Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Revisions to the Refrigerant Management Program's Extension to Substitutes, 14150-14171 [2020-04773]
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‘‘110(a)(1) and (2) Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 8-Hour
Ozone NAAQS’’ at the end of the table
to read as follows:
Subpart II—North Carolina
3. Section 52.1770, is amended in
paragraph (e) by adding an entry for
■
§ 52.1770
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED NORTH CAROLINA NON-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
State
effective
date
Provision
*
EPA
approval
date
*
110(a)(1) and (2) Infrastructure Requirements
for the 2015 8-Hour
Ozone NAAQS.
*
9/27/2018
[FR Doc. 2020–04855 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2017–0629; FRL–10006–10–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AT81
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone:
Revisions to the Refrigerant
Management Program’s Extension to
Substitutes
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Clean Air Act prohibits
knowingly venting or releasing ozonedepleting and substitute refrigerants in
the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of appliances or
industrial process refrigeration. In 2016,
the EPA amended the regulatory
refrigerant management requirements
and extended requirements that
previously applied only to refrigerants
containing an ozone-depleting
substance to substitute refrigerants that
are subject to the venting prohibition
(i.e., those that have not been exempted
from that prohibition) such as
hydrofluorocarbons. Based on changes
to the legal interpretation that supported
that 2016 rule, this action revises some
of those requirements—specifically, the
appliance maintenance and leak repair
provisions—so they apply only to
equipment using refrigerant containing
an ozone-depleting substance.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
April 10, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2017–0629. All
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SUMMARY:
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Federal Register
citation
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3/11/2020
Explanation
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[Insert citation of publication].
I. General Information
A. What is the National Recycling and
Emission Reduction Program?
Section 608 of the Clean Air Act
(CAA), titled ‘‘National Recycling and
Emission Reduction Program,’’ has three
main components. First, section 608(a)
requires the EPA to establish standards
and requirements regarding the use and
disposal of class I and class II
substances.1 The second component,
section 608(b), requires that the
regulations issued pursuant to
subsection (a) contain requirements for
the safe disposal of class I and class II
substances. The third component,
section 608(c), prohibits the knowing
venting, release, or disposal of ODS
1 A class I or class II substance is an ozonedepleting substance (ODS) listed at 40 CFR part 82,
subpart A, appendix A or appendix B, respectively.
This document refers to class I and class II
substances collectively as ozone-depleting
substances, or ODS.
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With the exception of 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and
2) and PSD provisions related to major sources
under sections 110(a)(2)(C), 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II)
(prong 3), and 110(a)(2)(J).
documents in the docket are listed on
the 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. All other publicly available docket
materials are available electronically
through www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeremy Arling by regular mail: U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Stratospheric Protection Division
(6205T), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20460; by
telephone: (202) 343–9055; or by email:
arling.jeremy@epa.gov. More
information can also be found at:
https://www.epa.gov/section608.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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refrigerants 2 and their substitutes 3 in
the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of appliances or
industrial process refrigeration (IPR).
The EPA refers to this third component
as the ‘‘venting prohibition.’’ Section
608(c)(1) establishes the venting
prohibition for ODS refrigerants
effective July 1, 1992, and it includes an
exemption from this prohibition for
‘‘[d]e minimis releases associated with
good faith attempts to recapture and
recycle or safely dispose’’ any such
substance. Section 608(c)(2) extends
608(c)(1) to substitute refrigerants,
effective November 15, 1995. Section
608(c)(2) also includes a provision that
allows the Administrator to exempt a
substitute refrigerant from the venting
prohibition if he or she determines that
such venting, release, or disposal of a
substitute refrigerant ‘‘does not pose a
threat to the environment.’’ 4
The EPA first issued regulations
under section 608 of the CAA on May
14, 1993 (58 FR 28660, ‘‘1993 Rule’’), to
establish the national refrigerant
management program for ODS
refrigerants recovered during the
service, repair, or disposal of airconditioning and refrigeration
appliances. The 1993 Rule required that
persons servicing air-conditioning and
refrigeration equipment containing ODS
refrigerants observe certain practices
that reduce emissions. It established
2 The term ‘‘ODS refrigerant’’ as used in this
document refers to any refrigerant or refrigerant
blend in which one or more of the components is
a class I or class II substance.
3 The term ‘‘substitute’’ is defined at § 82.152.
4 The EPA is using the term ‘‘non-exempt
substitute’’ in this document to refer to substitute
refrigerants that have not been exempted from the
venting prohibition under CAA section 608(c)(2)
and § 82.154(a) in the relevant end-use. Similarly,
the term ‘‘exempt substitute’’ refers to a substitute
refrigerant that has been exempted from the venting
prohibition under section 608(c)(2) and § 82.154(a)
in the relevant end-use. A few exempt substitutes
have been exempted from the venting prohibition
in all end-uses.
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requirements for refrigerant recovery
equipment, reclaimer certification, and
technician certification, and also
restricted the sale of ODS refrigerant so
that only certified technicians could
purchase it. In addition, the 1993 Rule
required that ODS be removed from
appliances prior to disposal, and that all
air-conditioning and refrigeration
equipment using an ODS be provided
with a servicing aperture or process stub
to facilitate refrigerant recovery. The
1993 Rule also established a
requirement to repair leaking appliances
containing more than 50 pounds of ODS
refrigerant. The rule set an annual leak
rate of 35 percent for commercial
refrigeration appliances and IPR and 15
percent for comfort cooling appliances.
If the applicable leak rate is exceeded,
the appliance must be repaired within
30 days. Further, consistent with CAA
section 608(c)(1), the 1993 Rule
included a regulatory provision
prohibiting the knowing venting or
release of ODS refrigerant by any person
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of an appliance. (58 FR 28714;
40 CFR 82.154(a) (1993)). It also
provided that such releases would be
considered de minimis, and therefore
not subject to the prohibition, if they
occurred when certain regulatory
requirements were followed. (40 CFR
82.154(a) (1993)).
The EPA revised these regulations,
which are found at 40 CFR part 82,
subpart F (‘‘subpart F’’), through
subsequent rulemakings published on
August 19, 1994 (59 FR 42950),
November 9, 1994 (59 FR 55912),
August 8, 1995 (60 FR 40420), July 24,
2003 (68 FR 43786), March 12, 2004 (69
FR 11946), January 11, 2005 (70 FR
1972), April 13, 2005 (70 FR 19273),
May 23, 2014 (79 FR 29682), April 10,
2015 (80 FR 19453), and November 18,
2016 (81 FR 82272).
In the April 2005 rulemaking, the EPA
revised the regulatory venting
prohibition in § 82.154, so that it also
applied to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, and included such
substitutes in the regulatory provision
implementing the de minimis
exemption, so that it exempted ‘‘de
minimis releases associated with good
faith attempts to recycle or recover
refrigerants or non-exempt substitutes’’
from the prohibition. (70 FR 19278).
However, in contrast to how these
regulations applied to ODS refrigerants,
they did not provide that releases of
non-exempt substitute refrigerants
would be considered de minimis if
certain regulatory requirements were
followed.
Additionally, the 2004 and 2005 rules
exempted certain substitute refrigerants
from the venting prohibition either in
specific end uses or in all end uses. (See
69 FR 11953–11954; 70 FR 19278;
§ 82.154(a) (2005)). The EPA has
periodically updated this list of
exemptions from the venting
prohibition in the regulations at
§ 82.154(a) since 2005. The EPA also
issued proposed rules to revise the
regulations in subpart F on June 11,
1998 (63 FR 32044), elements of which
were not finalized, and on December 15,
2010 (75 FR 78558), no elements of
which were finalized. A more detailed
history of these regulatory updates can
be found at 81 FR 82275.
On November 18, 2016, the EPA
published a rule updating existing
refrigerant management requirements
and extending the full set of the subpart
F refrigerant management requirements,
which prior to that rule applied only to
ODS refrigerants,5 to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, such as
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) and
hydrofluoroolefins (HFOs) (81 FR
82272, ‘‘2016 Rule’’). The 2016 Rule
also clarified how regulated entities
could avail themselves of the de
minimis exemption for non-exempt
substitutes. (See, e.g., 81 FR 82283–
82285). Among the subpart F
requirements extended to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule
were provisions that restrict the
servicing of appliances and the sale of
refrigerant to certified technicians,
specify the proper evacuation levels
before opening an appliance, require the
use of certified refrigerant recovery and/
or recycling equipment, require that
refrigerant be removed from appliances
prior to disposal, require that appliances
have a servicing aperture or process stub
to facilitate refrigerant recovery, require
that refrigerant reclaimers be certified to
reclaim and sell used refrigerant, and
establish standards for technician
certification programs, recovery
equipment, and quality of reclaimed
refrigerant. The 2016 Rule also extended
the appliance maintenance and leak
repair provisions, currently codified at
§ 82.157, to appliances that contain 50
or more pounds of non-exempt
substitute refrigerant. For ease of
reference, in this document the EPA
uses the terms ‘‘leak repair provisions’’
or ‘‘leak repair requirements’’
interchangeably to refer to all of the
provisions at § 82.157. Included in these
leak repair provisions are requirements
5 The only subpart F requirements that applied to
substitute refrigerants prior to the 2016 Rule were
the venting prohibition and certain exemptions
from that prohibition, as set forth in § 82.154(a).
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to conduct leak rate calculations when
refrigerant is added to an appliance,
repair an appliance that leaks above the
threshold leak rate applicable to that
type of appliance, conduct verification
tests on repairs, conduct periodic leak
inspections on appliances that have
exceeded the threshold leak rate, report
to the EPA on chronically leaking
appliances, retrofit or retire appliances
that are not repaired, and maintain
related documentation to verify
compliance. The regulatory changes in
the 2016 Rule became effective on
January 1, 2017, but the revisions to the
leak repair provisions had a compliance
date of January 1, 2019 to allow time for
the regulated community to prepare for
those changes. (81 FR 82343). The 2016
Rule additionally made numerous
revisions to improve the efficacy of the
refrigerant management program as a
whole, such as revisions of regulatory
provisions for increased clarity and
readability, and removal of provisions
that had become obsolete.
Two industry coalitions, the National
Environmental Development
Association’s Clean Air Project (NEDA/
CAP) and the Air Permitting Forum
(APF), filed petitions for judicial review
of the 2016 Rule in the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit (D.C. Circuit), and the cases have
been consolidated. (See NEDA/CAP v.
EPA, No. 17–1016 (D.C. Cir. filed
January 17, 2017); APF v. EPA, No. 17–
1017 (D.C. Cir. filed January 17, 2017)).
The Chemours Company, Honeywell
International Inc., the Natural Resources
Defense Council, and the Alliance for
Responsible Atmospheric Policy are
participating as intervenor-respondents
in that litigation, in support of the 2016
Rule. In addition, APF has filed a
petition with the EPA for administrative
reconsideration of the 2016 Rule. The
petition for reconsideration is available
in the docket for this action and raises
several issues regarding changes made
in the 2016 Rule, such as the EPA’s
statutory authority for its decision in the
2016 Rule to expand the scope of the
refrigerant management requirements—
including, but not limited to, leak repair
requirements—to cover non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. Honeywell
International Inc. submitted a document
styled as a response to APF’s petition
for reconsideration, which is also
available in the docket for this action.
B. Does this action apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially
affected by this action include those
who own or operate refrigeration and
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air-conditioning appliances. Potentially
affected entities include, but are not
limited to, the following:
TABLE 1—POTENTIALLY AFFECTED ENTITIES
Category
North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) code
Examples of regulated entities
Industrial Process Refrigeration (IPR).
111, 11251, 11511, 21111, 2211, 2212, 2213, 311, 3121,
3221, 3222, 32311, 32411, 3251, 32512, 3252, 3253,
32541, 3256, 3259, 3261, 3262, 3324, 3328, 33324,
33341, 33361, 3341, 3344, 3345, 3346, 3364, 33911,
339999.
Commercial Refrigeration.
42374, 42393, 42399, 4242, 4244, 42459, 42469, 42481,
42493, 4451, 4452, 45291, 48422, 4885, 4931, 49312,
72231.
Comfort Cooling
45211, 45299, 453998, 512, 522, 524, 531, 5417, 551, 561,
6111, 6112, 6113, 61151, 622, 7121, 71394, 721, 722,
813, 92.
Owners or operators of refrigeration equipment used in agriculture and crop production, oil and gas extraction, ice
rinks, and the manufacture of frozen food, dairy products,
food and beverages, ice, petrochemicals, chemicals, machinery, medical equipment, plastics, paper, and electronics.
Owners or operators of refrigerated warehousing and storage
facilities, supermarkets, grocery stores, warehouse clubs,
supercenters, convenience stores, and refrigerated transport.
Owners or operators of air-conditioning equipment used in
the following: Hospitals, office buildings, colleges and universities, metropolitan transit authorities, real estate rental
& leased properties, lodging and food services, property
management, schools, and public administration or other
public institutions.
This list is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather to provide a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
affected by this action. To determine
whether your facility, company,
business, or organization could be
affected by this action, you should
carefully examine the regulations at 40
CFR part 82, subpart F and the revisions
below. If you have questions regarding
the applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
C. What action is the agency taking?
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The EPA reviewed the 2016 Rule,
focusing in particular on whether the
agency had the statutory authority to
extend the full set of subpart F
refrigerant management regulations to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants, such
as HFCs and HFOs. Based on that
review, Administrator Pruitt signed a
letter on August 10, 2017 stating that the
EPA is ‘‘planning to issue a proposed
rule to revisit aspects of the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the 40 CFR part 82, subpart
F refrigerant management requirements
to non-exempt substitutes.’’ 6 Consistent
with that letter, in 2018 the agency
proposed to withdraw the extension of
the provisions at § 82.157 to appliances
using only non-exempt substitute
refrigerants.7 (83 FR 43922). As
6 Letter from the EPA to National Environmental
Development Association’s Clean Air Project and
the Air Permitting Forum (Aug. 10, 2017), available
at www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2017-08/
documents/608_update_letter.pdf and in the docket
to this rule.
7 Ozone-depleting refrigerants and appliances that
contain or use any amount of ODS continue to be
subject to all applicable subpart F requirements,
including those in § 82.157.
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discussed above, these provisions
include requirements related to
appliance maintenance and leak repair.
This action finalizes that proposed
withdrawal and will relieve businesses
from having to repair leaks, conduct
leak inspections, and keep records for
appliances containing only substitute
refrigerant.
The 2018 proposal also requested
comment on whether to withdraw the
2016 Rule’s extension of the full set of
subpart F provisions to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. Subpart F
includes provisions that restrict the
servicing of appliances and the sale of
refrigerant to certified technicians,
specify the proper evacuation levels
before opening an appliance, require the
use of certified refrigerant recovery and/
or recycling equipment, require that
refrigerant be removed from appliances
prior to disposal, require that appliances
have a servicing aperture or process stub
to facilitate refrigerant recovery, require
that refrigerant reclaimers be certified to
reclaim and sell used refrigerant, and
establish standards for technician
certification programs, recovery
equipment, and quality of reclaimed
refrigerant (40 CFR part 82, subpart F).
In this action the EPA is not making any
changes to the subpart F provisions
other than (1) limiting the applicability
of the leak repair provisions in § 82.157
to appliances that use ODS refrigerants
or a blend containing ODS refrigerants
and (2) correspondingly clarifying that
the reference to § 82.157 in
§ 82.154(a)(2)(i) (the regulatory
provision implementing the de minimis
exemption to the venting prohibition)
only applies for appliances that contain
ODS refrigerants (including in a blend).
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Consistent with the proposal, this action
does not change any of the regulatory
requirements for ODS in 40 CFR part 82,
subpart F.
D. What is the agency’s authority for
taking this action?
This action is based on changes to a
legal interpretation of the EPA’s
authority under CAA section 608 that
supported the extension of the leak
repair requirements at § 82.157 to nonexempt substitute refrigerants in the
2016 Rule. As described in greater detail
in Section II below, the EPA concludes
that, as a legal matter, the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants exceeded the EPA’s
statutory authority under CAA section
608. Accordingly, the EPA is rescinding
the 2016 Rule’s extension of the leak
repair requirements to non-exempt
substitutes. However, the EPA continues
to interpret section 608 as providing the
agency some authority to regulate
substitutes. That includes authority to
issue regulations that interpret, explain,
and enforce the venting prohibition and
the de minimis exemption under section
608(c) or that are necessary to fulfill the
purposes set forth in section 608(a)(3)
(i.e., to reduce the use and emission of
ODS to the lowest achievable level or to
maximize the recapture and recycling of
ODS). Because the extension of the nonleak repair provisions in subpart F to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants
remains within the scope of the EPA’s
authority under 608 under the revised
statutory interpretation described in this
action, the extension of those
requirements is not being rescinded.
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E. What are the incremental costs and
benefits of this action?
Although this action is based on
changes in the EPA’s statutory
interpretation, the agency is providing a
summary of incremental costs and
benefits associated with this action for
purposes of transparency and public
information. Using a 7% discount rate,
agency analyses indicate that rescinding
the extension of the leak repair
provisions to non-exempt substitutes
reduces the burden associated with the
2016 Rule by approximately $39 million
per year. The EPA also estimates this
rule will increase the need to purchase
non-exempt substitute refrigerant for
leaking appliances, at an overall cost of
approximately $15 million per year.
Thus, incremental compliance savings
and increased refrigerant costs
combined are estimated to be a
reduction of at least $24 million per
year. These estimates are somewhat
lower if a 3% discount rate is used. The
EPA estimates that this action will
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result in forgone annual greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions reductions benefits of
about 3 million metric tons of carbon
dioxide equivalent (MMTCO2e). This
rule will not result in an increase in
ODS emissions.
Table 2 presents a summary of the
annual costs, forgone emission
reductions, and benefits associated with
rescinding the extension of the leak
repair provisions to non-exempt
substitutes, using a 7% or a 3%
discount rate, respectively.
TABLE 2—ANNUAL COSTS AND BENEFITS
Rescinding extension of leak repair
provisions to non-exempt substitutes
7% Discount rate
Cost Savings (Burden Reduction) ............................................................................................................
Total Cost (Refrigerant Replacement) ......................................................................................................
Net Cost Savings ......................................................................................................................................
Forgone Emissions Reductions (non-monetized disbenefit) ....................................................................
Additional discussion of these
analyses can be found in Section III of
this document and in the Analysis of the
Economic Impact of the Proposed 2018
Revisions to the National Recycling and
Emission Reduction Program in the
docket.
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II. The Final Rule
A. Legal Background and the 2016 Rule
This action results from the EPA’s
decision to revisit aspects of the 2016
Rule’s extension of the 40 CFR part 82,
subpart F refrigerant management
requirements to non-exempt substitutes.
That process resulted in changes to the
legal interpretation supporting the 2016
Rule, which are reflected in this action.
For context, we begin by summarizing
the key statutory provisions and the
EPA’s view of its legal authority as
presented in the 2016 Rule. The
discussion of the EPA’s statutory
authority to extend refrigerant
management requirements to nonexempt substitute refrigerants in the
2016 Rule focused primarily on CAA
section 608, especially on sections
608(c) and 608(a). (See generally 81 FR
82284–82288).
Section 608(a) requires the EPA to
establish standards and requirements
regarding the use and disposal of class
I and class II substances. With regard to
refrigerants, under sections 608(a)(1)
and 608(a)(2), the EPA is required to
promulgate regulations establishing
standards and requirements for the use
and disposal of class I and class II
substances, respectively, during the
service, repair, or disposal of airconditioning and refrigeration
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appliances and IPR.8 Section 608(a)(3)
provides that regulations under section
608(a) are to include requirements to
reduce the use and emission of ODS to
the lowest achievable level, and to
maximize the recapture and recycling of
such substances. Section 608(a)(3)
further provides that ‘‘[s]uch regulations
may include requirements to use
alternative substances (including
substances which are not class I or class
II substances) or to minimize use of
class I or class II substances, or to
promote the use of safe alternatives
pursuant to section [612] or any
combination of the foregoing.’’ 9
Section 608(c) establishes a selfeffectuating prohibition, commonly
called the ‘‘venting prohibition.’’ 10
8 We note that section 608(a) is not limited to
refrigerants, and that the EPA has applied its
authority under section 608(a) to establish or
consider regulations for ODS in non-refrigerant
applications. See, e.g., 63 FR 11084.
9 While section 608(a)(3) provides that the
regulations issued under section 608(a) ‘‘may
include requirements to use alternative substances
(including substances which are not class I or class
II substances), . . . or to promote the use of safe
alternatives pursuant to section [612]’’, the EPA is
not relying upon these provisions in 608(a)(3) in
this document, as the regulatory changes effected by
the 2016 Rule, which today’s action partially
rescinds, do not relate to requirements to use
substitutes or promote their use pursuant to section
612. (In implementing Title VI, the EPA has at times
used the terms ‘‘alternative’’ and ‘‘substitute’’
interchangeably. See, e.g., 81 FR 86779, n.1; 81 FR
82276, 82291.) Furthermore, the EPA did not rely
on these authorities in 608(a)(3) in extending the
refrigerant management requirements to substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule, and it is not relying
on them in addressing the underlying questions of
statutory interpretation at issue here.
10 In this context, the EPA uses the term ‘‘selfeffectuating’’ to mean that the statutory prohibition
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$38,958,000 ..........
¥$14,874,000 ......
$24,084,000 ..........
2.946 MMTCO2e ...
3% Discount rate
$35,264,000.
¥$14,874,000.
$20,390,000.
2.946 MMTCO2e.
Section 608(c)(1), effective July 1, 1992,
makes it unlawful for any person, in the
course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance
or IPR to knowingly vent, release, or
dispose of any ODS used as a refrigerant
in such equipment in a manner that
permits that substance to enter the
environment. Section 608(c)(1) also
includes an exemption from this
prohibition for ‘‘[d]e minimis releases
associated with good faith attempts to
recapture and recycle or safely dispose’’
of such a substance. Section 608(c)(2)
states that, effective November 15, 1995,
‘‘paragraph (1) shall also apply to the
venting, release, or disposal of any
substitute substance for a class I or class
II substance by any person maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of an
appliance or [IPR] which contains and
uses as a refrigerant any such substance,
unless the Administrator determines
that venting, releasing, or disposing of
such substance does not pose a threat to
the environment.’’ The EPA interprets
section 608(c)(2)’s extension of section
608(c)(1) to substitute refrigerants to
extend both the prohibition on venting
and the de minimis exemption to nonexempt substitute refrigerants. This is a
long-held position which the EPA is not
revisiting in this action. (See, e.g., 69 FR
11949, March 12, 2004; and 70 FR
19274–19275, April 13, 2005). Section
608(c) does not expressly provide that
the EPA may write regulations under
that section. Section 301, however,
states that the ‘‘Administrator is
on venting is itself legally binding even in the
absence of implementing regulations.
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authorized to prescribe such regulations
as are necessary to carry out his
functions under [the Clean Air Act].’’
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA interpreted
section 608 of the CAA as being
ambiguous with regard to the agency’s
authority to establish refrigerant
management regulations for non-exempt
substitute refrigerants because Congress
had not precisely spoken to this issue.
Accordingly, the EPA took the view that
it had the discretion under Chevron,
U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843–44 (1984), to
interpret section 608 as providing the
EPA with authority to extend all aspects
of its refrigerant management
regulations under section 608 to nonexempt substitute refrigerants, including
those regulations that had previously
only applied to ODS refrigerants. (See
81 FR 82283). The 2016 Rule explained
that section 608(a) expressly requires
the EPA to issue regulations that apply
to class I and class II substances, but it
does not expressly address whether the
EPA could establish the same refrigerant
management practices for substitute
substances. On the other hand, section
608(c)(2) explicitly mentions substitute
refrigerants and directly applies the
provisions for ODS refrigerants in
section 608(c)(1) to them. The 2016 Rule
noted that this created a tension in the
regulatory scheme for substitute
refrigerants because the regulated
community is subject to the prohibition
on knowing venting, releasing, or
disposing of non-exempt substitute
refrigerants while maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of air
conditioning and refrigeration
equipment but at the same time section
608(a) does not direct the EPA to
promulgate regulations requiring the
regulated community to recover nonexempt substitute refrigerant prior to
servicing or disposing of such
equipment or to engage in any of the
practices or behaviors that the EPA has
established to minimize the emission
and release of ODS refrigerants during
such maintenance, service, repair, or
disposal. The 2016 Rule further
explained that while the subpart F
regulations made clear that ODS
refrigerant releases would be considered
de minimis if (and only if) certain
regulatory requirements were followed,
the rules did not provide any such
clarity regarding what practices
regulated parties must follow to qualify
for the de minimis exemption, and
thereby comply with the venting
prohibition, for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. (See 81 FR 82284).
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA grounded
its authority for the extension of
refrigerant requirements to non-exempt
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substitute refrigerants largely on section
608(c), which the EPA interpreted to
provide it authority to promulgate
regulations that interpret, explain, and
enforce the venting prohibition and the
de minimis exemption as they apply to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants. (See
81 FR 82283–82284). In reaching this
interpretation, the EPA relied in part on
a policy rationale that by establishing a
comprehensive and consistent
framework that applies to both ODS and
non-exempt substitute refrigerants, the
2016 Rule would provide clarity to the
regulated community concerning the
measures that should be taken to
comply with the venting prohibition for
non-exempt substitutes and would thus
reduce confusion and enhance
compliance for both ODS and nonexempt substitutes. The EPA further
explained its view in the 2016 Rule that
the extension of requirements under
section 608 to non-exempt substitutes
was also supported by section 608(a)
because having a consistent regulatory
framework for non-exempt substitutes
and ODS is expected to reduce
emissions of ODS refrigerants. In
addition, the EPA located supplemental
authority for the 2016 Rule in section
301(a), which provides authority for the
EPA to ‘‘prescribe such regulations as
are necessary to carry out [the EPA
Administrator’s] functions’’ under the
Act. Id. Further, the EPA identified
section 114, which provides authority to
the EPA Administrator to require
recordkeeping and reporting in carrying
out provisions of the CAA, as providing
supplemental authority to extend the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements to non-exempt substitutes.
Id.
B. The EPA’s Reassessment of Its Legal
Authority Under Section 608
The EPA’s ability to revisit existing
regulations is well-grounded in the law.
Specifically, the EPA has inherent
authority to reconsider, repeal, or revise
past decisions to the extent permitted by
law so long as the agency provides a
reasoned explanation. See, e.g., Encino
Motorcars LLC v. Navarro, 136 S.Ct.
2117, 2125 (2016). The authority to
reconsider prior decisions exists in part
because the EPA’s interpretations of
statutes it administers ‘‘[are not]
instantly carved in stone,’’ but must be
evaluated ‘‘on a continuing basis.’’
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467
U.S. 837, 863–64 (1984). This is true
when, as is the case here, review is
undertaken ‘‘in response to . . . a change
in administrations.’’ National Cable &
Telecommunications Ass’n v. Brand X
Internet Services, 545 U.S. 967, 981
(2005). Indeed, ‘‘[a]gencies obviously
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have broad discretion to reconsider a
regulation at any time.’’ Clean Air
Council v. Pruitt, 862 F.3d 1, 8–9 (D.C.
Cir. 2017). Similarly, the fact that an
agency has previously adopted one
interpretation of a statute does not
preclude it from later exercising its
discretion to change its interpretation.
National Cable & Telecommunications
Ass’n, 545 U.S. at 981. In addition, an
agency may ‘‘justify its policy choice by
explaining why that policy ‘is more
consistent with statutory language’ than
alternative policies.’’ Encino Motorcars,
136 S.Ct. at 2127 (quoting Long Island
Care at Home Ltd. v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158,
175 (2007)). The CAA complements the
EPA’s inherent authority to reconsider
prior rulemakings by providing the
agency with broad authority to prescribe
regulations as necessary to carry out the
agency’s functions under the CAA in
section 301(a).
In this action the agency has
reassessed the 2016 Rule’s assertion of
legal authority to extend the full set of
subpart F requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants under CAA
section 608. While the agency is
retaining aspects of the interpretation
that supported the 2016 Rule, it is
revising that interpretation in some
important respects for greater
consistency with the statutory text,
structure, and purposes, as described
below. As in the 2016 Rule, the EPA
continues to interpret section 608 as
being ambiguous with regard to the
agency’s authority to establish
refrigerant management regulations for
non-exempt substitute refrigerants.
Sections 608(a)(1) and (2) explicitly
require the EPA to promulgate
regulations regarding the use and
disposal of ODS but as these provisions
make no mention of substitutes they
neither expressly preclude nor expressly
authorize regulation of substitutes for
the purpose of achieving the ODS goals
of those provisions. Section 608(c)(2)
does expressly mention substitute
refrigerants, but that provision focuses
on prohibiting knowing releases of
substitute refrigerants in the course of
specific activities (maintenance, service,
repair, and disposal) and on providing
an exemption for de minimis releases
without specifying the mechanisms for
carrying out this prohibition and
exemption. Thus, Congress did not
precisely delineate in section 608 the
scope of the EPA’s authority to regulate
substitute refrigerants by issuing
refrigerant management regulations.
The EPA also continues to believe
that it is reasonable to interpret both
sections 608(a) and (c) as providing
authority that could support the
extension of certain subpart F
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requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. The EPA maintains the
position that section 608(c) is
reasonably construed as providing the
agency discretionary authority to
interpret, explain, and enforce the
venting prohibition and the de minimis
exemption for substitute refrigerants, as
section 608(c)(2) incorporates both the
prohibition and the exemption and
applies them to substitutes. Thus, these
are both elements in the statutory
regime that the EPA is entrusted to
administer for substitute refrigerants.
The fact that Congress extended the de
minimis exemption for ‘‘releases
associated with good faith attempts to
recapture and recycle or safely dispose
of any such substance’’ to substitutes
under section 608(c)(2) but did not
specify what practices or actions should
be taken to qualify for this exemption,
creates a statutory ambiguity that the
EPA can resolve through regulation.
However, section 608(c) is limited in the
scope of releases and activities it
addresses: It specifically covers
knowing venting, release, or disposal of
substitute refrigerants in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of appliances. To the extent
that the subpart F provisions extended
to non-exempt substitutes in the 2016
Rule address the potential for such
releases during one of these covered
activities, those provisions continue to
be within the scope of the EPA’s
authority under section 608(c) under the
interpretation supporting this action.
As for section 608(a), section 608(a)(3)
requires the agency to issue regulations
that reduce the use and emission of ODS
to the lowest achievable level and
maximize the recapture and recycling of
such substances. While section 608(a)(3)
contains discretionary language about
what requirements those regulations
may include, it does not contain any
more specific mandates about how the
required objectives should be achieved.
Given this ambiguity, the EPA
reasonably interprets section 608(a) to
provide authority to issue regulations
that reduce the use and emission of ODS
to the lowest achievable level or that
maximize the recapture and recycling of
such substances, even if the regulations
do not directly regulate ODS. Thus, as
in the 2016 Rule, to the extent that the
extension of certain subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitutes
is necessary to achieve the purposes set
forth in section 608(a)(3) (i.e., reducing
the use and emission of ODS to the
lowest achievable level or maximizing
the recapture and recycling of such
substances), the EPA concludes that the
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extension is within the ambit of its
authority under section 608(a).
