Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Utah; Regional Haze State and Federal Implementation Plans, 75860-75874 [2020-23994]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 229 / Friday, November 27, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
1967(a)(1)(A)(ii) or (C)(ii) after the child
becomes a member.
[FR Doc. 2020–25585 Filed 11–25–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R08–OAR–2015–0463; FRL–10015–
75–Region 8]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Utah;
Regional Haze State and Federal
Implementation Plans
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is finalizing approval of
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revisions submitted by the State of Utah
on July 3, 2019, as supplemented on
December 3, 2019, to satisfy certain
regional haze requirements for the
regional haze program’s first
implementation period (Utah SIP
revisions). The EPA is approving the
Utah SIP revision that provides an
alternative to best available retrofit
technology (BART) controls for nitrogen
oxides (NOX) at the PacifiCorp Hunter
and Huntington power plants. The EPA
finds that the NOX BART Alternative for
Hunter and Huntington achieves greater
reasonable progress toward natural
visibility conditions than BART, in
accordance with the requirements of the
Clean Air Act (CAA) and the EPA’s
Regional Haze Rule. In conjunction with
this approval, we are withdrawing the
Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) that
addresses NOX BART for the Hunter and
Huntington power plants that EPA
promulgated in 2016. The EPA is also
approving Utah’s December 3, 2019 SIP
supplement that requires reporting of all
deviations from compliance with the
applicable requirements under
particulate matter (PM) BART and the
NOX BART Alternative, including the
emission limits for Hunter and
Huntington. The EPA is taking these
actions pursuant to sections 110 and
169A of the CAA.
DATES: This rule is effective on
December 28, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R08–OAR–2015–0463. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov
website. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
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SUMMARY:
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available, e.g., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the website and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available through https://
www.regulations.gov, or please call or
email the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
for additional availability information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Aaron Worstell, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA, Region 8, Mailcode
8ARD–IO, 1595 Wynkoop Street,
Denver, Colorado 80202–1129, (303)
312–6073, worstell.aaron@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Proposed Action and the EPA’s Conclusion
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
A. Legal Issues
B. BART Alternative Requirements
C. BART Alternative ‘‘Greater Reasonable
Progress’’ Determination
III. The EPA’s Final Action
A. 2019 Utah Regional Haze SIP Revisions
B. FIP Withdrawal
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulations and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
J. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
L. Determination Under Section Clean Air
Act Section 307(d)
M. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
N. Judicial Review
I. Proposed Action and the EPA’s
Conclusion
On July 5, 2016, the EPA promulgated
a final rule titled ‘‘Approval,
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Disapproval, and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Partial
Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air
Quality Implementation Plans and
Federal Implementation Plan; Utah;
Revisions to Regional Haze State
Implementation Plan; Federal
Implementation Plan for Regional
Haze,’’ which approved, in part, a
regional haze SIP revision submitted by
the State of Utah on June 4, 2015.1 In
the July 2016 final rule, the EPA also
disapproved, in part, the Utah regional
haze SIP submission, including the NOX
BART Alternative (also ‘‘BART
Alternative’’ or ‘‘Alternative’’) for
Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2, which are BART units as
explained in more detail below. The
BART Alternative relied on sulfur
dioxide (SO2), NOX, and PM emission
reductions from the 2015 closure of
PacifiCorp’s Carbon power plant, as
well as NOX reductions achieved
through combustion control upgrades at
Hunter Units 1, 2 and 3 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2, which were installed in
2006–2014 (Hunter Unit 3 is not a BART
unit). The combustion control upgrades
for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and
Huntington Units 1 and 2 include an
Alstom TSF 2000TM low-NOX firing
system and two elevations of separated
overfire air (SOFA). The combustion
upgrades for Hunter Unit 3 include
upgraded low-NOX burners (LNB) and
overfire air (OFA). Concurrent with
disapproving the NOX BART
Alternative, EPA promulgated a FIP in
the July 2016 final rule that imposed a
NOX BART emission limit of 0.07 lb/
MMBtu (30-day rolling average) for each
of the four BART units based on the
emission reductions achievable through
the installation and operation of
selective-catalytic reduction (SCR) plus
upgraded combustion controls.
On July 3, 2019, Utah submitted a
revised SIP that, based on new technical
information and a different regulatory
test, seeks to demonstrate that the
previously submitted NOX BART
Alternative achieves greater reasonable
progress than BART. The SIP revision
also includes amendments to Utah’s SO2
milestone reporting requirements under
the SO2 Backstop Trading Program
pursuant to 40 CFR 51.309 such that
SO2 emission reductions resulting from
the closure of the Carbon plant are not
counted under both the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program and the NOX BART
Alternative. On January 22, 2020, the
EPA proposed to approve the State’s
July 3, 2019 SIP revision based on this
new information.2 Specifically, we
1 81
2 85
FR 43894 (July 5, 2016).
FR 3558 (Jan. 22, 2020).
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proposed to incorporate the following
into Utah’s SIP:
• A NOX emission limit of 0.26 lb/
MMBtu (30-day rolling average) each for
Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2.
• A NOX emission limit of 0.34 lb/
MMBtu (30-day rolling average) for
Hunter Unit 3.
• A requirement to permanently close
and cease operation of the Carbon
power plant by August 15, 2015.
• The associated amendments to the
SO2 milestone reporting requirements.
Because approval of the NOX BART
Alternative satisfies Utah’s BART
obligation for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and
Huntington Units 1 and 2, we also
proposed to withdraw the FIP for NOX
BART at these units. In particular, we
proposed to find that the NOX BART
Alternative would achieve greater
reasonable progress towards natural
visibility conditions than would be
achieved through the installation and
operation of BART at Hunter Units 1
and 2 and Huntington Units 1 and 2
under EPA’s 2016 FIP.
The EPA also proposed to approve a
December 3, 2019 SIP supplement to the
July 3, 2019 SIP revision that includes
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting (MRR) requirements for the
units subject to the NOX BART
Alternative and PM BART. The
supplement also includes amendments
that require each source to submit a
report of any deviation from applicable
emission limits and operating practices,
including deviations attributable to
upset conditions, the probable cause of
such deviations, and any corrective
actions or preventive measures taken.
Finally, contingent on our approval of
these two SIP revisions, we proposed to
find that Utah’s SIP fully satisfies the
requirements of section 309 of the
Regional Haze Rule and that, therefore,
the State has fully complied with the
requirements for reasonable progress,
including BART, for the first
implementation period.
EPA requested comment on its
proposed approval of Utah’s regional
haze SIP elements related to the NOX
BART Alternative under 40 CFR
51.309(d)(4)(vii) and 51.308(e)(2) and
(3), as well as the MRR elements for the
units subject to that BART Alternative
and to PM BART. EPA previously
approved Utah’s regional haze SIP as
meeting all other requirements of 40
CFR 51.309,3 and we neither reopened
nor requested comment on previously
approved elements.
3 See 77 FR 74355 (Dec. 14, 2012); 81 FR 43894
(July 5, 2016).
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The EPA conducted a public hearing
for our proposed action in Price, Utah
on February 12, 2020. Our public
comment period closed on March 23,
2020.
Our January 2020 proposed rule
provided background on the
requirements of the CAA and EPA’s
Regional Haze Rule, a summary of Utah
regional haze SIP submittals and related
EPA actions, and the EPA’s rationale for
its proposed action. That background
information and rationale will not be
restated here. For the reasons stated in
the proposed rule, this document, and
in the accompanying Response to
Comments (RTC) document, the EPA
concludes that Utah’s NOX BART
Alternative achieves greater reasonable
progress under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(2) and
(3).
II. Public Comments and EPA
Responses
We received both written and oral
comments at the public hearings we
held in Price, Utah. We also received
comments through the internet and
mail. The full text of comments received
from these commenters is included in
the publicly posted docket associated
with this action at https://
www.regulations.gov. Our RTC
document, which is also included in the
docket associated with this action,
provides detailed responses to all
significant comments received except
for those addressed below.4 Our RTC
document is organized similarly to the
structure presented in this section.
Therefore, if additional information is
desired concerning how we addressed a
particular comment, the reader should
refer to the appropriate section in our
RTC document.
PacifiCorp, conservation
organizations (HEAL Utah, Sierra Club,
National Parks Conservation
Association, Utah Physicians for a
Healthy Environment, and Natural
Resources Defense Council), Edison
Electric Institute, Ute Mountain Ute
Tribe, and Salt Lake City’s Capitol Hill
Action Group submitted detailed
written comments. Many general
comments were made at the public
hearing.
A. Legal Issues
Comment summary: Some
commenters argued that the modeling
assumptions used for comparing the
BART Benchmark (the controls required
by the 2016 FIP) 5 to the NOX BART
4 Most commenter citations and footnotes are
excluded from this document.
5 As described above, in the July 2016 FIP, EPA
determined that NOX BART for each of the four
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Alternative overstated emissions for
non-BART units in the BART
Benchmark scenario. Specifically, the
commenters argued that emissions for
the Carbon plant should have reflected
compliance with the Mercury and Air
Toxics Standards (MATS) rule, which
was required by April 15, 2015.
According to the commenters,
compliance with MATS would have
resulted in a greater than 50 percent
reduction in SO2 emissions at Carbon
Units 1 and 2 compared to its historical
emissions. Additionally, the
commenters argued that emissions from
Hunter Unit 3 in the BART Benchmark
scenario should have reflected
combustion controls installed in 2007.
The modeling instead assumed that
under this scenario, the Carbon plant
and Hunter Unit 3 would emit
pollutants consistent with the 2001–
2003 baseline.6 The commenters argued
that such assumption overstates the
emissions from these sources that would
have occurred under the BART
Benchmark and thus understates the
visibility benefits that would occur
under the BART Benchmark.
Response: Utah’s modeling of
emissions at Carbon and Hunter Unit 3
under the NOX BART Alternative and
the BART Benchmark is reasonable and
authorized under the EPA’s regulations
for BART alternatives. In particular,
assuming continued emissions from
sources that would not be subject to
BART controls in the BART Benchmark
scenario, when such emissions would
be eliminated under the BART
Alternative, is simply a necessary
analytical step for making a proper
comparison of the two scenarios to
determine which achieves ‘‘greater
reasonable progress.’’ 7 This is
authorized by the Regional Haze Rule,
and it is consistent with the EPA’s prior
regulatory actions, EPA guidance, and
case law.
BART units constituted an emission limit of 0.07
lb/MMBtu (30-day rolling average) based on the
emission reductions achievable through the
installation and operation of SCR plus upgraded
combustion controls. Utah’s July 2019 SIP submittal
thus refers to the BART Benchmark controls as the
‘‘EPA FIP,’’ as do many of the commenters. While
the controls represented by the BART Benchmark
and EPA’s 2016 FIP are indeed the same, the
relevant comparison for this action is between the
BART Benchmark and the NOX BART Alternative.
40 CFR 51.308(e)(2); see also 85 FR 3572. We
therefore refer to the 2016 FIP as the BART
Benchmark as appropriate in this document, the
preamble to the proposed rule, and the RTC
document.
6 See 85 FR 3568.
7 40 CFR 51.308(e).
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First, Hunter Unit 3 and the Carbon
Units are not BART sources.8
Accordingly, reductions from these
sources should not be included in
determining emissions reductions from
the BART Benchmark under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2)(i)(C). Hunter Unit 3 and the
Carbon Units are covered by Utah’s
BART Alternative, however, and thus
emissions reductions from these sources
properly are attributed to the BART
Alternative under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2)(i)(D). Were the EPA to
include these same emission reductions
in the BART Benchmark scenario, even
though there would have been no
enforceable obligation that they occur
under that scenario, a proper
comparison of the relative degree of
visibility improvement between the two
scenarios would not be possible.
Furthermore, Utah properly applied a
2001–2003 baseline to calculate
emissions reductions under both
scenarios. Pursuant to 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2)(iv), a state’s SIP must
demonstrate that emissions reductions
resulting from an alternative measure
will be surplus to those reductions
resulting from measures adopted to
meet requirements of the CAA ‘‘as of the
baseline date of the SIP.’’ In
promulgating the Regional Haze Rule in
1999, we explained that the ‘‘baseline
date of the SIP’’ in this context means
‘‘the date of the emissions inventories
on which the SIP relies,’’ 9 which is
defined as 2002 for regional haze
purposes.10 Any measure adopted after
2002 is accordingly ‘‘surplus’’ under 40
CFR 51.308(e)(2)(iv). Indeed, in 2002,
the EPA designated the baseline date of
all regional haze SIPs as 2002.11 The
EPA explained that ‘‘[p]rogress in
improving visibility is tracked from
baseline conditions (established using
air quality monitoring for the 2000–2004
period). If 2002 is used as the base year
for planning purposes, then States can
take credit for emission reductions that
are achieved before the 2007–2008 SIP
due date.’’ 12
In other words, for purposes of
calculating emissions reductions from
BART alternatives, states assume a
baseline of 2002 emissions and may take
credit for emissions reductions after that
date, even if those reductions occur as
8 See 85 FR 3559; 81 FR 43895; Utah Air Quality
Board, ‘‘Utah State Implementation Plan Section
XX,’’ June 24, 2019, pages 28–29.
9 64 FR 35714, 35742 (July 1, 1999).
10 70 FR 39104, 39143 (July 6, 2005).
11 See Memorandum dated November 18, 2002,
from Lydia Wegman and Peter Tsirigotis, Subject:
‘‘2002 Base Year Emission Inventory SIP Planning:
8-hr Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze Programs.’’
12 Id. at 3. The first regional haze SIPs were due
December 17, 2007. See 40 CFR 51.308(b).
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a result of, or to comply with, other
CAA requirements, so long those
requirements occur after that baseline.
Thus, Utah’s modeling properly
credited emissions reductions from
Carbon’s 2015 shutdown and Hunter 3’s
2007 controls towards the BART
Alternative. Furthermore, in order to
properly compare the BART Benchmark
to the NOX BART Alternative under
51.308(e)(2) to determine if the
Alternative achieves greater reasonable
progress, common sense dictates that
the EPA must compare emissions
reductions under each scenario from the
same baseline year. Thus, Utah’s
modeling also properly included Carbon
and Hunter 3’s emissions from the
2001–2003 baseline period (i.e., not
including any reductions from MATS
compliance or 2007 controls) under the
BART Benchmark because Carbon and
Hunter 3 are not BART sources.
This approach is supported by case
law.13 In Yazzie v. EPA, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit reviewed and upheld EPA’s FIP,
which included a BART alternative
instead of BART.14 The petitioners
argued that the EPA inconsistently
credited the BART alternative, but not
the BART benchmark, for emissions
reductions from controls voluntarily
installed in 2009–2011 for purposes of
comparing the two.15 Like here, the EPA
used a 2001–2003 baseline from which
to calculate emissions reductions under
both scenarios for purposes of the
comparison.16 The Ninth Circuit
deemed this approach reasonable under
40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).17 Likewise, Utah’s
approach here with respect to Hunter 3
and Carbon is reasonable.
Commenters additionally argue that
the State cannot take credit for the
portion of the reductions from the
Carbon shutdown that would have
happened anyway had Carbon remained
in operation but in compliance with the
MATS rule. However, as the D.C. Circuit
has recognized, EPA’s regulations allow
for BART alternatives even when the
reductions are due to compliance with
another CAA requirement. In UARG v.
EPA, the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit
reviewed and upheld the EPA’s rule
finding that emission reductions
attributable to the 2011 Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR)—implemented
under the ‘‘good neighbor’’ provision of
the Act, CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)—
13 See Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, 885
F.3d. 714 (D.C. Cir. 2018); Yazzie v. EPA, 851 F.3d
960 (9th Cir. 2017).
14 851 F.3d at 975.
15 851 F.3d at 974.
16 Id.
17 See id.
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may be treated as a BART alternative.
The petitioners there argued that the
EPA should not have compared BART
on its own (i.e., without CSAPR in
place) to the BART alternative on its
own (i.e., CSAPR without BART in
place), but should have instead
compared BART plus CSAPR to CSAPR,
because CSAPR (like the MATS rule
here), was implemented under a
separate provision of the CAA and
would go into effect regardless of
BART.18 The D.C. Circuit rejected the
petitioners’ argument as effectively
requiring more of BART alternatives
than the EPA’s rule requires. The court
explained that under the Regional Haze
Rule, the EPA properly compares BART
without the alternative or other CAA
requirements to the alternative without
BART.19 Underlying that holding is the
fact that EPA’s regulations authorize
BART alternatives to take advantage of
emission reductions achieved to meet
some other CAA requirement so long as
they are surplus to requirements as of
the baseline.20 Thus, as in UARG, the
EPA here properly compared the BART
Benchmark without MATS compliance
at Carbon to the NOX BART Alternative.
This approach is also consistent with
other EPA actions. See, e.g., 79 FR
39322, 39325 (July 10, 2014) (approving
Connecticut’s use of emissions
reductions from post-2002 regulations
as surplus that could be credited to its
BART alternative); 77 FR 34218, 34219
(June 11, 2012) (approving Indiana’s
credit to its BART alternative for
reductions from a non-BART source); 78
FR 57487, 57489–91 (Sept. 19, 2013)
(approving Massachusetts’ comparison
of the BART benchmark and the BART
alternative from a common 2002
baseline, and approving the state’s use
of emissions reductions from post-2002
regulations as surplus that could be
credited to its BART alternative); 79 FR
33438, 33441–42 (June 11, 2014)
(approving Washington’s credit to its
BART alternative for reductions
achieved through controls installed
post-2002 in order to meet other CAA
requirements).
In sum, in this final action approving
Utah’s NOX BART Alternative, the EPA
finds that Utah properly compared the
BART Benchmark to the BART
Alternative, using its modeling of the
emissions reductions of each without
the other from the 2001–2003 baseline
period, consistent with the Regional
18 UARG,
885 F.3d at 720.
id.
20 See 40 CFR 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), (e)(2)(iv). See
also UARG, 885 F.3d at 719, 720 (finding challenge
to EPA’s BART alternative regulations to be timebarred).
19 See
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Haze Rule, its regulatory history, EPA
guidance, and case law.
Comment summary: Some
commenters argued that there are three
legal flaws with Utah’s treatment of SO2
emissions reductions from the Carbon
plant shutdown. As explained in the
preamble to the proposed rule, Utah’s
SIP revision continues to report
historical emissions for the Carbon plant
in annual milestone reports for the SO2
Backstop Trading Program to ensure
that SO2 emissions reductions from the
Carbon shutdown are not doublecounted towards the NOX BART
Alternative and the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program. First, the commenters
argued that the approach violates 40
CFR 51.309(d)(4)(iii)’s requirement that
reporting under the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program include ‘‘actual’’
emissions. Second, the commenters
argued that the approach violates 40
CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i), which requires that
participating states use the same
compliance methodology during the
first two years of the Program. Finally,
the commenters argued that removing
Carbon from the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program would undermine and
potentially nullify the EPA’s approval of
that Program because the Program’s
inclusion of sources like Carbon was an
underpinning of the EPA’s approval.
Response: The EPA disagrees with
this comment and the incorporated 2016
comments by the National Park Service.
First, 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(iii)’s
requirement that SIPs include
provisions requiring ‘‘annual reporting
of actual stationary source SO2
emissions’’ must be read in context with
the following sentence that such ‘‘data
must be sufficient to determine annually
whether the milestone for each year
through 2018 is achieved.’’ 21 The
provision goes on to require that the
participating states submit the data to
the EPA and the regional planning
organization and that the data be kept
for at least 10 years. Thus, read in
context, § 51.309(d)(4)(iii) plainly is
meant to require reporting that allows a
determination of whether the milestones
have been met.22 Utah’s approach to
reporting Carbon’s emissions under the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program serves
this purpose because Utah will overstate
actual emissions under the Program.
This conservative approach ensures that
the reported data are sufficient to
determine whether the SO2 milestone is
achieved and is therefore consistent
21 40
CFR 51.309(d)(4)(iii).
64 FR 35751–52 (‘‘Section 51.309(d)(4)
requires monitoring and reporting of stationary
source emissions of SO2 in order to assess
compliance with these milestones during the period
2003 to 2018.’’).
22 See
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with and achieves the purpose of the
provision, and the EPA finds it
approvable.
As explained in the proposal, the
participating states first achieved the
2018 milestone (the most stringent
milestone) in 2011 when Carbon was
fully operational. Between 2011 and
Carbon’s shutdown in 2015, emissions
continued to stay below the 2018
milestone and decreased significantly
each year. The most recent milestone
report, for 2016, demonstrates that SO2
emissions were 36 percent lower than
the 2018 milestone.23 At its highest
reported SO2 emissions level, Carbon’s
emissions made up only 10 percent of
the participating states’ three-year
average SO2 emissions (reported in
2014).24 Thus, even with the additional
emissions from Carbon, the
participating states can easily achieve
the 2018 milestone, and overstating
Utah’s emissions for purposes of the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program will not
impair any determination of compliance
with the milestones.
Second, Utah’s approach does not
violate 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i). As an
initial matter, the commenters
selectively quote the provision. The
complete sentence reads, ‘‘[d]uring the
first two years of the program,
compliance with the milestone may be
measured by a methodology of the
States’ choosing, so long as all States in
the program use the same
methodology.’’ 25 The SO2 Backstop
Trading Program was approved in 2012,
which is more than two years ago.26
Thus, this sentence is no longer
applicable.
Instead, after the first two years of the
Program, § 51.309(d)(4)(i) requires that
participating states measure compliance
by comparing ‘‘a three-year rolling
average of actual emissions with a
rolling average of the emissions
milestones for the same three years.’’
