial
circuit courts. The commenters noted
that since the revised affirmative
defense policy would apply throughout
Region 6, which spans three judicial
circuits, and that the three courts could
reach conflicting conclusions regarding
the appropriateness of affirmative
defenses, the proposal must be reviewed
only in the D.C. Circuit. The
commenters claimed that a refusal to
find the rule is based on determinations
of nationwide scope and effect would be
inconsistent with the 2015 SSM SIP
Action; there the EPA found that venue
was appropriate in the D.C. Circuit
because the agency was revising its
interpretations with respect to certain
issues and establishing a national policy
applicable to all states. The commenters
argued that the EPA’s refusal to make
and publish a finding of nationwide
scope and effect constitutes an arbitrary,
capricious, and unexplained departure
from the EPA’s past practice of directing
review of SIP calls to the D.C. Circuit.
The commenters concluded that while
the EPA is not precluded from adopting
a different approach to venue under the
CAA, it must display an awareness of its
changing position and show there are
good reasons for the new policy.
Response: Under the venue provision
of the CAA, an EPA action ‘‘which is
locally or regionally applicable’’ may be
filed ‘‘only in the United States Court of
Appeals’’ covering that area, 42 U.S.C.
7607(b)(1) (emphasis added). The only
exception to that mandate is where the
Administrator expressly finds and
publishes that the locally or regionally
applicable action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope and
effect. The requirement that the
Administrator find and publish that an
otherwise locally or regionally
applicable action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope and
effect is an express statutory
requirement for application of this
venue exception, and there is no such
finding to publish here. Absent an
express statement—and publication—
that such a finding has been made, thus
invoking the venue exception, there can
be no application of that exception. See,
e.g., Lion Oil v. EPA, 792 F.3d 978, 984
n.1 (8th Cir. 2015) (even where the EPA,
unlike here, made the necessary finding,
the court found no need to decide
application of the venue exception
absent publication of that finding);
Texas v. EPA, 829 F.3d 405, 419 (5th
Cir. 2016) (‘‘This finding is an
independent, post hoc, conclusion by
the agency about the nature of the
determinations; the finding is not, itself,
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7241
the determination.’’); Dalton Trucking,
808 F.3d 875.
CAA section 307 expressly hands the
Agency full discretion to make its own
determination whether to exercise an
exception to a Congressionally-dictated
rule. See Texas v. EPA, 829 F.3d at 419–
20 (the venue exception ‘‘gives the
Administrator the discretion to move
venue to the D.C. Circuit by publishing
a finding declaring the Administrator’s
belief that the action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope and
effect.’’) (emphases added).
Even assuming that a court would
review Region 6’s declination to make a
nationwide scope or effect
determination under the Administrative
Procedure Act arbitrary and capricious
standard, the declination is not
unreasonable in this case. Commenters
assert that Region 6’s decision to seek
concurrence to propose an action
inconsistent with national policy
somehow constitutes an admission that
such action is based on a determination
of nationwide scope and effect. It is not
clear how or why this should be so. In
any case, as is stated throughout this
document, this action and the CAA
interpretation it is based upon applies
in Texas only and does not alter EPA’s
national policy, and thus is not based on
a determination of nationwide scope or
effect. See American Road &
Transportation Builders Ass’n v. EPA,
705 F.3d 453, 456 (D.C. Cir. 2013)
(holding that venue for review of the
EPA’s approval of revisions to
California’s SIP lay in the Ninth Circuit
because the approval only applied to
projects within California, even if the
SIP could set a precedent for future
proceedings).
The commenters argue that it is
appropriate for EPA to find and publish
that an action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope and
effect where a regionally applicable
action encompasses multiple judicial
circuits. The EPA does not take a
position on this question here, nor does
it need to do so, because as explained
earlier in this document, this final
action is limited to Texas, and thus only
a single judicial circuit. Although
Region 6 was initially contemplating a
regionwide policy on affirmative
defense provisions in SIPs, after
reviewing comments received during
the public process the region has
decided to limit the deviation from
national policy to Texas and the only
final action being taken herein is to
withdraw the SIP call issued to Texas.
The commenters also allege that the
EPA has a past practice of directing
review of SIP calls to the D.C. Circuit,
but this is incorrect. In the 2015 SSM
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SIP Action, the Agency did opt to
consolidate its action into a single
national announcement of policy and
issue 36 individual SIP calls through
one document. But at other times SIP
calls have been issued by individual
regions and reviewed in regional
circuits. For example, in 2011, EPA
Region 8 found that the Utah SIP was
substantially inadequate to comply with
the requirements of the CAA and
therefore issued a SIP call for Utah to
revise its SIP to change an unavoidable
breakdown rule, which exempted
emissions during unavoidable
breakdowns from compliance with
emission limitations. 76 FR 21639
(April 18, 2011). This SIP call was
subsequently reviewed in the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. US
Magnesium v. EPA, 690 F.3d 1157 (10th
Cir. 2012).
Comment: Commenters stated that the
proposed Texas withdrawal from the
2015 SSM SIP Action applies only to
the Texas SIP and only has legal effect
in the State of Texas; therefore, the
action is ‘‘locally or regionally
applicable’’ under the CAA judicial
review provision and EPA Region 6 was
correct in not making a finding that this
action ‘‘is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect.’’ The
commenters noted that while Luminant
is directly applicable to Texas, the
rationale for the action may be
applicable elsewhere and it may be
more appropriate to address Region 6
states outside the Fifth Circuit in a
separate action. Commenters requested
that Region 6 should clarify that its
policy position on the treatment of SSM
affirmative defenses is non-binding
guidance that reflects the Region’s
interpretation of the CAA’s
requirements. The commenters stated
that guidance should make clear that
any Region 6 state that seeks approval
of SIP provisions containing SSM
affirmative defenses would be subject to
a separate notice-and-comment
rulemaking in which Region 6 would
assess the provision and determine
whether it complies with the
requirements of the CAA. The
commenters also stated that the policy
guidance here would not constitute the
consummation of any decision-making
process with regard to those SIPs, nor
would it determine any legal rights,
obligations, or consequences. The
commenters recommended that the
policy guidance should make clear that
the Region would examine individual
SIP affirmative defense provisions for
consistency with the CAA on a case-bycase rather than rejecting all such
provisions out of hand.
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Response: This action only concerns
the Texas SIP and only has legal effect
in Texas, so it is a locally or regionally
(as opposed to nationally) applicable
action. As stated in the TCEQ’s petition
for reconsideration and our proposal,
the Texas affirmative defense SIP
provisions are narrow and limited in
scope. After careful consideration of the
facts and circumstances surrounding
our approval of the affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP, including
the fact that the Fifth Circuit previously
upheld the EPA’s approval of the same
provisions that were the subject of the
Texas portion of the 2015 SSM SIP
Action, Region 6 has concluded that it
would be appropriate to withdraw the
finding of inadequacy as it applies to
the Texas SIP.
This action does not have any
immediate or legal effect outside of
Texas, and Region 6 is not announcing
any policy that would apply outside of
Texas. As noted by the commenter,
Region 6 will examine any state
submittal for a SIP revision, or any
potential future petition for
reconsideration of a SIP call issued to
another Region 6 state, consistent with
the EPA’s obligations under the CAA. In
this document, Region 6 is taking a final
action to withdraw the Texas SIP call
based on the reasons set forth in the
proposal and this document. Apart from
the action on the Texas SIP, Region 6 is
not altering or changing the Agency’s
position with respect to affirmative
defenses.
4. Other Comments
Comment: The commenter alleged
that the EPA’s argument that ‘‘removing
these affirmative defense provisions
from SIPs will not reduce emissions and
therefore would not result in an
environmental or public health or
welfare benefit’’ is flawed and
inadequate. The commenter stated that,
through this action, Region 6 is creating
a less stringent regulatory environment,
while providing no evidence to support
its claim that eliminating affirmative
defense provisions will not reduce
excess emissions. The commenter
contended that the EPA’s argument is
not based on any analysis and lacks
substantive supportive evidence from
the peer reviewed literature.
The commenter also cited research
documenting the specific and general
deterrence effects of enforcement on
environmental rules and regulations.
The commenter contended this
research, which studies the Clean Water
Act compliance behavior of paper and
pulp facilities, concludes that
compliance and enforcement actions
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reduce incidences and durations of
noncompliance.
Response: The commenter, and the
cited research, speak of emissions that
exceed applicable limitations during
routine events. This action concerns the
Texas affirmative defense provisions
that are only available for upsets and
unplanned MSS events. Unplanned
MSS events by definition are not
routine. The specific affirmative defense
provisions at issue herein apply to
unavoidable excess emissions by a
source that cannot be prevented by an
owner or operator through planning and
design. Because the covered events, and
resulting emissions that exceed
applicable emission limitations, are
unavoidable, by the very nature of
source operations, they would occur
regardless of whether the affirmative
defense provisions were in the Texas
SIP. Therefore, Region 6 disagrees that
the affirmative defense provision
provide a less stringent regulatory
environment as the potential relief is
only available for events proved to be
unavoidable.
Furthermore, the following provides
evidence that the Texas regulatory
scheme provides deterrence to
emissions events. In response to a
similar comment, TCEQ in 2016
wrote 26:
‘‘In fiscal year 2015, the agency
[TCEQ] conducted over 109,000
investigations, which included 4,212
compliance investigations. More than
18,000 Notice of Violations were issued
regarding investigations conducted.
Enforcement efforts resulted in 1,681
administrative orders issued with over
$12.6 million to be paid as penalties and
over 3.2 million to be expended for
Supplemental Environmental Projects
(SEPs). There were an additional 46
civil judicial orders issued by the Texas
Office of Attorney General (OAG) that
resulted in over $16.1 million to be paid
as penalties. The agency also
participated in five search warrants and
finalized ten criminal cases with
convictions against 11 individuals and
two corporations during FY 2015. The
finalized cases included 19 felony
counts and six misdemeanor counts.
These cases resulted in total of $16,000
in criminal fines, 30 years of community
supervision, 156 months of
incarceration, 1,050 hours of
community service, and over
$23,370,000 in restitution.’’ TCEQ also
stated, ‘‘It is important to note that the
overall number of emission events
26 October 31, 2016, TCEQ’s Interoffice
Memorandum, from Richard Hyde, Executive
Director to Tucker Royall, General Counsel, titled
‘‘Analysis of Environmental Integrity Project’s (EIP)
Breakdowns in Air Quality Report, April 27, 2016’’.
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reported decreased 10% from 4,987 in
FY 2014 to 4,512 in FY 2015.’’
Moreover, while Region 6 does not
dispute the research cited by the
commenter concerning the deterrence
effect of enforcement, the Texas
affirmative defense provisions do not
prohibit enforcement. The Texas
affirmative defense is only available for
monetary penalties; an enforcement
action can still be brought for injunctive
relief. Region 6 also notes that the
research on the regulation and
enforcement of the Clean Water Act
finds that enforcement reduces the
incidence and duration of violations.
The affirmative defense provisions in
the Texas SIP only apply to excess
emissions violations due to unavoidable
malfunctions, where the source has
proven that it meets specific criteria
(including that the frequency and
duration of the event was minimized
and that all possible steps were taken to
minimize the impact of the
unauthorized emissions on air quality).
This also does not speak in any way to
Region 6’s alternative CAA
interpretation outlined in the proposal
and this action and whether the Texas
affirmative defense provisions are
approvable in CAA SIPs.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the EPA failed to conduct a detailed cost
benefit analysis on the impacts of excess
emissions on human health and the
environment.
Response: There is nothing in the
statute that requires the Agency to
conduct a cost benefit analysis in order
to withdraw a SIP call, and the
commenter has not provided a
compelling reason for why Region 6
should do so. In addition to statutory
requirements, regulatory agencies also
take direction from the President and
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) within the Executive Office of
the President regarding what type of
formal regulatory evaluation should be
performed during rulemaking. Executive
Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and
Review, requires an assessment of
benefits and costs for all significant
regulatory actions. As stated in the
proposal, this action is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ subject to review by
OMB under Executive Order 12866. In
reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely reaffirms that the Texas State
law meets Federal requirements and
does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. Therefore, this action is not
subject to review by the OMB.
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Even if Region 6 were to conduct a
cost benefit analysis, there are unlikely
to be any impacts of this action. This
final action does not involve a revision
to the Texas SIP, nor does it result in an
amendment to the current federally
codified Texas SIP concerning
affirmative defense provisions. This
final action withdraws a SIP call issued
to Texas in 2015 thereby leaving in
place a state rule that the EPA
incorporated into the Texas SIP in
November 2010. Furthermore, the Texas
affirmative defense provisions only
apply to unauthorized emissions that a
defendant proves were unavoidable.
Because these emissions were
unavoidable, the existence or lack of the
affirmative defense provisions should
not impact the scope of emissions.
Comment: The commenter noted that,
according to STEERS for calendar year
2017, 275 companies reported 4,067
periods of excess emissions that
resulted in the release of more than 63
million pounds of air pollution. The
commenter stated that according to data
provided by TCEQ, affirmative defenses
were claimed for 97 percent of those
excess emissions events. The
commenter concluded that this data
indicates that these events are common
enough to be considered routine and,
therefore, should be regulated.
Response: Region 6 does not disagree
with the commenter’s citation or their
use of the data from STEERS. The fact
that affirmative defense provisions were
claimed for 97% of periods of excess
emissions reported, however, does not
suggest that these events are considered
routine. Instead, it suggests an operator
of an emission unit that violates an
applicable limit is doing so because of
a malfunction that was, due to the
specific circumstances, considered
unavoidable, based on the facts
available at the time the excess
emissions report and claim was required
to be filed with Texas. The Texas
affirmative defense provisions for an
upset is only available for an event
where the source owner or operator
proves by a preponderance of evidence
in an enforcement proceeding that the
event in question was indeed due to an
unplanned and unavoidable breakdown
or excursion of a process or operation.
