Partial Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air Quality Implementation Plans; California; San Joaquin Valley Serious Area and Section 189(d) Plan for Attainment of the 1997 Annual PM2.5, 38652-38674 [2021-15551]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 138 / Thursday, July 22, 2021 / Proposed Rules
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2021–0260; FRL–8644–02–
R9]
Partial Approval and Partial
Disapproval of Air Quality
Implementation Plans; California; San
Joaquin Valley Serious Area and
Section 189(d) Plan for Attainment of
the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
in part and disapprove in part portions
of a state implementation plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the State of
California to meet Clean Air Act (CAA
or ‘‘Act’’) requirements for the 1997
annual fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS or ‘‘standards’’) in the San
Joaquin Valley PM2.5 nonattainment
area. Specifically, the EPA is proposing
to approve the 2013 base year emissions
inventories in the submitted SIP
revisions. Because the area did not
attain by the State’s projected
attainment date of December 31, 2020,
the EPA is proposing to disapprove the
attainment demonstration and related
elements, including the comprehensive
precursor demonstration, five percent
annual emission reductions
demonstration, best available control
measures (BACM) demonstration,
reasonable further progress (RFP)
demonstration, quantitative milestone
demonstration, and contingency
measures. The EPA is also proposing to
disapprove the motor vehicle emission
budgets in the plan as not meeting the
requirements of the CAA and EPA
regulations.
SUMMARY:
Any comments on this proposal
must be received by August 23, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R09–
OAR–2021–0260 at https://
www.regulations.gov. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish
any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (e.g., audio or video) must
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DATES:
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be accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets. If you need
assistance in a language other than
English or if you are a person with
disabilities who needs a reasonable
accommodation at no cost to you, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ashley Graham, Air Planning Office
(ARD–2), EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, CA 94105, (415)
972–3877, or by email at
graham.ashleyr@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Proposed Action
A. PM2.5 NAAQS
B. San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Designations,
Classifications, and SIP Revisions
II. Summary and Completeness Review of the
San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Plan
A. 2018 PM2.5 Plan
B. Valley State SIP Strategy
C. District Rule 4901
III. Clean Air Act Requirements for Serious
PM2.5 Areas That Fail To Attain
IV. Review of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
Plan
A. Emissions Inventories
B. PM2.5 Precursors
C. Attainment Plan Control Strategy
D. Attainment Demonstration and
Modeling
E. Reasonable Further Progress and
Quantitative Milestones
F. Contingency Measures
G. Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets
H. Nonattainment New Source Review
Requirements Under CAA Section 189(e)
V. Proposed Action
A. Effect of Finalizing the Proposed
Disapproval Actions
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Proposed Action
A. PM2.5 NAAQS
Under section 109 of the CAA, the
EPA has established NAAQS for certain
pervasive air pollutants (referred to as
‘‘criteria pollutants’’) and conducts
periodic reviews of the NAAQS to
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determine whether they should be
revised or whether new NAAQS should
be established.
On July 18, 1997, the EPA revised the
NAAQS for particulate matter by
establishing new NAAQS for particles
with an aerodynamic diameter less than
or equal to a nominal 2.5 micrometers
(PM2.5).1 The EPA established primary
and secondary annual and 24-hour
standards for PM2.5.2 The annual
primary and secondary standards were
set at 15.0 micrograms per cubic meter
(mg/m3), based on a three-year average of
annual mean PM2.5 concentrations, and
the 24-hour primary and secondary
standards were set at 65 mg/m3, based on
the three-year average of the 98th
percentile of 24-hour PM2.5
concentrations at each monitoring site
within an area.3 Collectively, we refer
herein to the 1997 annual and 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS as the ‘‘1997 PM2.5
NAAQS’’ or ‘‘1997 PM2.5 standards.’’
On October 17, 2006, the EPA revised
the level of the 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS
to 35 mg/m3,4 and on January 15, 2013,
the EPA revised the level of the primary
annual PM2.5 NAAQS to 12.0 mg/m3.5
Even though the EPA has lowered the
24-hour and annual PM2.5 standards, the
1997 PM2.5 standards remain in effect.
The EPA established these standards
after considering substantial evidence
from numerous health studies
demonstrating that serious health effects
are associated with exposures to PM2.5
concentrations above these levels.
Epidemiological studies have shown
statistically significant correlations
between elevated PM2.5 levels and
premature mortality. Other important
health effects associated with PM2.5
exposure include aggravation of
respiratory and cardiovascular disease
(as indicated by increased hospital
admissions, emergency room visits,
absences from school or work, and
restricted activity dates), changes in
lung function and increased respiratory
symptoms, and new evidence for more
subtle indicators of cardiovascular
health. Individuals particularly
sensitive to PM2.5 exposure include
1 62
FR 38652.
a given air pollutant, ‘‘primary’’ NAAQS are
those determined by the EPA as requisite to protect
the public health, allowing an adequate margin of
safety, and ‘‘secondary’’ standards are those
determined by the EPA as requisite to protect the
public welfare from any known or anticipated
adverse effects associated with the presence of such
air pollutant in the ambient air. See CAA section
109(b).
3 40 CFR 50.7.
4 71 FR 61144.
5 78 FR 3086.
2 For
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older adults, people with heart and lung
disease, and children.6
Sources can emit PM2.5 directly into
the atmosphere as a solid or liquid
particle (primary PM2.5 or direct PM2.5),
or PM2.5 can form in the atmosphere
(secondary PM2.5) as a result of various
chemical reactions from precursor
emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOX),
sulfur oxides (SOX), volatile organic
compounds (VOC), and ammonia.7
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B. San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
Designations, Classifications, and SIP
Revisions
Following promulgation of a new or
revised NAAQS, the EPA is required
under CAA section 107(d) to designate
areas throughout the nation as attaining
or not attaining the NAAQS. Effective
April 5, 2005, the EPA established the
initial air quality designations for the
1997 annual and 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS,
using air quality monitoring data for the
three-year periods of 2001–2003 and
2002–2004.8 The EPA designated the
San Joaquin Valley as nonattainment for
both the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS
(15.0 mg/m3) and the 1997 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS (65 mg/m3).9
The San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
nonattainment area encompasses over
23,000 square miles and includes all or
part of eight counties: San Joaquin,
Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno,
Tulare, Kings, and the valley portion of
Kern.10 The area is home to four million
people and is one of the nation’s leading
agricultural regions. Stretching over 250
miles from north to south and averaging
80 miles wide, it is partially enclosed by
the Coast Mountain range to the west,
the Tehachapi Mountains to the south,
and the Sierra Nevada range to the east.
Under State law, the San Joaquin Valley
Unified Air Pollution Control District
(SJVUAPCD or ‘‘District’’) has primary
responsibility for developing plans to
provide for attainment of the NAAQS in
this area. The District works
cooperatively with the California Air
Resources Board (CARB) in preparing
attainment plans. Authority for
regulating sources under state
jurisdiction in the San Joaquin Valley is
split under State law between the
District, which has responsibility for
regulating stationary and most area
sources, and CARB, which has
6 EPA, Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter,
No. EPA/600/P–99/002aF and EPA/600/P–99/
002bF, October 2004.
7 For example, see 72 FR 20586, 20589 (April 25,
2007).
8 70 FR 944 (January 5, 2005).
9 40 CFR 81.305.
10 For a precise description of the geographic
boundaries of the San Joaquin Valley nonattainment
area, see 40 CFR 81.305.
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responsibility for regulating most
mobile sources.
Within three years of the effective
date of designations, states with areas
designated as nonattainment for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS were required to
submit SIP revisions that, among other
things, provided for implementation of
reasonably available control measures
(RACM), RFP, attainment of the
standards as expeditiously as
practicable but no later than five years
from the nonattainment designation (in
this instance, no later than April 5,
2010) unless the state justified an
attainment date extension of up to five
years, and contingency measures.11
Between 2007 and 2011, California
submitted six SIP revisions to address
nonattainment area planning
requirements for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
in the San Joaquin Valley,12 which we
refer to collectively as the ‘‘2008 PM2.5
Plan.’’ On November 9, 2011, the EPA
approved the portions of the 2008 PM2.5
Plan, as revised in 2009 and 2011, that
addressed attainment of the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
nonattainment area, except for the
attainment contingency measures,
which we disapproved.13 We also
granted the State’s request to extend the
attainment deadline for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley to
April 5, 2015.14
Following a January 4, 2013 decision
of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit (‘‘D.C. Circuit’’) remanding the
EPA’s 2007 implementation rule for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS,15 the EPA
published a final rule on June 2, 2014,
classifying the San Joaquin Valley,
among other areas, as a Moderate
nonattainment area for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS under subpart 4, part D of title
I of the Act.16
Effective May 7, 2015, the EPA
reclassified the San Joaquin Valley as a
Serious nonattainment area for the 1997
11 CAA sections 172(a)(2), 172(c)(1), 172(c)(2),
and 172(c)(9).
12 76 FR 69896, n. 2 (November 9, 2011).
13 Id. at 69924.
14 Id.
15 Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 706
F.3d. 428 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (‘‘NRDC’’). In NRDC, the
court held that the EPA erred in implementing the
1997 PM2.5 standards solely pursuant to the general
implementation requirements of subpart 1, without
also considering the requirements specific to
nonattainment areas for particles less than or equal
to 10 mm in diameter (PM10) in subpart 4, part D
of title I of the CAA. The court reasoned that the
plain meaning of the CAA requires implementation
of the 1997 PM2.5 standards under subpart 4
because PM2.5 falls within the statutory definition
of PM10 and is thus subject to the same statutory
requirements as PM10. The court remanded the rule,
without vacatur, and instructed the EPA ‘‘to
repromulgate these rules pursuant to Subpart 4
consistent with this opinion.’’
16 79 FR 31566.
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PM2.5 NAAQS based on our
determination that the area could not
practicably attain these NAAQS by the
April 5, 2015 attainment date.17 Upon
reclassification as a Serious area, the
San Joaquin Valley became subject to a
December 31, 2015 deadline under CAA
section 188(c)(2) to attain the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS. On February 9, 2016, the EPA
proposed to grant the State’s request for
extensions of the December 31, 2015
attainment date under CAA section
188(e), to December 31, 2018, for the
1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, and to
December 31, 2020, for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley.18 However, on October 6, 2016,
after considering public comments, the
EPA denied California’s request for
these extensions of the attainment
dates.19 Consequently, on November 23,
2016, the EPA determined that the San
Joaquin Valley had failed to attain the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS by the December 31,
2015 Serious area attainment date.20
This determination triggered a
requirement for California to submit, by
December 31, 2016, a revised PM2.5
attainment plan for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS for the San Joaquin Valley that
satisfies the requirements of CAA
section 189(d).
On December 6, 2018, the EPA
determined that California had failed to
submit a complete Serious area and
section 189(d) attainment plan for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS, among other
required SIP submissions for the San
Joaquin Valley, by the submittal
deadline.21 This finding, which became
effective on January 7, 2019, triggered
clocks under CAA section 179(a) for the
application of emissions offset sanctions
18 months after the finding and
highway funding sanctions six months
thereafter, unless the EPA affirmatively
determines that the State has submitted
a complete SIP addressing the identified
deficiencies.22 The finding also
triggered the obligation under CAA
section 110(c) on the EPA to promulgate
a federal implementation plan no later
than two years after the finding, unless
the State has submitted, and the EPA
has approved, the required SIP
17 80
FR 18528 (April 7, 2015).
FR 6936. California’s request for extension
of the Serious Area attainment date for the San
Joaquin Valley accompanied its Serious Area
attainment plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS and
related motor vehicle emission budgets, submitted
June 25, 2015 and August 13, 2015, respectively.
19 81 FR 69396. The EPA did not finalize the
actions proposed on February 9, 2016, with respect
to the submitted Serious area plan. Id. at 69400.
20 81 FR 84481.
21 83 FR 62720.
22 Id. at 62723.
18 81
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submittal.23 CARB submitted a revised
attainment plan for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS, among other submissions, on
May 10, 2019.24 This SIP revision is the
subject of this proposal. On June 24,
2020, the EPA issued a letter finding the
submittal complete and terminating the
sanctions clocks under CAA section
179(a).25
II. Summary and Completeness Review
of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Plan
The EPA is proposing action on
portions of three SIP revisions
submitted by CARB to meet CAA
requirements for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.
Specifically, the EPA is proposing to act
on those portions of the following two
plan submissions that pertain to the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS: The ‘‘2018
Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5
Standards,’’ adopted by the SJVUAPCD
on November 15, 2018, and by CARB on
January 24, 2019 (‘‘2018 PM2.5 Plan’’); 26
and the ‘‘San Joaquin Valley
Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy
for the State Implementation Plan,’’
adopted by CARB on October 25, 2018
(‘‘Valley State SIP Strategy’’). CARB
submitted the 2018 PM2.5 Plan and
Valley State SIP Strategy to the EPA as
a revision to the California SIP on May
10, 2019.27 We refer to these two SIP
submissions collectively as the ‘‘SJV
PM2.5 Plan’’ or ‘‘Plan.’’
The EPA is also proposing action on
2019 amendments to the regional air
district residential wood-burning rule,
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23 Id.
24 Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 9.
25 Letter dated June 24, 2020, from Elizabeth J.
Adams, Director, Air and Radiation Division, EPA
Region IX, to Richard W. Corey, Executive Officer,
CARB, Subject: ‘‘RE: Completeness Finding for
State Implementation Plan (SIP) Submissions for
San Joaquin Valley for the 1997, 2006, and 2012
Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) National Ambient
Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and Termination of
Clean Air Act (CAA) Sanction Clocks.’’
26 The 2018 PM
2.5 Plan was developed jointly by
CARB and the District.
27 Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 9. The letter clarifies
that the 2018 PM2.5 Plan supersedes past submittals
to the EPA that the agency has not yet acted on for
the 1997 standards, including the 2015 Plan for the
1997 Standard (submitted by CARB on June 25,
2015) and motor vehicle emission budgets
(submitted by CARB August 13, 2015). The EPA
previously acted on those portions of the ‘‘2018
Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5 Standards’’
and the ‘‘San Joaquin Valley Supplement to the
2016 State Strategy for the State Implementation
Plan’’ that pertain to the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS (85 FR
44192, July 22, 2020), and is not, at this time,
proposing to act on those portions that pertain to
the 1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS or the 2012 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS. We intend to act on these portions
of the submitted SIP revisions in subsequent
rulemakings.
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SJVUAPCD Rule 4901, ‘‘Wood Burning
Fireplaces and Wood Burning Heaters’’
(‘‘Rule 4901’’), adopted by the
SJVUAPCD on June 20, 2019, and by
CARB on July 19, 2019.28 These
amendments include a contingency
measure (in section 5.7.3 of the
amended rule) that applies to the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
The SJV PM2.5 Plan addresses the
Serious area and CAA section 189(d)
requirements for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
in the San Joaquin Valley, including the
State’s demonstration that the area will
attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by
December 31, 2020. In this proposal, the
EPA is proposing to act only on those
portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that
pertain to the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS. The EPA intends to act on the
portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that
pertain to the 1997 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS and subsequent PM2.5 NAAQS
in separate rulemakings.
CAA sections 110(a)(1) and (2) and
110(l) require each state to provide
reasonable public notice and
opportunity for public hearing prior to
the adoption and submission of a SIP or
SIP revision to the EPA. To meet this
requirement, every SIP submission
should include evidence that adequate
public notice was given and that an
opportunity for a public hearing was
provided consistent with the EPA’s
implementing regulations in 40 CFR
51.102.
CAA section 110(k)(1)(B) requires the
EPA to determine whether a SIP
submission is complete within 60 days
of receipt. This section also provides
that any plan that the EPA has not
affirmatively determined to be complete
or incomplete will become complete by
operation of law six months after the
date of submission. The EPA’s SIP
completeness criteria are found in 40
CFR part 51, Appendix V.
A. 2018 PM2.5 Plan
The following portions of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan and related support
documents address both the Serious
area requirements in CAA section 189(b)
and the CAA section 189(d)
requirements for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley: (i)
Chapter 4 (‘‘Attainment Strategy for
PM2.5’’), (ii) Chapter 5 (‘‘Demonstration
of Federal Requirements for 1997 PM2.5
Standards’’); 29 (iii) numerous
28 Letter dated July 19, 2019, from Richard W.
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9.
29 Chapter 6 (‘‘Demonstration of Federal
Requirements for the 2006 PM2.5 Standard: Serious
Plan and Extension Request’’) and Chapter 7
(‘‘Demonstration of Federal Requirements for the
2012 PM2.5 Standard’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
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appendices to the 2018 PM2.5 Plan; (iv)
CARB’s ‘‘Staff Report, Review of the San
Joaquin Valley 2018 Plan for the 1997,
2006, and 2012 PM2.5 Standards,’’
release date December 21, 2018 (‘‘CARB
Staff Report’’); 30 and (v) the State’s and
District’s board resolutions adopting the
2018 PM2.5 Plan (CARB Resolution 19–
1 and SJVUAPCD Governing Board
Resolution 18–11–16).31
The appendices to the 2018 PM2.5
Plan that address the requirements for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS include:
(i) Appendix A (‘‘Ambient PM2.5 Data
Analysis’’); (ii) Appendix B (‘‘Emissions
Inventory’’); (iii) Appendix C
(‘‘Stationary Source Control Measure
Analyses’’); (iv) Appendix D (‘‘Mobile
Source Control Measure Analyses’’); (v)
Appendix G (‘‘Precursor
Demonstration’’); (vi) Appendix H
(‘‘RFP, Quantitative Milestones, and
Contingency’’); 32 (vii) Appendix I
(‘‘New Source Review and Emission
Reduction Credits’’); (viii) Appendix J
(‘‘Modeling Emission Inventory’’); (ix)
Appendix K (‘‘Modeling Attainment
Demonstration’’); and (x) Appendix L
(‘‘Modeling Protocol’’).
The District provided public notice
and opportunity for public comment
prior to its November 15, 2018 public
hearing on and adoption of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.33 CARB also provided
public notice and opportunity for public
comment prior to its January 24, 2019
public hearing on and adoption of the
pertain to the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS and the 2012
PM2.5 NAAQS, respectively. The EPA previously
acted on those portions of the Plan that pertain to
the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS (85 FR 44192, July 22, 2020)
and intends to act on those portions that pertain to
the 1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS and 2012 PM2.5
NAAQS in separate rulemakings.
30 Letter dated December 11, 2019, from Richard
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9, transmitting
the CARB Staff Report [on the 2018 PM2.5 Plan]. The
CARB Staff Report includes CARB’s review of,
among other things, the 2018 PM2.5 Plan’s control
strategy and attainment demonstration.
31 CARB Resolution 19–1, ‘‘2018 PM
2.5 State
Implementation Plan for the San Joaquin Valley,’’
January 24, 2019, and SJVUAPCD Governing Board
Resolution 18–11–16, ‘‘Adopting the [SJVUAPCD]
2018 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5
Standards,’’ November 15, 2018.
32 Appendix H to 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, submitted
February 11, 2020 via the EPA State Planning
Electronic Collaboration System. Following the
identification of a transcription error in the RFP
tables of Appendix H, on February 11, 2020, the
State submitted a revised version of Appendix H
that corrects the transcription error and provides
additional information on the RFP demonstration.
All references to Appendix H in this proposed rule
are to the revised version submitted on February 11,
2020, which replaces the version submitted with
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan on May 10, 2019.
33 SJVUAPCD, ‘‘Notice of Public Hearing for
Adoption of Proposed 2018 PM2.5 Plan for the 1997,
2006, and 2012 Standards,’’ October 16, 2018, and
SJVUAPCD Governing Board Resolution 18–11–16.
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2018 PM2.5 Plan.34 The SIP submission
includes proof of publication of notices
for the respective public hearings. It also
includes copies of the written and oral
comments received during the State’s
and District’s public review processes
and the agencies’ responses thereto.35
Therefore, we find that the 2018 PM2.5
Plan meets the procedural requirements
for public notice and hearing in CAA
sections 110(a) and 110(l) and 40 CFR
51.102. The 2018 PM2.5 Plan became
complete by operation of law on
November 10, 2019.
B. Valley State SIP Strategy
CARB developed the ‘‘Revised
Proposed 2016 State Strategy for the
State Implementation Plan’’ (‘‘2016
State Strategy’’) to support attainment
planning in the San Joaquin Valley and
Los Angeles-South Coast Air Basin
(‘‘South Coast’’) ozone nonattainment
areas.36 In its resolution adopting the
2016 State Strategy (CARB Resolution
17–7), the Board found that the 2016
State Strategy would achieve 6 tons per
day (tpd) of NOX emissions reductions
and 0.1 tpd of direct PM2.5 emissions
reductions in the San Joaquin Valley by
2025 and directed CARB staff to work
with SJVUAPCD to identify additional
reductions from sources under District
regulatory authority as part of a
comprehensive plan to attain the PM2.5
standards for the San Joaquin Valley
and to return to the Board with a
commitment to achieve additional
emission reductions from mobile
sources.37
CARB responded to this resolution by
developing and adopting the ‘‘San
Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016
State Strategy for the State
Implementation Plan’’ (‘‘Valley State
SIP Strategy’’) to support the 2018 PM2.5
Plan. The State’s May 10, 2019 SIP
submission incorporates by reference
the Valley State SIP Strategy as adopted
by CARB on October 25, 2018 and
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34 CARB,
‘‘Notice of Public Meeting to Consider
the 2018 PM2.5 State Implementation Plan for the
San Joaquin Valley,’’ December 21, 2018, and CARB
Resolution 19–1.
35 CARB, ‘‘Board Meeting Comments Log,’’ March
29, 2019; J&K Court Reporting, LLC, ‘‘Meeting, State
of California Air Resources Board,’’ January 24,
2019 (transcript of CARB’s public hearing), and
2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix M (‘‘Summary of
Significant Comments and Responses’’).
36 The EPA has approved certain commitments
made by CARB in the 2016 State Strategy for
purposes of attaining the ozone NAAQS in the San
Joaquin Valley and South Coast ozone
nonattainment areas (for example, see 84 FR 3302
(February 12, 2019) and 84 FR 52005 (October 1,
2019)) and for attaining the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS in
the San Joaquin Valley (85 FR 44192 (July 22,
2020)).
37 CARB Resolution 17–7, ‘‘2016 State Strategy for
the State Implementation Plan,’’ March 23, 2017,
6–7.
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submitted to the EPA on November 16,
2018.38
The Valley State SIP Strategy includes
an ‘‘Introduction’’ (Chapter 1), a chapter
on ‘‘Measures’’ (Chapter 2), and a
‘‘Supplemental State Commitment from
the Proposed State Measures for the
Valley’’ (Chapter 3). Much of the
content of the Valley State SIP Strategy
is reproduced in Chapter 4 (‘‘Attainment
Strategy for PM2.5’’) of the 2018 PM2.5
Plan.39 The Valley State SIP Strategy
also includes CARB Resolution 18–49,
which, among other things, commits
CARB to achieve specific amounts of
NOX and PM2.5 emissions reductions by
specific years, for purposes of attaining
the PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley.40
CARB provided the required public
notice and opportunity for public
comment prior to its October 25, 2018
public hearing on and adoption of the
Valley State SIP Strategy.41 The SIP
submission includes proof of
publication of the public notice for this
public hearing. It also includes copies of
the written and oral comments received
during the State’s public review process
and CARB’s responses thereto.42
Therefore, we find that the Valley State
SIP Strategy meets the procedural
requirements for public notice and
hearing in CAA sections 110(a) and
110(l) and 40 CFR 51.102. The Valley
State SIP Strategy became complete by
operation of law on November 10, 2019.
measure.43 On June 20, 2019, the
District adopted amendments to Rule
4901 including a contingency measure
(in section 5.7.3 of the amended rule),
and, as an attachment to a letter dated
July 19, 2019, CARB submitted the
amended rule to the EPA for approval.44
On July 22, 2020, we approved Rule
4901, as amended June 20, 2019, into
the SIP based on our conclusion that the
rule meets the requirements for
enforceability and for SIP revisions in
CAA sections 110(a)(2)(A), 110(l), and
193 but we did not evaluate section
5.7.3 of the amended rule for
compliance with CAA requirements for
contingency measures.45 As part of that
rulemaking, we stated that we would
determine in future actions whether
section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901, in
conjunction with other submitted
provisions, meets the statutory and
regulatory requirements for contingency
measures.46 We are now evaluating
section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901, as amended
June 20, 2019, for compliance with the
requirements for contingency measures
for purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS.