In contrast to the 2016 Rule, however,
the EPA has concluded that its statutory
authority under section 608, taking that
authority as a whole, does not extend as
far with respect to substitutes as it does
with respect to ODS. This conclusion is
supported by the text and structure of
section 608. The fact that Congress
specifically included the term
‘‘substitutes’’ in section 608(c) but not
in sections 608(a)(1) or (2), contrasted
with the express references to ODS
(class I and class II substances) in both
subsections, suggests that the EPA’s
authority to address substitutes under
section 608 is more limited than its
authority to address ODS. If Congress
had intended to convey authority to the
EPA to promulgate the same, full set of
refrigerant management requirements
for substitutes as for ODS, it is
reasonable to expect that Congress
would have expressly included
substitutes in sections 608(a)(1) or (2),
as it did for section 608(c)—but it did
not. In addition, the differences in the
verbs used in section 608(a) (authorizing
regulations related to the ‘‘use and
disposal’’ of ODS ‘‘including use and
disposal during service, repair, or
disposal’’ of appliances) compared to
those used in section 608(c) (prohibiting
knowing releases ‘‘in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing’’ of appliances) further
supports the conclusion that Congress
envisioned that the regulations under
section 608(a) would affect a broader
range of activities than those under
section 608(c), as regulations under
section 608(a) could address any use or
disposal of ODS, rather than being
limited to particular activities.
In sum, while the EPA continues to
interpret section 608 to provide some
authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants, the EPA now reads sections
608(a) and (c) together to determine that
its authority is more limited for
substitute refrigerants than for ODS. In
addition, the EPA continues to interpret
CAA section 301(a), which provides that
the EPA may ‘‘prescribe such
regulations as are necessary to carry out
[the EPA Administrator’s] functions’’
under the Act, to supplement its
authority to issue regulations necessary
to address substitute refrigerants under
section 608(c). Further, the agency
continues to interpret CAA section 114,
which provides authority to the EPA
Administrator to require recordkeeping
and reporting in carrying out provisions
of the CAA, as providing supplemental
authority to extend the subpart F
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements to non-exempt substitutes.
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C. The EPA Lacked Authority Under
Section 608 To Extend Leak Repair
Requirements To Substitute Refrigerants
Applying the interpretive framework
described in Section II.B above, the EPA
has re-examined whether the 2016
Rule’s extension of the leak repair
requirements to appliances that contain
only substitute refrigerants was within
its authority under section 608, either as
(1) an appropriate means of interpreting,
explaining, and enforcing the venting
prohibition and the de minimis
exemption under section 608(c), or (2)
as regulations that are necessary to
fulfill the purposes of section 608(a) to
reduce the use and emission of ODS to
the lowest achievable level or to
maximize the recapture and recycling of
ODS. As described further below, based
on that legal analysis, the agency
concludes that the extension of the leak
repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants exceeded the
EPA’s legal authority under section 608
because it relied on an unreasonable
interpretation of that authority.
Consequently, the EPA determines that
the extension of the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants must be rescinded and is
finalizing that rescission in this action.
This rescission is also consistent with
the agency’s view that the scope of its
authority under section 608 is more
limited for substitutes than for ODS, and
the EPA today is finalizing changes to
its subpart F regulations to conform
those regulations to its interpretation of
the statute.
i. Section 608(c)
To justify the extension of the leak
repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule,
the EPA reversed its longstanding
position that ‘‘topping off’’ leaking
appliances was not knowing venting or
a knowing release of refrigerant in the
course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance
within the meaning of section 608(c).
The EPA’s historic position, and the one
that the agency is returning to through
this action, is that refrigerant released
during the normal operation of an
appliance is generally not subject to the
venting prohibition.
When establishing the original leak
repair provisions in 1993, the EPA
stated that:
[T]he venting prohibition itself, which
applies to the maintenance, service, repair,
and disposal of equipment, does not prohibit
‘‘topping off’’ systems, which leads to
emissions of refrigerant during the use of
equipment. The provision on knowing
releases does, however, include the situation
in which a technician is practically certain
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that his or her conduct will cause a release
of refrigerant during the maintenance,
service, repair, or disposal of equipment.
Knowing releases also include situations in
which a technician closes his or her eyes to
obvious facts or fails to investigate them
when aware of facts that demand
investigation. [58 FR 28672.]
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA changed the
agency’s interpretation of the venting
prohibition as part of the rationale that
supported applying the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. The EPA stated in the 2016
Rule that it:
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concludes that its statements in the 1993
Rule presented an overly narrow
interpretation of the statutory venting
prohibition. Consistent with the direction
articulated in the proposed 2010 Leak Repair
Rule, EPA is adopting a broader
interpretation. When refrigerant must be
added to an existing appliance, other than
when originally charging the system or for a
seasonal variance, the owner or operator
necessarily knows that the system has leaks.
At that point the owner or operator is
required to calculate the leak rate. If the leaks
exceed the applicable leak rate for that
particular type of appliance, the owner or
operator will know that absent repairs,
subsequent additions of refrigerant will be
released in a manner that will permit the
refrigerant to enter the environment.
Therefore, EPA interprets section 608(c) such
that if a person adds refrigerant to an
appliance that he or she knows is leaking, he
or she also violates the venting prohibition
unless he or she has complied with the
applicable practices referenced in
§ 82.154(a)(2), as revised, including the leak
repair requirements, as applicable. [81 FR
82285.] 11
The EPA now concludes that this
2016 interpretation was unreasonable
and that extending the leak repair
provisions to substitute refrigerants
exceeded the scope of the agency’s
authority under section 608(c)(2). The
leak repair provisions include
requirements to determine whether an
appliance is leaking above the threshold
leak rate applicable to that type of
appliance, to repair an appliance that
leaks above the applicable leak rate, and
to conduct verification tests and
periodic leak inspections on appliances
that have exceeded the threshold leak
rate, as well as requirements to retrofit
or retire appliances that are not repaired
and recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. The 2016 interpretation is
an unreasonable reading of section
608(c)(2) because the refrigerant releases
from such leaks typically occur during
11 The EPA did not finalize the 2010 leak repair
proposal (75 FR 78558). As noted in the 2016 Rule
(81 FR 82275), the EPA withdrew the 2010 proposal
in the 2016 rulemaking and re-proposed elements
on the 2010 proposal in the notice of proposed
rulemaking (80 FR 69461) for the 2016 Rule.
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the normal operation of the appliance,
rather than ‘‘in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of’’ an appliance. The
operational leaks that trigger the leak
repair provisions may take the form of
a slow leak that results in the need to
add refrigerant, and such releases occur
in the weeks or months prior to the
servicing event. Leaks may also result
from an unintended catastrophic failure,
which leads to a subsequent service
event to recharge the appliance. Neither
of these types of releases typically occur
in the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance.
Rather, in these situations the release of
refrigerant typically occurs before the
servicing event, and the owner or
operator may not be aware of the release
until it affects equipment performance.
The EPA has always understood that
few appliances are leak-free, which
further supports the notion that leaks
commonly occur during the normal
operation of an appliance, rather than
during appliance maintenance, service,
repair, or disposal.12 The EPA has also
recognized that ‘‘[t]his is particularly
likely for larger and more complicated
appliances like those subject to the
subpart F leak repair provisions.’’ (81
FR 82313).
In addition, while the 2016 Rule cited
various dictionary definitions of the
term ‘‘maintain’’ to support an
interpretation that the inclusion of the
concept of maintenance in section
608(c) covered a broad range of
activities involved in preserving
equipment in normal working order (see
81 FR 82291), the EPA does not believe
that Congress intended the statutory
term ‘‘maintaining’’ in section 608(c) to
include the normal operation of an
appliance. Congress did use broad
language in 608(a) (‘‘use . . . of class I
and class II substances’’) that
encompasses activities during normal
operation of appliances. If Congress had
intended for 608(c) to apply to normal
operations, it could have included the
term ‘‘use’’ in section 608(c), as it did
in section 608(a)—but it did not. In
addition, the term appears in section
608(c) as part of a group with three
other terms (‘‘servicing, repairing, or
disposing’’) that are distinct from
normal operation of an appliance. Thus,
reading the term in the overall context
of section 608, the EPA does not believe
that it is reasonable to interpret
‘‘maintaining’’ to include the normal
operation of the appliance.
The EPA is accordingly returning to
the agency’s reasonable interpretation of
608(c) with respect to leaks, which had
been long-held until it was revised in
the 2016 Rule. Based on this change in
interpretation, the EPA therefore
concludes that the leak repair
provisions apply to activities and
releases that are too distinct from those
identified in section 608(c) to provide
the EPA with regulatory authority to
extend the leak repair regulations to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants.13
The EPA notes that under this
interpretation the venting prohibition
under section 608(c) would continue to
apply to actions taken in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of appliances containing nonexempt substitute refrigerant, including
those containing 50 or more pounds of
such refrigerant. For example, knowing
release from cutting refrigerant lines
when disposing of an appliance is
prohibited. Similarly, opening an
appliance to repair a component
without first isolating it and recovering
the refrigerant would typically lead to a
knowing release of refrigerant to the
environment during the service,
maintenance, or repair of an appliance
and thus would also be prohibited. It is
also possible that some ‘‘topping off’’
may occur in an appliance with a leak
that is so visible, audible, or frequent
that adding refrigerant to the appliance
creates the practical certainty that the
refrigerant will be released
contemporaneously with the servicing
event to add refrigerant and therefore
may constitute a knowing release
subject to the venting prohibition. For
example, hearing hissing or noticing a
ruptured line while continuing to add
refrigerant to an appliance would
constitute a knowing release. However,
the EPA has no information to suggest
that this occurs in a substantial number
of situations, and the mere possibility of
such an event does not justify a blanket
interpretation that ‘‘topping off’’ an
appliance that has leaked, absent
adherence to the requirements at
§ 82.157, is necessarily and per se a
violation of 608(c).
12 Recognizing that appliances can leak during
their normal operation, § 82.157(g) requires periodic
leak inspections of appliances with 50 or more
pounds of refrigerant that have been repaired after
leaking above the applicable threshold rate.
Automatic leak detection equipment is also allowed
in lieu of inspections for such appliances, or
portions of such appliances.
13 Furthermore, the leak repair provisions are not
sufficiently related to ‘‘good faith attempts to
recapture and recycle or safely dispose’’ of
refrigerant under the de minimis exemption in
section 608(c) for that provision to provide
independent authority for the extension of the leak
repair requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants.
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ii. Section 608(a)
The EPA stated in the preamble to the
2016 Rule that the agency’s authority for
extending the refrigerant management
regulations to substitute refrigerants is
based in part on section 608(a), in light
of the corresponding reductions in ODS
emissions and increases in ODS
recapture and recycling that are
expected to result from requiring
consistent practices for ODS and
substitute refrigerants. (81 FR 82288). In
part, this was based on the potential for
cross-contamination, refrigerant mixing,
and related releases from ODS
appliances in the absence of consistent
practices. The response to comments for
the 2016 Rule 14 also noted, in the
context of explaining the EPA’s
authority for the revisions to § 82.157,
that providing a consistent standard for
ODS and non-exempt substitute
refrigerants would reduce emissions of
ODS by reducing the incidence of
failure to follow the requirements for
ODS appliances due to refrigerant
confusion. However, in neither
discussion did the EPA address
whether, if all other subpart F
requirements were extended to nonexempt substitutes, it would be
necessary to also extend § 82.157 to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants to
serve the purposes of section 608(a), as
articulated in sections 608(a)(3)(A) and
(B).
After further consideration, the EPA
believes that these statements in the
2016 Rule, which were advanced
generally and without distinction to
support extending all the subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, failed to recognize that the
leak repair provisions have a more
attenuated connection to the purposes
of section 608(a) when applied to nonexempt substitute refrigerants than do
the rest of the subpart F requirements,
especially once application of all the
other subpart F requirements to such
refrigerants is taken into account. After
further consideration, the EPA believes
that extending the leak repair
requirements to appliances containing
non-exempt substitutes is not necessary
to meet the purposes of section 608(a).
Because the EPA is retaining the other
subpart F requirements for non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, the rescission of
the extension only of the leak repair
requirements is unlikely to directly
affect ODS emissions or the recapture
14 Response to Comments for the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking: Protection of Stratospheric
Ozone: Update to the Refrigerant Management
Requirements under the Clean Air Act, pages 13–
14 (pdf pages 18–19). Available at: https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-HQ-OAR2015-0453-0226.
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and recycling of ODS. For example,
since the EPA is retaining the
requirement that only a certified
technician can open an appliance
containing non-exempt substitute
refrigerant, it is unlikely that leaks in
appliances with 50 or more pounds of
ODS refrigerant would not be repaired
because of a difference in the duty to
repair between appliances containing
ODS and those containing substitute
refrigerants. The repair of leaks in ODScontaining appliances in this size range
has been required since 1993, and
owners and operators of such
appliances as well as certified
technicians are well aware of those
requirements.
The EPA also does not believe that
applying the leak repair provisions to
appliances that use only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants would
independently reduce crosscontamination, refrigerant mixing, or
related releases from an ODS appliance.
As discussed further in Section II.D of
this document, the agency will continue
to apply the other elements of the 608
program, such as the refrigerant sales
restriction, technician certification,
reclamation requirements, and
evacuation standards, to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, and these
elements address those concerns. Taken
together, the other subpart F
requirements also reduce the incidence
of failure to follow the requirements for
ODS appliances. By contrast,
application specifically of the leak
repair requirements to equipment
containing only substitute refrigerants
would not lead to additional reductions
in ODS emissions. Nor would it lead to
additional increases in the recapture
and recycling of ODS because there is
no ODS in these appliances to be
recaptured or recycled.
Thus, insofar as the 2016 Rule was
grounded in an argument that section
608(a) supports the extension of the leak
repair provisions to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, the EPA is
withdrawing that interpretation.
Accordingly, the EPA concludes that the
connection between applying the leak
repair requirements to appliances with
only substitute refrigerants and serving
the purposes in section 608(a)(3) is too
tenuous to reasonably support reliance
on CAA section 608(a) as a basis for
authority to extend the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitutes.
D. The EPA Had Authority Under
Section 608 To Extend Subpart F
Provisions Other Than Leak Repair
Provisions To Substitute Refrigerants
The EPA requested comments on
whether the agency should withdraw
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14157
the entire extension of subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule given its
proposed interpretation. As described in
more detail below, after considering the
comments received, and analyzing the
relevant provisions under the
interpretive framework described in
Section II.B above, the EPA concludes
that, except for the leak repair
provisions, the 2016 Rule’s extension of
the subpart F requirements to nonexempt substitute refrigerants was
within the scope of its authority under
section 608. Thus, aside from the
rescission of the extension of the leak
repair provisions discussed in Section
II.C, the EPA is not withdrawing the
extension of any of the non-leak repair
provisions in subpart F to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants.
i. Section 608(c)
The EPA is retaining the extension of
the non-leak repair provisions in
subpart F for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants as appropriate measures to
interpret, explain, and enforce the
venting prohibition and the de minimis
exemption for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants under 608(c). In contrast to
the leak repair requirements, the other
provisions of subpart F that the EPA
extended to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule relate
directly to releases that necessarily
occur in the course of maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of an
appliance. Accordingly, those
provisions directly address the potential
for knowing releases of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants that would be
within the scope of section 608(c)(2) or
the application of the de minimis
exemption to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants under section 608(c)(2), and
therefore are within the EPA’s authority
under section 608(c)(2).
The EPA has long recognized
connections between the non-leak repair
requirements in subpart F and the
potential for releases to occur during
appliance maintenance, service, repair,
or disposal, and continues to do so. For
example, failure to properly evacuate an
appliance (§ 82.156 and § 82.158) before
opening it for servicing will create the
practical certainty that the refrigerant in
the appliance will be released during
the servicing event. The requirement
that small appliances be equipped with
a process stub (§ 82.154(e)(2)) facilitates
the removal of refrigerant at servicing
and disposal. The requirements
(§§ 82.156 and 82.158) that recovery
and/or recycling equipment be used
during the maintenance, servicing,
repair or disposal of an appliance, and
that such equipment be tested and
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certified by an EPA-approved laboratory
or organization, are intended ‘‘to ensure
that recycling and recovery equipment
on the market is capable of limiting
emissions’’ during such servicing and
disposal activities. (58 FR 28682). The
vapor recovery efficiency and the
efficiency of noncondensable purge
devices on recycling machines affect
total recovery efficiency and thus how
much refrigerant will be released to the
environment once the appliance is
opened for maintenance, servicing,
repair or disposal. After a certified
technician properly evacuates an
appliance according to the requirements
of § 82.156, any remaining refrigerant
that is then released during the
maintenance, service, repair or disposal
of the appliance can be considered a de
minimis release associated with good
faith attempts to recycle or recover
refrigerants. Similarly, disposing of an
appliance without removing the
refrigerant as required under § 82.155
will result in the release of any
remaining refrigerant during disposal of
the appliance. The EPA has long
emphasized this point. When the EPA
first issued the safe disposal
requirements in 1993, the EPA stated:
‘‘The Agency wishes to clarify that the
prohibition on venting refrigerant
includes individuals who are preparing
to dispose of a used appliance.’’ (58 FR
28703). The recordkeeping provisions at
§ 82.155(c)(2) are necessary to ensure
that disposers of small appliances are
adhering to the venting prohibition and
the evacuation requirements. Similarly,
the recordkeeping provisions at
§ 82.156(a)(3) ensure that technicians
are adhering to the venting prohibition
and evacuation requirements when
disposing of mid-sized appliances.
These recordkeeping requirements help
ensure accountability for compliance
with the venting prohibition, as well as
improving the enforceability of the
prohibition. With respect to the sales
restriction and technician certification
requirements, consistent with its longstanding view, the EPA continues to
believe that ‘‘unrestricted sales will
enable untrained or undertrained
technicians to obtain access to
refrigerants that are likely to be used
improperly in connection with servicing
activities that will result in the venting
of refrigerants’’ (58 FR 28698) and that
restricting servicing activities to
technicians trained on the regulatory
requirements and proper use of
equipment reduces emissions and
enhances compliance (see 58 FR 28692).
Further, ‘‘[e]ducating technicians on
how to contain and conserve refrigerant
effectively, curtailing illegal venting
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into the atmosphere’’ was one of the
primary reasons many technicians
commented in support of the
certification program when it was
initially promulgated. (58 FR 28691).
Thus, the EPA continues to agree with
the assessment in the 2016 Rule that
these refrigerant management provisions
address releases that necessarily occur
in the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance.
Accordingly, the agency concludes that
the 2016 Rule’s extension of these
subpart F requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants is within the
scope of the EPA’s authority under CAA
section 608(c)(2), because these
requirements interpret, explain, or help
enforce that provision’s venting
prohibition and the application of the
de minimis exemption.
The EPA views the agency’s authority
to extend the reclamation requirements
to non-exempt substitute refrigerants
under section 608(c) as relating
specifically to appliance servicing and
disposal. By ‘‘reclamation
requirements,’’ the EPA means: The
requirements under § 82.164, including
the requirements to reclaim used
refrigerant before it is sold for use in an
appliance; the requirement that
reclaimed refrigerant be tested and meet
AHRI Standard 700–2016,
Specifications for Refrigerants (an
industry developed consensus standard
that the EPA has adopted into its
regulations); and the requirement that
reclaimers be certified by the EPA and
agree to meet certain standards. The
EPA interprets section 608(c),
particularly the provisions relating to
the servicing and disposal of appliances
as described below, to provide authority
that supports the extension of the
reclamation requirements to nonexempt substitute refrigerants.
Section 608(c)(1) states that ‘‘it shall
be unlawful for any person in the course
of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of an appliance . . . to
knowingly vent or otherwise knowingly
release or dispose of any class I or class
II substance used as a refrigerant . . . in
a manner which permits such substance
to enter the environment.’’ Furthermore,
the de minimis exemption encompasses
‘‘releases associated with good faith
attempts to recapture and recycle or
safely dispose of any such substance
. . .’’ As described above, the EPA
interprets section 608(c)(2) to extend the
prohibitions in 608(c)(1), including the
restriction on releases in the course of
disposing and servicing of appliances
and the de minimis exemption, to
substitute substances.
As part of the EPA’s authority to
interpret, explain, and enforce the
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venting prohibition under 608(c), the
agency also has authority to address
what constitutes disposal of an
appliance. The agency defines
‘‘disposal’’ in Subpart F to mean ‘‘the
process leading to and including’’
several listed activities, such as ‘‘the
discharge, deposit, dumping or placing
of any discarded appliance into or on
any land or water;’’ the ‘‘disassembly of
any appliance for discharge, deposit,
dumping or placing of its discarded
component parts into or on any land or
water’’ or for reuse of its component
parts; the ‘‘vandalism of any appliance
such that the refrigerant is released into
the environment or would be released
into the environment if it had not been
recovered prior to the destructive
activity;’’ and the ‘‘recycling of any
appliance for scrap.’’ (§ 82.152).
The reclamation requirements explain
how to ‘‘recapture and recycle’’
refrigerants that are recovered in the
course of servicing or disposing of an
appliance in lieu of releasing them into
the environment. Reclamation, a process
whereby used refrigerant is purified to
meet required specifications and then
permitted to be sold for reuse, is a
means of ‘‘recaptur[ing] and recycl[ing]’’
refrigerant. The reclamation
requirements have the added benefit of
supporting a market in which
technicians can sell recovered
refrigerant to reclaimers for
compensation; this provides a financial
benefit to technicians who recover
refrigerant during appliance disposal
rather than venting it.15
The interpretation that the
reclamation requirements directly relate
to interpreting, explaining, and
enforcing the prohibition on venting
during appliance servicing and disposal
is further supported by the fact that
Congress included ‘‘releases associated
with good faith attempts to . . . recycle
or safely dispose of any such substance’’
in the de minimis exemption to the
venting prohibition. This indicates that
Congress clearly contemplated that
certain refrigerant-related actions could
be implicated by the appliance-related
actions covered by the venting
prohibition.
The EPA further interprets the phrase
‘‘recycle or safely dispose of any such
substance,’’ when referring to either
ODS or non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, to include reclamation.
Accordingly, the EPA believes the
extension of the reclamation
15 Much of the refrigerant recovered and sent for
reclamation occurs during the disposal of an
appliance. However, some refrigerant that is sent for
reclamation is also recovered during the servicing
of an appliance, including the retrofitting of an
appliance for use with a different refrigerant.
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requirements to non-exempt substitutes
refrigerants is supported by 608(c)
because these requirements interpret,
explain, and enforce section 608(c)’s
prohibition on releases of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants during the
servicing and disposal of appliances and
the de minimis exemption for recycling
or safely disposing of such refrigerants.
ii. Section 608(a)
The EPA also concludes that section
608(a) provides the EPA authority for
the 2016 Rule’s extension of the nonleak repair subpart F requirements to
the extent that there is demonstrably a
connection between those requirements
and the purposes of 608(a), as
articulated in sections 608(a)(3)(A) and
(B). As the EPA concluded in the
preamble to the 2016 Rule:
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This action extending the regulations
under subpart F to non-exempt substitutes is
additionally supported by the authority in
section 608(a) because regulations that
minimize the release and maximize the
recapture and recovery of non-exempt
substitutes will also reduce the release and
increase the recovery of ozone-depleting
substances. Improper handling of substitute
refrigerants is likely to contaminate
appliances and recovery cylinders with
mixtures of ODS and non-ODS substitutes,
which can lead to illegal venting because
such mixtures are difficult or expensive to
reclaim or appropriately dispose of. . . . In
short, the authority to promulgate regulations
regarding the use of class I and II substances
encompasses the authority to establish
regulations regarding the proper handling of
substitutes where this is needed to reduce
emissions and maximize recapture and
recycling of class I and II substances.
Applying consistent requirements to all nonexempt refrigerants will reduce complexity
and increase clarity for the regulated
community and promote compliance with
those requirements for ODS refrigerants, as
well as their substitutes. [81 FR 82286.]
The 2016 Rule discussed how failure
to apply consistent standards to
appliances containing non-exempt
substitute refrigerants and those
containing ODS refrigerants could lead
to emissions of ODS (81 FR 82288).
After additional consideration, the EPA
affirms the potential for such
inconsistent requirements to increase
ODS emissions. For example, applying
the sales restriction and technician
certification requirements for persons
servicing appliances using non-exempt
substitute refrigerants reduces the
possibility that refrigerant in the
appliances may be misidentified or
mishandled by an uncertified person
attempting to service the appliance.
Improper handling of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants by persons
lacking the requisite training may
contaminate appliances and recovery
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cylinders with mixtures of ODS and
non-ODS substitutes. Contaminated
appliances may lead to equipment
failures and emissions from those
systems, including emissions of ODS.
Contaminated refrigerant is more costly
to reclaim for re-use and the only other
option besides reclamation (or recycling
for use by the same owner) to avoid its
entry to the environment is that it be
destroyed. However, the costs of
reclaiming or destroying these mixed
refrigerants incentivizes intentional
releases, including of ODS, to the
atmosphere from contaminated
appliances and recovery cylinders.
Applying the same requirements for
servicing and disposing of appliances
containing ODS and non-exempt
substitute refrigerant ensures standard
procedures are followed, which reduces
the possibility for errors and the risk of
ODS emissions associated with
misidentification or mishandling of the
refrigerant.
The EPA also concludes that section
608(a) provides the EPA authority for
the 2016 Rule’s extension of the
reclamation requirements to nonexempt substitute refrigerants. The EPA
established the reclamation requirement
for used ODS refrigerant in 1993 to
prevent equipment damage, and the
resultant emissions caused by use of
contaminated refrigerant in appliances,
and to provide confidence in the market
for used refrigerants (58 FR 28678).
Because of the venting prohibition,
combined with the phaseout of ODS, the
EPA in 1993 anticipated a large increase
in recovered refrigerant and was
concerned about the risks to appliances
posed by use of contaminated
refrigerant. As the EPA stated in the
1993 Rule, damaged equipment would
often leak during operation and would
require servicing or replacement more
often than undamaged equipment,
increasing refrigerant emissions.
Damage to equipment would also
reduce consumer confidence in the
quality of used refrigerant, leading to
erosion of the market for used
refrigerants and possibly to their release.
As described further below, the 2016
Rule’s extension of the reclamation
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants addresses these concerns
and therefore furthers the goals of
section 608(a)(3) to reduce the
emissions of ODS and maximize the
recapture and recycling of ODS.
An important aspect of the
reclamation requirements is the
requirement that used refrigerant be
reclaimed to certain purity standards
prior to sale for re-use. By requiring that
used refrigerant be reclaimed prior to
sale, the reclamation requirements also
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prohibit the immediate reuse of
recovered refrigerant, with the
exception of use in equipment owned
by the same entity owning the
equipment from which the refrigerant
was removed. In 1993, the EPA
expressed concern that recovered
refrigerant may contain moisture, acids,
oil, particulates, or other contaminants
that can lead to serious damage to the
equipment if it is reused without taking
some action to remove these
contaminants. Recovered non-exempt
substitute refrigerants today contain
those same contaminants as in 1993
with one significant difference: The
increase in the use of substitute
refrigerants, including multi-component
blends, has resulted in more types of
refrigerant encountered by technicians.
Often ODS and non-ODS refrigerants are
improperly recovered into the same
recovery cylinder, leading to mixed
refrigerant which contains both ODS
and non-ODS. This is supported by data
reported annually by EPA-certified
reclaimers under § 82.164(d)(3) which
show that the amount of mixed
refrigerant they receive is increasing.16
The lack of consistent reclamation
requirements for non-exempt substitutes
could result in confusion about what to
do if there is uncertainty about the
contents of a cylinder or about the
proper treatment of mixtures.
Equipment can be damaged, resulting in
refrigerant emissions, including ODS
emissions, if such mixed refrigerant is
not sent for reclamation but rather sold
and recharged into appliances designed
for non-exempt substitute refrigerants.
Reclamation requirements to remove
impurities and separate mixed
refrigerants reduce the likelihood of
equipment failure and subsequent
emissions of ODS. These requirements
also promote the recycling of ODS
because once it is separated from the
mixed refrigerant the ODS can
subsequently be reclaimed for reuse.
In addition, the combined effect of the
reclamation provisions relating to EPA’s
certification of reclaimers, the purity
standards that reclaimed refrigerant
must meet, and the testing of that
refrigerant to ensure it meets those
standards together provide confidence
in the market for used refrigerants.
Reclamation is performed by private
businesses and is subject to market
forces. Currently these market forces
provide a financial incentive to
technicians to recover refrigerant and
send it to a reclaimer in as pure a state
as possible to maximize the
16 These data can be found at: https://
www.epa.gov/section608/summary-refrigerantreclamation-trends.
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compensation they receive. Absent that
financial incentive, technicians may be
more likely to vent the refrigerant than
to send it for reclamation, which could
lead to ODS emissions when the
refrigerant vented is an ODS or a
mixture containing ODS. These market
forces also sustain an industry whose
function is to reprocess used refrigerant.
Reclamation is critical to achieving the
goal of maximizing the recapture and
recycling of ODS, as set forth in section
608(a)(3)(B). Absent reclamation, banks
of ODS refrigerant found in existing
equipment, in stockpiles, or mixed with
other used refrigerant will instead likely
be released, given the costs of
destruction. In sum, the EPA concludes
that the extension of the reclamation
requirements to non-exempt substitutes
is supported by section 608(a)(3)
because extending these requirements to
non-exempt substitutes serves the
purposes set forth in 608(a)(3) of
maximizing the recapture and recycling
of ODS and reducing ODS emissions to
the lowest achievable level.
In conclusion, because the application
of the non-leak repair requirements to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants is
connected to the purposes of section
608(a)(3) via the corresponding
reductions in ODS emissions and
increases in ODS recapture and
recycling that are expected to result
from maintaining the reclamation
requirements for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants and retaining consistent
practices for ODS and non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. Therefore, the
EPA concludes that the extension of
these requirements is within the scope
of its authority under CAA 608(a).
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III. Summary and Response to Major
Comments
This section summarizes many
comments received on this rule,
particularly those related to the EPA’s
legal authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants under section 608, and the
EPA’s responses. Other comments
received for this action are addressed in
Sections IV and V below, as well as in
the response to comments document
found in the docket for this action.
A. Comments on the Scope of the
Agency’s Authority To Regulate
Substitutes Under Section 608(c)
The EPA received multiple comments
in support of the agency’s authority to
interpret and explain section 608(c)
through the issuance of regulations.
These commenters point to the text,
purpose, context, and legislative history
of section 608(c) to argue that the EPA
has broad authority to regulate
substitute refrigerants to prevent illegal
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venting. Most of these commenters
support the EPA’s view of its authority
as articulated in the 2016 Rule, both for
the leak repair provisions and the nonleak repair provisions in subpart F.
Other commenters, however, state that
the EPA’s authority under 608(c) does
not allow for the leak repair provisions
established in the 2016 Rule. One of
those commenters states that the EPA
has authority to establish the non-leak
repair requirements for substitutes, but
not the leak repair provisions. Another
one of those commenters states that the
EPA’s authority under 608(c) does not
extend so far as to authorize regulations
for substitutes that are co-extensive with
the regulations required under 608(a)
requirements for ODS. That commenter
states that the lack of an explicit grant
of authority from Congress for the EPA
to establish a regulatory program for
substitutes indicates that no such
authority exists, arguing that
Congressional silence is not a delegation
of authority to regulate. Another
commenter states that the EPA lacks
authority to regulate substitutes in any
manner under section 608(c). The
commenter states that 608(c) is a selfeffectuating enforceable requirement to
use good management practices and
does not provide the EPA with the
authority to implement a regulatory
program.