Utah’s SIP revision remains consistent
with this methodology. Under this
methodology, each state reports its own
emissions.27 As explained above, using
this methodology, the participating
states achieved the 2018 milestone in
2011, and emissions are currently 36
percent below the 2018 milestone.28
Accordingly, Wyoming and New
Mexico are not prejudiced by Utah’s
23 85
FR 3570.
at Table 6.
25 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i) (emphasis added).
26 See 77 FR 73926 (Dec. 12, 2012).
27 See Utah Admin. Code R307–250–9(8); WY
Rules and Regulations 020.0002.14 § 2(h)(viii); New
Mexico Admin. Code 20.2.81.106(O) and
20.11.46.16(H) (all requiring quarterly and annual
reports).
28 85 FR 3570 (Table 6).
24 Id.
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continued reporting of the Carbon
emissions, nor do they have any reason
to amend their SIPs to account for
Carbon’s emissions. Indeed, the EPA
approved a similar SIP revision for units
in Wyoming in 2019.29 Utah’s approach
is consistent with § 51.309(d)(4)(i) and
with the other states’ methodologies.
Finally, Utah’s approach does not
undermine or nullify the EPA’s
approval of the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program. In approving the Program as
better than BART, the EPA relied on the
fact that the Program, including the
2018 SO2 emissions milestone, covered
63 non-BART sources, including
Carbon.30 It hardly undermines the
EPA’s approval that one of the sources
that was included in the Program has
now shut down. The Program was
designed to encourage sources to reduce
emissions so that the emissions
milestones were and are never
exceeded.31 In any case, Utah has not
removed Carbon from the Program, but
rather has decided to continue counting
its emissions at historical levels towards
the 2018 milestone, even though the
source is now actually emitting at zero.
That is, emissions from Carbon remain
covered by the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program. Even accounting for Carbon’s
historical emissions, the participating
states’ SO2 emissions are far below the
2018 milestone and there is no
indication that the 2018 milestone will
ever be exceeded such that emissions
under the Program would exceed
projected emissions under BART,
thereby rendering the Program less
effective than BART.
Even it if was the case that Utah had
removed Carbon from the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program, however, the
inclusion of non-BART units like
Carbon was just one of several reasons
the EPA deemed the Program better than
BART. Additional reasons included: (1)
The trading program discouraged
emissions from new sources more
effectively than under BART; (2) the
trading program included an aggregate
cap on emissions, which decreased
emissions more effectively than BART;
and (3) the trading program encouraged
earlier reductions than under BART.32
The Tenth Circuit upheld the EPA’s
considerations as ‘‘a reasonable basis for
29 See 84 FR 22711, 22712, 22715 (May 20, 2019)
(requiring Basin Electric to use inflated emission
rates to calculate and report emissions from two
units for the SO2 Backstop Trading Program to
ensure SO2 emissions are not double counted for
the SO2 Program and the BART alternative).
30 77 FR 30953, 30965 (May 24, 2012).
31 77 FR 74360. Participating states must continue
to meet the 2018 milestone until the Program is
replaced with an EPA-approved SIP revision. See
also 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(vi)(A).
32 See 77 FR 30965; 77 FR 73927.
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the EPA’s approval of the 309
program.’’ 33 Accordingly, Utah’s
continued accounting of the Carbon
emissions in the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program, which arguably affects just one
part of the EPA’s rationale in a
proportionally minor way (1/63), cannot
possibly undermine or nullify the EPA’s
approval.
Finally, as noted above, Carbon has
not been removed from the Program as
the commenters contend. Rather, as
explained above, Carbon’s emissions
continue to be included in the inventory
of annual emissions notwithstanding
the fact that it is shut down.34 Thus, SO2
emissions remain capped at the 2018
milestone, including Carbon’s
emissions. To the extent it may become
necessary, future SO2 reductions would
have to come from other sources in
order to allow the participating states to
continue to meet the 2018 milestone.
Comment summary: Some
commenters assert that the EPA may not
approve the NOX BART Alternative
because the NOX BART Alternative
would allow increased emissions limits
and visibility impairment without
offsetting increased emissions elsewhere
in Utah’s SIP in violation of CAA
section 110(l), 42 U.S.C. 7410(l). The
commenters argue that case law
supports an interpretation of CAA
section 110(l) that prevents
implementation plan revisions that
would increase overall air pollution
limits or worsen air quality. The
commenters argue that the EPA’s
approval of the NOX BART Alternative
and withdrawal of the FIP would violate
CAA section 110(l) for two specific
reasons. First, the commenters assert
that the NOX BART Alternative would
increase emissions limits and resulting
NOX pollution compared to the FIP.
They argue that the EPA’s proposed
analysis and conclusion that increased
NOX emissions will not interfere with
applicable CAA requirements is
‘‘woefully insufficient to support
compliance with section 110(l).’’
Second, the commenters assert that
Utah’s treatment of the SO2 emissions
reductions from the Carbon plant,
which continues to report Carbon’s
emissions under the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program so that they can be
credited to the NOX BART Alternative,
violates CAA section 110(l). The
commenters argue that such treatment
eliminates an applicable requirement
under the CAA that results in an
increase in overall allowed emissions.
33 WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 770 F.3d 919, 935
(10th Cir. 2014).
34 See 85 FR 3574.
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Response: The EPA disagrees with
these comments. CAA section 110(l)
states in relevant part: ‘‘The
Administrator shall not approve a
revision of a plan if the revision would
interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress (as defined
in section 7501 of this title), and any
other applicable requirement of this
chapter.’’ 35 CAA section 110(l) applies
to all requirements of the CAA and to
all areas of the country, whether
attainment, nonattainment,
unclassifiable or maintenance for one or
more of the six criteria pollutants. EPA
interprets section 110(l) as applying to
all National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS) that are in effect,
including those for which SIP
submissions have not been made.36
However, the level of rigor needed for
any CAA section 110(l) demonstration
will vary depending on the nature and
circumstances of the revision.
There are two possible paths for
satisfying CAA section 110(l). First, a
state may demonstrate through an air
quality analysis that the revision will
not interfere with attainment of the
NAAQS, reasonable further progress, or
any other applicable requirements.
Second, a state may substitute
equivalent emissions reductions to
compensate for any change to a plan to
ensure actual emissions to the air are
not increased and thus preserve status
quo air quality.37 The second approach
may be used, for example, where no
attainment demonstrations are available
to guide an analysis of whether the SIP
revision would interfere with
attainment of the NAAQS. However,
nothing in the statute requires a state to
rely on substitute emission reductions
or alters the basic proposition that
section 110(l) can be satisfied by an air
quality analysis demonstrating that a
plan revision will not interfere with any
35 42
U.S.C. 7410(l).
general, a section 110(l) demonstration
should address all pollutants whose emissions and/
or ambient concentrations would change as a result
of a plan revision. Here, commenters allege that
emissions and/or ambient concentrations of NOX
and SO2 would change as a result of this plan
revision.
37 ‘‘Equivalent’’ emissions reductions are
reductions that are equal to or greater than those
reductions achieved by the control measure
approved into the plan. To show that compensating
emissions reductions are equivalent, adequate
justification must be provided. The compensating,
equivalent reductions should represent actual
emissions reductions achieved in a
contemporaneous time frame to the change of the
existing control measure in order to preserve the
status quo air quality. If the status quo is preserved,
noninterference is demonstrated. In addition to
being contemporaneous, the equivalent emissions
reductions should also be permanent, enforceable,
quantifiable, and surplus.
36 In
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applicable requirement concerning
attainment and reasonable further
progress, or any other applicable CAA
requirement. As explained in greater
detail below, in this case, the EPA has
concluded based on an air quality
analysis that the revision will not
interfere with attainment of the NAAQS
or any other applicable CAA
requirement and is not relying on
substitute emission reductions.
Before addressing comments
regarding the EPA’s analysis, however,
we address the commenters’ suggestion
that CAA section 110(l) per se prohibits
approval of any SIP revision that allows
an increase in emissions or weakens
requirements relative to the existing
implementation plan.38 Such an
interpretation is not supported by the
statutory language or case law. First, the
plain language of the provision does not
prohibit every SIP revision that allows
an increase in emissions or weakens the
existing plan’s requirements. Rather, the
language prohibits EPA approval of
such a SIP revision if it would interfere
with attainment of the NAAQS,
reasonable further progress, or any other
applicable requirement of the CAA.39
Thus, the language focuses on
interference rather than on emissions
increases or changed requirements.
Second, courts have upheld EPA’s
interpretation that the relevant inquiry
under CAA section 110(l) is not whether
the SIP revision allows an increase in
emissions or weakens requirements, but
whether there has been a demonstration
that the SIP revision would interfere
with the NAAQS, reasonable further
progress, or any other applicable CAA
requirement.
For example, in Kentucky Resources
Council v. EPA, the petitioners argued
that a new attainment demonstration,
which was not due for years after action
on the SIP revision, was required in
order to show noninterference under
CAA section 110(l). Instead, the
examination in that case was based on
whether the area, which was designated
as a nonattainment area for the relevant
NAAQS, would have more difficulty
attaining and maintaining the NAAQS
with the SIP revision (i.e., whether the
SIP revision would interfere with
38 While the EPA acknowledges that this action
will allow for greater NOX emissions than the 2016
FIP, the EPA does not concede that this action
weakens regional haze requirements or allows
increased visibility impairment. Instead, as is
explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, this
document, and in the EPA’s response to comments,
Utah’s NOX BART Alternative will achieve greater
reasonable progress through combined NOX, SO2,
and PM reductions and therefore results in a
stronger regional haze requirement than the existing
plan. See, e.g., 85 FR 3566 (Table 3), 3569, 3573.
39 See 42 U.S.C. 7410(l).
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attainment and maintenance of the
NAAQS). In upholding the EPA’s
interpretation and examination, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
explained, ‘‘Congress did not intend
that the EPA reject each and every SIP
revision that presents some remote
possibility for interference. Thus, where
EPA does not find that a SIP revision
would interfere with attainment,
approval of the revision does no
violence to the statute.’’ 40 The Sixth
Circuit further explained that, ‘‘[i]n
rejecting [a] strict interpretation in favor
of one that allows [states] more
flexibility, the EPA does service to a
fundamental premise underlying the
Clean Air Act scheme, which is that the
states have the primary responsibility
for ensuring that the NAAQS are
met.’’ 41 Likewise, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit upheld
the EPA’s interpretation stating, ‘‘[w]e
agree that where interference is not
demonstrated, approval of the state’s
SIP revision appropriately respects the
state’s choice to achieve air quality
standards with ‘whatever mix of
emission limitations it deems best
suited to its particular situation.’ ’’ 42
The commenters misconstrue other
cases. In El Comite Para El Bienestar de
Earlimart v. EPA and WildEarth
Guardians v. EPA, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit dismissed
petitioners’ CAA section 110(l)
challenges without addressing what is
required to show that a SIP revision
violates CAA section 110(l).43 And
contrary to the commenters’ assertion,
neither Indiana v. EPA nor Kentucky
Resources Council v. EPA stand for the
proposition that the EPA must require
substitute emissions reductions when a
SIP revision increases emissions so that
overall net emissions do not increase. In
those cases, the U.S. Courts of Appeal
for the Sixth and Seventh Circuits
simply held that the EPA reasonably
concluded that CAA section 110(l) was
40 467
F.3d 986, 994 (6th Cir. 2006).
at 996.
42 Alabama Environmental Council v. EPA, 711
F.3d 1277, 1293 (11th Cir. 2013) (quoting Train v.
NRDC, Inc., 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975)). See also
Indiana v. EPA, 796 F.3d 803, 811 (7th Cir. 2015)
(‘‘When deciding whether to approve Illinois’s SIP
revision, EPA was required to determine whether
the revision would, going forward, interfere with
attainment.’’) (emphasis in original); GalvestonHouston Ass’n for Smog Prevention v. EPA, 289
Fed. Appx. 745, 754 (5th Cir. 2008) (‘‘[C]hanges to
a SIP, either dropping measures or reducing
measurement requirements, are not by themselves
sufficient to prove interference. Rather, one must
show that the substitute measures are not at least
equivalent to the previous measures in achieving
attainment.’’).
43 See El Comite Para El Bienestar de Earlimart
v. EPA, 786 F.3d 688, 696–97 (9th Cir. 2015);
WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 759 F.3d 1064, 1074
(9th Cir. 2014).
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41 Id.
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not violated when substitute emissions
reductions were included in the SIP
revisions at issue.44 But as explained
above, the EPA has previously
identified two options for demonstrating
noninterference under CAA section
110(l): (1) Substitution of one measure
by another with equivalent or greater
emissions reductions/air quality benefit;
and (2) an air quality analysis showing
that removing the measure will not
interfere with other applicable
requirements (i.e., without a substitute
measure).45 Here the SIP submission did
not include substitute measures and the
EPA chose to evaluate the air quality
impact of the proposed revision. As we
explain below, the EPA’s air quality
analysis shows that the Utah SIP
revisions will not interfere with
attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable
further progress, or any other CAA
requirement.
Importantly, the statute does not
require any ‘‘specific methodology’’ for
air quality analyses under CAA section
110(l).46 In general, the level of rigor
needed for any CAA section 110(l)
demonstration will vary depending on
the nature of the revision, its potential
impact on emissions and air quality,
and the air quality in the affected areas.
In the proposed rule, the EPA
proposed to find that the SIP revisions
satisfy section 110(l). The document
explained how the proposed SIP
revisions and associated FIP withdrawal
will comply with and thus could not be
said to interfere with applicable regional
haze requirements and general
implementation plan requirements such
as enforceability. The proposal also
addressed potential interference with
requirements concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress, stating that
the Utah SIP revisions will allow for
greater NOX emissions at the four
subject-to-BART units as compared to
the 2016 FIP (which is currently
judicially stayed). The proposal went on
to explain that the change in these
emissions compared to the FIP,
however, is not anticipated to interfere
with any applicable requirements under
the CAA. We explained that the
geographic area where the BART units
are located is not part of a
nonattainment area for any NAAQS.
Furthermore, we explained that the
approved portions of the PM2.5
attainment demonstrations and clean
data determinations (CDD) for the Salt
Lake City, Provo, and Logan, UT–ID
nonattainment areas (NAAs) do not rely
44 See Kentucky Resources Council, 467 F.3d at
995–96; Indiana, 796 F.3d at 812–13.
45 See Indiana, 796 F.3d at 806.
46 Kentucky Resources Council, 467 F.3d at 995.
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75865
on the installation of SCR at Hunter or
Huntington to achieve attainment of the
NAAQS. Similarly, we explained that
the EPA recently approved Utah’s PM10
redesignation requests and maintenance
plans for Salt Lake County, Utah
County, and Ogden City NAAs.47 These
PM10 redesignation requests and
maintenance plans do not rely on the
installation of SCR at Hunter or
Huntington to achieve attainment of the
NAAQS. Finally, we explained that
there are no other approved attainment
demonstrations in other areas of the
State or outside of the State that rely on
the installation of SCR at Hunter or
Huntington to achieve attainment of any
of the NAAQS.48
The commenters contend that the
EPA’s air quality analysis is inadequate
but did not provide any evidence that
Utah’s SIP revisions will interfere with
any specific applicable requirement
under the CAA. Here, for the reasons
explained below, the EPA now confirms
the proposed conclusions from the CAA
section 110(l) analysis in the proposal.
First, the geographic area where the
Hunter and Huntington Units are
located is not part of a nonattainment
area for any NAAQS. Also, monitors in
the geographic area do not currently
show exceedances of the ozone
NAAQS.49
Second, since the publication of the
proposal on January 22, 2020, the PM10
areas for Salt Lake County, Utah County,
and Ogden City were redesignated as
attaining the PM10 NAAQS.50 The areas
continue to attain the PM10 NAAQS
based on the most recent official
ambient data (2017–2019).51 This means
that these areas attained the NAAQS at
current emission levels, i.e., the
emission levels allowed by the NOX
controls installed at Hunter and
Huntington between 2006 and 2014 and
which will be maintained under Utah’s
NOX BART Alternative. Because the FIP
was judicially stayed and the NOX
emission controls required by the FIP
(SCRs) were never installed, current
emissions levels do not reflect emission
levels that would have been achieved if
the FIP had been implemented. In other
words, the EPA’s approval of the Utah
NOX BART Alternative will not cause
an increase in NOX emissions at Hunter
47 The PM
10 redesignations for Salt Lake County,
Utah County, and Ogden City nonattainment areas
revised 40 CFR 81.345 to signify that these areas are
in attainment. Utah demonstrated maintenance of
the PM10 standard to 2035 through the maintenance
plans.
48 85 FR 3574.
49 EPA, ‘‘Air Quality System Preliminary Design
Value Report,’’ October 7, 2020.
50 85 FR 10989 (Feb. 26, 2020).
51 EPA, ‘‘Air Quality System Preliminary Design
Value Report,’’ September 15, 2020.
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or Huntington compared to current
conditions. Therefore, the SIP approval
will not interfere with already-achieved
NAAQS attainment for PM10, and there
is no evidence, including none provided
by the commenters, to suggest that PM10
areas for Salt Lake County, Utah County,
and Ogden City will not continue to
attain the NAAQS following our
approval of the SIP and concurrent
withdrawal of the FIP.
Third, the Northern Wasatch Front,
Southern Wasatch Front, and Uinta
Basin ozone non-attainment areas were
designated nonattainment for the 2015
ozone NAAQS on August 3, 2018.52 As
part of the 2018 ozone designation
process, the EPA conducted a
meteorological Hybrid Single-Particle
Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory
(HYSPLIT) analysis to determine
whether sources near the monitors
violating the NAAQS contribute to the
Northern and Southern Wasatch Front
ozone non-attainment areas. Evaluation
of such meteorological data helps to
assess the fate and transport of
emissions contributing to ozone
concentrations and to identify areas
potentially contributing to the
monitored violations. Results of the
HYSPLIT analysis for the Northern and
Southern Wasatch Front ozone
nonattainment areas show that back
trajectories rarely originated or passed
through Carbon and Emery counties on
high ozone days in the Wasatch Front
(where Hunter and Huntington are
located).53 Instead, the HYSPLIT
analysis indicates that emissions
originating within Davis and Salt Lake
Counties, the southern portion of Weber
County, the northern portion of Utah
County, and the eastern portion of
Tooele County primarily contribute to
monitor violations.54 Furthermore, the
monitors in the Southern Wasatch Front
ozone nonattainment area (closest to the
BART sources) are currently attaining
the ozone standard using 2017–2019
and preliminary 2018–2020 data.55
For the Uinta Basin non-attainment
area, the EPA has determined that ozone
production is a highly localized
phenomenon. The Uinta Basin is a
winter ozone area, where violating
52 83 FR 25776, 25836 (June 4, 2018). At that time,
the ozone monitors located closest to the two power
plants, in Carbon County, did not violate the 2015
ozone standard. EPA, ‘‘Utah: Northern Wasatch
Front, Southern Wasatch Front, and Uinta Basin
Intended Area Designations for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards Technical
Support Document (TSD),’’ page 6 (‘‘Utah 2015
Ozone TSD’’). Also found in docket EPA–HQ–
OAR–2017–0548; posted January 5, 2018.
53 Utah 2015 Ozone TSD, pages 18–25.
54 Id. at 25.
55 EPA, ‘‘Air Quality System Preliminary Design
Value Report,’’ October 7, 2020.
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ozone concentrations are dependent on
stagnant winter conditions associated
with strong temperature inversions.
During the ozone designations process,
the EPA used the latest data and
information available to the agency (and
to the states and tribes through the
Ozone Designations Mapping Tool and
the EPA Ozone Designations Guidance
and Data web page),56 to evaluate
emissions and air quality data and other
information for counties in the Uinta
Basin. The EPA determined that the
stagnant winter conditions associated
with strong temperature inversions limit
the influence of areas outside of the
topographic Uinta Basin.57 Thus, at the
time of the 2018 designation, the EPA
determined that sources in surrounding
counties (like Hunter and Huntington)
do not contribute to the violating area
because of these unique geographic
features and the associated winter
temperature inversion meteorology.
Fourth, the Salt Lake City, Provo, and
Logan, Utah-Idaho (UT–ID) PM2.5
nonattainment areas were designated
nonattainment for the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS on November 13, 2009.58
On October 19, 2018, the EPA finalized
a determination of attainment for the
Logan, UT–ID PM2.5 nonattainment
area.59 Based on the most recent 3 years
of valid data at that time (2015–2017),
the Logan, UT–ID nonattainment area
attained the 2006 primary and
secondary 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS by the
attainment date of December 31, 2017.
Likewise, on June 8, 2020, the EPA
proposed a determination of attainment,
based on the most recent 3 years of valid
data (2017–2019), that the Salt Lake City
and Provo nonattainment areas attained
the 2006 primary and secondary 24hour PM2.5 NAAQS by the attainment
date of December 31, 2019.60 On
January 13, 2020, Utah submitted
redesignation requests for the Logan,
UT–ID, Salt Lake City, and Provo PM2.5
nonattainment areas and the EPA is
56 The EPA’s Ozone Designations Guidance and
Data web page can be found at https://
www.epa.gov/ozone-designations/ozonedesignations-guidance-and-data.
57 Utah 2015 Ozone TSD, pages 29, 30.
58 74 FR 58688 (Nov. 13, 2009).