Consistent with the requirements of
40 CFR part 51, Appendix V, we
previously determined that CARB’s
submittal of the June 20, 2019 revisions
to Rule 4901 satisfied the procedural
requirements for SIP revisions under
CAA section 110 and the EPA’s
implementing regulations.47
C. District Rule 4901
III. Clean Air Act Requirements for
Serious PM2.5 Areas That Fail To Attain
With respect to the District
contingency measure, the District states
in Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
that it will amend Rule 4901 to include
a requirement to be triggered upon a
determination by the EPA that the San
Joaquin Valley failed to meet a
regulatory requirement necessitating
implementation of a contingency
38 Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 9, 2.
39 For example, Table 2 (proposed mobile source
measures and schedule), Table 3 (emissions
reductions from proposed mobile source measures),
and Table 4 (summary of emission reduction
measures) of the Valley State SIP Strategy
correspond to tables 4–8, 4–9, and 4–7,
respectively, of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4.
40 CARB Resolution 18–49, ‘‘San Joaquin Valley
Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy for the State
Implementation Plan,’’ October 25, 2018, 5.
41 CARB, ‘‘Notice of Public Meeting to Consider
the San Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016
State Strategy for the State Implementation Plan,’’
September 21, 2018, and CARB Resolution 18–49.
42 CARB, ‘‘Board Meeting Comments Log,’’
November 2, 2018 and compilation of written
comments; and J&K Court Reporting, LLC,
‘‘Meeting, State of California Air Resources Board,’’
October 25, 2018 (transcript of CARB’s public
hearing).
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In the event that a Serious area fails
to attain the PM2.5 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date, CAA section
189(d) requires that ‘‘the State in which
such area is located shall, after notice
and opportunity for public comment,
submit within 12 months after the
applicable attainment date, plan
revisions which provide for attainment
of the . . . standard. . .’’ An attainment
plan under section 189(d) must, among
other things, demonstrate expeditious
attainment of the NAAQS within the
time period provided under CAA
section 179(d)(3) and provide for annual
reductions in emissions of direct PM2.5
or a PM2.5 plan precursor pollutant
within the area of not less than five
43 2018
PM2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H–25.
dated July 19, 2019 from Richard W.
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9.
45 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020) (final approval of
Rule 4901); 85 FR 1131, 1132–33 (January 9, 2020)
(proposed approval of Rule 4901).
46 85 FR 1131, 1132–33.
47 85 FR 1131 (January 9, 2020) (proposed
approval of revised Rule 4901) and 85 FR 44206
(July 22, 2020) (final approval of revised Rule 4901).
44 Letter
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percent per year from the most recent
emissions inventory for the area until
attainment.48 In addition to the
requirement to submit control measures
providing for a five percent reduction in
emissions of certain pollutants on an
annual basis, the EPA interprets CAA
section 189(d) as requiring a state to
submit an attainment plan that includes
the same basic statutory plan elements
that are required for other attainment
plans.49 Specifically, a state must
submit to the EPA its plan to meet the
requirements of CAA section 189(d) in
the form of a complete attainment plan
submission that includes the following
elements:
1. A comprehensive, accurate, current
inventory of actual emissions from all
sources of PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors in
the area;
2. A control strategy that includes
additional measures (beyond those
already adopted in previous SIPs for the
area as RACM/RACT, best available
control measures/best available control
technology (BACM/BACT), and most
stringent measures (if applicable)) that
provide for attainment of the standards
and, from the date of such submission
until attainment, demonstrate that the
plan will at a minimum achieve an
annual five percent reduction in
emissions of direct PM2.5 or any PM2.5
plan precursor;
3. A demonstration (including air
quality modeling) that the plan provides
for attainment as expeditiously as
practicable;
4. Plan provisions that require RFP;
5. Quantitative milestones that are to
be achieved every three years until the
area is redesignated attainment and that
demonstrate RFP toward attainment by
the applicable date;
6. Contingency measures to be
implemented if the area fails to meet
any requirement concerning RFP or
quantitative milestones or to attain by
the applicable attainment date; and
7. Provisions to assure that control
requirements applicable to major
stationary sources of PM2.5 also apply to
major stationary sources of PM2.5
precursors, except where the state
demonstrates to the EPA’s satisfaction
that such sources do not contribute
significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed
the standards in the area.
A state with a Serious PM2.5
nonattainment area that fails to attain
the NAAQS by the applicable Serious
area attainment date must also address
any statutory requirements applicable to
Moderate and Serious nonattainment
area plans under CAA sections 172 and
48 CAA
49 81
section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c).
FR 58010, 58098 (August 24, 2016).
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189 of the CAA to the extent that those
requirements have not already been
met.50
A section 189(d) plan must
demonstrate attainment as expeditiously
as practicable, and no later than five
years from the date of the EPA’s
determination that the area failed to
attain, consistent with sections 179(d)(3)
and 172(a)(2) of the CAA.51 Pursuant to
those provisions, the Administrator may
also extend the attainment date to the
extent the Administrator deems
appropriate, for a period no greater than
10 years from the effective date of the
EPA’s determination that the area failed
to attain, considering the severity of
nonattainment and the availability and
feasibility of pollution control measures.
The EPA provided its preliminary
views on the CAA’s requirements for
particulate matter plans under part D,
title I of the Act in the following
guidance documents: (1) ‘‘State
Implementation Plans; General
Preamble for the Implementation of
Title I of the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1990’’ (‘‘General Preamble’’); 52 (2)
‘‘State Implementation Plans; General
Preamble for the Implementation of
Title I of the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1990; Supplemental’’ (‘‘General
Preamble Supplement’’); 53 and (3)
‘‘State Implementation Plans for Serious
PM–10 Nonattainment Areas, and
Attainment Date Waivers for PM–10
Nonattainment Areas Generally;
Addendum to the General Preamble for
the Implementation of Title I of the
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990’’
(‘‘General Preamble Addendum’’).54
More recently, in an August 24, 2016
final rule entitled, ‘‘Fine Particulate
Matter National Ambient Air Quality
Standards: State Implementation Plan
Requirements’’ (‘‘PM2.5 SIP
Requirements Rule’’), the EPA
established regulatory requirements and
provided further interpretive guidance
on the statutory SIP requirements that
apply to areas designated nonattainment
for the PM2.5 standards.55 We discuss
these regulatory requirements and
interpretations of the Act as appropriate
in our evaluation of the SJV PM2.5 Plan
that follows.
50 Id. Because the EPA has not previously
approved a SIP submission for the San Joaquin
Valley as meeting the Serious area planning
requirements under CAA sections 172 and 189 for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, the EPA is
evaluating relevant portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan
for compliance with these requirements, in addition
to the requirements of CAA section 189(d).
51 81 FR 84481, 84482.
52 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992).
53 57 FR 18070 (April 28, 1992).
54 59 FR 41998 (August 16, 1994).
55 81 FR 58010.
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IV. Review of the San Joaquin Valley
PM2.5 Plan
A. Emissions Inventories
1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
CAA section 172(c)(3) requires that
each SIP include a comprehensive,
accurate, current inventory of actual
emissions from all sources of the
relevant pollutant or pollutants in the
nonattainment area. The EPA discussed
the emissions inventory requirements
that apply to PM2.5 nonattainment areas
in the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule and
codified these requirements in 40 CFR
51.1008.56 The EPA has also issued
guidance concerning emissions
inventories for PM2.5 nonattainment
areas.57
The base year emissions inventory
should provide a state’s best estimate of
actual emissions from all sources of the
relevant pollutants in the area, i.e., all
emissions that contribute to the
formation of a particular NAAQS
pollutant. For the PM2.5 NAAQS, the
base year inventory must include direct
PM2.5 emissions, separately reported
filterable and condensable PM2.5
emissions,58 and emissions of all
chemical precursors to the formation of
secondary PM2.5: nitrogen oxides (NOX),
sulfur dioxide (SO2), volatile organic
compounds (VOC), and ammonia.59 In
addition, the emissions inventory base
year for a Serious PM2.5 nonattainment
area subject to CAA section 189(d) must
be one of the three years for which
monitored data were used to determine
that the area failed to attain the PM2.5
NAAQS by the applicable Serious area
attainment date, or another technically
appropriate year justified by the state in
its Serious area SIP submission.60 A
state’s SIP submission must include
documentation explaining how it
calculated emissions data for the
inventory. In estimating mobile source
emissions, a state should use the latest
emissions models and planning
assumptions available at the time the
SIP is developed. The latest EPAapproved version of California’s mobile
56 Id.
at 58098–58099.
Inventory Guidance for
Implementation of Ozone and Particulate Matter
National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
and Regional Haze Regulations,’’ U.S. EPA, May
2017 (‘‘Emissions Inventory Guidance’’), available
at https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-inventories/
air-emissions-inventory-guidance-implementationozone-and-particulate.
58 The Emissions Inventory Guidance identifies
the types of sources for which the EPA expects
states to provide condensable PM emissions
inventories. Emissions Inventory Guidance, section
4.2.1 (‘‘Condensable PM Emissions’’), 63–65.
59 40 CFR 51.1008(c)(1).
60 Id.
57 ‘‘Emissions
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source emission factor model for
estimating tailpipe, brake, and tire wear
emissions from on-road mobile sources
that was available during the State’s and
District’s development of the SJV PM2.5
Plan was EMFAC2014.61 Following
CARB’s submission of the Plan, the EPA
approved EMFAC2017, the latest
revision to this mobile source emissions
model, and established grace periods
during which EMFAC2014 may
continue to be used for transportation
conformity purposes (i.e., new regional
emissions analyses and CO, PM10, and
PM2.5 hot-spot analyses).62 States are
also required to use the EPA’s
‘‘Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission
Factors’’ (‘‘AP–42’’) road dust method
for calculating re-entrained road dust
emissions from paved roads.63 64
In addition to the base year inventory
submitted to meet the requirements of
CAA section 172(c)(3), the state must
also submit a projected attainment year
inventory and emissions projections for
each RFP milestone year.65 These future
emissions projections are necessary
components of the attainment
demonstration required under CAA
section 189(d) and the demonstration of
RFP required under section 172(c)(2).66
Emissions projections for future years
61 80 FR 77337 (December 14, 2015). EMFAC is
short for EMission FACtor. The EPA announced the
availability of the EMFAC2014 model, effective on
the date of publication in the Federal Register, for
use in state implementation plan development and
transportation conformity in California. Upon that
action, EMFAC2014 was required to be used for all
new regional emissions analyses and CO, PM10, and
PM2.5 hot-spot analyses that were started on or after
December 14, 2017, which was the end of the grace
period for using the prior mobile source emissions
model, EMFAC2011.
62 84 FR 41717 (August 15, 2019). The grace
period for new regional emissions analyses begins
on August 15, 2019 and ends on August 16, 2021,
while the grace period for hot-spot analyses begins
on August 15, 2019 and ends on August 17, 2020.
84 FR 41717, 41720.
63 The EPA released an update to AP–42 in
January 2011 that revised the equation for
estimating paved road dust emissions based on an
updated data regression that included new emission
tests results. 76 FR 6328 (February 4, 2011). CARB
used the revised 2011 AP–42 methodology in
developing on-road mobile source emissions; see
https://www.arb.ca.gov/ei/areasrc/fullpdf/full7-9_
2016.pdf.
64 AP–42 has been published since 1972 as the
primary source of the EPA’s emission factor
information and is available at https://
www.epa.gov/air-emissions-factors-andquantification/ap-42-compilation-air-emissionsfactors. It contains emission factors and process
information for more than 200 air pollution source
categories. A source category is a specific industry
sector or group of similar emitting sources. The
emission factors have been developed and compiled
from source test data, material balance studies, and
engineering estimates.
65 40 CFR 51.1008 and 51.1012. See also
Emissions Inventory Guidance, section 3 (‘‘SIP
Inventory Requirements and Recommendations’’).
66 40 CFR 51.1004, 51.1008, 51.1011, and
51.1012.
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(referred to in the Plan as ‘‘forecasted
inventories’’) should account for, among
other things, the ongoing effects of
economic growth and adopted
emissions control requirements. The
state’s SIP submission should include
documentation to explain how the
emissions projections were calculated.
Where a state chooses to allow new
major stationary sources or major
modifications to use emission reduction
credits (ERCs) that were generated
through shutdown or curtailed
emissions units occuring before the base
year of an attainment plan, the projected
emissions inventory used to develop the
attainment demonstration must
explicitly include the emissions from
such previously shutdown or curtailed
emissions units.67
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
Summaries of the planning emissions
inventories for direct PM2.5 and PM2.5
precursors (NOX, SOX,68 VOC,69 and
ammonia) and the documentation for
the inventories for the San Joaquin
Valley PM2.5 nonattainment area are
included in Appendix B (‘‘Emissions
Inventory’’) and Appendix I (‘‘New
Source Review and Emission Reduction
Credits’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.
CARB and District staff worked
together to develop the emissions
inventories for the San Joaquin Valley
PM2.5 nonattainment area. The District
worked with operators of the stationary
facilities in the nonattainment area to
develop the stationary source emissions
estimates. The responsibility for
developing emissions estimates for area
sources such as agricultural burning and
paved road dust was shared by the
District and CARB. CARB staff
developed the emissions inventories for
both on-road and non-road mobile
sources.70
The Plan includes winter (24-hour)
average and annual average daily
planning inventories for the 2013 base
year, which were modeled from the
2012 emissions inventory, and
estimated emissions for forecasted years
from 2017 through 2028 for the
attainment and RFP demonstrations for
CFR 51.165(a)(3)(ii)(C)(1).
SJV PM2.5 Plan generally uses ‘‘sulfur
oxides’’ or ‘‘SOX’’ in reference to SO2 as a precursor
to the formation of PM2.5. We use SOX and SO2
interchangeably throughout this notice.
69 The SJV PM
2.5 Plan generally uses ‘‘reactive
organic gasses’’ or ‘‘ROG’’ in reference to VOC as
a precursor to the formation of PM2.5. We use ROG
and VOC interchangeably throughout this notice.
70 The EPA regulations refer to ‘‘non-road’’
vehicles and engines whereas CARB regulations
refer to ‘‘Other Mobile Sources’’ or ‘‘off-road’’
vehicles and engines. These terms refer to the same
types of vehicles and engines. We refer herein to
such vehicles and engines as ‘‘non-road’’ sources.
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68 The
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the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5
NAAQS.71 In this proposal, we are
proposing action on those winter
average and annual average emissions
inventories necessary to support the
attainment plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS—i.e., the 2013 base year
inventory, forecasted inventories for the
RFP milestone years of 2017, 2020
(attainment year), and 2023 (postattainment milestone year), and
additional forecasted inventories for
2018 and 2019 to support the five
percent annual emission reduction
demonstration. Each inventory includes
emissions from stationary, area, on-road,
and non-road sources.
The base year inventories for
stationary sources were developed using
actual emissions reports from facility
operators. The State developed the base
year emissions inventory for area
sources using the most recent models
and methodologies available at the time
the State was developing the Plan.72 The
Plan also includes background,
methodology, and inventories of
condensable and filterable PM2.5
emissions from stationary point and
non-point combustion sources that are
expected to generate condensable
PM2.5.73 CARB used EMFAC2014 to
estimate on-road motor vehicle
emissions based on transportation
activity data from the 2014 Regional
Transportation Plan (2014 RTP) adopted
by the transportation planning agencies
in the San Joaquin Valley.74 Reentrained paved road dust emissions
were calculated using a CARB
methodology consistent with the EPA’s
AP–42 road dust methodology.75
CARB developed the emissions
forecasts by applying growth and
control profiles to the base year
inventory. CARB’s mobile source
emissions projections take into account
predicted activity rates and vehicle fleet
turnover by vehicle model year and
adopted controls.76 In addition, the Plan
states that the District is providing for
use of pre-base year ERCs as offsets by
accounting for such ERCs in the
71 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix B, B–18 to B–19.
The winter average daily planning inventory
corresponds to the months of November through
April when daily ambient PM2.5 concentrations are
typically highest. The base year inventory is from
the California Emissions Inventory Development
and Reporting System (CEIDARS) and future year
inventories were estimated using the California
Emission Projection Analysis Model (CEPAM), 2016
SIP Baseline Emission Projections, version 1.05.
72 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix B, section B.2
(‘‘Emissions Inventory Summary and
Methodology’’).
73 Id. at B–42 to B–44.
74 Id. at B–37.
75 Id. at B–28.
76 Id. at B–18 and B–19.
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projected 2025 emissions inventory.77
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan identifies growth
factors, control factors, and estimated
offset use between 2013 and 2025 for
direct PM2.5, NOX, SOX, and VOC
emissions by source category and lists
all pre-base year ERCs issued by the
District for PM10, NOX, SOX, and VOC
emissions, by facility.78
Table 1 provides a summary of the
winter (24-hour) average inventories in
tons per day (tpd) of direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors for the 2013 base year.
Table 2 provides a summary of annual
average inventories of direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors for the 2013 base year.
These annual average inventories
provide the basis for the control
measure analysis and the RFP and
attainment demonstrations in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan.
TABLE 1—SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY WINTER AVERAGE EMISSIONS INVENTORY FOR DIRECT PM2.5 AND PM2.5 PRECURSORS
FOR THE 2013 BASE YEAR
[tpd]
Category
Direct PM2.5
NOX
SOX
VOC
Ammonia
Stationary Sources ..................................................................................
Area Sources ...........................................................................................
On-Road Mobile Sources ........................................................................
Non-Road Mobile Sources .......................................................................
8.5
41.4
6.4
4.4
35.0
11.5
188.7
65.3
6.9
0.5
0.6
0.3
86.6
156.8
51.1
27.4
13.9
291.5
4.4
0.0
Totals a ..............................................................................................
60.8
300.5
8.4
321.9
309.8
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, tables B–1 to B–5.
a Totals reflect disaggregated emissions and may not add exactly as shown here due to rounding.
TABLE 2—SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY ANNUAL AVERAGE EMISSIONS INVENTORY FOR DIRECT PM2.5 AND PM2.5 PRECURSORS
FOR THE 2013 BASE YEAR
[tpd]
Category
Direct PM2.5
NOX
SOX
VOC
Ammonia
Stationary Sources ..................................................................................
Area Sources ...........................................................................................
On-Road Mobile Sources ........................................................................
Non-Road Mobile Sources .......................................................................
8.8
41.5
6.4
5.8
38.6
8.1
183.1
87.4
7.2
0.3
0.6
0.3
87.1
153.4
49.8
33.8
13.9
310.9
4.4
0.0
Totals a ..............................................................................................
62.5
317.2
8.5
324.1
329.2
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Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, tables B–1 to B–5.
a Totals reflect disaggregated emissions and may not add exactly as shown here due to rounding.
3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
We have reviewed the 2013 base year
emissions inventories in the SJV PM2.5
Plan and emissions inventory
estimation methodologies used by
California for consistency with CAA
requirements and the EPA’s guidance.
We find that the inventories are based
on the most current and accurate
information available to the State and
District at the time they were
developing the Plan and inventories,
including the latest version of
California’s mobile source emissions
model that had been approved by the
EPA at the time, EMFAC2014. The
inventories comprehensively address all
source categories in the San Joaquin
Valley PM2.5 nonattainment area and are
consistent with the EPA’s inventory
guidance.
In accordance with 40 CFR
51.1008(c)(1), the 2013 base year is one
of the three years for which monitored
77 2018
PM2.5 Plan, Appendix I, I–1 to I–5.
at tables I–1 to I–5.
79 81 FR 84481, 84482 (November 23, 2016).
78 Id.
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data were used to determine that the
San Joaquin Valley area failed to attain
the PM2.5 NAAQS by the applicable
Serious area attainment date for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS,79 and it
represents actual annual average
emissions of all sources within the
nonattainment area. Direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors are included in the
inventories, and filterable and
condensable direct PM2.5 emissions are
identified separately.
For these reasons, we are proposing to
approve the 2013 base year emissions
inventories in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS as meeting
the requirements of CAA section
172(c)(3) and 40 CFR 51.1008.
B. PM2.5 Precursors
1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
The composition of PM2.5 is complex
and highly variable due in part to the
large contribution of secondary PM2.5 to
80 ‘‘Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter’’
(EPA/600/P–99/002aF), EPA, October 2004, Chapter
3.
81 ‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Final
Revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality
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total fine particle mass in most
locations, and to the complexity of
secondary particle formation processes.
A large number of possible chemical
reactions, often non-linear in nature,
can convert gaseous NOX, SO2, VOC,
and ammonia to PM2.5, making them
precursors to PM2.5.80 Formation of
secondary PM2.5 may also depend on
atmospheric conditions, including solar
radiation, temperature, and relative
humidity, and the interactions of
precursors with preexisting particles
and with cloud or fog droplets.81
Under subpart 4 of part D, title I of the
CAA and the PM2.5 SIP Requirements
Rule, each state containing a PM2.5
nonattainment area must evaluate all
PM2.5 precursors for regulation unless,
for any given PM2.5 precursor, the state
demonstrates to the Administrator’s
satisfaction that such precursor does not
contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels
that exceed the NAAQS in the
nonattainment area.82 The provisions of
Standards for Particulate Matter’’ (EPA/452/R–12–
005), EPA, December 2012), 2–1.
82 81 FR 58010, 58017–58020.
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subpart 4 do not define the term
‘‘precursor’’ for purposes of PM2.5, nor
do they explicitly require the control of
any specifically identified PM2.5
precursor. The statutory definition of
‘‘air pollutant,’’ however, provides that
the term ‘‘includes any precursors to the
formation of any air pollutant, to the
extent the Administrator has identified
such precursor or precursors for the
particular purpose for which the term
‘air pollutant’ is used.’’ 83 The EPA has
identified NOX, SO2, VOC, and
ammonia as precursors to the formation
of PM2.5.84 Accordingly, the attainment
plan requirements of subpart 4 apply to
emissions of all four precursor
pollutants and direct PM2.5 from all
types of stationary, area, and mobile
sources, except as otherwise provided in
the Act (e.g., CAA section 189(e)).
Section 189(e) of the Act requires that
the control requirements for major
stationary sources of direct PM10 also
apply to major stationary sources of
PM10 precursors, except where the
Administrator determines that such
sources do not contribute significantly
to PM10 levels that exceed the standard
in the area. Section 189(e) contains the
only express exception to the control
requirements under subpart 4 (e.g.,
requirements for RACM and RACT,
BACM and BACT, most stringent
measures, and new source review
(NSR)) for sources of direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursor emissions. Although
section 189(e) explicitly addresses only
major stationary sources, the EPA
interprets the Act as authorizing it also
to determine, under appropriate
circumstances, that regulation of
specific PM2.5 precursors from other
source categories in a given
nonattainment area is not necessary.85
For example, under the EPA’s
longstanding interpretation of the
control requirements that apply to
stationary, area, and mobile sources of
PM10 precursors in the nonattainment
area under CAA section 172(c)(1) and
subpart 4,86 a state may demonstrate in
a SIP submission that control of a
certain precursor pollutant is not
necessary in light of its insignificant
contribution to ambient PM10 levels in
the nonattainment area.87
Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements
Rule, a state may elect to submit to the
EPA a ‘‘comprehensive precursor
demonstration’’ for a specific
83 CAA
section 302(g).
FR 58010, 58015.