Moreover, the State of Texas has
additional provisions for excessive
emission events, if, in fact, a facility is
routinely and frequently violating
applicable standards.27
Outside of the criteria outlined in the
affirmative defense provisions, which
are quite stringent, equipment and
process downtime cost business money
27 See
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7243
and serve as incentive to repair and
remedy the situation in an expeditious
manner. As previously stated, Region 6
takes the position that in the case of the
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP, it would be inequitable to
penalize a source for occurrences
beyond the company’s control.
Furthermore, evidence of any past
upset, unplanned MSS, or excess
opacity event to which an owner or
operator invoked the affirmative defense
provision is admissible in litigation
proceedings and can be considered as
relevant to demonstrate a frequent or
recurring pattern of events, even if all
subjects of the criteria are proven.28
Comment: The commenters alleged
that the EPA fails to rationally confront
how the affirmative defense provisions
in the Texas SIP harm community
enforcement efforts and the efficacy of
pollution-control efforts. The
commenters stated that the proposal
fails to consider the polluters’ abuse of
the affirmative defense provisions and
how that use thwarts enforcement and
therefore diminishes sources’ incentives
for avoiding violations, resulting in
higher levels of pollution. Additionally,
the commenters alleged that the EPA
has failed to rationally explain its
departure from its treatment of such
issues in the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
where the EPA found that affirmative
defense provisions do in fact interfere
with actions taken to enforce emission
limitations brought under the authority
provided by CAA section 304. The
commenters noted that where it is
already difficult to bring citizen suits
under the CAA, as demonstrated by the
Hecker article 29 as well as Sierra Club
v. Energy Future Holding Corp., No. 12–
cv–108–WSS, 2014 WL 2153913 (W.D.
Tex. (Mar. 28, 2014)), affirmative
defenses make enforcement even more
difficult and expensive. The
commenters referenced a case in the
Hecker article, which described how the
factual complexity inherent in a dispute
over whether violations are infrequent
and unavoidable, and could have been
prevented through acceptable operating
and maintenance practices, made it
difficult to rebut the defendant’s
assertion of affirmative defense and
bring the suit in a cost-effective manner.
The commenters alleged that in Energy
Future Holding, without denying
thousands of exceedances of the permit
28 See
30 TAC 101.222(g).
Hecker, The Difficulty of Citizen
Enforcement of the Clean Air Act, 10 Widener L.
Rev. 303 (2004). (Referred to as ‘‘Hecker article’’.
This article describes the author’s experience
litigating five citizen suits between 1995 and 2004,
including one citizen suit case where a Texas
refinery claimed SSM defenses.)
29 Jim
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limits for opacity, Luminant argued, and
the district court found, that TCEQ’s
determinations did alter the court’s
authority to find liability for selfreported exceedances of emission limits.
The commenters claimed that real world
experience shows that defendants have
relied upon, and will assuredly
continue to rely upon, the Texas
affirmative defense provisions to argue
that a federal court’s authority to find
liability or impose penalties under the
Act is limited.
Response: In this action, Region 6 is
reviewing the regulatory affirmative
defense provisions adopted by Texas
and previously approved by the EPA
into the Texas SIP. Region 6 is not
investigating how these provisions have
been applied in individual cases by
either the State or individual courts. See
Montana Environmental Information
Center v. Thomas, 902 F.3d 971 (9th Cir.
2018) (holding that a petitioner’s
concern raising questions of
implementation does not need to be
addressed when EPA is approving a SIP,
but rather is ‘‘better addressed at a
different time’’). To the extent the
commenters disagree that the
affirmative defense provisions were
applied correctly in an individual case,
they could have made such claims as a
plaintiff or intervenor in the State’s
administrative or judicial enforcement
action where the defendant asserted the
affirmative defense. In this action,
Region 6 is considering whether the
affirmative defense provisions as crafted
in state regulations, and approved into
Texas’s SIP, are consistent with CAA
requirements.
However, Region 6 notes that the
commenters provide insufficient
evidence that sources ‘‘abuse’’ the Texas
affirmative defense provisions. The
commenters appear to be claiming that
sources are using the affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP to bad effect
or for bad purpose. This supposition is
unsubstantiated, and the commenters
have failed to provide actual evidence
that the affirmative defense provisions
in the Texas SIP are being misused. The
EPA does not believe it appropriate to
speculate as to the motives or incentives
of a source owner or operator generally
or with respect to any particular
emissions incident.
Comment: The commenter claimed
that the proposal fails to explain how
the affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP will protect public health
from air quality that violates the
NAAQS. The commenter stated that
neither the proposal nor Luminant
considers how these provisions meet the
legal requirements of SIPs to protect the
NAAQS and PSD increments. The
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commenter noted that SSM events are
well documented to have adverse
human health impacts, especially on
neighboring communities; furthermore,
excess emissions represent a sizeable
share of emissions in Texas. The
commenter stated that Region 6 should
have performed an analysis specific to
sources in Texas, evaluating the
potential impacts affirmative defenses
would have on air quality throughout
Texas, and demonstrating that the
NAAQS would continue to be
maintained in all areas of Texas
notwithstanding the availability of such
affirmative defenses. The commenter
noted that Region 6 has made no
attempt to do so in the proposal,
therefore the proposal fails to provide a
reasonable basis for approval.
Response: Region 6 disagrees that
some type of additional analysis specific
to sources in Texas is required that the
Texas affirmative defense provisions in
the Texas SIP will protect the public
health and the environment. At issue is
whether the affirmative defense
provisions are consistent with CAA
requirements. With respect to
commenter’s concern about NAAQS
violations, the provisions in the Texas
SIP clearly place the burden of proof on
the source owner or operator to
demonstrate that the NAAQS and PSD
increments were not exceeded in order
to make use of the affirmative defense.
See 30 TAC 101.222(b)(11) (the owner
or operator must demonstrate that ‘‘the
unauthorized emissions did not cause or
contribute to an exceedance of the
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS), prevention of significant
deterioration (PSD) increments, or to a
condition of air pollution’’). Therefore,
the existence of these provisions, by
their own requirements, will not lead to
any further interfere with the attainment
of the NAAQS or PSD increments.
Additionally, in an effort to ensure air
quality is protected in Texas, TCEQ
investigates each reported emission
event, and makes a determination of
whether the emission event was
excessive (30 TAC 101.222(a)). In
addition, 30 TAC 101.222(f), titled
Obligation, states that meeting the
criteria in 30 TAC 101.222(b)–(e) and (h)
do not remove any obligations to
comply with any other existing permit,
rule, or order provisions that are
applicable to an emissions event or a
maintenance, startup, or shutdown
activity. It also states that an affirmative
defense cannot apply to violations of
federally promulgated performance or
technology-based standards, such as
those found in 40 CFR parts 60, 61, and
63. The affirmative defense is available
only for emissions that have been
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4700
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reported or recorded. Furthermore, the
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP are available only for
emission events that are proven to be
due to malfunctions.
Comment: The commenters asserted
that the burden of proof for an
affirmative defense requires operators to
prove that unauthorized emissions did
not cause or contribute to a NAAQS
violation or PSD increment exceedance,
although in practice TCEQ grants
affirmative defense to operators’
unsupported representations that they
lack sufficient information to indicate
that an exceedance has occurred. The
commenters claimed that the
implementation of this affirmative
defense provision is inconsistent with
the Fifth Circuit decision and the EPA’s
reading of the rule. The commenters
alleged that this provision has public
health damages resulting from periods
of excess emissions exceeding $250
million annually and noted that lowincome communities and communities
of color that are in close-proximity to
sources claiming affirmative defenses
bear the burden of periods of excess
emissions, breathing deadly pollution,
being told to stay indoors, being told to
shelter in place, experiencing more
frequent hospital visits, and facing a
higher risk of serious and chronic health
harms.
Response: As discussed earlier, the
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP are defenses to a civil penalty
asserted by a defendant in an
enforcement action. Whatever
conclusions made by TCEQ in its
evaluation of excess emission reports for
malfunctions is not binding upon the
courts or other parties in a state or
Federal enforcement action brought
under CAA sections 113(b) or 304(a).
See Environment Texas Citizen Lobby v.
ExxonMobil, 84 ERC 1578 (S.D. Tex.
2017) (stating that ‘‘TCEQ’s
determination of the applicability of an
affirmative defense at best rises to the
level of prima facie proof’’ and
‘‘[r]eliance on the TCEQ’s determination
is not sufficient to meet Exxon’s
evidentiary burden at trial to
demonstrate all eleven criteria are
met’’). In addition, the affirmative
defense provisions in the Texas SIP are
only applicable to upsets and
unplanned periods of excess emissions.
By definition, these events are
unavoidable even when good practices
are implemented at facilities. Upsets
and unplanned periods of excess
emissions are not beneficial
operationally or financially to sources.
The commenters appear to be asserting
that affirmative defenses disincentivize
mitigation of emissions due to
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malfunctions. However, among the
criteria in the Texas affirmative defense
provisions is that all possible steps were
taken to minimize the impacts of the
unauthorized emissions on air quality.
As such, sources have incentives to
mitigate the adverse air quality impacts
from such events as much as possible.
While Region 6 acknowledges
commenters’ concern that emissions
from malfunctions may contribute to
adverse health impacts on communities
around industrial facilities,
malfunctions resulting in excess
emissions are, subject to scrutiny both
by TCEQ and in potential enforcement
actions, as to whether the event itself
was unavoidable using the narrowly
tailored criteria provided in the
affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP. In this action, Region 6 is
reviewing the regulatory affirmative
defense provisions adopted by Texas
and previously approved by the EPA
into the Texas SIP. Region 6 is not
reviewing how those provisions are
being implemented by TCEQ. In
addition, the Texas affirmative defense
provisions do not apply to actions
seeking injunctive relief.
action is not significant under Executive
Order 12866.
IV. Final Action
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
Region 6 is finding that the
affirmative defense provisions
previously approved into the SIP do not
make the Texas SIP substantially
inadequate to meet the requirements of
the Act. In doing so, EPA Region 6 is
withdrawing the SIP call issued to
Texas in 2015 SSM SIP Action. As is
detailed in the proposal for this final
action, in the absence of a SIP call,
Texas no longer has an obligation to
submit a SIP revision addressing its
existing affirmative defense provisions.
Texas may withdraw the SIP revision
submitted in November 2016 in
response to the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
on which the EPA has not proposed or
taken final action to approve or
disapprove.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
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A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action and was therefore not
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulations and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
This action is not an Executive Order
13771 regulatory action because this
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C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
since it alleviates an obligation on the
State of Texas to revise its SIP by
withdrawing the SIP call issued to
Texas in 2015.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. In making this
determination, the impact of concern is
any significant adverse economic
impact on small entities. Any agency
may certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities if
the rule relieves regulatory burden, has
no net burden or otherwise has a
positive economic effect on the small
entities subject to this action. This
action will not impose any requirements
on small entities.
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the states, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. In this action, the EPA is
not addressing any tribal
implementation plans. This action is
limited to the State of Texas. Thus,
Executive Order 13175 does not apply
to this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4700
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7245
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
J. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action does
not have disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority, low-income
populations and/or indigenous peoples,
as specified in Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). The
documentation for this decision is
contained in the response to comments
section of the preamble.
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. The EPA will
submit a report containing this action
and other required information to the
U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States prior to
publication of the rule in the Federal
Register. A major rule cannot take effect
until 60 days after it is published in the
Federal Register. This action is not a
‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2). The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. The EPA will
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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).
M. 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 April 7, 2020. Filing a petition
for reconsideration by the Administrator
of this final rule does not affect the
finality of this action for the purposes of
judicial review nor does it extend the
time within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action. This action may not be
challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Hydrocarbons, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Lead, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: January 7, 2020.
Kenley McQueen,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
[FR Doc. 2020–01477 Filed 2–6–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 200204–0041]
RIN 0648–BJ58
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Fisheries off West Coast States; Highly
Migratory Fisheries; California Drift
Gillnet Fishery; Protected Species
Hard Caps for the California/Oregon
Large-Mesh Drift Gillnet Fishery
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
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NMFS is publishing
regulations under the authority of
Section 303(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (MSA) to implement an immediate
closure of the California/Oregon drift
gillnet (DGN) fishery for swordfish and
thresher shark (14 inch (36 cm)
minimum mesh size) if a hard cap (i.e.,
limit) on mortality/injury is met or
exceeded for certain protected species
during a rolling 2-year period. The
length of the closure will be dependent
on when the hard cap is reached. The
implementation of hard caps is intended
to manage the fishery under the MSA to
protect certain non-target species. The
publication of this final rule is
necessary to comply with a court order
issued January 8, 2020, as further
described in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION below.
DATES: The final rule is effective March
9, 2020. Comments on the final rule and
supporting documents must be
submitted in writing by March 23, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by NOAA–
NMFS–2016–0123, by any of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/docket?
D=NOAA-NMFS-2016-0123, click the
‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon, complete the
required fields, and enter or attach your
comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Lyle Enriquez, NMFS West Coast
Region, 501 W. Ocean Blvd., Suite 4200,
Long Beach, CA 90802. Include the
identifier ‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2016–0123’’
in the comments.
Instructions: Comments must be
submitted by one of the above methods
to ensure they are received,
documented, and considered by NMFS.
Comments sent by any other method, to
any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period, may not be considered. All
comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be
posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address, etc.) submitted
voluntarily by the sender will be
publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive or protected
information. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
Copies of the final Environmental
Assessment (EA), Regulatory Impact
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4700
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Review (RIR), Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA), and other
supporting documents are available via
the Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov/docket?D=NOAANMFS-2016-0123 or by contacting Lyle
Enriquez, NMFS West Coast Region, 501
W. Ocean Boulevard, Suite 4200, Long
Beach, CA 90802–4213, or
Lyle.Enriquez@noaa.gov.