The agency agrees that the EPA’s
authority to issue regulations
interpreting, explaining, and enforcing
section 608(c) is not co-extensive with
its authority to regulate under section
608(a). Thus, the agency disagrees with
the comments that supported the view
of the EPA’s authority as articulated in
the 2016 Rule. As explained in Section
II above, the agency now interprets
sections 608(a) and (c) together to
determine that while these provisions
are reasonably read to provide it some
authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants, its authority is more limited
for substitute refrigerants than for ODS.
In so doing, the EPA recognizes and
gives weight to the fact that sections
608(a) and 608(c) differ from one
another in some key respects, including
the fact that 608(a)(1) and (2) expressly
require the EPA to issue regulations for
class I and class II substances, but
include no such requirement for—or
indeed any mention of—substitutes. In
contrast, 608(c) does explicitly apply to
substitute refrigerants, but that
subsection leaves the EPA discretion as
to whether to promulgate regulations
implementing its provisions and is
focused on preventing knowing releases
of refrigerants in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
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disposing of appliances and on
providing an exemption for de minimis
releases without specifying the
mechanisms for carrying out this
prohibition and exemption. In light of
these differences in wording between
608(a) and 608(c), the EPA concludes in
this action that the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the full set of subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants exceeded its statutory
authority under section 608 because the
extension of the full set of requirements
(i.e., as an entirety) was inconsistent
with the more limited scope of the
EPA’s authority under section 608 to
regulate substitute refrigerants as
compared with its authority to regulate
ODS refrigerants. In addition, as
explained in Section II of this
document, the EPA has concluded that
the 2016 Rule’s extension of the leak
repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants exceeded its
authority under both sections 608(c) and
608(a). Therefore, the agency disagrees
with the comments concluding that the
EPA did have authority to extend the
leak repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, and agrees with
the comments that the extension of
these requirements exceed the agency’s
authority under 608(c).
To the extent that the comments are
intended to suggest that any overlap
between regulations under sections
608(a) and 608(c) exceeds the EPA’s
statutory authority, the agency
disagrees. The fact that Congress
required the EPA to address ODS
refrigerants in a specific way under
section 608(a), and then included a
separate provision under 608(c) to
address knowing venting, release, and
disposal of ODS and substitute
refrigerants during certain activities,
does not demonstrate that Congress
intended to preclude the EPA from
implementing section 608(a) and the
venting prohibition in section 608(c) by
using similar requirements for ODS and
substitute refrigerants, when such an
approach is independently consistent
with those statutory provisions. Taking
such an approach does not mean that
the agency is using section 608(a) to
implement section 608(c), or vice versa,
but instead simply indicates that these
regulatory approaches can be justified
under both section 608(a) and 608(c).17
17 As explained in the 2016 Rule, the EPA
continues to believe that using section 608(c) to
establish similar requirements to those authorized
under section 608(a) does not render section 608(a)
a nullity: ‘‘Unlike section 608(c), section 608(a) is
not limited to refrigerants. EPA has applied its
authority under section 608(a) to establish or
consider regulations for ODS in non-refrigerant
applications. As an example, in 1998, EPA issued
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For example, as explained in Section II
above, the EPA concludes it was within
its statutory authority under both
sections 608(a) and 608(c) to extend the
non-leak repair provisions in subpart F
to substitute refrigerants.
With regard to the comments that the
EPA does not have regulatory authority
under section 608(c) either because that
provision is self-effectuating or because
it does not contain explicit
authorization to issue regulations, the
EPA disagrees. The agency has long
held and continues to maintain that
608(c), though self-effectuating,
provides authority to issue
implementing regulations that interpret,
explain, and enforce the venting
prohibition and the de minimis
exemption in section 608(c) and that
include the venting prohibition in the
overall context of the regulatory scheme.
(See, e.g., 69 FR 11947). Thus, while
section 608(c) does not include a
requirement to issue regulations as
section 608(a) does, the agency does not
view the lack of a requirement as
equivalent to a prohibition on issuing
regulations under section 608(c). This is
not a situation where Congress was
silent as to whether the statutory
provision applies to substitutes. Rather,
Congress specifically included
substitutes in the venting prohibition. It
also provided the agency additional
discretion to exempt substitutes from
the venting prohibition when it
determined that the venting, release, or
disposal of the substitute did not pose
a threat to the environment. The EPA
construes the inclusion of substitutes in
section 608(c)(2) in these ways to
indicate that Congress contemplated
that regulation of substitutes would
occur. Furthermore, while the EPA is
not relying on CAA section 301(a) for
primary or substantive authority in this
action, the agency believes that the text
of CAA section 301(a), which provides
that the EPA may ‘‘prescribe such
regulations as are necessary to carry out
[the EPA Administrator’s] functions’’
under the Act, supplements its authority
under section 608(c) to issue regulations
that interpret, explain, or enforce the
venting prohibition and the de minimis
exemption. In addition, as some
commenters point out, the legislative
a rule on halon management under the authority of
section 608(a)(2) (63 FR 11084, March 5, 1998). In
that action, EPA noted that section 608(a)(2) ‘directs
EPA to establish standards and requirements
regarding the use and disposal of class I and II
substances other than refrigerants.’ 63 FR 11085.
Similarly, EPA considered whether to establish a
requirement to use gas impermeable tarps to reduce
emissions of methyl bromide under section
608(a)(2), ultimately determining not to do so for
technological and economic reasons. 63 FR 6008
(February 5, 1998).’’ (82 FR 82290).
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history indicates that in establishing the
venting prohibition, Congress expected
the EPA to promulgate regulatory
‘‘provisions to foster implementation of
this prohibition, including guidance on
what constitutes ‘de minimis’ and ‘good
faith’.’’ Report of the Committee on
Environment and Public Works United
States Senate, Report Accompanying S.
1630 (S. Rept. 101–228) (December 20,
1989) at 396 (reprinted in 5 A
Legislative History of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990, at 8736 (1993)).
Furthermore, as explained in Section
II of this document, the agency
continues to view section 608 as
ambiguous in important respects. In
section 608(c) Congress provided an
exemption to the venting prohibition for
certain de minimis releases, but it did
not define what releases would be
considered ‘‘de minimis’’ nor which
activities would be considered ‘‘good
faith attempts to recapture and recycle
or safely dispose’’ of such substances.
Where Congress has not directly spoken
to an issue or has left ambiguity in the
statute, that silence or ambiguity creates
an assumption that ‘‘Congress implicitly
delegated to the agency the power to
make policy choices that represent a
reasonable accommodation of
conflicting policies that are committed
to the agency’s care by the statute.’’
National Ass’n of Mfrs. v. United States
DOI, 134 F.3d 1095, 1106 (D.C. Cir.
1998). As the U.S. Supreme Court has
explained, the ‘‘power of an
administrative agency to administer a
congressionally created . . . program
necessarily requires the formulation of
policy and the making of rules to fill
any gap left, implicitly or explicitly, by
Congress.’’ Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843–44.
Accordingly, Congress’s silence with
regard to carrying out the venting
prohibition and the exception for
certain releases leaves a gap for the
Agency to fill.
Consistent with this view, the EPA’s
regulations at § 82.154 have included
the venting prohibition since they were
originally promulgated in 1993. (58 FR
28714). Even before the 2016 Rule, the
subpart F regulations provided that
‘‘[n]o person maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of appliances
may knowingly vent or otherwise
release into the environment any
refrigerant or substitute from such
appliances’’ and then provided for
exceptions from this prohibition for
specified substitutes in specified enduses. (§ 82.154 (2014)). These exceptions
implemented the discretion Congress
left the EPA under 608(c)(2) to exempt
certain releases from the venting
prohibition, if the Administrator has
determined that ‘‘venting, releasing, or
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14161
disposing of such substance does not
pose a threat to the environment.’’ CAA
section 608(c)(2). Similarly, the
regulations at § 82.154 in place before
the 2016 Rule included provisions
clarifying that ‘‘[ODS] releases shall be
considered de minimis only if they
occur when’’ certain regulatory
requirements are observed.
(§ 82.154(a)(2) (2014)). However, those
regulations did not provide the same
clarity regarding releases of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants or what practices
would be considered to fall within the
ambit of ‘‘good faith attempts to recycle
or recover’’ non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. (§ 82.154(a)(2)). The EPA
has long interpreted section 608(c)(2) to
incorporate and extend both the venting
prohibition and the de minimis
exemption in section 608(c)(1) to
substitute refrigerants, but Congress did
not specify what practices or actions
should be taken to qualify for this
exemption in either provision. Thus, it
is reasonable to interpret these
provisions as indicating that Congress
contemplated that the EPA would have
authority to resolve this ambiguity by
issuing regulations to implement section
608(c). For these reasons, and as
explained in prior sections of this
document, the EPA continues to believe
that section 608(c) is reasonably
interpreted to provide it some authority
to issue regulations applicable to
substitute refrigerants and thus
disagrees with these comments.
B. Comments on Whether ‘‘Topping Off’’
a Leaking Appliance Constitutes a
Knowing Release Subject to the Venting
Prohibition
The EPA received multiple comments
stating that the operation of an
appliance, and the ‘‘topping off’’ with
additional refrigerant, is not knowing
venting prohibited under section 608(c).
They state that venting must occur
during the service, maintenance, repair,
or disposal of an appliance to be
prohibited. Other comments disagree
with the EPA’s proposed decision to
return to its pre-2016 interpretation of
‘‘topping off.’’ A couple of commenters
state that the fact that refrigerant must
be added demonstrates that there is a
leak, which would continue if not
repaired, and that a technician that
repeatedly tops off refrigerant from
leaking equipment knows the refrigerant
is being released. These commenters
object to the proposal to return to the
prior interpretation of ‘‘topping off’’
because under that interpretation, no
matter how significant the quantity of
lost refrigerant from a leaking appliance,
it would not violate the venting
prohibition unless there was a practical
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certainty refrigerant was being released
during the servicing event. These
commenters thought such a result
conflicted with section 608’s purpose of
reducing emissions of ODS and their
substitutes. These commenters also
generally found the EPA’s 2016 change
in its historical interpretation to be
reasonable and supported retaining that
interpretation. Other commenters look
to the word ‘‘maintenance’’ in section
608 as providing authority for the leak
repair provisions. One commenter states
that ‘‘maintenance’’ includes normal
operation, noting the definition of
maintenance includes ‘‘keep[ing] in an
existing state’’ or ‘‘preserv[ing]’’ the
machinery.18 Another comment states
that because proper maintenance
includes fixing leaks, failure to
adequately repair leaks violates the
venting prohibition.
The EPA disagrees with commenters
that state that the ‘‘topping off’’ of a
leaking appliance is necessarily
prohibited under section 608(c). The
addition of refrigerant to an appliance
during service, maintenance, or repair is
typically distinct and separate in time
from the release of that refrigerant into
the environment from a leak during the
normal operation of the appliance. As
discussed elsewhere in this document,
while there may be a release of
refrigerant from a leaking appliance, all
appliances leak and such leaks typically
occur during normal operations. While
there may be cases where there would
be an ongoing release of refrigerant such
that the refrigerant added to the system
is contemporaneously released and the
technician knows about such a release
during the servicing event (e.g., when
refrigerant is added to equipment that is
audibly or visibly leaking during the
servicing event), the EPA does not have
any information to suggest that this is
the norm. Accordingly, the EPA does
not have any information to suggest that
these situations are common enough to
sustain an extension of the leak repair
requirements to equipment using solely
substitute refrigerants under the text of
section 608(c).
The EPA also disagrees with the
commenters suggesting that inclusion of
the term ‘‘maintaining’’ in section 608(c)
provides the agency authority to apply
the leak repair provisions to appliances
containing only substitute refrigerants.
Contrary to the position that the EPA
took in the 2016 Rule (81 FR 82291), the
EPA concludes in this action that the
term ‘‘maintaining’’ in section 608(c) is
not meant to encompass the normal
18 Maintain, MERRIAM–WEBSTER ONLINE
DICTIONARY, https://www.merriam-webster.com/
dictionary/maintain (last visited Nov. 15, 2018).
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operation of an appliance. Rather, as
discussed in Section II above, the EPA
believes it is reasonable to interpret this
term in light of the other terms in
section 608(c) (servicing, repairing, or
disposing), all of which refer to
activities that are distinct from the
normal, day-to-day operation of the
equipment. The EPA also disagrees with
the commenters suggesting that failure
to repair leaks is a failure to maintain
equipment that necessarily results in
releases that violate the venting
prohibition. The text of section 608(c)(1)
prohibits knowing releases of ODS by
‘‘any person, in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing’’ of appliances, and section
608(c)(2) extends that prohibition to
knowing releases of substitute
refrigerants ‘‘by any person maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of’’ an
appliance. Thus, section 608(c) requires
an actor (e.g., a technician) to conduct
one of a particular set of actions on an
object (an appliance) in order for the
venting prohibition to apply. The four
terms ‘‘maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing’’ included in section 608(c)
are all forms of transitive verbs that
express an action by an actor (‘‘any
person’’) on an object (an appliance
containing or using refrigerant).
Interpreting the term ‘‘maintaining’’ as
encompassing the lack of maintenance
or failure to repair leaks unreasonably
transforms the prohibition against
knowing releases during certain defined
activities into a requirement to
undertake those activities. In the EPA’s
view, it is not reasonable to interpret the
term ‘‘maintaining’’ to encompass
normal, day-to-day operations of an
appliance or to encompass failure to
maintain an appliance. Rather, the EPA
concludes that the term ‘‘maintaining’’
as used in section 608(c) should be
interpreted to refer to work done on an
appliance in furtherance of its
continued functioning or to preserve its
existing state of repair. (See, e.g., The
American Heritage College Dictionary,
4th ed. (Houghton Mifflin, 2002), at 834
(listing definitions of ‘‘maintain’’ which
include ‘‘to keep in an existing state;
preserve or retain’’ and to ‘‘keep in a
condition of good repair or efficiency’’);
Merriam Webster’s Collegiate
Dictionary, 11th ed. (Merriam Webster
Inc., 2003), at 749 (definitions of
‘‘maintain’’ include ‘‘to keep in an
existing state (as of repair, efficiency, or
validity): preserve from failure or
decline <∼machinery>’’)).
The EPA disagrees with the comments
that its historic interpretation, to which
it returns today, is inconsistent with the
purpose of section 608(c). As explained
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in Section II above, a general analysis of
whether a provision leads to reductions
in ODS emissions would typically be
undertaken under section 608(a). In
contrast to section 608(a), which
requires regulations to reduce emissions
of ODS to the lowest achievable level,
the agency interprets section 608(c) as
focusing on limiting particular types of
emissions of ODS and substitute
refrigerants—those from knowing
releases, venting, and disposal that
occur in the course of maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of
appliances. The agency views its return
to its historic interpretation in this
action as consistent with the purposes
of section 608(c) because it better
focuses the regulations on knowing
releases that occur during the activities
listed in 608(c). In this interpretation it
is not the quantity of refrigerant
released, but rather the circumstances of
the release that determine whether the
venting prohibition applies. The EPA
concludes that its legal authority under
section 608(c)(2) does not extend to
emissions of substitute refrigerants that
do not occur during one of those four
activities. Thus, the agency agrees with
the comments stating that the release
must occur during the service,
maintenance, repair, or disposal of an
appliance to be prohibited under the
venting prohibition.
A couple of commenters request that
the EPA clarify how rescinding the 2016
Rule’s interpretation—that ‘‘topping off’’
a leaking appliance could in some
circumstances constitute a knowing
release and violate the venting
prohibition—affects appliances
containing ODS refrigerant. Noting that
the proposed rule states that the Agency
was not modifying any ODS provisions,
the commenters state that the EPA
should rescind this interpretation as it
applies to ODS appliances as well. The
EPA responds that the agency is
rescinding this interpretation for all
appliances, regardless of the type of
refrigerant used. The original
interpretation that topping off an
appliance was not a knowing release
was in the context of appliances
containing ODS refrigerant. (58 FR
28672). Thus, reverting back to that
original interpretation means it applies
to appliances using ODS refrigerant, as
well as to those using non-ODS
refrigerants. We further note that this
return to the original interpretation does
not change the required leak repair
practices in § 82.157 for ODS
equipment, as those requirements
reduce the emissions of ODS and
maximize the recapture and recycling of
ODS as provided in section 608(a). In
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addition, the agency is not changing the
requirement under § 82.154(a)(2)(i) that
ODS releases only qualify for the de
minimis exemption if certain regulatory
practices, including those in § 82.157,
have been observed.
C. Comments on Whether Section 608(a)
Provides Any Statutory Authority To
Regulate Substitute Refrigerants
The EPA requested comment on
whether, as a matter of statutory
interpretation, the agency can rely on
section 608(a) for the issuance of any of
the subpart F requirements (leak repair
or otherwise) for substitute refrigerants,
including those provisions for which
there is demonstrably a connection
between the regulatory requirement and
the purposes of section 608(a) to reduce
use and emission of class I and II
substances to the lowest achievable
level and maximize the recapture and
recycling of such substances. As the
EPA discussed in the proposal, Congress
specifically required the EPA in section
608(a) to issue regulations for class I and
class II substances that would meet
certain statutory purposes set forth in
that section. But Congress did not list
substitutes for coverage by those
requirements. In contrast, section 608(c)
does expressly apply to substitute
refrigerants. This difference between
section 608(a) and 608(c) could be
interpreted as a manifestation of
Congressional intent to distinguish
between the categories of substances
covered in these respective provisions
and to only convey authority to address
substitute refrigerants under 608(c), not
608(a), which is an issue on which the
EPA solicited comment.
Three commenters state that 608(a) is
not ambiguous with respect to the
extent to which Congress authorized the
EPA to issue refrigerant management
regulations for substitutes. The
commenters state that Congress did not
provide any explicit grant of authority
in section 608(a) for the EPA to establish
a regulatory program for substitutes. The
fact that Congress so clearly provided
such authority for ODS demonstrates
that no such authority exists for
substitutes. One of those commenters
concludes that the EPA lacks the
discretion it claims to regulate nonexempt substitutes in any manner.
Other commenters state that the scope
of 608(a) is ambiguous and that to the
extent that the EPA determines that the
statutory language is ambiguous, then
the EPA is free to make a policy
decision to resolve the ambiguity. These
commenters state that there are many
policy rationales that support regulating
non-ODS substitutes to an equal extent
as the regulation of ODS, including cost
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savings to owners and operators by
encouraging proper leak management,
reducing harm to the atmosphere, and
reduced public safety hazards.
The EPA responds that, as discussed
in Section II.B. above, while section
608(a)(3) states that regulations under
608(a) shall include requirements that
serve particular objectives and
discretionary language about what
requirements those regulations may
include, it does not contain any more
specific mandates about how the
required objectives should be achieved.
Thus, the EPA agrees with the
comments that section 608(a) is
ambiguous with respect to the EPA’s
authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants to achieve those purposes.
Given this ambiguity, the EPA interprets
section 608(a) to provide authority to
issue regulations that reduce the use
and emission of ODS to the lowest
achievable level or that maximize the
recapture and recycling of such
substances, even if the regulations do
not directly regulate ODS. Thus, as in
the 2016 Rule, to the extent that the
extension of certain subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitutes
is necessary to achieve the purposes set
forth in section 608(a)(3) (i.e., reducing
the use and emission of ODS to the
lowest achievable level or maximizing
the recapture and recycling of such
substances), the EPA concludes that the
extension is within the ambit of its
authority under section 608(a).
However, the EPA disagrees with the
comments suggesting that 608(a) is so
ambiguous as to allow the agency to
employ various policy rationales such
as cost savings to the owners and
operators, encouraging proper leak
management, reducing harm to the
atmosphere, and reducing public safety
hazards when considering whether the
extension of the subpart F requirements
to substitute refrigerants is supported by
608(a). The EPA interprets section
608(a) to authorize the extension of
those requirements only if they meet the
explicit purpose(s) of that section,
including reducing the use and
emission of ODS to the lowest
achievable level and/or maximizing the
recapture and recycling of such
substances. For the reasons discussed in
Section II of this document, the EPA
concludes that section 608(a) does not
support the 2016 extension of the leak
repair requirements in § 82.157 to nonexempt substitute refrigerants but does
support the extension of the non-leak
repair requirements to such refrigerants.
Some commenters state that 608(a)
does not provide authority to require
repairing leaks of non-ODS substitutes
because repairing an appliance
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14163
containing a substitute will not reduce
the use or emission of ODS nor
maximize the recapture and recycling of
ODS.
The EPA responds that, as described
in greater detail in Section II above, the
agency interprets CAA section 608(a) to
support the 2016 Rule’s extension of the
existing subpart F requirements to
appliances using only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants only if that
extension is necessary to serve the
purposes of 608(a). The EPA agrees with
these commenters that applying the leak
repair provisions to appliances
containing only substitute refrigerants is
not necessary to reduce ODS emissions
or to promote the recapture and
recycling of ODS. This is especially true
since the EPA is retaining the non-leak
repair provisions in subpart F for nonexempt substitutes.
Three commenters state that the text
of 608(a) demonstrates that Congress
intended the section to provide an
incentive to transition to non-ODS
substitutes. These commenters state that
rescinding the leak repair provisions for
non-exempt substitutes will restore that
incentive, which will minimize use and
emission of ODS. Likewise, one
commenter states that applying the
refrigerant management requirements to
substitutes will disincentivize the
development of new substitutes.
While the EPA is rescinding the leak
repair provisions for non-exempt
substitutes based on its determination
that the extension of these provisions to
such substitutes exceeded its statutory
authority because it was based on an
unreasonable interpretation of that
authority, the EPA disagrees that section
608 drives the development of or
transition to substitutes. Section 608 is
one of several complementary measures
in Title VI of the CAA that support the
phaseout of class I and class II ODS. For
example, in section 610 Congress
banned certain products containing
ODS and granted the EPA authority
under to ban others. In section 611,
Congress required the EPA to
promulgate labeling requirements for
certain products containing or
manufactured with ODS. These aspects
of Title VI more directly establish
incentives and support the transition to
ODS alternatives than the provisions in
section 608, which establish a national
recycling and emission reduction
program. Further, the production and
import of class I ODS has been phased
out and the production and import of
class II ODS is well underway.
Allowances for production and import
of the most common HCFC refrigerant,
HCFC–22, are set to decline to zero in
2020 (§§ 82.16, 82.15(e)). In addition,
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use restrictions issued pursuant to
section 605(a) prohibit use of newly
produced HCFC–22 in equipment
manufactured on or after January 1,
2010 (§ 82.15(g)(2)). The section 605(a)
use restrictions further prohibit use of
newly produced HCFC–123 in
equipment manufactured on or after
January 1, 2020 (§ 82.15(g)(4)). While
used HCFCs are not subject to these
restrictions, the HCFC production and
import phaseout and the restrictions on
use of newly produced HCFCs provide
clear market signals regarding future
availability of HCFC refrigerants.
Thus, the provisions of Title VI, taken
together, provide a variety of incentives
for the transition from ODS to
substitutes. In section 608(c)(2),
however, Congress indicated a concern
about the potential environmental
impacts of substitute refrigerants by
extending the venting prohibition to
substitute refrigerants, unless the EPA
determines that for particular
substances such releases do not pose a
threat to the environment.
To the extent that the extension of
subpart F regulatory requirements to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants is
supported by section 608(c), that
extension provides clarity and certainty
to owners, operators, and people
servicing, maintaining, repairing, or
disposing of air conditioning and
refrigeration equipment of how they can
avoid violating the venting prohibition.
Such clarity and certainty with regards
to the venting prohibition are consistent
with the EPA’s overall efforts under
Title VI to facilitate a smooth transition
from ODS to substitute refrigerants.
Thus, while facilitating a smooth
transition to substitutes is not a basis for
this action, the EPA disagrees with the
comments suggesting that applying
subpart F provisions to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants reduces
incentives for the development of or
transition to substitutes.
The EPA solicited comment regarding
scenarios where failure to apply
consistent standards for the non-leak
repair provisions in Subpart F could
lead to emissions of ODS. These
scenarios include contamination caused
by the improper handling of nonexempt substitute refrigerant,
equipment failure due to mixed or
contaminated refrigerant, venting of
contaminated refrigerant due to cost of
handling and reclaiming refrigerant in
appliances, and venting due to an
individual misidentifying an ODS
refrigerant as a substitute refrigerant
when performing maintenance on an
appliance. (83 FR 49340).
One commenter states that the EPA
provided no technical basis to warrant
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the extension of the non-leak repair
subpart F requirements to substitutes.
Specifically, the commenter states that
the agency did not provide any data
concerning frequency of refrigerant
contamination, equipment failures due
to contamination, and misidentification.
The commenter states that its members,
including one that has 75 separate
facilities, could not identify any
examples of substitute contamination or
mismanagement. Multiple other
commenters state that a single, uniform,
and consistent management system for
ODS and substitute refrigerants makes
refrigerant management easier for
technicians maintaining, servicing, or
disposing of refrigeration equipment,
and increases the chances that
technicians will not release class I or
class II refrigerant. Some of these
comments were limited to the non-leak
repair provisions of Subpart F and some
were inclusive of the leak repair
provisions. Several refrigerant
technicians and reclaimers in their
comments relay instances where a
layperson has mixed refrigerant or
attempted an improper retrofit or other
maintenance and caused the release of
refrigerant. Other commenters state that
refrigerant mixing would increase if the
sales restriction for non-exempt
substitutes were rescinded.
The EPA’s understanding of the
industry indicates that technician errors
can result in refrigerant mixing, and
catastrophic equipment failure as a
result. The agency’s understanding is
consistent with and supported by
information that stakeholders have
provided to the agency, including
information submitted during the
development of this rulemaking and
included in the record for this rule.
Moreover, the EPA has supporting
evidence from enforcement actions
pertaining to R–22a and reported
reclamation data that mixing does
occur. Many entities including
refrigerant reclaimers, equipment
manufacturers, technicians, and
equipment owners have notified the
agency that mixed refrigerant is
becoming increasingly prevalent as the
number of substitutes for ODS in use
increases. The EPA finds credible the
information provided by commenters
who identified examples of refrigerant
releases related to mixing of refrigerants
or attempted improper retrofit or other
maintenance.
Evidence of refrigerant mixing comes
from data reported to the EPA by
reclaimers. The amount of mixed
refrigerant being received by reclaimers
has been increasing since 2012 by total
volume or since 2013 as a percentage of
the amount of refrigerant sent for
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reclamation. These data support the
anecdotal statements and comments
made by individual reclaimers and
technicians that they are encountering
more mixed refrigerant. The data are
available on the EPA’s website and
some of the comments and statements
are in the docket to this rule.19 The EPA
also expects that the reported data are
an underestimate of the total amount of
mixed refrigerant since mixed
refrigerant is often vented or not sent to
reclaimers, and thus those amounts are
unavailable to be reported.
In addition, as discussed in the 2016
Rule, the use of R–22a (a non-exempt
substitute refrigerant) as a replacement
for R–22 (an ODS refrigerant) indicates
to the EPA that people are purchasing
their own refrigerant and adding it to
systems with ODS refrigerant. R–22a,
which is propane, in some cases mixed
with isobutane and an odorant, has been
marketed as a ‘‘drop-in’’ (or more
appropriately termed a ‘‘retrofit’’)
replacement for existing equipment,
typically residential split airconditioning systems, which are
designed for use with HCFCs or HFCs.
The EPA has listed propane and R–22a
as well as all ASHRAE Flammability
Class 3 Refrigerants as unacceptable for
retrofit in residential and light
commercial unitary split AC and heat
pumps under the Significant New
Alternatives Policy program. The
Agency learned through its enforcement
actions against Enviro-Safe and
Northcutt, two distributors of R–22a,
and through other investigations, that
R–22a has been sold to both consumers
and certified technicians. Often the
buyers are not aware there is a
difference between R–22 and R–22a, or
even that R–22a is flammable. As a
result, appliances have exploded,
resulting in the release of refrigerant
that consists in part of ODS, and people
have been injured. Together, this data
from reclaimers and information on R–
22a support the view that applying the
sales restriction and technician
certification requirements to nonexempt substitute refrigerants serves the
purposes of section 608(a) because it
prevents the mixing and subsequent
release of ODS refrigerants, including in
mixtures with substitute refrigerants.
Two commenters state that crosscontamination of ODS and non-exempt
substitute refrigerant does not occur
because they operate at different
pressures so there are no concerns that
ODS will be emitted if there are no
19 Mixed Refrigerant Received Totals by Year
(Pounds), available at https://www.epa.gov/
section608/summary-refrigerant-reclamationtrends.
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controls on substitute refrigerants. In
contrast, another commenter states that
many class II (and in some cases, class
I) substances can be used
interchangeably with HFCs and other
substitute refrigerants, though
sometimes requiring equipment
modification. Other commenters state
that ODS and ODS substitutes can be
used interchangeably in many
applications, and service technicians are
likely to encounter both types of
refrigerants. In California,
approximately 17% of reporting
facilities have both ODS and HFC
systems.
The EPA disagrees with the comment
saying that cross-contamination of ODS
and non-exempt substitute refrigerant
cannot occur because they operate at
different pressures. R–22 has been the
dominant ODS refrigerant and is being
replaced with several non-exempt
substitute refrigerants that operate at
similar pressures (e.g., R–404A, R–
407A, and R–407C). In those situations,
cross-contamination of ODS and
substitute refrigerant, refrigerant mixing,
and related releases of ODS can occur.
The EPA agrees with the comments that
ODS and substitute refrigerants have
inappropriately been used
interchangeably. The EPA frequently
hears from industry stakeholders,
similar to comments received on the
proposal, that technicians are ‘‘topping
off’’ R–22 systems with non-exempt
substitute refrigerant, particularly
during the final stages of the R–22
phaseout which has seen price spikes.
Improper retrofits or refrigerant mixing
can occur even when the operating
pressure is different, especially when
appliances are serviced by untrained
personnel. This mixing of refrigerant
with different operating pressure makes
catastrophic equipment failure and
release of the refrigerant charge even
more likely.
A few commenters state that
eliminating the reclamation requirement
for non-exempt substitute refrigerants
would set in motion market forces that
would ultimately result in an increase
in ODS emissions. Specifically, the
commenter states that technicians
would resell recovered substitute
refrigerants to other customers rather
than sending them for reclamation. This
would reduce the profitability and
ability of reclaimers to reclaim the ODS
refrigerants that they do receive. The
comment explains that reclaimers might
stop accepting ODS refrigerants and
technicians would then either resell
contaminated refrigerant, vent the ODS
refrigerants to the atmosphere, or pay
for proper disposal, likely in that order.
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The EPA agrees with the comments
that rescinding the reclamation
requirements for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants would likely result in an
increase in ODS emissions. As
discussed further in Section II.D. of this
document, the reclamation requirements
for non-exempt substitute refrigerant
prohibit the resale of mixed used
refrigerant and support a market-based
process from the technician or recovery
company to the refrigerant distributor
and ultimately the reclaimer to return
used ODS and non-exempt substitute
refrigerant to the same purity level as
newly produced refrigerant. The
requirement that recovered ODS and
non-exempt substitute refrigerant be
reclaimed to meet industry purity
standards before being resold, with
limited exceptions, implements the
direction in section 608(a)(3) to reduce
the use and emission of ODS to the
lowest achievable level, and to
maximize the recapture and recycling of
such substances, as explained further in
Section II.D. of this document. The EPA
concludes that section 608 provides the
EPA authority for the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the reclamation
requirements to substitute refrigerants
and is therefore not finalizing a
rescission of the reclamation standards.