85 Id. at 58018–58019.
86 General Preamble, 57 FR 13498, 13539–13542.
87 Courts have upheld this approach to the
requirements of subpart 4 for PM10. See, e.g., Assoc.
of Irritated Residents v. EPA, et al., 423 F.3d 989
(9th Cir. 2005).
84 81
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nonattainment area to show that
emissions of a particular precursor from
all existing sources located in the
nonattainment area do not contribute
significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed
the standards in the area.88 If the EPA
determines that the contribution of the
precursor to PM2.5 levels in the area is
not significant and approves the
demonstration, the state is not required
to control emissions of the relevant
precursor from existing sources in the
attainment plan.89
In addition, in May 2019, the EPA
issued the ‘‘Fine Particulate Matter
(PM2.5) Precursor Demonstration
Guidance’’ (‘‘PM2.5 Precursor
Guidance’’),90 which provides
recommendations to states for analyzing
nonattainment area PM2.5 emissions and
developing such optional precursor
demonstrations, consistent with the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule. The PM2.5
Precursor Guidance builds upon the
draft version of the guidance, released
on November 17, 2016 (‘‘Draft PM2.5
Precursor Guidance’’), which CARB
referenced in developing its precursor
demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan.91
The EPA’s recommendations in the
PM2.5 Precursor Guidance are
essentially the same as those in the Draft
PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, including the
recommended annual contribution
threshold of 0.2 mg/m3.
We are evaluating the SJV PM2.5 Plan
in accordance with the presumption
embodied within subpart 4 that all
PM2.5 precursors must be addressed in
the State’s evaluation of potential
control measures, unless the State
adequately demonstrates that emissions
of a particular precursor or precursors
do not contribute significantly to
ambient PM2.5 levels that exceed the
PM2.5 NAAQS in the nonattainment
area. In reviewing any determination by
the State to exclude a PM2.5 precursor
from the required evaluation of
potential control measures, we consider
both the magnitude of the precursor’s
contribution to ambient PM2.5
concentrations in the nonattainment
area and the sensitivity of ambient PM2.5
88 40
CFR 51.1006(a)(1).
89 Id.
90 ‘‘PM
2.5 Precursor Demonstration Guidance,’’
EPA–454/R–19–004, May 2019, including
memorandum dated May 30, 2019 from Scott
Mathias, Acting Director, Air Quality Policy
Division and Richard Wayland, Director, Air
Quality Assessment Division, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards (OAQPS), EPA to Regional
Air Division Directors, Regions 1–10, EPA.
91 ‘‘PM
2.5 Precursor Demonstration Guidance,
Draft for Public Review and Comments,’’ EPA–454/
P–16–001, November 17, 2016, including
memorandum dated November 17, 2016 from
Stephen D. Page, Director, OAQPS, EPA to Regional
Air Division Directors, Regions 1–10, EPA.
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concentrations in the area to reductions
in emissions of that precursor.
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
The State presents a summary of its
PM2.5 precursor analysis in Chapter 5 of
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan and the full
precursor demonstration in Appendix G
(‘‘Precursor Demonstration’’) of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.92 Additional modeling
results are presented in Appendix K
(‘‘Modeling Attainment
Demonstration’’), section 5.6 (‘‘PM2.5
Precursor Sensitivity Analysis’’). CARB
also provided clarifying information on
its precursor assessment, including an
Attachment A to its letter transmitting
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan to the EPA 93 and
further clarifications in five email
transmittals.94 The CARB Staff Report
contains additional discussion of the
role of ammonia in the formation of
ammonium nitrate and the role of VOC
in the formation of ammonium nitrate
and secondary organic aerosol.95
The Plan provides both concentrationbased and sensitivity-based analyses of
precursor contributions to ambient
PM2.5 concentrations in the San Joaquin
Valley. The State supplemented the
sensitivity analysis, particularly for
ammonia, with additional information,
including factors identified in the PM2.5
Precursor Guidance, such as emission
trends, the appropriateness of future
year versus base year sensitivity,
available emission controls, and the
92 A copy of the contents of Appendix G appears
in the CARB Staff Report, Appendix C4 (‘‘Precursor
Demonstrations for Ammonia, SOX, and ROG’’).
93 Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Michael Stoker,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9, Attachment
A (‘‘Clarifying information for the San Joaquin
Valley 2018 Plan regarding model sensitivity
related to ammonia and ammonia controls’’).
94 Email dated June 20, 2019, from Jeremy Avise,
CARB, to Scott Bohning, EPA Region IX, Subject:
‘‘RE: SJV model disbenefit from SOX reduction,’’
with attachment (‘‘CARB’s June 2019 Precursor
Clarification’’); email dated September 19, 2019,
from Jeremy Avise, CARB, to Scott Bohning, EPA
Region IX, Subject: ‘‘FW: SJV species responses,’’
with attachments (‘‘CARB’s September 2019
Precursor Clarification’’); email dated October 18,
2019, from Laura Carr, CARB, to Scott Bohning,
Jeanhee Hong, and Rory Mays, EPA Region IX,
Subject: ‘‘Clarifying information on ammonia,’’ with
attachment ‘‘Clarifying Information on Ammonia’’
(‘‘CARB’s October 2019 Precursor Clarification’’);
email dated April 19, 2021, from Laura Carr, CARB,
to Rory Mays, EPA Region IX, Subject: ‘‘Ammonia
update,’’ with attachment ‘‘Update on Ammonia in
the San Joaquin Valley’’ (‘‘CARB’s April 19, 2021
Precursor Clarification’’); and email dated April 26,
2021, from Laura Carr, CARB, to Scott Bohning,
EPA Region IX, Subject: ‘‘RE: Ammonia update,’’
with attachment ‘‘Ammonia in San Joaquin Valley’’
(‘‘CARB’s April 26, 2021 Precursor Clarification’’).
95 CARB Staff Report, Appendix C, 9–16. The
CARB Staff Report, Appendix C4 (‘‘Precursor
Demonstrations for Ammonia, SOX, and ROG’’) is
very similar to the contents of Appendix G of the
2018 PM2.5 Plan.
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severity of nonattainment.96 These
analyses led the State to conclude that
direct PM2.5 and NOX emissions
contribute significantly to ambient
PM2.5 levels that exceed the PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley while
ammonia, SOX, and VOC do not
contribute significantly to such
exceedances.97 We summarize the
State’s analysis and conclusions below.
For a more detailed summary of the
precursor demonstration in the Plan,
please refer to the EPA’s ‘‘Technical
Support Document, EPA Evaluation of
PM2.5 Precursor Demonstration, San
Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Plan for the 2006
PM2.5 NAAQS,’’ February 2020 (‘‘EPA’s
PM2.5 Precursor TSD’’).
For ammonia, SOX, and VOC, CARB
assessed the 2015 annual average
concentration of each precursor in
ambient PM2.5 at Bakersfield, for which
the necessary speciated PM2.5 data are
available and where the highest PM2.5
design values have been recorded in
most years, and compared those
concentrations to the recommended
annual average contribution threshold
of 0.2 mg/m3 from the Draft PM2.5
Precursor Guidance, which was
available at the time the State developed
the SIP.98 The contributions of
ammonia, SOX, and VOC were 5.2 mg/
m3, 1.6 mg/m3, and 6.2 mg/m3,
respectively. Given that these levels are
well above the EPA’s 0.2 mg/m3
recommended contribution threshold,
the State proceeded with a sensitivitybased analysis.
The State’s sensitivity-based analysis
used the same Community Multiscale
Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling platform
as that used for the Plan’s attainment
demonstration. The State modeled the
sensitivity of ambient PM2.5
concentration in the San Joaquin Valley
96 PM
2.5 Precursor Guidance, 18–19
(consideration of additional information), 31
(available emission controls), and 35–36
(appropriateness of future year versus base year
sensitivity).
97 Direct PM
2.5 emissions are considered a
primary source of ambient PM2.5 (i.e., no further
formation in the atmosphere is required), and
therefore is not considered a precursor pollutant
under subpart 4, which may differ from a more
generalized understanding of what contributes to
ambient PM2.5.
98 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix G, 3. The Plan does
not present a concentration-based analysis for the
24-hour average concentrations in the San Joaquin
Valley. Instead, CARB relied on the annual average
concentration-based analysis as an interim step to
the sensitivity-based analysis, for which CARB
assessed the sensitivity of both 24-hour average and
annual average ambient PM2.5 concentrations to
precursor emissions reductions. Separately, the
Plan presents a graphical representation of annual
average ambient PM2.5 components (i.e., crustal
particulate matter, elemental carbon, organic
matter, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium nitrate)
for 2011–2013 for Bakersfield, Fresno, and Modesto.
2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 3, 3–3 to 3–4.
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to 30 percent and 70 percent emissions
reductions in 2013, 2020, and 2024 for
each of ammonia, SOX, and VOC. The
State estimated baseline (2013, 2020,
and 2024) design values for PM2.5 using
relative response factors (RRFs) and
calculated the ammonia, SOX, and VOC
precursor contribution for a given year
and for each sensitivity scenario (30
percent and 70 percent emissions
reductions) as the difference between its
baseline design value and the design
value for each sensitivity scenario.99
Based on these analyses and supporting
information, the State concludes that
ammonia, SOX, and VOC emissions do
not contribute significantly to PM2.5
levels that exceed the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.
3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
As discussed in section IV of this
proposal, the EPA is proposing to
disapprove the attainment
demonstration and related elements in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS, including the five
percent annual emission reductions
demonstration, reasonable further
progress (RFP) demonstration, and
quantitative milestones, based on
ambient monitoring data that show that
the Plan was insufficient to achieve
attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by December 31, 2020, the
State’s projected attainment date. Given
that we are proposing to disapprove the
attainment demonstration, and given
that the precursor demonstration for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS largely relies
on the technical analyses and
assumptions that provide the basis for
the attainment demonstration, we are
also proposing to disapprove the
precursor demonstration in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS. Therefore, all precursors to the
formation of PM2.5 in the San Joaquin
Valley (i.e., NOX, ammonia, SOX, and
VOC) remain ‘‘PM2.5 plan precursors’’ as
defined in 40 CFR 51.1000 for purposes
of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for the
Plan that is the subject of this proposal.
If the EPA takes final action on the
SJV PM2.5 Plan as proposed, California
will be required to develop and submit
a revised plan for the San Joaquin
Valley area that addresses the applicable
CAA requirements, including the
requirements of CAA section 189(d).
Under 40 CFR 51.1006, the State will be
required to submit an updated precursor
demonstration if it seeks to exempt
sources of a particular precursor from
control requirements in the new Serious
99 This procedure is the procedure recommended
by the EPA. PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, 37.
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area attainment demonstration. For
these reasons, and because we are
proposing to disapprove the precursor
demonstration on the basis of our
proposed disapproval of the attainment
demonstration, we are not providing a
full evaluation of the precursor
demonstration for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the SJV PM2.5 Plan at this
time.
C. Attainment Plan Control Strategy
1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
The overarching requirement for the
CAA section 189(d) attainment control
strategy is that it provides for attainment
of the standards as expeditiously as
practicable.100 The control strategy must
include any additional measures
(beyond those already adopted in
previous SIPs for the area as RACM/
RACT or BACM/BACT) that are needed
for the area to attain expeditiously. This
includes reassessing any measures
previously rejected during the
development of any Moderate area or
Serious area attainment plan control
strategy.101 The plan must also
demonstrate that it will, at a minimum,
achieve an annual five percent
reduction in emissions of direct PM2.5 or
any PM2.5 plan precursor from sources
in the area until attainment, based on
the most recent emissions inventory for
the area.102
In the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule,
the EPA clarified its interpretation of
the statutory language in CAA section
189(d) requiring a state to submit a new
attainment plan to achieve annual
reductions ‘‘from the date of such
submission until attainment,’’ to mean
annual reductions beginning from the
due date of such submission until the
new projected attainment date for the
area based on the new or additional
control measures identified to achieve at
least five percent emissions reductions
annually.103 This interpretation is
intended to make clear that even if a
state is late in submitting its CAA
section 189(d) plan, the area must still
achieve its annual five percent emission
reductions beginning from the date by
100 81
FR 58010, 58100.
CFR 50.1010(c)(2)(ii).
102 CAA section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c).
103 81 FR 58010, 58101. The new projected
attainment date is established by the EPA in
accordance with the provisions of CAA sections
179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2), which require that the new
attainment date be as expeditious as practicable but
no later than 5 years from the date of publication
in the Federal Register of the EPA’s determination
that the area failed to attain the relevant NAAQS,
except that the EPA may extend the attainment date
by up to 5 additional years based on the severity
of nonattainment and the availability and feasibility
of pollution control measures. Id. at 58103.
101 40
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which the state was required to make its
CAA section 189(d) submission, not by
some later date. Because the deadline
for California to submit a section 189(d)
plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the
San Joaquin Valley was December 31,
2016, one year after the December 31,
2015 attainment date for these NAAQS
under CAA section 188(c)(2), the
starting point for the five percent
emission reduction requirement under
section 189(d) for this area is 2017.
As discussed in section III of this
proposed rule, a state with a Serious
PM2.5 nonattainment area that fails to
attain the NAAQS by the applicable
Serious area attainment date must also
address any statutory requirements
applicable to Moderate and Serious
nonattainment area plans under CAA
sections 172 and 189 of the CAA to the
extent that those requirements have not
already been met. Because the EPA has
not previously taken action to approve
the California SIP as meeting the
Serious nonattainment area planning
requirements under CAA sections 172
and 189 for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS for the San Joaquin Valley area,
the EPA is reviewing the SJV PM2.5 Plan
for compliance with those requirements,
including the requirement for BACM.
Section 189(b)(1)(B) of the Act
requires for any Serious PM2.5
nonattainment area that the state submit
provisions to assure that BACM for the
control of PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors
shall be implemented no later than four
years after the date the area is
reclassified as a Serious area. The EPA
has defined BACM in the PM2.5 SIP
Requirements Rule to mean ‘‘any
technologically and economically
feasible control measure that . . . can
achieve greater permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions of
direct PM2.5 emissions and/or emissions
of PM2.5 plan precursors from sources in
the area than can be achieved through
the implementation of RACM on the
same source(s). BACM includes best
available control technology
(BACT).’’ 104
The EPA generally considers BACM a
control level that goes beyond existing
RACM-level controls, for example by
expanding the use of RACM controls or
by requiring preventative measures
instead of remediation.105 Indeed, as
implementation of BACM and BACT is
104 40
CFR 51.1000 (definitions). In longstanding
guidance, the EPA has similarly defined BACM to
mean, ‘‘among other things, the maximum degree of
emissions reduction achievable for a source or
source category, which is determined on a case-bycase basis considering energy, environmental, and
economic impacts.’’ General Preamble Addendum,
42010, 42013.
105 81 FR 58010, 58081 and General Preamble
Addendum, 42011, 42013.
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required when a Moderate
nonattainment area is reclassified as
Serious due to its inability to attain the
NAAQS through implementation of
‘‘reasonable’’ measures, it is logical that
‘‘best’’ control measures should
represent a more stringent and
potentially more costly level of
control.106 If RACM and RACT level
controls of emissions have been
insufficient to reach attainment, the
CAA contemplates the implementation
of more stringent controls, controls on
more sources, or other adjustments to
the control strategy necessary to attain
the NAAQS in the area.
Consistent with longstanding
guidance provided in the General
Preamble Addendum, the preamble to
the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule
discusses the following steps for
determining BACM and BACT:
(1) Develop a comprehensive
emissions inventory of the sources of
PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors;
(2) Identify potential control
measures;
(3) Determine whether an available
control measure or technology is
technologically feasible;
(4) Determine whether an available
control measure or technology is
economically feasible; and
(5) Determine the earliest date by
which a control measure or technology
can be implemented in whole or in
part.107
The EPA allows consideration of
factors such as physical plant layout,
energy requirements, needed
infrastructure, and workforce type and
habits when considering technological
feasibility. For purposes of evaluating
economic feasibility, the EPA allows
consideration of factors such as the
capital costs, operating and
maintenance costs, and cost
effectiveness (i.e., cost per ton of
pollutant reduced by a measure or
technology) associated with the measure
or control.108
Once these analyses are complete, the
state must use this information to
develop enforceable control measures
and submit them to the EPA for
evaluation as SIP provisions to meet the
basic requirements of CAA section 110
and any other applicable substantive
provisions of the Act.
106 Id. and General Preamble Addendum, 42009–
42010.
107 81 FR 58010, 58083–58085.
108 40 CFR 51.1010(a)(3) and 81 FR 58010, 58041–
58042.
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2. Summary of the State’s Submission
and the EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
The control strategy in the SJV PM2.5
Plan is based on ongoing emissions
reductions from baseline control
measures. As the term is used here,
baseline measures are State and District
regulations adopted prior to the
development of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that
continue to achieve emissions
reductions through the projected 2020
attainment year and beyond. The 2018
PM2.5 Plan describes these measures in
Chapter 4,109 Appendix C (‘‘Stationary
Source Control Measure Analyses’’), and
Appendix D (‘‘Mobile Source Control
Measure Analyses’’). Reductions from
these baseline measures are
incorporated into the projected baseline
inventories and reductions from District
measures are individually quantified in
Appendix C.
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan states that
mobile sources emit over 85 percent of
the NOX in the San Joaquin Valley and
that CARB has adopted and amended
regulations to reduce public exposure to
diesel particulate matter, which
includes direct PM2.5 and NOX, from
‘‘fuel sources, freight transport sources
like heavy-duty diesel trucks,
transportation sources like passenger
cars and buses, and non-road sources
like large construction equipment.’’ 110
Given the need for substantial
emissions reductions from mobile and
area sources to meet the NAAQS in
California nonattainment areas, the
State of California has developed
stringent control measures for on-road
and non-road mobile sources and the
fuels that power them. California has
unique authority under CAA section
209 (subject to a waiver or authorization
as applicable by the EPA) to adopt and
implement new emissions standards for
many categories of on-road vehicles and
engines and new and in-use non-road
vehicles and engines. The EPA has
approved such mobile source
regulations for which waiver
authorizations have been issued as
revisions to the California SIP.111
CARB’s mobile source program
extends beyond regulations that are
subject to the waiver or authorization
process set forth in CAA section 209 to
109 2018
PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, Table 4–2.
PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, 4–9. For CARB’s
BACM analysis for mobile source measures, see
2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, including analyses
for on-road light-duty vehicles and fuels (starting on
page D–17), on-road heavy-duty vehicles and fuels
(starting on page D–35), and non-road sources
(starting on page D–64).
111 For example, see 81 FR 39424 (June 16, 2016);
82 FR 14446 (March 21, 2017); and 83 FR 23232
(May 18, 2018).
110 2018
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include standards and other
requirements to control emissions from
in-use heavy-duty trucks and buses,
gasoline and diesel fuel specifications,
and many other types of mobile sources.
Generally, these regulations have also
been submitted and approved as
revisions to the California SIP.112
As to stationary and area sources, the
SJV PM2.5 Plan states that stringent
regulations adopted for prior attainment
plans continue to reduce emissions of
NOX and direct PM2.5.113 Specifically,
Table 4–1 of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
identifies 33 District measures that limit
NOX and direct PM2.5 emissions from
stationary and area sources.114
a. Best Available Control Measures
The State’s BACM demonstration is
presented in Appendix C (‘‘Stationary
Source Controls’’) and Appendix D
(‘‘Mobile Source Control Measure
Analyses’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. As
discussed in section IV.A of this
proposed rule, Appendix B (‘‘Emissions
Inventory’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
contains the planning inventories for
direct PM2.5 and all PM2.5 precursors
(NOX, SOX, VOC, and ammonia) for the
San Joaquin Valley nonattainment area
together with documentation to support
these inventories. Each inventory
includes emissions from stationary,
area, on-road, and non-road emission
sources, and the State specifically
identifies the condensable component of
direct PM2.5 for relevant stationary
source and area source categories. As
discussed in section IV.B of this
proposed rule, the State concludes that
the Plan should control emissions of
PM2.5 and NOX to reach attainment.
Accordingly, the BACM and BACT
evaluation in the Plan addresses
potential controls for sources of those
pollutants.
For stationary and area sources, the
District identifies the sources of direct
PM2.5 and NOX in the San Joaquin
Valley that are subject to District
emission control measures and provides
its evaluation of these regulations for
compliance with BACM requirements in
Appendix C of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. As
part of its process for identifying
candidate BACM and considering the
technical and economic feasibility of
additional control measures, the District
reviewed the EPA’s guidance
documents on BACM, additional
guidance documents on control
measures for direct PM2.5 and NOX
emission sources, and control measures
implemented in other ozone and PM2.5
nonattainment areas in California and
other states.115 The District also
provides an analysis of several SIPapproved VOC regulations that,
according to the District, also provide
ammonia co-benefits.116
For mobile sources, CARB identifies
the sources of direct PM2.5 and NOX in
the San Joaquin Valley that are subject
to the State’s emission control measures
and provides its evaluation of these
regulations for compliance with BACM
requirements in Appendix D of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan. Appendix D describes
CARB’s process for determining BACM,
including identification of the sources
of direct PM2.5 and NOX in the San
Joaquin Valley, identification of
potential control measures for such
sources, assessment of the stringency
and feasibility of the potential control
measures, and adoption and
implementation of feasible control
measures.117 Appendix D of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan also describes the current
efforts of the eight local jurisdiction
metropolitan planning organizations
(MPOs) to implement cost-effective
transportation control measures (TCMs)
in the San Joaquin Valley.118
Because we are proposing to
disapprove the comprehensive
precursor demonstration in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS, all precursors to
the formation of PM2.5 (i.e., NOX,
ammonia, SOX and VOC) remain PM2.5
plan precursors subject to control
requirements under subpart 4 of part D,
title I of the Act for purposes of the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley. The SJV PM2.5 Plan contains
State and District control measures and
related BACM analyses for sources of
direct PM2.5 and NOX in the San Joaquin
Valley but does not contain such
measures or analyses for sources of SOX
or VOC emissions, given the State’s
assumption that these precursors would
not be subject to controls. Furthermore,
while the District provides an analysis
of potential control of ammonia sources,
the Plan does not identify any specific,
enforceable requirement to reduce
ammonia emissions in the area and does
not demonstrate that the State or District
adequately considered potential control
measures for ammonia sources, given
the State’s assumption that ammonia
would not be subject to controls.
Without an approvable precursor
demonstration, the SJV PM2.5 Plan does
not satisfy BACM and BACT
requirements for sources of direct PM2.5
and PM2.5 plan precursors for purposes
of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. We
therefore propose to disapprove the
BACM/BACT demonstration in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for failure to meet the
requirements of CAA section
189(b)(1)(B) and 40 CFR 51.1010 for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
b. Five Percent Emission Reduction
Requirement
The SJV PM2.5 Plan’s demonstration of
annual five percent reductions in NOX
emissions is in section 5.2 of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan. As shown in Table 3, the
demonstration uses the 2013 base year
inventory as the starting point from
which the five percent per year
emission reductions are calculated and
uses 2017 as the year from which the
reductions start. The target required
reduction in 2017 is five percent of the
base year (2013) inventory, which is
approximately 15.9 tpd of NOX, and the
targets for subsequent years are
additional reductions of five percent
each year until the 2020 attainment
year. The projected emissions
inventories reflect NOX emissions
reductions achieved by baseline control
measures and the demonstration shows
that these NOX emissions reductions are
greater than the required five percent
per year.
TABLE 3—2017–2020 ANNUAL FIVE PERCENT EMISSION REDUCTIONS DEMONSTRATION FOR THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY
% Reduction
from 2013
base year
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Year
5% Target
(tpd NOX)
2013 (base year) .............................................................................................
112 For example, see the EPA’s approval of
standards and other requirements to control
emissions from in-use heavy-duty diesel trucks (77
FR 20308, April 4, 2012), and revisions to the
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Meets 5%?
317.3
California on-road reformulated gasoline and diesel
fuel regulations (75 FR 26653, May 12, 2010).
113 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, 4–3. For the
District’s BACM analysis for stationary and area
source measures, see 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix C.