Lyle
Enriquez, NMFS, West Coast Region,
562–980–4025, or Lyle.Enriquez@
noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The DGN fishery for swordfish and
thresher shark (14 inch (36 cm)
minimum mesh size) is federally
managed under the Federal Fishery
Management Plan for U.S. West Coast
Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species
(HMS FMP) and via regulations of the
states of California and Oregon to
conserve target and non-target stocks,
including protected species that are
incidentally captured. The HMS FMP
was prepared by the Council and is
implemented under the authority of the
MSA by regulations at 50 CFR part 660.
The DGN fishery has been subject to
a number of seasonal closures. Since
1982, it has been closed inside the
entire U.S. West Coast exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) from February 1 to
April 30. In 1986, a closure was
established within 75 miles (121 km) of
the California mainland from June 1
through Aug 14 to conserve common
thresher sharks; this closure was
extended to include May in 1990 and
later years. In 2001, NMFS implemented
two Pacific sea turtle conservation areas
on the U.S. West Coast with seasonal
DGN restrictions to protect endangered
leatherback and loggerhead sea turtles.
The larger of the two closures spans the
EEZ north of Point Conception, CA
(34°27′ N latitude) to mid-Oregon (45° N
latitude) and west to 129° W longitude.
DGN fishing is prohibited annually
within this conservation area from
August 15 to November 15 to protect
leatherback sea turtles. A smaller
closure was implemented to protect
Pacific loggerhead turtles from DGN
gear from June 1—August 31 during a
forecasted or occurring El Nin˜o event,
and is located south of Point
Conception, CA, and east of 120° W
longitude (72 FR 31756, June 8, 2007).
The number of active vessels in the
DGN fishery has remained under 50
vessels since 2003, with an average of
20 active vessels per year from 2010
through 2018.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 26 (Friday, February 7, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7232-7246]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-01477]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770; FRL-10004-01-Region 6]
Withdrawal of Finding of Substantial Inadequacy of Implementation
Plan and of Call for Texas State Implementation Plan Revision--
Affirmative Defense Provisions
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final action.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 6 Regional Administrator
finds that the affirmative defense provisions in the State
Implementation Plan (SIP) for the State of Texas applicable to excess
emissions that occur during certain upset events and unplanned
maintenance, startup, and shutdown activities are consistent with CAA
requirements. Accordingly, EPA Region 6 is withdrawing the SIP call
issued to Texas that was published on June 12, 2015. This action is
limited to the SIP call issued to Texas and does not otherwise change
or alter the EPA's June 12, 2015 action.
DATES: This final action is effective on March 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770. 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 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 either electronically through https://www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the EPA Region 6 Office, 1201 Elm Street, Suite 500,
Dallas, Texas 75270.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Alan Shar, EPA Region 6 Office,
SO2 and Regional Haze Section (6ARSH), 1201 Elm Street,
Suite 500, Dallas, TX 75270, 214-665-6691, [email protected]. To
inspect the hard copy materials, please schedule an appointment with
Alan Shar.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document ``we,'' ``us,'' and
``our'' means the EPA.
Definitions
For the purpose of this document, the following definitions apply:
i. The word Act or initials CAA mean or refer to the Clean Air
Act.
ii. The initials EPA mean or refer to the United States
Environmental Protection Agency.
iii. The initials MSS mean unplanned Maintenance, Startup or
Shutdown activities, specific to Texas regulations.
iv. The term Malfunction means a sudden and unavoidable
breakdown of process or control equipment.
v. The initials NAAQS mean National Ambient Air Quality
Standards.
vi. The initials NESHAP mean National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants.
vii. The initials OAQPS mean the Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards.
viii. The initials OMB mean the Office of Management and Budget.
ix. The initials PSD mean Prevention of Significant
Deterioration.
x. The terms EPA Region 6 and Region 6 refer to the United
States Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, located in Dallas,
Texas.
xi. The initials RTC mean Response To Comment.
xii. The initials SIP mean State Implementation Plan.
xiii. The word State means the State of Texas, unless the
context indicates otherwise.
xiv. The initials STEERS mean the State of Texas Environmental
Electronic Reporting System.
xv. The term Shutdown means, generally, the cessation of
operation of a source.
xvi. The initials SSM mean Startup, Shutdown, or Malfunction.
xvii. The term Startup means, generally, the setting in
operation of a source.
xviii. The initials TAC mean the Texas Administrative Code.
xix. The initials TCEQ mean the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality.
Table of Contents
I. Summary of the Final Action
II. Background
A. Clean Air Act and the Texas SIP
B. Affirmative Defense Provisions in the Texas SIP
III. Evaluation of the Affirmative Defense Provisions in the Texas
SIP
A. Summary of Proposal
B. Final Action
C. Comments and Responses
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of the Final Action
In this document, Region 6 is making a finding that the affirmative
defense provisions in Texas's SIP applicable to excess emissions that
occur during upsets (30 TAC 101.222(b)), unplanned events (30 TAC
101.222(c)), upsets with respect to opacity limits (30 TAC 101.222(d)),
and unplanned events with respect to opacity limits (30 TAC
[[Page 7233]]
101.222(e)) do not make Texas's SIP substantially inadequate to meet
the requirements of the Act. Accordingly, Region 6 is withdrawing the
SIP call issued to Texas that was published on June 12, 2015 (80 FR
33968-9).
II. Background
The background for this action is discussed in detail in our April
29, 2019 (84 FR 17986) proposed action. In that document, Region 6
invited comment on its belief that the best policy may be to permit
certain affirmative defense provisions in SIPs, consistent with the
court's decision in Luminant Generation v. EPA, 714 F.3d 841 (5th Cir.
2013), cert. denied, 134 S. Ct. 387 (2013). See 84 FR 17990. Region 6
recognized that such a policy, if adopted, would depart from the policy
set forth in the EPA's 2015 Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction (SSM) SIP
Action.\1\ EPA Region 6 also proposed to make a finding that the
affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP applicable to excess
emissions that occur during certain upset events \2\ and unplanned
maintenance, startup, or shutdown activities \3\ would be consistent
with CAA requirements if the alternative interpretation were adopted.
Accordingly, Region 6 proposed to withdraw the SIP call \4\ issued to
Texas that was published on June 12, 2015.
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\1\ See section XI.F of the Statement of the EPA's SSM SIP
Policy as of 2015 as set forth in ``State Implementation Plans:
Response to Petition for Rulemaking; Restatement and Update of EPA's
SSM Policy Applicable to SIPs; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy;
and SIP Calls To Amend Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions
During Periods of Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction; Final Rule''
(80 FR 33840, 33981-2).
\2\ See 30 TAC 101.1(110).
\3\ See 301 TAC 101.1(109).
\4\ ``State Implementation Plans: Response to Petition for
Rulemaking; Restatement and Update of EPA's SSM Policy Applicable to
SIPs; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy; and SIP Calls to Amend
Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of Startup,
Shutdown and Malfunction; Final Rule.'' (80 FR 33840), June 12,
2015. (2015 SSM SIP Action).
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The 60-day public comment period closed on June 28, 2019, and
Region 6 received numerous comments on the proposed action. The public
comments are included in the publicly posted docket associated with
this action at www.regulations.gov. Region 6 reviewed all public
comments received on the proposed action and considered them before
finalizing this action. In this preamble, Region 6 provides a summary
of certain significant comments received on the 2019 Proposal and the
Region's response to those comments. The Response To Comment (RTC)
document for this action summarizes and responds to all other relevant
comments received. The RTC document may be found in the docket for this
action.
A. Clean Air Act and the Texas SIP
The CAA creates a framework for cooperative state and Federal
programs to prevent and control air pollution providing states with the
``primary responsibility'' for prevention and control of air pollution
and flexibility for specific state needs and priorities.\5\ The Act
requires the EPA to identify pollutants that could endanger the public
health and welfare and to establish national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS), which the EPA has done for six criteria pollutants.
Each state prepares a State Implementation Plan (SIP) that identifies
the controls and programs the state will use to attain and maintain the
NAAQS.\6\ In Texas, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
(TCEQ) is the State agency responsible for implementing the
requirements of the CAA related to SIPs. Since the EPA's approval of
the initial Texas SIP in 1972, there has been a separate regulatory
control strategy for unauthorized emissions \7\ due to malfunction
events based on the acknowledgement that imposition of civil penalties
may not be appropriate every time unauthorized emissions result from
such events. The regulatory regime has evolved since 1972, with each
iteration tightening requirements. In 2005, TCEQ adopted the
affirmative defenses found at 30 TAC 101.222(b)-(e).\8\ The EPA
approved these affirmative defense provisions related to upsets and
unplanned maintenance, startup, or shutdown (MSS) activities as a
revision to the Texas SIP in November 2010.\9\ The EPA subsequently
issued a SIP call for these provisions as part of its 2015 SSM SIP
Action based on the position that the affirmative defense provisions
made the SIP substantially inadequate to meet the requirements of the
Act. The 2015 SSM SIP Action included SIP calls for 45 jurisdictions in
36 states. For more information concerning the SIP call issued to
Texas, see section II.(C) of the proposed action (84 FR at 17988). On
March 15, 2017, TCEQ petitioned the EPA to reconsider the SIP call
issued to Texas in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
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\5\ 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3); 42 U.S.C. 7407(a); Train v. NRDC, 421
U.S. 60, 79 (1975).
\6\ 42 U.S.C. 7407(a) & 7410(a).
\7\ See 30 TAC 101.1(108).
\8\ See 30 Texas Register 8884 (Dec. 30, 2005), codified at 30
TAC 101.222.
\9\ 75 FR 68989 (Nov. 10, 2010).
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B. Affirmative Defense Provisions in the Texas SIP
As stated above, the EPA approved the affirmative defense
provisions found at 30 TAC 101.222(b)-(e) as a revision to the Texas
SIP in November 2010.\10\ These provisions provide a narrowly tailored
affirmative defense for emissions that exceed applicable emissions
limitations that occur during upsets and unplanned MSS activities and
are considered functionally equivalent to malfunctions. That is, the
affirmative defense provisions in the EPA-approved Texas SIP apply to
unplanned and unavoidable upset events and unplanned MSS activities
that are not part of normal or routine operations and arise from sudden
and unforeseeable events beyond the control of the operator. In
addition, the affirmative defense provisions are inapplicable to
emission events determined to be excessive \11\ based on a number of
criteria including frequency, duration, and impact on human health, and
are unavailable in criminal actions or civil enforcement actions
seeking administrative technical orders and actions for injunctive
relief. In the context of an enforcement proceeding,\12\ an affirmative
defense is a response or defense put forward by a defendant, who bears
the burden of proof, and the merits of which are independently and
objectively evaluated in a judicial or administrative proceeding. See
section IV.A of the proposed action for more information (84 FR 17991-
92). The EPA's 2010 approval of the Texas SIP revision adding these
affirmative defense provisions was subsequently challenged in court and
upheld as reasonable under the Act by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit in Luminant. 714 F.3d 841.
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\10\ Id.
\11\ To determine whether an emissions event or emissions events
are excessive, the following factors are evaluated: (1) The
frequency of the facility's emissions events; (2) the cause of the
emissions event; (3) the quantity and impact on human health or the
environment of the emissions event; (4) the duration of the
emissions event; (5) the percentage of a facility's total annual
operating hours during which emissions events occur; and (6) the
need for startup, shutdown, and maintenance activities. See 30 TAC
101.222(a). The current EPA-approved Texas SIP does not provide any
affirmative defense for an emissions event or emissions events that
are determined to be excessive emission events. Such events trigger
a requirement to develop a corrective action plan and are subject to
a penalty action. See 30 TAC 101.223.
\12\ See Appendix 2 of the RTC document, found in the docket for
this action, for more information on how TCEQ implements Texas
affirmative defense provisions.
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[[Page 7234]]
III. Evaluation of the Affirmative Defense Provisions in the Texas SIP
A. Summary of Proposal
Pursuant to 40 CFR 56.5(b), on October 16, 2018, Region 6 received
EPA headquarters concurrence to convene a proceeding for
reconsideration of the SIP call issued to Texas and to undertake a
rulemaking pursuant to this reconsideration that may deviate from the
EPA's national policy that provisions providing an affirmative defense
to civil penalties for excess emissions during periods of startup,
shutdown, malfunction, or maintenance are not consistent with CAA
requirements. In the proposal, Region 6 explained that in light of the
Luminant decision, a more appropriate policy approach may be to permit
certain affirmative defense provisions in the SIPs of states in Region
6, and invited comment on this issue. Region 6 explained that it may be
inappropriate to impose a civil penalty on sources for sudden and
unavoidable emissions caused by circumstances beyond the control of the
owner or operator. Region 6 recognized that even equipment that is
properly designed and maintained can sometimes fail. Further, because
the specific affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP apply only
to excess emissions that cannot be avoided by a source operator,\13\
removing these affirmative defense provisions from SIPs will not reduce
emissions and therefore would not result in an environmental or public
health or welfare benefit.
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\13\ See 30 TAC 101.222(b)(2), 30 TAC 101.222(c)(2), 30 TAC
101.222(d)(2), and 30 TAC 101.222(e)(2).
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In the proposal, Region 6 analyzed 30 TAC 101.222(b), 30 TAC
101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d) and 30 TAC 101.222(e) to see if such
provisions were consistent with CAA requirements according to the
policy under consideration. Based on this analysis, Region 6 proposed
to determine that these provisions were consistent with CAA
requirements and therefore are permissible components of a SIP if
Region 6 were to adopt the new policy under consideration.