D. Comments Regarding How Holistic
Interpretations of Section 608 and Other
Sections of Title VI May Relate to EPA’s
Authority To Regulate Substitute
Refrigerants
One commenter states that the EPA
must read section 608 as a whole,
consistent with giving meaning to the
full statutory provision. This commenter
further asserts that doing so shows that
Congress intended to only stagger
requirements for ODS and non-exempt
substitutes, with ODS requirements
applying starting in 1992 and those for
substitutes starting in 1995, not to create
a more limited regulatory program for
substitutes. A few commenters state that
section 608(a) is broader than 608(c) in
that it provides the EPA the authority to
regulate ‘‘use’’ of an ODS while 608(c)
is limited to service, maintenance,
repair, or disposal of an appliance.
These commenters state that this
difference in wording indicates that
Congress intended for different
requirements to apply to ODS and
substitutes. Another commenter states
that because section 608(c)(2) extends to
the ‘‘knowing release’’ or the disposal of
substitutes, it provides broader legal
authority than exists within the
Administrator’s authority to establish
standards regarding the ‘‘use and
disposal of class I substances’’ under
CAA section 608(a), offering the
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example that CAA section 608(c)
authority extends to any ‘‘release’’
whether by means other than use or
disposal.
The EPA responds that the agency has
appropriately considered the authority
granted to the agency under section 608,
considering that section as a whole, in
reaching the interpretations supporting
this action. Based on that consideration,
the EPA disagrees that reading 608(a)
and (c) together indicates that Congress
intended simply to stagger similar
requirements for ODS and substitutes.
Were this the case, Congress could have
inserted requirements to regulate
substitutes in 608(a) that were effective
in 1995, in a similar manner to the way
it made the venting prohibition effective
for substitutes effective November 15,
1995 in 608(c)(2). But it did not. While
Congress chose to stagger the
requirements in 608(a) for class I and
class II ODS, with section 608(a)(1)
requiring the EPA to issue certain
regulations for class I substances by
January 1, 1992, and 608(a)(2) requiring
other regulations for class I and class II
substances by November 15, 1994, it did
not include such a staggered date for
substitutes. Nor did it even mention
substitutes in these provisions.
Similarly, while Congress staggered the
application of the venting prohibition in
section 608(c) to ODS and substitutes,
that only indicates that Congress
intended for the venting prohibition to
apply equally to both substitutes and
ODS after November 15, 1995. As
explained in greater detail in Section II
of this document, the EPA concludes
that, reading section 608 as a whole, its
authority to address substitutes under
section 608 is more limited than its
authority to address ODS.
The EPA agrees with the comment
that that the verbs used in section 608(a)
suggest a broader scope of authority
than those in 608(c). As noted in
Section II above, sections 608(a)(1) and
(2) broadly authorize regulations for the
‘‘use and disposal’’ of ODS, and section
608(a)(2) clarifies that this ‘‘includ[es]
use and disposal during service, repair,
or disposal’’ of appliances. The term
‘‘includ[es]’’ in 608(a)(2) indicates that
‘‘use and disposal’’ can occur during
activities other than ‘‘service, repair, or
disposal.’’ These are three of the four
activities mentioned in section 608(c),
which prohibits knowing releases ‘‘in
the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing’’ of appliances.
As explained elsewhere in this
document, the EPA interprets the fourth
term, ‘‘maintaining,’’ as similar in scope
to ‘‘servicing, repairing, or disposing’’
and to refer to work done on an
appliance in furtherance of its
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continued functioning or to preserve its
existing state of repair. Thus, the EPA
concludes that Congress envisioned that
the regulations under section 608(a)
would affect a broader range of activities
than those under section 608(c). In
addition, as described in greater detail
in Section II above, the EPA now reads
sections 608(a) and (c) together to
determine that its authority is more
limited for substitute refrigerants than
for ODS. However, the EPA does not
believe that this means none of the same
provisions can be applied to ODS and
substitute refrigerants. Rather, the EPA
believes the same provision can apply to
both ODS and substitute refrigerants
where the agency can reasonably
conclude that extending a requirement
that previously only applied to ODS
refrigerants to substitute refrigerants is
an appropriate application of its
authority under either section 608(a) or
(c), under the interpretive framework set
forth in Section II above. The EPA
disagrees with the comment that
608(c)(2) is broader than 608(a) because
it extends to ‘‘any release.’’ As
discussed in Section II, the releases
prohibited under section 608(c)(2) are
limited to those that occur ‘‘in the
course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing’’ of appliances, a
narrower range of activities than the
broad range of ‘‘use and disposal’’
activities featured in section 608(a).
Two commenters state that reading
sections 608 and 612 together indicates
that Congress sought to avoid solving
one problem (ozone depletion) only to
create another, in this case GHG
emissions. They argue that given the
policy choices that are embodied in
section 612—to replace ODS with
substitutes that lower the overall risks to
human health and the environment—
and the fact that HFCs have not been
exempted from the venting prohibition,
the EPA should take an expansive read
of the Agency’s authority to regulate
substitutes.
The EPA responds that CAA sections
612 and 608 are distinct provisions, and
the EPA does not believe it is reasonable
to interpret the policy objectives of
section 612 as expanding the agency’s
ability to regulate substitutes under
section 608 beyond the authority
conveyed in the text of 608 itself. As
explained in Section II above, because
the agency has determined that the 2016
Rule’s extension of the leak repair
requirements to appliances using only
non-exempt substitute refrigerant
exceeds its statutory authority, it is
rescinding that extension.
Another commenter states that
reading 608 and 609 together indicates
that Congress was capable of clearly
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indicating when it intended for ODS
and substitutes to be treated the same,
and that it chose not to do so in 608. In
support of this argument, the
commenter points out that the
definition of refrigerant in section 609
includes class I and class II substances,
as well as any substitute substance
beginning November 15, 1995. The EPA
responds that as described in greater
detail in Section II above, it interprets
its authority to address substitutes
under section 608 as more limited than
its authority to address ODS, based in
part on the inclusion of the term
‘‘substitute’’ in section 608(c)(2) but not
sections 608(a)(1) and (2). Section 609 is
a distinct provision from section 608
and is highly specialized, being focused
on motor vehicle air conditioners,
which were one of the first uses to
transition to substitutes. The EPA
believes this comment provides
additional support for the agency’s
conclusion that its authority to regulate
substitutes under section 608 is not as
extensive as its authority to regulate
ODS. However, the EPA does not
believe that section 609 should be read
to suggest that the agency has no
authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants under section 608, as
section 608(c), like section 609, does
mention both ODS and substitute
refrigerants and applies the venting
prohibition to both beginning November
15, 1995. Nor does anything in section
609 indicate whether certain refrigerant
management requirements for
substitutes might be necessary to
achieve the purposes of section 608(a),
which covers a broad range of uses, with
widely varying timelines for the
transition from ODS. For the reasons
described further in Section II, the
agency continues to reasonably interpret
both section 608(a) and (c) to provide
some authority to regulate substitute
refrigerants, to the extent consistent
with the text of those provisions, and
this action appropriately aligns its
regulation of substitute refrigerants with
its statutory authority under 608.
One commenter states that the name
of Title VI (Stratospheric Ozone
Protection) indicates that Congress
intended to only address stratospheric
ozone depletion, not GHG emissions.
The EPA responds that this action
addresses non-exempt substitutes
without distinction as to whether they
are GHGs and indeed without
distinction as to any other attribute.
Further, the text of 608(c) demonstrates
that Congress was addressing both class
I and class II refrigerants and substitute
refrigerants. Congress specifically
applied the venting prohibition to
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substitutes, and, as indicated by the
provision that allows the EPA to exempt
substitute refrigerants from the venting
prohibition if it determines that venting,
release, or disposal of such substitute
does not pose a threat to the
environment, specifically contemplated
that threats to the environment other
than stratospheric ozone depletion
would be considered in implementing
the venting prohibition under section
608(c)(2). In addition, the Supreme
Court has recognized the ‘‘wise rule that
the title of a statute and the heading of
a section cannot limit the plain meaning
of the text’’; while they may provide a
‘‘short-hand reference to the general
subject matter involved,’’ they are not
‘‘necessarily designed to be a reference
guide or a synopsis.’’ Bhd. of R.R.
Trainmen v. Balt. & O.R. Co., 331 U.S.
519, 528–29 (1947) (internal citations
omitted). Thus, the EPA does not
interpret the title of Title VI as
precluding it from regulating substitute
refrigerants, where such regulation is
otherwise authorized under the Act.
Moreover, as described in Section II
above, in re-assessing the scope of its
authority for the 2016 Rule’s extension
of subpart F provisions to substitute
refrigerants, the EPA has considered
whether the extension of those
provisions serve the purposes of section
608(a) by maximizing recyling or
recovery of ODS and/or reducing
emissions of ODS to the lowest
achievable level and has determined
that the extension of those provisions
with the exception of the leak repair
requirements met such purposes.
Three commenters cite section 602(e)
for the proposition that Congress did not
intend to address GHGs in any of Title
VI. That section requires the EPA to
publish the global warming potential
(GWP) of class I and class II substances
but states that such required publication
‘‘shall not be construed to be the basis
of any additional regulation under this
chapter.’’ The EPA responds, as above,
that this action addresses non-exempt
substitutes without distinction as to
whether they are GHGs and indeed
without distinction as to any other
attribute. Regardless, section 602(e) does
not mention substitutes. Section 602(e)
relates to the GWPs of ODS, and neither
directs the publication of GWPs of
substitutes nor makes any statement
regarding regulation of such substances.
In any event, the EPA is not regulating
either ODS or substitutes on the basis of
their GWP in this action. Furthermore,
the EPA did not rely on section 602 as
authority for the extension of subpart F
to non-exempt substitutes in 2016, nor
is it relying on section 602 for the action
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being taken in this rulemaking. In the
2016 Rule, the EPA extended the
subpart F regulations to all substitute
refrigerants that are not exempt from the
venting prohibition irrespective of their
GWPs. In this action, the agency’s
decision to rescind the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the leak repair
requirements to equipment containing
only non-exempt substitute refrigerants
is based on the conclusion that the
extension exceeded the agency’s
authority under section 608 because it
was based on an unreasonable
interpretation of that authority.
E. Comments Regarding Whether the
Agency Has Provided a Reasoned Basis
for This Action
One commenter states that the EPA’s
reinterpretation of its legal authority fits
squarely within the authority that
supports an agency’s ability to change
its policy (citing Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v.
NRDC, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863–64
(1984)). Some commenters state that the
EPA has not offered an adequate
rationale for this action and fault the
agency for not providing substantial
evidence for changing its previous
findings. These commenters state that
when changing policy, ‘‘a reasoned
explanation is needed for disregarding
facts and circumstances that underlay or
were engendered by the prior policy’’
(citing FCC v. Fox Television Stations,
556 U.S. 502, 516 (2009)). Another
commenter states that the EPA failed to
provide the requisite ‘‘good reasons’’ for
its change (citing id. at 515). Some of
these commenters state that ‘‘an agency
changing its course by rescinding a rule
is obligated to supply a reasoned
analysis for the change beyond that
which may be required when an agency
does not act in the first instance’’ (citing
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm
Mutual Auto Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42
(1983)) and argue that the EPA has
failed to provide a sufficient
justification for the change. Other
commenters state that the EPA ignores
the fact that harmful emissions would
increase under today’s action, arguing
that this shows that the EPA has failed
to ‘‘examine the relevant data and
articulate a satisfactory explanation for
its action including a rational
connection between the facts found and
the choice made’’ (citing State Farm,
463 U.S. at 43)).
The EPA disagrees that the agency has
failed to provide an adequate rationale
for this regulatory change. To begin, we
note that the agency ‘‘obviously ha[s]
broad discretion to reconsider a
regulation at any time,’’ Clean Air
Council, 862 F.3d at 8–9, as long as it
provides a reasoned explanation for its
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action. See, e.g., Encino Motorcars, 136
S.Ct. at 2125. As discussed elsewhere in
this preamble, including in detail in
Section II above, the reason for today’s
action is not a change in policy, but
rather a determination that the agency
exceeded the scope of its legal authority
under the CAA in the 2016 Rule by
extending the leak repair provisions to
equipment containing only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants based on an
unreasonable interpretation of its
authority. The EPA has provided a
reasoned explanation of its current
interpretation of its legal authority in
Section II of this document and
explained why that interpretation
requires the rescission of the 2016
extension of the leak repair
requirements to substitute refrigerants.
Even if the facts and circumstances that
underlay that extension, or were
engendered by it, could be cited to
provide a policy basis for applying the
leak repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, the EPA cannot
do that because doing so exceeds its
legal authority. An agency may ‘‘justify
its policy choice by explaining why that
policy ‘is more consistent with statutory
language’ than alternative policies,’’
Encino Motorcars, 136 S.Ct. at 2127
(quoting Long Island Care at Home Ltd.
v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 175 (2007)), as
the agency has done here. In addition,
the agency does not agree with the
commenters’ claim that it needs to
provide more rationale for this change
than if it were acting in the first
instance. See Encino Motorcars, 136
S.Ct. at 2126 (‘‘When an agency changes
its existing position, it ‘need not always
provide a more detailed justification
than what would suffice for a new
policy created on a blank slate.’ ’’)
(quoting FCC v. Fox Television Stations,
Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515 (2009)).
However, even if it did, the EPA
believes that the detailed description in
Section II of this document would
satisfy that standard, especially
considering that it is undertaking this
action to rescind a regulatory provision
that exceeds its statutory authority.
Accordingly, the EPA agrees with the
comments that stated this action is well
within the agency’s authority to change
existing regulatory requirements.
Two commenters state that rescinding
the leak repair provision for non-exempt
substitutes is arbitrary and capricious
because it would result in more of the
pollution the CAA seeks to limit and
then goes on to discuss the forgone
annual GHG emissions reductions. They
also state that the EPA has not
explained how the new interpretation
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‘‘is rationally related to the goals of the
statute.’’
The EPA does not agree that this
action will result in increased emissions
of the pollution that section 608 seeks
to limit, nor that this action is not
rationally related to the goals of the
statute. With respect to section 608(a),
that section focuses on reducing
emissions of ODS. The EPA has been
implementing regulations under section
608(a) of the CAA for decades and has
been appropriately reducing the use and
emission of ODS refrigerants through
those regulations. As discussed in
Section II above, the EPA has
determined that leak repair provisions
as applied to appliances containing only
substitute refrigerants are not needed to
reduce the use and emissions of ODS
refrigerants or to maximize the
recapture and recycling of ODS
refrigerants, especially if the other
subpart F provisions are in place for
non-exempt substitutes. As explained in
Section II of this document, the EPA
concludes that this action is necessary
because the 2016 Rule exceeded its
statutory authority. With respect to
section 608(c), the agency interprets
section 608(c) to apply only to knowing
releases that occur in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of appliances. Because
operational leaks of substitute
refrigerants that would typically trigger
the leak repair provisions do not occur
during one of those four activities, the
EPA does not agree that this action will
result in increased emissions of the
pollution that section 608(c) seeks to
limit.
IV. Extension of the January 1, 2019
Compliance Date for the Appliance
Maintenance and Leak Repair
Provisions for Non-Exempt Substitute
Refrigerants
The 2016 Rule established a January
1, 2019 compliance date for the leak
repair provisions. In establishing that
compliance date, the agency had found
that two years was sufficient time for
owners and operators of appliances with
50 or more pounds of refrigerant to learn
about the updated requirements and
prepare for compliance. (81 FR 82343).
The 2018 proposal for this action
explained that the EPA was evaluating
whether that compliance date remained
viable or whether it should be extended.
The EPA proposed to take final action
to extend the compliance date in
§ 82.157(a) for appliances containing
only non-exempt substitute refrigerants
if final action on the substantive
portions of the proposed rule would not
occur within a reasonable time before
the existing compliance date. At that
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time, however, the EPA lacked specific
information relating to the continued
viability of the compliance date. The
EPA requested comment on whether
facilities would encounter practical
difficulties in meeting the compliance
date and stated that it intended to
consider such information in deciding
whether a compliance date extension
was needed. The EPA further requested
comment on any hardship that owners
or operators of appliances would face if
the compliance date was not extended
and on any forgone benefits from such
an extension. Finally, the EPA requested
comment on its ability to finalize a
compliance date extension.
Multiple commenters state that the
EPA has the authority and should
finalize an extension of the compliance
date for the leak repair provisions as
they apply to non-exempt substitutes.
Several commenters state that the EPA
should take a separate action to extend
the compliance deadline. They argue
that the extension would help eliminate
the burden of implementing compliance
plans that are expected to no longer be
needed when the rule is finalized, and
that the separate rule should be issued
as far ahead of December 31, 2018 as is
possible to minimize any burdens.
Commenters state that a 6- to 12-month
delay in compliance would provide
certainty to the industry. Some suggest
that the extension should be a full
twelve months, which would move the
compliance date to January 1, 2020.
However, several other commenters do
not support an extension of the
compliance date. They state that the
2016 Rule has been in effect since
January 1, 2017, and that responsible
regulated entities have planned for,
invested in, and implemented changes
necessary to comply with the applicable
compliance deadlines, including
January 1, 2019. Commenters state that
the EPA has failed to provide any lawful
basis for its proposal to delay the
compliance date for the 2016 Rule.
The EPA considered the comments
received and is not finalizing, in this
rulemaking or separately, an extension
to the January 1, 2019 compliance date
for the application of the updated leak
repair provisions to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. Even though
some commenters thought an extension
would reduce compliance costs,
commenters also said that they were
taking steps to comply and did not
suggest that they would be unable to do
so by January 1, 2019. With no
information in the record to contradict
the EPA’s earlier findings that two years
provided sufficient time to prepare for
the January 1, 2019 compliance date,
this final rule rescinds the leak repair
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requirements for appliances that contain
non-exempt substitute refrigerants
without any extension of that
compliance date.
V. Economic Analysis
The EPA does not interpret section
608 to require it to consider costs and
benefits or select the option with the
best cost-benefit outcome. Section 608
does not explicitly address whether
costs or benefits should be considered
in developing regulations under that
section. Because the statutory language
does not dictate a particular means of
taking economic factors into account, if
at all, the EPA has discretion to adopt
a reasonable method for doing so. In this
rule, the EPA has focused on the proper
scope of the agency’s authority to
regulate.
The EPA is removing the requirement
to comply with the leak repair
provisions for appliances containing
only non-exempt substitute refrigerants
as the EPA has determined that the 2016
Rule’s extension of those provisions to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants
exceeded the agency’s statutory
authority because it relied on an
unreasonable interpretation of that
authority. These provisions include
requirements to repair equipment that is
leaking above the regulatory threshold,
along with the associated verification
tests, leak inspections, and
recordkeeping.
Details of the methods used to
estimate the costs and benefits of this
rule are discussed in the Analysis of the
Economic Impact of the Proposed 2018
Revisions to the National Recycling and
Emission Reduction Program in the
docket. For a complete description of
the methodology used in the EPA’s
analysis, see Section VI of the 2016 Rule
(81 FR 82344) and the technical support
document for the 2016 Rule which is
also available in the docket for this
action. While the EPA is providing this
information to help the public
understand the implications of this
action compared to those considered in
the economic analysis provided for the
2016 Rule, this action is not based on
consideration of this information.
Rather, this action is based on changes
in the agency’s legal interpretation of
the scope of its statutory authority, as
described in earlier sections of this
document.
The EPA received several comments
on the economic analysis included in
the proposal. One commenter states that
the EPA has the authority to take costs
into consideration in finalizing the
proposed rule even where the statute is
silent, as confirmed by recent Supreme
Court decisions. That commenter, and
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numerous other commenters, state that
failure to consider a relevant factor such
as cost could make the agency action
unlawful. The EPA agrees as a general
matter that the agency has the authority
to consider costs and benefits in
regulations promulgated under section
608. (See, e.g., 81 FR 82287). However,
the consideration of costs and benefits
described in the technical support
documents in the docket are provided
for purposes of transparency and to
inform the public about the implications
of this action relative to those described
in the economic analysis provided for
the 2016 Rule following agency
guidance on assessing economic costs
and benefits. This action rescinds the
extension of requirements that exceeded
the agency’s statutory authority. The
agency cannot impose obligations that
exceed its statutory authority,
irrespective of the costs and benefits
associated with those requirements.
The EPA received numerous
comments on the agency’s analysis of
the costs and benefits of the proposed
rule. Several commenters state that it is
arbitrary to not monetize the climate
damages caused by the forgone emission
reductions resulting from rescinding the
extension of the leak repair provisions
to non-exempt substitutes. Commenters
also argue that: Use of the Interagency
Working Group’s social cost of GHGs
metric would have found that the
climate damages of the proposed rule’s
forgone emissions reductions outweigh
the estimated cost savings; it is arbitrary
for the agency to not use any monetary
value for fluorinated gases; and the EPA
has previously found that HFCs
endanger public health and welfare, so
the agency cannot ignore GHG
emissions which may result.
Commenters also state that the EPA did
not consider the effect that the proposed
rule would have on operating costs of
leaking systems, the shortened lifespans
and increased equipment failures of
systems allowed to operate with leaks,
costs to companies that have created
innovative products to facilitate
compliance, and decreased yields of
products generated through IPR
processes. Some commenters also state
that rescinding the leak detection and
repair program would result in higher
costs for consumers as well as lost jobs
in the air conditioning and refrigeration
industry. Others state that compliance
costs will increase as companies will
need to ensure compliance with two
different regulatory frameworks.
The EPA disagrees with the comments
suggesting that it has ignored the
increased GHG emissions, as it has
quantified the expected increase in
those emissions and reflected them in
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its analysis. Today’s action is not based
on a cost-benefit analysis of retaining or
rescinding various provisions or on any
other consideration of the costs and
benefits of various policy options, but
rather is focused solely on whether the
agency had the statutory authority to
extend elements of the refrigerant
management program to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule.
If the agency does not have legal
authority to impose a requirement, it
cannot do so, even if that action would
be environmentally or economically
beneficial. As noted above, the technical
support documents in the docket are
provided to inform the public about the
implications of this action relative to
those described in the economic
analysis provided for the 2016 Rule. The
EPA did not monetize the GHG effects
in the economic analysis for the 2016
Rule, nor did it quantify the other types
of indirect costs raised in the comments.
The EPA observes that the 2016
Technical Support Document for the
2016 Rule notes that the final rule, ‘‘may
result in other economic health and
environmental benefits that are not
quantified or monetized in this
conservative analysis.’’ 20 EPA is
rescinding the 2016 Rule’s extension of
the leak repair requirements to
equipment containing only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, therefore the
unquantified benefits related to the
extension of such requirements will no
longer be attributable to the EPA’s
refrigerant management program.
Consistent with the agency’s overall
approach taken in the 2016 Rule, the
EPA is not monetizing the GHG effects
of this action. Similarly, the EPA is not
quantifying other indirect costs or
distributional effects raised by
commenters. While such analyses are
not relevant to the basis for this action,
for informational purposes we observe
that estimating distribution effects such
as job loss is very difficult to
quantitatively assess: Regulatory
employment impacts can vary across
occupations, regions, and industries; by
labor demand and supply elasticities;
and in response to other labor market
conditions. Isolating such impacts is a
challenge, as they are difficult to
disentangle from employment impacts
caused by a wide variety of ongoing,
concurrent economic changes.21
20 Technical Support Document, Analysis of the
Economic Impacts and Benefits of the Final
Revisions to the National Recycling and Emission
Reduction Program, September 2, 2016, pgs. 60–63.
21 For a more detailed discussion, see, e.g.,
Economic Analysis for Proposed Regulation of
Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA section 6(h), June 2019; Regulatory
Impact Analysis for the Proposed Oil and Natural
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One commenter states that the agency
failed to quantify the extra ODS
emissions that would result from
unraveling the uniform regulatory
framework for substitute refrigerants.
Another commenter notes that the
EPA’s estimated forgone GHG emissions
reductions do not consider appliances’
end-of-life emissions. The EPA responds
that, aside from the leak repair
provisions, the EPA is retaining the
extension of all the subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, including the service
practices, which require specific
evacuation levels before disposing of an
appliance or opening it for service, use
of certified recovery equipment, and the
technician certification requirement. In
addition, the venting prohibition
continues to apply to any knowing
release, venting, or disposal of ODS or
non-exempt substitute refrigerant by any
person maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing of an appliance. As such,
the EPA believes that end-of-life
emissions of both ODS and non-exempt
substitute refrigerant will not be affected
by this final rule and were properly not
included in the agency’s analysis.
Similarly, the EPA properly did not
include any ODS emissions that would
result from rescinding the non-leak
repair subpart F provisions in its
analysis for the final rule, as it is not
rescinding the extension of those
provisions.
Several commenters state that the
compliance costs of the 2016 Rule were
too great and presented an unnecessary
burden. One commenter states that the
$24 million in annual savings likely
underestimates the costs of the 2016
Rule. One commenter states that the
EPA has not fully considered the
impacts of the 2016 Rule on companies,
institutions like hospitals and schools,
and homeowners. With the transition to
HFCs and HFOs, these entities have
made costly investments in systems, but
found higher repair costs. Likewise, this
commenter states that the EPA did not
consider the costs to install new IPR
using non-ODS refrigerants.
The EPA responds that the costs of
the 2016 Rule are outside the scope of
this action, which is only to rescind the
2016 Rule’s extension of requirements
to non-exempt substitute refrigerants
that exceeded the agency’s statutory
authority.
The EPA received many comments
from the refrigeration and air
conditioning industry that they have
spent time and money to comply with
Gas Sector: Emission Standards for New,
Reconstructed, and Modified Sources Review; EPA–
452/R–19–001, August 2019.
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14169
the various provisions of the 2016 Rule.
This includes costs associated with
training staff, updating reporting and
recordkeeping software, revising and
republishing testing materials, and
identifying affected appliances and
individuals responsible to ensure
compliance.
The EPA responds that the
consideration of costs, including
reliance interests, is not relevant to this
action because the rescission here is
based on the agency’s lack of legal
authority for the 2016 Rule’s extension
of the leak repair provisions, not on a
cost/benefit analysis or policy
considerations. As noted above, if the
agency does not have legal authority to
impose a requirement, it cannot do so,
even if retaining that requirement would
be economically beneficial to some
entities. However, the EPA notes that
this action does not rescind the
extension of most of the provisions that
the commenters mention as a concern,
including the leak repair provisions for
appliances containing ODS, and
therefore those investments will not be
stranded as a result of this action. The
EPA is rescinding the 2016 Rule’s
extension of the leak repair provisions
as they apply to equipment containing
only non-exempt substitute refrigerants,
but it is retaining the extension of the
other subpart F requirements, such as
those pertaining to reclamation. This
rule does not impose any new reporting
or recordkeeping obligations.
One commenter states that the EPA
failed to distinguish between private
and social benefits, and that some costs
of this action should not be counted if
the regulated entity had the same or
similar options available to identify and
repair refrigerant leaks prior to the
rulemaking. This comment referred
specifically to the estimated $15 million
in refrigerant purchases that will be
made as a result of this action by owners
and operators of equipment with nonexempt substitutes.
As explained above, consideration of
the costs and benefits of this action is
not part of the rationale for this action
and does not inform the EPA’s decision
on this rule. Rather, this action is based
on the agency’s determination that the
2016 Rule’s extension of the leak repair
provisions to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants exceeded the agency’s
statutory authority. The EPA
additionally notes that while it is true
that the costs of purchasing additional
refrigerant will fall on private entities, it
is those same private entities that will
secure a reduction in burden from the
rescission of the leak repair
requirements of the 2016 Rule as they
apply to equipment containing only
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non-exempt substitute refrigerants. To
present one of these effects without the
other would fail to recognize the fact
that the two effects are inextricably
related. Further, it is standard practice
for the EPA, consistent with the
agency’s Guidelines for Preparing
Economic Analyses,22 to consider
increased direct outlays of money by
regulated entities due to an action
relative to a baseline without that action
as costs of the action. Any entity that
did not repair a leaking appliance that
they would have been required to repair
before today’s action would need to
allocate some part of its resources to
buying replacement refrigerant that
otherwise could have been used for
capital investment, increasing
production, or profit. Under the
agency’s Guidelines, it is appropriate to
consider the replacement refrigerant
costs as opportunity costs when
preparing an economic analysis.
The agency agrees that the nature of
private costs in this case merits a
separate accounting in a discussion of
the total benefits and costs of a rule. We
have enumerated the costs of
purchasing additional refrigerant
separate from the deregulatory benefits.
VI. 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 a significant regulatory
action that was submitted to the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) for
review. Any changes made in response
to OMB recommendations have been
documented in the docket. The EPA
prepared an economic analysis of the
costs and benefits associated with this
action which is available in Docket
Number EPA–HQ–OAR–2017–0629.
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with RULES
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulations and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
This action is considered an
Executive Order 13771 deregulatory
action. Details on the estimated cost
savings of this final rule can be found
in the EPA’s analysis of the potential
costs and benefits associated with this
action.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities
in this rule have been submitted for
approval to OMB under the PRA. The
22 The Guidelines can be found at https://
www.epa.gov/environmental-economics/guidelinespreparing-economic-analyses. See Chapter 8 titled
‘‘Analyzing Costs.’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:55 Mar 10, 2020
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Information Collection Request (ICR)
document that the EPA prepared has
been assigned EPA ICR number 1626.17;
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Control Number: 2060–0256.
You can find a copy of the ICR and
supporting statement in the docket for
this rule, and it is briefly summarized
here. The information collection
requirements are not enforceable until
OMB approves them.
Through this rule, EPA is revising the
leak repair provisions in § 82.157 so
they apply only to equipment using
ODS refrigerants or a blend containing
ODS refrigerant.
Respondents/affected entities: This
rule removes reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for owners
and operators of appliances containing
50 or more pounds of a non-exempt
substitute refrigerant and technicians
servicing such appliances. Entities
required to comply with reporting and
recordkeeping requirements include
technicians; technician certification
programs; refrigerant wholesalers;
refrigerant reclaimers; refrigeration and
air-conditioning equipment owners and/
or operators; and other establishments
that perform refrigerant removal,
service, or disposal.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
Mandatory (40 CFR part 82, subpart F).
Estimated number of respondents:
This rule reduces the estimated number
of respondents from 861,374 under the
2016 Rule to 573,731.
Frequency of response: The frequency
of responses vary from once a year to
daily. Public reporting burden for this
collection of information is estimated to
vary from one minute to 9.4 hours per
response, including time for reviewing
instructions and gathering, maintaining,
and submitting information.
Total estimated burden: This rule
reduces the estimated annual
recordkeeping and reporting burden
from 580,473 hours under the 2016 Rule
to 434,359 hours. Burden is defined at
5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: This rule
reduces the estimated annual
recordkeeping and reporting cost from
$34,627,298 under the 2016 Rule to
$24,625,892. There are no estimated
annualized capital or operation and
maintenance costs associated with the
reporting or recordkeeping
requirements.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for the EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
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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. An 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 the rule. This rule
does not impose any new regulatory
requirements. It is deregulatory in that
it removes required leak repair and
maintenance practices and associated
recordkeeping for appliances that do not
contain any ODS refrigerant. We have
therefore concluded that this action will
relieve regulatory burden for directly
regulated small entities.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
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. It will not have substantial
direct effects on tribal governments, on
the relationship between the federal
government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the federal
government and Indian tribes, as
specified in Executive Order 13175.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because it is not
economically significant as defined in
Executive Order 12866. The EPA has
not conducted a separate analysis of
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 11, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
risks to infants and children associated
with this rule.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
J. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
§ 82.157
repair.