PO 00000
CEPAM
inventory
v1.05
(tpd NOX)
114 Id.
at Chapter 4, Table 4–1.
PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, section 4.3.1.
116 Id. at Appendix C., section C.25.
117 Id. at Appendix D, Chapter II.
118 Id. at Appendix D, D–127 and D–128.
115 2018
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TABLE 3—2017–2020 ANNUAL FIVE PERCENT EMISSION REDUCTIONS DEMONSTRATION FOR THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY—
Continued
% Reduction
from 2013
base year
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
.................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................
5% Target
(tpd NOX)
5
10
15
20
301.3
285.5
269.6
253.8
CEPAM
inventory
v1.05
(tpd NOX)
233.4
221.5
214.5
203.3
Meets 5%?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Table 5–2.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
The State’s methodology for
calculating the five percent emission
reduction targets for the years 2017,
2018, 2019, and 2020 is consistent with
CAA requirements as interpreted in the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, and the
Plan shows that NOX emissions
reductions from 2017 to 2020 are greater
than the required five percent per year.
However, the language in section 189(d)
compels us to conclude that the five
percent demonstration in the Plan does
not meet that section’s requirement for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. CAA
section 189(d) requires that the plan
provide for annual reductions of PM2.5
or a PM2.5 precursor of not less than five
percent each year from the date of
submission of the plan until the
applicable attainment date approved by
the EPA.119 The Plan submitted by
California does not demonstrate
reductions after 2020 because it projects
attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by December 31, 2020. Because
the EPA is proposing to disapprove the
attainment demonstration, as discussed
in section IV.D, based on ambient
monitoring data for 2018–2020
indicating that the San Joaquin Valley
did not attain the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by the December 31, 2020
attainment date projected by the State in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan, December 31, 2020
is not the applicable attainment date for
purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in this area, and the Plan does
not meet the requirement to
demonstrate five percent reductions per
year until attainment. Therefore, the
EPA is proposing to disapprove the
demonstration of the five percent
annual emission reductions in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for failure to meet the
requirements of CAA section 189(d) and
119 Under 40 CFR 51.1000, the applicable
attainment date is the latest statutory date by which
an area is required to attain a particular PM2.5
NAAQS or the attainment date approved by the
EPA as part of an attainment plan for the area. For
a Serious nonattainment area subject to the
requirements of CAA section 189(d), the EPA
establishes the applicable attainment date in
accordance with the provisions of CAA sections
179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2). 81 FR 58010, 58103.
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40 CFR 51.1010(c) for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS.
D. Attainment Demonstration and
Modeling
1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
Section 189(d) of the CAA requires a
state with a Serious nonattainment area
that failed to attain the NAAQS by the
Serious area attainment date to submit
a revised attainment demonstration as
part of a new plan. The PM2.5 SIP
Requirements Rule explains that the
same general requirements that apply to
Moderate and Serious area plans under
CAA sections 189(a) and 189(b) should
apply to plans developed pursuant to
CAA section 189(d)—i.e., the plan must
include a demonstration (including air
quality modeling) that the control
strategy provides for attainment of the
PM2.5 NAAQS as expeditiously as
practicable.120 For purposes of
determining the attainment date that is
as expeditious as practicable, the state
must conduct future year modeling that
takes into account emissions growth,
known controls (including any controls
that were previously determined to be
RACM/RACT or BACM/BACT), the five
percent per year emissions reductions
required by CAA section 189(d), and
any other emissions controls that are
needed for expeditious attainment of the
NAAQS.
The EPA’s PM2.5 modeling
guidance 121 (‘‘Modeling Guidance’’ and
‘‘Modeling Guidance Update’’)
recommends that a photochemical
model, such as the Comprehensive Air
Quality Model with Extensions (CAMx)
FR 58010, 58102.
121 Memorandum dated November 29, 2018, from
Richard Wayland, Air Quality Assessment Division,
Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, EPA,
to Regional Air Division Directors, EPA, Subject:
‘‘Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality
Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze,’’
(‘‘Modeling Guidance’’), and memorandum dated
June 28, 2011, from Tyler Fox, Air Quality
Modeling Group, OAQPS, EPA, to Regional Air
Program Managers, EPA, Subject: ‘‘Update to the 24
Hour PM2.5 NAAQS Modeled Attainment Test,’’
(‘‘Modeling Guidance Update’’).
PO 00000
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Frm 00074
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or Community Multiscale Air Quality
Model (CMAQ), be used to simulate a
base case, with meteorological and
emissions inputs reflecting a base case
year, to replicate concentrations
monitored in that year. The model
application to the base year undergoes
a performance evaluation to ensure that
it satisfactorily corroborates the
concentrations monitored in that year.
The model may then be used to simulate
emissions occurring in other years
required for a plan, namely the base
year (which may differ from the base
case year) and a future year.122 The
modeled response to the emission
changes between those years is used to
calculate RRFs that are applied to the
design value in the base year to estimate
the projected design value in the future
year for comparison against the NAAQS.
Separate RRFs are estimated for each
chemical species component of PM2.5,
and for each quarter of the year, to
reflect their differing responses to
seasonal meteorological conditions and
emissions. Because each species is
handled separately, before applying an
RRF, the base year design value must be
speciated using available chemical
species measurements—that is, each
day’s measured PM2.5 design value must
be split into its species components.
The Modeling Guidance provides
additional detail on the recommended
approach.123
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
As discussed in section IV.C, the SJV
PM2.5 Plan includes a modeled
demonstration projecting that the San
Joaquin Valley would attain the 1997
122 In this section, we use the terms ‘‘base case,’’
‘‘base year’’ or ‘‘baseline,’’ and ‘‘future year’’ as
described in section 2.3 of the EPA’s Modeling
Guidance. The ‘‘base case’’ modeling simulates
measured concentrations for a given time period,
using emissions and meteorology for that same year.
The modeling ‘‘base year’’ (which can be the same
as the base case year) is the emissions starting point
for the plan and for projections to the future year,
both of which are modeled for the attainment
demonstration. Modeling Guidance, 37–38.
123 Modeling Guidance, section 4.4, ‘‘What is the
Modeled Attainment Tests for the Annual Average
PM2.5 NAAQS.’’
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annual PM2.5 NAAQS by December 31,
2020, based on ongoing emissions
reductions from baseline control
measures. CARB conducted
photochemical modeling with the
CMAQ model using inputs developed
from routinely available meteorological
and air quality data, as well as more
detailed and extensive data from the
DISCOVER–AQ field study conducted
in January and February of 2013.124 The
Plan’s primary discussion of the
photochemical modeling appears in
Appendix K (‘‘Modeling Attainment
Demonstration’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.
The State briefly summarizes the area’s
air quality problem in Chapter 2 (‘‘Air
Quality Challenges and Trends’’) and
the modeling results in Chapter 5.3
(‘‘Attainment Demonstration and
Modeling’’) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. The
State provides a conceptual model of
PM2.5 formation in the San Joaquin
Valley as part of the modeling protocol
in Appendix L (‘‘Modeling Protocol’’).
Appendix J (‘‘Modeling Emission
Inventory’’) describes emission input
preparation procedures. The State
presents additional relevant information
in Appendix C (‘‘Weight of Evidence
Analysis’’) of the CARB Staff Report,
which includes ambient trends and
other data in support of the attainment
demonstration.
CARB’s air quality modeling approach
investigated the many inter-connected
facets of modeling ambient PM2.5 in the
San Joaquin Valley, including model
input preparation, model performance
evaluation, use of the model output for
the numerical NAAQS attainment test,
and modeling documentation.
Specifically, this required the
development and evaluation of a
conceptual model, modeling protocol,
episode (i.e., base year) selection,
modeling domain, CMAQ model
selection, initial and boundary
condition procedures, meteorological
model choice and performance,
modeling emissions inventory
preparation procedures, model
performance, attainment test procedure,
adjustments to baseline air quality for
modeling, the 2020 attainment test, and
an unmonitored area analysis. These
analyses are generally consistent with
the EPA’s recommendations in the
Modeling Guidance.
The model performance evaluation in
Appendix K includes statistical and
graphical measures of model
performance. The magnitude and timing
of predicted concentrations of total
PM2.5, as well as of its ammonium and
nitrate components, generally match the
occurrence of elevated PM2.5 levels in
the measured observations. A
comparison to other recent modeling
efforts shows good model performance
on bias, error, and correlation with
measurements, for total PM2.5 and for
most of its chemical components. The
Weight of Evidence Analysis shows the
downward trend in NOX emissions
along with a 24 to 44 percent decrease
in annual PM2.5 design values between
1999 and 2017.125 The analysis also
shows decreases in daily PM2.5
concentrations during winter, and in the
frequency of high PM2.5 concentrations
generally.126 Available ambient air
quality data show that total PM2.5 and
ammonium nitrate concentrations have
declined over the 2004–2017 period,
despite some increases from time to
time.127 These trends show that there
has been an improvement in air quality
due to emissions reductions in the San
Joaquin Valley.
The State conducted three CMAQ 128
simulations: (1) A 2013 base year
simulation to demonstrate that the
model reasonably reproduced the
observed PM2.5 concentrations in the
San Joaquin Valley; (2) a 2013 baseline
year simulation that was the same as the
2013 base year simulation but excluded
exceptional event emissions, such as
wildfire emissions; and (3) a 2020 future
year simulation that reflects projected
emissions growth and reductions due to
controls that have already been adopted
and implemented.
Table 4 shows the 2013 base year and
2020 projected future year annual PM2.5
design values at monitoring sites in the
San Joaquin Valley. The highest 2020
projected design value is 14.6 mg/m 3 at
the Bakersfield—California monitoring
site, which is below the 15.0 mg/m 3
level of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
TABLE 4—PROJECTED FUTURE ANNUAL PM2.5 DESIGN VALUES AT MONITORING SITES IN THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY
[μg/m3]
2013 Base
design value
Monitoring site
Bakersfield—California ............................................................................................................................................
Fresno—Garland .....................................................................................................................................................
Hanford ....................................................................................................................................................................
Fresno—Hamilton & Winery ....................................................................................................................................
Clovis .......................................................................................................................................................................
Visalia ......................................................................................................................................................................
Bakersfield—Planz ...................................................................................................................................................
Madera .....................................................................................................................................................................
Turlock .....................................................................................................................................................................
Modesto ...................................................................................................................................................................
Merced–M. Street ....................................................................................................................................................
Stockton ...................................................................................................................................................................
Merced—S Coffee ...................................................................................................................................................
Manteca ...................................................................................................................................................................
Tranquility ................................................................................................................................................................
17.2
16.9
16.5
16.2
16.1
16.0
15.0
14.9
14.2
13.1
13.1
13.0
11.0
10.1
7.7
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Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Table 5–4.
124 NASA, ‘‘Deriving Information on Surface
conditions from COlumn and VERtically Resolved
Observations Relevant to Air Quality,’’ available at
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125 Weight of Evidence Analysis, 26–27, Figure
12, and Figure 24.
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126 Id.
at Figure 16 and Figure 17.
at Figure 21.
128 CMAQ Version 5.0.2.
127 Id.
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2020
Projected
design value
14.6
14.2
13.3
13.5
13.4
13.5
12.4
12.5
11.9
11.4
10.9
11.0
9.3
8.7
6.4
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3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
The EPA has reviewed monitoring
data recorded at air quality monitors
throughout the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
nonattainment area to consider whether
the area attained the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by the December 31, 2020
attainment date projected in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan. We based our review on
preliminary but complete and qualityassured ambient air monitoring data
recorded during the three years
preceding the State’s identified
attainment date (2018–2020).129 The
EPA has found that the PM2.5
monitoring network in the San Joaquin
Valley currently meets or exceeds the
requirements for the minimum number
of monitoring sites designated as State
and Local Air Monitoring Stations
(SLAMS) for PM2.5 and that CARB’s and
the District’s annual network plans meet
the applicable requirements in 40 CFR
part 58.130
Table 5 shows the annual arithmetic
means and preliminary annual PM2.5
design values at each of the 18 SLAMS
monitoring sites within the San Joaquin
Valley nonattainment area for the most
recent three-year period (2018–2020).
The data show that the annual design
value for the 2018–2020 period ranged
from 9.5 to 17.6 mg/m 3 across the area
at monitors with valid design values,
and that the valid design values
exceeded 15.0 mg/m 3 (i.e., the level of
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS) at eight
of the monitoring sites, indicating that
the area did not attain the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS by the projected
December 31, 2020 attainment date.
As discussed in section IV.D.2,
CARB’s Weight of Evidence Analysis
shows a long-term downward trend in
annual PM2.5 design values through
2017, the latest year prior to
development of the SJV PM2.5 Plan for
which air quality data were available.
As described in the Weight of Evidence
Analysis, the San Joaquin Valley has
shown a general downward trend in
measured PM2.5 concentrations despite
the effects of extensive wildfires in 2008
and unusual meteorological conditions
during the 2013/2014 winter that
resulted in higher concentrations during
those periods. Similarly, the San
Joaquin Valley area may have
experienced higher than normal PM2.5
concentrations in 2018 and 2020 due to
wildfires in the surrounding areas
during the summer and fall months.
Table 5 shows that concentrations at all
17 monitors in the San Joaquin Valley
area with data spanning 2018 to 2020
are significantly higher in 2018 and
2020 relative to concentrations in 2019,
possibly due to the wildfires in those
years.
TABLE 5—2018–2020 ANNUAL PM2.5 DESIGN VALUES FOR THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY NONATTAINMENT AREA
County
General location site
Annual arithmetic mean
(μg/m3)
AQS ID
2018
Fresno ...........
Kern ..............
Kings .............
Madera ..........
Merced ..........
San Joaquin ..
Stanislaus .....
Tulare ............
2019
2018–2020
Annual
design values
(μg/m3) a
2020
Fresno—Pacific .........................................
Fresno—Garland ......................................
Fresno—Foundry ......................................
06–019–5025
06–019–0011
06–019–2016
17.1
16.2
Inc
11.2
11.1
Inc
18.7
19.2
20.3
Clovis ........................................................
06–019–5001
14.3
18.4
Tranquility .................................................
Bakersfield—Planz Road ..........................
Bakersfield—California Ave. .....................
Bakersfield—Golden State Highway ........
Corcoran ...................................................
Hanford .....................................................
Madera—Avenue 14 .................................
Merced—M Street .....................................
Merced—Coffee ........................................
Stockton ....................................................
Manteca ....................................................
06–019–2009
06–029–0016
06–029–0014
06–029–0010
06–031–0004
06–031–1004
06–039–2010
06–047–2510
06–047–0003
06–077–1002
06–077–2010
11.1
19.4
17.7
18.1
17.2
17.7
14.0
14.2
15.1
17.6
13.4
Modesto ....................................................
Turlock ......................................................
Visalia .......................................................
06–099–0005
06–099–0006
06–107–2002
15.2
17.2
17.3
10.3
(Inc)
5.8
13.0
11.9
12.4
12.1
12.2
9.7
9.6
9.1
9.3
8.3
(Inc)
7.7
10.7
12.9
11.5
20.3
19.7
20.0
19.5
19.9
16.9
15.5
14.7
14.4
14.8
14.5
15.5
19.7
15.7
15.5
b 20.3
(Inv)
14.4
(Inv)
9.5
17.6
16.4
16.8
16.3
16.6
13.5
13.1
13.0
13.8
12.2
(Inv)
12.5
14.5
16.7
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Source: EPA, Preliminary 2020 AQS Design Value Report, AMP480, accessed June 15, 2021.
Notes: Inc = Incomplete data. Inv = Invalid design value due to incomplete data. Design values shown in bold type do not meet the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
a This preliminary design value includes all available data; no data flagged for exceptional events have been excluded.
b The preliminary 2018–2020 design value at Fresno-Foundry (AQS ID: 06–019–2016) is based on concentration data from January 1, 2020 to
December 31, 2020. The site began operation in 2020; therefore, data from January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2019 are not available. Based on
40 CFR part 50, Appendix N, section 4.1(b), three years of valid annual means are required to produce a valid annual PM2.5 NAAQS design
value. Thus, the Fresno-Foundry 2018–2020 preliminary design value is considered invalid.
Under 40 CFR part 50, appendix N,
because the 2018–2020 preliminary
design value exceeded the 15.0 mg/m 3
level of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS,
the San Joaquin Valley area did not
attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by
December 31, 2020, as projected in the
SJV PM2.5 Plan. Therefore, the EPA is
proposing to disapprove the attainment
129 At the time of the EPA’s review, the State had
not yet certified the 2020 ambient air monitoring
data. We understand that the State is working to
certify the data and anticipate that the 2020 data
will be certified prior to our final action. We do not
expect the certified data to differ significantly from
the data reflected in this proposal.
130 Letter dated October 26, 2020, from Gwen
Yoshimura, Manager, EPA Region 9, Air Quality
Analysis Office, to Jon Klassen, Director of
Strategies and Incentives, SJVUAPCD, and letter
dated November 5, 2020, from Gwen Yoshimura,
Manager, EPA Region 9, Air Quality Analysis
Office, to Ravi Ramalingam, Chief, Consumer
Products and Air Quality Assessment Branch,
CARB.
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demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for
failure to meet the requirements of CAA
sections 189(d) and 179(d) and 40 CFR
51.1011(b). Because our proposal is
based on ambient monitoring data
clearly indicating that the Plan was
insufficient to achieve attainment of the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by the
December 31, 2020 attainment date, we
do not provide a full evaluation of the
attainment demonstration analyses for
these NAAQS at this time.
E. Reasonable Further Progress and
Quantitative Milestones
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1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
CAA section 172(c)(2) provides that
all nonattainment area plans shall
require RFP toward attainment. In
addition, CAA section 189(c) requires
that all PM2.5 nonattainment area SIPs
include quantitative milestones to be
achieved every three years until the area
is redesignated to attainment and that
demonstrate RFP. Section 171(l) of the
Act defines RFP as ‘‘such annual
incremental reductions in emissions of
the relevant air pollutant as are required
by [Part D] or may reasonably be
required by the Administrator for the
purpose of ensuring attainment of the
applicable [NAAQS] by the applicable
date.’’ Neither subpart 1 nor subpart 4
of part D, title I of the Act requires that
states achieve a set percentage of
emission reductions in any given year
for purposes of satisfying the RFP
requirement. For purposes of the PM2.5
NAAQS, the EPA has interpreted the
RFP requirement to require that the
nonattainment area plans show annual
incremental emission reductions
sufficient to maintain generally linear
progress toward attainment by the
applicable deadline.131
Attainment plans for PM2.5
nonattainment areas should include
detailed schedules for compliance with
emission regulations in the area and
provide corresponding annual emission
reductions to be achieved by each
milestone in the schedule.132 In
reviewing an attainment plan under
subpart 4, the EPA considers whether
the annual incremental emission
reductions to be achieved are reasonable
in light of the statutory objective of
timely attainment. Although early
implementation of the most costeffective control measures is often
appropriate, states should consider both
cost-effectiveness and pollution
reduction effectiveness when
developing implementation schedules
for control measures and may
implement measures that are more
effective at reducing PM2.5 earlier to
provide greater public health
benefits.133
The PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule
establishes specific regulatory
requirements for purposes of satisfying
the Act’s RFP requirements and
provides related guidance in the
preamble to the rule. Specifically, under
the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, each
PM2.5 attainment plan must contain an
RFP analysis that includes, at minimum,
the following four components: (1) An
implementation schedule for control
measures; (2) RFP projected emissions
for direct PM2.5 and all PM2.5 plan
precursors for each applicable milestone
year, based on the anticipated control
measure implementation schedule; (3) a
demonstration that the control strategy
and implementation schedule will
achieve reasonable progress toward
attainment between the base year and
the attainment year; and (4) a
demonstration that by the end of the
calendar year for each milestone date for
the area, pollutant emissions will be at
levels that reflect either generally linear
progress or stepwise progress in
reducing emissions on an annual basis
between the base year and the
attainment year.134 Additionally, states
should estimate the RFP projected
emissions for each quantitative
milestone year by sector on a pollutantby-pollutant basis.135
Section 189(c) of the Act requires that
PM2.5 attainment plans include
quantitative milestones that
demonstrate RFP. The purpose of the
quantitative milestones is to allow
periodic evaluation of the area’s
progress towards attainment of the
NAAQS consistent with RFP
requirements. Because RFP is an annual
emission reduction requirement and the
quantitative milestones are to be
achieved every three years, when a state
demonstrates compliance with the
quantitative milestone requirement, it
should also demonstrate that RFP has
been achieved during each of the
relevant three years. Quantitative
milestones should provide an objective
means to evaluate progress toward
attainment meaningfully, e.g., through
imposition of emission controls in the
attainment plan and the requirement to
quantify those required emission
reductions. The CAA also requires states
to submit milestone reports (due 90
days after each milestone), and these
133 Id.
131 General
Preamble Addendum, 42015.
132 Id. at 42016.
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134 40
135 81
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FR 58010, 58056.
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reports should include calculations and
any assumptions made by the state
concerning how RFP has been met, e.g.,
through quantification of emission
reductions to date.136
The CAA does not specify the starting
point for counting the three-year periods
for quantitative milestones under CAA
section 189(c). In the General Preamble
and General Preamble Addendum, the
EPA interpreted the CAA to require that
the starting point for the first three-year
period be the due date for the Moderate
area plan submission.137 In keeping
with this historical approach, the EPA
established December 31, 2014, the
deadline that the EPA established for a
state’s submission of any additional
attainment-related SIP elements
necessary to satisfy the subpart 4
Moderate area requirements for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS, as the starting point for
the first three-year period under CAA
section 189(c) for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.138
Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements
Rule, each attainment plan submission
for an area designated nonattainment for
the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS before January
15, 2015, must contain quantitative
milestones to be achieved no later than
three years after December 31, 2014, and
every three years thereafter until the
milestone date that falls within three
years after the applicable attainment
date.139 If the area fails to attain, this
post-attainment date milestone provides
the EPA with the tools necessary to
monitor the area’s continued progress
toward attainment while the state
develops a new attainment plan.140
Quantitative milestones must provide
for objective evaluation of RFP toward
timely attainment of the PM2.5 NAAQS
in the area and include, at minimum, a
metric for tracking progress achieved in
implementing SIP control measures,
including BACM and BACT, by each
milestone date.141
Because the EPA designated the San
Joaquin Valley area as nonattainment for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS effective
136 General
Preamble Addendum, 42016–42017.
Preamble, 13539, and General
Preamble Addendum, 42016.
138 79 FR 31566 (June 2, 2014) (final rule
establishing subpart 4 moderate area classifications
and deadline for related SIP submissions). Although
this final rule did not affect any action that the EPA
had previously taken under CAA section 110(k) on
a SIP for a PM2.5 nonattainment area, the EPA noted
that states may need to submit additional SIP
elements to fully comply with the applicable
requirements of subpart 4, even for areas with
previously approved PM2.5 attainment plans, and
that the deadline for any such additional plan
submissions was December 31, 2014. Id. at 31569.
139 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4).
140 81 FR 58010, 58064.