B. Final Action
As explained in the proposal, Region 6 invited comment on whether
to adopt a policy that certain affirmative defense provisions are
generally permissible in SIPs in states in Region 6. However, after
reviewing the comments received on Region 6's proposal, including on
the regionwide policy under consideration, Region 6 has decided to
limit this final action to the specific Texas affirmative defense
provisions that were the subject of the 2015 SSM SIP Action and for
which Texas filed a petition for reconsideration. Region 6 is not
herein announcing any alternative CAA interpretation that would be
applicable outside of Texas; Region 6 will determine whether to adopt a
similar or other alternative interpretation for other Region 6 states
if and when the need for such a determination arises in the future.
After considering the public comments received, Region 6 is
finalizing its proposed determination that 30 TAC 101.222(b), 30 TAC
101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d), and 30 TAC 101.222(e) are permissible
affirmative defense provisions. As outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
the EPA views all emissions that are in excess of applicable
limitations as violations. Nevertheless, Region 6 recognizes that
imposition of a penalty for sudden and unavoidable malfunctions caused
by circumstances beyond the control of the owner or operator may not be
appropriate. In the context of unplanned events or malfunctions, Region
6 is cognizant of the reality that even process equipment or a control
device that is properly designed, maintained, and operated can
sometimes fail. At the same time, as outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP
Action, the EPA has a fundamental responsibility under the CAA to
ensure that SIPs provide for attainment and maintenance of the NAAQS
and protection of air quality increments in the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD) program. After balancing these
considerations, Region 6 has concluded that the Texas SIP provisions
containing affirmative defenses are appropriately narrowly tailored and
will not undermine the fundamental requirement of attainment and
maintenance of the NAAQS, or any other requirement of the CAA.
In its 2010 approval, Region 6 determined that the Texas
affirmative defense provisions met the criteria outlined in the 1999
Guidance,\14\ which was the relevant guidance at the time outlining how
the EPA would assess the approvability of affirmative defense
provisions in SIPs. That guidance set forth the EPA's thinking at the
time that if affirmative defense provisions met specific enumerated
criteria, they generally would be consistent with the fundamental
requirements of the CAA. Region 6 finds that the Texas affirmative
defense provisions still meet the criteria from that memo, namely that
the ``defendant'' has the burden of proof of demonstrating that:
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\14\ ``State Implementation Plans: Policy Regarding Excess
Emissions During Malfunctions, Startup, and Shutdown,'' Memorandum
from Steven A. Herman, Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and
Compliance Assurance, and Robert Perciasepe, Assistant Administrator
for Air and Radiation, to EPA Regional Administrators, September 20,
1999 (1999 Guidance).
1. The excess emissions were caused by a sudden, unavoidable
breakdown of technology, beyond the control of the owner or
operator;
2. The excess emissions (a) did not stem from any activity or
event that could have been foreseen and avoided, or planned for, and
(b) could not have been avoided by better operation and maintenance
practices;
3. To the maximum extent practicable the air pollution control
equipment or processes were maintained and operated in a manner
consistent with good practice for minimizing emissions;
4. Repairs were made in an expeditious fashion when the operator
knew or should have known that applicable emission limitations were
being exceeded. Off-shift labor and overtime must have been
utilized, to the extent practicable, to ensure that such repairs
were made as expeditiously as practicable;
5. The amount and duration of the excess emissions (including
any bypass) were minimized to the maximum extent practicable during
periods of such emissions;
6. All possible steps were taken to minimize the impact of the
excess emissions on ambient air quality;
7. All emission monitoring systems were kept in operation if at
all possible;
8. The owner or operator's actions in response to the excess
emissions were documented by properly signed, contemporaneous
operating logs, or other relevant evidence;
9. The excess emissions were not part of a recurring pattern
indicative of inadequate design, operation, or maintenance; and
10. The owner or operator properly and promptly notified the
appropriate regulatory authority.
The affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP related to non-
excessive upset events that were approved in 2010, and that were
subsequently made the subject of the SIP call issued in 2015 include a
series of specific criteria enumerated in 30 TAC 101.222(b)(1)-(b)(11):
``(1) the owner or operator complies with the requirements of
Sec. 101.201 of this title (relating to Emissions Event Reporting
and Recordkeeping Requirements). In the event the owner or operator
fails to report as required by Sec. 101.201(a)(2) or (3), (b), or
(e) of this title, the commission will initiate enforcement for such
failure to report and for the underlying emissions event itself.
This subsection does not apply when there are minor omissions or
inaccuracies that do not impair the commission's ability to review
the event according to this rule, unless the owner or operator
knowingly or intentionally falsified the information in the report;
(2) the unauthorized emissions were caused by a sudden,
unavoidable breakdown
[[Page 7235]]
of equipment or process, beyond the control of the owner or
operator;
(3) the unauthorized emissions did not stem from any activity or
event that could have been foreseen and avoided or planned for, and
could not have been avoided by better operation and maintenance
practices or technically feasible design consistent with good
engineering practice;
(4) the air pollution control equipment or processes were
maintained and operated in a manner consistent with good practice
for minimizing emissions and reducing the number of emissions
events;
(5) prompt action was taken to achieve compliance once the
operator knew or should have known that applicable emission
limitations were being exceeded, and any necessary repairs were made
as expeditiously as practicable;
(6) the amount and duration of the unauthorized emissions and
any bypass of pollution control equipment were minimized and all
possible steps were taken to minimize the impact of the unauthorized
emissions on ambient air quality;
(7) all emission monitoring systems were kept in operation if
possible;
(8) the owner or operator actions in response to the
unauthorized emissions were documented by contemporaneous operation
logs or other relevant evidence;
(9) the unauthorized emissions were not part of a frequent or
recurring pattern indicative of inadequate design, operation, or
maintenance;
(10) the percentage of a facility's total annual operating hours
during which unauthorized emissions occurred was not unreasonably
high; and
(11) the unauthorized emissions did not cause or contribute to
an exceedance of the national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS),
prevention of significant deterioration (PSD) increments, or to a
condition of air pollution.''
In Section 16, Table VII of the TSD \15\ prepared in conjunction
with the final rule approving 30 TAC 101.222(a)-(g) of the Texas SIP
(``2010 final action'') (November 10, 2010, 75 FR 68989), Region 6
compared the criteria in 30 TAC 101.222(b)(1)-(b)(11) with the
affirmative defense criteria outlined above and included in the EPA's
1999 Guidance. In the 2010 final action, Region 6 concluded that the
criteria in 30 TAC 101.222(b) are very similar to those of the 1999
Guidance. Because EPA's thinking at the time was that, if affirmative
defense provisions met the specific enumerated criteria from the 1999
Guidance, they generally would be consistent with the fundamental
requirements of the CAA, and so Region 6 approved the affirmative
defense provisions into the Texas SIP.\16\ As discussed previously,
that approval action was upheld by the Fifth Circuit. See Luminant, 714
F.3d 841.
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\15\ See Document ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2006-0132-0018 at
www.regulations.gov.
\16\ Affirmative defense criteria similar to those found in 30
TAC 101.222(b)(1)-(b)(10) (for non-excessive upset events) may be
found at 30 TAC 101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d), and 30 TAC 101.222(e)
(for unplanned MSS activity, excess opacity events, and opacity
events resulting from unplanned MSS activity, respectively).
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In addition, 30 TAC 101.222(f) states that meeting the affirmative
defense criteria does not remove any obligations to comply with any
other existing permit, rule, or order provisions that are applicable to
an emissions event or a maintenance, startup, or shutdown activity. It
also states that an affirmative defense cannot apply to violations of
federally promulgated performance or technology-based standards, such
as those found in 40 CFR parts 60, 61, and 63. Additionally, the
affirmative defense is available only for emissions that have been
reported or recorded.
Furthermore, 30 TAC 101.222(g) states that evidence of any past
event with respect to which an owner or operator invoked the
affirmative defense provision shall nonetheless be admissible in
litigation proceedings and can be considered as relevant to demonstrate
a frequent or recurring pattern of events, even if all of the criteria
to receive an affirmative defense are proven.
As outlined above, Region 6 is herein reaffirming the determination
that these affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP are very
similar to, and compatible with, the criteria outlined in the 1999
Guidance. Because the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP
pertaining to upsets and unplanned events (malfunctions) are narrowly
tailored, properly drafted, limited in scope or application, and
effective in practice, EPA Region 6 finds that 30 TAC 101.222(b), 30
TAC 101.222(c), 30 TAC 101.222(d) and 30 TAC 101.222(e) are consistent
with CAA requirements for SIPs and permissible affirmative defense
provisions.
C. Comments and Responses
In this subsection, Region 6 provides a summary of certain
significant comments received on the 2019 Proposal and the Region's
response to those comments. The RTC document, found in the docket for
this action, summarizes and responds to all other relevant comments
received.
1. Comments Alleging That EPA Region 6's Proposed Action Is
Inconsistent With the CAA and D.C. Circuit Precedent
Comment: Commenters alleged that the proposal is inconsistent with
CAA sections 304(a) and 113(e). The commenters asserted that the EPA
cannot allow the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP
because those provisions directly conflict with Congress's exclusive
grant of jurisdiction to the federal district courts to provide
remedies in civil suits brought under the CAA for violations of
emissions standards. The commenters noted that under CAA section 304,
Congress gave ``any person'' the right to sue over violations of
emission standards established in SIPs. Citing to language in the NRDC
opinion, the commenters noted that CAA section 304 creates a private
right of action, and it is the judiciary, not any executive agency,
that determines the scope--including the available remedies--of
judicial power vested by the CAA. NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055 (D.C. Cir.
2014). The commenters also pointed to CAA section 113(e), noting that
Congress expressly requires courts to consider enumerated penalty
assessment criteria when they decide the amount of civil penalties to
apply when they find a violation of an emission limitation; weighing
these criteria, courts decide on a case-by-case basis what penalty, if
any, is appropriate. The commenters also cited to congressional intent
by noting that CAA section 304(a) was amended in 1990 to provide
district courts with the new authority to apply civil penalties,
because Congress felt it was necessary for deterrence, restitution, and
retribution. The commenters concluded that affirmative defenses which,
if proven, prohibit federal district courts from imposing penalties are
irreconcilable with this congressional intent.
The commenters also took issue with the EPA's statement in the
proposal that ``states have latitude to define in their SIPs what
constitutes an enforceable emission limitation, so long as the SIP
meets all applicable CAA requirements.'' \17\ The commenters assert
that the EPA's claim is wrong for two reasons: (1) The CAA requires
civil penalties be available as relief in a citizen enforcement case,
so a SIP that limits that ability does not meet all the applicable CAA
requirements; and (2) affirmative defense provisions are neither
emission limitations nor control measures, but rather ancillary
provisions that purport to limit the liability of a violating source,
which is inconsistent with congressionally created remedies for
violations of emission standards.
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\17\ 84 FR 17990 (April 29, 2019).
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Response: Region 6 disagrees with the commenters. This action is
not illegal, arbitrary, or inconsistent with any
[[Page 7236]]
requirement of the CAA. The Act provides that, in the case of EPA
enforcement and citizen suits, a federal district court ``shall have
jurisdiction'' to assess civil penalties; in assessing the amount of a
civil penalty, the court must consider the penalty assessment criteria
outlined in CAA section 113(e). In 2013, in reviewing Region 6's
approval of the same Texas SIP provisions in question here, the
Luminant court held that approval was based upon a permissible
interpretation of CAA section 113 and deserved deference. Region 6
acknowledges that an effective enforcement program must be able to
collect penalties to deter avoidable violations. However, Region 6 also
acknowledges--as did the Luminant court--that, despite good practices,
sources may be unable to meet emission limitations during periods of
unplanned malfunctions due to events beyond the control of the owner or
operator. The EPA finds it reasonable to determine that a SIP can
provide for an affirmative defense against civil penalties for
circumstances where it is not feasible to meet the applicable emission
limits, and the narrowly tailored criteria that the source must prove
can ensure that the source has made every effort to comply with those
emission limitations. This is consistent with the CAA because the
criteria set forth in the Texas SIP that a source must meet to assert
the affirmative defenses are consistent with the penalty assessment
criteria identified in CAA section 113, which are considered by the
courts and the EPA in determining whether or not to assess a civil
penalty for violations, and, if so, the amount. The Luminant court
upheld the EPA's approval of the Texas affirmative defense provisions
on that basis. See Luminant 714 F.3d 853 (acknowledging that the Texas
affirmative defense criteria are consistent with the penalty assessment
criteria in CAA section 113).
In addition, the EPA's role, with respect to a SIP revision, is
focused on reviewing the submission to determine whether it meets the
applicable criteria of the CAA, and, where it does, section 110(k)(3)
of the Act requires the EPA to approve the submission. In the context
of a SIP, the EPA is not, as a matter of law or policy, exercising
discretion to establish its own requirements for the state to implement
beyond the requirements contained in the CAA. CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)-
(B) requires states to submit SIPs with emission limits and other
control measures necessary or appropriate to meet CAA requirements, and
CAA section 110(a)(2)(C) requires SIPs to include ``a program to
provide for the enforcement'' of those emission control measures. In
light of the latitude provided to states by Congress in CAA section 110
for NAAQS implementation, Region 6 has determined that inclusion of
Texas's affirmative defense provision in the SIP is appropriate due to
the latitude that states have to define in their SIPs what constitutes
an enforceable emission limitation, so long as the SIP meets all
applicable CAA requirements.