59 83 FR 52983 (Oct. 19, 2018). A nonattainment
area may be issued a determination of attainment
by the EPA only if monitored data demonstrate that
air quality has improved enough that the NAAQS
is now being achieved. These determinations are
based upon complete, quality-assured data gathered
at established state and local air monitoring stations
and national air monitoring stations in the
nonattainment area and must include a notice and
comment rulemaking by the EPA determining that
the area is attaining the relevant standard. Although
a determination of attainment is not equivalent to
a redesignation in 40 CFR part 81, a determination
of attainment shows that monitored air quality no
longer violates the NAAQS.
60 85 FR 35033 (June 8, 2020).
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actively reviewing this submittal for
future action.
Because the Logan, UT–ID PM2.5
nonattainment area is now attaining the
PM2.5 NAAQS and we proposed to find
that the Salt Lake City and Provo PM2.5
nonattainment areas are also now
attaining the PM2.5 NAAQS at current
emission levels, which would not
increase upon approval of Utah’s SIP
revisions, the SIP approval will not
interfere with NAAQS attainment for
PM2.5. Additionally, there is no
evidence, including none provided by
the commenters, to suggest that these
areas will not continue to attain the
NAAQS following our approval of the
SIP and concurrent withdrawal of the
FIP.
Fifth, contrary to the commenters’
argument, the EPA demonstrated that
the SIP approval will not interfere with
the CAA’s BART requirements,
including the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program. As explained elsewhere in this
document, Utah’s amendments to the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program do not
alter the applicable 2018 SO2 milestone
or the sources covered by the Program,
and thus maintain compliance with the
Program and the Regional Haze Rule.
The SIP amendments to Utah’s SO2
milestone reporting requirements under
the SO2 Backstop Trading Program are
merely an accounting exercise to ensure
that emission reductions resulting from
the Carbon plant’s closure are not
credited towards both the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program and the NOX BART
Alternative. The SIP amendments
further do not result in an actual
increase in emissions.
In summary, we find that Utah’s SIP
revisions will not interfere with
attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable
further progress, or other CAA
requirements because: (1) The
geographic area where the Hunter and
Huntington Units are located is not part
of a nonattainment area for any NAAQS;
(2) the recently redesignated former
PM10 nonattainment areas in Salt Lake
County, Utah County, and Ogden City
are attaining the PM10 NAAQS at
current emission levels, which would
remain unchanged with approval of
Utah’s SIP revisions; (3) we determined
in 2018 that the Hunter and Huntington
power plants do not contribute to the
Northern Wasatch Front and Southern
Wasatch Front ozone non-attainment
areas, and that the Uinta Basin nonattainment area is a highly localized
phenomenon and sources in
surrounding counties, including the
Hunter and Huntington power plants,
do not contribute to the violating area;
(4) the Logan, UT–ID PM2.5
nonattainment area is attaining the
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PM2.5 NAAQS, and we proposed to find
that the Salt Lake City and Provo PM2.5
nonattainment areas are also attaining
the PM2.5 NAAQS, all at current
emission levels that would not increase
under Utah’s SIP revisions; and (5) the
Utah SIP revisions properly account for
SO2 emissions in accordance with
applicable requirements. Furthermore,
the commenters provided no analysis or
information to indicate otherwise. Thus,
we confirm our position in the proposed
rule that Utah’s SIP revisions are not
anticipated to interfere with applicable
requirements of the CAA and therefore
CAA section 110(l) does not prohibit
approval of this SIP and concurrent
withdrawal of the FIP.
B. BART Alternative Requirements
Comment summary: Some
commenters asserted that because the
EPA’s proposed rule would result in a
significantly different distribution of
emissions from BART, it fails to show
‘‘greater reasonable progress’’ under 40
CFR 51.308(e)(3) than the EPA’s
previously issued FIP. Specifically, the
commenters assert that when alleged
technical deficiencies including those in
the CAMx dispersion modeling are
corrected, the EPA is unable to prove
‘‘greater reasonable progress’’ because
visibility will decline in one or more
Class I areas and there is not an overall
improvement in visibility over all
affected Class I areas.
Response: We disagree with this
comment. The three plants (Hunter,
Huntington, and Carbon) are all located
within 40 miles of each other in Central
Utah and are therefore similarly situated
to the affected Class I areas. But Utah
chose to use CAMx dispersion modeling
to assess whether the NOX BART
Alternative achieves greater reasonable
progress for the worst and best 20
percent of days (i.e., the two-prong test).
This is the regulatory test required
under § 51.308(e)(3) if the distribution
of emissions were substantially
different.61 Thus, the question of
emissions distribution is not pertinent
to the EPA’s approval of Utah’s NOX
BART Alternative. Any influence that
the respective geographic relationship of
the emission reductions from BART and
the NOX BART Alternative have on
visibility impacts at the Class I areas is
resolved by the CAMx modeling.
We respond to specific comments
related to alleged technical deficiencies
in the modeling in more detail below
and in the RTC document. We find that
the CAMx modeling used for the greater
reasonable progress demonstration was
performed consistent with EPA
61 See
40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).
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guidance and that the model
performance was similar to applications
of the CAMx model that the EPA and
states have used in previous actions for
regional haze.62 The CAMx modeling
results showed that the NOX BART
Alternative met the requirements of the
greater reasonable progress two-prong
test, i.e., visibility does not decline in
any Class I area under the BART
Alternative relative to the Baseline on
both the 20% best and 20% worst days,
and the average visibility improvement
across all affected Class I areas is greater
under the BART Alternative than under
the BART Benchmark.63
C. BART Alternative ‘‘Greater
Reasonable Progress’’ Determination
Comment summary: Some
commenters asserted that the CAMx
modeling supporting the Utah NOX
BART Alternative is flawed because it
continues to assume that the installation
and operation of SCR on Hunter Units
1 and 2 and Huntington Units 1 and 2
would achieve a NOX emission rate of
0.07 lb/MMBtu on a 30-day rolling
average, as approved by the EPA four
years ago in its FIP. The commenters
contend that there are several electric
generating units (EGUs) that have
achieved NOX emission rates of 0.04 lb/
MMBtu or lower on an annual average
basis. The commenters further contend
that the EPA recently adopted a BART
alternative for the Laramie River Station
in Wyoming and acknowledged that a
0.04 lb/MMBtu NOX emission rate
would be achieved with SCR on an
annual average basis under a 0.06 lb/
MMBtu NOX limit applicable on a 30day average basis.
The commenters further assert that
while the Hunter and Huntington BART
units have been achieving 0.19–0.20 lb/
MMBtu NOX rates on an annual average
basis in the last two years, these units
should be able to readily achieve a 0.04
lb/MMBtu annual average NOX rate
with SCR. The commenters contend that
such a NOX rate equates to a 74–80%
NOX removal efficiency across the SCR,
and SCR systems are routinely designed
to achieve 90% NOX removal. The
commenters therefore argue that it is
improper to judge the Utah BART
Alternative against a BART Benchmark
that utilizes obsolete emissions
information and that the EPA should
not have assumed a controlled annual
62 Previous actions that relied on CAMx modeling
include the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR)
(76 FR 48208 (Aug. 8, 2011)); the FIP revision for
Laramie River Station in Wyoming (84 FR 22711
(May 20, 2019)); and the SIP revision for Coronado
Generating Station in Arizona (82 FR 46903 (Oct.
10, 2017)).
63 See 85 FR 3573.
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75867
average NOX rate any higher than 0.04
lb/MMBtu for the Hunter and
Huntington Units in BART modeling.
Response: We disagree with this
comment. By way of background, the
EPA’s FIP used an assumed emission
rate of 0.05 lb/MMBtu on an annual
basis, but required compliance with a
0.07 lb/MMBtu, 30-day rolling average
limit.64 The commenters here contend
that EPA should have used a lower
annual limit, which would in turn lower
the 30-day rolling average limit, for
purposes of the BART Benchmark. As
an initial matter, emission limits
associated with BART do not need to
meet the lowest emission rate achieved
with that technology at any coal-fired
power plant. The Regional Haze Rule
provides that ‘‘[t]he determination of
BART must be based on an analysis of
the best system of continuous emission
control technology available and
associated emission reductions
achievable for each BART-eligible
source that is subject to BART.’’ 65
Additionally, the BART Guidelines
state that: ‘‘[i]n assessing the capability
of the control alternative, latitude exists
to consider special circumstances
pertinent to the specific source under
review, or regarding the prior
application of the control
alternative,’’ 66 and that ‘‘[t]o complete
the BART process, you must establish
enforceable emission limits that reflect
the BART requirements.’’ 67 The five
factor BART analysis described in the
Guidelines is a case-by-case analysis
that considers site-specific factors in
assessing the best technology for
continuous emission controls. After a
technology is determined as BART, the
BART Guidelines require establishment
of an emission limit that reflects the
BART requirements, but does not
specify that the emission limit must
represent the maximum level of control
achieved by the technology selected as
BART.
While the BART Guidelines and the
Regional Haze Rule do not preclude
selection of the maximum level of
control achieved by a given technology
as BART, the emission limit must be set
to reflect BART which in turn must be
determined based on a consideration
and weighing of the five statutory BART
factors. Therefore, limits set in other
BART determinations, Best Available
Control Technology during Prevention
of Significant Deterioration review, or
emission rates achieved from the
operation of individual facilities under
64 81
FR 43903.
CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
66 40 CFR part 51, appendix Y, section IV.D.3.
67 40 CFR part 51, appendix Y, section V.
65 40
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an emissions trading program (e.g.,
CSAPR) may provide important
information, but should not be
construed to automatically represent the
most appropriate BART limit for a given
technology.
Additionally, while the commenters
cite actual annual emission rates found
in the EPA’s Air Markets Program
Database (AMPD) to support their claim
that an annual emission rate of 0.04 lb/
MMBtu is achievable with SCR, a more
thorough review of the data supports the
EPA’s conclusion that an annual
emission rate no lower than 0.05 lb/
MMBtu is representative of what can be
achieved when retrofitting SCR to an
existing boiler. Of the 155 coal-fired
EGUs equipped with SCR operating in
2019 with actual annual emission rates
below 0.10 lb/MMBtu, 135 (87.1%) had
actual annual emissions greater than
0.05 lb/MMBtu, 18 (11.6%) had actual
annual emissions greater than 0.04 lb/
MMBtu and less than or equal to 0.05
lb/MMbtu, and only 2 (1.3%) had actual
annual emissions less than or equal 0.04
lb/MMBtu.68 The figure in our RTC
document shows the number of coalfired EGUs equipped with SCR by actual
annual emission range in increments of
0.01 lb/MMbtu. Notwithstanding the
site-specific nature of SCR retrofits,
these data support the conclusion that
an annual emission rate of 0.05 lb/
MMBtu is appropriate for the Utah
BART units, and confirm that the
assumption is relatively conservative
because the majority of EGUs equipped
with SCR have actual annual emission
rates that are higher.
Moreover, the lowest emission rates
found in the AMPD database may not be
indicative of what can be expected at
the Utah BART units for a number of
reasons. As noted above, the sitespecific characteristic of each SCR
installation must be taken into account
when determining the anticipated actual
annual emission rate. For example, the
commenter lists Dry Fork Unit 1 in
Wyoming among units that are
achieving an actual annual emission
rate of 0.04 lb/MMBtu.69 However,
construction on Dry Fork Unit 1 began
in 2007 and SCR was integrated into the
original design, and not installed as a
68 See spreadsheet titled ‘‘SCR Actual Annual
Emissions by Range.xlsx’’ in the docket. Note that
AMPD query returned a total of 265 coal-fired EGUs
equipped with SCR operating in 2019. However,
many of these units had actual annual emission
rates well in excess of what would be anticipated
with an SCR when operated on a year-round basis.
For that reason, the EPA eliminated all units with
an actual annual emission rate in excess of 0.10 lb/
MMBtu from consideration, leaving 155 units.
69 AMPD data for 2019 show actual annual
emissions of 0.0432 lb/MMBtu, above 0.04 lb/
MMBtu.
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retrofit as would be the case with the
Utah BART units.
Our use of an anticipated actual
annual emission rate with SCR of 0.05
lb/MMBtu here is also consistent with
our 2016 FIP.70 The EPA is unaware of,
and the commenters have not cited, any
advancements in SCR retrofit
technology that have occurred since our
July 2016 final rule. Accordingly, we
have no reason to conclude that the
assumptions we made at that time
regarding SCR performance are now
obsolete.
Finally, the commenters have
incorrectly assumed that a 90% control
efficiency can be achieved in all SCR
applications regardless of the input NOX
emission rate or other parameters. In our
July 2016 final rule, the EPA used an
actual annual average emission rate for
LNB/SOFA (i.e., pre-SCR) at the Utah
BART units of 0.20 lb/MMBtu to 0.22
lb/MMBtu.71 A 90% reduction with
SCR from these emission rates would
yield annual emission rates of 0.020 lb/
MMBtu to 0.022lb/MMBtu. As can be
seen from the AMPD data discussed
above, no EGU has achieved this level
of control with SCR. Thus, because this
level of control has not been achieved
in practice, it is not a realistic
expectation for the Utah BART units.
Comment summary: Some
commenters criticized the selection of
Class I areas for inclusion in the CAMx
modeling domain. The commenters
asserted that the modeling included
Class I areas beyond 300 kilometers
from the Carbon, Hunter, and
Huntington power plants, and afforded
equal weight to areas near and distant
from the pollution sources even though
there is higher confidence in the CAMx
modeling at sites within 300 kilometers
of the sources. The commenters further
asserted that PacifiCorp included
certain areas (e.g. San Pedro Parks
Wilderness Area (New Mexico)) farther
than 500km from the sources, while
apparently omitting others a similar
distance away (e.g. Craters of the Moon
in Idaho; Jarbidge in Nevada;
Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Washakie,
Fitzpatrick, and Bridger in Wyoming;
Petrified Forest and Sycamore Canyon
in Arizona; and Rocky Mountain, Eagles
Nest, Rawah, and Great Sand Dunes in
Colorado, among others). The
commenters also stated that while Utah
appeared to give undue weight to
visibility benefits at certain distant Class
I areas, Utah gave zero weight (and did
not even analyze) visibility impacts at
similarly distant sites. The commenters
therefore argue that the assessed Class I
70 81
FR 2034.
81 FR 43903, Tables 2 through 5.
71 See
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
areas were selected in an arbitrary
manner, and that the analysis does not
account for visibility impacts ‘‘over all
affected Class I areas,’’ as required by
the Regional Haze Rule.72 The
commenters argue that if corrected, the
alleged errors may flip the outcome of
Utah’s analysis; i.e., if the Class I areas
outside of 300 kilometers from the
power plants are omitted, the modeling
fails to demonstrate that the average
visibility benefit of the BART
Alternative will be greater than the 2016
FIP (BART Benchmark).
Response: The EPA disagrees with
this comment. The draft modeling
protocol prepared by PacifiCorp
included a rectangular modeling
domain that included all of the Class I
areas within a distance of 300 km of the
Hunter and Huntington Units that had
been considered in previous CALPUFF
modeling applications for these BART
sources. The EPA reviewed the
proposed modeling domain and
recommended that the boundaries of the
domain be extended farther east, north,
and south to include terrain features
that could affect the transport of
pollutants from the BART sources.73
PacifiCorp agreed to extend the size of
the domain as requested by the EPA.
Thus, for example, the domain was
extended farther north to include the
Uinta mountain range in northern Utah,
and the domain was extended farther
east such that the relevant Class I areas
were fully included in the model
domain and were not located close to
the boundary of the domain. Because of
the possibility of modeling artifacts at
domain boundaries,74 the EPA believed
that the larger model domain was
technically more defensible. The
motivation for expanding the size of the
model domain was to provide more
accurate model results, not to include
more Class I areas. However, given that
additional Class I areas were included
within the domain, the EPA determined
that it was appropriate to consider
visibility benefits at all Class I areas for
which model results were available. The
EPA determined that it would have been
arbitrary to include some Class I areas
72 40
CFR 51.308(e)(3)(ii).
dated September 20, 2017, from Aaron
Worstell (EPA) to Jay Baker (UDAQ), Subject:
Updated invitation: Utah Regional Haze CAMx
Model Review, docket ID EPA–R08–OAR–2015–
0463–0228.
74 For example, if emissions plumes near the
model domain boundaries are transported out of the
model domain, those emissions are permanently
lost to the model, even if meteorological
recirculation patterns might cause those emissions
to re-enter the domain. Selecting a large model
domain reduces the possibility that emissions
plumes will be transported out of the model
domain.
73 Email
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but not to include other nearby Class I
areas for which modeling results were
available. The additional Class I areas
(Mount Zirkel Wilderness Area [WA],
Maroon Bells/Snowmass WA, West Elk
WA, La Garita WA, Weminuche WA,
and San Pedro Parks WA) are located
close to and within the same air basins
as the other Class I areas previously
included in the CALPUFF modeling.
While there are other Class I areas
located within 500 km of the sources,
prevailing wind patterns and terrain
features make it less likely that
emissions from Hunter and Huntington
would impact those areas, and the EPA
did not find that it was reasonable to
recommend further expansion of the
model domain to include these Class I
areas. In addition, the calculation of the
average difference between BART and
the BART Alternative is most
influenced by the Class I areas closest to
and most impacted by Hunter,
Huntington and Carbon. Therefore,
small modeled impacts at additional
distant Class I areas would likely have
little or no impact on the average impact
across all affected Class I areas.
We also disagree with the comment
that there is higher confidence in the
CAMx modeling at sites within 300
kilometers of the sources. Higher
confidence in modeling for sites within
300 kilometers is a feature of the
CALPUFF model. For example, the
Interagency Workgroup on Air Quality
Modeling report recommended the ‘‘use
of CALPUFF for transport distances of
order 200 km and less. Use of CALPUFF
for characterizing transport beyond 200
to 300 km should be done cautiously
with an awareness of the likely
problems involved.’’ 75 The CAMx
model is not subject to this limitation
because it was developed and has been
widely used and evaluated for
applications at distances much greater
than 300 kilometers, including
modeling and regulatory analyses for
interstate transport of ozone and PM2.5.
Photochemical grid models such as
CAMx are recommended by the EPA in
Appendix W 76 for long range transport
modeling for secondary pollutants,
including regional haze.
Comment summary: Some
commenters asserted that the CAMx
modeling cannot support the NOX
BART Alternative because it employs
75 EPA, ‘‘Interagency Workgroup on Air Quality
Modeling (IWAQM) Phase 2 Summary Report and
Recommendations for Modeling Long Range
Transport Impacts,’’ December 1998, pages 18 and
D–11.
76 40 CFR part 51, appendix W.
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the wrong metric for comparison.
Specifically, the commenters argue that
instead of using ‘‘the worst and best 20
percent of days’’ to demonstrate greater
reasonable progress under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3), Utah should have
substituted an analysis for the 20% of
days in a calendar year ‘‘with the
highest amount of anthropogenic
visibility impairment’’ under the EPA’s
2017 revisions to the Regional Haze
Rule. The commenters argue that
without such modeling, the EPA cannot
demonstrate in accordance with the
regional haze requirements that the
BART Alternative would result in
greater reasonable progress than BART
as determined in the EPA’s FIP (BART
Benchmark), and the BART Alternative
is not approvable.
Response: We disagree that the CAMx
modeling relied on in Utah’s SIP
submittal employs the wrong metric for
comparison of the BART Benchmark
and NOX BART Alternative. First, as
explained elsewhere in the preamble to
the proposed rule, the RTC document,
and this document, Utah submitted its
NOX BART Alternative, and the EPA
proposed to approve it, under the twoprong test in 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3)(i) and
(ii). The two-prong test requires that
‘‘the State must conduct dispersion
modeling to determine differences in
visibility between BART and the
[alternative] for each impacted Class I
area, for the worst and best 20 percent
of days.’’ 77 The 2017 revisions to the
Regional Haze Rule discussed by the
commenter did not change 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3).78 Indeed, § 51.308(e)(3) is a
BART provision applicable to the first
regional haze planning period, and the
EPA explicitly did not make any
changes to the Regional Haze Rule’s
BART provisions in the 2017
revisions.79 Because Utah’s SIP
revisions are intended to satisfy first
planning period BART requirements,80
the CAMx modeling properly employed
the haziest days metric rather than the
new ‘‘most impaired days’’ metric.
Comment summary: Commenters
assert that the most fundamental
technical deficiency in the CAMx
modeling is the emissions information
used by Utah for the ‘‘typical year’’
scenario (also called the 2011 reference
case). Commenters assert that the EPA
provided no explanation as to why the
77 40
CFR 51.308(e)(3) (emphasis added).
82 FR 3078, 3124 (Jan. 10, 2017).
79 See 81 FR 26942, 26947 (May 4, 2016) (‘‘States
undertook the BART determination process during
the first implementation period. The BART
requirement was a one-time requirement . . . .
78 See
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75869
2011 reference case was modeled with
the 2001–2003 baseline period
emissions at Carbon, Hunter and
Huntington. Commenters note that in
the interval between the baseline period
and the typical year, PacifiCorp
installed significant emissions control
improvements at both Hunter and
Huntington, which resulted in
substantial SO2 reductions.