141 Id. at 58064 and 58092.
137 General
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April 5, 2005,142 the plan for this area
must contain quantitative milestones to
be achieved no later than three years
after December 31, 2014 (i.e., by
December 31, 2017), and every three
years thereafter until the milestone date
that falls within three years after the
applicable attainment date.143
2013 base year to the projected 2020
attainment year, and beyond to the 2023
post-attainment quantitative milestone
year. The Plan’s emissions inventory
shows that direct PM2.5 and NOX are
emitted by a large number and range of
sources in the San Joaquin Valley. Table
H–2 in Appendix H contains an
anticipated implementation schedule
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
for District regulatory control measures
and Table 4–8 in Chapter 4 of the 2018
Appendix H (‘‘RFP, Quantitative
PM2.5 Plan contains an anticipated
Milestones, and Contingency’’) of the
2018 PM2.5 Plan contains the State’s RFP implementation schedule for CARB
control measures in the San Joaquin
demonstration and quantitative
Valley. Table H–5 in Appendix H
milestones for the 1997 annual PM2.5
contains projected emissions for each
NAAQS,144 and the Valley State SIP
quantitative milestone year. These
Strategy contains the control measure
emission levels reflect baseline emission
commitments that CARB has identified
as mobile source quantitative milestones projections through the 2023 postattainment milestone year.148
for the 2020 milestone date.145 Given
The SJV PM2.5 Plan identifies
the State’s conclusions that ammonia,
emission reductions needed for
SOX, and VOC emissions do not
attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5
contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels
NAAQS by 2020,149 and identifies San
that exceed the 1997 annual PM2.5
Joaquin
Valley’s progress toward
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley, as
attainment in each milestone year.150
discussed in section IV.B of this
The State and District set RFP targets for
proposed rule, the RFP demonstration
each of the quantitative milestone years
provided by the State addresses
as shown in Table H–8 of Appendix H
emissions of direct PM2.5 and NOX.146
of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.
Similarly, the State developed
According to the Plan, reductions in
quantitative milestones based upon
both direct PM2.5 and NOX emissions
implementation of control strategy
from 2013 base year levels result in
measures in the adopted SIP and in the
emission levels consistent with
SJV PM2.5 Plan that achieve reductions
in emissions of direct PM2.5 and NOX.147 attainment in the 2020 attainment year.
Based on these analyses, the State and
For the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, the
District conclude that the adopted
RFP demonstration in the Plan shows
control strategy is adequate to meet the
generally linear progress toward
RFP requirement for the 1997 annual
attainment.
PM2.5 NAAQS.
We describe the RFP demonstration
and quantitative milestones in the SJV
Quantitative Milestones
PM2.5 Plan in greater detail below.
Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
identifies the milestone dates of
Reasonable Further Progress
December 31, 2017, December 31, 2020,
The State addresses the RFP and
and December 31, 2023, for the 1997
quantitative milestone requirements in
PM2.5 NAAQS.151 Appendix H also
Appendix H to the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
identifies target emission levels to meet
submitted in February 2020. The Plan
the RFP requirement for direct PM2.5
estimates that emissions of direct PM2.5
and NOX emissions for each of these
and NOX will generally decline from the milestone years,152 and State and
District control measures that will
142 70 FR 944 (January 5, 2005).
achieve emission reductions in the years
143 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4).
leading up to each of the milestones, in
144 As discussed in footnote 32, all references to
accordance with the control strategy in
Appendix H in this proposed rule are to the revised
version submitted on February 11, 2020, which
the Plan.153
replaces the version submitted with the 2018 PM2.5
The Plan includes quantitative
Plan on May 10, 2019.
milestones for mobile, stationary, and
145 Valley State SIP Strategy, Table 7 (identifying
area sources. For mobile sources, CARB
State measures scheduled for action between 2017
has developed quantitative milestones
and 2020, inter alia) and CARB Resolution 18–49,
‘‘San Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016 State
that provide for an evaluation of RFP
Strategy for the State Implementation Plan’’
based on the implementation of specific
(October 25, 2018), 5 (adopting State commitment
to begin public processes and propose for Board
consideration the list of proposed SIP measures
outlined in the Valley State SIP Strategy and
included in Attachment A, according to the
schedule set forth therein).
146 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H–1.
147 Id. at H–18 and H–19 (District milestones),
and H–21 and H–22 (State milestones).
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at tables H–3 to H–5.
at Table H–6.
150 Id. at Table H–7.
151 Id. at Table H–12.
152 Id. at Table H–8.
153 Id. at H–18 and H–19 (District milestones),
and H–21 and H–22 (State milestones).
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149 Id.
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control measures by the relevant threeyear milestones. For each quantitative
milestone year, the Plan provides for
evaluating RFP by tracking State and
District implementation of regulatory
measures and SIP commitments during
the three-year period leading to each
milestone date, consistent with the
control strategy in the SJV PM2.5
Plan.154 The identified regulatory
measures include State measures for
light-duty vehicles and non-road
vehicles and several District measures
for stationary and area sources.155
CARB submitted its 2017 Quantitative
Milestone Report for the San Joaquin
Valley to the EPA on December 20,
2018.156 The report includes a
certification that CARB and the District
met the 2017 quantitative milestones
identified in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS and discusses the
State’s and District’s progress on
implementing the three CARB measures
and six District measures identified in
Appendix H as quantitative milestones
for the 2017 milestone year. On
February 15, 2021, the EPA determined
that the 2017 Quantitative Milestone
Report was adequate.157 In our
evaluation of the 2017 Quantitative
Milestone Report, we found that the
control measures in the Plan are in
effect, consistent with the RFP
demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, but we
noted that the determination of
adequacy did not constitute approval of
any component of the SJV PM2.5 Plan.158
3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
As discussed in section IV.D, we are
proposing to disapprove the attainment
demonstration for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the SJV PM2.5 Plan because
the area did not attain by the State’s
projected attainment date, which was
December 31, 2020. As a result, the RFP
154 Id. We note that the District’s identified
quantitative milestones for 2023 appear to contain
a typographical error, as they include a District
report on ‘‘[t]he status of SIP measures adopted
between 2017 and 2020 as per the schedule
included in the adopted Plan.’’ Id. at H–18 and H–
19. We understand that the District intended to
refer here to the status of SIP measures adopted
between 2020 and 2023, consistent with the
schedule in the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.
155 Id. at H–18 and H–19 (District milestones),
and H–21 and H–22 (State milestones).
156 Letter dated December 20, 2018, from Richard
W. Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Michael
Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9, with
attachment ‘‘2017 Quantitative Milestone Report for
the 1997 and 2006 NAAQS.’’
157 Letter dated February 15, 2021, from Deborah
Jordan, Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region
IX, to Richard W. Corey, Executive Officer, CARB,
with enclosure titled ‘‘EPA Evaluation of 2017
Quantitative Milestone Report.’’
158 Id.
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demonstration in the Plan does not
achieve the statutory purpose of RFP to
‘‘ensure attainment’’ under CAA section
171(l) and the quantitative milestones
do not ‘‘demonstrate [RFP] toward
attainment by the applicable date’’
under CAA section 189(c). We are,
therefore, proposing to disapprove the
RFP and quantitative milestone
elements of the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for failure to
meet the requirements of CAA sections
172(c)(2), 171(1), and 189(c) and 40 CFR
51.1012 and 51.1013.
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F. Contingency Measures
1. Requirements for Contingency
Measures
Under CAA section 172(c)(9), each
state required to make a nonattainment
plan SIP submission must include, in
such plan, contingency measures to be
implemented if an area fails to meet RFP
(‘‘RFP contingency measures’’) or fails
to attain the NAAQS by the applicable
attainment date (‘‘attainment
contingency measures’’). Under the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, states
must include contingency measures that
will be implemented following a
determination by the EPA that the state
has failed: (1) To meet any RFP
requirement in the approved SIP; (2) to
meet any quantitative milestone in the
approved SIP; (3) to submit a required
quantitative milestone report; or (4) to
attain the applicable PM2.5 NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date.159
Contingency measures must be fully
adopted rules or control measures that
are ready to be implemented quickly
upon failure to meet RFP or failure of
the area to meet the relevant NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date.160
The purpose of contingency measures
is to continue progress in reducing
emissions while a state revises its SIP to
meet the missed RFP requirement or to
correct ongoing nonattainment. Neither
the CAA nor the EPA’s implementing
regulations establish a specific level of
emission reductions that
implementation of contingency
measures must achieve, but the EPA
recommends that contingency measures
should provide for emission reductions
equivalent to approximately one year of
reductions needed for RFP in the
nonattainment area at issue, calculated
as the overall level of reductions needed
to demonstrate attainment divided by
the number of years from the base year
to the attainment year. In general, we
expect all actions needed to effect full
implementation of the measures to
159 40
CFR 51.1014(a).
FR 58010, 58066 and General Preamble
Addendum, 42015.
160 81
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occur within 60 days after the EPA
notifies the state of a failure to meet RFP
or to attain.161
To satisfy the requirements of 40 CFR
51.1014, the contingency measures
adopted as part of a PM2.5 attainment
plan must consist of control measures
for the area that are not otherwise
required to meet other nonattainment
plan requirements (e.g., to meet RACM/
RACT requirements) and must specify
the timeframe within which their
requirements become effective following
any of the EPA determinations specified
in 40 CFR 51.1014(a). In a 2016 decision
called Bahr v. EPA (‘‘Bahr’’),162 the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected
the EPA’s interpretation of CAA section
172(c)(9) to allow approval of alreadyimplemented control measures as
contingency measures. In Bahr, the
Ninth Circuit concluded that
contingency measures must be measures
that are triggered and implemented only
after the EPA determines that an area
failed to meet RFP requirements or to
attain by the applicable attainment date.
Thus, within the geographic jurisdiction
of the Ninth Circuit, already
implemented measures cannot serve as
contingency measures under CAA
section 172(c)(9). To comply with
section 172(c)(9), a state must develop,
adopt, and submit a contingency
measure to be triggered upon a failure
to meet an RFP milestone, failure to
meet a quantitative milestone
requirement, or failure to attain the
NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date.
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
The SJV PM2.5 Plan addresses the
contingency measure requirement for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in
section 5.6 and Appendix H
(specifically, section H.3 (‘‘Contingency
Measures’’)) of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. The
Plan relies on revisions to the District’s
wood-burning rule (Rule 4901) and
refers to a SIP revision submitted by
CARB on October 23, 2017, titled ‘‘State
Implementation Plan Attainment
Contingency Measures for the San
Joaquin Valley 15 mg/m 3 Annual PM2.5
NAAQS’’ (‘‘2017 Contingency Measure
SIP’’).163 On March 19, 2021, CARB
withdrew the 2017 Contingency
Measure SIP submission.164 Therefore,
161 81 FR 58010, 58066. See also General
Preamble, 13512, 13543–13544, and General
Preamble Addendum, 42014–42015.
162 Bahr v. EPA, 836 F.3d 1218, 1235–1237 (9th
Cir. 2016).
163 Letter dated October 23, 2017, from Richard
W. Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Alexis
Strauss, Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region
9.
164 Letter dated March 19, 2021, from Richard W.
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Deborah Jordan,
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we are not evaluating the 2017
Contingency Measure SIP as part of this
action.
With respect to the District
contingency measure, the 2018 PM2.5
Plan states that the District will amend
Rule 4901 to include a requirement that
would be triggered upon a
determination by the EPA that the San
Joaquin Valley failed to meet a
regulatory requirement necessitating
implementation of a contingency
measure.165 As discussed in section II.C,
the District adopted amendments to
Rule 4901 on June 20, 2019, including
a contingency measure in section 5.7.3
of the amended rule. In the EPA’s July
22, 2020 final action to approve Rule
4901, as amended June 20, 2019, we did
not evaluate section 5.7.3 of the
amended rule for compliance with CAA
requirements for contingency
measures.166 We are now evaluating
section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901 for
compliance with the requirements for
contingency measures for purposes of
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
Rule 4901 is designed to limit
emissions generated by the use of wood
burning fireplaces, wood burning
heaters, and outdoor wood burning
devices. The rule establishes
requirements for the sale/transfer,
operation, and installation of wood
burning devices and for advertising the
sale of seasoned wood consistent with a
moisture content limit within the San
Joaquin Valley. The rule includes a twotiered, episodic wood burning
curtailment requirement that applies
during four winter months, November
through February. During a level one
episodic wood burning curtailment,
section 5.7.1 prohibits any person from
operating a wood burning fireplace or
unregistered wood burning heater, but
permits the use of a properly operated
wood burning heater that meets
certification requirements and has a
current registration with the District.
Sections 5.9 through 5.11 impose
specific registration requirements on
any person operating a wood burning
fireplace or wood burning heater and
section 5.12 imposes specific
certification requirements on wood
burning heater professionals. During a
level two episodic wood burning
curtailment, operation of any wood
burning device is prohibited by section
5.7.2.
Prior to the 2019–2020 wood burning
season, the District imposed a level one
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9,
transmitting CARB Executive Order S–21–004.
165 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H–25.
166 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020) (final approval of
Rule 4901); 85 FR 1131, 1132–1133 (January 9,
2020) (proposed approval of Rule 4901).
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curtailment when the PM2.5
concentration was forecasted to be
between 20 mg/m 3 and 65 mg/m 3 and
imposed a level two curtailment when
the PM2.5 concentration was forecasted
to be above 65 mg/m 3 or the PM10
concentration was forecasted to be
above 135 mg/m 3. In 2019 the District
adopted revisions to Rule 4901 to lower
the wood burning curtailment
thresholds in the ‘‘hot spot’’ counties of
Madera, Fresno, and Kern. The District
lowered the level one PM2.5 threshold
for these three counties from 20 mg/m 3
to 12 mg/m 3, and the level two PM2.5
threshold from 65 mg/m 3 to 35 mg/m 3.
The District did not modify the
curtailment thresholds for other
counties in the San Joaquin Valley—
those levels remain at 20 mg/m 3 for level
one and 65 mg/m 3 for level two.
The District’s 2019 revision to Rule
4901 also included the addition of a
contingency measure in section 5.7.3 of
the rule, requiring that 60 days
following the effective date of an EPA
determination that the San Joaquin
Valley has failed to attain the 1997,
2006, or 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date, the PM2.5
curtailment levels of any county that
has failed to attain the applicable
standard will be lowered to the
curtailment levels in place for hot spot
counties. The District estimates that the
potential emissions reduction of direct
PM2.5 would be in the range of 0.014 tpd
(if the contingency measure is triggered
in Kings County but not the other nonhot spot counties) to 0.387 tpd (if the
contingency measure is triggered in all
five of the non-hot spot counties), but
there would be no emissions reduction
if, at the time of the determination of
failure to attain the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by the attainment date,
violations of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS are observed only at monitors
in the hot spot counties.167 The
corresponding potential NOX emissions
reduction would be in the range of 0.002
tpd to 0.060 tpd, respectively, but once
again, there would be no emissions
reduction if the violations are monitored
in the hot spot counties only.168 The
EPA has already approved Rule 4901, as
amended in 2019, as a revision to the
California SIP.169
167 See
Table B–13 in Appendix B from the
District’s Final Staff Report (June 20, 2019) for
revisions to Rule 4901.
168 NO emissions reductions from the
X
contingency measure are based on the District’s
estimates for direct PM2.5 emissions using the ratio
of direct PM2.5 to NOX in Table 1, page 8, of the
District’s Final Staff Report (June 20, 2019) for
revisions to Rule 4901.
169 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020).
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Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
also provides updated emissions
estimates for the year following the
State’s projected attainment year (i.e.,
2021) to evaluate whether the emission
reductions from the contingency
measures are sufficient. Table H–3 in
Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
shows that the emission reductions
between 2020 and 2021 are estimated to
be 0.5 tpd of direct PM2.5 and 12.3 tpd
of NOX (based on the annual average
inventory).
3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
We have evaluated the contingency
provision in Rule 4901 (i.e., section
5.7.3 of the rule) for compliance with
the requirements of CAA section
172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1014 and find
that the measure meets some, but not
all, of the applicable requirements for
contingency measures. The contingency
provision in Rule 4901 is structured to
be undertaken if the area fails to attain
the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS, not before, and
therefore is consistent with the Bahr
decision disallowing alreadyimplemented measures for contingency
measure purposes under CAA section
172(c)(9). Furthermore, the contingency
provision in Rule 4901 would achieve
emission reductions above and beyond
those that are projected to be achieved
if the EPA finds that monitoring
locations in counties outside of Fresno,
Kern, or Madera counties (i.e., the ‘‘hot
spot’’ counties listed in the rule) are
violating the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS
as of the attainment date. In accordance
with 40 CFR 51.1014, the contingency
provision in Rule 4901 identifies a
specific triggering mechanism. In this
case, the triggering mechanism in the
rule is the EPA’s final determination
that San Joaquin Valley has failed to
attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date.170 The
rule also specifies a timeframe within
which its requirements become effective
after a failure-to-attain determination
(i.e., 60 days from the effective date of
the EPA’s final determination), and
would take effect with minimal further
action by the State or the EPA.
Conversely, we have identified
several deficiencies with respect to the
contingency measure element of the SJV
170 Section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901 states that ‘‘the
District shall notify the public of an Episodic
Curtailment for the PM2.5 curtailment levels
described in Sections 5.7.1.2 and 5.7.2.2 for any
county that has failed to attain the applicable
standard.’’ (emphasis added) We interpret this to
mean that the District would apply the more
stringent curtailment provisions for any county
identified in the EPA’s final rule making the
determination that the San Joaquin Valley failed to
attain the applicable PM2.5 NAAQS.
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PM2.5 Plan. First, the contingency
provisions of Rule 4901 do not address
the potential for State failures to meet
RFP, to meet a quantitative milestone, or
to submit a quantitative milestone
report. In addition, the contingency
measure provisions of Rule 4901 are not
structured to achieve any additional
emissions reductions if the EPA finds
that the monitoring locations in the ‘‘hot
spot’’ counties (i.e., Fresno, Kern, or
Madera) are the only counties in the San
Joaquin Valley that are violating the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS as of the
attainment date. To qualify as a
contingency measure, a measure must
be structured to achieve emissions
reductions if triggered; however, the
contingency provisions of Rule 4901
provide for such reductions only under
certain circumstances. Thus, the
contingency provisions of Rule 4901
should be revised to provide for
additional emissions reductions in the
San Joaquin Valley (if triggered)
regardless of which monitoring site(s) is
determined to be violating the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS as of the
attainment date.
Furthermore, CAA section 172(c)(9)
requires that the plan provide for the
implementation of contingency
measures to be undertaken if the area
fails to attain the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date. Given our proposed disapproval of
the State’s attainment demonstration for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, as
described in section IV.D.3 of this
proposed rule, it is not possible to
determine whether emission reductions
from contingency measures in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan that are intended to take
effect upon an EPA finding that the area
failed to attain the standards are in fact
surplus to the attainment
demonstration, as required by section
172(c)(9).
For these reasons, we are proposing to
disapprove the contingency measure
element of the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. If we
finalize this proposal, we will remove
from the California SIP the contingency
provision in Rule 4901 (section 5.7.3)
because this provision does not satisfy
CAA requirements for contingency
measures and is severable from the
remainder of Rule 4901. The
disapproval of section 5.7.3 of Rule
4901 would have no effect on our prior
approval of the rule for purposes of
meeting the BACM and MSM
requirements for the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS
in the San Joaquin Valley,171 which
171 85 FR 44206 (final approval of Rule 4901) and
85 FR 44192 (determination that Rule 4901
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would remain in effect for all but
section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901.
G. Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets
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1. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
Section 176(c) of the CAA requires
federal actions in nonattainment and
maintenance areas to conform to the
goals of the state’s SIP to eliminate or
reduce the severity and number of
violations of the NAAQS and achieve
timely attainment of the standards.
Conformity to the SIP’s goals means that
such actions will not: (1) Cause or
contribute to violations of a NAAQS, (2)
worsen the severity of an existing
violation, or (3) delay timely attainment
of any NAAQS or any interim
milestone.
Actions involving Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA) or Federal
Transit Administration (FTA) funding
or approval are subject to the EPA’s
transportation conformity rule, codified
at 40 CFR part 93, subpart A. Under this
rule, metropolitan planning
organizations (MPOs) in nonattainment
and maintenance areas coordinate with
state and local air quality and
transportation agencies, the EPA, the
FHWA, and the FTA to demonstrate that
an area’s regional transportation plans
(RTPs) and transportation improvement
programs conform to the applicable SIP.
This demonstration is typically done by
showing that estimated emissions from
existing and planned highway and
transit systems are less than or equal to
the motor vehicle emissions budgets
(MVEBs or ‘‘budgets’’) contained in all
control strategy SIPs. Budgets are
generally established for specific years
and specific pollutants or precursors
and must reflect all of the motor vehicle
control measures contained in the
attainment and RFP demonstrations.172
Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements
Rule, Serious area PM2.5 attainment
plans must include appropriate
quantitative milestones and projected
RFP emission levels for direct PM2.5 and
all PM2.5 plan precursors in each
milestone year.173 For an area
designated nonattainment for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS before January 15, 2015,
the attainment plan must contain
quantitative milestones to be achieved
no later than three years after December
31, 2014, and every three years
thereafter until the milestone date that
falls within three years after the
implements BACM and MSM for residential wood
burning).
172 40 CFR 93.118(e)(4)(v).
173 40 CFR 51.1012(a), 51.1013(a)(1).
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applicable attainment date.174 As the
EPA explained in the preamble to the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, it is
important to include a post-attainment
year quantitative milestone to ensure
that, if the area fails to attain by the
attainment date, the EPA can continue
to monitor the area’s progress toward
attainment while the state develops a
new attainment plan.175 Although the
post-attainment year quantitative
milestone is a required element of a
Serious area plan, it is not necessary to
demonstrate transportation conformity
for 2023 or to use the 2023 budgets in
transportation conformity
determinations until such time as the
area fails to attain the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS.
PM2.5 plans should identify budgets
for direct PM2.5, NOX, and all other
PM2.5 precursors for which on-road
emissions are determined to
significantly contribute to PM2.5 levels
in the area for each RFP milestone year
and the attainment year, if the plan
demonstrates attainment. All direct
PM2.5 SIP budgets should include direct
PM2.5 motor vehicle emissions from
tailpipes, brake wear, and tire wear.
With respect to PM2.5 from re-entrained
road dust and emissions of VOC, SO2,
and/or ammonia, the transportation
conformity provisions of 40 CFR part
93, subpart A, apply only if the EPA
Regional Administrator or the director
of the state air agency has made a
finding that emissions of these
pollutants within the area are a
significant contributor to the PM2.5
nonattainment problem and has so
notified the MPO and Department of
Transportation (DOT), or if the
applicable implementation plan (or
implementation plan submission)
includes any of these pollutants in the
approved (or adequate) budget as part of
the RFP, attainment, or maintenance
strategy.176
By contrast, transportation conformity
requirements apply with respect to
emissions of NOX unless both the EPA
Regional Administrator and the director
of the state air agency have made a
finding that transportation-related
emissions of NOX within the
nonattainment area are not a significant
contributor to the PM2.5 nonattainment
problem and have so notified the MPO
and DOT, or the applicable
implementation plan (or
174 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4) and 81 FR 58010, 58058
and 58063–58064 (August 24, 2016).
175 81 FR 58010, 58063–58064.
176 40 CFR 93.102(b)(3), 93.102(b)(2)(v), and
93.122(f); see also Conformity Rule preambles at 69
FR 40004, 40031–40036 (July 1, 2004), 70 FR 24280,
24283–24285 (May 6, 2005) and 70 FR 31354 (June
1, 2005).
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implementation plan submission) does
not establish an approved (or adequate)
budget for such emissions as part of the
RFP, attainment, or maintenance
strategy.177
It is not always necessary for states to
establish motor vehicle emissions
budgets for all PM2.5 precursors. The
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule allows a
state to demonstrate that emissions of
certain precursors do not contribute
significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed
the NAAQS in a nonattainment area, in
which case the state may exclude such
precursor(s) from its control evaluations
for the specific NAAQS at issue. If a
state successfully demonstrates that the
emissions of one or more of the PM2.5
precursors from all sources do not
contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels
in the subject area, then it is not
necessary to establish motor vehicle
emissions budgets for such precursor(s).
Alternatively, the transportation
conformity regulations contain criteria
for determining whether emissions of
one or more PM2.5 precursors are
insignificant for transportation
conformity purposes.178 For a pollutant
or precursor to be considered an
insignificant contributor based on the
transportation conformity rule’s criteria,
the control strategy SIP must
demonstrate that it would be
unreasonable to expect that such an area
would experience enough motor vehicle
emissions growth in that pollutant and/
or precursor for a NAAQS violation to
occur. Insignificance determinations are
based on factors such as air quality, SIP
motor vehicle control measures, trends
and projections of motor vehicle
emissions, and the percentage of the
total attainment plan emissions
inventory for the NAAQS at issue that
is comprised of motor vehicle
emissions. The EPA’s rationale for
providing for insignificance
determinations is described in the July
1, 2004 revision to the Transportation
Conformity Rule.179
Transportation conformity trading
mechanisms are allowed under 40 CFR
93.124 where a state establishes
appropriate mechanisms for such trades.