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 it is not feasible
to quantify any disproportionately high
and adverse effects from this action on
minority populations, low-income
populations and/or indigenous peoples,
as specified in Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
the EPA will submit a rule report to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Appliance maintenance and leak
(a) Applicability. This section applies
as of January 1, 2019. As of April 10,
2020, this section applies only to
appliances with a full charge of 50 or
more pounds of any class I or class II
refrigerant or blend containing a class I
or class II refrigerant. Notwithstanding
the use of the term refrigerant in this
section, the requirements of this section
do not apply to appliances containing
solely substitute refrigerants. Unless
otherwise specified, the requirements of
this section apply to the owner or
operator of the appliance.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2020–04773 Filed 3–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 82
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Chemicals, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 622
Dated: February 26, 2020.
Andrew R. Wheeler,
Administrator.
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
1. The authority citation for part 82
continues to read as follows:
■
2. Amend § 82.154 by revising
paragraph (a)(2)(i) to read as follows:
■
Prohibitions.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The applicable practices in
§§ 82.155 and 82.156 are observed, the
applicable practices in § 82.157 are
observed for appliances that contain any
class I or class II refrigerant or blend
containing a class I or class II
refrigerant, recovery and/or recycling
15:55 Mar 10, 2020
Jkt 250001
NMFS announces the 2020
recreational fishing season for the
Federal charter vessel/headboat (forhire) component for red snapper in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of the
Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) through this
temporary rule. The red snapper
recreational for-hire component in the
Gulf EEZ opens on June 1, 2020, and
will close at 12:01 a.m., local time, on
August 2, 2020. This closure is
necessary to prevent the Federal for-hire
component from exceeding its quota
and to prevent overfishing of the Gulf
red snapper resource.
SUMMARY:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7601, 7671–
7671q.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; 2020
Red Snapper Recreational For-Hire
Fishing Season in the Gulf of Mexico
AGENCY:
PART 82—PROTECTION OF
STRATOSPHERIC OZONE
§ 82.154
[Docket No. 140818679–5356–02]
RTID 0648–XS026
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Environmental Protection
Agency amends 40 CFR part 82 as
follows:
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machines that meet the requirements in
§ 82.158 are used whenever refrigerant
is removed from an appliance, the
technician certification provisions in
§ 82.161 are observed, and the
reclamation requirements in § 82.164
are observed; or
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 82.157 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
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14171
The closure is effective at 12:01
a.m., local time, on August 2, 2020,
until 12:01 a.m., local time, on January
1, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727–551–5719, email:
daniel.luers@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Gulf
reef fish fishery, which includes red
snapper, is managed under the Fishery
Management Plan for the Reef Fish
Resources of the Gulf of Mexico (FMP).
The FMP was prepared by the Gulf of
Mexico Fishery Management Council
and is implemented by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) by
regulations at 50 CFR part 622.
The final rule implementing
Amendment 40 to the FMP established
two components within the recreational
sector fishing for Gulf red snapper: The
private angling component, and the
Federal for-hire component (80 FR
22422, April 22, 2015). Amendment 40
also allocated the red snapper
recreational ACL (recreational quota)
between the components and
established separate seasonal closures
for the two components. On February 6,
2020, Amendments 50 A–F to the FMP
were implemented, which delegated
authority to the Gulf states (Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and
Texas) to establish specific management
measures for the harvest of red snapper
in Federal water of the Gulf by the
private angling component of the
recreational sector (85 FR 6819,
February 6, 2020). These amendments
allocate a portion of the private angling
quota to each state, and each state is
required to constrain landings to its
allocation. Therefore, NMFS will no
longer announce a season for the private
angling component of the recreational
sector. Additionally, on February 20,
2020, NMFS published a final rule
implementing a framework action that
changed the Federal for-hire
component’s red snapper annual catch
target (ACT) for 2020 and beyond, from
20 percent below the for-hire
component quota to 9 percent below the
for-hire component quota (85 FR 9684).
This rule will be effective on March 23,
2020.
The red snapper for-hire component
seasonal closure is projected from the
component ACT. Projecting the for-hire
component’s seasonal closure using the
ACT reduces the likelihood of the
harvest exceeding the component quota
and the total recreational quota.
All weights described in this
temporary rule are in round weight.
DATES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 11, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 14150-14171]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-04773]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 82
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2017-0629; FRL-10006-10-OAR]
RIN 2060-AT81
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Revisions to the Refrigerant
Management Program's Extension to Substitutes
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Clean Air Act prohibits knowingly venting or releasing
ozone-depleting and substitute refrigerants in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of appliances or
industrial process refrigeration. In 2016, the EPA amended the
regulatory refrigerant management requirements and extended
requirements that previously applied only to refrigerants containing an
ozone-depleting substance to substitute refrigerants that are subject
to the venting prohibition (i.e., those that have not been exempted
from that prohibition) such as hydrofluorocarbons. Based on changes to
the legal interpretation that supported that 2016 rule, this action
revises some of those requirements--specifically, the appliance
maintenance and leak repair provisions--so they apply only to equipment
using refrigerant containing an ozone-depleting substance.
DATES: This final rule is effective on April 10, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2017-0629. All documents in the docket are
listed on the 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. All other publicly available docket materials
are available electronically through www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeremy Arling by regular mail: U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Stratospheric Protection Division
(6205T), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460; by
telephone: (202) 343-9055; or by email: [email protected]. More
information can also be found at: https://www.epa.gov/section608.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. What is the National Recycling and Emission Reduction Program?
Section 608 of the Clean Air Act (CAA), titled ``National Recycling
and Emission Reduction Program,'' has three main components. First,
section 608(a) requires the EPA to establish standards and requirements
regarding the use and disposal of class I and class II substances.\1\
The second component, section 608(b), requires that the regulations
issued pursuant to subsection (a) contain requirements for the safe
disposal of class I and class II substances. The third component,
section 608(c), prohibits the knowing venting, release, or disposal of
ODS refrigerants \2\ and their substitutes \3\ in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of appliances or
industrial process refrigeration (IPR). The EPA refers to this third
component as the ``venting prohibition.'' Section 608(c)(1) establishes
the venting prohibition for ODS refrigerants effective July 1, 1992,
and it includes an exemption from this prohibition for ``[d]e minimis
releases associated with good faith attempts to recapture and recycle
or safely dispose'' any such substance. Section 608(c)(2) extends
608(c)(1) to substitute refrigerants, effective November 15, 1995.
Section 608(c)(2) also includes a provision that allows the
Administrator to exempt a substitute refrigerant from the venting
prohibition if he or she determines that such venting, release, or
disposal of a substitute refrigerant ``does not pose a threat to the
environment.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A class I or class II substance is an ozone-depleting
substance (ODS) listed at 40 CFR part 82, subpart A, appendix A or
appendix B, respectively. This document refers to class I and class
II substances collectively as ozone-depleting substances, or ODS.
\2\ The term ``ODS refrigerant'' as used in this document refers
to any refrigerant or refrigerant blend in which one or more of the
components is a class I or class II substance.
\3\ The term ``substitute'' is defined at Sec. 82.152.
\4\ The EPA is using the term ``non-exempt substitute'' in this
document to refer to substitute refrigerants that have not been
exempted from the venting prohibition under CAA section 608(c)(2)
and Sec. 82.154(a) in the relevant end-use. Similarly, the term
``exempt substitute'' refers to a substitute refrigerant that has
been exempted from the venting prohibition under section 608(c)(2)
and Sec. 82.154(a) in the relevant end-use. A few exempt
substitutes have been exempted from the venting prohibition in all
end-uses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA first issued regulations under section 608 of the CAA on
May 14, 1993 (58 FR 28660, ``1993 Rule''), to establish the national
refrigerant management program for ODS refrigerants recovered during
the service, repair, or disposal of air-conditioning and refrigeration
appliances. The 1993 Rule required that persons servicing air-
conditioning and refrigeration equipment containing ODS refrigerants
observe certain practices that reduce emissions. It established
[[Page 14151]]
requirements for refrigerant recovery equipment, reclaimer
certification, and technician certification, and also restricted the
sale of ODS refrigerant so that only certified technicians could
purchase it. In addition, the 1993 Rule required that ODS be removed
from appliances prior to disposal, and that all air-conditioning and
refrigeration equipment using an ODS be provided with a servicing
aperture or process stub to facilitate refrigerant recovery. The 1993
Rule also established a requirement to repair leaking appliances
containing more than 50 pounds of ODS refrigerant. The rule set an
annual leak rate of 35 percent for commercial refrigeration appliances
and IPR and 15 percent for comfort cooling appliances. If the
applicable leak rate is exceeded, the appliance must be repaired within
30 days. Further, consistent with CAA section 608(c)(1), the 1993 Rule
included a regulatory provision prohibiting the knowing venting or
release of ODS refrigerant by any person maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance. (58 FR 28714; 40 CFR 82.154(a)
(1993)). It also provided that such releases would be considered de
minimis, and therefore not subject to the prohibition, if they occurred
when certain regulatory requirements were followed. (40 CFR 82.154(a)
(1993)).
The EPA revised these regulations, which are found at 40 CFR part
82, subpart F (``subpart F''), through subsequent rulemakings published
on August 19, 1994 (59 FR 42950), November 9, 1994 (59 FR 55912),
August 8, 1995 (60 FR 40420), July 24, 2003 (68 FR 43786), March 12,
2004 (69 FR 11946), January 11, 2005 (70 FR 1972), April 13, 2005 (70
FR 19273), May 23, 2014 (79 FR 29682), April 10, 2015 (80 FR 19453),
and November 18, 2016 (81 FR 82272).
In the April 2005 rulemaking, the EPA revised the regulatory
venting prohibition in Sec. 82.154, so that it also applied to non-
exempt substitute refrigerants, and included such substitutes in the
regulatory provision implementing the de minimis exemption, so that it
exempted ``de minimis releases associated with good faith attempts to
recycle or recover refrigerants or non-exempt substitutes'' from the
prohibition. (70 FR 19278). However, in contrast to how these
regulations applied to ODS refrigerants, they did not provide that
releases of non-exempt substitute refrigerants would be considered de
minimis if certain regulatory requirements were followed.
Additionally, the 2004 and 2005 rules exempted certain substitute
refrigerants from the venting prohibition either in specific end uses
or in all end uses. (See 69 FR 11953-11954; 70 FR 19278; Sec.
82.154(a) (2005)). The EPA has periodically updated this list of
exemptions from the venting prohibition in the regulations at Sec.
82.154(a) since 2005. The EPA also issued proposed rules to revise the
regulations in subpart F on June 11, 1998 (63 FR 32044), elements of
which were not finalized, and on December 15, 2010 (75 FR 78558), no
elements of which were finalized. A more detailed history of these
regulatory updates can be found at 81 FR 82275.
On November 18, 2016, the EPA published a rule updating existing
refrigerant management requirements and extending the full set of the
subpart F refrigerant management requirements, which prior to that rule
applied only to ODS refrigerants,\5\ to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, such as hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) and hydrofluoroolefins
(HFOs) (81 FR 82272, ``2016 Rule''). The 2016 Rule also clarified how
regulated entities could avail themselves of the de minimis exemption
for non-exempt substitutes. (See, e.g., 81 FR 82283-82285). Among the
subpart F requirements extended to non-exempt substitute refrigerants
in the 2016 Rule were provisions that restrict the servicing of
appliances and the sale of refrigerant to certified technicians,
specify the proper evacuation levels before opening an appliance,
require the use of certified refrigerant recovery and/or recycling
equipment, require that refrigerant be removed from appliances prior to
disposal, require that appliances have a servicing aperture or process
stub to facilitate refrigerant recovery, require that refrigerant
reclaimers be certified to reclaim and sell used refrigerant, and
establish standards for technician certification programs, recovery
equipment, and quality of reclaimed refrigerant. The 2016 Rule also
extended the appliance maintenance and leak repair provisions,
currently codified at Sec. 82.157, to appliances that contain 50 or
more pounds of non-exempt substitute refrigerant. For ease of
reference, in this document the EPA uses the terms ``leak repair
provisions'' or ``leak repair requirements'' interchangeably to refer
to all of the provisions at Sec. 82.157. Included in these leak repair
provisions are requirements to conduct leak rate calculations when
refrigerant is added to an appliance, repair an appliance that leaks
above the threshold leak rate applicable to that type of appliance,
conduct verification tests on repairs, conduct periodic leak
inspections on appliances that have exceeded the threshold leak rate,
report to the EPA on chronically leaking appliances, retrofit or retire
appliances that are not repaired, and maintain related documentation to
verify compliance. The regulatory changes in the 2016 Rule became
effective on January 1, 2017, but the revisions to the leak repair
provisions had a compliance date of January 1, 2019 to allow time for
the regulated community to prepare for those changes. (81 FR 82343).
The 2016 Rule additionally made numerous revisions to improve the
efficacy of the refrigerant management program as a whole, such as
revisions of regulatory provisions for increased clarity and
readability, and removal of provisions that had become obsolete.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The only subpart F requirements that applied to substitute
refrigerants prior to the 2016 Rule were the venting prohibition and
certain exemptions from that prohibition, as set forth in Sec.
82.154(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two industry coalitions, the National Environmental Development
Association's Clean Air Project (NEDA/CAP) and the Air Permitting Forum
(APF), filed petitions for judicial review of the 2016 Rule in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit),
and the cases have been consolidated. (See NEDA/CAP v. EPA, No. 17-1016
(D.C. Cir. filed January 17, 2017); APF v. EPA, No. 17-1017 (D.C. Cir.
filed January 17, 2017)). The Chemours Company, Honeywell International
Inc., the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Alliance for
Responsible Atmospheric Policy are participating as intervenor-
respondents in that litigation, in support of the 2016 Rule. In
addition, APF has filed a petition with the EPA for administrative
reconsideration of the 2016 Rule. The petition for reconsideration is
available in the docket for this action and raises several issues
regarding changes made in the 2016 Rule, such as the EPA's statutory
authority for its decision in the 2016 Rule to expand the scope of the
refrigerant management requirements--including, but not limited to,
leak repair requirements--to cover non-exempt substitute refrigerants.
Honeywell International Inc. submitted a document styled as a response
to APF's petition for reconsideration, which is also available in the
docket for this action.
B. Does this action apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially affected by this action include
those who own or operate refrigeration and
[[Page 14152]]
air-conditioning appliances. Potentially affected entities include, but
are not limited to, the following:
Table 1--Potentially Affected Entities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
North American
Industry Examples of
Category Classification regulated entities
System (NAICS) code
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industrial Process 111, 11251, 11511, Owners or operators
Refrigeration (IPR). 21111, 2211, 2212, of refrigeration
2213, 311, 3121, equipment used in
3221, 3222, 32311, agriculture and
32411, 3251, 32512, crop production,
3252, 3253, 32541, oil and gas
3256, 3259, 3261, extraction, ice
3262, 3324, 3328, rinks, and the
33324, 33341, manufacture of
33361, 3341, 3344, frozen food, dairy
3345, 3346, 3364, products, food and
33911, 339999. beverages, ice,
petrochemicals,
chemicals,
machinery, medical
equipment,
plastics, paper,
and electronics.
Commercial Refrigeration.... 42374, 42393, 42399, Owners or operators
4242, 4244, 42459, of refrigerated
42469, 42481, warehousing and
42493, 4451, 4452, storage facilities,
45291, 48422, 4885, supermarkets,
4931, 49312, 72231. grocery stores,
warehouse clubs,
supercenters,
convenience stores,
and refrigerated
transport.
Comfort Cooling............. 45211, 45299, Owners or operators
453998, 512, 522, of air-conditioning
524, 531, 5417, equipment used in
551, 561, 6111, the following:
6112, 6113, 61151, Hospitals, office
622, 7121, 71394, buildings, colleges
721, 722, 813, 92. and universities,
metropolitan
transit
authorities, real
estate rental &
leased properties,
lodging and food
services, property
management,
schools, and public
administration or
other public
institutions.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather to provide a
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be affected by this
action. To determine whether your facility, company, business, or
organization could be affected by this action, you should carefully
examine the regulations at 40 CFR part 82, subpart F and the revisions
below. If you have questions regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
C. What action is the agency taking?
The EPA reviewed the 2016 Rule, focusing in particular on whether
the agency had the statutory authority to extend the full set of
subpart F refrigerant management regulations to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, such as HFCs and HFOs. Based on that review,
Administrator Pruitt signed a letter on August 10, 2017 stating that
the EPA is ``planning to issue a proposed rule to revisit aspects of
the 2016 Rule's extension of the 40 CFR part 82, subpart F refrigerant
management requirements to non-exempt substitutes.'' \6\ Consistent
with that letter, in 2018 the agency proposed to withdraw the extension
of the provisions at Sec. 82.157 to appliances using only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants.\7\ (83 FR 43922). As discussed above, these
provisions include requirements related to appliance maintenance and
leak repair. This action finalizes that proposed withdrawal and will
relieve businesses from having to repair leaks, conduct leak
inspections, and keep records for appliances containing only substitute
refrigerant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Letter from the EPA to National Environmental Development
Association's Clean Air Project and the Air Permitting Forum (Aug.
10, 2017), available at www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2017-08/documents/608_update_letter.pdf and in the docket to this rule.
\7\ Ozone-depleting refrigerants and appliances that contain or
use any amount of ODS continue to be subject to all applicable
subpart F requirements, including those in Sec. 82.157.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2018 proposal also requested comment on whether to withdraw the
2016 Rule's extension of the full set of subpart F provisions to non-
exempt substitute refrigerants. Subpart F includes provisions that
restrict the servicing of appliances and the sale of refrigerant to
certified technicians, specify the proper evacuation levels before
opening an appliance, require the use of certified refrigerant recovery
and/or recycling equipment, require that refrigerant be removed from
appliances prior to disposal, require that appliances have a servicing
aperture or process stub to facilitate refrigerant recovery, require
that refrigerant reclaimers be certified to reclaim and sell used
refrigerant, and establish standards for technician certification
programs, recovery equipment, and quality of reclaimed refrigerant (40
CFR part 82, subpart F). In this action the EPA is not making any
changes to the subpart F provisions other than (1) limiting the
applicability of the leak repair provisions in Sec. 82.157 to
appliances that use ODS refrigerants or a blend containing ODS
refrigerants and (2) correspondingly clarifying that the reference to
Sec. 82.157 in Sec. 82.154(a)(2)(i) (the regulatory provision
implementing the de minimis exemption to the venting prohibition) only
applies for appliances that contain ODS refrigerants (including in a
blend). Consistent with the proposal, this action does not change any
of the regulatory requirements for ODS in 40 CFR part 82, subpart F.
D. What is the agency's authority for taking this action?
This action is based on changes to a legal interpretation of the
EPA's authority under CAA section 608 that supported the extension of
the leak repair requirements at Sec. 82.157 to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule. As described in greater detail in
Section II below, the EPA concludes that, as a legal matter, the 2016
Rule's extension of the leak repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants exceeded the EPA's statutory authority under
CAA section 608. Accordingly, the EPA is rescinding the 2016 Rule's
extension of the leak repair requirements to non-exempt substitutes.
However, the EPA continues to interpret section 608 as providing the
agency some authority to regulate substitutes. That includes authority
to issue regulations that interpret, explain, and enforce the venting
prohibition and the de minimis exemption under section 608(c) or that
are necessary to fulfill the purposes set forth in section 608(a)(3)
(i.e., to reduce the use and emission of ODS to the lowest achievable
level or to maximize the recapture and recycling of ODS). Because the
extension of the non-leak repair provisions in subpart F to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants remains within the scope of the EPA's authority
under 608 under the revised statutory interpretation described in this
action, the extension of those requirements is not being rescinded.
[[Page 14153]]
E. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?
Although this action is based on changes in the EPA's statutory
interpretation, the agency is providing a summary of incremental costs
and benefits associated with this action for purposes of transparency
and public information. Using a 7% discount rate, agency analyses
indicate that rescinding the extension of the leak repair provisions to
non-exempt substitutes reduces the burden associated with the 2016 Rule
by approximately $39 million per year. The EPA also estimates this rule
will increase the need to purchase non-exempt substitute refrigerant
for leaking appliances, at an overall cost of approximately $15 million
per year. Thus, incremental compliance savings and increased
refrigerant costs combined are estimated to be a reduction of at least
$24 million per year. These estimates are somewhat lower if a 3%
discount rate is used. The EPA estimates that this action will result
in forgone annual greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions benefits of
about 3 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent
(MMTCO2e). This rule will not result in an increase in ODS
emissions.
Table 2 presents a summary of the annual costs, forgone emission
reductions, and benefits associated with rescinding the extension of
the leak repair provisions to non-exempt substitutes, using a 7% or a
3% discount rate, respectively.
Table 2--Annual Costs and Benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rescinding extension of leak repair provisions to non-exempt
substitutes
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7% Discount rate 3% Discount rate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost Savings (Burden Reduction)......... $38,958,000....................... $35,264,000.
Total Cost (Refrigerant Replacement).... -$14,874,000...................... -$14,874,000.
Net Cost Savings........................ $24,084,000....................... $20,390,000.
Forgone Emissions Reductions (non- 2.946 MMTCO2e..................... 2.946 MMTCO2e.
monetized disbenefit).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional discussion of these analyses can be found in Section III
of this document and in the Analysis of the Economic Impact of the
Proposed 2018 Revisions to the National Recycling and Emission
Reduction Program in the docket.
II. The Final Rule
A. Legal Background and the 2016 Rule
This action results from the EPA's decision to revisit aspects of
the 2016 Rule's extension of the 40 CFR part 82, subpart F refrigerant
management requirements to non-exempt substitutes. That process
resulted in changes to the legal interpretation supporting the 2016
Rule, which are reflected in this action. For context, we begin by
summarizing the key statutory provisions and the EPA's view of its
legal authority as presented in the 2016 Rule. The discussion of the
EPA's statutory authority to extend refrigerant management requirements
to non-exempt substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule focused
primarily on CAA section 608, especially on sections 608(c) and 608(a).
(See generally 81 FR 82284-82288).
Section 608(a) requires the EPA to establish standards and
requirements regarding the use and disposal of class I and class II
substances. With regard to refrigerants, under sections 608(a)(1) and
608(a)(2), the EPA is required to promulgate regulations establishing
standards and requirements for the use and disposal of class I and
class II substances, respectively, during the service, repair, or
disposal of air-conditioning and refrigeration appliances and IPR.\8\
Section 608(a)(3) provides that regulations under section 608(a) are to
include requirements to reduce the use and emission of ODS to the
lowest achievable level, and to maximize the recapture and recycling of
such substances. Section 608(a)(3) further provides that ``[s]uch
regulations may include requirements to use alternative substances
(including substances which are not class I or class II substances) or
to minimize use of class I or class II substances, or to promote the
use of safe alternatives pursuant to section [612] or any combination
of the foregoing.'' \9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ We note that section 608(a) is not limited to refrigerants,
and that the EPA has applied its authority under section 608(a) to
establish or consider regulations for ODS in non-refrigerant
applications. See, e.g., 63 FR 11084.
\9\ While section 608(a)(3) provides that the regulations issued
under section 608(a) ``may include requirements to use alternative
substances (including substances which are not class I or class II
substances), . . . or to promote the use of safe alternatives
pursuant to section [612]'', the EPA is not relying upon these
provisions in 608(a)(3) in this document, as the regulatory changes
effected by the 2016 Rule, which today's action partially rescinds,
do not relate to requirements to use substitutes or promote their
use pursuant to section 612. (In implementing Title VI, the EPA has
at times used the terms ``alternative'' and ``substitute''
interchangeably. See, e.g., 81 FR 86779, n.1; 81 FR 82276, 82291.)
Furthermore, the EPA did not rely on these authorities in 608(a)(3)
in extending the refrigerant management requirements to substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule, and it is not relying on them in
addressing the underlying questions of statutory interpretation at
issue here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 608(c) establishes a self-effectuating prohibition,
commonly called the ``venting prohibition.'' \10\ Section 608(c)(1),
effective July 1, 1992, makes it unlawful for any person, in the course
of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of an appliance or
IPR to knowingly vent, release, or dispose of any ODS used as a
refrigerant in such equipment in a manner that permits that substance
to enter the environment. Section 608(c)(1) also includes an exemption
from this prohibition for ``[d]e minimis releases associated with good
faith attempts to recapture and recycle or safely dispose'' of such a
substance. Section 608(c)(2) states that, effective November 15, 1995,
``paragraph (1) shall also apply to the venting, release, or disposal
of any substitute substance for a class I or class II substance by any
person maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of an appliance
or [IPR] which contains and uses as a refrigerant any such substance,
unless the Administrator determines that venting, releasing, or
disposing of such substance does not pose a threat to the
environment.'' The EPA interprets section 608(c)(2)'s extension of
section 608(c)(1) to substitute refrigerants to extend both the
prohibition on venting and the de minimis exemption to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. This is a long-held position which the EPA is
not revisiting in this action. (See, e.g., 69 FR 11949, March 12, 2004;
and 70 FR 19274-19275, April 13, 2005). Section 608(c) does not
expressly provide that the EPA may write regulations under that
section. Section 301, however, states that the ``Administrator is
[[Page 14154]]
authorized to prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry out
his functions under [the Clean Air Act].''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ In this context, the EPA uses the term ``self-
effectuating'' to mean that the statutory prohibition on venting is
itself legally binding even in the absence of implementing
regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA interpreted section 608 of the CAA as
being ambiguous with regard to the agency's authority to establish
refrigerant management regulations for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants because Congress had not precisely spoken to this issue.
Accordingly, the EPA took the view that it had the discretion under
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
843-44 (1984), to interpret section 608 as providing the EPA with
authority to extend all aspects of its refrigerant management
regulations under section 608 to non-exempt substitute refrigerants,
including those regulations that had previously only applied to ODS
refrigerants. (See 81 FR 82283). The 2016 Rule explained that section
608(a) expressly requires the EPA to issue regulations that apply to
class I and class II substances, but it does not expressly address
whether the EPA could establish the same refrigerant management
practices for substitute substances. On the other hand, section
608(c)(2) explicitly mentions substitute refrigerants and directly
applies the provisions for ODS refrigerants in section 608(c)(1) to
them. The 2016 Rule noted that this created a tension in the regulatory
scheme for substitute refrigerants because the regulated community is
subject to the prohibition on knowing venting, releasing, or disposing
of non-exempt substitute refrigerants while maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of air conditioning and refrigeration equipment
but at the same time section 608(a) does not direct the EPA to
promulgate regulations requiring the regulated community to recover
non-exempt substitute refrigerant prior to servicing or disposing of
such equipment or to engage in any of the practices or behaviors that
the EPA has established to minimize the emission and release of ODS
refrigerants during such maintenance, service, repair, or disposal. The
2016 Rule further explained that while the subpart F regulations made
clear that ODS refrigerant releases would be considered de minimis if
(and only if) certain regulatory requirements were followed, the rules
did not provide any such clarity regarding what practices regulated
parties must follow to qualify for the de minimis exemption, and
thereby comply with the venting prohibition, for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. (See 81 FR 82284).
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA grounded its authority for the extension
of refrigerant requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants
largely on section 608(c), which the EPA interpreted to provide it
authority to promulgate regulations that interpret, explain, and
enforce the venting prohibition and the de minimis exemption as they
apply to non-exempt substitute refrigerants. (See 81 FR 82283-82284).
In reaching this interpretation, the EPA relied in part on a policy
rationale that by establishing a comprehensive and consistent framework
that applies to both ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerants, the
2016 Rule would provide clarity to the regulated community concerning
the measures that should be taken to comply with the venting
prohibition for non-exempt substitutes and would thus reduce confusion
and enhance compliance for both ODS and non-exempt substitutes. The EPA
further explained its view in the 2016 Rule that the extension of
requirements under section 608 to non-exempt substitutes was also
supported by section 608(a) because having a consistent regulatory
framework for non-exempt substitutes and ODS is expected to reduce
emissions of ODS refrigerants. In addition, the EPA located
supplemental authority for the 2016 Rule in section 301(a), which
provides authority for the EPA to ``prescribe such regulations as are
necessary to carry out [the EPA Administrator's] functions'' under the
Act. Id. Further, the EPA identified section 114, which provides
authority to the EPA Administrator to require recordkeeping and
reporting in carrying out provisions of the CAA, as providing
supplemental authority to extend the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements to non-exempt substitutes. Id.
B. The EPA's Reassessment of Its Legal Authority Under Section 608
The EPA's ability to revisit existing regulations is well-grounded
in the law. Specifically, the EPA has inherent authority to reconsider,
repeal, or revise past decisions to the extent permitted by law so long
as the agency provides a reasoned explanation. See, e.g., Encino
Motorcars LLC v. Navarro, 136 S.Ct. 2117, 2125 (2016). The authority to
reconsider prior decisions exists in part because the EPA's
interpretations of statutes it administers ``[are not] instantly carved
in stone,'' but must be evaluated ``on a continuing basis.'' Chevron
U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863-64 (1984). This is true
when, as is the case here, review is undertaken ``in response to . . .
a change in administrations.'' National Cable & Telecommunications
Ass'n v. Brand X Internet Services, 545 U.S. 967, 981 (2005). Indeed,
``[a]gencies obviously have broad discretion to reconsider a regulation
at any time.'' Clean Air Council v. Pruitt, 862 F.3d 1, 8-9 (D.C. Cir.
2017). Similarly, the fact that an agency has previously adopted one
interpretation of a statute does not preclude it from later exercising
its discretion to change its interpretation. National Cable &
Telecommunications Ass'n, 545 U.S. at 981. In addition, an agency may
``justify its policy choice by explaining why that policy `is more
consistent with statutory language' than alternative policies.'' Encino
Motorcars, 136 S.Ct. at 2127 (quoting Long Island Care at Home Ltd. v.
Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 175 (2007)). The CAA complements the EPA's inherent
authority to reconsider prior rulemakings by providing the agency with
broad authority to prescribe regulations as necessary to carry out the
agency's functions under the CAA in section 301(a).
In this action the agency has reassessed the 2016 Rule's assertion
of legal authority to extend the full set of subpart F requirements to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants under CAA section 608. While the
agency is retaining aspects of the interpretation that supported the
2016 Rule, it is revising that interpretation in some important
respects for greater consistency with the statutory text, structure,
and purposes, as described below. As in the 2016 Rule, the EPA
continues to interpret section 608 as being ambiguous with regard to
the agency's authority to establish refrigerant management regulations
for non-exempt substitute refrigerants. Sections 608(a)(1) and (2)
explicitly require the EPA to promulgate regulations regarding the use
and disposal of ODS but as these provisions make no mention of
substitutes they neither expressly preclude nor expressly authorize
regulation of substitutes for the purpose of achieving the ODS goals of
those provisions. Section 608(c)(2) does expressly mention substitute
refrigerants, but that provision focuses on prohibiting knowing
releases of substitute refrigerants in the course of specific
activities (maintenance, service, repair, and disposal) and on
providing an exemption for de minimis releases without specifying the
mechanisms for carrying out this prohibition and exemption. Thus,
Congress did not precisely delineate in section 608 the scope of the
EPA's authority to regulate substitute refrigerants by issuing
refrigerant management regulations.
The EPA also continues to believe that it is reasonable to
interpret both sections 608(a) and (c) as providing authority that
could support the extension of certain subpart F
[[Page 14155]]
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants. The EPA maintains
the position that section 608(c) is reasonably construed as providing
the agency discretionary authority to interpret, explain, and enforce
the venting prohibition and the de minimis exemption for substitute
refrigerants, as section 608(c)(2) incorporates both the prohibition
and the exemption and applies them to substitutes. Thus, these are both
elements in the statutory regime that the EPA is entrusted to
administer for substitute refrigerants. The fact that Congress extended
the de minimis exemption for ``releases associated with good faith
attempts to recapture and recycle or safely dispose of any such
substance'' to substitutes under section 608(c)(2) but did not specify
what practices or actions should be taken to qualify for this
exemption, creates a statutory ambiguity that the EPA can resolve
through regulation. However, section 608(c) is limited in the scope of
releases and activities it addresses: It specifically covers knowing
venting, release, or disposal of substitute refrigerants in the course
of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of appliances. To
the extent that the subpart F provisions extended to non-exempt
substitutes in the 2016 Rule address the potential for such releases
during one of these covered activities, those provisions continue to be
within the scope of the EPA's authority under section 608(c) under the
interpretation supporting this action.