Commenters assert that the Hunter
and Huntington emission controls are
important because the associated impact
of such controls on visibility conditions
in Class I areas in Utah and neighboring
states already would be reflected in the
2009–2013 five-year average Interagency
Monitoring of Protected Visual
Environments (IMPROVE) data used in
the CAMx modeling. Commenters claim
that by using the 2001–2003 baseline
emissions to describe the Hunter and
Huntington plants for the 2011 reference
year, the post-2003 SO2 reductions at
Hunter and Huntington are essentially
double counted. Commenters conclude
that Utah’s approach to typical year
emissions for the Hunter, Huntington
and Carbon power plants presents a
fundamental error with the CAMx
modeling and the resulting implication
is that the modeling results cannot be
used to support Utah’s conclusion that
the Utah NOX BART Alternative would
result in greater visibility improvement
compared to the EPA FIP (BART
Benchmark).
Response: We disagree with this
comment. As an initial matter, the
commenters have not explained how the
emissions data used in the 2011 Typical
Year scenario results in a faulty
outcome to the two-prong regulatory
analysis required under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3). Indeed, the modeling was
appropriately designed to assess each
prong in a reasonable and technically
defensible way.81
As we explained in the proposed rule,
CAMx was configured to simulate four
modeling scenarios: the 2011 Typical
Year, the 2025 Baseline, the BART
Benchmark, and the Utah NOX BART
Alternative. The 2011 Typical Year
scenario includes emissions for Carbon,
Hunter and Huntington at 2001–2003
levels, while all other sources remain at
2011 levels. The annual NOX and SO2
emissions modeled for each of these
scenarios are shown in Table 1 below.
Consequently, we are not proposing any changes to
the BART provisions in this rulemaking.’’).
80 See 85 FR 3575.
81 See AECOM, ‘‘Photochemical Modeling
Protocol to Assess Visibility Impacts for PacifiCorp
Power Plants Located in Utah,’’ January 2018.
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TABLE 1—ANNUAL NOX AND SO2 EMISSIONS BY MODELING SCENARIO
2011
Typical year
Plant
Carbon .............
Hunter ..............
Huntington ........
1
2
1
2
3
1
2
SO2
(tpy)
1,312
1,977
6,380
6,092
6,530
5,944
5,817
82 Utah Regional Haze State Implementation Plan,
Staff Review of Recommended Alternative to BART
for NOX, May 28, 2019, page 13.
83 Contrary to the commenters’ claim, EPA
explained this approach in the proposed rule. 85 FR
3572.
16:10 Nov 25, 2020
Jkt 253001
SO2
(tpy)
NOX
(tpy)
2,286
3,528
2,535
2,531
1,204
2,380
12,308
The modeling relied on the 2011
emissions data because a robust, wellevaluated modeling platform was
available only for 2011 and was not
available for any other year.
The 2025 Baseline modeling scenario,
which is based on the 2011 Typical Year
scenario with emissions projected to
2025, also uses 2001–2003 emissions for
PacifiCorp’s units in order to reflect
only those controls that were in place at
those units in the baseline period (i.e.,
pre-regional haze measures).82 This
allows for a straightforward comparison
of the effects of the BART Benchmark
versus the Utah NOX BART Alternative
relative to the 2025 Baseline (i.e.,
relative to conditions without any
regional haze measures applied to the
Utah BART sources). Because measures
included in the BART Alternative were
installed starting in 2006, using
emissions from a later year to represent
the baseline would not accurately reflect
the impacts of each of the two scenarios.
While Utah could have chosen to use
different years to represent baseline
emissions from Hunter, Huntington, and
Carbon, it chose to use a consistent
period for these Units that is also
consistent with the baseline period of
the regional haze SIP, and we find this
to be a reasonable approach.83
The 2011 Typical Year and the 2025
Baseline scenarios were used in the
development of relative response factors
(RRFs) that were applied to publicly
available IMPROVE monitoring data in
order to predict future visibility
conditions in 2025 for the BART
Benchmark and the NOX BART
Alternative scenarios. The BART
Benchmark and BART Alternative
results were then both compared to the
2025 Baseline scenario and to each
other to determine whether the BART
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2025
BART benchmark
2025
Utah NOX BART alternative
Unit
NOX
(tpy)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
2025
Baseline
1,312
1,977
6,380
6,092
6,530
5,944
5,816
2,286
3,528
2,535
2,531
1,204
2,380
12,308
SO2
(tpy)
NOX
(tpy)
1,312
1,977
796
798
6,530
793
753
Alternative passes the two-prong test in
§ 51.308(e)(3).
The BART Benchmark scenario
includes 2001–2003 Carbon and Hunter
3 emissions, because Carbon and Hunter
3 are not BART sources. But the BART
Benchmark reflects predicted NOX
emissions reductions from the
installation of SCR controls on Hunter
and Huntington Units 1 and 2 because
those controls were required by EPA’s
2016 FIP. The BART Benchmark
scenario also includes SO2 emissions
from Hunter and Huntington from
2014–2016 in order to match the BART
Alternative scenario, which as
explained below, is important for the
comparison in § 51.308(e)(3)(ii). The
BART Alternative scenario includes
emissions from Hunter and Huntington
from 2014–2016 to reflect all emissions
controls required by the Alternative,
and zero emissions from Carbon because
the Alternative requires Carbon’s 2015
shutdown. As described below, these
modeling scenarios allow an accurate
comparison between the BART
Benchmark and the Utah NOX BART
Alternative under the two-prong test in
§ 51.308(e)(3).
The first step (prong 1) of the twoprong test requires a demonstration that
the BART alternative does not result in
a decline in visibility at any Class I area
relative to a baseline.84 The record
clearly establishes that there is no
decline in visibility under the NOX
BART Alternative when visibility
impacts of the NOX BART Alternative
are compared to the 2025 Baseline
scenario.85 As we explained in the
proposed rule under prong 1, while the
post-2003 SO2 reductions from Hunter
and Huntington increase the apparent
overall visibility benefit of the BART
Alternative relative to the Baseline,
there would not be an anticipated
decline in visibility relative to the
Baseline in the absence of those SO2
2,286
3,528
1,153
1,408
1,230
1,254
1,201
86 Id.
85 See
87 40
PO 00000
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0
0
3,166
3,028
4,490
3,147
3,366
SO2
(tpy)
0
0
1,153
1,408
1,230
1,254
1,201
reductions from Hunter and Huntington
because the BART Alternative would
still result in overall NOX, SO2, and PM
emissions decreases compared to the
Baseline.86
At the second step of the (e)(3) test
(prong 2), the state must establish that
there is ‘‘an overall improvement in
visibility, determined by comparing the
average differences between BART and
the alternative.’’ 87 Thus, the purpose of
the modeling at this step is to allow for
a comparison between two control
scenarios—the BART benchmark and
the BART alternative—relative to a
baseline. It is not critical that the
baseline itself be entirely representative
of what might be expected to happen in
2025 so long as the emissions and
meteorological data used in the
modeling allow for the comparison
between the BART benchmark and
BART alternative. As noted above, the
commenters have not demonstrated that
the 2025 Baseline scenario here does not
serve that purpose.
As we explained in the proposed rule,
the relative to the 2025 Baseline, the
BART Benchmark and BART
Alternative include actual SO2
reductions from Hunter and Huntington
that occurred after the 2001–2003
baseline due to scrubber upgrades.
Thus, the CAMx modeling results for
the BART Benchmark and BART
Alternative shown in Tables 4 and 5 of
the proposed rule reflect these SO2
reductions. The treatment of these SO2
reductions in the modeling does not
affect the determination of greater
reasonable progress under the twoprong test. Under prong 2, because the
SO2 reductions from Hunter and
Huntington are equal under the BART
Alternative and BART Benchmark, they
do not advantage either control
scenario.88
In other words, even if the CAMx
modeling counts Huntington and
84 40
CFR 51.308(e)(3)(i).
85 FR 3568–69, 3573, and Tables 4 and 5
(column D).
NOX
(tpy)
at 3573.
CFR 51.308(e)(3)(ii).
88 85 FR 3572–73.
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Hunter as creating an additional
visibility improvement in the BART
Benchmark and NOX BART Alternative
scenarios relative to the 2025 Baseline
scenario, this artifact of the data is
present for both the BART Benchmark
and BART Alternative scenarios. Thus,
it does not have a meaningful effect on
the comparison in relative improvement
in visibility between those scenarios.
The modeling does not, and need not,
purport to establish actual, absolute
improvements in visibility under the
two scenarios; it simply needs to allow
for a comparison between the scenarios.
In order to pass the second prong under
§ 51.308(e)(3), a BART alternative must
show an overall average improvement in
visibility over the BART benchmark.
Here, Utah’s NOX BART Alternative
demonstrated an overall average
improvement over the BART benchmark
of 0.00494 deciviews across all Class I
areas on the 20 percent best days and
0.00058 deciviews on the 20 percent
worst days.89 Thus, Utah’s NOX BART
Alternative passes the second prong of
40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).
In sum, there is no merit to
commenters’ assertion that the data
used in the CAMx modeling cannot be
used to support Utah’s conclusion that
the Utah NOX BART Alternative would
result in greater visibility improvement
compared to the EPA FIP (BART
Benchmark) under the two-prong test in
§ 51.308(e)(3).
III. The EPA’s Final Action
For the reasons stated in the preamble
to the proposed rule, in the RTC
document, and in this document, we are
fully approving the SIP revisions
submitted by the State of Utah on July
3, 2019, as supplemented on December
3, 2019.
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A. 2019 Utah Regional Haze SIP
Revisions
We are approving these aspects of the
2019 Utah RH SIP revisions:
• NOX BART Alternative, including
NOX emission reductions from Hunter
Units 1, 2 and 3 and Huntington Units
1 and 2, and SO2, NOX and PM emission
reductions from Carbon Units 1 and 2.
• A NOX emission limit of 0.26 lb/
MMBtu (30-day rolling average) each for
Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2.
• A NOX emission limit of 0.34 lb/
MMBtu (30-day rolling average) for
Hunter Unit 3.
• A requirement to permanently close
and cease operation of the Carbon
power plant by August 15, 2015.
89 Id.
at 3569.
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• The associated amendments to the
SO2 milestone reporting requirements.
• MRR requirements for units subject
to the NOX BART Alternative and the
PM BART emission limits.
We also note that the regulatory text
amendments contained in this
document include incorporation of
additional parts of SIP section XX
(XX.B–C and XX.E–N) and section
XXIII, which were not addressed in the
proposed action or in this final action.
The EPA approved these SIP sections as
meeting the requirements of the CAA
and applicable regulations in previous
actions; 90 however, we inadvertently
did not incorporate all approved
sections in 40 CFR 52.2320(e). We are
remedying this oversight and
reorganizing 40 CFR 52.2320(e) to better
reflect the structure of Utah’s SIP
submissions here. We did not reopen
these previously approved SIP sections
in this rulemaking.
Finally, consistent with our approval
of Utah’s July 2019 and December 2019
SIP submissions, we find that Utah’s SIP
fully satisfies the requirements of
section 309 of the Regional Haze Rule
and therefore the State has fully
complied with the requirements for
reasonable progress, including BART,
for the first implementation period.
B. FIP Withdrawal
Because we find that Utah’s July 2019
and December 2019 SIP submissions
satisfy the NOX BART and MRR
requirements currently addressed by the
EPA’s 2016 FIP, we are also
withdrawing in whole the Utah
Regional Haze FIP at 40 CFR 52.2336
that imposes NOX BART requirements
on Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2.
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
As we explain in detail in section II.A
of this document and in the RTC
document that accompanies this action,
we find that our approval of the 2019
Utah SIP revisions and concurrent
withdrawal of the corresponding the FIP
is consistent with CAA section 110(l),
42 U.S.C. 7410(l).
IV. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, the EPA is
finalizing regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In
accordance with the requirements of 1
CFR 51.5, the EPA is finalizing the
incorporation by reference of the SIP
amendments described in section III.A
of this preamble and set forth below.
90 73 FR 16543 (Mar. 28, 2008); 77 FR 74355 (Dec.
14, 2012); 78 FR 4072 (Jan. 18, 2013); 81 FR 43894
(July 5, 2016).
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75871
The EPA has made, and will continue
to make, these materials generally
available through https://
www.regulations.gov (refer to docket
EPA–R08–OAR–2015–0463) and at the
EPA Region 8 Office (please contact the
person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble for more information).
Therefore, these materials have been
approved by the EPA for inclusion in
the SIP, have been incorporated by
reference by the EPA into that plan, are
fully federally enforceable under
sections 110 and 113 of the CAA as of
the effective date of the final rulemaking
of the EPA’s approval, and will be
incorporated by reference by the
Director of the Federal Register in the
next update to the SIP compilation.91
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under the terms of
Executive Order 12866 92 and was
therefore not submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review. This final rule applies to three
facilities in the State of Utah. It is
therefore not a rule of general
applicability.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulations and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
This action is not an Executive Order
13771 regulatory action because it is not
significant under Executive Order 12866
for the reasons stated in section V.A
above. Instead, it is a Rule of Particular
Applicability that is exempted under
Executive Order 12866.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
PRA. Because this rule revises regional
haze reporting requirements for three
facilities, the PRA does not apply.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action will not
impose any requirements on small
entities. This rule does not impose any
requirements or create impacts on small
91 62
92 58
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FR 51735, 51738 (Oct. 4, 1993).
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entities as no small entities are subject
to the requirements of this rule.93
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain an
unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, and does not significantly or
uniquely affect small governments.
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.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
In comments on the proposed rule,
the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe requested
consultation. In response, the EPA
offered consultation, but the Ute
Mountain Ute Tribe later waived the
opportunity for consultation.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045.94 The EPA interprets
Executive Order 13045 as applying only
to those regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
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I. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211 95 because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
93 See
13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22, Subsector 221.
FR 19885 (Apr. 23, 1997).
95 66 FR 28355 (May 22, 2001).
94 62
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J. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action does
not have disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority populations, lowincome populations and/or indigenous
peoples, as specified in Executive Order
12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The documentation for this decision
is contained in EPA’s EJ analysis. The
EPA’s Guidance on Considering
Environmental Justice During the
Development of Regulatory Actions 96 is
the Agency’s guide for determining
when environmental justice should be
considered when developing
regulations. In support of this guidance,
the EPA used EJSCREEN 97 to identify
areas of potential environmental justice
(EJ) concerns associated with this
rulemaking. A 300-kilometer radius
zone of impact was used in the
EJSCREEN analysis consistent with
other regional haze actions. The results
do not identify any areas of potential EJ
concerns.98 Moreover as explained in
the preamble to the final rule and in
response to comments, the Utah
Regional Haze SIP, as revised by this
action, will ensure a significant
reduction in emissions compared to
regional haze baseline levels (2002).
Finally, the EPA’s analysis under CAA
section 110(l) shows that this action will
not interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress or any other
applicable CAA requirements. Thus,
this final action will not create a
disproportionately high and adverse
effect on minority, low-income, and/or
indigenous/tribal populations.
The availability of regulations.gov to
submit written comments and a public
hearing in Price, Utah provided
meaningful opportunities for public
participation in the proposed
rulemaking. The EPA considered input
received during the public comment
period regarding environmental justice
considerations.
96 https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/
2015-06/documents/considering-ej-in-rulemakingguide-final.pdf
97 EJSCREEN: Environmental Justice Screening
and Mapping Tool is available at https://
www.epa.gov/ejscreen.
98 Results in the EJSCREEN Report for the Hunter
and Huntington Power Plants show percentiles of
less than 80 for all EJ Indexes evaluated. See
EJSCREEN Report in the docket.
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L. Determination Under Section Clean
Air Act Section 307(d)
Pursuant to CAA sections 307(d)(1)(B)
and 307(d)(1)(V), the Administrator
determines that this action is subject to
the provisions of section 307(d). CAA
section 307(d)(1)(B) provides that
section 307(d) applies to, among other
things, ‘‘the promulgation or revision of
an implementation plan by the
Administrator under [CAA section
110(c)].’’ 99 Under section 307(d)(1)(V),
the provisions of section 307(d) also
apply to ‘‘such other actions as the
Administrator may determine.’’ 100 To
the extent the approval of Utah’s SIP
submittals is not expressly identified
under section 307(d), the Administrator
hereby determines that section 307(d)
applies to this aspect of this action. The
agency has complied with the
procedural requirements of CAA section
307(d) during the course of this
rulemaking.
M. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This rule is exempt from the CRA
because it is a rule of particular
applicability that only applies to three
named facilities.
N. Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by January 26, 2021. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the
Administrator of this final rule does not
affect the finality of this action for
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. See CAA
section 307(b)(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate matter,
Sulfur oxides.
Andrew Wheeler,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is to be
amended as follows:
99 42
U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(B).
U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
100 42
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PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart TT—Utah
2. In § 52.2320:
a. The table in paragraph (c) is
amended by revising the entries ‘‘R307–
110–17,’’ ‘‘R307–110–28,’’ and ‘‘R307–
150–03’’.
■ b. The table in paragraph (e) is
amended by:
■ i. Adding the entries ‘‘Section
IX.H.21. General Requirements: Control
Measures for Area and Point Sources,
Emission Limits and Operating
Practices, Regional Haze Requirements’’
and ‘‘Section IX.H.22. Source Specific
Emission Limitations: Regional Haze
■
■
Rule No.
Requirements, Best Available Retrofit
Technology’’ in numerical order.
■ ii. Removing from under the center
heading ‘‘XVII. Visibility Protection’’
the entries ‘‘Progress Report for Utah’s
State Implementation Plan for Regional
Haze,’’ ‘‘Section XX.D.6. Best Available
Retrofit Technology (BART) Assessment
for NOX and PM,’’ and ‘‘Section XX.G.
Long-Term Strategy for Fire Programs.’’
■ iii. Adding the center heading ‘‘XX.
Regional Haze’’ and the entries ‘‘Section
XX.A. Executive Summary’’, ‘‘Section
XX.B. Background on the Regional Haze
Rule’’, ‘‘Section XX.C. Long-Term
Strategy for the Clean-Air Corridor’’,
‘‘Section XX.D. Long-Term Strategy for
Stationary Sources’’, ‘‘Section XX.E.
Sulfur Dioxide Milestones and Backstop
Trading Program’’, ‘‘Section XX.F. LongTerm Strategy for Mobile Sources’’,
‘‘Section XX.G. Long-Term Strategy for
Fire Programs’’, ‘‘Section XX.H.
Assessment of Emissions from Paved
State effective
date
Rule title
*
*
*
and Unpaved Road Dust’’, ‘‘Section
XX.I. Pollution Prevention and
Renewable Energy Programs’’, ‘‘Section
XX.J. Other GCVTC Recommendations’’,
‘‘Section XX.K. Projection of Visibility
Improvement Anticipated from LongTerm Strategy’’, ‘‘Section XX.L. Periodic
Implementation Plan Revisions’’,
‘‘Section XX.M. State Planning/
Interstate Coordination and Tribal
Implementation’’, ‘‘Section XX.N.
Enforceable Commitments for the Utah
Regional Haze SIP’’, and ‘‘Progress
Report for Utah’s State Implementation
Plan for Regional Haze’’ in numerical
order and after the entry ‘‘Section XXIII.
Interstate Transport’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 52.2320
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(c) * * *
*
*
Final rule citation, date
*
*
Comments
*
*
R307–110. General Requirements: State Implementation Plan
*
R307–110–17 ...
*
*
Section IX. Control Measures for Area and
Point Sources, Part H, Emission Limits.
*
11/25/2019
*
*
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/
27/2020.
*
*
R307–110–28 ...
*
*
Section XX. Regional Haze ............................
*
8/15/2019
*
*
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/
27/2020.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
R307–150. Emission Inventories
*
R307–150–03 ...
*
*
Applicability .....................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/
27/2020.
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
State effective
date
Rule title
*
*
6/25/2019
*
*
Final rule citation, date
*
Comments
*
*
*
*
*
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IX. Control Measures for Area and Point Sources
*
*
*
Section IX.H.21. General Requirements: Control
Measures for Area and Point Sources, Emission
Limits and Operating Practices, Regional Haze
Requirements.
Section IX.H.22. Source Specific Emission Limitations: Regional Haze Requirements, Best Available Retrofit Technology.
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*
*
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
11/25/2019
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State effective
date
Rule title
*
*
*
Final rule citation, date
*
Comments
*
*
*
*
*
XX. Regional Haze
Section XX.A. Executive Summary ............................
8/15/2019
Section XX.B. Background on the Regional Haze
Rule.
Section XX.C. Long-Term Strategy for the Clean-Air
Corridor.
Section XX.D. Long-Term Strategy for Stationary
Sources.
Section XX.E. Sulfur Dioxide Milestones and Backstop Trading Program.
Section XX.F. Long-Term Strategy for Mobile
Sources.
Section XX.G. Long-Term Strategy for Fire Programs
8/15/2019
8/15/2019
8/15/2019
8/15/2019
4/7/2011
8/15/2019
Section XX.K. Projection of Visibility Improvement
Anticipated from Long-Term Strategy.
Section XX.L. Periodic Implementation Plan Revisions.
Section XX.M. State Planning/Interstate Coordination
and Tribal Implementation.
Section XX.N. Enforceable Commitments for the
Utah Regional Haze SIP.
Progress Report for Utah’s State Implementation
Plan for Regional Haze.
8/15/2019
§ 52.2336
■
*
[Removed and Reserved]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
8/15/2019
8/15/2019
8/15/2019
2/4/2016
*
*
The final rule is effective on
December 28, 2020.