The basis for the trading mechanism is
the SIP attainment modeling that
establishes the relative contribution of
each PM2.5 precursor pollutant. The
applicability of emission trading
between conformity budgets for
conformity purposes is described in 40
CFR 93.124(c).
The EPA’s process for determining the
adequacy of a budget consists of three
177 40
CFR 93.102(b)(2)(iv).
CFR 93.109(f).
179 69 FR 40004.
178 40
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basic steps: (1) Notifying the public of
a SIP submittal; (2) providing the public
the opportunity to comment on the
budget during a public comment period;
and, (3) making a finding of adequacy or
inadequacy. The EPA can notify the
public by either posting an
announcement that the EPA has
received SIP budgets on the EPA’s
adequacy website,180 or through a
Federal Register notice of proposed
rulemaking when the EPA reviews the
adequacy of an implementation plan
budget simultaneously with its review
and action on the SIP itself.181
2. Summary of the State’s Submission
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan includes budgets
for direct PM2.5 and NOX emissions,
calculated using annual average daily
emissions, for 2017, 2020, and 2023
(RFP milestone year, attainment year,
and post-attainment quantitative
milestone year, respectively).182 The
Plan establishes separate direct PM2.5
and NOX subarea budgets for each
county, or partial county (for Kern
County), in the San Joaquin Valley.183
CARB calculated the budgets using
EMFAC2014, CARB’s latest version of
the EMFAC model for estimating
emissions from on-road vehicles
operating in California that was
available at the time of Plan
development, and the latest modeled
vehicle miles traveled and speed
distributions from the San Joaquin
Valley MPOs from the Final 2017
Federal Transportation Improvement
Program, adopted in September 2016.
The budgets reflect annual average
emissions because those emissions are
linked with the District’s attainment
demonstration for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS.
The direct PM2.5 budgets include
tailpipe, brake wear, and tire wear
emissions but do not include paved
road dust, unpaved road dust, and road
construction dust emissions.184 The
State is not required to include reentrained road dust in the budgets
under section 93.103(b)(3) unless the
EPA or the State has made a finding that
these emissions are significant. Neither
the State nor the EPA has made such a
finding, but the Plan does include a
discussion of the significance/
insignificance factors for re-entrained
road dust.185 The budgets included in
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS are shown in
Table 6.
TABLE 6—MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSION BUDGETS FOR THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY FOR THE 1997 ANNUAL PM2.5 NAAQS
[Annual average, tpd]
2017
(RFP year)
County
PM2.5
Fresno ..............................................................................
Kern ..................................................................................
Kings ................................................................................
Madera .............................................................................
Merced .............................................................................
San Joaquin .....................................................................
Stanislaus .........................................................................
Tulare ...............................................................................
2020
(Attainment year)
NOX
0.9
0.8
0.2
0.2
0.3
0.7
0.4
0.4
PM2.5
28.5
28.0
5.8
5.3
10.7
14.9
11.9
10.8
2023
(Post-attainment year)
NOX
0.9
0.8
0.2
0.2
0.3
0.6
0.4
0.4
25.3
23.3
4.8
4.2
8.9
11.9
9.6
8.5
PM2.5
NOX
0.8
0.7
0.2
0.2
0.3
0.6
0.4
0.4
15.1
13.3
2.8
2.5
5.3
7.6
6.1
5.2
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Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, Table 3–1. Budgets are rounded to the nearest tenth of a ton.
The State did not include budgets for
VOC, SO2, or ammonia. As discussed in
section IV.B of this proposed rule, the
State submitted a PM2.5 precursor
demonstration documenting its
conclusion that control of these
precursors would not significantly
contribute to attainment of the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS. The State also
included a discussion of the
significance/insignificance factors for
ammonia, SO2, and VOC to demonstrate
a finding of insignificance under the
transportation conformity rule.186
In the submittal letter for the 2018
PM2.5 Plan, CARB requested that the
EPA limit the duration of the approval
of the budgets to the period before the
effective date of the EPA’s adequacy
finding for any subsequently submitted
budgets.187
CFR 93.118(f)(1).
CFR 93.118(f)(2).
182 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix D, Table 3–1.
183 40 CFR 93.124(c) and (d).
Conformity Trading Mechanism
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan also includes a
proposed trading mechanism for
transportation conformity analyses that
would allow future decreases in NOX
emissions from on-road mobile sources
to offset any on-road increases in direct
PM2.5 emissions. The State is proposing
to use a 6.5 to 1 NOX to PM2.5 ratio for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. This
ratio was derived by performing a
sensitivity analysis based on a 30
percent reduction of NOX or PM2.5
emissions and calculating the
corresponding effect on design values at
sites in Bakersfield and Fresno.
To ensure that the trading mechanism
does not affect the ability of the San
Joaquin Valley to meet the NOX budget,
the NOX emissions reductions available
to supplement the PM2.5 budget would
be only those remaining after the NOX
budget has been met.188 The Plan also
180 40
181 40
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184 2018
PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D–122 to D–
123.
185 2018
PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D–121 and D–
122.
186 40
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provides that the San Joaquin Valley
MPOs shall clearly document the
calculations used in the trading, along
with any additional reductions of NOX
and PM2.5 emissions in the conformity
analysis.
3. The EPA’s Evaluation and Proposed
Action
The EPA generally first conducts a
preliminary review of budgets
submitted with an attainment or
maintenance plan for PM2.5 for
adequacy, prior to taking action on the
plan itself, and did so with respect to
the PM2.5 budgets in the 2018 PM2.5
Plan. On June 18, 2019, the EPA
announced the availability of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan with MVEBs and a 30-day
public comment period. This
announcement was posted on the EPA’s
Adequacy website at: https://
www.epa.gov/state-and-local187 Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard W.
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9, 3.
188 2018 PM
2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D–126 and D–
127.
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transportation/state-implementationplans-sip-submissions-currently-underepa. The comment period for this
notification ended on July 18, 2019. We
did not receive any comments during
this comment period.
We have reviewed the motor vehicle
emissions budgets in the 2018 PM2.5
Plan and find that, because we are
proposing to disapprove the attainment
demonstration and related elements of
the SJV PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS based on the
area’s failure to attain by the State’s
projected attainment date, the budgets
cannot be consistent with the applicable
requirements for RFP and attainment of
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
Therefore, we are proposing to find that
the motor vehicle emissions budgets do
not meet applicable statutory and
regulatory requirements, including the
adequacy criteria specified in the
transportation conformity rule.189 As
discussed earlier in sections IV.C, IV.D,
and IV.E, we are proposing to
disapprove the Plan’s five percent,
attainment, and RFP demonstrations. In
addition, because we are proposing to
disapprove the five percent and RFP
demonstrations, the budgets are not
consistent with the applicable
requirements for the five percent annual
reductions and RFP. Therefore, we are
proposing to disapprove the budgets in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan. Our proposed
disapproval relates only to the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS, and does not
affect the status of the budgets for the
1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS or the
previously-approved budgets for the
2006 PM2.5 NAAQS and related trading
mechanism, which remain in effect for
those PM2.5 NAAQS. Because we are
disapproving the attainment and RFP
demonstrations, the budgets are not
eligible for a protective finding.190
If our proposed disapproval of the
budgets is finalized, upon the effective
date of our final rule, the area would be
subject to a conformity freeze under 40
CFR 93.120 of the transportation
conformity rule. No new transportation
plan, transportation improvement
program (TIP), or project may be found
to conform until the State submits
another control strategy implementation
plan revision fulfilling the same CAA
requirements, the EPA finds the budgets
in the revised plan adequate or approves
the budgets, the MPO makes a
conformity determination for the new
budgets, and the U.S. Department of
Transportation makes a conformity
determination.191 In addition, only
transportation projects outside of the
first four years of the current
conforming transportation plan and TIP
or that meets the requirements of 40
CFR 93.104(f) during the resulting
conformity freeze may be found to
conform until California submits a new
attainment plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS and (1) the EPA finds the
submitted budgets adequate per 40 CFR
93.118 or (2) the EPA approves the new
attainment plan and conformity to the
new plan is determined.192
Furthermore, if, as a result of our final
disapproval action, the EPA imposes
highway sanctions under section
179(b)(1) of the Act two years from the
effective date of our final rule, then the
conformity status of the transportation
plan and TIP will lapse on that date and
no new transportation plan, TIP, or
project may be found to conform until
California submits a new plan for the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, and
conformity to the plan is determined.193
H. Nonattainment New Source Review
Requirements Under CAA Section
189(e)
CAA section 189(e) specifically
requires that the control requirements
applicable to major stationary sources of
direct PM2.5 also apply to major
stationary sources of PM2.5 precursors,
except where the Administrator
determines that such sources do not
contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels
that exceed the standards in the area.194
The control requirements applicable to
major stationary sources of direct PM2.5
in a Serious PM2.5 nonattainment area
include, at minimum, the requirements
of a nonattainment NSR permit program
meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 172(c)(5) and 189(b)(3). As part
of our April 7, 2015 final action to
reclassify the San Joaquin Valley area as
Serious nonattainment for the 1997
PM2.5 standards, we established a May
7, 2016 deadline for the State to submit
nonattainment NSR SIP revisions
addressing the requirements of CAA
sections 189(b)(3) and 189(e) of the Act
for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS.
California submitted nonattainment
NSR SIP revisions to address the
subpart 4 requirements for the San
Joaquin Valley Serious PM2.5
nonattainment area on November 20,
2019. We are not proposing any action
on this submission at this time. We will
act on this submission through a
separate rulemaking, as appropriate.
189 40
192 Id.
190 40
CFR 93.118(e)(4).
CFR 93.120(a)(3).
191 40 CFR 93.120(a)(2).
193 40
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CFR 93.120(a)(1).
Preamble, 13539 and 13541–13542.
194 General
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V. Proposed Action
For the reasons discussed in this
proposed rule, under CAA section
110(k)(3), the EPA is proposing to
approve in part and disapprove in part
the portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that
pertain to the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS for the San Joaquin Valley
nonattainment area as follows:
(1) We are proposing to approve the
2013 base year emissions inventories as
meeting the requirements of CAA
section 172(c)(3) and 40 CFR 51.1008;
and
(2) We are proposing to disapprove
the following elements:
(a) The precursor demonstration as
not meeting the requirements of 40 CFR
51.1006,
(b) The BACM/BACT demonstration
as not meeting the requirements of CAA
section 189(b)(1)(B) and 40 CFR
51.1010,
(c) The five percent demonstration as
not meeting the requirements of CAA
section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c),
(d) The attainment demonstration as
not meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 189(d) and 179(d) and 40 CFR
51.1011(b),
(e) The RFP demonstration as not
meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 172(c)(2) and 171(1) and 40
CFR 51.1012,
(f) The quantitative milestone
demonstration as not meeting the
requirements of CAA section 189(c) and
40 CFR 51.1013,
(g) The contingency measures as not
meeting the requirements of CAA
section 172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1014,
and
(h) The motor vehicle emissions
budgets as not meeting the requirements
of CAA section 176(c) and 40 CFR
93.118(e)(4).
A. Effect of Finalizing the Proposed
Disapproval Actions
If we finalize disapprovals of the
precursor demonstration, BACM/BACT
demonstration, five percent
demonstration, attainment
demonstration, RFP and milestone
demonstrations, motor vehicle emission
budgets, or contingency measures, the
offset sanction in CAA section 179(b)(2)
will be applied in the San Joaquin
Valley area 18 months after the effective
date of such final disapproval. For new
or modified major stationary sources in
the area, the ratio of emission
reductions to increased emissions shall
be at least 2 to 1. The highway funding
sanctions in CAA section 179(b)(1) will
apply in the area six months after the
offset sanction is imposed. Neither
sanction will be imposed if California
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submits and we approve SIP revisions
meeting the applicable CAA
requirements prior to the
implementation of the sanctions.195
In addition to the sanctions, CAA
section 110(c)(1) provides that the EPA
must promulgate a federal
implementation plan (FIP) addressing
any disapproved elements of the plan
two years after the effective date of
disapproval unless the State submits,
and the EPA approves, the required SIP
submittal. As a result of the EPA’s
December 6, 2018 determination that
California had failed to submit the
required attainment plan for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS, among other required
SIP submissions for the San Joaquin
Valley,196 the EPA is already subject to
a statutory deadline to promulgate a FIP
for this purpose no later than two years
after the effective date of that
determination.197
Furthermore, if we take final action
disapproving the SJV PM2.5 Plan, a
conformity freeze will take effect upon
the effective date of any final
disapproval (usually 30 days after
publication of the final action in the
Federal Register). A conformity freeze
means that only projects in the first four
years of the most recent RTP and TIP
can proceed. During a freeze, no new
RTPs, TIPs, or RTP/TIP amendments
can be found to conform.198
Finally, if the EPA takes final action
on the SJV PM2.5 Plan as proposed,
California will be required to develop
and submit a revised plan for the San
Joaquin Valley area that addresses the
applicable CAA requirements, including
the requirements of CAA section 189(d).
In accordance with sections 179(d)(3)
and 172(a)(2) of the CAA, the revised
plan must demonstrate attainment as
expeditiously as practicable and no later
than five years from the date of the
EPA’s determination that the area failed
to attain (i.e., by November 23, 2021),
except that the EPA may extend the
attainment date to a date no later than
10 years from the date of this
determination (i.e., to November 23,
2026), considering the severity of
nonattainment and the availability and
feasibility of pollution control
measures.199
The EPA is soliciting public
comments on the issues discussed in
195 See 40 CFR 52.31, which sets forth in detail
the sanctions consequences of a final disapproval.
196 83 FR 62720.
197 Id.
198 See 40 CFR 93.120(a).
199 81 FR 84481, 84482 (November 23, 2016)
(final EPA action determining that the San Joaquin
Valley had failed to attain the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
by the December 31, 2015 Serious area attainment
date).
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this proposed rule. We will accept
comments from the public on this
proposal for the next 30 days.
VI. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, the EPA is
proposing to amend regulatory text that
includes incorporation by reference. As
explained in section IV.F.3 of this
preamble, the EPA is proposing to
remove section 5.7.3 of SJVUAPCD Rule
4901 from the California State
Implementation Plan, which is
incorporated by reference in accordance
with the requirements of 1 CFR part 51.
VII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www2.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action and was therefore not
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
PRA because this proposed SIP
disapproval, if finalized, will not inand-of itself create any new information
collection burdens but will simply
disapprove certain State requirements
for inclusion in the SIP.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action will not
impose any requirements on small
entities. This proposed SIP disapproval,
if finalized, will not in-and-of itself
create any new requirements but will
simply disapprove certain state
requirements for inclusion in the SIP.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. This action proposes to
disapprove pre-existing requirements
under state or local law and imposes no
new requirements. Accordingly, no
additional costs to state, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector,
result from this action.
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E. 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.
F. Executive Order 13175: Coordination
With Indian Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications, as specified in Executive
Order 13175, because the SIP revision
that the EPA is proposing to disapprove
would not apply on any Indian
reservation land or in any other area
where the EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction, and will not impose
substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because this proposed SIP disapproval,
if finalized, will not in-and-of itself
create any new regulations but will
simply disapprove certain state
requirements for inclusion in the SIP.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211 because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
Section 12(d) of the NTTAA directs
the EPA to use voluntary consensus
standards in its regulatory activities
unless to do so would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. The EPA believes that this
action is not subject to the requirements
of section 12(d) of the NTTAA because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA.
E:\FR\FM\22JYP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 138 / Thursday, July 22, 2021 / Proposed Rules
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Population
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
The EPA lacks the discretionary
authority to address environmental
justice in this rulemaking.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Jul 21, 2021
Jkt 253001
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Ammonia,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
dioxide, Volatile organic compounds.
PO 00000
Frm 00085
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Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: July 12, 2021.
Deborah Jordan,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2021–15551 Filed 7–21–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 138 (Thursday, July 22, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 38652-38674]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-15551]
[[Page 38652]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2021-0260; FRL-8644-02-R9]
Partial Approval and Partial Disapproval of Air Quality
Implementation Plans; California; San Joaquin Valley Serious Area and
Section 189(d) Plan for Attainment of the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve in part and disapprove in part portions of a state
implementation plan (SIP) revision submitted by the State of California
to meet Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act'') requirements for the 1997 annual
fine particulate matter (PM2.5) national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS or ``standards'') in the San Joaquin Valley
PM2.5 nonattainment area. Specifically, the EPA is proposing
to approve the 2013 base year emissions inventories in the submitted
SIP revisions. Because the area did not attain by the State's projected
attainment date of December 31, 2020, the EPA is proposing to
disapprove the attainment demonstration and related elements, including
the comprehensive precursor demonstration, five percent annual emission
reductions demonstration, best available control measures (BACM)
demonstration, reasonable further progress (RFP) demonstration,
quantitative milestone demonstration, and contingency measures. The EPA
is also proposing to disapprove the motor vehicle emission budgets in
the plan as not meeting the requirements of the CAA and EPA
regulations.
DATES: Any comments on this proposal must be received by August 23,
2021.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R09-
OAR-2021-0260 at https://www.regulations.gov. For comments submitted at
Regulations.gov, follow the online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit electronically any information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia submissions (e.g.,
audio or video) must be accompanied by a written comment. The written
comment is considered the official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please contact the person identified in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the full EPA public
comment policy, information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and
general guidance on making effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets. If you need assistance in a
language other than English or if you are a person with disabilities
who needs a reasonable accommodation at no cost to you, please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ashley Graham, Air Planning Office
(ARD-2), EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105,
(415) 972-3877, or by email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,''
and ``our'' refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. Background for Proposed Action
A. PM2.5 NAAQS
B. San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Designations,
Classifications, and SIP Revisions
II. Summary and Completeness Review of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
Plan
A. 2018 PM2.5 Plan
B. Valley State SIP Strategy
C. District Rule 4901
III. Clean Air Act Requirements for Serious PM2.5 Areas That Fail To
Attain
IV. Review of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Plan
A. Emissions Inventories
B. PM2.5 Precursors
C. Attainment Plan Control Strategy
D. Attainment Demonstration and Modeling
E. Reasonable Further Progress and Quantitative Milestones
F. Contingency Measures
G. Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets
H. Nonattainment New Source Review Requirements Under CAA
Section 189(e)
V. Proposed Action
A. Effect of Finalizing the Proposed Disapproval Actions
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background for Proposed Action
A. PM2.5 NAAQS
Under section 109 of the CAA, the EPA has established NAAQS for
certain pervasive air pollutants (referred to as ``criteria
pollutants'') and conducts periodic reviews of the NAAQS to determine
whether they should be revised or whether new NAAQS should be
established.
On July 18, 1997, the EPA revised the NAAQS for particulate matter
by establishing new NAAQS for particles with an aerodynamic diameter
less than or equal to a nominal 2.5 micrometers (PM2.5).\1\
The EPA established primary and secondary annual and 24-hour standards
for PM2.5.\2\ The annual primary and secondary standards
were set at 15.0 micrograms per cubic meter ([mu]g/m\3\), based on a
three-year average of annual mean PM2.5 concentrations, and
the 24-hour primary and secondary standards were set at 65 [mu]g/m\3\,
based on the three-year average of the 98th percentile of 24-hour
PM2.5 concentrations at each monitoring site within an
area.\3\ Collectively, we refer herein to the 1997 annual and 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS as the ``1997 PM2.5 NAAQS'' or ``1997
PM2.5 standards.''
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\1\ 62 FR 38652.
\2\ For a given air pollutant, ``primary'' NAAQS are those
determined by the EPA as requisite to protect the public health,
allowing an adequate margin of safety, and ``secondary'' standards
are those determined by the EPA as requisite to protect the public
welfare from any known or anticipated adverse effects associated
with the presence of such air pollutant in the ambient air. See CAA
section 109(b).
\3\ 40 CFR 50.7.
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On October 17, 2006, the EPA revised the level of the 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS to 35 [mu]g/m\3\,\4\ and on January 15, 2013,
the EPA revised the level of the primary annual PM2.5 NAAQS
to 12.0 [mu]g/m\3\.\5\ Even though the EPA has lowered the 24-hour and
annual PM2.5 standards, the 1997 PM2.5 standards
remain in effect.
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\4\ 71 FR 61144.
\5\ 78 FR 3086.
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The EPA established these standards after considering substantial
evidence from numerous health studies demonstrating that serious health
effects are associated with exposures to PM2.5
concentrations above these levels. Epidemiological studies have shown
statistically significant correlations between elevated
PM2.5 levels and premature mortality. Other important health
effects associated with PM2.5 exposure include aggravation
of respiratory and cardiovascular disease (as indicated by increased
hospital admissions, emergency room visits, absences from school or
work, and restricted activity dates), changes in lung function and
increased respiratory symptoms, and new evidence for more subtle
indicators of cardiovascular health. Individuals particularly sensitive
to PM2.5 exposure include
[[Page 38653]]
older adults, people with heart and lung disease, and children.\6\
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\6\ EPA, Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter, No. EPA/
600/P-99/002aF and EPA/600/P-99/002bF, October 2004.
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Sources can emit PM2.5 directly into the atmosphere as a
solid or liquid particle (primary PM2.5 or direct
PM2.5), or PM2.5 can form in the atmosphere
(secondary PM2.5) as a result of various chemical reactions
from precursor emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOX), sulfur
oxides (SOX), volatile organic compounds (VOC), and
ammonia.\7\
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\7\ For example, see 72 FR 20586, 20589 (April 25, 2007).
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B. San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Designations, Classifications, and SIP
Revisions
Following promulgation of a new or revised NAAQS, the EPA is
required under CAA section 107(d) to designate areas throughout the
nation as attaining or not attaining the NAAQS. Effective April 5,
2005, the EPA established the initial air quality designations for the
1997 annual and 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, using air quality
monitoring data for the three-year periods of 2001-2003 and 2002-
2004.\8\ The EPA designated the San Joaquin Valley as nonattainment for
both the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS (15.0 [mu]g/m\3\) and the
1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS (65 [mu]g/m\3\).\9\
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\8\ 70 FR 944 (January 5, 2005).
\9\ 40 CFR 81.305.
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The San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 nonattainment area
encompasses over 23,000 square miles and includes all or part of eight
counties: San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Tulare,
Kings, and the valley portion of Kern.\10\ The area is home to four
million people and is one of the nation's leading agricultural regions.
Stretching over 250 miles from north to south and averaging 80 miles
wide, it is partially enclosed by the Coast Mountain range to the west,
the Tehachapi Mountains to the south, and the Sierra Nevada range to
the east. Under State law, the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution
Control District (SJVUAPCD or ``District'') has primary responsibility
for developing plans to provide for attainment of the NAAQS in this
area. The District works cooperatively with the California Air
Resources Board (CARB) in preparing attainment plans. Authority for
regulating sources under state jurisdiction in the San Joaquin Valley
is split under State law between the District, which has responsibility
for regulating stationary and most area sources, and CARB, which has
responsibility for regulating most mobile sources.
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\10\ For a precise description of the geographic boundaries of
the San Joaquin Valley nonattainment area, see 40 CFR 81.305.
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Within three years of the effective date of designations, states
with areas designated as nonattainment for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS were required to submit SIP revisions that, among other things,
provided for implementation of reasonably available control measures
(RACM), RFP, attainment of the standards as expeditiously as
practicable but no later than five years from the nonattainment
designation (in this instance, no later than April 5, 2010) unless the
state justified an attainment date extension of up to five years, and
contingency measures.\11\
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\11\ CAA sections 172(a)(2), 172(c)(1), 172(c)(2), and
172(c)(9).