As explained in the proposal for this action, the differences in
scope and relative balance of state and federal authority between CAA
sections 110 and 112 suggest that the D.C. Circuit's reasoning in NRDC
with respect to limits on federal agency authority under CAA section
110 does not address the distinct question of whether a state may
include affirmative defense provisions as part of its overall strategy
for inclusion in their SIP submissions to the EPA under CAA section
110. In the Luminant case, the environmental petitioners raised the
same basic argument that was key to the D.C. Circuit's NRDC holding:
Environmental petitioners argued that the EPA's approval of the Texas
affirmative defense SIP provision conflicts with the CAA's provision
that, in the case of EPA enforcement and citizen suits, a federal
district court ``shall have jurisdiction'' to assess a ``civil
penalty.'' 42 U.S.C. 7413(b); 7604(a). The Fifth Circuit, however,
upheld as ``neither contrary to law nor in excess of [the EPA's]
statutory authority'' the EPA's position that the Texas provision at
issue here is narrowly tailored and consistent with the penalty
assessment criteria in CAA section 113(e). In addition, the Fifth
Circuit stated that the availability of the affirmative defense in the
Texas SIP ``does not negate the district court's jurisdiction to assess
civil penalties using the criteria outlined in [CAA section 113(e)], .
. . it simply provides a defense, under narrowly defined circumstances,
if and when penalties are assessed.'' Luminant, 714 F.3d at 853 fn.9.
The commenters noted that Congress amended CAA section 304(a) in
1990 to provide courts the additional authority to assess civil
penalties in citizen suit actions because civil penalties were thought
necessary for deterrence. Even accepting this characterization of
Congress's intent, it has no bearing on the permissibility of the Texas
affirmative defense provisions because the use of those provisions is
limited to malfunctions, which are sudden, unavoidable, and beyond the
control of the owner or operator. Among other factors, in order to use
the Texas affirmative defense, a source owner or operator must show
that all possible steps were taken to minimize the impact of the
unauthorized emissions on air quality. Malfunctions, as defined in the
Texas affirmative defense provision, cannot be deterred. Therefore,
Region 6 maintains that in light of the Luminant decision, the
appropriate policy is to consider the Texas affirmative defense
provisions to be consistent with CAA requirements.
Comment: The commenters asserted that the EPA fails to rationally
explain why following the NRDC decision's statutory interpretation is
inappropriate in light of Luminant. The commenters also noted EPA's
claim that the application of the NRDC decision may be ``particularly
inappropriate'' in light of Luminant is unexplained and conflicts with
the 2015 SSM SIP Action. Furthermore, the commenters alleged that the
proposal's change in position on affirmative defenses from the position
expressed in the 2015 SSM SIP Action is irrational and cannot be
reconciled with NRDC. Commenters particularly noted that the proposal
fails to explain why the NRDC court's acknowledgment of Luminant
matters or why it matters that Luminant upheld the EPA's prior
interpretation at Chevron step two.
The commenters also stated that the enforcement provisions of CAA
sections 304 and 113 were the sole basis for the NRDC court striking
down affirmative defenses, rather than the applicability of these
provisions to CAA sections 112 or 110. The commenters pointed out that
the NRDC court did not specifically evaluate the question of whether
affirmative defenses are appropriate in section 110 SIPs, and the
commenters disagreed with the EPA's statement that ``the NRDC decision
did not foreclose the EPA's ability to allow affirmative defense
provisions in section 110 SIPs.'' \18\ The commenters alleged that, as
the NRDC court shows, the text, structure, context, purpose, and
history of the CAA plainly demonstrate Congress's intent to give
federal courts the authority and obligation to determine what penalties
(if any) are appropriate in enforcement cases. The commenters asserted
that the NRDC court's reasoning applies with equal force to citizen
suits alleging violations of SIP emission limits and equally to any
remedy Congress gave courts jurisdiction to order.
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\18\ 84 FR 17989 (April 29, 2019).
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The commenters stated that to provide a rational basis for its
policy reversal, the EPA must evaluate whether
[[Page 7237]]
the reasoning of the NRDC decision applies to CAA section 110 and
explain the reasons for choosing to disregard the NRDC court's logic.
The commenters alleged that the EPA premises its policy reversal on a
belief that CAA section 110 somehow overrides the CAA's enforcement
provisions, relying on what they characterize as an outdated notion of
``cooperative federalism'' that relies heavily on the Train and Union
Electric decisions from the 1970s, which hold in keeping with what the
commenters characterize as the antiquated notion that Congress deferred
all specific decisions to the states as long as the result is
compliance with national standards. The commenters asserted that the
D.C. Circuit has since made clear that it has not suggested that states
may develop SIPs free of extrinsic legal constraints, including those
in the CAA, and that the EPA ignores subsequent amendments to the CAA
that resulted in specific minimum requirements for SIPs in the Act,
including specific control measures and permitting requirements. The
commenters noted that demonstrating compliance with the national
standards is not the sole measure for approval of a SIP revision.
Response: At the outset, Region 6 notes that it maintains
discretion and authority to change its CAA interpretation from a prior
position. In FCC v. Fox, the U.S. Supreme Court stated an agency's
obligation with respect to changing a prior policy quite plainly:
We find no basis . . . for a requirement that all agency change
be subjected to more searching review. The [Administrative
Procedure] Act mentions no such heightened standard. And our opinion
in State Farm neither held nor implied that every agency action
representing a policy change must be justified by reasons more
substantial than those required to adopt a policy in the first
instance.``
FCC v. Fox Television Stations, 556 U.S. 502, 514 (2009).
In cases where an agency is changing its position, the Court stated
that a reasoned explanation for the new policy would ordinarily
``display awareness that it is changing position'' and ``show that
there are good reasons for the new policy.'' Id. at 515. However, the
Court held that the agency ``need not demonstrate . . . that the
reasons for the new policy are better than the reasons for the old one;
it suffices that the new policy is permissible under the statute, that
there are good reasons for it, and that the agency believes it to be
better.'' Id. In cases where a new policy ``rests upon factual findings
that contradict those which underlay its prior policy; or when its
prior policy has engendered serious reliance interests that must be
taken into account,'' the Court found that a more detailed
justification might be warranted than what would suffice for a new
policy. At the outset, it is important to note that the Luminant court
upheld the EPA's approval of the very same affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP that are at issue in this action.\19\
Furthermore, the Luminant decision is the only existing court precedent
that addresses the approvability of affirmative defense provisions in
SIPs. The Luminant court held that the EPA acted consistent with
statutory authority and upheld the EPA's interpretation that
affirmative defenses against civil penalties are not inconsistent with
CAA section 113 if the defense is narrowly tailored to address
unplanned, unavoidable excess emissions in a manner that is consistent
with the penalty assessment criteria set forth in CAA section 113(e).
By contrast, the D.C. Circuit's NRDC decision only evaluated the
validity of an affirmative defense provision in an emission standard
created by the EPA itself under CAA section 112, and that decision
expressly reserved judgment regarding the validity of an affirmative
defense in the context of a SIP approved under CAA section 110. The
NRDC ruling explicitly states, ``[w]e do not here confront the question
whether an affirmative defense may be appropriate in a State
Implementation Plan.'' 749 F.3d at 1064 n.2 (citing Luminant, 714 F.3d
841). Therefore, the NRDC decision did not speak to the EPA's ability
to allow for affirmative defense provisions in SIPs. Texas's narrowly
tailored and limited affirmative defense SIP provisions for
malfunctions, as upheld by the Fifth Circuit's Luminant decision, are
consistent with CAA requirements and it is not necessary or appropriate
to extend the D.C. Circuit's reasoning in NRDC to the specific
affirmative defense provisions currently in the Texas SIP for the
reasons discussed herein.
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\19\ Some commenters have noted that the claims asserted in the
Luminant decision may not be relitigated in any future challenge to
this action. The EPA reserves the right to assert this argument (or
similar arguments) as a defense to this final action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenters assert that Region 6 is reading the provisions of
CAA section 110 to override the CAA's enforcement provisions, including
CAA sections 113(b) and 304(a), but this is not true. Rather, Region 6
is reading all of these provisions together to authorize its approval
of certain affirmative defense provisions in SIPs. SIPs are developed
by the states under CAA section 110 and reflect the Act's core
principle of cooperative federalism.\20\ CAA section 110 affords broad
discretion to states in how to develop and implement air emission
controls after the federal government establishes NAAQS to be achieved.
Region 6 agrees with the commenters' position that the flexibility
afforded states in the development of SIPs is not without limitations
and that demonstrating compliance with NAAQS is not the sole measure
for SIP approvals. However, Region 6 finds the commenters' claims that
subsequent amendments to the CAA (concerning control measures and
permitting requirements) were ignored are misplaced and not relevant to
this action. Also, as noted in an earlier response, the congressionally
stated reasons for the amendment to CAA section 304(a) in 1990 (to
provide deterrence) are not relevant to determining the permissibility
of affirmative defense provisions that are limited to unavoidable,
unpreventable malfunctions (which are beyond the control of the owner
or operator and therefore cannot be deterred). This flexibility, and
state discretion, under CAA section 110 has been acknowledged
repeatedly by the EPA in its actions and in court decisions on those
Agency actions.\21\
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\20\ 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3); 42 U.S.C. 7407(a); Train v. NRDC, 421
U.S. 60, 79 (1975).
\21\ See Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining and Reclamation Ass'n,
452 U.S. 264, 289 (1981) (noting that states are permitted ``within
limits established by [the NAAQS], to enact and administer their own
regulatory programs, structured to meet their own particular
needs''). See also Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 250 (1976)
(acknowledging that states have ``wide discretion'' in formulating
their SIPs and that ``[s]o long as national standards are met, the
state may select whatever mix of control devices it desires''); BCCA
Appeal Grp. v. EPA, 355 F.3d 817, 822 (5th Cir. 2003) (recognizing
states have ``broad authority to determine the methods and
particular control strategies they will use to achieve the statutory
requirements'') (citing Union Elec. Co., 427 U.S. at 266).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA Region 6 recognizes that the interpretation of the CAA to allow
the Texas affirmative defenses in SIPs conflicts with the position
taken in the 2015 SSM SIP Action; however, it is important to
understand and acknowledge that the affirmative defense provisions for
malfunctions in the Texas SIP are a key component of the state's
overall clean air control strategy which has evolved since the initial
Texas SIP in 1972. See page 3 of the TCEQ comment letter recognizing
that affirmative defense provisions are ``part of a long-standing and
integral part of the Texas SIP''.\22\ Recognizing that states have
latitude to define in their SIPs what constitutes an
[[Page 7238]]
enforceable emission limitation, Region 6 has determined that the Texas
SIP provisions are an example of how a limited affirmative defense can
be properly crafted to be a part of an approved SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Document ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770-0018 at
www.regulations.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter quoted the D.C. Circuit as saying that it has avoided
suggesting ``that under [section 7410] states may develop their plans
free of extrinsic legal constraints,'' including those contained in the
Act. Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA, 249 F.3d 1032, 1047 (D.C. Cir.
2001). In this action, Region 6 is in no way suggesting that no
limitations exist on states' SIP development. As noted previously in
this response, Region 6 agrees with the commenters' position that the
flexibility afforded states in the development of SIPs is not without
limitations. However, as explained elsewhere in this action, Region 6
has determined that the affirmative defense provisions in Texas's SIP
are consistent with CAA requirements.
Comment: The commenter stated that the EPA has not explained why it
would be appropriate to prevent a federal court from imposing civil
penalties for violation of a SIP emission limit while preserving the
right of the court to impose civil penalties for violation of a NESHAP.
The commenter claimed that, without a stated, logical reason for this
distinction, it is arbitrary and capricious of the EPA to create a
distinction.
Response: Region 6 disagrees with the commenter. As explained in
the proposal, the mechanisms established under section 112 of the CAA
to control air pollution are different than those under section 110 in
significant ways. CAA section 110 functions within a cooperative
federalism system in which states are required to develop plans to
attain and maintain the NAAQS and the EPA determines whether the
specific state plans comply with the Act's requirements. See 42 U.S.C.
7410(a) & (k)(4). On the other hand, CAA section 112 requires the EPA
(not states) to establish federal emission limitations for a specific
class of sources and pollutants and strictly prescribes how the EPA
must establish those standards, which states have little flexibility in
how to implement. See 42 U.S.C. 7412(d). More specifically, CAA section
110 requires states to adopt ``emission limitations and other control
measures, means, or techniques . . . as may be necessary or appropriate
to meet the applicable requirements of this chapter'' while CAA section
112 directs the EPA to adopt standards that ``require the maximum
degree of reduction in emissions'' that the Administrator determines is
achievable ``through application of measures, processes, methods,
systems or techniques including, but not limited to'' measures meeting
a list of five requirements. Cf. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(a) with
7412(d)(2) (emphases added).
Region 6 now believes that the Agency gave insufficient weight to
the fact that Region 6's prior approval of the Texas affirmative
defense provisions that were subject to the 2015 SSM SIP Action had
been upheld by the Fifth Circuit, the circuit to which review of Texas-
specific actions is specifically assigned by Congress under CAA section
307(b), when applying the reasoning of NRDC to the SIP context in the
EPA's 2014 supplemental proposal and the 2015 SSM SIP Action. As
explained in the prior response, the petitioners in the Luminant case
argued that the EPA's approval of the Texas affirmative defense SIP
provision conflicts with CAA sections 113(b) and 304(a). As discussed
above, the Luminant court was squarely presented with the argument that
affirmative defense for malfunctions in the Texas SIP inappropriately
altered or infringed upon federal district court jurisdiction to assess
appropriate penalties and the court concluded that it did not, instead
holding that it is permissible to include narrowly-tailored provisions
that are consistent with the penalty assessment criteria in CAA section
113(e). The Luminant court acknowledged that ``states have wide
discretion in formulating their SIPs, including the broad authority to
determine the methods and particular control strategies they will use
to achieve the statutory requirements.'' 714 F.3d at 845 (internal
quotations deleted), citing Union Elec., 427 U.S. at 250; BCCA Appeal
Grp., 355 F.3d at 822.
While the NRDC court clearly states that affirmative defenses under
CAA section 112 are inappropriate, that court's opinion explicitly
deferred judgment on whether they were permissible for inclusion in an
approved SIP. The only court decision to reach the question of the
appropriateness of affirmative defenses in SIPs is the Luminant court.