DATES:
43 CFR Part 2560
Paul
Krabacher, Division of Lands and
Cadastral, Bureau of Land Management,
(907) 271–5681. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339, 24
hours a day, 7 days a week, to leave a
message or question with the previously
mentioned point of contact. You will
receive a reply during normal business
hours.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[LLAK940000 L14100000.HM0000 20X]
RIN 1004–AE66
Alaska Native Vietnam-Era Veterans
Allotments
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) is issuing final
regulations to enable certain Alaska
Native Vietnam-era veterans to apply for
land allotments under Section 1119 of
the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation,
Management, and Recreation Act of
March 12, 2019 (Dingell Act). The
SUMMARY:
16:10 Nov 25, 2020
8/15/2019
Dingell Act requires the BLM to issue
regulations to implement the Act’s land
allotment provisions. This action will
enable certain Alaska Native Vietnamera veterans to apply for an allotment
who, because of their military service,
were not able to do so during the late
1960s and early 1970s.
3. Remove and reserve § 52.2336.
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*
[FR Doc. 2020–23994 Filed 11–25–20; 8:45 am]
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8/15/2019
Section XX.H. Assessment of Emissions from Paved
and Unpaved Road Dust.
Section XX.I. Pollution Prevention and Renewable
Energy Programs.
Section XX.J. Other GCVTC Recommendations .......
*
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
[INSERT Federal Register CITATION] 11/27/2020.
85 FR 64050, 10/9/2020 ................
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Discussion of the Final Rule, Section-bySection Analysis, and Response to
Comments on the Proposed Rule
III. Procedural Matters
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I. Background
On December 18, 1971, Congress
enacted the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (ANCSA; 43 U.S.C. 1601,
et seq.), which repealed the Alaska
Native Allotment Act (34 Stat. 197, as
amended). During the time leading up to
the repeal of the Alaska Native
Allotment Act, certain Alaska Natives
who were eligible to apply for
allotments were serving in the U.S.
military and may have missed their
opportunity to apply because of their
military service.
In 1998, Congress enacted a law
allowing certain Alaska Native veterans
a new opportunity to apply for
allotments under the Alaska Native
Allotment Act, as it was in effect before
its repeal (Alaska Native Veterans
Allotment Act of 1998; 43 U.S.C. 1629g).
Those Alaska Native veterans were able
to apply for allotments from July 31,
2000 to January 31, 2002. Under the
Alaska Native Veterans Allotment Act of
1998, about 250 allotments were issued
to Alaska Native veterans or their heirs.
On March 12, 2019, Congress enacted
Section 1119 of the Dingell Act
(codified at 43 U.S.C. 1629g–1) to
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[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 229 (Friday, November 27, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 75860-75874]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-23994]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R08-OAR-2015-0463; FRL-10015-75-Region 8]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Utah; Regional Haze State and Federal Implementation Plans
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is finalizing
approval of State Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions submitted by the
State of Utah on July 3, 2019, as supplemented on December 3, 2019, to
satisfy certain regional haze requirements for the regional haze
program's first implementation period (Utah SIP revisions). The EPA is
approving the Utah SIP revision that provides an alternative to best
available retrofit technology (BART) controls for nitrogen oxides
(NOX) at the PacifiCorp Hunter and Huntington power plants.
The EPA finds that the NOX BART Alternative for Hunter and
Huntington achieves greater reasonable progress toward natural
visibility conditions than BART, in accordance with the requirements of
the Clean Air Act (CAA) and the EPA's Regional Haze Rule. In
conjunction with this approval, we are withdrawing the Federal
Implementation Plan (FIP) that addresses NOX BART for the
Hunter and Huntington power plants that EPA promulgated in 2016. The
EPA is also approving Utah's December 3, 2019 SIP supplement that
requires reporting of all deviations from compliance with the
applicable requirements under particulate matter (PM) BART and the
NOX BART Alternative, including the emission limits for
Hunter and Huntington. The EPA is taking these actions pursuant to
sections 110 and 169A of the CAA.
DATES: This rule is effective on December 28, 2020.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-R08-OAR-2015-0463. All documents in the docket are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website. Although listed in
the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain
other material, such as copyrighted material, is not placed on the
website and will be publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly
available docket materials are available through https://www.regulations.gov, or please call or email the person identified in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section for additional availability
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aaron Worstell, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA, Region 8, Mailcode 8ARD-IO, 1595 Wynkoop Street, Denver,
Colorado 80202-1129, (303) 312-6073, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever ``we,'' ``us,'' or ``our'' is
used, we mean the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Proposed Action and the EPA's Conclusion
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
A. Legal Issues
B. BART Alternative Requirements
C. BART Alternative ``Greater Reasonable Progress''
Determination
III. The EPA's Final Action
A. 2019 Utah Regional Haze SIP Revisions
B. FIP Withdrawal
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulations and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
L. Determination Under Section Clean Air Act Section 307(d)
M. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
N. Judicial Review
I. Proposed Action and the EPA's Conclusion
On July 5, 2016, the EPA promulgated a final rule titled
``Approval, Disapproval, and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation
Plans; Partial Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air Quality
Implementation Plans and Federal Implementation Plan; Utah; Revisions
to Regional Haze State Implementation Plan; Federal Implementation Plan
for Regional Haze,'' which approved, in part, a regional haze SIP
revision submitted by the State of Utah on June 4, 2015.\1\ In the July
2016 final rule, the EPA also disapproved, in part, the Utah regional
haze SIP submission, including the NOX BART Alternative
(also ``BART Alternative'' or ``Alternative'') for Hunter Units 1 and 2
and Huntington Units 1 and 2, which are BART units as explained in more
detail below. The BART Alternative relied on sulfur dioxide
(SO2), NOX, and PM emission reductions from the
2015 closure of PacifiCorp's Carbon power plant, as well as
NOX reductions achieved through combustion control upgrades
at Hunter Units 1, 2 and 3 and Huntington Units 1 and 2, which were
installed in 2006-2014 (Hunter Unit 3 is not a BART unit). The
combustion control upgrades for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2 include an Alstom TSF 2000TM low-
NOX firing system and two elevations of separated overfire
air (SOFA). The combustion upgrades for Hunter Unit 3 include upgraded
low-NOX burners (LNB) and overfire air (OFA). Concurrent
with disapproving the NOX BART Alternative, EPA promulgated
a FIP in the July 2016 final rule that imposed a NOX BART
emission limit of 0.07 lb/MMBtu (30-day rolling average) for each of
the four BART units based on the emission reductions achievable through
the installation and operation of selective-catalytic reduction (SCR)
plus upgraded combustion controls.
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\1\ 81 FR 43894 (July 5, 2016).
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On July 3, 2019, Utah submitted a revised SIP that, based on new
technical information and a different regulatory test, seeks to
demonstrate that the previously submitted NOX BART
Alternative achieves greater reasonable progress than BART. The SIP
revision also includes amendments to Utah's SO2 milestone
reporting requirements under the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program pursuant to 40 CFR 51.309 such that SO2 emission
reductions resulting from the closure of the Carbon plant are not
counted under both the SO2 Backstop Trading Program and the
NOX BART Alternative. On January 22, 2020, the EPA proposed
to approve the State's July 3, 2019 SIP revision based on this new
information.\2\ Specifically, we
[[Page 75861]]
proposed to incorporate the following into Utah's SIP:
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\2\ 85 FR 3558 (Jan. 22, 2020).
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A NOX emission limit of 0.26 lb/MMBtu (30-day
rolling average) each for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington Units 1
and 2.
A NOX emission limit of 0.34 lb/MMBtu (30-day
rolling average) for Hunter Unit 3.
A requirement to permanently close and cease operation of
the Carbon power plant by August 15, 2015.
The associated amendments to the SO2 milestone
reporting requirements.
Because approval of the NOX BART Alternative satisfies
Utah's BART obligation for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington Units 1
and 2, we also proposed to withdraw the FIP for NOX BART at
these units. In particular, we proposed to find that the NOX
BART Alternative would achieve greater reasonable progress towards
natural visibility conditions than would be achieved through the
installation and operation of BART at Hunter Units 1 and 2 and
Huntington Units 1 and 2 under EPA's 2016 FIP.
The EPA also proposed to approve a December 3, 2019 SIP supplement
to the July 3, 2019 SIP revision that includes monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting (MRR) requirements for the units subject
to the NOX BART Alternative and PM BART. The supplement also
includes amendments that require each source to submit a report of any
deviation from applicable emission limits and operating practices,
including deviations attributable to upset conditions, the probable
cause of such deviations, and any corrective actions or preventive
measures taken.
Finally, contingent on our approval of these two SIP revisions, we
proposed to find that Utah's SIP fully satisfies the requirements of
section 309 of the Regional Haze Rule and that, therefore, the State
has fully complied with the requirements for reasonable progress,
including BART, for the first implementation period.
EPA requested comment on its proposed approval of Utah's regional
haze SIP elements related to the NOX BART Alternative under
40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(vii) and 51.308(e)(2) and (3), as well as the MRR
elements for the units subject to that BART Alternative and to PM BART.
EPA previously approved Utah's regional haze SIP as meeting all other
requirements of 40 CFR 51.309,\3\ and we neither reopened nor requested
comment on previously approved elements.
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\3\ See 77 FR 74355 (Dec. 14, 2012); 81 FR 43894 (July 5, 2016).
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The EPA conducted a public hearing for our proposed action in
Price, Utah on February 12, 2020. Our public comment period closed on
March 23, 2020.
Our January 2020 proposed rule provided background on the
requirements of the CAA and EPA's Regional Haze Rule, a summary of Utah
regional haze SIP submittals and related EPA actions, and the EPA's
rationale for its proposed action. That background information and
rationale will not be restated here. For the reasons stated in the
proposed rule, this document, and in the accompanying Response to
Comments (RTC) document, the EPA concludes that Utah's NOX
BART Alternative achieves greater reasonable progress under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2) and (3).
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
We received both written and oral comments at the public hearings
we held in Price, Utah. We also received comments through the internet
and mail. The full text of comments received from these commenters is
included in the publicly posted docket associated with this action at
https://www.regulations.gov. Our RTC document, which is also included
in the docket associated with this action, provides detailed responses
to all significant comments received except for those addressed
below.\4\ Our RTC document is organized similarly to the structure
presented in this section. Therefore, if additional information is
desired concerning how we addressed a particular comment, the reader
should refer to the appropriate section in our RTC document.
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\4\ Most commenter citations and footnotes are excluded from
this document.
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PacifiCorp, conservation organizations (HEAL Utah, Sierra Club,
National Parks Conservation Association, Utah Physicians for a Healthy
Environment, and Natural Resources Defense Council), Edison Electric
Institute, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, and Salt Lake City's Capitol Hill
Action Group submitted detailed written comments. Many general comments
were made at the public hearing.
A. Legal Issues
Comment summary: Some commenters argued that the modeling
assumptions used for comparing the BART Benchmark (the controls
required by the 2016 FIP) \5\ to the NOX BART Alternative
overstated emissions for non-BART units in the BART Benchmark scenario.
Specifically, the commenters argued that emissions for the Carbon plant
should have reflected compliance with the Mercury and Air Toxics
Standards (MATS) rule, which was required by April 15, 2015. According
to the commenters, compliance with MATS would have resulted in a
greater than 50 percent reduction in SO2 emissions at Carbon
Units 1 and 2 compared to its historical emissions. Additionally, the
commenters argued that emissions from Hunter Unit 3 in the BART
Benchmark scenario should have reflected combustion controls installed
in 2007. The modeling instead assumed that under this scenario, the
Carbon plant and Hunter Unit 3 would emit pollutants consistent with
the 2001-2003 baseline.\6\ The commenters argued that such assumption
overstates the emissions from these sources that would have occurred
under the BART Benchmark and thus understates the visibility benefits
that would occur under the BART Benchmark.
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\5\ As described above, in the July 2016 FIP, EPA determined
that NOX BART for each of the four BART units constituted
an emission limit of 0.07 lb/MMBtu (30-day rolling average) based on
the emission reductions achievable through the installation and
operation of SCR plus upgraded combustion controls. Utah's July 2019
SIP submittal thus refers to the BART Benchmark controls as the
``EPA FIP,'' as do many of the commenters. While the controls
represented by the BART Benchmark and EPA's 2016 FIP are indeed the
same, the relevant comparison for this action is between the BART
Benchmark and the NOX BART Alternative. 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2); see also 85 FR 3572. We therefore refer to the 2016
FIP as the BART Benchmark as appropriate in this document, the
preamble to the proposed rule, and the RTC document.
\6\ See 85 FR 3568.
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Response: Utah's modeling of emissions at Carbon and Hunter Unit 3
under the NOX BART Alternative and the BART Benchmark is
reasonable and authorized under the EPA's regulations for BART
alternatives. In particular, assuming continued emissions from sources
that would not be subject to BART controls in the BART Benchmark
scenario, when such emissions would be eliminated under the BART
Alternative, is simply a necessary analytical step for making a proper
comparison of the two scenarios to determine which achieves ``greater
reasonable progress.'' \7\ This is authorized by the Regional Haze
Rule, and it is consistent with the EPA's prior regulatory actions, EPA
guidance, and case law.
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\7\ 40 CFR 51.308(e).
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[[Page 75862]]
First, Hunter Unit 3 and the Carbon Units are not BART sources.\8\
Accordingly, reductions from these sources should not be included in
determining emissions reductions from the BART Benchmark under 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2)(i)(C). Hunter Unit 3 and the Carbon Units are covered by
Utah's BART Alternative, however, and thus emissions reductions from
these sources properly are attributed to the BART Alternative under 40
CFR 51.308(e)(2)(i)(D). Were the EPA to include these same emission
reductions in the BART Benchmark scenario, even though there would have
been no enforceable obligation that they occur under that scenario, a
proper comparison of the relative degree of visibility improvement
between the two scenarios would not be possible.
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\8\ See 85 FR 3559; 81 FR 43895; Utah Air Quality Board, ``Utah
State Implementation Plan Section XX,'' June 24, 2019, pages 28-29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, Utah properly applied a 2001-2003 baseline to
calculate emissions reductions under both scenarios. Pursuant to 40 CFR
51.308(e)(2)(iv), a state's SIP must demonstrate that emissions
reductions resulting from an alternative measure will be surplus to
those reductions resulting from measures adopted to meet requirements
of the CAA ``as of the baseline date of the SIP.'' In promulgating the
Regional Haze Rule in 1999, we explained that the ``baseline date of
the SIP'' in this context means ``the date of the emissions inventories
on which the SIP relies,'' \9\ which is defined as 2002 for regional
haze purposes.\10\ Any measure adopted after 2002 is accordingly
``surplus'' under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(2)(iv). Indeed, in 2002, the EPA
designated the baseline date of all regional haze SIPs as 2002.\11\ The
EPA explained that ``[p]rogress in improving visibility is tracked from
baseline conditions (established using air quality monitoring for the
2000-2004 period). If 2002 is used as the base year for planning
purposes, then States can take credit for emission reductions that are
achieved before the 2007-2008 SIP due date.'' \12\
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\9\ 64 FR 35714, 35742 (July 1, 1999).
\10\ 70 FR 39104, 39143 (July 6, 2005).
\11\ See Memorandum dated November 18, 2002, from Lydia Wegman
and Peter Tsirigotis, Subject: ``2002 Base Year Emission Inventory
SIP Planning: 8-hr Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze
Programs.''
\12\ Id. at 3. The first regional haze SIPs were due December
17, 2007. See 40 CFR 51.308(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In other words, for purposes of calculating emissions reductions
from BART alternatives, states assume a baseline of 2002 emissions and
may take credit for emissions reductions after that date, even if those
reductions occur as a result of, or to comply with, other CAA
requirements, so long those requirements occur after that baseline.
Thus, Utah's modeling properly credited emissions reductions from
Carbon's 2015 shutdown and Hunter 3's 2007 controls towards the BART
Alternative. Furthermore, in order to properly compare the BART
Benchmark to the NOX BART Alternative under 51.308(e)(2) to
determine if the Alternative achieves greater reasonable progress,
common sense dictates that the EPA must compare emissions reductions
under each scenario from the same baseline year. Thus, Utah's modeling
also properly included Carbon and Hunter 3's emissions from the 2001-
2003 baseline period (i.e., not including any reductions from MATS
compliance or 2007 controls) under the BART Benchmark because Carbon
and Hunter 3 are not BART sources.
This approach is supported by case law.\13\ In Yazzie v. EPA, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reviewed and
upheld EPA's FIP, which included a BART alternative instead of
BART.\14\ The petitioners argued that the EPA inconsistently credited
the BART alternative, but not the BART benchmark, for emissions
reductions from controls voluntarily installed in 2009-2011 for
purposes of comparing the two.\15\ Like here, the EPA used a 2001-2003
baseline from which to calculate emissions reductions under both
scenarios for purposes of the comparison.\16\ The Ninth Circuit deemed
this approach reasonable under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).\17\ Likewise,
Utah's approach here with respect to Hunter 3 and Carbon is reasonable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, 885 F.3d. 714
(D.C. Cir. 2018); Yazzie v. EPA, 851 F.3d 960 (9th Cir. 2017).
\14\ 851 F.3d at 975.
\15\ 851 F.3d at 974.
\16\ Id.
\17\ See id.
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Commenters additionally argue that the State cannot take credit for
the portion of the reductions from the Carbon shutdown that would have
happened anyway had Carbon remained in operation but in compliance with
the MATS rule. However, as the D.C. Circuit has recognized, EPA's
regulations allow for BART alternatives even when the reductions are
due to compliance with another CAA requirement. In UARG v. EPA, the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
reviewed and upheld the EPA's rule finding that emission reductions
attributable to the 2011 Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR)--
implemented under the ``good neighbor'' provision of the Act, CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)--may be treated as a BART alternative. The
petitioners there argued that the EPA should not have compared BART on
its own (i.e., without CSAPR in place) to the BART alternative on its
own (i.e., CSAPR without BART in place), but should have instead
compared BART plus CSAPR to CSAPR, because CSAPR (like the MATS rule
here), was implemented under a separate provision of the CAA and would
go into effect regardless of BART.\18\ The D.C. Circuit rejected the
petitioners' argument as effectively requiring more of BART
alternatives than the EPA's rule requires. The court explained that
under the Regional Haze Rule, the EPA properly compares BART without
the alternative or other CAA requirements to the alternative without
BART.\19\ Underlying that holding is the fact that EPA's regulations
authorize BART alternatives to take advantage of emission reductions
achieved to meet some other CAA requirement so long as they are surplus
to requirements as of the baseline.\20\ Thus, as in UARG, the EPA here
properly compared the BART Benchmark without MATS compliance at Carbon
to the NOX BART Alternative.
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\18\ UARG, 885 F.3d at 720.
\19\ See id.
\20\ See 40 CFR 51.308(e)(2)(i)(C), (e)(2)(iv). See also UARG,
885 F.3d at 719, 720 (finding challenge to EPA's BART alternative
regulations to be time-barred).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This approach is also consistent with other EPA actions. See, e.g.,
79 FR 39322, 39325 (July 10, 2014) (approving Connecticut's use of
emissions reductions from post-2002 regulations as surplus that could
be credited to its BART alternative); 77 FR 34218, 34219 (June 11,
2012) (approving Indiana's credit to its BART alternative for
reductions from a non-BART source); 78 FR 57487, 57489-91 (Sept. 19,
2013) (approving Massachusetts' comparison of the BART benchmark and
the BART alternative from a common 2002 baseline, and approving the
state's use of emissions reductions from post-2002 regulations as
surplus that could be credited to its BART alternative); 79 FR 33438,
33441-42 (June 11, 2014) (approving Washington's credit to its BART
alternative for reductions achieved through controls installed post-
2002 in order to meet other CAA requirements).
In sum, in this final action approving Utah's NOX BART
Alternative, the EPA finds that Utah properly compared the BART
Benchmark to the BART Alternative, using its modeling of the emissions
reductions of each without the other from the 2001-2003 baseline
period, consistent with the Regional
[[Page 75863]]
Haze Rule, its regulatory history, EPA guidance, and case law.
Comment summary: Some commenters argued that there are three legal
flaws with Utah's treatment of SO2 emissions reductions from
the Carbon plant shutdown. As explained in the preamble to the proposed
rule, Utah's SIP revision continues to report historical emissions for
the Carbon plant in annual milestone reports for the SO2
Backstop Trading Program to ensure that SO2 emissions
reductions from the Carbon shutdown are not double-counted towards the
NOX BART Alternative and the SO2 Backstop Trading
Program. First, the commenters argued that the approach violates 40 CFR
51.309(d)(4)(iii)'s requirement that reporting under the SO2
Backstop Trading Program include ``actual'' emissions. Second, the
commenters argued that the approach violates 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i),
which requires that participating states use the same compliance
methodology during the first two years of the Program. Finally, the
commenters argued that removing Carbon from the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program would undermine and potentially nullify the EPA's
approval of that Program because the Program's inclusion of sources
like Carbon was an underpinning of the EPA's approval.
Response: The EPA disagrees with this comment and the incorporated
2016 comments by the National Park Service. First, 40 CFR
51.309(d)(4)(iii)'s requirement that SIPs include provisions requiring
``annual reporting of actual stationary source SO2
emissions'' must be read in context with the following sentence that
such ``data must be sufficient to determine annually whether the
milestone for each year through 2018 is achieved.'' \21\ The provision
goes on to require that the participating states submit the data to the
EPA and the regional planning organization and that the data be kept
for at least 10 years. Thus, read in context, Sec. 51.309(d)(4)(iii)
plainly is meant to require reporting that allows a determination of
whether the milestones have been met.\22\ Utah's approach to reporting
Carbon's emissions under the SO2 Backstop Trading Program
serves this purpose because Utah will overstate actual emissions under
the Program. This conservative approach ensures that the reported data
are sufficient to determine whether the SO2 milestone is
achieved and is therefore consistent with and achieves the purpose of
the provision, and the EPA finds it approvable.