As for section 608(a), section 608(a)(3) requires the agency to
issue regulations that reduce the use and emission of ODS to the lowest
achievable level and maximize the recapture and recycling of such
substances. While section 608(a)(3) contains discretionary language
about what requirements those regulations may include, it does not
contain any more specific mandates about how the required objectives
should be achieved. Given this ambiguity, the EPA reasonably interprets
section 608(a) to provide authority to issue regulations that reduce
the use and emission of ODS to the lowest achievable level or that
maximize the recapture and recycling of such substances, even if the
regulations do not directly regulate ODS. Thus, as in the 2016 Rule, to
the extent that the extension of certain subpart F requirements to non-
exempt substitutes is necessary to achieve the purposes set forth in
section 608(a)(3) (i.e., reducing the use and emission of ODS to the
lowest achievable level or maximizing the recapture and recycling of
such substances), the EPA concludes that the extension is within the
ambit of its authority under section 608(a).
In contrast to the 2016 Rule, however, the EPA has concluded that
its statutory authority under section 608, taking that authority as a
whole, does not extend as far with respect to substitutes as it does
with respect to ODS. This conclusion is supported by the text and
structure of section 608. The fact that Congress specifically included
the term ``substitutes'' in section 608(c) but not in sections
608(a)(1) or (2), contrasted with the express references to ODS (class
I and class II substances) in both subsections, suggests that the EPA's
authority to address substitutes under section 608 is more limited than
its authority to address ODS. If Congress had intended to convey
authority to the EPA to promulgate the same, full set of refrigerant
management requirements for substitutes as for ODS, it is reasonable to
expect that Congress would have expressly included substitutes in
sections 608(a)(1) or (2), as it did for section 608(c)--but it did
not. In addition, the differences in the verbs used in section 608(a)
(authorizing regulations related to the ``use and disposal'' of ODS
``including use and disposal during service, repair, or disposal'' of
appliances) compared to those used in section 608(c) (prohibiting
knowing releases ``in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing'' of appliances) further supports the conclusion that
Congress envisioned that the regulations under section 608(a) would
affect a broader range of activities than those under section 608(c),
as regulations under section 608(a) could address any use or disposal
of ODS, rather than being limited to particular activities.
In sum, while the EPA continues to interpret section 608 to provide
some authority to regulate substitute refrigerants, the EPA now reads
sections 608(a) and (c) together to determine that its authority is
more limited for substitute refrigerants than for ODS. In addition, the
EPA continues to interpret CAA section 301(a), which provides that the
EPA may ``prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry out [the
EPA Administrator's] functions'' under the Act, to supplement its
authority to issue regulations necessary to address substitute
refrigerants under section 608(c). Further, the agency continues to
interpret CAA section 114, which provides authority to the EPA
Administrator to require recordkeeping and reporting in carrying out
provisions of the CAA, as providing supplemental authority to extend
the subpart F recordkeeping and reporting requirements to non-exempt
substitutes.
C. The EPA Lacked Authority Under Section 608 To Extend Leak Repair
Requirements To Substitute Refrigerants
Applying the interpretive framework described in Section II.B
above, the EPA has re-examined whether the 2016 Rule's extension of the
leak repair requirements to appliances that contain only substitute
refrigerants was within its authority under section 608, either as (1)
an appropriate means of interpreting, explaining, and enforcing the
venting prohibition and the de minimis exemption under section 608(c),
or (2) as regulations that are necessary to fulfill the purposes of
section 608(a) to reduce the use and emission of ODS to the lowest
achievable level or to maximize the recapture and recycling of ODS. As
described further below, based on that legal analysis, the agency
concludes that the extension of the leak repair requirements to non-
exempt substitute refrigerants exceeded the EPA's legal authority under
section 608 because it relied on an unreasonable interpretation of that
authority. Consequently, the EPA determines that the extension of the
leak repair requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants must be
rescinded and is finalizing that rescission in this action. This
rescission is also consistent with the agency's view that the scope of
its authority under section 608 is more limited for substitutes than
for ODS, and the EPA today is finalizing changes to its subpart F
regulations to conform those regulations to its interpretation of the
statute.
i. Section 608(c)
To justify the extension of the leak repair requirements to non-
exempt substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule, the EPA reversed its
longstanding position that ``topping off'' leaking appliances was not
knowing venting or a knowing release of refrigerant in the course of
maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of an appliance within
the meaning of section 608(c). The EPA's historic position, and the one
that the agency is returning to through this action, is that
refrigerant released during the normal operation of an appliance is
generally not subject to the venting prohibition.
When establishing the original leak repair provisions in 1993, the
EPA stated that:
[T]he venting prohibition itself, which applies to the
maintenance, service, repair, and disposal of equipment, does not
prohibit ``topping off'' systems, which leads to emissions of
refrigerant during the use of equipment. The provision on knowing
releases does, however, include the situation in which a technician
is practically certain
[[Page 14156]]
that his or her conduct will cause a release of refrigerant during
the maintenance, service, repair, or disposal of equipment. Knowing
releases also include situations in which a technician closes his or
her eyes to obvious facts or fails to investigate them when aware of
facts that demand investigation. [58 FR 28672.]
In the 2016 Rule, the EPA changed the agency's interpretation of
the venting prohibition as part of the rationale that supported
applying the leak repair requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants. The EPA stated in the 2016 Rule that it:
concludes that its statements in the 1993 Rule presented an overly
narrow interpretation of the statutory venting prohibition.
Consistent with the direction articulated in the proposed 2010 Leak
Repair Rule, EPA is adopting a broader interpretation. When
refrigerant must be added to an existing appliance, other than when
originally charging the system or for a seasonal variance, the owner
or operator necessarily knows that the system has leaks. At that
point the owner or operator is required to calculate the leak rate.
If the leaks exceed the applicable leak rate for that particular
type of appliance, the owner or operator will know that absent
repairs, subsequent additions of refrigerant will be released in a
manner that will permit the refrigerant to enter the environment.
Therefore, EPA interprets section 608(c) such that if a person adds
refrigerant to an appliance that he or she knows is leaking, he or
she also violates the venting prohibition unless he or she has
complied with the applicable practices referenced in Sec.
82.154(a)(2), as revised, including the leak repair requirements, as
applicable. [81 FR 82285.] \11\
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\11\ The EPA did not finalize the 2010 leak repair proposal (75
FR 78558). As noted in the 2016 Rule (81 FR 82275), the EPA withdrew
the 2010 proposal in the 2016 rulemaking and re-proposed elements on
the 2010 proposal in the notice of proposed rulemaking (80 FR 69461)
for the 2016 Rule.
The EPA now concludes that this 2016 interpretation was
unreasonable and that extending the leak repair provisions to
substitute refrigerants exceeded the scope of the agency's authority
under section 608(c)(2). The leak repair provisions include
requirements to determine whether an appliance is leaking above the
threshold leak rate applicable to that type of appliance, to repair an
appliance that leaks above the applicable leak rate, and to conduct
verification tests and periodic leak inspections on appliances that
have exceeded the threshold leak rate, as well as requirements to
retrofit or retire appliances that are not repaired and recordkeeping
and reporting requirements. The 2016 interpretation is an unreasonable
reading of section 608(c)(2) because the refrigerant releases from such
leaks typically occur during the normal operation of the appliance,
rather than ``in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of'' an appliance. The operational leaks that trigger the
leak repair provisions may take the form of a slow leak that results in
the need to add refrigerant, and such releases occur in the weeks or
months prior to the servicing event. Leaks may also result from an
unintended catastrophic failure, which leads to a subsequent service
event to recharge the appliance. Neither of these types of releases
typically occur in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing of an appliance. Rather, in these situations the release of
refrigerant typically occurs before the servicing event, and the owner
or operator may not be aware of the release until it affects equipment
performance. The EPA has always understood that few appliances are
leak-free, which further supports the notion that leaks commonly occur
during the normal operation of an appliance, rather than during
appliance maintenance, service, repair, or disposal.\12\ The EPA has
also recognized that ``[t]his is particularly likely for larger and
more complicated appliances like those subject to the subpart F leak
repair provisions.'' (81 FR 82313).
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\12\ Recognizing that appliances can leak during their normal
operation, Sec. 82.157(g) requires periodic leak inspections of
appliances with 50 or more pounds of refrigerant that have been
repaired after leaking above the applicable threshold rate.
Automatic leak detection equipment is also allowed in lieu of
inspections for such appliances, or portions of such appliances.
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In addition, while the 2016 Rule cited various dictionary
definitions of the term ``maintain'' to support an interpretation that
the inclusion of the concept of maintenance in section 608(c) covered a
broad range of activities involved in preserving equipment in normal
working order (see 81 FR 82291), the EPA does not believe that Congress
intended the statutory term ``maintaining'' in section 608(c) to
include the normal operation of an appliance. Congress did use broad
language in 608(a) (``use . . . of class I and class II substances'')
that encompasses activities during normal operation of appliances. If
Congress had intended for 608(c) to apply to normal operations, it
could have included the term ``use'' in section 608(c), as it did in
section 608(a)--but it did not. In addition, the term appears in
section 608(c) as part of a group with three other terms (``servicing,
repairing, or disposing'') that are distinct from normal operation of
an appliance. Thus, reading the term in the overall context of section
608, the EPA does not believe that it is reasonable to interpret
``maintaining'' to include the normal operation of the appliance.
The EPA is accordingly returning to the agency's reasonable
interpretation of 608(c) with respect to leaks, which had been long-
held until it was revised in the 2016 Rule. Based on this change in
interpretation, the EPA therefore concludes that the leak repair
provisions apply to activities and releases that are too distinct from
those identified in section 608(c) to provide the EPA with regulatory
authority to extend the leak repair regulations to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants.\13\
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\13\ Furthermore, the leak repair provisions are not
sufficiently related to ``good faith attempts to recapture and
recycle or safely dispose'' of refrigerant under the de minimis
exemption in section 608(c) for that provision to provide
independent authority for the extension of the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants.
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The EPA notes that under this interpretation the venting
prohibition under section 608(c) would continue to apply to actions
taken in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing
of appliances containing non-exempt substitute refrigerant, including
those containing 50 or more pounds of such refrigerant. For example,
knowing release from cutting refrigerant lines when disposing of an
appliance is prohibited. Similarly, opening an appliance to repair a
component without first isolating it and recovering the refrigerant
would typically lead to a knowing release of refrigerant to the
environment during the service, maintenance, or repair of an appliance
and thus would also be prohibited. It is also possible that some
``topping off'' may occur in an appliance with a leak that is so
visible, audible, or frequent that adding refrigerant to the appliance
creates the practical certainty that the refrigerant will be released
contemporaneously with the servicing event to add refrigerant and
therefore may constitute a knowing release subject to the venting
prohibition. For example, hearing hissing or noticing a ruptured line
while continuing to add refrigerant to an appliance would constitute a
knowing release. However, the EPA has no information to suggest that
this occurs in a substantial number of situations, and the mere
possibility of such an event does not justify a blanket interpretation
that ``topping off'' an appliance that has leaked, absent adherence to
the requirements at Sec. 82.157, is necessarily and per se a violation
of 608(c).
[[Page 14157]]
ii. Section 608(a)
The EPA stated in the preamble to the 2016 Rule that the agency's
authority for extending the refrigerant management regulations to
substitute refrigerants is based in part on section 608(a), in light of
the corresponding reductions in ODS emissions and increases in ODS
recapture and recycling that are expected to result from requiring
consistent practices for ODS and substitute refrigerants. (81 FR
82288). In part, this was based on the potential for cross-
contamination, refrigerant mixing, and related releases from ODS
appliances in the absence of consistent practices. The response to
comments for the 2016 Rule \14\ also noted, in the context of
explaining the EPA's authority for the revisions to Sec. 82.157, that
providing a consistent standard for ODS and non-exempt substitute
refrigerants would reduce emissions of ODS by reducing the incidence of
failure to follow the requirements for ODS appliances due to
refrigerant confusion. However, in neither discussion did the EPA
address whether, if all other subpart F requirements were extended to
non-exempt substitutes, it would be necessary to also extend Sec.
82.157 to non-exempt substitute refrigerants to serve the purposes of
section 608(a), as articulated in sections 608(a)(3)(A) and (B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Response to Comments for the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking:
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Update to the Refrigerant
Management Requirements under the Clean Air Act, pages 13-14 (pdf
pages 18-19). Available at: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-HQ-OAR-2015-0453-0226.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After further consideration, the EPA believes that these statements
in the 2016 Rule, which were advanced generally and without distinction
to support extending all the subpart F requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, failed to recognize that the leak repair
provisions have a more attenuated connection to the purposes of section
608(a) when applied to non-exempt substitute refrigerants than do the
rest of the subpart F requirements, especially once application of all
the other subpart F requirements to such refrigerants is taken into
account. After further consideration, the EPA believes that extending
the leak repair requirements to appliances containing non-exempt
substitutes is not necessary to meet the purposes of section 608(a).
Because the EPA is retaining the other subpart F requirements for non-
exempt substitute refrigerants, the rescission of the extension only of
the leak repair requirements is unlikely to directly affect ODS
emissions or the recapture and recycling of ODS. For example, since the
EPA is retaining the requirement that only a certified technician can
open an appliance containing non-exempt substitute refrigerant, it is
unlikely that leaks in appliances with 50 or more pounds of ODS
refrigerant would not be repaired because of a difference in the duty
to repair between appliances containing ODS and those containing
substitute refrigerants. The repair of leaks in ODS-containing
appliances in this size range has been required since 1993, and owners
and operators of such appliances as well as certified technicians are
well aware of those requirements.
The EPA also does not believe that applying the leak repair
provisions to appliances that use only non-exempt substitute
refrigerants would independently reduce cross-contamination,
refrigerant mixing, or related releases from an ODS appliance. As
discussed further in Section II.D of this document, the agency will
continue to apply the other elements of the 608 program, such as the
refrigerant sales restriction, technician certification, reclamation
requirements, and evacuation standards, to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, and these elements address those concerns. Taken
together, the other subpart F requirements also reduce the incidence of
failure to follow the requirements for ODS appliances. By contrast,
application specifically of the leak repair requirements to equipment
containing only substitute refrigerants would not lead to additional
reductions in ODS emissions. Nor would it lead to additional increases
in the recapture and recycling of ODS because there is no ODS in these
appliances to be recaptured or recycled.
Thus, insofar as the 2016 Rule was grounded in an argument that
section 608(a) supports the extension of the leak repair provisions to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants, the EPA is withdrawing that
interpretation. Accordingly, the EPA concludes that the connection
between applying the leak repair requirements to appliances with only
substitute refrigerants and serving the purposes in section 608(a)(3)
is too tenuous to reasonably support reliance on CAA section 608(a) as
a basis for authority to extend the leak repair requirements to non-
exempt substitutes.
D. The EPA Had Authority Under Section 608 To Extend Subpart F
Provisions Other Than Leak Repair Provisions To Substitute Refrigerants
The EPA requested comments on whether the agency should withdraw
the entire extension of subpart F requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants in the 2016 Rule given its proposed interpretation. As
described in more detail below, after considering the comments
received, and analyzing the relevant provisions under the interpretive
framework described in Section II.B above, the EPA concludes that,
except for the leak repair provisions, the 2016 Rule's extension of the
subpart F requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants was within
the scope of its authority under section 608. Thus, aside from the
rescission of the extension of the leak repair provisions discussed in
Section II.C, the EPA is not withdrawing the extension of any of the
non-leak repair provisions in subpart F to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants.
i. Section 608(c)
The EPA is retaining the extension of the non-leak repair
provisions in subpart F for non-exempt substitute refrigerants as
appropriate measures to interpret, explain, and enforce the venting
prohibition and the de minimis exemption for non-exempt substitute
refrigerants under 608(c). In contrast to the leak repair requirements,
the other provisions of subpart F that the EPA extended to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule relate directly to releases
that necessarily occur in the course of maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing of an appliance. Accordingly, those provisions
directly address the potential for knowing releases of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants that would be within the scope of section
608(c)(2) or the application of the de minimis exemption to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants under section 608(c)(2), and therefore are
within the EPA's authority under section 608(c)(2).
The EPA has long recognized connections between the non-leak repair
requirements in subpart F and the potential for releases to occur
during appliance maintenance, service, repair, or disposal, and
continues to do so. For example, failure to properly evacuate an
appliance (Sec. 82.156 and Sec. 82.158) before opening it for
servicing will create the practical certainty that the refrigerant in
the appliance will be released during the servicing event. The
requirement that small appliances be equipped with a process stub
(Sec. 82.154(e)(2)) facilitates the removal of refrigerant at
servicing and disposal. The requirements (Sec. Sec. 82.156 and 82.158)
that recovery and/or recycling equipment be used during the
maintenance, servicing, repair or disposal of an appliance, and that
such equipment be tested and
[[Page 14158]]
certified by an EPA-approved laboratory or organization, are intended
``to ensure that recycling and recovery equipment on the market is
capable of limiting emissions'' during such servicing and disposal
activities. (58 FR 28682). The vapor recovery efficiency and the
efficiency of noncondensable purge devices on recycling machines affect
total recovery efficiency and thus how much refrigerant will be
released to the environment once the appliance is opened for
maintenance, servicing, repair or disposal. After a certified
technician properly evacuates an appliance according to the
requirements of Sec. 82.156, any remaining refrigerant that is then
released during the maintenance, service, repair or disposal of the
appliance can be considered a de minimis release associated with good
faith attempts to recycle or recover refrigerants. Similarly, disposing
of an appliance without removing the refrigerant as required under
Sec. 82.155 will result in the release of any remaining refrigerant
during disposal of the appliance. The EPA has long emphasized this
point. When the EPA first issued the safe disposal requirements in
1993, the EPA stated: ``The Agency wishes to clarify that the
prohibition on venting refrigerant includes individuals who are
preparing to dispose of a used appliance.'' (58 FR 28703). The
recordkeeping provisions at Sec. 82.155(c)(2) are necessary to ensure
that disposers of small appliances are adhering to the venting
prohibition and the evacuation requirements. Similarly, the
recordkeeping provisions at Sec. 82.156(a)(3) ensure that technicians
are adhering to the venting prohibition and evacuation requirements
when disposing of mid-sized appliances. These recordkeeping
requirements help ensure accountability for compliance with the venting
prohibition, as well as improving the enforceability of the
prohibition. With respect to the sales restriction and technician
certification requirements, consistent with its long-standing view, the
EPA continues to believe that ``unrestricted sales will enable
untrained or undertrained technicians to obtain access to refrigerants
that are likely to be used improperly in connection with servicing
activities that will result in the venting of refrigerants'' (58 FR
28698) and that restricting servicing activities to technicians trained
on the regulatory requirements and proper use of equipment reduces
emissions and enhances compliance (see 58 FR 28692). Further,
``[e]ducating technicians on how to contain and conserve refrigerant
effectively, curtailing illegal venting into the atmosphere'' was one
of the primary reasons many technicians commented in support of the
certification program when it was initially promulgated. (58 FR 28691).
Thus, the EPA continues to agree with the assessment in the 2016
Rule that these refrigerant management provisions address releases that
necessarily occur in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing of an appliance. Accordingly, the agency concludes that
the 2016 Rule's extension of these subpart F requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants is within the scope of the EPA's authority
under CAA section 608(c)(2), because these requirements interpret,
explain, or help enforce that provision's venting prohibition and the
application of the de minimis exemption.
The EPA views the agency's authority to extend the reclamation
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants under section 608(c)
as relating specifically to appliance servicing and disposal. By
``reclamation requirements,'' the EPA means: The requirements under
Sec. 82.164, including the requirements to reclaim used refrigerant
before it is sold for use in an appliance; the requirement that
reclaimed refrigerant be tested and meet AHRI Standard 700-2016,
Specifications for Refrigerants (an industry developed consensus
standard that the EPA has adopted into its regulations); and the
requirement that reclaimers be certified by the EPA and agree to meet
certain standards. The EPA interprets section 608(c), particularly the
provisions relating to the servicing and disposal of appliances as
described below, to provide authority that supports the extension of
the reclamation requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants.
Section 608(c)(1) states that ``it shall be unlawful for any person
in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of an
appliance . . . to knowingly vent or otherwise knowingly release or
dispose of any class I or class II substance used as a refrigerant . .
. in a manner which permits such substance to enter the environment.''
Furthermore, the de minimis exemption encompasses ``releases associated
with good faith attempts to recapture and recycle or safely dispose of
any such substance . . .'' As described above, the EPA interprets
section 608(c)(2) to extend the prohibitions in 608(c)(1), including
the restriction on releases in the course of disposing and servicing of
appliances and the de minimis exemption, to substitute substances.
As part of the EPA's authority to interpret, explain, and enforce
the venting prohibition under 608(c), the agency also has authority to
address what constitutes disposal of an appliance. The agency defines
``disposal'' in Subpart F to mean ``the process leading to and
including'' several listed activities, such as ``the discharge,
deposit, dumping or placing of any discarded appliance into or on any
land or water;'' the ``disassembly of any appliance for discharge,
deposit, dumping or placing of its discarded component parts into or on
any land or water'' or for reuse of its component parts; the
``vandalism of any appliance such that the refrigerant is released into
the environment or would be released into the environment if it had not
been recovered prior to the destructive activity;'' and the ``recycling
of any appliance for scrap.'' (Sec. 82.152).
The reclamation requirements explain how to ``recapture and
recycle'' refrigerants that are recovered in the course of servicing or
disposing of an appliance in lieu of releasing them into the
environment. Reclamation, a process whereby used refrigerant is
purified to meet required specifications and then permitted to be sold
for reuse, is a means of ``recaptur[ing] and recycl[ing]'' refrigerant.
The reclamation requirements have the added benefit of supporting a
market in which technicians can sell recovered refrigerant to
reclaimers for compensation; this provides a financial benefit to
technicians who recover refrigerant during appliance disposal rather
than venting it.\15\
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\15\ Much of the refrigerant recovered and sent for reclamation
occurs during the disposal of an appliance. However, some
refrigerant that is sent for reclamation is also recovered during
the servicing of an appliance, including the retrofitting of an
appliance for use with a different refrigerant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The interpretation that the reclamation requirements directly
relate to interpreting, explaining, and enforcing the prohibition on
venting during appliance servicing and disposal is further supported by
the fact that Congress included ``releases associated with good faith
attempts to . . . recycle or safely dispose of any such substance'' in
the de minimis exemption to the venting prohibition. This indicates
that Congress clearly contemplated that certain refrigerant-related
actions could be implicated by the appliance-related actions covered by
the venting prohibition.
The EPA further interprets the phrase ``recycle or safely dispose
of any such substance,'' when referring to either ODS or non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, to include reclamation. Accordingly, the EPA
believes the extension of the reclamation
[[Page 14159]]
requirements to non-exempt substitutes refrigerants is supported by
608(c) because these requirements interpret, explain, and enforce
section 608(c)'s prohibition on releases of non-exempt substitute
refrigerants during the servicing and disposal of appliances and the de
minimis exemption for recycling or safely disposing of such
refrigerants.
ii. Section 608(a)
The EPA also concludes that section 608(a) provides the EPA
authority for the 2016 Rule's extension of the non-leak repair subpart
F requirements to the extent that there is demonstrably a connection
between those requirements and the purposes of 608(a), as articulated
in sections 608(a)(3)(A) and (B). As the EPA concluded in the preamble
to the 2016 Rule:
This action extending the regulations under subpart F to non-
exempt substitutes is additionally supported by the authority in
section 608(a) because regulations that minimize the release and
maximize the recapture and recovery of non-exempt substitutes will
also reduce the release and increase the recovery of ozone-depleting
substances. Improper handling of substitute refrigerants is likely
to contaminate appliances and recovery cylinders with mixtures of
ODS and non-ODS substitutes, which can lead to illegal venting
because such mixtures are difficult or expensive to reclaim or
appropriately dispose of. . . . In short, the authority to
promulgate regulations regarding the use of class I and II
substances encompasses the authority to establish regulations
regarding the proper handling of substitutes where this is needed to
reduce emissions and maximize recapture and recycling of class I and
II substances. Applying consistent requirements to all non-exempt
refrigerants will reduce complexity and increase clarity for the
regulated community and promote compliance with those requirements
for ODS refrigerants, as well as their substitutes. [81 FR 82286.]
The 2016 Rule discussed how failure to apply consistent standards
to appliances containing non-exempt substitute refrigerants and those
containing ODS refrigerants could lead to emissions of ODS (81 FR
82288). After additional consideration, the EPA affirms the potential
for such inconsistent requirements to increase ODS emissions. For
example, applying the sales restriction and technician certification
requirements for persons servicing appliances using non-exempt
substitute refrigerants reduces the possibility that refrigerant in the
appliances may be misidentified or mishandled by an uncertified person
attempting to service the appliance. Improper handling of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants by persons lacking the requisite training may
contaminate appliances and recovery cylinders with mixtures of ODS and
non-ODS substitutes. Contaminated appliances may lead to equipment
failures and emissions from those systems, including emissions of ODS.
Contaminated refrigerant is more costly to reclaim for re-use and the
only other option besides reclamation (or recycling for use by the same
owner) to avoid its entry to the environment is that it be destroyed.
However, the costs of reclaiming or destroying these mixed refrigerants
incentivizes intentional releases, including of ODS, to the atmosphere
from contaminated appliances and recovery cylinders. Applying the same
requirements for servicing and disposing of appliances containing ODS
and non-exempt substitute refrigerant ensures standard procedures are
followed, which reduces the possibility for errors and the risk of ODS
emissions associated with misidentification or mishandling of the
refrigerant.
The EPA also concludes that section 608(a) provides the EPA
authority for the 2016 Rule's extension of the reclamation requirements
to non-exempt substitute refrigerants. The EPA established the
reclamation requirement for used ODS refrigerant in 1993 to prevent
equipment damage, and the resultant emissions caused by use of
contaminated refrigerant in appliances, and to provide confidence in
the market for used refrigerants (58 FR 28678). Because of the venting
prohibition, combined with the phaseout of ODS, the EPA in 1993
anticipated a large increase in recovered refrigerant and was concerned
about the risks to appliances posed by use of contaminated refrigerant.
As the EPA stated in the 1993 Rule, damaged equipment would often leak
during operation and would require servicing or replacement more often
than undamaged equipment, increasing refrigerant emissions. Damage to
equipment would also reduce consumer confidence in the quality of used
refrigerant, leading to erosion of the market for used refrigerants and
possibly to their release. As described further below, the 2016 Rule's
extension of the reclamation requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants addresses these concerns and therefore furthers the goals
of section 608(a)(3) to reduce the emissions of ODS and maximize the
recapture and recycling of ODS.
An important aspect of the reclamation requirements is the
requirement that used refrigerant be reclaimed to certain purity
standards prior to sale for re-use. By requiring that used refrigerant
be reclaimed prior to sale, the reclamation requirements also prohibit
the immediate reuse of recovered refrigerant, with the exception of use
in equipment owned by the same entity owning the equipment from which
the refrigerant was removed. In 1993, the EPA expressed concern that
recovered refrigerant may contain moisture, acids, oil, particulates,
or other contaminants that can lead to serious damage to the equipment
if it is reused without taking some action to remove these
contaminants. Recovered non-exempt substitute refrigerants today
contain those same contaminants as in 1993 with one significant
difference: The increase in the use of substitute refrigerants,
including multi-component blends, has resulted in more types of
refrigerant encountered by technicians. Often ODS and non-ODS
refrigerants are improperly recovered into the same recovery cylinder,
leading to mixed refrigerant which contains both ODS and non-ODS. This
is supported by data reported annually by EPA-certified reclaimers
under Sec. 82.164(d)(3) which show that the amount of mixed
refrigerant they receive is increasing.\16\ The lack of consistent
reclamation requirements for non-exempt substitutes could result in
confusion about what to do if there is uncertainty about the contents
of a cylinder or about the proper treatment of mixtures. Equipment can
be damaged, resulting in refrigerant emissions, including ODS
emissions, if such mixed refrigerant is not sent for reclamation but
rather sold and recharged into appliances designed for non-exempt
substitute refrigerants. Reclamation requirements to remove impurities
and separate mixed refrigerants reduce the likelihood of equipment
failure and subsequent emissions of ODS. These requirements also
promote the recycling of ODS because once it is separated from the
mixed refrigerant the ODS can subsequently be reclaimed for reuse.
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\16\ These data can be found at: https://www.epa.gov/section608/summary-refrigerant-reclamation-trends.
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In addition, the combined effect of the reclamation provisions
relating to EPA's certification of reclaimers, the purity standards
that reclaimed refrigerant must meet, and the testing of that
refrigerant to ensure it meets those standards together provide
confidence in the market for used refrigerants. Reclamation is
performed by private businesses and is subject to market forces.
Currently these market forces provide a financial incentive to
technicians to recover refrigerant and send it to a reclaimer in as
pure a state as possible to maximize the
[[Page 14160]]
compensation they receive. Absent that financial incentive, technicians
may be more likely to vent the refrigerant than to send it for
reclamation, which could lead to ODS emissions when the refrigerant
vented is an ODS or a mixture containing ODS. These market forces also
sustain an industry whose function is to reprocess used refrigerant.
Reclamation is critical to achieving the goal of maximizing the
recapture and recycling of ODS, as set forth in section 608(a)(3)(B).
Absent reclamation, banks of ODS refrigerant found in existing
equipment, in stockpiles, or mixed with other used refrigerant will
instead likely be released, given the costs of destruction. In sum, the
EPA concludes that the extension of the reclamation requirements to
non-exempt substitutes is supported by section 608(a)(3) because
extending these requirements to non-exempt substitutes serves the
purposes set forth in 608(a)(3) of maximizing the recapture and
recycling of ODS and reducing ODS emissions to the lowest achievable
level.
In conclusion, because the application of the non-leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants is connected to the
purposes of section 608(a)(3) via the corresponding reductions in ODS
emissions and increases in ODS recapture and recycling that are
expected to result from maintaining the reclamation requirements for
non-exempt substitute refrigerants and retaining consistent practices
for ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerants. Therefore, the EPA
concludes that the extension of these requirements is within the scope
of its authority under CAA 608(a).
III. Summary and Response to Major Comments
This section summarizes many comments received on this rule,
particularly those related to the EPA's legal authority to regulate
substitute refrigerants under section 608, and the EPA's responses.
Other comments received for this action are addressed in Sections IV
and V below, as well as in the response to comments document found in
the docket for this action.
A. Comments on the Scope of the Agency's Authority To Regulate
Substitutes Under Section 608(c)
The EPA received multiple comments in support of the agency's
authority to interpret and explain section 608(c) through the issuance
of regulations. These commenters point to the text, purpose, context,
and legislative history of section 608(c) to argue that the EPA has
broad authority to regulate substitute refrigerants to prevent illegal
venting. Most of these commenters support the EPA's view of its
authority as articulated in the 2016 Rule, both for the leak repair
provisions and the non-leak repair provisions in subpart F. Other
commenters, however, state that the EPA's authority under 608(c) does
not allow for the leak repair provisions established in the 2016 Rule.