Region 6 is applying this directly on-point court decision, from the
court which Congress has assigned the role of hearing challenges to
actions applicable to Texas, 42 U.S.C. 7606(b), to the review of the
affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP, which is the Luminant
decision. Region 6 thinks the distinction between CAA sections 110 and
112 set forth here is reasonable under the Act. Where the Act requires
under CAA section 112 the EPA to directly establish federal limits that
meet detailed and strict criteria and that are established to further a
different purpose than that of CAA section 110, it is reasonable to
take the position that the EPA's and a state's discretion is more
limited than in the section 110 context, and that only a court should
determine what penalties should apply when those limits are violated,
as the NRDC court found. However, when addressing limits that have been
established by the state as part of an overall plan to address the
NAAQS under the CAA section 110 regime, and where states have primary
responsibility for and flexibility in establishing those limits, Region
6 thinks it is reasonable for states to include--and the EPA to
approve--certain defenses to penalties for violations of those limits,
as the Luminant court found.
Comment: Commenters stated that the EPA lacks the authority to
disapprove affirmative defense SIP provisions if it finds that the SIP
will ensure compliance with the NAAQS. Commenters referenced several
court cases where the courts stated that it is the states and not the
EPA that retain primacy for NAAQS implementation. Commenters stated
that development of affirmative defense provisions for SSM periods is
plainly within the states' authority under this statutory structure,
and the EPA's role is limited to determining whether such SIP
provisions are approvable. Commenters referenced CAA section 110(k)(2)
and the EPA's previous statements in a memorandum and stated that, in
the absence of any demonstrated link to air quality issues rendering a
SIP substantially inadequate, any effort by the EPA to impose its
policy preference on the states is beyond the EPA's authority.
Furthermore, commenters stated that there is no indication that the
Texas affirmative defense for SSM provisions renders the Texas SIP
substantially inadequate. The commenters alleged that the 2015 SSM SIP
Action did not reflect the EPA's limited role, did not defer to the
state on how to achieve CAA objectives, and wholly fails to demonstrate
that the Texas SIP is in fact ``substantially inadequate to attain or
maintain'' the NAAQS and meet other CAA requirements. The commenters
stated that the EPA has failed to demonstrate that substantial
reductions in emissions would result from eliminating affirmative
defense provisions for SSM activities despite the reasonable design,
operation, and maintenance of equipment to meet those requirements.
Response: This action is limited to Region 6's review of the SIP
call issued to Texas in 2015. To the extent the
[[Page 7239]]
commenters are arguing about other aspects of the EPA's 2015 SSM SIP
Action, that is outside the scope of this action. Within the confines
of this action, which is limited to the Texas affirmative defense
provisions, Region 6 agrees with the commenters that the CAA grants
states considerable latitude in fashioning a plan to ensure the
attainment and maintenance of the NAAQS, as provided by CAA section
110. Section 110(k)(5) of the CAA defines the basis upon which the EPA
can issue a call to a state to revise its SIP. Section 110(k)(5) of the
CAA provides that the EPA can issue a SIP call whenever the Agency
``finds that the applicable implementation plan for any area is
substantially inadequate to attain or maintain the relevant [NAAQS], .
. . or to otherwise comply with any requirement of this chapter''
(emphasis added). Region 6 does not consider this role and
responsibility to be limited or ministerial in nature. However, as
discussed throughout this final action, based on an alternative
interpretation of CAA requirements, Region 6 is now adopting the view
that the Texas affirmative defense provisions are not substantially
inadequate under the rubric of CAA section 110(k)(5) and, therefore, is
withdrawing the SIP call for the Texas affirmative defense provisions
issued in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
2. Comments on the Need for Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: The commenter stated that the EPA should not defund the
regulation and penalization of emissions related to SSM events. The
commenter argued that mechanisms for accountability and financial and
criminal liability should remain in place. The commenter believes that
polluters should not escape penalties for significant emissions that
result from scheduled maintenance, accidents, and/or a catchall class
of ``furtive'' emissions.
Response: Region 6 disagrees with the commenter's assertion that
this action in any way ``defunds the regulation and penalization'' of
SSM events. Rather, our action finds that specific and narrowly
tailored affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP are not
substantially inadequate under the rubric of CAA section 110(k)(5). As
discussed in the proposal and in this final action, Region 6 has
concluded that the Texas affirmative defense provisions are permissible
under the alternative interpretation of the CAA presented here,
including that CAA section 110(a)(2) authorizes Texas to establish
emission limitations in its SIP that include a narrowly tailored
affirmative defense to civil penalties for unavoidable excess emissions
in a manner consistent with the penalty assessment criteria set forth
in CAA section 113(e), as upheld in the Luminant decision. Under the
requirements of these provisions, Texas will hold sources accountable
for periods of excess emissions, including triggering penalties and
corrective action plan requirements, where excessive emission events do
not meet the requirements of the state's narrowly tailored affirmative
defense. With regards to the comment that sources should be held
accountable for significant excess emissions that result during periods
of scheduled maintenance, Region 6 notes that planned, scheduled
maintenance events do not meet the criteria in the Texas affirmative
defense provisions. In addition, there are no ``furtive'' or hidden
emissions associated with the affirmative defense provisions that are
the subject of this action because all excess emissions are required to
be reported to Texas online through the State of Texas Electronic
Emissions Reporting System (STEERS) and the affirmative defense may not
be asserted for emissions that have not been reported (see 30 TAC
Chapter 101, Subchapter F). The commenter also argued that mechanisms
for criminal liability should remain in place. The affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP do not apply to criminal penalties.
Comment: The commenter stated that most excess emissions can be
attributed to accidents that could have been avoided through better
maintenance or safety inspections. The commenter cited research that
demonstrates that just over 10% of all excess emissions events from
2002-2017 were related to unavoidable natural disasters, and that this
finding suggests that many excess emissions events in Texas cannot be
considered unavoidable. The commenter stated that the proposal
completely misses the distinction between ``unavoidable'' and truly
unavoidable excess emissions (from unavoidable natural disasters) and
thus fails to account for the deterrent effect that a stricter
regulatory environment can have on the incidence of excess emissions.
Response: The commenter appears to be asserting that the only
excess emissions that can be considered unavoidable are those that
result following natural disasters. The EPA has never taken the
position that all emission events are avoidable except from those that
result from natural disasters, such as tornadoes or hurricanes. To the
extent that the commenter is alleging that the Texas provisions do not
adequately incentivize source owners or operators toward responsible
behavior and better plant maintenance, Region 6 disagrees that the
proposal does not address the distinction between unavoidable excess
emissions and excess emissions that could have been avoided by better
maintenance in regard to affirmative defenses. First, Region 6 observes
that all emissions occurring above any air emission limitation in a
permit, rule, or order of the commission are deemed a violation of the
emission limitation. 30 TAC 101.1(108). An enforcement action can be
brought by the EPA, Texas, or citizens for any such violation. The
affirmative defense provision only provides the defendant an
opportunity, with regard to which the defendant bears the burden of
proof, to demonstrate that the violation in question meets the strict
criteria outlined in the Texas SIP. An affirmative defense is only
available for non-excessive upset and unplanned events, so source
owners and operators are incentivized to keep any emissions that occur
over applicable limitations to a minimum to avoid being considered
excessive. In addition, in order to successfully assert an affirmative
defense in an enforcement action, the responsible party bears the
burden to demonstrate that the unauthorized emissions could not have
been avoided through better operation and maintenance practices, among
a number of other identified criteria. A citizen or government agency
has an opportunity to rebut this demonstration in the course of an
enforcement action.
Each report of emissions that exceed applicable limitations is
evaluated by the corresponding TCEQ field office. In fact, as stated
earlier, Texas's regulatory regime has evolved since 1972, with each
iteration bringing a tightening of requirements.\23\
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\23\ See pages 2-3 of TCEQ's petition for reconsideration,
Document ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770-0010 at www.regulations.gov.
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3. Comments Concerning Appropriateness of the Regional Scope of This
Action
Comment: Commenters argued that Region 6's proposed action is based
on an interpretation of the CAA that varies from national policy, and
the Region is required by law (specifically 40 CFR 56.5(b)) to obtain
concurrence for such actions from the relevant EPA headquarters (HQ)
office before taking final action. The commenters alleged that there is
no record that the EPA has complied with its consistency
[[Page 7240]]
regulations in proposing to exempt Texas from the national SSM policy,
although the commenter acknowledged that the docket includes a letter
of concurrence signed by the Director of OAQPS. The commenter asserted
that governing EPA guidance documents state that where a proposed
action would have significant national policy implications, a more
complete review, including a steering committee or interagency review,
coordination through the appropriate HQ office, and full concurrence by
each affected EPA section is necessary. The commenter argued that
nothing is in the record to indicate that Region 6 has conducted the
required consultations and obtained all requisite concurrences in order
for this action to move forward.
Commenters also argued that for an EPA regional office to depart
from a national EPA policy on a particular issue, it must articulate a
compelling reason that rationally explains why that issue deserves
different treatment from other regions, but the EPA has failed to meet
this requirement. The commenter contended that the EPA is obligated to
correct inconsistencies by standardizing processes and policies rather
than using CAA section 301(a)(2) as a license to institutionalize the
kind of inconsistencies that have been proposed in EPA Regions 4 and 6,
which depart from the nationally applicable policies in the 2015 SSM
SIP Action and instead create a patchwork of regionally applicable CAA
policies. The commenters alleged that there is no adequate explanation
for authorizing an alternative interpretation, including no discussion
of why an alternative interpretation is approvable under the regional
consistency regulations.
Response: To the extent the commenters are raising concerns with
the recent action proposed by EPA Region 4 concerning SSM SIP
provisions in North Carolina, that is outside the scope of this action
and Region 6 provides no response. With respect to the concerns raised
concerning this Region 6 action, which is limited in scope to Texas,
Region 6 did follow the procedures outlined in the regional consistency
regulations at 40 CFR 56.5(b), as explained in the proposal and
acknowledged by commenters. Specifically, before granting Texas's
petition for reconsideration and before our proposed action, the Region
6 Regional Administrator sought and received EPA headquarters
concurrence to deviate from the national policy announced in the 2015
SSM SIP Action.\24\ Before finalization of this action, the Region 6
Regional Administrator again sought and received EPA headquarters
concurrence to deviate from national policy in this final action.\25\
The substance of the commenters' allegation appears to be directed at
Region 6's alleged failure to follow the document titled ``Revisions to
State Implementation Plans--Procedures for Approval/Disapproval
Actions,'' OAQPS No. 1.2-005A, referenced in 40 CFR 56.5(c). However,
the regional consistency regulations only require following this
guideline ``in reviewing State Implementation Plans.'' In this action,
the Region is not reviewing a SIP submission from a state under section
110(k)(3), but rather is withdrawing a SIP call issued pursuant to
section 110(k)(5). Therefore, the provisions of 40 CFR 56.5(c) are not
applicable. Even if this action fell under the auspices of 40 CFR
56.5(c), that regulation requires the region to follow ``OAQPS No. 1.2-
005A, or revision thereof.'' OAQPS No. 1.2-005A is a guideline from
1975 that has been updated multiple times. EPA Region 6 did follow the
most recent iteration of the EPA's internal SIP review process for
ensuring national consistency, which is the EPA's 2018 SIP Consistency
Issues Guide.
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\24\ See Document ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770-0009.pdf, pages
3-4 at www.regulations.gov.
\25\ See EPA Docket ID No. EPA-R06-OAR-2018-0770 at
www.regulations.gov.
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The commenters also argue that Region 6 failed to follow the
regional consistency regulations by not providing a ``compelling
reason'' for the region to deviate from the national policy outlined in
the 2015 SSM SIP Action. Nothing in the EPA's regional consistency
regulations or CAA section 301(a)(2) require a ``compelling reason'' to
underpin regional deviation from national policy. All that is required
is that the region seek EPA headquarters concurrence for the action it
intends to take, when such action deviates from national policy, and
that has been done here. Moreover, the EPA's Office of Air and
Radiation reviewed a draft of this final action and determined that the
circumstances and rationale set forth in this action provided a
reasonable basis to concur on Region 6's deviation from the national
policy outlined in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
Comment: The commenter stated that, although Region 6 relies
heavily on the Fifth Circuit Luminant decision in order to apply a new
CAA interpretation for all Region 6 states, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and
Arkansas are not in the Fifth Circuit. The commenter states that this
is arbitrary and capricious since there is no basis for treating the
SIPs from these three states differently than the SIPs from states in
other EPA regions.
Response: In the April 2019 proposal, Region 6 noted that it was
considering adopting a regionwide policy that certain affirmative
defense SIP provisions are consistent with CAA requirements, but noted
that it would consider whether it would apply any regionwide policy to
others states in Region 6 in separate actions. However, after reviewing
the public comments received, EPA Region 6 has decided to limit its
deviation from national policy regarding affirmative defenses only as
to the SSM SIP call for Texas since the Texas provisions were
previously upheld by the Fifth Circuit in the Luminant decision, and
Region 6 is not herein announcing any policy with respect to the
remaining Region 6 states. Therefore, at this time in all Region 6
states except Texas, the policy remains unchanged from what was
announced in the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
Comment: The commenters noted that, as the EPA recognized in the
2015 SSM SIP Action, the agency's legal interpretation of CAA
requirements concerning permissible SIP provisions to address emissions
during SSM events was a ``nationally applicable rule.'' The commenters
noted that petitions challenging aspects of the SIP call or its SSM
policy were required to be filed in the D.C. Circuit. The commenters
suggested that Region 6 must acknowledge that the proposal at issue is
part of the same nationally applicable regulation under CAA section
307(b)(1) for the following reasons:
(1) The Region 6 proposal adopts a policy that varies from the
national policy and announces a substantive change to determining
whether affirmative defense provisions in SIPs are approvable. This
reversal effectively amends the EPA's national SSM policy and is
therefore nationally applicable;
(2) Although the proposal ostensibly only applies to states in
Region 6, the EPA is using it to announce a substantial change to the
CAA's SIP requirements. Furthermore, the proposal necessarily applies
to the 17 states covered by the affirmative defense aspect of the 2015
SSM SIP Action. That the EPA chose to promulgate a new national policy
in a Federal Register document that only applies to Region 6 does not
preclude the courts from examining the underlying substance and
applicability of the rule.