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\21\ 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(iii).
\22\ See 64 FR 35751-52 (``Section 51.309(d)(4) requires
monitoring and reporting of stationary source emissions of
SO2 in order to assess compliance with these milestones
during the period 2003 to 2018.'').
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As explained in the proposal, the participating states first
achieved the 2018 milestone (the most stringent milestone) in 2011 when
Carbon was fully operational. Between 2011 and Carbon's shutdown in
2015, emissions continued to stay below the 2018 milestone and
decreased significantly each year. The most recent milestone report,
for 2016, demonstrates that SO2 emissions were 36 percent
lower than the 2018 milestone.\23\ At its highest reported
SO2 emissions level, Carbon's emissions made up only 10
percent of the participating states' three-year average SO2
emissions (reported in 2014).\24\ Thus, even with the additional
emissions from Carbon, the participating states can easily achieve the
2018 milestone, and overstating Utah's emissions for purposes of the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program will not impair any
determination of compliance with the milestones.
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\23\ 85 FR 3570.
\24\ Id. at Table 6.
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Second, Utah's approach does not violate 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i). As
an initial matter, the commenters selectively quote the provision. The
complete sentence reads, ``[d]uring the first two years of the program,
compliance with the milestone may be measured by a methodology of the
States' choosing, so long as all States in the program use the same
methodology.'' \25\ The SO2 Backstop Trading Program was
approved in 2012, which is more than two years ago.\26\ Thus, this
sentence is no longer applicable.
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\25\ 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(i) (emphasis added).
\26\ See 77 FR 73926 (Dec. 12, 2012).
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Instead, after the first two years of the Program, Sec.
51.309(d)(4)(i) requires that participating states measure compliance
by comparing ``a three-year rolling average of actual emissions with a
rolling average of the emissions milestones for the same three years.''
Utah's SIP revision remains consistent with this methodology. Under
this methodology, each state reports its own emissions.\27\ As
explained above, using this methodology, the participating states
achieved the 2018 milestone in 2011, and emissions are currently 36
percent below the 2018 milestone.\28\ Accordingly, Wyoming and New
Mexico are not prejudiced by Utah's continued reporting of the Carbon
emissions, nor do they have any reason to amend their SIPs to account
for Carbon's emissions. Indeed, the EPA approved a similar SIP revision
for units in Wyoming in 2019.\29\ Utah's approach is consistent with
Sec. 51.309(d)(4)(i) and with the other states' methodologies.
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\27\ See Utah Admin. Code R307-250-9(8); WY Rules and
Regulations 020.0002.14 Sec. 2(h)(viii); New Mexico Admin. Code
20.2.81.106(O) and 20.11.46.16(H) (all requiring quarterly and
annual reports).
\28\ 85 FR 3570 (Table 6).
\29\ See 84 FR 22711, 22712, 22715 (May 20, 2019) (requiring
Basin Electric to use inflated emission rates to calculate and
report emissions from two units for the SO2 Backstop
Trading Program to ensure SO2 emissions are not double
counted for the SO2 Program and the BART alternative).
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Finally, Utah's approach does not undermine or nullify the EPA's
approval of the SO2 Backstop Trading Program. In approving
the Program as better than BART, the EPA relied on the fact that the
Program, including the 2018 SO2 emissions milestone, covered
63 non-BART sources, including Carbon.\30\ It hardly undermines the
EPA's approval that one of the sources that was included in the Program
has now shut down. The Program was designed to encourage sources to
reduce emissions so that the emissions milestones were and are never
exceeded.\31\ In any case, Utah has not removed Carbon from the
Program, but rather has decided to continue counting its emissions at
historical levels towards the 2018 milestone, even though the source is
now actually emitting at zero. That is, emissions from Carbon remain
covered by the SO2 Backstop Trading Program. Even accounting
for Carbon's historical emissions, the participating states'
SO2 emissions are far below the 2018 milestone and there is
no indication that the 2018 milestone will ever be exceeded such that
emissions under the Program would exceed projected emissions under
BART, thereby rendering the Program less effective than BART.
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\30\ 77 FR 30953, 30965 (May 24, 2012).
\31\ 77 FR 74360. Participating states must continue to meet the
2018 milestone until the Program is replaced with an EPA-approved
SIP revision. See also 40 CFR 51.309(d)(4)(vi)(A).
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Even it if was the case that Utah had removed Carbon from the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program, however, the inclusion of non-
BART units like Carbon was just one of several reasons the EPA deemed
the Program better than BART. Additional reasons included: (1) The
trading program discouraged emissions from new sources more effectively
than under BART; (2) the trading program included an aggregate cap on
emissions, which decreased emissions more effectively than BART; and
(3) the trading program encouraged earlier reductions than under
BART.\32\ The Tenth Circuit upheld the EPA's considerations as ``a
reasonable basis for
[[Page 75864]]
the EPA's approval of the 309 program.'' \33\ Accordingly, Utah's
continued accounting of the Carbon emissions in the SO2
Backstop Trading Program, which arguably affects just one part of the
EPA's rationale in a proportionally minor way (1/63), cannot possibly
undermine or nullify the EPA's approval.
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\32\ See 77 FR 30965; 77 FR 73927.
\33\ WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 770 F.3d 919, 935 (10th Cir.
2014).
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Finally, as noted above, Carbon has not been removed from the
Program as the commenters contend. Rather, as explained above, Carbon's
emissions continue to be included in the inventory of annual emissions
notwithstanding the fact that it is shut down.\34\ Thus, SO2
emissions remain capped at the 2018 milestone, including Carbon's
emissions. To the extent it may become necessary, future SO2
reductions would have to come from other sources in order to allow the
participating states to continue to meet the 2018 milestone.
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\34\ See 85 FR 3574.
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Comment summary: Some commenters assert that the EPA may not
approve the NOX BART Alternative because the NOX
BART Alternative would allow increased emissions limits and visibility
impairment without offsetting increased emissions elsewhere in Utah's
SIP in violation of CAA section 110(l), 42 U.S.C. 7410(l). The
commenters argue that case law supports an interpretation of CAA
section 110(l) that prevents implementation plan revisions that would
increase overall air pollution limits or worsen air quality. The
commenters argue that the EPA's approval of the NOX BART
Alternative and withdrawal of the FIP would violate CAA section 110(l)
for two specific reasons. First, the commenters assert that the
NOX BART Alternative would increase emissions limits and
resulting NOX pollution compared to the FIP. They argue that
the EPA's proposed analysis and conclusion that increased
NOX emissions will not interfere with applicable CAA
requirements is ``woefully insufficient to support compliance with
section 110(l).'' Second, the commenters assert that Utah's treatment
of the SO2 emissions reductions from the Carbon plant, which
continues to report Carbon's emissions under the SO2
Backstop Trading Program so that they can be credited to the
NOX BART Alternative, violates CAA section 110(l). The
commenters argue that such treatment eliminates an applicable
requirement under the CAA that results in an increase in overall
allowed emissions.
Response: The EPA disagrees with these comments. CAA section 110(l)
states in relevant part: ``The Administrator shall not approve a
revision of a plan if the revision would interfere with any applicable
requirement concerning attainment and reasonable further progress (as
defined in section 7501 of this title), and any other applicable
requirement of this chapter.'' \35\ CAA section 110(l) applies to all
requirements of the CAA and to all areas of the country, whether
attainment, nonattainment, unclassifiable or maintenance for one or
more of the six criteria pollutants. EPA interprets section 110(l) as
applying to all National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) that are
in effect, including those for which SIP submissions have not been
made.\36\ However, the level of rigor needed for any CAA section 110(l)
demonstration will vary depending on the nature and circumstances of
the revision.
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\35\ 42 U.S.C. 7410(l).
\36\ In general, a section 110(l) demonstration should address
all pollutants whose emissions and/or ambient concentrations would
change as a result of a plan revision. Here, commenters allege that
emissions and/or ambient concentrations of NOX and
SO2 would change as a result of this plan revision.
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There are two possible paths for satisfying CAA section 110(l).
First, a state may demonstrate through an air quality analysis that the
revision will not interfere with attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable
further progress, or any other applicable requirements. Second, a state
may substitute equivalent emissions reductions to compensate for any
change to a plan to ensure actual emissions to the air are not
increased and thus preserve status quo air quality.\37\ The second
approach may be used, for example, where no attainment demonstrations
are available to guide an analysis of whether the SIP revision would
interfere with attainment of the NAAQS. However, nothing in the statute
requires a state to rely on substitute emission reductions or alters
the basic proposition that section 110(l) can be satisfied by an air
quality analysis demonstrating that a plan revision will not interfere
with any applicable requirement concerning attainment and reasonable
further progress, or any other applicable CAA requirement. As explained
in greater detail below, in this case, the EPA has concluded based on
an air quality analysis that the revision will not interfere with
attainment of the NAAQS or any other applicable CAA requirement and is
not relying on substitute emission reductions.
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\37\ ``Equivalent'' emissions reductions are reductions that are
equal to or greater than those reductions achieved by the control
measure approved into the plan. To show that compensating emissions
reductions are equivalent, adequate justification must be provided.
The compensating, equivalent reductions should represent actual
emissions reductions achieved in a contemporaneous time frame to the
change of the existing control measure in order to preserve the
status quo air quality. If the status quo is preserved,
noninterference is demonstrated. In addition to being
contemporaneous, the equivalent emissions reductions should also be
permanent, enforceable, quantifiable, and surplus.
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Before addressing comments regarding the EPA's analysis, however,
we address the commenters' suggestion that CAA section 110(l) per se
prohibits approval of any SIP revision that allows an increase in
emissions or weakens requirements relative to the existing
implementation plan.\38\ Such an interpretation is not supported by the
statutory language or case law. First, the plain language of the
provision does not prohibit every SIP revision that allows an increase
in emissions or weakens the existing plan's requirements. Rather, the
language prohibits EPA approval of such a SIP revision if it would
interfere with attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable further progress, or
any other applicable requirement of the CAA.\39\ Thus, the language
focuses on interference rather than on emissions increases or changed
requirements.
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\38\ While the EPA acknowledges that this action will allow for
greater NOX emissions than the 2016 FIP, the EPA does not
concede that this action weakens regional haze requirements or
allows increased visibility impairment. Instead, as is explained in
the preamble to the proposed rule, this document, and in the EPA's
response to comments, Utah's NOX BART Alternative will
achieve greater reasonable progress through combined NOX,
SO2, and PM reductions and therefore results in a
stronger regional haze requirement than the existing plan. See,
e.g., 85 FR 3566 (Table 3), 3569, 3573.
\39\ See 42 U.S.C. 7410(l).
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Second, courts have upheld EPA's interpretation that the relevant
inquiry under CAA section 110(l) is not whether the SIP revision allows
an increase in emissions or weakens requirements, but whether there has
been a demonstration that the SIP revision would interfere with the
NAAQS, reasonable further progress, or any other applicable CAA
requirement.
For example, in Kentucky Resources Council v. EPA, the petitioners
argued that a new attainment demonstration, which was not due for years
after action on the SIP revision, was required in order to show
noninterference under CAA section 110(l). Instead, the examination in
that case was based on whether the area, which was designated as a
nonattainment area for the relevant NAAQS, would have more difficulty
attaining and maintaining the NAAQS with the SIP revision (i.e.,
whether the SIP revision would interfere with
[[Page 75865]]
attainment and maintenance of the NAAQS). In upholding the EPA's
interpretation and examination, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit explained, ``Congress did not intend that the EPA reject each
and every SIP revision that presents some remote possibility for
interference. Thus, where EPA does not find that a SIP revision would
interfere with attainment, approval of the revision does no violence to
the statute.'' \40\ The Sixth Circuit further explained that, ``[i]n
rejecting [a] strict interpretation in favor of one that allows
[states] more flexibility, the EPA does service to a fundamental
premise underlying the Clean Air Act scheme, which is that the states
have the primary responsibility for ensuring that the NAAQS are met.''
\41\ Likewise, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
upheld the EPA's interpretation stating, ``[w]e agree that where
interference is not demonstrated, approval of the state's SIP revision
appropriately respects the state's choice to achieve air quality
standards with `whatever mix of emission limitations it deems best
suited to its particular situation.' '' \42\
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\40\ 467 F.3d 986, 994 (6th Cir. 2006).
\41\ Id. at 996.
\42\ Alabama Environmental Council v. EPA, 711 F.3d 1277, 1293
(11th Cir. 2013) (quoting Train v. NRDC, Inc., 421 U.S. 60, 79
(1975)). See also Indiana v. EPA, 796 F.3d 803, 811 (7th Cir. 2015)
(``When deciding whether to approve Illinois's SIP revision, EPA was
required to determine whether the revision would, going forward,
interfere with attainment.'') (emphasis in original); Galveston-
Houston Ass'n for Smog Prevention v. EPA, 289 Fed. Appx. 745, 754
(5th Cir. 2008) (``[C]hanges to a SIP, either dropping measures or
reducing measurement requirements, are not by themselves sufficient
to prove interference. Rather, one must show that the substitute
measures are not at least equivalent to the previous measures in
achieving attainment.'').
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The commenters misconstrue other cases. In El Comite Para El
Bienestar de Earlimart v. EPA and WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit dismissed petitioners' CAA
section 110(l) challenges without addressing what is required to show
that a SIP revision violates CAA section 110(l).\43\ And contrary to
the commenters' assertion, neither Indiana v. EPA nor Kentucky
Resources Council v. EPA stand for the proposition that the EPA must
require substitute emissions reductions when a SIP revision increases
emissions so that overall net emissions do not increase. In those
cases, the U.S. Courts of Appeal for the Sixth and Seventh Circuits
simply held that the EPA reasonably concluded that CAA section 110(l)
was not violated when substitute emissions reductions were included in
the SIP revisions at issue.\44\ But as explained above, the EPA has
previously identified two options for demonstrating noninterference
under CAA section 110(l): (1) Substitution of one measure by another
with equivalent or greater emissions reductions/air quality benefit;
and (2) an air quality analysis showing that removing the measure will
not interfere with other applicable requirements (i.e., without a
substitute measure).\45\ Here the SIP submission did not include
substitute measures and the EPA chose to evaluate the air quality
impact of the proposed revision. As we explain below, the EPA's air
quality analysis shows that the Utah SIP revisions will not interfere
with attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable further progress, or any other
CAA requirement.
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\43\ See El Comite Para El Bienestar de Earlimart v. EPA, 786
F.3d 688, 696-97 (9th Cir. 2015); WildEarth Guardians v. EPA, 759
F.3d 1064, 1074 (9th Cir. 2014).
\44\ See Kentucky Resources Council, 467 F.3d at 995-96;
Indiana, 796 F.3d at 812-13.
\45\ See Indiana, 796 F.3d at 806.
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Importantly, the statute does not require any ``specific
methodology'' for air quality analyses under CAA section 110(l).\46\ In
general, the level of rigor needed for any CAA section 110(l)
demonstration will vary depending on the nature of the revision, its
potential impact on emissions and air quality, and the air quality in
the affected areas.
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\46\ Kentucky Resources Council, 467 F.3d at 995.
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In the proposed rule, the EPA proposed to find that the SIP
revisions satisfy section 110(l). The document explained how the
proposed SIP revisions and associated FIP withdrawal will comply with
and thus could not be said to interfere with applicable regional haze
requirements and general implementation plan requirements such as
enforceability. The proposal also addressed potential interference with
requirements concerning attainment and reasonable further progress,
stating that the Utah SIP revisions will allow for greater
NOX emissions at the four subject-to-BART units as compared
to the 2016 FIP (which is currently judicially stayed). The proposal
went on to explain that the change in these emissions compared to the
FIP, however, is not anticipated to interfere with any applicable
requirements under the CAA. We explained that the geographic area where
the BART units are located is not part of a nonattainment area for any
NAAQS. Furthermore, we explained that the approved portions of the
PM2.5 attainment demonstrations and clean data
determinations (CDD) for the Salt Lake City, Provo, and Logan, UT-ID
nonattainment areas (NAAs) do not rely on the installation of SCR at
Hunter or Huntington to achieve attainment of the NAAQS. Similarly, we
explained that the EPA recently approved Utah's PM10
redesignation requests and maintenance plans for Salt Lake County, Utah
County, and Ogden City NAAs.\47\ These PM10 redesignation
requests and maintenance plans do not rely on the installation of SCR
at Hunter or Huntington to achieve attainment of the NAAQS. Finally, we
explained that there are no other approved attainment demonstrations in
other areas of the State or outside of the State that rely on the
installation of SCR at Hunter or Huntington to achieve attainment of
any of the NAAQS.\48\
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\47\ The PM10 redesignations for Salt Lake County,
Utah County, and Ogden City nonattainment areas revised 40 CFR
81.345 to signify that these areas are in attainment. Utah
demonstrated maintenance of the PM10 standard to 2035
through the maintenance plans.
\48\ 85 FR 3574.
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The commenters contend that the EPA's air quality analysis is
inadequate but did not provide any evidence that Utah's SIP revisions
will interfere with any specific applicable requirement under the CAA.
Here, for the reasons explained below, the EPA now confirms the
proposed conclusions from the CAA section 110(l) analysis in the
proposal.
First, the geographic area where the Hunter and Huntington Units
are located is not part of a nonattainment area for any NAAQS. Also,
monitors in the geographic area do not currently show exceedances of
the ozone NAAQS.\49\
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\49\ EPA, ``Air Quality System Preliminary Design Value
Report,'' October 7, 2020.
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Second, since the publication of the proposal on January 22, 2020,
the PM10 areas for Salt Lake County, Utah County, and Ogden
City were redesignated as attaining the PM10 NAAQS.\50\ The
areas continue to attain the PM10 NAAQS based on the most
recent official ambient data (2017-2019).\51\ This means that these
areas attained the NAAQS at current emission levels, i.e., the emission
levels allowed by the NOX controls installed at Hunter and
Huntington between 2006 and 2014 and which will be maintained under
Utah's NOX BART Alternative. Because the FIP was judicially
stayed and the NOX emission controls required by the FIP
(SCRs) were never installed, current emissions levels do not reflect
emission levels that would have been achieved if the FIP had been
implemented. In other words, the EPA's approval of the Utah
NOX BART Alternative will not cause an increase in
NOX emissions at Hunter
[[Page 75866]]
or Huntington compared to current conditions. Therefore, the SIP
approval will not interfere with already-achieved NAAQS attainment for
PM10, and there is no evidence, including none provided by
the commenters, to suggest that PM10 areas for Salt Lake
County, Utah County, and Ogden City will not continue to attain the
NAAQS following our approval of the SIP and concurrent withdrawal of
the FIP.
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\50\ 85 FR 10989 (Feb. 26, 2020).
\51\ EPA, ``Air Quality System Preliminary Design Value
Report,'' September 15, 2020.
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Third, the Northern Wasatch Front, Southern Wasatch Front, and
Uinta Basin ozone non-attainment areas were designated nonattainment
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS on August 3, 2018.\52\ As part of the 2018
ozone designation process, the EPA conducted a meteorological Hybrid
Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory (HYSPLIT) analysis to
determine whether sources near the monitors violating the NAAQS
contribute to the Northern and Southern Wasatch Front ozone non-
attainment areas. Evaluation of such meteorological data helps to
assess the fate and transport of emissions contributing to ozone
concentrations and to identify areas potentially contributing to the
monitored violations. Results of the HYSPLIT analysis for the Northern
and Southern Wasatch Front ozone nonattainment areas show that back
trajectories rarely originated or passed through Carbon and Emery
counties on high ozone days in the Wasatch Front (where Hunter and
Huntington are located).\53\ Instead, the HYSPLIT analysis indicates
that emissions originating within Davis and Salt Lake Counties, the
southern portion of Weber County, the northern portion of Utah County,
and the eastern portion of Tooele County primarily contribute to
monitor violations.\54\ Furthermore, the monitors in the Southern
Wasatch Front ozone nonattainment area (closest to the BART sources)
are currently attaining the ozone standard using 2017-2019 and
preliminary 2018-2020 data.\55\
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\52\ 83 FR 25776, 25836 (June 4, 2018). At that time, the ozone
monitors located closest to the two power plants, in Carbon County,
did not violate the 2015 ozone standard. EPA, ``Utah: Northern
Wasatch Front, Southern Wasatch Front, and Uinta Basin Intended Area
Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards Technical Support Document (TSD),'' page 6 (``Utah 2015
Ozone TSD''). Also found in docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2017-0548; posted
January 5, 2018.
\53\ Utah 2015 Ozone TSD, pages 18-25.
\54\ Id. at 25.
\55\ EPA, ``Air Quality System Preliminary Design Value
Report,'' October 7, 2020.
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For the Uinta Basin non-attainment area, the EPA has determined
that ozone production is a highly localized phenomenon. The Uinta Basin
is a winter ozone area, where violating ozone concentrations are
dependent on stagnant winter conditions associated with strong
temperature inversions. During the ozone designations process, the EPA
used the latest data and information available to the agency (and to
the states and tribes through the Ozone Designations Mapping Tool and
the EPA Ozone Designations Guidance and Data web page),\56\ to evaluate
emissions and air quality data and other information for counties in
the Uinta Basin. The EPA determined that the stagnant winter conditions
associated with strong temperature inversions limit the influence of
areas outside of the topographic Uinta Basin.\57\ Thus, at the time of
the 2018 designation, the EPA determined that sources in surrounding
counties (like Hunter and Huntington) do not contribute to the
violating area because of these unique geographic features and the
associated winter temperature inversion meteorology.