One of those commenters states that the EPA has authority to establish
the non-leak repair requirements for substitutes, but not the leak
repair provisions. Another one of those commenters states that the
EPA's authority under 608(c) does not extend so far as to authorize
regulations for substitutes that are co-extensive with the regulations
required under 608(a) requirements for ODS. That commenter states that
the lack of an explicit grant of authority from Congress for the EPA to
establish a regulatory program for substitutes indicates that no such
authority exists, arguing that Congressional silence is not a
delegation of authority to regulate. Another commenter states that the
EPA lacks authority to regulate substitutes in any manner under section
608(c). The commenter states that 608(c) is a self-effectuating
enforceable requirement to use good management practices and does not
provide the EPA with the authority to implement a regulatory program.
The agency agrees that the EPA's authority to issue regulations
interpreting, explaining, and enforcing section 608(c) is not co-
extensive with its authority to regulate under section 608(a). Thus,
the agency disagrees with the comments that supported the view of the
EPA's authority as articulated in the 2016 Rule. As explained in
Section II above, the agency now interprets sections 608(a) and (c)
together to determine that while these provisions are reasonably read
to provide it some authority to regulate substitute refrigerants, its
authority is more limited for substitute refrigerants than for ODS. In
so doing, the EPA recognizes and gives weight to the fact that sections
608(a) and 608(c) differ from one another in some key respects,
including the fact that 608(a)(1) and (2) expressly require the EPA to
issue regulations for class I and class II substances, but include no
such requirement for--or indeed any mention of--substitutes. In
contrast, 608(c) does explicitly apply to substitute refrigerants, but
that subsection leaves the EPA discretion as to whether to promulgate
regulations implementing its provisions and is focused on preventing
knowing releases of refrigerants in the course of maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of appliances and on providing an
exemption for de minimis releases without specifying the mechanisms for
carrying out this prohibition and exemption. In light of these
differences in wording between 608(a) and 608(c), the EPA concludes in
this action that the 2016 Rule's extension of the full set of subpart F
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants exceeded its
statutory authority under section 608 because the extension of the full
set of requirements (i.e., as an entirety) was inconsistent with the
more limited scope of the EPA's authority under section 608 to regulate
substitute refrigerants as compared with its authority to regulate ODS
refrigerants. In addition, as explained in Section II of this document,
the EPA has concluded that the 2016 Rule's extension of the leak repair
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants exceeded its
authority under both sections 608(c) and 608(a). Therefore, the agency
disagrees with the comments concluding that the EPA did have authority
to extend the leak repair requirements to non-exempt substitute
refrigerants, and agrees with the comments that the extension of these
requirements exceed the agency's authority under 608(c).
To the extent that the comments are intended to suggest that any
overlap between regulations under sections 608(a) and 608(c) exceeds
the EPA's statutory authority, the agency disagrees. The fact that
Congress required the EPA to address ODS refrigerants in a specific way
under section 608(a), and then included a separate provision under
608(c) to address knowing venting, release, and disposal of ODS and
substitute refrigerants during certain activities, does not demonstrate
that Congress intended to preclude the EPA from implementing section
608(a) and the venting prohibition in section 608(c) by using similar
requirements for ODS and substitute refrigerants, when such an approach
is independently consistent with those statutory provisions. Taking
such an approach does not mean that the agency is using section 608(a)
to implement section 608(c), or vice versa, but instead simply
indicates that these regulatory approaches can be justified under both
section 608(a) and 608(c).\17\
[[Page 14161]]
For example, as explained in Section II above, the EPA concludes it was
within its statutory authority under both sections 608(a) and 608(c) to
extend the non-leak repair provisions in subpart F to substitute
refrigerants.
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\17\ As explained in the 2016 Rule, the EPA continues to believe
that using section 608(c) to establish similar requirements to those
authorized under section 608(a) does not render section 608(a) a
nullity: ``Unlike section 608(c), section 608(a) is not limited to
refrigerants. EPA has applied its authority under section 608(a) to
establish or consider regulations for ODS in non-refrigerant
applications. As an example, in 1998, EPA issued a rule on halon
management under the authority of section 608(a)(2) (63 FR 11084,
March 5, 1998). In that action, EPA noted that section 608(a)(2)
`directs EPA to establish standards and requirements regarding the
use and disposal of class I and II substances other than
refrigerants.' 63 FR 11085. Similarly, EPA considered whether to
establish a requirement to use gas impermeable tarps to reduce
emissions of methyl bromide under section 608(a)(2), ultimately
determining not to do so for technological and economic reasons. 63
FR 6008 (February 5, 1998).'' (82 FR 82290).
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With regard to the comments that the EPA does not have regulatory
authority under section 608(c) either because that provision is self-
effectuating or because it does not contain explicit authorization to
issue regulations, the EPA disagrees. The agency has long held and
continues to maintain that 608(c), though self-effectuating, provides
authority to issue implementing regulations that interpret, explain,
and enforce the venting prohibition and the de minimis exemption in
section 608(c) and that include the venting prohibition in the overall
context of the regulatory scheme. (See, e.g., 69 FR 11947). Thus, while
section 608(c) does not include a requirement to issue regulations as
section 608(a) does, the agency does not view the lack of a requirement
as equivalent to a prohibition on issuing regulations under section
608(c). This is not a situation where Congress was silent as to whether
the statutory provision applies to substitutes. Rather, Congress
specifically included substitutes in the venting prohibition. It also
provided the agency additional discretion to exempt substitutes from
the venting prohibition when it determined that the venting, release,
or disposal of the substitute did not pose a threat to the environment.
The EPA construes the inclusion of substitutes in section 608(c)(2) in
these ways to indicate that Congress contemplated that regulation of
substitutes would occur. Furthermore, while the EPA is not relying on
CAA section 301(a) for primary or substantive authority in this action,
the agency believes that the text of CAA section 301(a), which provides
that the EPA may ``prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry
out [the EPA Administrator's] functions'' under the Act, supplements
its authority under section 608(c) to issue regulations that interpret,
explain, or enforce the venting prohibition and the de minimis
exemption. In addition, as some commenters point out, the legislative
history indicates that in establishing the venting prohibition,
Congress expected the EPA to promulgate regulatory ``provisions to
foster implementation of this prohibition, including guidance on what
constitutes `de minimis' and `good faith'.'' Report of the Committee on
Environment and Public Works United States Senate, Report Accompanying
S. 1630 (S. Rept. 101-228) (December 20, 1989) at 396 (reprinted in 5 A
Legislative History of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, at 8736
(1993)).
Furthermore, as explained in Section II of this document, the
agency continues to view section 608 as ambiguous in important
respects. In section 608(c) Congress provided an exemption to the
venting prohibition for certain de minimis releases, but it did not
define what releases would be considered ``de minimis'' nor which
activities would be considered ``good faith attempts to recapture and
recycle or safely dispose'' of such substances. Where Congress has not
directly spoken to an issue or has left ambiguity in the statute, that
silence or ambiguity creates an assumption that ``Congress implicitly
delegated to the agency the power to make policy choices that represent
a reasonable accommodation of conflicting policies that are committed
to the agency's care by the statute.'' National Ass'n of Mfrs. v.
United States DOI, 134 F.3d 1095, 1106 (D.C. Cir. 1998). As the U.S.
Supreme Court has explained, the ``power of an administrative agency to
administer a congressionally created . . . program necessarily requires
the formulation of policy and the making of rules to fill any gap left,
implicitly or explicitly, by Congress.'' Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843-44.
Accordingly, Congress's silence with regard to carrying out the venting
prohibition and the exception for certain releases leaves a gap for the
Agency to fill.
Consistent with this view, the EPA's regulations at Sec. 82.154
have included the venting prohibition since they were originally
promulgated in 1993. (58 FR 28714). Even before the 2016 Rule, the
subpart F regulations provided that ``[n]o person maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of appliances may knowingly vent or
otherwise release into the environment any refrigerant or substitute
from such appliances'' and then provided for exceptions from this
prohibition for specified substitutes in specified end-uses. (Sec.
82.154 (2014)). These exceptions implemented the discretion Congress
left the EPA under 608(c)(2) to exempt certain releases from the
venting prohibition, if the Administrator has determined that
``venting, releasing, or disposing of such substance does not pose a
threat to the environment.'' CAA section 608(c)(2). Similarly, the
regulations at Sec. 82.154 in place before the 2016 Rule included
provisions clarifying that ``[ODS] releases shall be considered de
minimis only if they occur when'' certain regulatory requirements are
observed. (Sec. 82.154(a)(2) (2014)). However, those regulations did
not provide the same clarity regarding releases of non-exempt
substitute refrigerants or what practices would be considered to fall
within the ambit of ``good faith attempts to recycle or recover'' non-
exempt substitute refrigerants. (Sec. 82.154(a)(2)). The EPA has long
interpreted section 608(c)(2) to incorporate and extend both the
venting prohibition and the de minimis exemption in section 608(c)(1)
to substitute refrigerants, but Congress did not specify what practices
or actions should be taken to qualify for this exemption in either
provision. Thus, it is reasonable to interpret these provisions as
indicating that Congress contemplated that the EPA would have authority
to resolve this ambiguity by issuing regulations to implement section
608(c). For these reasons, and as explained in prior sections of this
document, the EPA continues to believe that section 608(c) is
reasonably interpreted to provide it some authority to issue
regulations applicable to substitute refrigerants and thus disagrees
with these comments.
B. Comments on Whether ``Topping Off'' a Leaking Appliance Constitutes
a Knowing Release Subject to the Venting Prohibition
The EPA received multiple comments stating that the operation of an
appliance, and the ``topping off'' with additional refrigerant, is not
knowing venting prohibited under section 608(c). They state that
venting must occur during the service, maintenance, repair, or disposal
of an appliance to be prohibited. Other comments disagree with the
EPA's proposed decision to return to its pre-2016 interpretation of
``topping off.'' A couple of commenters state that the fact that
refrigerant must be added demonstrates that there is a leak, which
would continue if not repaired, and that a technician that repeatedly
tops off refrigerant from leaking equipment knows the refrigerant is
being released. These commenters object to the proposal to return to
the prior interpretation of ``topping off'' because under that
interpretation, no matter how significant the quantity of lost
refrigerant from a leaking appliance, it would not violate the venting
prohibition unless there was a practical
[[Page 14162]]
certainty refrigerant was being released during the servicing event.
These commenters thought such a result conflicted with section 608's
purpose of reducing emissions of ODS and their substitutes. These
commenters also generally found the EPA's 2016 change in its historical
interpretation to be reasonable and supported retaining that
interpretation. Other commenters look to the word ``maintenance'' in
section 608 as providing authority for the leak repair provisions. One
commenter states that ``maintenance'' includes normal operation, noting
the definition of maintenance includes ``keep[ing] in an existing
state'' or ``preserv[ing]'' the machinery.\18\ Another comment states
that because proper maintenance includes fixing leaks, failure to
adequately repair leaks violates the venting prohibition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Maintain, MERRIAM-WEBSTER ONLINE DICTIONARY, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/maintain (last visited Nov. 15,
2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA disagrees with commenters that state that the ``topping
off'' of a leaking appliance is necessarily prohibited under section
608(c). The addition of refrigerant to an appliance during service,
maintenance, or repair is typically distinct and separate in time from
the release of that refrigerant into the environment from a leak during
the normal operation of the appliance. As discussed elsewhere in this
document, while there may be a release of refrigerant from a leaking
appliance, all appliances leak and such leaks typically occur during
normal operations. While there may be cases where there would be an
ongoing release of refrigerant such that the refrigerant added to the
system is contemporaneously released and the technician knows about
such a release during the servicing event (e.g., when refrigerant is
added to equipment that is audibly or visibly leaking during the
servicing event), the EPA does not have any information to suggest that
this is the norm. Accordingly, the EPA does not have any information to
suggest that these situations are common enough to sustain an extension
of the leak repair requirements to equipment using solely substitute
refrigerants under the text of section 608(c).
The EPA also disagrees with the commenters suggesting that
inclusion of the term ``maintaining'' in section 608(c) provides the
agency authority to apply the leak repair provisions to appliances
containing only substitute refrigerants. Contrary to the position that
the EPA took in the 2016 Rule (81 FR 82291), the EPA concludes in this
action that the term ``maintaining'' in section 608(c) is not meant to
encompass the normal operation of an appliance. Rather, as discussed in
Section II above, the EPA believes it is reasonable to interpret this
term in light of the other terms in section 608(c) (servicing,
repairing, or disposing), all of which refer to activities that are
distinct from the normal, day-to-day operation of the equipment. The
EPA also disagrees with the commenters suggesting that failure to
repair leaks is a failure to maintain equipment that necessarily
results in releases that violate the venting prohibition. The text of
section 608(c)(1) prohibits knowing releases of ODS by ``any person, in
the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing'' of
appliances, and section 608(c)(2) extends that prohibition to knowing
releases of substitute refrigerants ``by any person maintaining,
servicing, repairing, or disposing of'' an appliance. Thus, section
608(c) requires an actor (e.g., a technician) to conduct one of a
particular set of actions on an object (an appliance) in order for the
venting prohibition to apply. The four terms ``maintaining, servicing,
repairing, or disposing'' included in section 608(c) are all forms of
transitive verbs that express an action by an actor (``any person'') on
an object (an appliance containing or using refrigerant). Interpreting
the term ``maintaining'' as encompassing the lack of maintenance or
failure to repair leaks unreasonably transforms the prohibition against
knowing releases during certain defined activities into a requirement
to undertake those activities. In the EPA's view, it is not reasonable
to interpret the term ``maintaining'' to encompass normal, day-to-day
operations of an appliance or to encompass failure to maintain an
appliance. Rather, the EPA concludes that the term ``maintaining'' as
used in section 608(c) should be interpreted to refer to work done on
an appliance in furtherance of its continued functioning or to preserve
its existing state of repair. (See, e.g., The American Heritage College
Dictionary, 4th ed. (Houghton Mifflin, 2002), at 834 (listing
definitions of ``maintain'' which include ``to keep in an existing
state; preserve or retain'' and to ``keep in a condition of good repair
or efficiency''); Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th ed.
(Merriam Webster Inc., 2003), at 749 (definitions of ``maintain''
include ``to keep in an existing state (as of repair, efficiency, or
validity): preserve from failure or decline <~machinery>'')).
The EPA disagrees with the comments that its historic
interpretation, to which it returns today, is inconsistent with the
purpose of section 608(c). As explained in Section II above, a general
analysis of whether a provision leads to reductions in ODS emissions
would typically be undertaken under section 608(a). In contrast to
section 608(a), which requires regulations to reduce emissions of ODS
to the lowest achievable level, the agency interprets section 608(c) as
focusing on limiting particular types of emissions of ODS and
substitute refrigerants--those from knowing releases, venting, and
disposal that occur in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing of appliances. The agency views its return to its historic
interpretation in this action as consistent with the purposes of
section 608(c) because it better focuses the regulations on knowing
releases that occur during the activities listed in 608(c). In this
interpretation it is not the quantity of refrigerant released, but
rather the circumstances of the release that determine whether the
venting prohibition applies. The EPA concludes that its legal authority
under section 608(c)(2) does not extend to emissions of substitute
refrigerants that do not occur during one of those four activities.
Thus, the agency agrees with the comments stating that the release must
occur during the service, maintenance, repair, or disposal of an
appliance to be prohibited under the venting prohibition.
A couple of commenters request that the EPA clarify how rescinding
the 2016 Rule's interpretation--that ``topping off'' a leaking
appliance could in some circumstances constitute a knowing release and
violate the venting prohibition--affects appliances containing ODS
refrigerant. Noting that the proposed rule states that the Agency was
not modifying any ODS provisions, the commenters state that the EPA
should rescind this interpretation as it applies to ODS appliances as
well. The EPA responds that the agency is rescinding this
interpretation for all appliances, regardless of the type of
refrigerant used. The original interpretation that topping off an
appliance was not a knowing release was in the context of appliances
containing ODS refrigerant. (58 FR 28672). Thus, reverting back to that
original interpretation means it applies to appliances using ODS
refrigerant, as well as to those using non-ODS refrigerants. We further
note that this return to the original interpretation does not change
the required leak repair practices in Sec. 82.157 for ODS equipment,
as those requirements reduce the emissions of ODS and maximize the
recapture and recycling of ODS as provided in section 608(a). In
[[Page 14163]]
addition, the agency is not changing the requirement under Sec.
82.154(a)(2)(i) that ODS releases only qualify for the de minimis
exemption if certain regulatory practices, including those in Sec.
82.157, have been observed.
C. Comments on Whether Section 608(a) Provides Any Statutory Authority
To Regulate Substitute Refrigerants
The EPA requested comment on whether, as a matter of statutory
interpretation, the agency can rely on section 608(a) for the issuance
of any of the subpart F requirements (leak repair or otherwise) for
substitute refrigerants, including those provisions for which there is
demonstrably a connection between the regulatory requirement and the
purposes of section 608(a) to reduce use and emission of class I and II
substances to the lowest achievable level and maximize the recapture
and recycling of such substances. As the EPA discussed in the proposal,
Congress specifically required the EPA in section 608(a) to issue
regulations for class I and class II substances that would meet certain
statutory purposes set forth in that section. But Congress did not list
substitutes for coverage by those requirements. In contrast, section
608(c) does expressly apply to substitute refrigerants. This difference
between section 608(a) and 608(c) could be interpreted as a
manifestation of Congressional intent to distinguish between the
categories of substances covered in these respective provisions and to
only convey authority to address substitute refrigerants under 608(c),
not 608(a), which is an issue on which the EPA solicited comment.
Three commenters state that 608(a) is not ambiguous with respect to
the extent to which Congress authorized the EPA to issue refrigerant
management regulations for substitutes. The commenters state that
Congress did not provide any explicit grant of authority in section
608(a) for the EPA to establish a regulatory program for substitutes.
The fact that Congress so clearly provided such authority for ODS
demonstrates that no such authority exists for substitutes. One of
those commenters concludes that the EPA lacks the discretion it claims
to regulate non-exempt substitutes in any manner.
Other commenters state that the scope of 608(a) is ambiguous and
that to the extent that the EPA determines that the statutory language
is ambiguous, then the EPA is free to make a policy decision to resolve
the ambiguity. These commenters state that there are many policy
rationales that support regulating non-ODS substitutes to an equal
extent as the regulation of ODS, including cost savings to owners and
operators by encouraging proper leak management, reducing harm to the
atmosphere, and reduced public safety hazards.
The EPA responds that, as discussed in Section II.B. above, while
section 608(a)(3) states that regulations under 608(a) shall include
requirements that serve particular objectives and discretionary
language about what requirements those regulations may include, it does
not contain any more specific mandates about how the required
objectives should be achieved. Thus, the EPA agrees with the comments
that section 608(a) is ambiguous with respect to the EPA's authority to
regulate substitute refrigerants to achieve those purposes. Given this
ambiguity, the EPA interprets section 608(a) to provide authority to
issue regulations that reduce the use and emission of ODS to the lowest
achievable level or that maximize the recapture and recycling of such
substances, even if the regulations do not directly regulate ODS. Thus,
as in the 2016 Rule, to the extent that the extension of certain
subpart F requirements to non-exempt substitutes is necessary to
achieve the purposes set forth in section 608(a)(3) (i.e., reducing the
use and emission of ODS to the lowest achievable level or maximizing
the recapture and recycling of such substances), the EPA concludes that
the extension is within the ambit of its authority under section
608(a). However, the EPA disagrees with the comments suggesting that
608(a) is so ambiguous as to allow the agency to employ various policy
rationales such as cost savings to the owners and operators,
encouraging proper leak management, reducing harm to the atmosphere,
and reducing public safety hazards when considering whether the
extension of the subpart F requirements to substitute refrigerants is
supported by 608(a). The EPA interprets section 608(a) to authorize the
extension of those requirements only if they meet the explicit
purpose(s) of that section, including reducing the use and emission of
ODS to the lowest achievable level and/or maximizing the recapture and
recycling of such substances. For the reasons discussed in Section II
of this document, the EPA concludes that section 608(a) does not
support the 2016 extension of the leak repair requirements in Sec.
82.157 to non-exempt substitute refrigerants but does support the
extension of the non-leak repair requirements to such refrigerants.
Some commenters state that 608(a) does not provide authority to
require repairing leaks of non-ODS substitutes because repairing an
appliance containing a substitute will not reduce the use or emission
of ODS nor maximize the recapture and recycling of ODS.
The EPA responds that, as described in greater detail in Section II
above, the agency interprets CAA section 608(a) to support the 2016
Rule's extension of the existing subpart F requirements to appliances
using only non-exempt substitute refrigerants only if that extension is
necessary to serve the purposes of 608(a). The EPA agrees with these
commenters that applying the leak repair provisions to appliances
containing only substitute refrigerants is not necessary to reduce ODS
emissions or to promote the recapture and recycling of ODS. This is
especially true since the EPA is retaining the non-leak repair
provisions in subpart F for non-exempt substitutes.
Three commenters state that the text of 608(a) demonstrates that
Congress intended the section to provide an incentive to transition to
non-ODS substitutes. These commenters state that rescinding the leak
repair provisions for non-exempt substitutes will restore that
incentive, which will minimize use and emission of ODS. Likewise, one
commenter states that applying the refrigerant management requirements
to substitutes will disincentivize the development of new substitutes.
While the EPA is rescinding the leak repair provisions for non-
exempt substitutes based on its determination that the extension of
these provisions to such substitutes exceeded its statutory authority
because it was based on an unreasonable interpretation of that
authority, the EPA disagrees that section 608 drives the development of
or transition to substitutes. Section 608 is one of several
complementary measures in Title VI of the CAA that support the phaseout
of class I and class II ODS. For example, in section 610 Congress
banned certain products containing ODS and granted the EPA authority
under to ban others. In section 611, Congress required the EPA to
promulgate labeling requirements for certain products containing or
manufactured with ODS. These aspects of Title VI more directly
establish incentives and support the transition to ODS alternatives
than the provisions in section 608, which establish a national
recycling and emission reduction program. Further, the production and
import of class I ODS has been phased out and the production and import
of class II ODS is well underway. Allowances for production and import
of the most common HCFC refrigerant, HCFC-22, are set to decline to
zero in 2020 (Sec. Sec. 82.16, 82.15(e)). In addition,
[[Page 14164]]
use restrictions issued pursuant to section 605(a) prohibit use of
newly produced HCFC-22 in equipment manufactured on or after January 1,
2010 (Sec. 82.15(g)(2)). The section 605(a) use restrictions further
prohibit use of newly produced HCFC-123 in equipment manufactured on or
after January 1, 2020 (Sec. 82.15(g)(4)). While used HCFCs are not
subject to these restrictions, the HCFC production and import phaseout
and the restrictions on use of newly produced HCFCs provide clear
market signals regarding future availability of HCFC refrigerants.
Thus, the provisions of Title VI, taken together, provide a variety
of incentives for the transition from ODS to substitutes. In section
608(c)(2), however, Congress indicated a concern about the potential
environmental impacts of substitute refrigerants by extending the
venting prohibition to substitute refrigerants, unless the EPA
determines that for particular substances such releases do not pose a
threat to the environment.
To the extent that the extension of subpart F regulatory
requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants is supported by
section 608(c), that extension provides clarity and certainty to
owners, operators, and people servicing, maintaining, repairing, or
disposing of air conditioning and refrigeration equipment of how they
can avoid violating the venting prohibition. Such clarity and certainty
with regards to the venting prohibition are consistent with the EPA's
overall efforts under Title VI to facilitate a smooth transition from
ODS to substitute refrigerants. Thus, while facilitating a smooth
transition to substitutes is not a basis for this action, the EPA
disagrees with the comments suggesting that applying subpart F
provisions to non-exempt substitute refrigerants reduces incentives for
the development of or transition to substitutes.
The EPA solicited comment regarding scenarios where failure to
apply consistent standards for the non-leak repair provisions in
Subpart F could lead to emissions of ODS. These scenarios include
contamination caused by the improper handling of non-exempt substitute
refrigerant, equipment failure due to mixed or contaminated
refrigerant, venting of contaminated refrigerant due to cost of
handling and reclaiming refrigerant in appliances, and venting due to
an individual misidentifying an ODS refrigerant as a substitute
refrigerant when performing maintenance on an appliance. (83 FR 49340).
One commenter states that the EPA provided no technical basis to
warrant the extension of the non-leak repair subpart F requirements to
substitutes. Specifically, the commenter states that the agency did not
provide any data concerning frequency of refrigerant contamination,
equipment failures due to contamination, and misidentification. The
commenter states that its members, including one that has 75 separate
facilities, could not identify any examples of substitute contamination
or mismanagement. Multiple other commenters state that a single,
uniform, and consistent management system for ODS and substitute
refrigerants makes refrigerant management easier for technicians
maintaining, servicing, or disposing of refrigeration equipment, and
increases the chances that technicians will not release class I or
class II refrigerant. Some of these comments were limited to the non-
leak repair provisions of Subpart F and some were inclusive of the leak
repair provisions. Several refrigerant technicians and reclaimers in
their comments relay instances where a layperson has mixed refrigerant
or attempted an improper retrofit or other maintenance and caused the
release of refrigerant. Other commenters state that refrigerant mixing
would increase if the sales restriction for non-exempt substitutes were
rescinded.
The EPA's understanding of the industry indicates that technician
errors can result in refrigerant mixing, and catastrophic equipment
failure as a result. The agency's understanding is consistent with and
supported by information that stakeholders have provided to the agency,
including information submitted during the development of this
rulemaking and included in the record for this rule. Moreover, the EPA
has supporting evidence from enforcement actions pertaining to R-22a
and reported reclamation data that mixing does occur. Many entities
including refrigerant reclaimers, equipment manufacturers, technicians,
and equipment owners have notified the agency that mixed refrigerant is
becoming increasingly prevalent as the number of substitutes for ODS in
use increases. The EPA finds credible the information provided by
commenters who identified examples of refrigerant releases related to
mixing of refrigerants or attempted improper retrofit or other
maintenance.
Evidence of refrigerant mixing comes from data reported to the EPA
by reclaimers. The amount of mixed refrigerant being received by
reclaimers has been increasing since 2012 by total volume or since 2013
as a percentage of the amount of refrigerant sent for reclamation.
These data support the anecdotal statements and comments made by
individual reclaimers and technicians that they are encountering more
mixed refrigerant. The data are available on the EPA's website and some
of the comments and statements are in the docket to this rule.\19\ The
EPA also expects that the reported data are an underestimate of the
total amount of mixed refrigerant since mixed refrigerant is often
vented or not sent to reclaimers, and thus those amounts are
unavailable to be reported.
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\19\ Mixed Refrigerant Received Totals by Year (Pounds),
available at https://www.epa.gov/section608/summary-refrigerant-reclamation-trends.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, as discussed in the 2016 Rule, the use of R-22a (a
non-exempt substitute refrigerant) as a replacement for R-22 (an ODS
refrigerant) indicates to the EPA that people are purchasing their own
refrigerant and adding it to systems with ODS refrigerant. R-22a, which
is propane, in some cases mixed with isobutane and an odorant, has been
marketed as a ``drop-in'' (or more appropriately termed a ``retrofit'')
replacement for existing equipment, typically residential split air-
conditioning systems, which are designed for use with HCFCs or HFCs.
The EPA has listed propane and R-22a as well as all ASHRAE Flammability
Class 3 Refrigerants as unacceptable for retrofit in residential and
light commercial unitary split AC and heat pumps under the Significant
New Alternatives Policy program. The Agency learned through its
enforcement actions against Enviro-Safe and Northcutt, two distributors
of R-22a, and through other investigations, that R-22a has been sold to
both consumers and certified technicians. Often the buyers are not
aware there is a difference between R-22 and R-22a, or even that R-22a
is flammable. As a result, appliances have exploded, resulting in the
release of refrigerant that consists in part of ODS, and people have
been injured. Together, this data from reclaimers and information on R-
22a support the view that applying the sales restriction and technician
certification requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants serves
the purposes of section 608(a) because it prevents the mixing and
subsequent release of ODS refrigerants, including in mixtures with
substitute refrigerants.
Two commenters state that cross-contamination of ODS and non-exempt
substitute refrigerant does not occur because they operate at different
pressures so there are no concerns that ODS will be emitted if there
are no
[[Page 14165]]
controls on substitute refrigerants. In contrast, another commenter
states that many class II (and in some cases, class I) substances can
be used interchangeably with HFCs and other substitute refrigerants,
though sometimes requiring equipment modification. Other commenters
state that ODS and ODS substitutes can be used interchangeably in many
applications, and service technicians are likely to encounter both
types of refrigerants. In California, approximately 17% of reporting
facilities have both ODS and HFC systems.
The EPA disagrees with the comment saying that cross-contamination
of ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerant cannot occur because they
operate at different pressures. R-22 has been the dominant ODS
refrigerant and is being replaced with several non-exempt substitute
refrigerants that operate at similar pressures (e.g., R-404A, R-407A,
and R-407C). In those situations, cross-contamination of ODS and
substitute refrigerant, refrigerant mixing, and related releases of ODS
can occur. The EPA agrees with the comments that ODS and substitute
refrigerants have inappropriately been used interchangeably. The EPA
frequently hears from industry stakeholders, similar to comments
received on the proposal, that technicians are ``topping off'' R-22
systems with non-exempt substitute refrigerant, particularly during the
final stages of the R-22 phaseout which has seen price spikes. Improper
retrofits or refrigerant mixing can occur even when the operating
pressure is different, especially when appliances are serviced by
untrained personnel. This mixing of refrigerant with different
operating pressure makes catastrophic equipment failure and release of
the refrigerant charge even more likely.
A few commenters state that eliminating the reclamation requirement
for non-exempt substitute refrigerants would set in motion market
forces that would ultimately result in an increase in ODS emissions.
Specifically, the commenter states that technicians would resell
recovered substitute refrigerants to other customers rather than
sending them for reclamation. This would reduce the profitability and
ability of reclaimers to reclaim the ODS refrigerants that they do
receive. The comment explains that reclaimers might stop accepting ODS
refrigerants and technicians would then either resell contaminated
refrigerant, vent the ODS refrigerants to the atmosphere, or pay for
proper disposal, likely in that order.
The EPA agrees with the comments that rescinding the reclamation
requirements for non-exempt substitute refrigerants would likely result
in an increase in ODS emissions. As discussed further in Section II.D.
of this document, the reclamation requirements for non-exempt
substitute refrigerant prohibit the resale of mixed used refrigerant
and support a market-based process from the technician or recovery
company to the refrigerant distributor and ultimately the reclaimer to
return used ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerant to the same
purity level as newly produced refrigerant. The requirement that
recovered ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerant be reclaimed to
meet industry purity standards before being resold, with limited
exceptions, implements the direction in section 608(a)(3) to reduce the
use and emission of ODS to the lowest achievable level, and to maximize
the recapture and recycling of such substances, as explained further in
Section II.D. of this document. The EPA concludes that section 608
provides the EPA authority for the 2016 Rule's extension of the
reclamation requirements to substitute refrigerants and is therefore
not finalizing a rescission of the reclamation standards.