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Between 2007 and 2011, California submitted six SIP revisions to
address nonattainment area planning requirements for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley,\12\ which we refer to
collectively as the ``2008 PM2.5 Plan.'' On November 9,
2011, the EPA approved the portions of the 2008 PM2.5 Plan,
as revised in 2009 and 2011, that addressed attainment of the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
nonattainment area, except for the attainment contingency measures,
which we disapproved.\13\ We also granted the State's request to extend
the attainment deadline for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the San
Joaquin Valley to April 5, 2015.\14\
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\12\ 76 FR 69896, n. 2 (November 9, 2011).
\13\ Id. at 69924.
\14\ Id.
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Following a January 4, 2013 decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the D.C. Circuit (``D.C. Circuit'') remanding the EPA's 2007
implementation rule for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS,\15\ the EPA
published a final rule on June 2, 2014, classifying the San Joaquin
Valley, among other areas, as a Moderate nonattainment area for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS under subpart 4, part D of title I of the
Act.\16\
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\15\ Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 706 F.3d. 428
(D.C. Cir. 2013) (``NRDC''). In NRDC, the court held that the EPA
erred in implementing the 1997 PM2.5 standards solely
pursuant to the general implementation requirements of subpart 1,
without also considering the requirements specific to nonattainment
areas for particles less than or equal to 10 [mu]m in diameter
(PM10) in subpart 4, part D of title I of the CAA. The
court reasoned that the plain meaning of the CAA requires
implementation of the 1997 PM2.5 standards under subpart
4 because PM2.5 falls within the statutory definition of
PM10 and is thus subject to the same statutory
requirements as PM10. The court remanded the rule,
without vacatur, and instructed the EPA ``to repromulgate these
rules pursuant to Subpart 4 consistent with this opinion.''
\16\ 79 FR 31566.
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Effective May 7, 2015, the EPA reclassified the San Joaquin Valley
as a Serious nonattainment area for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
based on our determination that the area could not practicably attain
these NAAQS by the April 5, 2015 attainment date.\17\ Upon
reclassification as a Serious area, the San Joaquin Valley became
subject to a December 31, 2015 deadline under CAA section 188(c)(2) to
attain the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS. On February 9, 2016, the EPA
proposed to grant the State's request for extensions of the December
31, 2015 attainment date under CAA section 188(e), to December 31,
2018, for the 1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, and to December 31,
2020, for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley.\18\ However, on October 6, 2016, after considering public
comments, the EPA denied California's request for these extensions of
the attainment dates.\19\ Consequently, on November 23, 2016, the EPA
determined that the San Joaquin Valley had failed to attain the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS by the December 31, 2015 Serious area attainment
date.\20\ This determination triggered a requirement for California to
submit, by December 31, 2016, a revised PM2.5 attainment
plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS for the San Joaquin Valley
that satisfies the requirements of CAA section 189(d).
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\17\ 80 FR 18528 (April 7, 2015).
\18\ 81 FR 6936. California's request for extension of the
Serious Area attainment date for the San Joaquin Valley accompanied
its Serious Area attainment plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
and related motor vehicle emission budgets, submitted June 25, 2015
and August 13, 2015, respectively.
\19\ 81 FR 69396. The EPA did not finalize the actions proposed
on February 9, 2016, with respect to the submitted Serious area
plan. Id. at 69400.
\20\ 81 FR 84481.
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On December 6, 2018, the EPA determined that California had failed
to submit a complete Serious area and section 189(d) attainment plan
for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS, among other required SIP
submissions for the San Joaquin Valley, by the submittal deadline.\21\
This finding, which became effective on January 7, 2019, triggered
clocks under CAA section 179(a) for the application of emissions offset
sanctions 18 months after the finding and highway funding sanctions six
months thereafter, unless the EPA affirmatively determines that the
State has submitted a complete SIP addressing the identified
deficiencies.\22\ The finding also triggered the obligation under CAA
section 110(c) on the EPA to promulgate a federal implementation plan
no later than two years after the finding, unless the State has
submitted, and the EPA has approved, the required SIP
[[Page 38654]]
submittal.\23\ CARB submitted a revised attainment plan for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS, among other submissions, on May 10, 2019.\24\
This SIP revision is the subject of this proposal. On June 24, 2020,
the EPA issued a letter finding the submittal complete and terminating
the sanctions clocks under CAA section 179(a).\25\
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\21\ 83 FR 62720.
\22\ Id. at 62723.
\23\ Id.
\24\ Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9.
\25\ Letter dated June 24, 2020, from Elizabeth J. Adams,
Director, Air and Radiation Division, EPA Region IX, to Richard W.
Corey, Executive Officer, CARB, Subject: ``RE: Completeness Finding
for State Implementation Plan (SIP) Submissions for San Joaquin
Valley for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 Fine Particulate Matter
(PM2.5) National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
and Termination of Clean Air Act (CAA) Sanction Clocks.''
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II. Summary and Completeness Review of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
Plan
The EPA is proposing action on portions of three SIP revisions
submitted by CARB to meet CAA requirements for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley. Specifically, the EPA
is proposing to act on those portions of the following two plan
submissions that pertain to the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS: The
``2018 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5 Standards,''
adopted by the SJVUAPCD on November 15, 2018, and by CARB on January
24, 2019 (``2018 PM2.5 Plan''); \26\ and the ``San Joaquin
Valley Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy for the State
Implementation Plan,'' adopted by CARB on October 25, 2018 (``Valley
State SIP Strategy''). CARB submitted the 2018 PM2.5 Plan
and Valley State SIP Strategy to the EPA as a revision to the
California SIP on May 10, 2019.\27\ We refer to these two SIP
submissions collectively as the ``SJV PM2.5 Plan'' or
``Plan.''
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\26\ The 2018 PM2.5 Plan was developed jointly by
CARB and the District.
\27\ Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9.
The letter clarifies that the 2018 PM2.5 Plan supersedes
past submittals to the EPA that the agency has not yet acted on for
the 1997 standards, including the 2015 Plan for the 1997 Standard
(submitted by CARB on June 25, 2015) and motor vehicle emission
budgets (submitted by CARB August 13, 2015). The EPA previously
acted on those portions of the ``2018 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and
2012 PM2.5 Standards'' and the ``San Joaquin Valley
Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy for the State Implementation
Plan'' that pertain to the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS (85 FR 44192,
July 22, 2020), and is not, at this time, proposing to act on those
portions that pertain to the 1997 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS or
the 2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. We intend to act on these
portions of the submitted SIP revisions in subsequent rulemakings.
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The EPA is also proposing action on 2019 amendments to the regional
air district residential wood-burning rule, SJVUAPCD Rule 4901, ``Wood
Burning Fireplaces and Wood Burning Heaters'' (``Rule 4901''), adopted
by the SJVUAPCD on June 20, 2019, and by CARB on July 19, 2019.\28\
These amendments include a contingency measure (in section 5.7.3 of the
amended rule) that applies to the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\28\ Letter dated July 19, 2019, from Richard W. Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA
Region 9.
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The SJV PM2.5 Plan addresses the Serious area and CAA
section 189(d) requirements for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the
San Joaquin Valley, including the State's demonstration that the area
will attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by December 31,
2020. In this proposal, the EPA is proposing to act only on those
portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that pertain to the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS. The EPA intends to act on the portions
of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that pertain to the 1997 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS and subsequent PM2.5 NAAQS in
separate rulemakings.
CAA sections 110(a)(1) and (2) and 110(l) require each state to
provide reasonable public notice and opportunity for public hearing
prior to the adoption and submission of a SIP or SIP revision to the
EPA. To meet this requirement, every SIP submission should include
evidence that adequate public notice was given and that an opportunity
for a public hearing was provided consistent with the EPA's
implementing regulations in 40 CFR 51.102.
CAA section 110(k)(1)(B) requires the EPA to determine whether a
SIP submission is complete within 60 days of receipt. This section also
provides that any plan that the EPA has not affirmatively determined to
be complete or incomplete will become complete by operation of law six
months after the date of submission. The EPA's SIP completeness
criteria are found in 40 CFR part 51, Appendix V.
A. 2018 PM2.5 Plan
The following portions of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan and
related support documents address both the Serious area requirements in
CAA section 189(b) and the CAA section 189(d) requirements for the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley: (i) Chapter 4
(``Attainment Strategy for PM2.5''), (ii) Chapter 5
(``Demonstration of Federal Requirements for 1997 PM2.5
Standards''); \29\ (iii) numerous appendices to the 2018
PM2.5 Plan; (iv) CARB's ``Staff Report, Review of the San
Joaquin Valley 2018 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5
Standards,'' release date December 21, 2018 (``CARB Staff Report'');
\30\ and (v) the State's and District's board resolutions adopting the
2018 PM2.5 Plan (CARB Resolution 19-1 and SJVUAPCD Governing
Board Resolution 18-11-16).\31\
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\29\ Chapter 6 (``Demonstration of Federal Requirements for the
2006 PM2.5 Standard: Serious Plan and Extension
Request'') and Chapter 7 (``Demonstration of Federal Requirements
for the 2012 PM2.5 Standard'') of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan pertain to the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS and
the 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS, respectively. The EPA previously
acted on those portions of the Plan that pertain to the 2006
PM2.5 NAAQS (85 FR 44192, July 22, 2020) and intends to
act on those portions that pertain to the 1997 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS and 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS in separate
rulemakings.
\30\ Letter dated December 11, 2019, from Richard Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA
Region 9, transmitting the CARB Staff Report [on the 2018
PM2.5 Plan]. The CARB Staff Report includes CARB's review
of, among other things, the 2018 PM2.5 Plan's control
strategy and attainment demonstration.
\31\ CARB Resolution 19-1, ``2018 PM2.5 State
Implementation Plan for the San Joaquin Valley,'' January 24, 2019,
and SJVUAPCD Governing Board Resolution 18-11-16, ``Adopting the
[SJVUAPCD] 2018 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5
Standards,'' November 15, 2018.
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The appendices to the 2018 PM2.5 Plan that address the
requirements for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS include: (i)
Appendix A (``Ambient PM2.5 Data Analysis''); (ii) Appendix
B (``Emissions Inventory''); (iii) Appendix C (``Stationary Source
Control Measure Analyses''); (iv) Appendix D (``Mobile Source Control
Measure Analyses''); (v) Appendix G (``Precursor Demonstration''); (vi)
Appendix H (``RFP, Quantitative Milestones, and Contingency''); \32\
(vii) Appendix I (``New Source Review and Emission Reduction
Credits''); (viii) Appendix J (``Modeling Emission Inventory''); (ix)
Appendix K (``Modeling Attainment Demonstration''); and (x) Appendix L
(``Modeling Protocol'').
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\32\ Appendix H to 2018 PM2.5 Plan, submitted
February 11, 2020 via the EPA State Planning Electronic
Collaboration System. Following the identification of a
transcription error in the RFP tables of Appendix H, on February 11,
2020, the State submitted a revised version of Appendix H that
corrects the transcription error and provides additional information
on the RFP demonstration. All references to Appendix H in this
proposed rule are to the revised version submitted on February 11,
2020, which replaces the version submitted with the 2018
PM2.5 Plan on May 10, 2019.
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The District provided public notice and opportunity for public
comment prior to its November 15, 2018 public hearing on and adoption
of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.\33\ CARB also provided public notice
and opportunity for public comment prior to its January 24, 2019 public
hearing on and adoption of the
[[Page 38655]]
2018 PM2.5 Plan.\34\ The SIP submission includes proof of
publication of notices for the respective public hearings. It also
includes copies of the written and oral comments received during the
State's and District's public review processes and the agencies'
responses thereto.\35\ Therefore, we find that the 2018
PM2.5 Plan meets the procedural requirements for public
notice and hearing in CAA sections 110(a) and 110(l) and 40 CFR 51.102.
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan became complete by operation of law on
November 10, 2019.
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\33\ SJVUAPCD, ``Notice of Public Hearing for Adoption of
Proposed 2018 PM2.5 Plan for the 1997, 2006, and 2012
Standards,'' October 16, 2018, and SJVUAPCD Governing Board
Resolution 18-11-16.
\34\ CARB, ``Notice of Public Meeting to Consider the 2018
PM2.5 State Implementation Plan for the San Joaquin
Valley,'' December 21, 2018, and CARB Resolution 19-1.
\35\ CARB, ``Board Meeting Comments Log,'' March 29, 2019; J&K
Court Reporting, LLC, ``Meeting, State of California Air Resources
Board,'' January 24, 2019 (transcript of CARB's public hearing), and
2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix M (``Summary of Significant
Comments and Responses'').
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B. Valley State SIP Strategy
CARB developed the ``Revised Proposed 2016 State Strategy for the
State Implementation Plan'' (``2016 State Strategy'') to support
attainment planning in the San Joaquin Valley and Los Angeles-South
Coast Air Basin (``South Coast'') ozone nonattainment areas.\36\ In its
resolution adopting the 2016 State Strategy (CARB Resolution 17-7), the
Board found that the 2016 State Strategy would achieve 6 tons per day
(tpd) of NOX emissions reductions and 0.1 tpd of direct
PM2.5 emissions reductions in the San Joaquin Valley by 2025
and directed CARB staff to work with SJVUAPCD to identify additional
reductions from sources under District regulatory authority as part of
a comprehensive plan to attain the PM2.5 standards for the
San Joaquin Valley and to return to the Board with a commitment to
achieve additional emission reductions from mobile sources.\37\
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\36\ The EPA has approved certain commitments made by CARB in
the 2016 State Strategy for purposes of attaining the ozone NAAQS in
the San Joaquin Valley and South Coast ozone nonattainment areas
(for example, see 84 FR 3302 (February 12, 2019) and 84 FR 52005
(October 1, 2019)) and for attaining the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS
in the San Joaquin Valley (85 FR 44192 (July 22, 2020)).
\37\ CARB Resolution 17-7, ``2016 State Strategy for the State
Implementation Plan,'' March 23, 2017, 6-7.
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CARB responded to this resolution by developing and adopting the
``San Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy for the
State Implementation Plan'' (``Valley State SIP Strategy'') to support
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. The State's May 10, 2019 SIP submission
incorporates by reference the Valley State SIP Strategy as adopted by
CARB on October 25, 2018 and submitted to the EPA on November 16,
2018.\38\
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\38\ Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9,
2.
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The Valley State SIP Strategy includes an ``Introduction'' (Chapter
1), a chapter on ``Measures'' (Chapter 2), and a ``Supplemental State
Commitment from the Proposed State Measures for the Valley'' (Chapter
3). Much of the content of the Valley State SIP Strategy is reproduced
in Chapter 4 (``Attainment Strategy for PM2.5'') of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.\39\ The Valley State SIP Strategy also includes
CARB Resolution 18-49, which, among other things, commits CARB to
achieve specific amounts of NOX and PM2.5
emissions reductions by specific years, for purposes of attaining the
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.\40\
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\39\ For example, Table 2 (proposed mobile source measures and
schedule), Table 3 (emissions reductions from proposed mobile source
measures), and Table 4 (summary of emission reduction measures) of
the Valley State SIP Strategy correspond to tables 4-8, 4-9, and 4-
7, respectively, of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4.
\40\ CARB Resolution 18-49, ``San Joaquin Valley Supplement to
the 2016 State Strategy for the State Implementation Plan,'' October
25, 2018, 5.
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CARB provided the required public notice and opportunity for public
comment prior to its October 25, 2018 public hearing on and adoption of
the Valley State SIP Strategy.\41\ The SIP submission includes proof of
publication of the public notice for this public hearing. It also
includes copies of the written and oral comments received during the
State's public review process and CARB's responses thereto.\42\
Therefore, we find that the Valley State SIP Strategy meets the
procedural requirements for public notice and hearing in CAA sections
110(a) and 110(l) and 40 CFR 51.102. The Valley State SIP Strategy
became complete by operation of law on November 10, 2019.
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\41\ CARB, ``Notice of Public Meeting to Consider the San
Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016 State Strategy for the State
Implementation Plan,'' September 21, 2018, and CARB Resolution 18-
49.
\42\ CARB, ``Board Meeting Comments Log,'' November 2, 2018 and
compilation of written comments; and J&K Court Reporting, LLC,
``Meeting, State of California Air Resources Board,'' October 25,
2018 (transcript of CARB's public hearing).
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C. District Rule 4901
With respect to the District contingency measure, the District
states in Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan that it will
amend Rule 4901 to include a requirement to be triggered upon a
determination by the EPA that the San Joaquin Valley failed to meet a
regulatory requirement necessitating implementation of a contingency
measure.\43\ On June 20, 2019, the District adopted amendments to Rule
4901 including a contingency measure (in section 5.7.3 of the amended
rule), and, as an attachment to a letter dated July 19, 2019, CARB
submitted the amended rule to the EPA for approval.\44\ On July 22,
2020, we approved Rule 4901, as amended June 20, 2019, into the SIP
based on our conclusion that the rule meets the requirements for
enforceability and for SIP revisions in CAA sections 110(a)(2)(A),
110(l), and 193 but we did not evaluate section 5.7.3 of the amended
rule for compliance with CAA requirements for contingency measures.\45\
As part of that rulemaking, we stated that we would determine in future
actions whether section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901, in conjunction with other
submitted provisions, meets the statutory and regulatory requirements
for contingency measures.\46\ We are now evaluating section 5.7.3 of
Rule 4901, as amended June 20, 2019, for compliance with the
requirements for contingency measures for purposes of the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\43\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H-25.
\44\ Letter dated July 19, 2019 from Richard W. Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9.
\45\ 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020) (final approval of Rule 4901);
85 FR 1131, 1132-33 (January 9, 2020) (proposed approval of Rule
4901).
\46\ 85 FR 1131, 1132-33.
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Consistent with the requirements of 40 CFR part 51, Appendix V, we
previously determined that CARB's submittal of the June 20, 2019
revisions to Rule 4901 satisfied the procedural requirements for SIP
revisions under CAA section 110 and the EPA's implementing
regulations.\47\
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\47\ 85 FR 1131 (January 9, 2020) (proposed approval of revised
Rule 4901) and 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020) (final approval of
revised Rule 4901).
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III. Clean Air Act Requirements for Serious PM2.5 Areas That Fail To
Attain
In the event that a Serious area fails to attain the
PM2.5 NAAQS by the applicable attainment date, CAA section
189(d) requires that ``the State in which such area is located shall,
after notice and opportunity for public comment, submit within 12
months after the applicable attainment date, plan revisions which
provide for attainment of the . . . standard. . .'' An attainment plan
under section 189(d) must, among other things, demonstrate expeditious
attainment of the NAAQS within the time period provided under CAA
section 179(d)(3) and provide for annual reductions in emissions of
direct PM2.5 or a PM2.5 plan precursor pollutant
within the area of not less than five
[[Page 38656]]
percent per year from the most recent emissions inventory for the area
until attainment.\48\ In addition to the requirement to submit control
measures providing for a five percent reduction in emissions of certain
pollutants on an annual basis, the EPA interprets CAA section 189(d) as
requiring a state to submit an attainment plan that includes the same
basic statutory plan elements that are required for other attainment
plans.\49\ Specifically, a state must submit to the EPA its plan to
meet the requirements of CAA section 189(d) in the form of a complete
attainment plan submission that includes the following elements:
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\48\ CAA section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c).
\49\ 81 FR 58010, 58098 (August 24, 2016).
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1. A comprehensive, accurate, current inventory of actual emissions
from all sources of PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors in
the area;
2. A control strategy that includes additional measures (beyond
those already adopted in previous SIPs for the area as RACM/RACT, best
available control measures/best available control technology (BACM/
BACT), and most stringent measures (if applicable)) that provide for
attainment of the standards and, from the date of such submission until
attainment, demonstrate that the plan will at a minimum achieve an
annual five percent reduction in emissions of direct PM2.5
or any PM2.5 plan precursor;
3. A demonstration (including air quality modeling) that the plan
provides for attainment as expeditiously as practicable;
4. Plan provisions that require RFP;
5. Quantitative milestones that are to be achieved every three
years until the area is redesignated attainment and that demonstrate
RFP toward attainment by the applicable date;
6. Contingency measures to be implemented if the area fails to meet
any requirement concerning RFP or quantitative milestones or to attain
by the applicable attainment date; and
7. Provisions to assure that control requirements applicable to
major stationary sources of PM2.5 also apply to major
stationary sources of PM2.5 precursors, except where the
state demonstrates to the EPA's satisfaction that such sources do not
contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed the
standards in the area.
A state with a Serious PM2.5 nonattainment area that
fails to attain the NAAQS by the applicable Serious area attainment
date must also address any statutory requirements applicable to
Moderate and Serious nonattainment area plans under CAA sections 172
and 189 of the CAA to the extent that those requirements have not
already been met.\50\
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\50\ Id. Because the EPA has not previously approved a SIP
submission for the San Joaquin Valley as meeting the Serious area
planning requirements under CAA sections 172 and 189 for the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS, the EPA is evaluating relevant
portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan for compliance with these
requirements, in addition to the requirements of CAA section 189(d).
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A section 189(d) plan must demonstrate attainment as expeditiously
as practicable, and no later than five years from the date of the EPA's
determination that the area failed to attain, consistent with sections
179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2) of the CAA.\51\ Pursuant to those provisions,
the Administrator may also extend the attainment date to the extent the
Administrator deems appropriate, for a period no greater than 10 years
from the effective date of the EPA's determination that the area failed
to attain, considering the severity of nonattainment and the
availability and feasibility of pollution control measures.
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\51\ 81 FR 84481, 84482.
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The EPA provided its preliminary views on the CAA's requirements
for particulate matter plans under part D, title I of the Act in the
following guidance documents: (1) ``State Implementation Plans; General
Preamble for the Implementation of Title I of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990'' (``General Preamble''); \52\ (2) ``State
Implementation Plans; General Preamble for the Implementation of Title
I of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990; Supplemental'' (``General
Preamble Supplement''); \53\ and (3) ``State Implementation Plans for
Serious PM-10 Nonattainment Areas, and Attainment Date Waivers for PM-
10 Nonattainment Areas Generally; Addendum to the General Preamble for
the Implementation of Title I of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990''
(``General Preamble Addendum'').\54\ More recently, in an August 24,
2016 final rule entitled, ``Fine Particulate Matter National Ambient
Air Quality Standards: State Implementation Plan Requirements''
(``PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule''), the EPA established
regulatory requirements and provided further interpretive guidance on
the statutory SIP requirements that apply to areas designated
nonattainment for the PM2.5 standards.\55\ We discuss these
regulatory requirements and interpretations of the Act as appropriate
in our evaluation of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that follows.
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\52\ 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992).
\53\ 57 FR 18070 (April 28, 1992).
\54\ 59 FR 41998 (August 16, 1994).
\55\ 81 FR 58010.
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IV. Review of the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 Plan
A. Emissions Inventories
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
CAA section 172(c)(3) requires that each SIP include a
comprehensive, accurate, current inventory of actual emissions from all
sources of the relevant pollutant or pollutants in the nonattainment
area. The EPA discussed the emissions inventory requirements that apply
to PM2.5 nonattainment areas in the PM2.5 SIP
Requirements Rule and codified these requirements in 40 CFR
51.1008.\56\ The EPA has also issued guidance concerning emissions
inventories for PM2.5 nonattainment areas.\57\
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\56\ Id. at 58098-58099.