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\56\ The EPA's Ozone Designations Guidance and Data web page can
be found at https://www.epa.gov/ozone-designations/ozone-designations-guidance-and-data.
\57\ Utah 2015 Ozone TSD, pages 29, 30.
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Fourth, the Salt Lake City, Provo, and Logan, Utah-Idaho (UT-ID)
PM2.5 nonattainment areas were designated nonattainment for
the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS on November 13, 2009.\58\ On
October 19, 2018, the EPA finalized a determination of attainment for
the Logan, UT-ID PM2.5 nonattainment area.\59\ Based on the
most recent 3 years of valid data at that time (2015-2017), the Logan,
UT-ID nonattainment area attained the 2006 primary and secondary 24-
hour PM2.5 NAAQS by the attainment date of December 31,
2017. Likewise, on June 8, 2020, the EPA proposed a determination of
attainment, based on the most recent 3 years of valid data (2017-2019),
that the Salt Lake City and Provo nonattainment areas attained the 2006
primary and secondary 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS by the attainment
date of December 31, 2019.\60\ On January 13, 2020, Utah submitted
redesignation requests for the Logan, UT-ID, Salt Lake City, and Provo
PM2.5 nonattainment areas and the EPA is actively reviewing
this submittal for future action.
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\58\ 74 FR 58688 (Nov. 13, 2009).
\59\ 83 FR 52983 (Oct. 19, 2018). A nonattainment area may be
issued a determination of attainment by the EPA only if monitored
data demonstrate that air quality has improved enough that the NAAQS
is now being achieved. These determinations are based upon complete,
quality-assured data gathered at established state and local air
monitoring stations and national air monitoring stations in the
nonattainment area and must include a notice and comment rulemaking
by the EPA determining that the area is attaining the relevant
standard. Although a determination of attainment is not equivalent
to a redesignation in 40 CFR part 81, a determination of attainment
shows that monitored air quality no longer violates the NAAQS.
\60\ 85 FR 35033 (June 8, 2020).
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Because the Logan, UT-ID PM2.5 nonattainment area is now
attaining the PM2.5 NAAQS and we proposed to find that the
Salt Lake City and Provo PM2.5 nonattainment areas are also
now attaining the PM2.5 NAAQS at current emission levels,
which would not increase upon approval of Utah's SIP revisions, the SIP
approval will not interfere with NAAQS attainment for PM2.5.
Additionally, there is no evidence, including none provided by the
commenters, to suggest that these areas will not continue to attain the
NAAQS following our approval of the SIP and concurrent withdrawal of
the FIP.
Fifth, contrary to the commenters' argument, the EPA demonstrated
that the SIP approval will not interfere with the CAA's BART
requirements, including the SO2 Backstop Trading Program. As
explained elsewhere in this document, Utah's amendments to the
SO2 Backstop Trading Program do not alter the applicable
2018 SO2 milestone or the sources covered by the Program,
and thus maintain compliance with the Program and the Regional Haze
Rule. The SIP amendments to Utah's SO2 milestone reporting
requirements under the SO2 Backstop Trading Program are
merely an accounting exercise to ensure that emission reductions
resulting from the Carbon plant's closure are not credited towards both
the SO2 Backstop Trading Program and the NOX BART
Alternative. The SIP amendments further do not result in an actual
increase in emissions.
In summary, we find that Utah's SIP revisions will not interfere
with attainment of the NAAQS, reasonable further progress, or other CAA
requirements because: (1) The geographic area where the Hunter and
Huntington Units are located is not part of a nonattainment area for
any NAAQS; (2) the recently redesignated former PM10
nonattainment areas in Salt Lake County, Utah County, and Ogden City
are attaining the PM10 NAAQS at current emission levels,
which would remain unchanged with approval of Utah's SIP revisions; (3)
we determined in 2018 that the Hunter and Huntington power plants do
not contribute to the Northern Wasatch Front and Southern Wasatch Front
ozone non-attainment areas, and that the Uinta Basin non-attainment
area is a highly localized phenomenon and sources in surrounding
counties, including the Hunter and Huntington power plants, do not
contribute to the violating area; (4) the Logan, UT-ID PM2.5
nonattainment area is attaining the
[[Page 75867]]
PM2.5 NAAQS, and we proposed to find that the Salt Lake City
and Provo PM2.5 nonattainment areas are also attaining the
PM2.5 NAAQS, all at current emission levels that would not
increase under Utah's SIP revisions; and (5) the Utah SIP revisions
properly account for SO2 emissions in accordance with
applicable requirements. Furthermore, the commenters provided no
analysis or information to indicate otherwise. Thus, we confirm our
position in the proposed rule that Utah's SIP revisions are not
anticipated to interfere with applicable requirements of the CAA and
therefore CAA section 110(l) does not prohibit approval of this SIP and
concurrent withdrawal of the FIP.
B. BART Alternative Requirements
Comment summary: Some commenters asserted that because the EPA's
proposed rule would result in a significantly different distribution of
emissions from BART, it fails to show ``greater reasonable progress''
under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3) than the EPA's previously issued FIP.
Specifically, the commenters assert that when alleged technical
deficiencies including those in the CAMx dispersion modeling are
corrected, the EPA is unable to prove ``greater reasonable progress''
because visibility will decline in one or more Class I areas and there
is not an overall improvement in visibility over all affected Class I
areas.
Response: We disagree with this comment. The three plants (Hunter,
Huntington, and Carbon) are all located within 40 miles of each other
in Central Utah and are therefore similarly situated to the affected
Class I areas. But Utah chose to use CAMx dispersion modeling to assess
whether the NOX BART Alternative achieves greater reasonable
progress for the worst and best 20 percent of days (i.e., the two-prong
test). This is the regulatory test required under Sec. 51.308(e)(3) if
the distribution of emissions were substantially different.\61\ Thus,
the question of emissions distribution is not pertinent to the EPA's
approval of Utah's NOX BART Alternative. Any influence that
the respective geographic relationship of the emission reductions from
BART and the NOX BART Alternative have on visibility impacts
at the Class I areas is resolved by the CAMx modeling.
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\61\ See 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We respond to specific comments related to alleged technical
deficiencies in the modeling in more detail below and in the RTC
document. We find that the CAMx modeling used for the greater
reasonable progress demonstration was performed consistent with EPA
guidance and that the model performance was similar to applications of
the CAMx model that the EPA and states have used in previous actions
for regional haze.\62\ The CAMx modeling results showed that the
NOX BART Alternative met the requirements of the greater
reasonable progress two-prong test, i.e., visibility does not decline
in any Class I area under the BART Alternative relative to the Baseline
on both the 20% best and 20% worst days, and the average visibility
improvement across all affected Class I areas is greater under the BART
Alternative than under the BART Benchmark.\63\
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\62\ Previous actions that relied on CAMx modeling include the
Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) (76 FR 48208 (Aug. 8, 2011));
the FIP revision for Laramie River Station in Wyoming (84 FR 22711
(May 20, 2019)); and the SIP revision for Coronado Generating
Station in Arizona (82 FR 46903 (Oct. 10, 2017)).
\63\ See 85 FR 3573.
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C. BART Alternative ``Greater Reasonable Progress'' Determination
Comment summary: Some commenters asserted that the CAMx modeling
supporting the Utah NOX BART Alternative is flawed because
it continues to assume that the installation and operation of SCR on
Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington Units 1 and 2 would achieve a
NOX emission rate of 0.07 lb/MMBtu on a 30-day rolling
average, as approved by the EPA four years ago in its FIP. The
commenters contend that there are several electric generating units
(EGUs) that have achieved NOX emission rates of 0.04 lb/
MMBtu or lower on an annual average basis. The commenters further
contend that the EPA recently adopted a BART alternative for the
Laramie River Station in Wyoming and acknowledged that a 0.04 lb/MMBtu
NOX emission rate would be achieved with SCR on an annual
average basis under a 0.06 lb/MMBtu NOX limit applicable on
a 30-day average basis.
The commenters further assert that while the Hunter and Huntington
BART units have been achieving 0.19-0.20 lb/MMBtu NOX rates
on an annual average basis in the last two years, these units should be
able to readily achieve a 0.04 lb/MMBtu annual average NOX
rate with SCR. The commenters contend that such a NOX rate
equates to a 74-80% NOX removal efficiency across the SCR,
and SCR systems are routinely designed to achieve 90% NOX
removal. The commenters therefore argue that it is improper to judge
the Utah BART Alternative against a BART Benchmark that utilizes
obsolete emissions information and that the EPA should not have assumed
a controlled annual average NOX rate any higher than 0.04
lb/MMBtu for the Hunter and Huntington Units in BART modeling.
Response: We disagree with this comment. By way of background, the
EPA's FIP used an assumed emission rate of 0.05 lb/MMBtu on an annual
basis, but required compliance with a 0.07 lb/MMBtu, 30-day rolling
average limit.\64\ The commenters here contend that EPA should have
used a lower annual limit, which would in turn lower the 30-day rolling
average limit, for purposes of the BART Benchmark. As an initial
matter, emission limits associated with BART do not need to meet the
lowest emission rate achieved with that technology at any coal-fired
power plant. The Regional Haze Rule provides that ``[t]he determination
of BART must be based on an analysis of the best system of continuous
emission control technology available and associated emission
reductions achievable for each BART-eligible source that is subject to
BART.'' \65\
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\64\ 81 FR 43903.
\65\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(1)(ii)(A).
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Additionally, the BART Guidelines state that: ``[i]n assessing the
capability of the control alternative, latitude exists to consider
special circumstances pertinent to the specific source under review, or
regarding the prior application of the control alternative,'' \66\ and
that ``[t]o complete the BART process, you must establish enforceable
emission limits that reflect the BART requirements.'' \67\ The five
factor BART analysis described in the Guidelines is a case-by-case
analysis that considers site-specific factors in assessing the best
technology for continuous emission controls. After a technology is
determined as BART, the BART Guidelines require establishment of an
emission limit that reflects the BART requirements, but does not
specify that the emission limit must represent the maximum level of
control achieved by the technology selected as BART.
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\66\ 40 CFR part 51, appendix Y, section IV.D.3.
\67\ 40 CFR part 51, appendix Y, section V.
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While the BART Guidelines and the Regional Haze Rule do not
preclude selection of the maximum level of control achieved by a given
technology as BART, the emission limit must be set to reflect BART
which in turn must be determined based on a consideration and weighing
of the five statutory BART factors. Therefore, limits set in other BART
determinations, Best Available Control Technology during Prevention of
Significant Deterioration review, or emission rates achieved from the
operation of individual facilities under
[[Page 75868]]
an emissions trading program (e.g., CSAPR) may provide important
information, but should not be construed to automatically represent the
most appropriate BART limit for a given technology.
Additionally, while the commenters cite actual annual emission
rates found in the EPA's Air Markets Program Database (AMPD) to support
their claim that an annual emission rate of 0.04 lb/MMBtu is achievable
with SCR, a more thorough review of the data supports the EPA's
conclusion that an annual emission rate no lower than 0.05 lb/MMBtu is
representative of what can be achieved when retrofitting SCR to an
existing boiler. Of the 155 coal-fired EGUs equipped with SCR operating
in 2019 with actual annual emission rates below 0.10 lb/MMBtu, 135
(87.1%) had actual annual emissions greater than 0.05 lb/MMBtu, 18
(11.6%) had actual annual emissions greater than 0.04 lb/MMBtu and less
than or equal to 0.05 lb/MMbtu, and only 2 (1.3%) had actual annual
emissions less than or equal 0.04 lb/MMBtu.\68\ The figure in our RTC
document shows the number of coal-fired EGUs equipped with SCR by
actual annual emission range in increments of 0.01 lb/MMbtu.
Notwithstanding the site-specific nature of SCR retrofits, these data
support the conclusion that an annual emission rate of 0.05 lb/MMBtu is
appropriate for the Utah BART units, and confirm that the assumption is
relatively conservative because the majority of EGUs equipped with SCR
have actual annual emission rates that are higher.
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\68\ See spreadsheet titled ``SCR Actual Annual Emissions by
Range.xlsx'' in the docket. Note that AMPD query returned a total of
265 coal-fired EGUs equipped with SCR operating in 2019. However,
many of these units had actual annual emission rates well in excess
of what would be anticipated with an SCR when operated on a year-
round basis. For that reason, the EPA eliminated all units with an
actual annual emission rate in excess of 0.10 lb/MMBtu from
consideration, leaving 155 units.
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Moreover, the lowest emission rates found in the AMPD database may
not be indicative of what can be expected at the Utah BART units for a
number of reasons. As noted above, the site-specific characteristic of
each SCR installation must be taken into account when determining the
anticipated actual annual emission rate. For example, the commenter
lists Dry Fork Unit 1 in Wyoming among units that are achieving an
actual annual emission rate of 0.04 lb/MMBtu.\69\ However, construction
on Dry Fork Unit 1 began in 2007 and SCR was integrated into the
original design, and not installed as a retrofit as would be the case
with the Utah BART units.
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\69\ AMPD data for 2019 show actual annual emissions of 0.0432
lb/MMBtu, above 0.04 lb/MMBtu.
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Our use of an anticipated actual annual emission rate with SCR of
0.05 lb/MMBtu here is also consistent with our 2016 FIP.\70\ The EPA is
unaware of, and the commenters have not cited, any advancements in SCR
retrofit technology that have occurred since our July 2016 final rule.
Accordingly, we have no reason to conclude that the assumptions we made
at that time regarding SCR performance are now obsolete.
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\70\ 81 FR 2034.
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Finally, the commenters have incorrectly assumed that a 90% control
efficiency can be achieved in all SCR applications regardless of the
input NOX emission rate or other parameters. In our July
2016 final rule, the EPA used an actual annual average emission rate
for LNB/SOFA (i.e., pre-SCR) at the Utah BART units of 0.20 lb/MMBtu to
0.22 lb/MMBtu.\71\ A 90% reduction with SCR from these emission rates
would yield annual emission rates of 0.020 lb/MMBtu to 0.022lb/MMBtu.
As can be seen from the AMPD data discussed above, no EGU has achieved
this level of control with SCR. Thus, because this level of control has
not been achieved in practice, it is not a realistic expectation for
the Utah BART units.
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\71\ See 81 FR 43903, Tables 2 through 5.
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Comment summary: Some commenters criticized the selection of Class
I areas for inclusion in the CAMx modeling domain. The commenters
asserted that the modeling included Class I areas beyond 300 kilometers
from the Carbon, Hunter, and Huntington power plants, and afforded
equal weight to areas near and distant from the pollution sources even
though there is higher confidence in the CAMx modeling at sites within
300 kilometers of the sources. The commenters further asserted that
PacifiCorp included certain areas (e.g. San Pedro Parks Wilderness Area
(New Mexico)) farther than 500km from the sources, while apparently
omitting others a similar distance away (e.g. Craters of the Moon in
Idaho; Jarbidge in Nevada; Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Washakie,
Fitzpatrick, and Bridger in Wyoming; Petrified Forest and Sycamore
Canyon in Arizona; and Rocky Mountain, Eagles Nest, Rawah, and Great
Sand Dunes in Colorado, among others). The commenters also stated that
while Utah appeared to give undue weight to visibility benefits at
certain distant Class I areas, Utah gave zero weight (and did not even
analyze) visibility impacts at similarly distant sites. The commenters
therefore argue that the assessed Class I areas were selected in an
arbitrary manner, and that the analysis does not account for visibility
impacts ``over all affected Class I areas,'' as required by the
Regional Haze Rule.\72\ The commenters argue that if corrected, the
alleged errors may flip the outcome of Utah's analysis; i.e., if the
Class I areas outside of 300 kilometers from the power plants are
omitted, the modeling fails to demonstrate that the average visibility
benefit of the BART Alternative will be greater than the 2016 FIP (BART
Benchmark).
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\72\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3)(ii).
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Response: The EPA disagrees with this comment. The draft modeling
protocol prepared by PacifiCorp included a rectangular modeling domain
that included all of the Class I areas within a distance of 300 km of
the Hunter and Huntington Units that had been considered in previous
CALPUFF modeling applications for these BART sources. The EPA reviewed
the proposed modeling domain and recommended that the boundaries of the
domain be extended farther east, north, and south to include terrain
features that could affect the transport of pollutants from the BART
sources.\73\ PacifiCorp agreed to extend the size of the domain as
requested by the EPA. Thus, for example, the domain was extended
farther north to include the Uinta mountain range in northern Utah, and
the domain was extended farther east such that the relevant Class I
areas were fully included in the model domain and were not located
close to the boundary of the domain. Because of the possibility of
modeling artifacts at domain boundaries,\74\ the EPA believed that the
larger model domain was technically more defensible. The motivation for
expanding the size of the model domain was to provide more accurate
model results, not to include more Class I areas. However, given that
additional Class I areas were included within the domain, the EPA
determined that it was appropriate to consider visibility benefits at
all Class I areas for which model results were available. The EPA
determined that it would have been arbitrary to include some Class I
areas
[[Page 75869]]
but not to include other nearby Class I areas for which modeling
results were available. The additional Class I areas (Mount Zirkel
Wilderness Area [WA], Maroon Bells/Snowmass WA, West Elk WA, La Garita
WA, Weminuche WA, and San Pedro Parks WA) are located close to and
within the same air basins as the other Class I areas previously
included in the CALPUFF modeling. While there are other Class I areas
located within 500 km of the sources, prevailing wind patterns and
terrain features make it less likely that emissions from Hunter and
Huntington would impact those areas, and the EPA did not find that it
was reasonable to recommend further expansion of the model domain to
include these Class I areas. In addition, the calculation of the
average difference between BART and the BART Alternative is most
influenced by the Class I areas closest to and most impacted by Hunter,
Huntington and Carbon. Therefore, small modeled impacts at additional
distant Class I areas would likely have little or no impact on the
average impact across all affected Class I areas.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ Email dated September 20, 2017, from Aaron Worstell (EPA)
to Jay Baker (UDAQ), Subject: Updated invitation: Utah Regional Haze
CAMx Model Review, docket ID EPA-R08-OAR-2015-0463-0228.
\74\ For example, if emissions plumes near the model domain
boundaries are transported out of the model domain, those emissions
are permanently lost to the model, even if meteorological
recirculation patterns might cause those emissions to re-enter the
domain. Selecting a large model domain reduces the possibility that
emissions plumes will be transported out of the model domain.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also disagree with the comment that there is higher confidence
in the CAMx modeling at sites within 300 kilometers of the sources.
Higher confidence in modeling for sites within 300 kilometers is a
feature of the CALPUFF model. For example, the Interagency Workgroup on
Air Quality Modeling report recommended the ``use of CALPUFF for
transport distances of order 200 km and less. Use of CALPUFF for
characterizing transport beyond 200 to 300 km should be done cautiously
with an awareness of the likely problems involved.'' \75\ The CAMx
model is not subject to this limitation because it was developed and
has been widely used and evaluated for applications at distances much
greater than 300 kilometers, including modeling and regulatory analyses
for interstate transport of ozone and PM2.5. Photochemical
grid models such as CAMx are recommended by the EPA in Appendix W \76\
for long range transport modeling for secondary pollutants, including
regional haze.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ EPA, ``Interagency Workgroup on Air Quality Modeling
(IWAQM) Phase 2 Summary Report and Recommendations for Modeling Long
Range Transport Impacts,'' December 1998, pages 18 and D-11.
\76\ 40 CFR part 51, appendix W.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment summary: Some commenters asserted that the CAMx modeling
cannot support the NOX BART Alternative because it employs
the wrong metric for comparison. Specifically, the commenters argue
that instead of using ``the worst and best 20 percent of days'' to
demonstrate greater reasonable progress under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3), Utah
should have substituted an analysis for the 20% of days in a calendar
year ``with the highest amount of anthropogenic visibility impairment''
under the EPA's 2017 revisions to the Regional Haze Rule. The
commenters argue that without such modeling, the EPA cannot demonstrate
in accordance with the regional haze requirements that the BART
Alternative would result in greater reasonable progress than BART as
determined in the EPA's FIP (BART Benchmark), and the BART Alternative
is not approvable.
Response: We disagree that the CAMx modeling relied on in Utah's
SIP submittal employs the wrong metric for comparison of the BART
Benchmark and NOX BART Alternative. First, as explained
elsewhere in the preamble to the proposed rule, the RTC document, and
this document, Utah submitted its NOX BART Alternative, and
the EPA proposed to approve it, under the two-prong test in 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3)(i) and (ii). The two-prong test requires that ``the State
must conduct dispersion modeling to determine differences in visibility
between BART and the [alternative] for each impacted Class I area, for
the worst and best 20 percent of days.'' \77\ The 2017 revisions to the
Regional Haze Rule discussed by the commenter did not change 40 CFR
51.308(e)(3).\78\ Indeed, Sec. 51.308(e)(3) is a BART provision
applicable to the first regional haze planning period, and the EPA
explicitly did not make any changes to the Regional Haze Rule's BART
provisions in the 2017 revisions.\79\ Because Utah's SIP revisions are
intended to satisfy first planning period BART requirements,\80\ the
CAMx modeling properly employed the haziest days metric rather than the
new ``most impaired days'' metric.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3) (emphasis added).
\78\ See 82 FR 3078, 3124 (Jan. 10, 2017).