D. Comments Regarding How Holistic Interpretations of Section 608 and
Other Sections of Title VI May Relate to EPA's Authority To Regulate
Substitute Refrigerants
One commenter states that the EPA must read section 608 as a whole,
consistent with giving meaning to the full statutory provision. This
commenter further asserts that doing so shows that Congress intended to
only stagger requirements for ODS and non-exempt substitutes, with ODS
requirements applying starting in 1992 and those for substitutes
starting in 1995, not to create a more limited regulatory program for
substitutes. A few commenters state that section 608(a) is broader than
608(c) in that it provides the EPA the authority to regulate ``use'' of
an ODS while 608(c) is limited to service, maintenance, repair, or
disposal of an appliance. These commenters state that this difference
in wording indicates that Congress intended for different requirements
to apply to ODS and substitutes. Another commenter states that because
section 608(c)(2) extends to the ``knowing release'' or the disposal of
substitutes, it provides broader legal authority than exists within the
Administrator's authority to establish standards regarding the ``use
and disposal of class I substances'' under CAA section 608(a), offering
the example that CAA section 608(c) authority extends to any
``release'' whether by means other than use or disposal.
The EPA responds that the agency has appropriately considered the
authority granted to the agency under section 608, considering that
section as a whole, in reaching the interpretations supporting this
action. Based on that consideration, the EPA disagrees that reading
608(a) and (c) together indicates that Congress intended simply to
stagger similar requirements for ODS and substitutes. Were this the
case, Congress could have inserted requirements to regulate substitutes
in 608(a) that were effective in 1995, in a similar manner to the way
it made the venting prohibition effective for substitutes effective
November 15, 1995 in 608(c)(2). But it did not. While Congress chose to
stagger the requirements in 608(a) for class I and class II ODS, with
section 608(a)(1) requiring the EPA to issue certain regulations for
class I substances by January 1, 1992, and 608(a)(2) requiring other
regulations for class I and class II substances by November 15, 1994,
it did not include such a staggered date for substitutes. Nor did it
even mention substitutes in these provisions. Similarly, while Congress
staggered the application of the venting prohibition in section 608(c)
to ODS and substitutes, that only indicates that Congress intended for
the venting prohibition to apply equally to both substitutes and ODS
after November 15, 1995. As explained in greater detail in Section II
of this document, the EPA concludes that, reading section 608 as a
whole, its authority to address substitutes under section 608 is more
limited than its authority to address ODS.
The EPA agrees with the comment that that the verbs used in section
608(a) suggest a broader scope of authority than those in 608(c). As
noted in Section II above, sections 608(a)(1) and (2) broadly authorize
regulations for the ``use and disposal'' of ODS, and section 608(a)(2)
clarifies that this ``includ[es] use and disposal during service,
repair, or disposal'' of appliances. The term ``includ[es]'' in
608(a)(2) indicates that ``use and disposal'' can occur during
activities other than ``service, repair, or disposal.'' These are three
of the four activities mentioned in section 608(c), which prohibits
knowing releases ``in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing'' of appliances. As explained elsewhere in this document,
the EPA interprets the fourth term, ``maintaining,'' as similar in
scope to ``servicing, repairing, or disposing'' and to refer to work
done on an appliance in furtherance of its
[[Page 14166]]
continued functioning or to preserve its existing state of repair.
Thus, the EPA concludes that Congress envisioned that the regulations
under section 608(a) would affect a broader range of activities than
those under section 608(c). In addition, as described in greater detail
in Section II above, the EPA now reads sections 608(a) and (c) together
to determine that its authority is more limited for substitute
refrigerants than for ODS. However, the EPA does not believe that this
means none of the same provisions can be applied to ODS and substitute
refrigerants. Rather, the EPA believes the same provision can apply to
both ODS and substitute refrigerants where the agency can reasonably
conclude that extending a requirement that previously only applied to
ODS refrigerants to substitute refrigerants is an appropriate
application of its authority under either section 608(a) or (c), under
the interpretive framework set forth in Section II above. The EPA
disagrees with the comment that 608(c)(2) is broader than 608(a)
because it extends to ``any release.'' As discussed in Section II, the
releases prohibited under section 608(c)(2) are limited to those that
occur ``in the course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or
disposing'' of appliances, a narrower range of activities than the
broad range of ``use and disposal'' activities featured in section
608(a). Two commenters state that reading sections 608 and 612 together
indicates that Congress sought to avoid solving one problem (ozone
depletion) only to create another, in this case GHG emissions. They
argue that given the policy choices that are embodied in section 612--
to replace ODS with substitutes that lower the overall risks to human
health and the environment--and the fact that HFCs have not been
exempted from the venting prohibition, the EPA should take an expansive
read of the Agency's authority to regulate substitutes.
The EPA responds that CAA sections 612 and 608 are distinct
provisions, and the EPA does not believe it is reasonable to interpret
the policy objectives of section 612 as expanding the agency's ability
to regulate substitutes under section 608 beyond the authority conveyed
in the text of 608 itself. As explained in Section II above, because
the agency has determined that the 2016 Rule's extension of the leak
repair requirements to appliances using only non-exempt substitute
refrigerant exceeds its statutory authority, it is rescinding that
extension.
Another commenter states that reading 608 and 609 together
indicates that Congress was capable of clearly indicating when it
intended for ODS and substitutes to be treated the same, and that it
chose not to do so in 608. In support of this argument, the commenter
points out that the definition of refrigerant in section 609 includes
class I and class II substances, as well as any substitute substance
beginning November 15, 1995. The EPA responds that as described in
greater detail in Section II above, it interprets its authority to
address substitutes under section 608 as more limited than its
authority to address ODS, based in part on the inclusion of the term
``substitute'' in section 608(c)(2) but not sections 608(a)(1) and (2).
Section 609 is a distinct provision from section 608 and is highly
specialized, being focused on motor vehicle air conditioners, which
were one of the first uses to transition to substitutes. The EPA
believes this comment provides additional support for the agency's
conclusion that its authority to regulate substitutes under section 608
is not as extensive as its authority to regulate ODS. However, the EPA
does not believe that section 609 should be read to suggest that the
agency has no authority to regulate substitute refrigerants under
section 608, as section 608(c), like section 609, does mention both ODS
and substitute refrigerants and applies the venting prohibition to both
beginning November 15, 1995. Nor does anything in section 609 indicate
whether certain refrigerant management requirements for substitutes
might be necessary to achieve the purposes of section 608(a), which
covers a broad range of uses, with widely varying timelines for the
transition from ODS. For the reasons described further in Section II,
the agency continues to reasonably interpret both section 608(a) and
(c) to provide some authority to regulate substitute refrigerants, to
the extent consistent with the text of those provisions, and this
action appropriately aligns its regulation of substitute refrigerants
with its statutory authority under 608.
One commenter states that the name of Title VI (Stratospheric Ozone
Protection) indicates that Congress intended to only address
stratospheric ozone depletion, not GHG emissions. The EPA responds that
this action addresses non-exempt substitutes without distinction as to
whether they are GHGs and indeed without distinction as to any other
attribute. Further, the text of 608(c) demonstrates that Congress was
addressing both class I and class II refrigerants and substitute
refrigerants. Congress specifically applied the venting prohibition to
substitutes, and, as indicated by the provision that allows the EPA to
exempt substitute refrigerants from the venting prohibition if it
determines that venting, release, or disposal of such substitute does
not pose a threat to the environment, specifically contemplated that
threats to the environment other than stratospheric ozone depletion
would be considered in implementing the venting prohibition under
section 608(c)(2). In addition, the Supreme Court has recognized the
``wise rule that the title of a statute and the heading of a section
cannot limit the plain meaning of the text''; while they may provide a
``short-hand reference to the general subject matter involved,'' they
are not ``necessarily designed to be a reference guide or a synopsis.''
Bhd. of R.R. Trainmen v. Balt. & O.R. Co., 331 U.S. 519, 528-29 (1947)
(internal citations omitted). Thus, the EPA does not interpret the
title of Title VI as precluding it from regulating substitute
refrigerants, where such regulation is otherwise authorized under the
Act. Moreover, as described in Section II above, in re-assessing the
scope of its authority for the 2016 Rule's extension of subpart F
provisions to substitute refrigerants, the EPA has considered whether
the extension of those provisions serve the purposes of section 608(a)
by maximizing recyling or recovery of ODS and/or reducing emissions of
ODS to the lowest achievable level and has determined that the
extension of those provisions with the exception of the leak repair
requirements met such purposes.
Three commenters cite section 602(e) for the proposition that
Congress did not intend to address GHGs in any of Title VI. That
section requires the EPA to publish the global warming potential (GWP)
of class I and class II substances but states that such required
publication ``shall not be construed to be the basis of any additional
regulation under this chapter.'' The EPA responds, as above, that this
action addresses non-exempt substitutes without distinction as to
whether they are GHGs and indeed without distinction as to any other
attribute. Regardless, section 602(e) does not mention substitutes.
Section 602(e) relates to the GWPs of ODS, and neither directs the
publication of GWPs of substitutes nor makes any statement regarding
regulation of such substances. In any event, the EPA is not regulating
either ODS or substitutes on the basis of their GWP in this action.
Furthermore, the EPA did not rely on section 602 as authority for the
extension of subpart F to non-exempt substitutes in 2016, nor is it
relying on section 602 for the action
[[Page 14167]]
being taken in this rulemaking. In the 2016 Rule, the EPA extended the
subpart F regulations to all substitute refrigerants that are not
exempt from the venting prohibition irrespective of their GWPs. In this
action, the agency's decision to rescind the 2016 Rule's extension of
the leak repair requirements to equipment containing only non-exempt
substitute refrigerants is based on the conclusion that the extension
exceeded the agency's authority under section 608 because it was based
on an unreasonable interpretation of that authority.
E. Comments Regarding Whether the Agency Has Provided a Reasoned Basis
for This Action
One commenter states that the EPA's reinterpretation of its legal
authority fits squarely within the authority that supports an agency's
ability to change its policy (citing Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863-64 (1984)). Some commenters state that the EPA
has not offered an adequate rationale for this action and fault the
agency for not providing substantial evidence for changing its previous
findings. These commenters state that when changing policy, ``a
reasoned explanation is needed for disregarding facts and circumstances
that underlay or were engendered by the prior policy'' (citing FCC v.
Fox Television Stations, 556 U.S. 502, 516 (2009)). Another commenter
states that the EPA failed to provide the requisite ``good reasons''
for its change (citing id. at 515). Some of these commenters state that
``an agency changing its course by rescinding a rule is obligated to
supply a reasoned analysis for the change beyond that which may be
required when an agency does not act in the first instance'' (citing
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mutual Auto Ins. Co., 463 U.S.
29, 42 (1983)) and argue that the EPA has failed to provide a
sufficient justification for the change. Other commenters state that
the EPA ignores the fact that harmful emissions would increase under
today's action, arguing that this shows that the EPA has failed to
``examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation
for its action including a rational connection between the facts found
and the choice made'' (citing State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43)).
The EPA disagrees that the agency has failed to provide an adequate
rationale for this regulatory change. To begin, we note that the agency
``obviously ha[s] broad discretion to reconsider a regulation at any
time,'' Clean Air Council, 862 F.3d at 8-9, as long as it provides a
reasoned explanation for its action. See, e.g., Encino Motorcars, 136
S.Ct. at 2125. As discussed elsewhere in this preamble, including in
detail in Section II above, the reason for today's action is not a
change in policy, but rather a determination that the agency exceeded
the scope of its legal authority under the CAA in the 2016 Rule by
extending the leak repair provisions to equipment containing only non-
exempt substitute refrigerants based on an unreasonable interpretation
of its authority. The EPA has provided a reasoned explanation of its
current interpretation of its legal authority in Section II of this
document and explained why that interpretation requires the rescission
of the 2016 extension of the leak repair requirements to substitute
refrigerants. Even if the facts and circumstances that underlay that
extension, or were engendered by it, could be cited to provide a policy
basis for applying the leak repair requirements to non-exempt
substitute refrigerants, the EPA cannot do that because doing so
exceeds its legal authority. An agency may ``justify its policy choice
by explaining why that policy `is more consistent with statutory
language' than alternative policies,'' Encino Motorcars, 136 S.Ct. at
2127 (quoting Long Island Care at Home Ltd. v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 175
(2007)), as the agency has done here. In addition, the agency does not
agree with the commenters' claim that it needs to provide more
rationale for this change than if it were acting in the first instance.
See Encino Motorcars, 136 S.Ct. at 2126 (``When an agency changes its
existing position, it `need not always provide a more detailed
justification than what would suffice for a new policy created on a
blank slate.' '') (quoting FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556
U.S. 502, 515 (2009)). However, even if it did, the EPA believes that
the detailed description in Section II of this document would satisfy
that standard, especially considering that it is undertaking this
action to rescind a regulatory provision that exceeds its statutory
authority. Accordingly, the EPA agrees with the comments that stated
this action is well within the agency's authority to change existing
regulatory requirements.
Two commenters state that rescinding the leak repair provision for
non-exempt substitutes is arbitrary and capricious because it would
result in more of the pollution the CAA seeks to limit and then goes on
to discuss the forgone annual GHG emissions reductions. They also state
that the EPA has not explained how the new interpretation ``is
rationally related to the goals of the statute.''
The EPA does not agree that this action will result in increased
emissions of the pollution that section 608 seeks to limit, nor that
this action is not rationally related to the goals of the statute. With
respect to section 608(a), that section focuses on reducing emissions
of ODS. The EPA has been implementing regulations under section 608(a)
of the CAA for decades and has been appropriately reducing the use and
emission of ODS refrigerants through those regulations. As discussed in
Section II above, the EPA has determined that leak repair provisions as
applied to appliances containing only substitute refrigerants are not
needed to reduce the use and emissions of ODS refrigerants or to
maximize the recapture and recycling of ODS refrigerants, especially if
the other subpart F provisions are in place for non-exempt substitutes.
As explained in Section II of this document, the EPA concludes that
this action is necessary because the 2016 Rule exceeded its statutory
authority. With respect to section 608(c), the agency interprets
section 608(c) to apply only to knowing releases that occur in the
course of maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of
appliances. Because operational leaks of substitute refrigerants that
would typically trigger the leak repair provisions do not occur during
one of those four activities, the EPA does not agree that this action
will result in increased emissions of the pollution that section 608(c)
seeks to limit.
IV. Extension of the January 1, 2019 Compliance Date for the Appliance
Maintenance and Leak Repair Provisions for Non-Exempt Substitute
Refrigerants
The 2016 Rule established a January 1, 2019 compliance date for the
leak repair provisions. In establishing that compliance date, the
agency had found that two years was sufficient time for owners and
operators of appliances with 50 or more pounds of refrigerant to learn
about the updated requirements and prepare for compliance. (81 FR
82343). The 2018 proposal for this action explained that the EPA was
evaluating whether that compliance date remained viable or whether it
should be extended. The EPA proposed to take final action to extend the
compliance date in Sec. 82.157(a) for appliances containing only non-
exempt substitute refrigerants if final action on the substantive
portions of the proposed rule would not occur within a reasonable time
before the existing compliance date. At that
[[Page 14168]]
time, however, the EPA lacked specific information relating to the
continued viability of the compliance date. The EPA requested comment
on whether facilities would encounter practical difficulties in meeting
the compliance date and stated that it intended to consider such
information in deciding whether a compliance date extension was needed.
The EPA further requested comment on any hardship that owners or
operators of appliances would face if the compliance date was not
extended and on any forgone benefits from such an extension. Finally,
the EPA requested comment on its ability to finalize a compliance date
extension.
Multiple commenters state that the EPA has the authority and should
finalize an extension of the compliance date for the leak repair
provisions as they apply to non-exempt substitutes. Several commenters
state that the EPA should take a separate action to extend the
compliance deadline. They argue that the extension would help eliminate
the burden of implementing compliance plans that are expected to no
longer be needed when the rule is finalized, and that the separate rule
should be issued as far ahead of December 31, 2018 as is possible to
minimize any burdens. Commenters state that a 6- to 12-month delay in
compliance would provide certainty to the industry. Some suggest that
the extension should be a full twelve months, which would move the
compliance date to January 1, 2020. However, several other commenters
do not support an extension of the compliance date. They state that the
2016 Rule has been in effect since January 1, 2017, and that
responsible regulated entities have planned for, invested in, and
implemented changes necessary to comply with the applicable compliance
deadlines, including January 1, 2019. Commenters state that the EPA has
failed to provide any lawful basis for its proposal to delay the
compliance date for the 2016 Rule.
The EPA considered the comments received and is not finalizing, in
this rulemaking or separately, an extension to the January 1, 2019
compliance date for the application of the updated leak repair
provisions to non-exempt substitute refrigerants. Even though some
commenters thought an extension would reduce compliance costs,
commenters also said that they were taking steps to comply and did not
suggest that they would be unable to do so by January 1, 2019. With no
information in the record to contradict the EPA's earlier findings that
two years provided sufficient time to prepare for the January 1, 2019
compliance date, this final rule rescinds the leak repair requirements
for appliances that contain non-exempt substitute refrigerants without
any extension of that compliance date.
V. Economic Analysis
The EPA does not interpret section 608 to require it to consider
costs and benefits or select the option with the best cost-benefit
outcome. Section 608 does not explicitly address whether costs or
benefits should be considered in developing regulations under that
section. Because the statutory language does not dictate a particular
means of taking economic factors into account, if at all, the EPA has
discretion to adopt a reasonable method for doing so. In this rule, the
EPA has focused on the proper scope of the agency's authority to
regulate.
The EPA is removing the requirement to comply with the leak repair
provisions for appliances containing only non-exempt substitute
refrigerants as the EPA has determined that the 2016 Rule's extension
of those provisions to non-exempt substitute refrigerants exceeded the
agency's statutory authority because it relied on an unreasonable
interpretation of that authority. These provisions include requirements
to repair equipment that is leaking above the regulatory threshold,
along with the associated verification tests, leak inspections, and
recordkeeping.
Details of the methods used to estimate the costs and benefits of
this rule are discussed in the Analysis of the Economic Impact of the
Proposed 2018 Revisions to the National Recycling and Emission
Reduction Program in the docket. For a complete description of the
methodology used in the EPA's analysis, see Section VI of the 2016 Rule
(81 FR 82344) and the technical support document for the 2016 Rule
which is also available in the docket for this action. While the EPA is
providing this information to help the public understand the
implications of this action compared to those considered in the
economic analysis provided for the 2016 Rule, this action is not based
on consideration of this information. Rather, this action is based on
changes in the agency's legal interpretation of the scope of its
statutory authority, as described in earlier sections of this document.
The EPA received several comments on the economic analysis included
in the proposal. One commenter states that the EPA has the authority to
take costs into consideration in finalizing the proposed rule even
where the statute is silent, as confirmed by recent Supreme Court
decisions. That commenter, and numerous other commenters, state that
failure to consider a relevant factor such as cost could make the
agency action unlawful. The EPA agrees as a general matter that the
agency has the authority to consider costs and benefits in regulations
promulgated under section 608. (See, e.g., 81 FR 82287). However, the
consideration of costs and benefits described in the technical support
documents in the docket are provided for purposes of transparency and
to inform the public about the implications of this action relative to
those described in the economic analysis provided for the 2016 Rule
following agency guidance on assessing economic costs and benefits.
This action rescinds the extension of requirements that exceeded the
agency's statutory authority. The agency cannot impose obligations that
exceed its statutory authority, irrespective of the costs and benefits
associated with those requirements.
The EPA received numerous comments on the agency's analysis of the
costs and benefits of the proposed rule. Several commenters state that
it is arbitrary to not monetize the climate damages caused by the
forgone emission reductions resulting from rescinding the extension of
the leak repair provisions to non-exempt substitutes. Commenters also
argue that: Use of the Interagency Working Group's social cost of GHGs
metric would have found that the climate damages of the proposed rule's
forgone emissions reductions outweigh the estimated cost savings; it is
arbitrary for the agency to not use any monetary value for fluorinated
gases; and the EPA has previously found that HFCs endanger public
health and welfare, so the agency cannot ignore GHG emissions which may
result. Commenters also state that the EPA did not consider the effect
that the proposed rule would have on operating costs of leaking
systems, the shortened lifespans and increased equipment failures of
systems allowed to operate with leaks, costs to companies that have
created innovative products to facilitate compliance, and decreased
yields of products generated through IPR processes. Some commenters
also state that rescinding the leak detection and repair program would
result in higher costs for consumers as well as lost jobs in the air
conditioning and refrigeration industry. Others state that compliance
costs will increase as companies will need to ensure compliance with
two different regulatory frameworks.
The EPA disagrees with the comments suggesting that it has ignored
the increased GHG emissions, as it has quantified the expected increase
in those emissions and reflected them in
[[Page 14169]]
its analysis. Today's action is not based on a cost-benefit analysis of
retaining or rescinding various provisions or on any other
consideration of the costs and benefits of various policy options, but
rather is focused solely on whether the agency had the statutory
authority to extend elements of the refrigerant management program to
non-exempt substitute refrigerants in the 2016 Rule. If the agency does
not have legal authority to impose a requirement, it cannot do so, even
if that action would be environmentally or economically beneficial. As
noted above, the technical support documents in the docket are provided
to inform the public about the implications of this action relative to
those described in the economic analysis provided for the 2016 Rule.
The EPA did not monetize the GHG effects in the economic analysis for
the 2016 Rule, nor did it quantify the other types of indirect costs
raised in the comments. The EPA observes that the 2016 Technical
Support Document for the 2016 Rule notes that the final rule, ``may
result in other economic health and environmental benefits that are not
quantified or monetized in this conservative analysis.'' \20\ EPA is
rescinding the 2016 Rule's extension of the leak repair requirements to
equipment containing only non-exempt substitute refrigerants, therefore
the unquantified benefits related to the extension of such requirements
will no longer be attributable to the EPA's refrigerant management
program. Consistent with the agency's overall approach taken in the
2016 Rule, the EPA is not monetizing the GHG effects of this action.
Similarly, the EPA is not quantifying other indirect costs or
distributional effects raised by commenters. While such analyses are
not relevant to the basis for this action, for informational purposes
we observe that estimating distribution effects such as job loss is
very difficult to quantitatively assess: Regulatory employment impacts
can vary across occupations, regions, and industries; by labor demand
and supply elasticities; and in response to other labor market
conditions. Isolating such impacts is a challenge, as they are
difficult to disentangle from employment impacts caused by a wide
variety of ongoing, concurrent economic changes.\21\
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\20\ Technical Support Document, Analysis of the Economic
Impacts and Benefits of the Final Revisions to the National
Recycling and Emission Reduction Program, September 2, 2016, pgs.
60-63.
\21\ For a more detailed discussion, see, e.g., Economic
Analysis for Proposed Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and
Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA section 6(h), June 2019; Regulatory
Impact Analysis for the Proposed Oil and Natural Gas Sector:
Emission Standards for New, Reconstructed, and Modified Sources
Review; EPA-452/R-19-001, August 2019.
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One commenter states that the agency failed to quantify the extra
ODS emissions that would result from unraveling the uniform regulatory
framework for substitute refrigerants. Another commenter notes that the
EPA's estimated forgone GHG emissions reductions do not consider
appliances' end-of-life emissions. The EPA responds that, aside from
the leak repair provisions, the EPA is retaining the extension of all
the subpart F requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants,
including the service practices, which require specific evacuation
levels before disposing of an appliance or opening it for service, use
of certified recovery equipment, and the technician certification
requirement. In addition, the venting prohibition continues to apply to
any knowing release, venting, or disposal of ODS or non-exempt
substitute refrigerant by any person maintaining, servicing, repairing,
or disposing of an appliance. As such, the EPA believes that end-of-
life emissions of both ODS and non-exempt substitute refrigerant will
not be affected by this final rule and were properly not included in
the agency's analysis. Similarly, the EPA properly did not include any
ODS emissions that would result from rescinding the non-leak repair
subpart F provisions in its analysis for the final rule, as it is not
rescinding the extension of those provisions.
Several commenters state that the compliance costs of the 2016 Rule
were too great and presented an unnecessary burden. One commenter
states that the $24 million in annual savings likely underestimates the
costs of the 2016 Rule. One commenter states that the EPA has not fully
considered the impacts of the 2016 Rule on companies, institutions like
hospitals and schools, and homeowners. With the transition to HFCs and
HFOs, these entities have made costly investments in systems, but found
higher repair costs. Likewise, this commenter states that the EPA did
not consider the costs to install new IPR using non-ODS refrigerants.
The EPA responds that the costs of the 2016 Rule are outside the
scope of this action, which is only to rescind the 2016 Rule's
extension of requirements to non-exempt substitute refrigerants that
exceeded the agency's statutory authority.
The EPA received many comments from the refrigeration and air
conditioning industry that they have spent time and money to comply
with the various provisions of the 2016 Rule. This includes costs
associated with training staff, updating reporting and recordkeeping
software, revising and republishing testing materials, and identifying
affected appliances and individuals responsible to ensure compliance.
The EPA responds that the consideration of costs, including
reliance interests, is not relevant to this action because the
rescission here is based on the agency's lack of legal authority for
the 2016 Rule's extension of the leak repair provisions, not on a cost/
benefit analysis or policy considerations. As noted above, if the
agency does not have legal authority to impose a requirement, it cannot
do so, even if retaining that requirement would be economically
beneficial to some entities. However, the EPA notes that this action
does not rescind the extension of most of the provisions that the
commenters mention as a concern, including the leak repair provisions
for appliances containing ODS, and therefore those investments will not
be stranded as a result of this action. The EPA is rescinding the 2016
Rule's extension of the leak repair provisions as they apply to
equipment containing only non-exempt substitute refrigerants, but it is
retaining the extension of the other subpart F requirements, such as
those pertaining to reclamation. This rule does not impose any new
reporting or recordkeeping obligations.
One commenter states that the EPA failed to distinguish between
private and social benefits, and that some costs of this action should
not be counted if the regulated entity had the same or similar options
available to identify and repair refrigerant leaks prior to the
rulemaking. This comment referred specifically to the estimated $15
million in refrigerant purchases that will be made as a result of this
action by owners and operators of equipment with non-exempt
substitutes.
As explained above, consideration of the costs and benefits of this
action is not part of the rationale for this action and does not inform
the EPA's decision on this rule. Rather, this action is based on the
agency's determination that the 2016 Rule's extension of the leak
repair provisions to non-exempt substitute refrigerants exceeded the
agency's statutory authority. The EPA additionally notes that while it
is true that the costs of purchasing additional refrigerant will fall
on private entities, it is those same private entities that will secure
a reduction in burden from the rescission of the leak repair
requirements of the 2016 Rule as they apply to equipment containing
only
[[Page 14170]]
non-exempt substitute refrigerants. To present one of these effects
without the other would fail to recognize the fact that the two effects
are inextricably related. Further, it is standard practice for the EPA,
consistent with the agency's Guidelines for Preparing Economic
Analyses,\22\ to consider increased direct outlays of money by
regulated entities due to an action relative to a baseline without that
action as costs of the action. Any entity that did not repair a leaking
appliance that they would have been required to repair before today's
action would need to allocate some part of its resources to buying
replacement refrigerant that otherwise could have been used for capital
investment, increasing production, or profit. Under the agency's
Guidelines, it is appropriate to consider the replacement refrigerant
costs as opportunity costs when preparing an economic analysis.
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\22\ The Guidelines can be found at https://www.epa.gov/environmental-economics/guidelines-preparing-economic-analyses. See
Chapter 8 titled ``Analyzing Costs.''
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The agency agrees that the nature of private costs in this case
merits a separate accounting in a discussion of the total benefits and
costs of a rule. We have enumerated the costs of purchasing additional
refrigerant separate from the deregulatory benefits.
VI. 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 a significant regulatory action that was submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. Any changes
made in response to OMB recommendations have been documented in the
docket. The EPA prepared an economic analysis of the costs and benefits
associated with this action which is available in Docket Number EPA-HQ-
OAR-2017-0629.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulations and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
This action is considered an Executive Order 13771 deregulatory
action. Details on the estimated cost savings of this final rule can be
found in the EPA's analysis of the potential costs and benefits
associated with this action.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities in this rule have been
submitted for approval to OMB under the PRA. The Information Collection
Request (ICR) document that the EPA prepared has been assigned EPA ICR
number 1626.17; Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Control Number:
2060-0256. You can find a copy of the ICR and supporting statement in
the docket for this rule, and it is briefly summarized here. The
information collection requirements are not enforceable until OMB
approves them.
Through this rule, EPA is revising the leak repair provisions in
Sec. 82.157 so they apply only to equipment using ODS refrigerants or
a blend containing ODS refrigerant.
Respondents/affected entities: This rule removes reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for owners and operators of appliances
containing 50 or more pounds of a non-exempt substitute refrigerant and
technicians servicing such appliances. Entities required to comply with
reporting and recordkeeping requirements include technicians;
technician certification programs; refrigerant wholesalers; refrigerant
reclaimers; refrigeration and air-conditioning equipment owners and/or
operators; and other establishments that perform refrigerant removal,
service, or disposal.
Respondent's obligation to respond: Mandatory (40 CFR part 82,
subpart F).
Estimated number of respondents: This rule reduces the estimated
number of respondents from 861,374 under the 2016 Rule to 573,731.
Frequency of response: The frequency of responses vary from once a
year to daily. Public reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to vary from one minute to 9.4 hours per
response, including time for reviewing instructions and gathering,
maintaining, and submitting information.
Total estimated burden: This rule reduces the estimated annual
recordkeeping and reporting burden from 580,473 hours under the 2016
Rule to 434,359 hours. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: This rule reduces the estimated annual
recordkeeping and reporting cost from $34,627,298 under the 2016 Rule
to $24,625,892. There are no estimated annualized capital or operation
and maintenance costs associated with the reporting or recordkeeping
requirements.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for the
EPA's regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
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. An 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 the rule. This rule does not impose any new
regulatory requirements. It is deregulatory in that it removes required
leak repair and maintenance practices and associated recordkeeping for
appliances that do not contain any ODS refrigerant. We have therefore
concluded that this action will relieve regulatory burden for directly
regulated small entities.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
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. It will not have substantial direct effects on
tribal governments, on the relationship between the federal government
and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the federal government and Indian tribes, as specified in
Executive Order 13175. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to
this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is
not economically significant as defined in Executive Order 12866. The
EPA has not conducted a separate analysis of
[[Page 14171]]
risks to infants and children associated with this rule.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
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 it is not feasible to quantify any
disproportionately high and adverse effects from this action on
minority populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples,
as specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 82
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Chemicals,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: February 26, 2020.
Andrew R. Wheeler,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Environmental
Protection Agency amends 40 CFR part 82 as follows:
PART 82--PROTECTION OF STRATOSPHERIC OZONE
0
1. The authority citation for part 82 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7601, 7671-7671q.
0
2. Amend Sec. 82.154 by revising paragraph (a)(2)(i) to read as
follows:
Sec. 82.154 Prohibitions.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The applicable practices in Sec. Sec. 82.155 and 82.156 are
observed, the applicable practices in Sec. 82.157 are observed for
appliances that contain any class I or class II refrigerant or blend
containing a class I or class II refrigerant, recovery and/or recycling
machines that meet the requirements in Sec. 82.158 are used whenever
refrigerant is removed from an appliance, the technician certification
provisions in Sec. 82.161 are observed, and the reclamation
requirements in Sec. 82.164 are observed; or
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 82.157 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 82.157 Appliance maintenance and leak repair.
(a) Applicability. This section applies as of January 1, 2019. As
of April 10, 2020, this section applies only to appliances with a full
charge of 50 or more pounds of any class I or class II refrigerant or
blend containing a class I or class II refrigerant. Notwithstanding the
use of the term refrigerant in this section, the requirements of this
section do not apply to appliances containing solely substitute
refrigerants. Unless otherwise specified, the requirements of this
section apply to the owner or operator of the appliance.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2020-04773 Filed 3-10-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P