Response: Region 6 is not establishing a new national policy;
rather, Region 6 is taking action associated with specific
[[Page 7241]]
SIP provisions within the Texas SIP that are applicable only within a
single state, Texas. Region 6 is simply reexamining the effect of the
Luminant decision and the findings and statements made by that Court as
it applies to the exact Texas SIP provisions that were the subject of
the EPA's finding of substantial inadequacy in the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
as well as the nature and statements made by the NRDC court, and
concluding that it is not necessary to extend the reach of the NRDC
decision to the particular affirmative defense provisions at issue in
the Texas SIP. As the D.C. Circuit has recently explained, ``[t]he
court need look only to the face of the agency action, not its
practical effects, to determine whether an action is nationally
applicable.'' Sierra Club v. EPA, 926 F.3d 844, 849 (D.C. Cir. 2019)
(citing Dalton Trucking, 808 F.3d 875, 881 (D.C. Cir. 2015) and Am.
Road & Transp. Builders Ass'n v. EPA, 705 F.3d 453, 456 (D.C. Cir.
2013)). On its face, this action is locally applicable because it is
determining that specific provisions in the Texas SIP that are
applicable only in Texas are consistent with CAA requirements and
therefore withdrawing a SIP call issued to Texas in 2015. This action
has immediate or legal effect only for and within Texas. If the EPA
were to rely on the statutory interpretation set forth in this action
in another potential future final agency action, the statutory
interpretation would be subject to judicial review upon challenge of
that later action.
Comment: The commenters claimed that even if the EPA's proposal was
not nationally applicable, the EPA must still make and publish a
finding that the proposed amendment to the national SSM SIP call and
policy established in that rule is based on a determination of
nationwide scope and effect, as the proposal is in fact based on
several determinations of nationwide scope and effect, the authority
for which is given to the Administrator under the CAA. The commenters
contended that the proposal is indisputably based on the EPA's
determinations about the nationwide validity of the nationally
applicable 2015 SSM SIP Action. The commenters remarked that in the
proposal, Region 6, by seeking HQ concurrence to propose an action
inconsistent with national policy, admits that the proposal is, in
fact, based on a determination of nationwide scope and effect. The
commenters asserted that a determination of nationwide scope and effect
is furthermore appropriate where a regionally applicable action
encompasses two or more judicial circuit courts. The commenters noted
that since the revised affirmative defense policy would apply
throughout Region 6, which spans three judicial circuits, and that the
three courts could reach conflicting conclusions regarding the
appropriateness of affirmative defenses, the proposal must be reviewed
only in the D.C. Circuit. The commenters claimed that a refusal to find
the rule is based on determinations of nationwide scope and effect
would be inconsistent with the 2015 SSM SIP Action; there the EPA found
that venue was appropriate in the D.C. Circuit because the agency was
revising its interpretations with respect to certain issues and
establishing a national policy applicable to all states. The commenters
argued that the EPA's refusal to make and publish a finding of
nationwide scope and effect constitutes an arbitrary, capricious, and
unexplained departure from the EPA's past practice of directing review
of SIP calls to the D.C. Circuit. The commenters concluded that while
the EPA is not precluded from adopting a different approach to venue
under the CAA, it must display an awareness of its changing position
and show there are good reasons for the new policy.
Response: Under the venue provision of the CAA, an EPA action
``which is locally or regionally applicable'' may be filed ``only in
the United States Court of Appeals'' covering that area, 42 U.S.C.
7607(b)(1) (emphasis added). The only exception to that mandate is
where the Administrator expressly finds and publishes that the locally
or regionally applicable action is based on a determination of
nationwide scope and effect. The requirement that the Administrator
find and publish that an otherwise locally or regionally applicable
action is based on a determination of nationwide scope and effect is an
express statutory requirement for application of this venue exception,
and there is no such finding to publish here. Absent an express
statement--and publication--that such a finding has been made, thus
invoking the venue exception, there can be no application of that
exception. See, e.g., Lion Oil v. EPA, 792 F.3d 978, 984 n.1 (8th Cir.
2015) (even where the EPA, unlike here, made the necessary finding, the
court found no need to decide application of the venue exception absent
publication of that finding); Texas v. EPA, 829 F.3d 405, 419 (5th Cir.
2016) (``This finding is an independent, post hoc, conclusion by the
agency about the nature of the determinations; the finding is not,
itself, the determination.''); Dalton Trucking, 808 F.3d 875.
CAA section 307 expressly hands the Agency full discretion to make
its own determination whether to exercise an exception to a
Congressionally-dictated rule. See Texas v. EPA, 829 F.3d at 419-20
(the venue exception ``gives the Administrator the discretion to move
venue to the D.C. Circuit by publishing a finding declaring the
Administrator's belief that the action is based on a determination of
nationwide scope and effect.'') (emphases added).
Even assuming that a court would review Region 6's declination to
make a nationwide scope or effect determination under the
Administrative Procedure Act arbitrary and capricious standard, the
declination is not unreasonable in this case. Commenters assert that
Region 6's decision to seek concurrence to propose an action
inconsistent with national policy somehow constitutes an admission that
such action is based on a determination of nationwide scope and effect.
It is not clear how or why this should be so. In any case, as is stated
throughout this document, this action and the CAA interpretation it is
based upon applies in Texas only and does not alter EPA's national
policy, and thus is not based on a determination of nationwide scope or
effect. See American Road & Transportation Builders Ass'n v. EPA, 705
F.3d 453, 456 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (holding that venue for review of the
EPA's approval of revisions to California's SIP lay in the Ninth
Circuit because the approval only applied to projects within
California, even if the SIP could set a precedent for future
proceedings).
The commenters argue that it is appropriate for EPA to find and
publish that an action is based on a determination of nationwide scope
and effect where a regionally applicable action encompasses multiple
judicial circuits. The EPA does not take a position on this question
here, nor does it need to do so, because as explained earlier in this
document, this final action is limited to Texas, and thus only a single
judicial circuit. Although Region 6 was initially contemplating a
regionwide policy on affirmative defense provisions in SIPs, after
reviewing comments received during the public process the region has
decided to limit the deviation from national policy to Texas and the
only final action being taken herein is to withdraw the SIP call issued
to Texas.
The commenters also allege that the EPA has a past practice of
directing review of SIP calls to the D.C. Circuit, but this is
incorrect. In the 2015 SSM
[[Page 7242]]
SIP Action, the Agency did opt to consolidate its action into a single
national announcement of policy and issue 36 individual SIP calls
through one document. But at other times SIP calls have been issued by
individual regions and reviewed in regional circuits. For example, in
2011, EPA Region 8 found that the Utah SIP was substantially inadequate
to comply with the requirements of the CAA and therefore issued a SIP
call for Utah to revise its SIP to change an unavoidable breakdown
rule, which exempted emissions during unavoidable breakdowns from
compliance with emission limitations. 76 FR 21639 (April 18, 2011).
This SIP call was subsequently reviewed in the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Tenth Circuit. US Magnesium v. EPA, 690 F.3d 1157 (10th Cir.
2012).
Comment: Commenters stated that the proposed Texas withdrawal from
the 2015 SSM SIP Action applies only to the Texas SIP and only has
legal effect in the State of Texas; therefore, the action is ``locally
or regionally applicable'' under the CAA judicial review provision and
EPA Region 6 was correct in not making a finding that this action ``is
based on a determination of nationwide scope or effect.'' The
commenters noted that while Luminant is directly applicable to Texas,
the rationale for the action may be applicable elsewhere and it may be
more appropriate to address Region 6 states outside the Fifth Circuit
in a separate action. Commenters requested that Region 6 should clarify
that its policy position on the treatment of SSM affirmative defenses
is non-binding guidance that reflects the Region's interpretation of
the CAA's requirements. The commenters stated that guidance should make
clear that any Region 6 state that seeks approval of SIP provisions
containing SSM affirmative defenses would be subject to a separate
notice-and-comment rulemaking in which Region 6 would assess the
provision and determine whether it complies with the requirements of
the CAA. The commenters also stated that the policy guidance here would
not constitute the consummation of any decision-making process with
regard to those SIPs, nor would it determine any legal rights,
obligations, or consequences. The commenters recommended that the
policy guidance should make clear that the Region would examine
individual SIP affirmative defense provisions for consistency with the
CAA on a case-by-case rather than rejecting all such provisions out of
hand.
Response: This action only concerns the Texas SIP and only has
legal effect in Texas, so it is a locally or regionally (as opposed to
nationally) applicable action. As stated in the TCEQ's petition for
reconsideration and our proposal, the Texas affirmative defense SIP
provisions are narrow and limited in scope. After careful consideration
of the facts and circumstances surrounding our approval of the
affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP, including the fact
that the Fifth Circuit previously upheld the EPA's approval of the same
provisions that were the subject of the Texas portion of the 2015 SSM
SIP Action, Region 6 has concluded that it would be appropriate to
withdraw the finding of inadequacy as it applies to the Texas SIP.
This action does not have any immediate or legal effect outside of
Texas, and Region 6 is not announcing any policy that would apply
outside of Texas. As noted by the commenter, Region 6 will examine any
state submittal for a SIP revision, or any potential future petition
for reconsideration of a SIP call issued to another Region 6 state,
consistent with the EPA's obligations under the CAA. In this document,
Region 6 is taking a final action to withdraw the Texas SIP call based
on the reasons set forth in the proposal and this document. Apart from
the action on the Texas SIP, Region 6 is not altering or changing the
Agency's position with respect to affirmative defenses.
4. Other Comments
Comment: The commenter alleged that the EPA's argument that
``removing these affirmative defense provisions from SIPs will not
reduce emissions and therefore would not result in an environmental or
public health or welfare benefit'' is flawed and inadequate. The
commenter stated that, through this action, Region 6 is creating a less
stringent regulatory environment, while providing no evidence to
support its claim that eliminating affirmative defense provisions will
not reduce excess emissions. The commenter contended that the EPA's
argument is not based on any analysis and lacks substantive supportive
evidence from the peer reviewed literature.
The commenter also cited research documenting the specific and
general deterrence effects of enforcement on environmental rules and
regulations. The commenter contended this research, which studies the
Clean Water Act compliance behavior of paper and pulp facilities,
concludes that compliance and enforcement actions reduce incidences and
durations of noncompliance.
Response: The commenter, and the cited research, speak of emissions
that exceed applicable limitations during routine events. This action
concerns the Texas affirmative defense provisions that are only
available for upsets and unplanned MSS events. Unplanned MSS events by
definition are not routine. The specific affirmative defense provisions
at issue herein apply to unavoidable excess emissions by a source that
cannot be prevented by an owner or operator through planning and
design. Because the covered events, and resulting emissions that exceed
applicable emission limitations, are unavoidable, by the very nature of
source operations, they would occur regardless of whether the
affirmative defense provisions were in the Texas SIP. Therefore, Region
6 disagrees that the affirmative defense provision provide a less
stringent regulatory environment as the potential relief is only
available for events proved to be unavoidable.
Furthermore, the following provides evidence that the Texas
regulatory scheme provides deterrence to emissions events. In response
to a similar comment, TCEQ in 2016 wrote \26\:
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\26\ October 31, 2016, TCEQ's Interoffice Memorandum, from
Richard Hyde, Executive Director to Tucker Royall, General Counsel,
titled ``Analysis of Environmental Integrity Project's (EIP)
Breakdowns in Air Quality Report, April 27, 2016''.
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``In fiscal year 2015, the agency [TCEQ] conducted over 109,000
investigations, which included 4,212 compliance investigations. More
than 18,000 Notice of Violations were issued regarding investigations
conducted. Enforcement efforts resulted in 1,681 administrative orders
issued with over $12.6 million to be paid as penalties and over 3.2
million to be expended for Supplemental Environmental Projects (SEPs).
There were an additional 46 civil judicial orders issued by the Texas
Office of Attorney General (OAG) that resulted in over $16.1 million to
be paid as penalties. The agency also participated in five search
warrants and finalized ten criminal cases with convictions against 11
individuals and two corporations during FY 2015. The finalized cases
included 19 felony counts and six misdemeanor counts. These cases
resulted in total of $16,000 in criminal fines, 30 years of community
supervision, 156 months of incarceration, 1,050 hours of community
service, and over $23,370,000 in restitution.'' TCEQ also stated, ``It
is important to note that the overall number of emission events
[[Page 7243]]
reported decreased 10% from 4,987 in FY 2014 to 4,512 in FY 2015.''
Moreover, while Region 6 does not dispute the research cited by the
commenter concerning the deterrence effect of enforcement, the Texas
affirmative defense provisions do not prohibit enforcement. The Texas
affirmative defense is only available for monetary penalties; an
enforcement action can still be brought for injunctive relief. Region 6
also notes that the research on the regulation and enforcement of the
Clean Water Act finds that enforcement reduces the incidence and
duration of violations. The affirmative defense provisions in the Texas
SIP only apply to excess emissions violations due to unavoidable
malfunctions, where the source has proven that it meets specific
criteria (including that the frequency and duration of the event was
minimized and that all possible steps were taken to minimize the impact
of the unauthorized emissions on air quality). This also does not speak
in any way to Region 6's alternative CAA interpretation outlined in the
proposal and this action and whether the Texas affirmative defense
provisions are approvable in CAA SIPs.