\79\ See 81 FR 26942, 26947 (May 4, 2016) (``States undertook
the BART determination process during the first implementation
period. The BART requirement was a one-time requirement . . . .
Consequently, we are not proposing any changes to the BART
provisions in this rulemaking.'').
\80\ See 85 FR 3575.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment summary: Commenters assert that the most fundamental
technical deficiency in the CAMx modeling is the emissions information
used by Utah for the ``typical year'' scenario (also called the 2011
reference case). Commenters assert that the EPA provided no explanation
as to why the 2011 reference case was modeled with the 2001-2003
baseline period emissions at Carbon, Hunter and Huntington. Commenters
note that in the interval between the baseline period and the typical
year, PacifiCorp installed significant emissions control improvements
at both Hunter and Huntington, which resulted in substantial
SO2 reductions.
Commenters assert that the Hunter and Huntington emission controls
are important because the associated impact of such controls on
visibility conditions in Class I areas in Utah and neighboring states
already would be reflected in the 2009-2013 five-year average
Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) data
used in the CAMx modeling. Commenters claim that by using the 2001-2003
baseline emissions to describe the Hunter and Huntington plants for the
2011 reference year, the post-2003 SO2 reductions at Hunter
and Huntington are essentially double counted. Commenters conclude that
Utah's approach to typical year emissions for the Hunter, Huntington
and Carbon power plants presents a fundamental error with the CAMx
modeling and the resulting implication is that the modeling results
cannot be used to support Utah's conclusion that the Utah
NOX BART Alternative would result in greater visibility
improvement compared to the EPA FIP (BART Benchmark).
Response: We disagree with this comment. As an initial matter, the
commenters have not explained how the emissions data used in the 2011
Typical Year scenario results in a faulty outcome to the two-prong
regulatory analysis required under 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3). Indeed, the
modeling was appropriately designed to assess each prong in a
reasonable and technically defensible way.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See AECOM, ``Photochemical Modeling Protocol to Assess
Visibility Impacts for PacifiCorp Power Plants Located in Utah,''
January 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we explained in the proposed rule, CAMx was configured to
simulate four modeling scenarios: the 2011 Typical Year, the 2025
Baseline, the BART Benchmark, and the Utah NOX BART
Alternative. The 2011 Typical Year scenario includes emissions for
Carbon, Hunter and Huntington at 2001-2003 levels, while all other
sources remain at 2011 levels. The annual NOX and
SO2 emissions modeled for each of these scenarios are shown
in Table 1 below.
[[Page 75870]]
Table 1--Annual NOX and SO2 Emissions by Modeling Scenario
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011 Typical year 2025 Baseline 2025 BART benchmark 2025 Utah NOX BART
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ alternative
Plant Unit ---------------------------
NOX (tpy) SO2 (tpy) NOX (tpy) SO2 (tpy) NOX (tpy) SO2 (tpy) NOX (tpy) SO2 (tpy)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Carbon................................. 1 1,312 2,286 1,312 2,286 1,312 2,286 0 0
2 1,977 3,528 1,977 3,528 1,977 3,528 0 0
Hunter................................. 1 6,380 2,535 6,380 2,535 796 1,153 3,166 1,153
2 6,092 2,531 6,092 2,531 798 1,408 3,028 1,408
3 6,530 1,204 6,530 1,204 6,530 1,230 4,490 1,230
Huntington............................. 1 5,944 2,380 5,944 2,380 793 1,254 3,147 1,254
2 5,817 12,308 5,816 12,308 753 1,201 3,366 1,201
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The modeling relied on the 2011 emissions data because a robust,
well-evaluated modeling platform was available only for 2011 and was
not available for any other year.
The 2025 Baseline modeling scenario, which is based on the 2011
Typical Year scenario with emissions projected to 2025, also uses 2001-
2003 emissions for PacifiCorp's units in order to reflect only those
controls that were in place at those units in the baseline period
(i.e., pre-regional haze measures).\82\ This allows for a
straightforward comparison of the effects of the BART Benchmark versus
the Utah NOX BART Alternative relative to the 2025 Baseline
(i.e., relative to conditions without any regional haze measures
applied to the Utah BART sources). Because measures included in the
BART Alternative were installed starting in 2006, using emissions from
a later year to represent the baseline would not accurately reflect the
impacts of each of the two scenarios. While Utah could have chosen to
use different years to represent baseline emissions from Hunter,
Huntington, and Carbon, it chose to use a consistent period for these
Units that is also consistent with the baseline period of the regional
haze SIP, and we find this to be a reasonable approach.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Utah Regional Haze State Implementation Plan, Staff Review
of Recommended Alternative to BART for NOX, May 28, 2019,
page 13.
\83\ Contrary to the commenters' claim, EPA explained this
approach in the proposed rule. 85 FR 3572.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2011 Typical Year and the 2025 Baseline scenarios were used in
the development of relative response factors (RRFs) that were applied
to publicly available IMPROVE monitoring data in order to predict
future visibility conditions in 2025 for the BART Benchmark and the
NOX BART Alternative scenarios. The BART Benchmark and BART
Alternative results were then both compared to the 2025 Baseline
scenario and to each other to determine whether the BART Alternative
passes the two-prong test in Sec. 51.308(e)(3).
The BART Benchmark scenario includes 2001-2003 Carbon and Hunter 3
emissions, because Carbon and Hunter 3 are not BART sources. But the
BART Benchmark reflects predicted NOX emissions reductions
from the installation of SCR controls on Hunter and Huntington Units 1
and 2 because those controls were required by EPA's 2016 FIP. The BART
Benchmark scenario also includes SO2 emissions from Hunter
and Huntington from 2014-2016 in order to match the BART Alternative
scenario, which as explained below, is important for the comparison in
Sec. 51.308(e)(3)(ii). The BART Alternative scenario includes
emissions from Hunter and Huntington from 2014-2016 to reflect all
emissions controls required by the Alternative, and zero emissions from
Carbon because the Alternative requires Carbon's 2015 shutdown. As
described below, these modeling scenarios allow an accurate comparison
between the BART Benchmark and the Utah NOX BART Alternative
under the two-prong test in Sec. 51.308(e)(3).
The first step (prong 1) of the two-prong test requires a
demonstration that the BART alternative does not result in a decline in
visibility at any Class I area relative to a baseline.\84\ The record
clearly establishes that there is no decline in visibility under the
NOX BART Alternative when visibility impacts of the
NOX BART Alternative are compared to the 2025 Baseline
scenario.\85\ As we explained in the proposed rule under prong 1, while
the post-2003 SO2 reductions from Hunter and Huntington
increase the apparent overall visibility benefit of the BART
Alternative relative to the Baseline, there would not be an anticipated
decline in visibility relative to the Baseline in the absence of those
SO2 reductions from Hunter and Huntington because the BART
Alternative would still result in overall NOX,
SO2, and PM emissions decreases compared to the
Baseline.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3)(i).
\85\ See 85 FR 3568-69, 3573, and Tables 4 and 5 (column D).
\86\ Id. at 3573.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the second step of the (e)(3) test (prong 2), the state must
establish that there is ``an overall improvement in visibility,
determined by comparing the average differences between BART and the
alternative.'' \87\ Thus, the purpose of the modeling at this step is
to allow for a comparison between two control scenarios--the BART
benchmark and the BART alternative--relative to a baseline. It is not
critical that the baseline itself be entirely representative of what
might be expected to happen in 2025 so long as the emissions and
meteorological data used in the modeling allow for the comparison
between the BART benchmark and BART alternative. As noted above, the
commenters have not demonstrated that the 2025 Baseline scenario here
does not serve that purpose.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we explained in the proposed rule, the relative to the 2025
Baseline, the BART Benchmark and BART Alternative include actual
SO2 reductions from Hunter and Huntington that occurred
after the 2001-2003 baseline due to scrubber upgrades. Thus, the CAMx
modeling results for the BART Benchmark and BART Alternative shown in
Tables 4 and 5 of the proposed rule reflect these SO2
reductions. The treatment of these SO2 reductions in the
modeling does not affect the determination of greater reasonable
progress under the two-prong test. Under prong 2, because the
SO2 reductions from Hunter and Huntington are equal under
the BART Alternative and BART Benchmark, they do not advantage either
control scenario.\88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ 85 FR 3572-73.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In other words, even if the CAMx modeling counts Huntington and
[[Page 75871]]
Hunter as creating an additional visibility improvement in the BART
Benchmark and NOX BART Alternative scenarios relative to the
2025 Baseline scenario, this artifact of the data is present for both
the BART Benchmark and BART Alternative scenarios. Thus, it does not
have a meaningful effect on the comparison in relative improvement in
visibility between those scenarios. The modeling does not, and need
not, purport to establish actual, absolute improvements in visibility
under the two scenarios; it simply needs to allow for a comparison
between the scenarios. In order to pass the second prong under Sec.
51.308(e)(3), a BART alternative must show an overall average
improvement in visibility over the BART benchmark. Here, Utah's
NOX BART Alternative demonstrated an overall average
improvement over the BART benchmark of 0.00494 deciviews across all
Class I areas on the 20 percent best days and 0.00058 deciviews on the
20 percent worst days.\89\ Thus, Utah's NOX BART Alternative
passes the second prong of 40 CFR 51.308(e)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ Id. at 3569.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, there is no merit to commenters' assertion that the data
used in the CAMx modeling cannot be used to support Utah's conclusion
that the Utah NOX BART Alternative would result in greater
visibility improvement compared to the EPA FIP (BART Benchmark) under
the two-prong test in Sec. 51.308(e)(3).
III. The EPA's Final Action
For the reasons stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, in the
RTC document, and in this document, we are fully approving the SIP
revisions submitted by the State of Utah on July 3, 2019, as
supplemented on December 3, 2019.
A. 2019 Utah Regional Haze SIP Revisions
We are approving these aspects of the 2019 Utah RH SIP revisions:
NOX BART Alternative, including NOX
emission reductions from Hunter Units 1, 2 and 3 and Huntington Units 1
and 2, and SO2, NOX and PM emission reductions
from Carbon Units 1 and 2.
A NOX emission limit of 0.26 lb/MMBtu (30-day
rolling average) each for Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington Units 1
and 2.
A NOX emission limit of 0.34 lb/MMBtu (30-day
rolling average) for Hunter Unit 3.
A requirement to permanently close and cease operation of
the Carbon power plant by August 15, 2015.
The associated amendments to the SO2 milestone
reporting requirements.
MRR requirements for units subject to the NOX
BART Alternative and the PM BART emission limits.
We also note that the regulatory text amendments contained in this
document include incorporation of additional parts of SIP section XX
(XX.B-C and XX.E-N) and section XXIII, which were not addressed in the
proposed action or in this final action. The EPA approved these SIP
sections as meeting the requirements of the CAA and applicable
regulations in previous actions; \90\ however, we inadvertently did not
incorporate all approved sections in 40 CFR 52.2320(e). We are
remedying this oversight and reorganizing 40 CFR 52.2320(e) to better
reflect the structure of Utah's SIP submissions here. We did not reopen
these previously approved SIP sections in this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ 73 FR 16543 (Mar. 28, 2008); 77 FR 74355 (Dec. 14, 2012);
78 FR 4072 (Jan. 18, 2013); 81 FR 43894 (July 5, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, consistent with our approval of Utah's July 2019 and
December 2019 SIP submissions, we find that Utah's SIP fully satisfies
the requirements of section 309 of the Regional Haze Rule and therefore
the State has fully complied with the requirements for reasonable
progress, including BART, for the first implementation period.
B. FIP Withdrawal
Because we find that Utah's July 2019 and December 2019 SIP
submissions satisfy the NOX BART and MRR requirements
currently addressed by the EPA's 2016 FIP, we are also withdrawing in
whole the Utah Regional Haze FIP at 40 CFR 52.2336 that imposes
NOX BART requirements on Hunter Units 1 and 2 and Huntington
Units 1 and 2.
C. Clean Air Act Section 110(l)
As we explain in detail in section II.A of this document and in the
RTC document that accompanies this action, we find that our approval of
the 2019 Utah SIP revisions and concurrent withdrawal of the
corresponding the FIP is consistent with CAA section 110(l), 42 U.S.C.
7410(l).
IV. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, the EPA is finalizing regulatory text that
includes incorporation by reference. In accordance with the
requirements of 1 CFR 51.5, the EPA is finalizing the incorporation by
reference of the SIP amendments described in section III.A of this
preamble and set forth below. The EPA has made, and will continue to
make, these materials generally available through https://www.regulations.gov (refer to docket EPA-R08-OAR-2015-0463) and at the
EPA Region 8 Office (please contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this preamble for more
information).
Therefore, these materials have been approved by the EPA for
inclusion in the SIP, have been incorporated by reference by the EPA
into that plan, are fully federally enforceable under sections 110 and
113 of the CAA as of the effective date of the final rulemaking of the
EPA's approval, and will be incorporated by reference by the Director
of the Federal Register in the next update to the SIP compilation.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ 62 FR 27968 (May 22, 1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the
terms of Executive Order 12866 \92\ and was therefore not submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. This final rule
applies to three facilities in the State of Utah. It is therefore not a
rule of general applicability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ 58 FR 51735, 51738 (Oct. 4, 1993).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulations and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
This action is not an Executive Order 13771 regulatory action
because it is not significant under Executive Order 12866 for the
reasons stated in section V.A above. Instead, it is a Rule of
Particular Applicability that is exempted under Executive Order 12866.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the PRA. Because this rule revises regional haze reporting requirements
for three facilities, the PRA does not apply.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. This rule
does not impose any requirements or create impacts on small
[[Page 75872]]
entities as no small entities are subject to the requirements of this
rule.\93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ See 13 CFR 121.201, Sector 22, Subsector 221.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain an unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not
significantly or uniquely affect small governments.
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. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this
action.
In comments on the proposed rule, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe
requested consultation. In response, the EPA offered consultation, but
the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe later waived the opportunity for
consultation.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045.\94\ The EPA
interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern environmental health or safety risks that the EPA
has reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, per the
definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in section 2-202 of the
Executive order. This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an environmental health risk or safety
risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ 62 FR 19885 (Apr. 23, 1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 \95\ because it
is not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ 66 FR 28355 (May 22, 2001).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately
high and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The documentation for this decision is contained in EPA's EJ
analysis. The EPA's Guidance on Considering Environmental Justice
During the Development of Regulatory Actions \96\ is the Agency's guide
for determining when environmental justice should be considered when
developing regulations. In support of this guidance, the EPA used
EJSCREEN \97\ to identify areas of potential environmental justice (EJ)
concerns associated with this rulemaking. A 300-kilometer radius zone
of impact was used in the EJSCREEN analysis consistent with other
regional haze actions. The results do not identify any areas of
potential EJ concerns.\98\ Moreover as explained in the preamble to the
final rule and in response to comments, the Utah Regional Haze SIP, as
revised by this action, will ensure a significant reduction in
emissions compared to regional haze baseline levels (2002). Finally,
the EPA's analysis under CAA section 110(l) shows that this action will
not interfere with any applicable requirement concerning attainment and
reasonable further progress or any other applicable CAA requirements.
Thus, this final action will not create a disproportionately high and
adverse effect on minority, low-income, and/or indigenous/tribal
populations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-06/documents/considering-ej-in-rulemaking-guide-final.pdf
\97\ EJSCREEN: Environmental Justice Screening and Mapping Tool
is available at https://www.epa.gov/ejscreen.
\98\ Results in the EJSCREEN Report for the Hunter and
Huntington Power Plants show percentiles of less than 80 for all EJ
Indexes evaluated. See EJSCREEN Report in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The availability of regulations.gov to submit written comments and
a public hearing in Price, Utah provided meaningful opportunities for
public participation in the proposed rulemaking. The EPA considered
input received during the public comment period regarding environmental
justice considerations.
L. Determination Under Section Clean Air Act Section 307(d)
Pursuant to CAA sections 307(d)(1)(B) and 307(d)(1)(V), the
Administrator determines that this action is subject to the provisions
of section 307(d). CAA section 307(d)(1)(B) provides that section
307(d) applies to, among other things, ``the promulgation or revision
of an implementation plan by the Administrator under [CAA section
110(c)].'' \99\ Under section 307(d)(1)(V), the provisions of section
307(d) also apply to ``such other actions as the Administrator may
determine.'' \100\ To the extent the approval of Utah's SIP submittals
is not expressly identified under section 307(d), the Administrator
hereby determines that section 307(d) applies to this aspect of this
action. The agency has complied with the procedural requirements of CAA
section 307(d) during the course of this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(B).
\100\ 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
M. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This rule is exempt from the CRA because it is a rule of particular
applicability that only applies to three named facilities.
N. Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the appropriate circuit by January 26, 2021. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule does not affect
the finality of this action for purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition for judicial review may be
filed and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such rule or action.
This action may not be challenged later in proceedings to enforce its
requirements. See CAA section 307(b)(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate
matter, Sulfur oxides.
Andrew Wheeler,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is to be
amended as follows:
[[Page 75873]]
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart TT--Utah
0
2. In Sec. 52.2320:
0
a. The table in paragraph (c) is amended by revising the entries
``R307-110-17,'' ``R307-110-28,'' and ``R307-150-03''.
0
b. The table in paragraph (e) is amended by:
0
i. Adding the entries ``Section IX.H.21. General Requirements: Control
Measures for Area and Point Sources, Emission Limits and Operating
Practices, Regional Haze Requirements'' and ``Section IX.H.22. Source
Specific Emission Limitations: Regional Haze Requirements, Best
Available Retrofit Technology'' in numerical order.
0
ii. Removing from under the center heading ``XVII. Visibility
Protection'' the entries ``Progress Report for Utah's State
Implementation Plan for Regional Haze,'' ``Section XX.D.6. Best
Available Retrofit Technology (BART) Assessment for NOX and
PM,'' and ``Section XX.G. Long-Term Strategy for Fire Programs.''
0
iii. Adding the center heading ``XX. Regional Haze'' and the entries
``Section XX.A. Executive Summary'', ``Section XX.B. Background on the
Regional Haze Rule'', ``Section XX.C. Long-Term Strategy for the Clean-
Air Corridor'', ``Section XX.D. Long-Term Strategy for Stationary
Sources'', ``Section XX.E. Sulfur Dioxide Milestones and Backstop
Trading Program'', ``Section XX.F. Long-Term Strategy for Mobile
Sources'', ``Section XX.G. Long-Term Strategy for Fire Programs'',
``Section XX.H. Assessment of Emissions from Paved and Unpaved Road
Dust'', ``Section XX.I. Pollution Prevention and Renewable Energy
Programs'', ``Section XX.J. Other GCVTC Recommendations'', ``Section
XX.K. Projection of Visibility Improvement Anticipated from Long-Term
Strategy'', ``Section XX.L. Periodic Implementation Plan Revisions'',
``Section XX.M. State Planning/Interstate Coordination and Tribal
Implementation'', ``Section XX.N. Enforceable Commitments for the Utah
Regional Haze SIP'', and ``Progress Report for Utah's State
Implementation Plan for Regional Haze'' in numerical order and after
the entry ``Section XXIII. Interstate Transport''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 52.2320 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Final rule citation,
Rule No. Rule title effective date date Comments
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R307-110. General Requirements: State Implementation Plan
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
R307-110-17............... Section IX. Control 11/25/2019 [INSERT Federal ......................
Measures for Area Register CITATION]
and Point Sources, 11/27/2020.
Part H, Emission
Limits.
* * * * * * *
R307-110-28............... Section XX. Regional 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal ......................
Haze. Register CITATION]
11/27/2020.
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R307-150. Emission Inventories
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
R307-150-03............... Applicability........ 6/25/2019 [INSERT Federal ......................
Register CITATION]
11/27/2020.
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(e) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State
Rule title effective date Final rule citation, date Comments
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IX. Control Measures for Area and Point Sources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Section IX.H.21. General Requirements: 11/25/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Control Measures for Area and Point CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Sources, Emission Limits and Operating
Practices, Regional Haze Requirements.
Section IX.H.22. Source Specific 11/25/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Emission Limitations: Regional Haze CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Requirements, Best Available Retrofit
Technology.
[[Page 75874]]
* * * * * * *
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XX. Regional Haze
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Section XX.A. Executive Summary......... 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.B. Background on the Regional 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Haze Rule. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.C. Long-Term Strategy for the 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Clean-Air Corridor. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.D. Long-Term Strategy for 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Stationary Sources. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.E. Sulfur Dioxide Milestones 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
and Backstop Trading Program. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.F. Long-Term Strategy for 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Mobile Sources. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.G. Long-Term Strategy for 4/7/2011 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Fire Programs. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.H. Assessment of Emissions 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
from Paved and Unpaved Road Dust. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.I. Pollution Prevention and 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Renewable Energy Programs. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.J. Other GCVTC 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Recommendations. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.K. Projection of Visibility 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Improvement Anticipated from Long-Term CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Strategy.
Section XX.L. Periodic Implementation 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Plan Revisions. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.M. State Planning/Interstate 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
Coordination and Tribal Implementation. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Section XX.N. Enforceable Commitments 8/15/2019 [INSERT Federal Register ..........................
for the Utah Regional Haze SIP. CITATION] 11/27/2020.
Progress Report for Utah's State 2/4/2016 85 FR 64050, 10/9/2020.... ..........................
Implementation Plan for Regional Haze.
* * * * * * *
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Sec. 52.2336 [Removed and Reserved]
0
3. Remove and reserve Sec. 52.2336.
[FR Doc. 2020-23994 Filed 11-25-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P