Comment: One commenter noted that the EPA failed to conduct a
detailed cost benefit analysis on the impacts of excess emissions on
human health and the environment.
Response: There is nothing in the statute that requires the Agency
to conduct a cost benefit analysis in order to withdraw a SIP call, and
the commenter has not provided a compelling reason for why Region 6
should do so. In addition to statutory requirements, regulatory
agencies also take direction from the President and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) within the Executive Office of the
President regarding what type of formal regulatory evaluation should be
performed during rulemaking. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning
and Review, requires an assessment of benefits and costs for all
significant regulatory actions. As stated in the proposal, this action
is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to review by OMB
under Executive Order 12866. In reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's
role is to approve state choices, provided that they meet the criteria
of the CAA. Accordingly, this action merely reaffirms that the Texas
State law meets Federal requirements and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by state law. Therefore, this action
is not subject to review by the OMB.
Even if Region 6 were to conduct a cost benefit analysis, there are
unlikely to be any impacts of this action. This final action does not
involve a revision to the Texas SIP, nor does it result in an amendment
to the current federally codified Texas SIP concerning affirmative
defense provisions. This final action withdraws a SIP call issued to
Texas in 2015 thereby leaving in place a state rule that the EPA
incorporated into the Texas SIP in November 2010. Furthermore, the
Texas affirmative defense provisions only apply to unauthorized
emissions that a defendant proves were unavoidable. Because these
emissions were unavoidable, the existence or lack of the affirmative
defense provisions should not impact the scope of emissions.
Comment: The commenter noted that, according to STEERS for calendar
year 2017, 275 companies reported 4,067 periods of excess emissions
that resulted in the release of more than 63 million pounds of air
pollution. The commenter stated that according to data provided by
TCEQ, affirmative defenses were claimed for 97 percent of those excess
emissions events. The commenter concluded that this data indicates that
these events are common enough to be considered routine and, therefore,
should be regulated.
Response: Region 6 does not disagree with the commenter's citation
or their use of the data from STEERS. The fact that affirmative defense
provisions were claimed for 97% of periods of excess emissions
reported, however, does not suggest that these events are considered
routine. Instead, it suggests an operator of an emission unit that
violates an applicable limit is doing so because of a malfunction that
was, due to the specific circumstances, considered unavoidable, based
on the facts available at the time the excess emissions report and
claim was required to be filed with Texas. The Texas affirmative
defense provisions for an upset is only available for an event where
the source owner or operator proves by a preponderance of evidence in
an enforcement proceeding that the event in question was indeed due to
an unplanned and unavoidable breakdown or excursion of a process or
operation. Moreover, the State of Texas has additional provisions for
excessive emission events, if, in fact, a facility is routinely and
frequently violating applicable standards.\27\
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\27\ See 30 TAC 101.222(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outside of the criteria outlined in the affirmative defense
provisions, which are quite stringent, equipment and process downtime
cost business money and serve as incentive to repair and remedy the
situation in an expeditious manner. As previously stated, Region 6
takes the position that in the case of the affirmative defense
provisions in the Texas SIP, it would be inequitable to penalize a
source for occurrences beyond the company's control. Furthermore,
evidence of any past upset, unplanned MSS, or excess opacity event to
which an owner or operator invoked the affirmative defense provision is
admissible in litigation proceedings and can be considered as relevant
to demonstrate a frequent or recurring pattern of events, even if all
subjects of the criteria are proven.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See 30 TAC 101.222(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: The commenters alleged that the EPA fails to rationally
confront how the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP harm
community enforcement efforts and the efficacy of pollution-control
efforts. The commenters stated that the proposal fails to consider the
polluters' abuse of the affirmative defense provisions and how that use
thwarts enforcement and therefore diminishes sources' incentives for
avoiding violations, resulting in higher levels of pollution.
Additionally, the commenters alleged that the EPA has failed to
rationally explain its departure from its treatment of such issues in
the 2015 SSM SIP Action, where the EPA found that affirmative defense
provisions do in fact interfere with actions taken to enforce emission
limitations brought under the authority provided by CAA section 304.
The commenters noted that where it is already difficult to bring
citizen suits under the CAA, as demonstrated by the Hecker article \29\
as well as Sierra Club v. Energy Future Holding Corp., No. 12-cv-108-
WSS, 2014 WL 2153913 (W.D. Tex. (Mar. 28, 2014)), affirmative defenses
make enforcement even more difficult and expensive. The commenters
referenced a case in the Hecker article, which described how the
factual complexity inherent in a dispute over whether violations are
infrequent and unavoidable, and could have been prevented through
acceptable operating and maintenance practices, made it difficult to
rebut the defendant's assertion of affirmative defense and bring the
suit in a cost-effective manner. The commenters alleged that in Energy
Future Holding, without denying thousands of exceedances of the permit
[[Page 7244]]
limits for opacity, Luminant argued, and the district court found, that
TCEQ's determinations did alter the court's authority to find liability
for self-reported exceedances of emission limits. The commenters
claimed that real world experience shows that defendants have relied
upon, and will assuredly continue to rely upon, the Texas affirmative
defense provisions to argue that a federal court's authority to find
liability or impose penalties under the Act is limited.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Jim Hecker, The Difficulty of Citizen Enforcement of the
Clean Air Act, 10 Widener L. Rev. 303 (2004). (Referred to as
``Hecker article''. This article describes the author's experience
litigating five citizen suits between 1995 and 2004, including one
citizen suit case where a Texas refinery claimed SSM defenses.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: In this action, Region 6 is reviewing the regulatory
affirmative defense provisions adopted by Texas and previously approved
by the EPA into the Texas SIP. Region 6 is not investigating how these
provisions have been applied in individual cases by either the State or
individual courts. See Montana Environmental Information Center v.
Thomas, 902 F.3d 971 (9th Cir. 2018) (holding that a petitioner's
concern raising questions of implementation does not need to be
addressed when EPA is approving a SIP, but rather is ``better addressed
at a different time''). To the extent the commenters disagree that the
affirmative defense provisions were applied correctly in an individual
case, they could have made such claims as a plaintiff or intervenor in
the State's administrative or judicial enforcement action where the
defendant asserted the affirmative defense. In this action, Region 6 is
considering whether the affirmative defense provisions as crafted in
state regulations, and approved into Texas's SIP, are consistent with
CAA requirements.
However, Region 6 notes that the commenters provide insufficient
evidence that sources ``abuse'' the Texas affirmative defense
provisions. The commenters appear to be claiming that sources are using
the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP to bad effect or
for bad purpose. This supposition is unsubstantiated, and the
commenters have failed to provide actual evidence that the affirmative
defense provisions in the Texas SIP are being misused. The EPA does not
believe it appropriate to speculate as to the motives or incentives of
a source owner or operator generally or with respect to any particular
emissions incident.
Comment: The commenter claimed that the proposal fails to explain
how the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP will protect
public health from air quality that violates the NAAQS. The commenter
stated that neither the proposal nor Luminant considers how these
provisions meet the legal requirements of SIPs to protect the NAAQS and
PSD increments. The commenter noted that SSM events are well documented
to have adverse human health impacts, especially on neighboring
communities; furthermore, excess emissions represent a sizeable share
of emissions in Texas. The commenter stated that Region 6 should have
performed an analysis specific to sources in Texas, evaluating the
potential impacts affirmative defenses would have on air quality
throughout Texas, and demonstrating that the NAAQS would continue to be
maintained in all areas of Texas notwithstanding the availability of
such affirmative defenses. The commenter noted that Region 6 has made
no attempt to do so in the proposal, therefore the proposal fails to
provide a reasonable basis for approval.
Response: Region 6 disagrees that some type of additional analysis
specific to sources in Texas is required that the Texas affirmative
defense provisions in the Texas SIP will protect the public health and
the environment. At issue is whether the affirmative defense provisions
are consistent with CAA requirements. With respect to commenter's
concern about NAAQS violations, the provisions in the Texas SIP clearly
place the burden of proof on the source owner or operator to
demonstrate that the NAAQS and PSD increments were not exceeded in
order to make use of the affirmative defense. See 30 TAC 101.222(b)(11)
(the owner or operator must demonstrate that ``the unauthorized
emissions did not cause or contribute to an exceedance of the national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS), prevention of significant
deterioration (PSD) increments, or to a condition of air pollution'').
Therefore, the existence of these provisions, by their own
requirements, will not lead to any further interfere with the
attainment of the NAAQS or PSD increments.
Additionally, in an effort to ensure air quality is protected in
Texas, TCEQ investigates each reported emission event, and makes a
determination of whether the emission event was excessive (30 TAC
101.222(a)). In addition, 30 TAC 101.222(f), titled Obligation, states
that meeting the criteria in 30 TAC 101.222(b)-(e) and (h) do not
remove any obligations to comply with any other existing permit, rule,
or order provisions that are applicable to an emissions event or a
maintenance, startup, or shutdown activity. It also states that an
affirmative defense cannot apply to violations of federally promulgated
performance or technology-based standards, such as those found in 40
CFR parts 60, 61, and 63. The affirmative defense is available only for
emissions that have been reported or recorded. Furthermore, the
affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP are available only for
emission events that are proven to be due to malfunctions.
Comment: The commenters asserted that the burden of proof for an
affirmative defense requires operators to prove that unauthorized
emissions did not cause or contribute to a NAAQS violation or PSD
increment exceedance, although in practice TCEQ grants affirmative
defense to operators' unsupported representations that they lack
sufficient information to indicate that an exceedance has occurred. The
commenters claimed that the implementation of this affirmative defense
provision is inconsistent with the Fifth Circuit decision and the EPA's
reading of the rule. The commenters alleged that this provision has
public health damages resulting from periods of excess emissions
exceeding $250 million annually and noted that low-income communities
and communities of color that are in close-proximity to sources
claiming affirmative defenses bear the burden of periods of excess
emissions, breathing deadly pollution, being told to stay indoors,
being told to shelter in place, experiencing more frequent hospital
visits, and facing a higher risk of serious and chronic health harms.
Response: As discussed earlier, the affirmative defense provisions
in the Texas SIP are defenses to a civil penalty asserted by a
defendant in an enforcement action. Whatever conclusions made by TCEQ
in its evaluation of excess emission reports for malfunctions is not
binding upon the courts or other parties in a state or Federal
enforcement action brought under CAA sections 113(b) or 304(a). See
Environment Texas Citizen Lobby v. ExxonMobil, 84 ERC 1578 (S.D. Tex.
2017) (stating that ``TCEQ's determination of the applicability of an
affirmative defense at best rises to the level of prima facie proof''
and ``[r]eliance on the TCEQ's determination is not sufficient to meet
Exxon's evidentiary burden at trial to demonstrate all eleven criteria
are met''). In addition, the affirmative defense provisions in the
Texas SIP are only applicable to upsets and unplanned periods of excess
emissions. By definition, these events are unavoidable even when good
practices are implemented at facilities. Upsets and unplanned periods
of excess emissions are not beneficial operationally or financially to
sources. The commenters appear to be asserting that affirmative
defenses disincentivize mitigation of emissions due to
[[Page 7245]]
malfunctions. However, among the criteria in the Texas affirmative
defense provisions is that all possible steps were taken to minimize
the impacts of the unauthorized emissions on air quality. As such,
sources have incentives to mitigate the adverse air quality impacts
from such events as much as possible. While Region 6 acknowledges
commenters' concern that emissions from malfunctions may contribute to
adverse health impacts on communities around industrial facilities,
malfunctions resulting in excess emissions are, subject to scrutiny
both by TCEQ and in potential enforcement actions, as to whether the
event itself was unavoidable using the narrowly tailored criteria
provided in the affirmative defense provisions in the Texas SIP. In
this action, Region 6 is reviewing the regulatory affirmative defense
provisions adopted by Texas and previously approved by the EPA into the
Texas SIP. Region 6 is not reviewing how those provisions are being
implemented by TCEQ. In addition, the Texas affirmative defense
provisions do not apply to actions seeking injunctive relief.
IV. Final Action
Region 6 is finding that the affirmative defense provisions
previously approved into the SIP do not make the Texas SIP
substantially inadequate to meet the requirements of the Act. In doing
so, EPA Region 6 is withdrawing the SIP call issued to Texas in 2015
SSM SIP Action. As is detailed in the proposal for this final action,
in the absence of a SIP call, Texas no longer has an obligation to
submit a SIP revision addressing its existing affirmative defense
provisions. Texas may withdraw the SIP revision submitted in November
2016 in response to the 2015 SSM SIP Action, on which the EPA has not
proposed or taken final action to approve or disapprove.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action and was
therefore not submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
for review.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulations and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
This action is not an Executive Order 13771 regulatory action
because this action is not significant under Executive Order 12866.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.), since it alleviates an obligation on the State of Texas to
revise its SIP by withdrawing the SIP call issued to Texas in 2015.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. In
making this determination, the impact of concern is any significant
adverse economic impact on small entities. Any agency may certify that
a rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities if the rule relieves regulatory burden, has no
net burden or otherwise has a positive economic effect on the small
entities subject to this action. This action will not impose any
requirements on small entities.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the National Government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. In this action, the EPA is not addressing any
tribal implementation plans. This action is limited to the State of
Texas. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an environmental
health risk or safety risk.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211, because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately
high and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority,
low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as specified in
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). The
documentation for this decision is contained in the response to
comments section of the preamble.
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. The EPA will submit a report containing this action and
other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2). The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
generally provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency
promulgating the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy
of the rule, to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller
General of the United States. The EPA will
[[Page 7246]]
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).
M. 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 April 7, 2020. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule does not affect
the finality of this action for the purposes of judicial review nor
does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial review may
be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such rule or
action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Hydrocarbons, Incorporation by reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Lead, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: January 7, 2020.
Kenley McQueen,
Regional Administrator, Region 6.
[FR Doc. 2020-01477 Filed 2-6-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P