\57\ ``Emissions Inventory Guidance for Implementation of Ozone
and Particulate Matter National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) and Regional Haze Regulations,'' U.S. EPA, May 2017
(``Emissions Inventory Guidance''), available at https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-inventories/air-emissions-inventory-guidance-implementation-ozone-and-particulate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The base year emissions inventory should provide a state's best
estimate of actual emissions from all sources of the relevant
pollutants in the area, i.e., all emissions that contribute to the
formation of a particular NAAQS pollutant. For the PM2.5
NAAQS, the base year inventory must include direct PM2.5
emissions, separately reported filterable and condensable
PM2.5 emissions,\58\ and emissions of all chemical
precursors to the formation of secondary PM2.5: nitrogen
oxides (NOX), sulfur dioxide (SO2), volatile
organic compounds (VOC), and ammonia.\59\ In addition, the emissions
inventory base year for a Serious PM2.5 nonattainment area
subject to CAA section 189(d) must be one of the three years for which
monitored data were used to determine that the area failed to attain
the PM2.5 NAAQS by the applicable Serious area attainment
date, or another technically appropriate year justified by the state in
its Serious area SIP submission.\60\ A state's SIP submission must
include documentation explaining how it calculated emissions data for
the inventory. In estimating mobile source emissions, a state should
use the latest emissions models and planning assumptions available at
the time the SIP is developed. The latest EPA-approved version of
California's mobile
[[Page 38657]]
source emission factor model for estimating tailpipe, brake, and tire
wear emissions from on-road mobile sources that was available during
the State's and District's development of the SJV PM2.5 Plan
was EMFAC2014.\61\ Following CARB's submission of the Plan, the EPA
approved EMFAC2017, the latest revision to this mobile source emissions
model, and established grace periods during which EMFAC2014 may
continue to be used for transportation conformity purposes (i.e., new
regional emissions analyses and CO, PM10, and
PM2.5 hot-spot analyses).\62\ States are also required to
use the EPA's ``Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission Factors'' (``AP-
42'') road dust method for calculating re-entrained road dust emissions
from paved roads.63 64
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\58\ The Emissions Inventory Guidance identifies the types of
sources for which the EPA expects states to provide condensable PM
emissions inventories. Emissions Inventory Guidance, section 4.2.1
(``Condensable PM Emissions''), 63-65.
\59\ 40 CFR 51.1008(c)(1).
\60\ Id.
\61\ 80 FR 77337 (December 14, 2015). EMFAC is short for
EMission FACtor. The EPA announced the availability of the EMFAC2014
model, effective on the date of publication in the Federal Register,
for use in state implementation plan development and transportation
conformity in California. Upon that action, EMFAC2014 was required
to be used for all new regional emissions analyses and CO,
PM10, and PM2.5 hot-spot analyses that were
started on or after December 14, 2017, which was the end of the
grace period for using the prior mobile source emissions model,
EMFAC2011.
\62\ 84 FR 41717 (August 15, 2019). The grace period for new
regional emissions analyses begins on August 15, 2019 and ends on
August 16, 2021, while the grace period for hot-spot analyses begins
on August 15, 2019 and ends on August 17, 2020. 84 FR 41717, 41720.
\63\ The EPA released an update to AP-42 in January 2011 that
revised the equation for estimating paved road dust emissions based
on an updated data regression that included new emission tests
results. 76 FR 6328 (February 4, 2011). CARB used the revised 2011
AP-42 methodology in developing on-road mobile source emissions; see
https://www.arb.ca.gov/ei/areasrc/fullpdf/full7-9_2016.pdf.
\64\ AP-42 has been published since 1972 as the primary source
of the EPA's emission factor information and is available at https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-factors-and-quantification/ap-42-compilation-air-emissions-factors. It contains emission factors and
process information for more than 200 air pollution source
categories. A source category is a specific industry sector or group
of similar emitting sources. The emission factors have been
developed and compiled from source test data, material balance
studies, and engineering estimates.
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In addition to the base year inventory submitted to meet the
requirements of CAA section 172(c)(3), the state must also submit a
projected attainment year inventory and emissions projections for each
RFP milestone year.\65\ These future emissions projections are
necessary components of the attainment demonstration required under CAA
section 189(d) and the demonstration of RFP required under section
172(c)(2).\66\ Emissions projections for future years (referred to in
the Plan as ``forecasted inventories'') should account for, among other
things, the ongoing effects of economic growth and adopted emissions
control requirements. The state's SIP submission should include
documentation to explain how the emissions projections were calculated.
Where a state chooses to allow new major stationary sources or major
modifications to use emission reduction credits (ERCs) that were
generated through shutdown or curtailed emissions units occuring before
the base year of an attainment plan, the projected emissions inventory
used to develop the attainment demonstration must explicitly include
the emissions from such previously shutdown or curtailed emissions
units.\67\
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\65\ 40 CFR 51.1008 and 51.1012. See also Emissions Inventory
Guidance, section 3 (``SIP Inventory Requirements and
Recommendations'').
\66\ 40 CFR 51.1004, 51.1008, 51.1011, and 51.1012.
\67\ 40 CFR 51.165(a)(3)(ii)(C)(1).
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2. Summary of the State's Submission
Summaries of the planning emissions inventories for direct
PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors (NOX,
SOX,\68\ VOC,\69\ and ammonia) and the documentation for the
inventories for the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 nonattainment
area are included in Appendix B (``Emissions Inventory'') and Appendix
I (``New Source Review and Emission Reduction Credits'') of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.
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\68\ The SJV PM2.5 Plan generally uses ``sulfur
oxides'' or ``SOX'' in reference to SO2 as a
precursor to the formation of PM2.5. We use
SOX and SO2 interchangeably throughout this
notice.
\69\ The SJV PM2.5 Plan generally uses ``reactive
organic gasses'' or ``ROG'' in reference to VOC as a precursor to
the formation of PM2.5. We use ROG and VOC
interchangeably throughout this notice.
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CARB and District staff worked together to develop the emissions
inventories for the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5 nonattainment
area. The District worked with operators of the stationary facilities
in the nonattainment area to develop the stationary source emissions
estimates. The responsibility for developing emissions estimates for
area sources such as agricultural burning and paved road dust was
shared by the District and CARB. CARB staff developed the emissions
inventories for both on-road and non-road mobile sources.\70\
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\70\ The EPA regulations refer to ``non-road'' vehicles and
engines whereas CARB regulations refer to ``Other Mobile Sources''
or ``off-road'' vehicles and engines. These terms refer to the same
types of vehicles and engines. We refer herein to such vehicles and
engines as ``non-road'' sources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Plan includes winter (24-hour) average and annual average daily
planning inventories for the 2013 base year, which were modeled from
the 2012 emissions inventory, and estimated emissions for forecasted
years from 2017 through 2028 for the attainment and RFP demonstrations
for the 1997, 2006, and 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS.\71\ In this
proposal, we are proposing action on those winter average and annual
average emissions inventories necessary to support the attainment plan
for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS--i.e., the 2013 base year
inventory, forecasted inventories for the RFP milestone years of 2017,
2020 (attainment year), and 2023 (post-attainment milestone year), and
additional forecasted inventories for 2018 and 2019 to support the five
percent annual emission reduction demonstration. Each inventory
includes emissions from stationary, area, on-road, and non-road
sources.
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\71\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, B-18 to B-19. The
winter average daily planning inventory corresponds to the months of
November through April when daily ambient PM2.5
concentrations are typically highest. The base year inventory is
from the California Emissions Inventory Development and Reporting
System (CEIDARS) and future year inventories were estimated using
the California Emission Projection Analysis Model (CEPAM), 2016 SIP
Baseline Emission Projections, version 1.05.
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The base year inventories for stationary sources were developed
using actual emissions reports from facility operators. The State
developed the base year emissions inventory for area sources using the
most recent models and methodologies available at the time the State
was developing the Plan.\72\ The Plan also includes background,
methodology, and inventories of condensable and filterable
PM2.5 emissions from stationary point and non-point
combustion sources that are expected to generate condensable
PM2.5.\73\ CARB used EMFAC2014 to estimate on-road motor
vehicle emissions based on transportation activity data from the 2014
Regional Transportation Plan (2014 RTP) adopted by the transportation
planning agencies in the San Joaquin Valley.\74\ Re-entrained paved
road dust emissions were calculated using a CARB methodology consistent
with the EPA's AP-42 road dust methodology.\75\
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\72\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, section B.2
(``Emissions Inventory Summary and Methodology'').
\73\ Id. at B-42 to B-44.
\74\ Id. at B-37.
\75\ Id. at B-28.
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CARB developed the emissions forecasts by applying growth and
control profiles to the base year inventory. CARB's mobile source
emissions projections take into account predicted activity rates and
vehicle fleet turnover by vehicle model year and adopted controls.\76\
In addition, the Plan states that the District is providing for use of
pre-base year ERCs as offsets by accounting for such ERCs in the
[[Page 38658]]
projected 2025 emissions inventory.\77\ The 2018 PM2.5 Plan
identifies growth factors, control factors, and estimated offset use
between 2013 and 2025 for direct PM2.5, NOX,
SOX, and VOC emissions by source category and lists all pre-
base year ERCs issued by the District for PM10,
NOX, SOX, and VOC emissions, by facility.\78\
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\76\ Id. at B-18 and B-19.
\77\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix I, I-1 to I-5.
\78\ Id. at tables I-1 to I-5.
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Table 1 provides a summary of the winter (24-hour) average
inventories in tons per day (tpd) of direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors for the 2013 base year. Table 2 provides a
summary of annual average inventories of direct PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors for the 2013 base year. These annual
average inventories provide the basis for the control measure analysis
and the RFP and attainment demonstrations in the SJV PM2.5
Plan.
Table 1--San Joaquin Valley Winter Average Emissions Inventory for Direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 Precursors for the
2013 Base Year
[tpd]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Direct
Category PM2.5 NOX SOX VOC Ammonia
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stationary Sources............................. 8.5 35.0 6.9 86.6 13.9
Area Sources................................... 41.4 11.5 0.5 156.8 291.5
On-Road Mobile Sources......................... 6.4 188.7 0.6 51.1 4.4
Non-Road Mobile Sources........................ 4.4 65.3 0.3 27.4 0.0
----------------------------------------------------------------
Totals a................................... 60.8 300.5 8.4 321.9 309.8
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, tables B-1 to B-5.
a Totals reflect disaggregated emissions and may not add exactly as shown here due to rounding.
Table 2--San Joaquin Valley Annual Average Emissions Inventory for Direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 Precursors for the
2013 Base Year
[tpd]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Direct
Category PM2.5 NOX SOX VOC Ammonia
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stationary Sources............................. 8.8 38.6 7.2 87.1 13.9
Area Sources................................... 41.5 8.1 0.3 153.4 310.9
On-Road Mobile Sources......................... 6.4 183.1 0.6 49.8 4.4
Non-Road Mobile Sources........................ 5.8 87.4 0.3 33.8 0.0
----------------------------------------------------------------
Totals a................................... 62.5 317.2 8.5 324.1 329.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix B, tables B-1 to B-5.
a Totals reflect disaggregated emissions and may not add exactly as shown here due to rounding.
3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
We have reviewed the 2013 base year emissions inventories in the
SJV PM2.5 Plan and emissions inventory estimation
methodologies used by California for consistency with CAA requirements
and the EPA's guidance. We find that the inventories are based on the
most current and accurate information available to the State and
District at the time they were developing the Plan and inventories,
including the latest version of California's mobile source emissions
model that had been approved by the EPA at the time, EMFAC2014. The
inventories comprehensively address all source categories in the San
Joaquin Valley PM2.5 nonattainment area and are consistent
with the EPA's inventory guidance.
In accordance with 40 CFR 51.1008(c)(1), the 2013 base year is one
of the three years for which monitored data were used to determine that
the San Joaquin Valley area failed to attain the PM2.5 NAAQS
by the applicable Serious area attainment date for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS,\79\ and it represents actual annual average
emissions of all sources within the nonattainment area. Direct
PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors are included in the
inventories, and filterable and condensable direct PM2.5
emissions are identified separately.
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\79\ 81 FR 84481, 84482 (November 23, 2016).
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For these reasons, we are proposing to approve the 2013 base year
emissions inventories in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS as meeting the requirements of CAA
section 172(c)(3) and 40 CFR 51.1008.
B. PM2.5 Precursors
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
The composition of PM2.5 is complex and highly variable
due in part to the large contribution of secondary PM2.5 to
total fine particle mass in most locations, and to the complexity of
secondary particle formation processes. A large number of possible
chemical reactions, often non-linear in nature, can convert gaseous
NOX, SO2, VOC, and ammonia to PM2.5,
making them precursors to PM2.5.\80\ Formation of secondary
PM2.5 may also depend on atmospheric conditions, including
solar radiation, temperature, and relative humidity, and the
interactions of precursors with preexisting particles and with cloud or
fog droplets.\81\
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\80\ ``Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter'' (EPA/600/P-
99/002aF), EPA, October 2004, Chapter 3.
\81\ ``Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Final Revisions to the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter''
(EPA/452/R-12-005), EPA, December 2012), 2-1.
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Under subpart 4 of part D, title I of the CAA and the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, each state containing a
PM2.5 nonattainment area must evaluate all PM2.5
precursors for regulation unless, for any given PM2.5
precursor, the state demonstrates to the Administrator's satisfaction
that such precursor does not contribute significantly to
PM2.5 levels that exceed the NAAQS in the nonattainment
area.\82\ The provisions of
[[Page 38659]]
subpart 4 do not define the term ``precursor'' for purposes of
PM2.5, nor do they explicitly require the control of any
specifically identified PM2.5 precursor. The statutory
definition of ``air pollutant,'' however, provides that the term
``includes any precursors to the formation of any air pollutant, to the
extent the Administrator has identified such precursor or precursors
for the particular purpose for which the term `air pollutant' is
used.'' \83\ The EPA has identified NOX, SO2,
VOC, and ammonia as precursors to the formation of
PM2.5.\84\ Accordingly, the attainment plan requirements of
subpart 4 apply to emissions of all four precursor pollutants and
direct PM2.5 from all types of stationary, area, and mobile
sources, except as otherwise provided in the Act (e.g., CAA section
189(e)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ 81 FR 58010, 58017-58020.
\83\ CAA section 302(g).
\84\ 81 FR 58010, 58015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 189(e) of the Act requires that the control requirements
for major stationary sources of direct PM10 also apply to
major stationary sources of PM10 precursors, except where
the Administrator determines that such sources do not contribute
significantly to PM10 levels that exceed the standard in the
area. Section 189(e) contains the only express exception to the control
requirements under subpart 4 (e.g., requirements for RACM and RACT,
BACM and BACT, most stringent measures, and new source review (NSR))
for sources of direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursor
emissions. Although section 189(e) explicitly addresses only major
stationary sources, the EPA interprets the Act as authorizing it also
to determine, under appropriate circumstances, that regulation of
specific PM2.5 precursors from other source categories in a
given nonattainment area is not necessary.\85\ For example, under the
EPA's longstanding interpretation of the control requirements that
apply to stationary, area, and mobile sources of PM10
precursors in the nonattainment area under CAA section 172(c)(1) and
subpart 4,\86\ a state may demonstrate in a SIP submission that control
of a certain precursor pollutant is not necessary in light of its
insignificant contribution to ambient PM10 levels in the
nonattainment area.\87\
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\85\ Id. at 58018-58019.
\86\ General Preamble, 57 FR 13498, 13539-13542.
\87\ Courts have upheld this approach to the requirements of
subpart 4 for PM10. See, e.g., Assoc. of Irritated
Residents v. EPA, et al., 423 F.3d 989 (9th Cir. 2005).
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Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, a state may elect
to submit to the EPA a ``comprehensive precursor demonstration'' for a
specific nonattainment area to show that emissions of a particular
precursor from all existing sources located in the nonattainment area
do not contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed
the standards in the area.\88\ If the EPA determines that the
contribution of the precursor to PM2.5 levels in the area is
not significant and approves the demonstration, the state is not
required to control emissions of the relevant precursor from existing
sources in the attainment plan.\89\
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\88\ 40 CFR 51.1006(a)(1).
\89\ Id.
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In addition, in May 2019, the EPA issued the ``Fine Particulate
Matter (PM2.5) Precursor Demonstration Guidance''
(``PM2.5 Precursor Guidance''),\90\ which provides
recommendations to states for analyzing nonattainment area
PM2.5 emissions and developing such optional precursor
demonstrations, consistent with the PM2.5 SIP Requirements
Rule. The PM2.5 Precursor Guidance builds upon the draft
version of the guidance, released on November 17, 2016 (``Draft
PM2.5 Precursor Guidance''), which CARB referenced in
developing its precursor demonstration in the SJV PM2.5
Plan.\91\ The EPA's recommendations in the PM2.5 Precursor
Guidance are essentially the same as those in the Draft
PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, including the recommended annual
contribution threshold of 0.2 [mu]g/m\3\.
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\90\ ``PM2.5 Precursor Demonstration Guidance,'' EPA-
454/R-19-004, May 2019, including memorandum dated May 30, 2019 from
Scott Mathias, Acting Director, Air Quality Policy Division and
Richard Wayland, Director, Air Quality Assessment Division, Office
of Air Quality Planning and Standards (OAQPS), EPA to Regional Air
Division Directors, Regions 1-10, EPA.
\91\ ``PM2.5 Precursor Demonstration Guidance, Draft
for Public Review and Comments,'' EPA-454/P-16-001, November 17,
2016, including memorandum dated November 17, 2016 from Stephen D.
Page, Director, OAQPS, EPA to Regional Air Division Directors,
Regions 1-10, EPA.
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We are evaluating the SJV PM2.5 Plan in accordance with
the presumption embodied within subpart 4 that all PM2.5
precursors must be addressed in the State's evaluation of potential
control measures, unless the State adequately demonstrates that
emissions of a particular precursor or precursors do not contribute
significantly to ambient PM2.5 levels that exceed the
PM2.5 NAAQS in the nonattainment area. In reviewing any
determination by the State to exclude a PM2.5 precursor from
the required evaluation of potential control measures, we consider both
the magnitude of the precursor's contribution to ambient
PM2.5 concentrations in the nonattainment area and the
sensitivity of ambient PM2.5 concentrations in the area to
reductions in emissions of that precursor.
2. Summary of the State's Submission
The State presents a summary of its PM2.5 precursor
analysis in Chapter 5 of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan and the full
precursor demonstration in Appendix G (``Precursor Demonstration'') of
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.\92\ Additional modeling results are
presented in Appendix K (``Modeling Attainment Demonstration''),
section 5.6 (``PM2.5 Precursor Sensitivity Analysis''). CARB
also provided clarifying information on its precursor assessment,
including an Attachment A to its letter transmitting the 2018
PM2.5 Plan to the EPA \93\ and further clarifications in
five email transmittals.\94\ The CARB Staff Report contains additional
discussion of the role of ammonia in the formation of ammonium nitrate
and the role of VOC in the formation of ammonium nitrate and secondary
organic aerosol.\95\
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\92\ A copy of the contents of Appendix G appears in the CARB
Staff Report, Appendix C4 (``Precursor Demonstrations for Ammonia,
SOX, and ROG'').
\93\ Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Michael Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region
9, Attachment A (``Clarifying information for the San Joaquin Valley
2018 Plan regarding model sensitivity related to ammonia and ammonia
controls'').
\94\ Email dated June 20, 2019, from Jeremy Avise, CARB, to
Scott Bohning, EPA Region IX, Subject: ``RE: SJV model disbenefit
from SOX reduction,'' with attachment (``CARB's June 2019
Precursor Clarification''); email dated September 19, 2019, from
Jeremy Avise, CARB, to Scott Bohning, EPA Region IX, Subject: ``FW:
SJV species responses,'' with attachments (``CARB's September 2019
Precursor Clarification''); email dated October 18, 2019, from Laura
Carr, CARB, to Scott Bohning, Jeanhee Hong, and Rory Mays, EPA
Region IX, Subject: ``Clarifying information on ammonia,'' with
attachment ``Clarifying Information on Ammonia'' (``CARB's October
2019 Precursor Clarification''); email dated April 19, 2021, from
Laura Carr, CARB, to Rory Mays, EPA Region IX, Subject: ``Ammonia
update,'' with attachment ``Update on Ammonia in the San Joaquin
Valley'' (``CARB's April 19, 2021 Precursor Clarification''); and
email dated April 26, 2021, from Laura Carr, CARB, to Scott Bohning,
EPA Region IX, Subject: ``RE: Ammonia update,'' with attachment
``Ammonia in San Joaquin Valley'' (``CARB's April 26, 2021 Precursor
Clarification'').
\95\ CARB Staff Report, Appendix C, 9-16. The CARB Staff Report,
Appendix C4 (``Precursor Demonstrations for Ammonia, SOX,
and ROG'') is very similar to the contents of Appendix G of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.
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The Plan provides both concentration-based and sensitivity-based
analyses of precursor contributions to ambient PM2.5
concentrations in the San Joaquin Valley. The State supplemented the
sensitivity analysis, particularly for ammonia, with additional
information, including factors identified in the PM2.5
Precursor Guidance, such as emission trends, the appropriateness of
future year versus base year sensitivity, available emission controls,
and the
[[Page 38660]]
severity of nonattainment.\96\ These analyses led the State to conclude
that direct PM2.5 and NOX emissions contribute
significantly to ambient PM2.5 levels that exceed the
PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley while ammonia,
SOX, and VOC do not contribute significantly to such
exceedances.\97\ We summarize the State's analysis and conclusions
below. For a more detailed summary of the precursor demonstration in
the Plan, please refer to the EPA's ``Technical Support Document, EPA
Evaluation of PM2.5 Precursor Demonstration, San Joaquin
Valley PM2.5 Plan for the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS,''
February 2020 (``EPA's PM2.5 Precursor TSD'').
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\96\ PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, 18-19 (consideration
of additional information), 31 (available emission controls), and
35-36 (appropriateness of future year versus base year sensitivity).
\97\ Direct PM2.5 emissions are considered a primary
source of ambient PM2.5 (i.e., no further formation in
the atmosphere is required), and therefore is not considered a
precursor pollutant under subpart 4, which may differ from a more
generalized understanding of what contributes to ambient
PM2.5.
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For ammonia, SOX, and VOC, CARB assessed the 2015 annual
average concentration of each precursor in ambient PM2.5 at
Bakersfield, for which the necessary speciated PM2.5 data
are available and where the highest PM2.5 design values have
been recorded in most years, and compared those concentrations to the
recommended annual average contribution threshold of 0.2 [mu]g/m\3\
from the Draft PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, which was available
at the time the State developed the SIP.\98\ The contributions of
ammonia, SOX, and VOC were 5.2 [mu]g/m\3\, 1.6 [mu]g/m\3\,
and 6.2 [mu]g/m\3\, respectively. Given that these levels are well
above the EPA's 0.2 [mu]g/m\3\ recommended contribution threshold, the
State proceeded with a sensitivity-based analysis.
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\98\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix G, 3. The Plan does
not present a concentration-based analysis for the 24-hour average
concentrations in the San Joaquin Valley. Instead, CARB relied on
the annual average concentration-based analysis as an interim step
to the sensitivity-based analysis, for which CARB assessed the
sensitivity of both 24-hour average and annual average ambient
PM2.5 concentrations to precursor emissions reductions.
Separately, the Plan presents a graphical representation of annual
average ambient PM2.5 components (i.e., crustal
particulate matter, elemental carbon, organic matter, ammonium
sulfate, and ammonium nitrate) for 2011-2013 for Bakersfield,
Fresno, and Modesto. 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 3, 3-3 to
3-4.
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The State's sensitivity-based analysis used the same Community
Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling platform as that used for the
Plan's attainment demonstration. The State modeled the sensitivity of
ambient PM2.5 concentration in the San Joaquin Valley to 30
percent and 70 percent emissions reductions in 2013, 2020, and 2024 for
each of ammonia, SOX, and VOC. The State estimated baseline
(2013, 2020, and 2024) design values for PM2.5 using
relative response factors (RRFs) and calculated the ammonia,
SOX, and VOC precursor contribution for a given year and for
each sensitivity scenario (30 percent and 70 percent emissions
reductions) as the difference between its baseline design value and the
design value for each sensitivity scenario.\99\ Based on these analyses
and supporting information, the State concludes that ammonia,
SOX, and VOC emissions do not contribute significantly to
PM2.5 levels that exceed the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.
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\99\ This procedure is the procedure recommended by the EPA.
PM2.5 Precursor Guidance, 37.
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3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
As discussed in section IV of this proposal, the EPA is proposing
to disapprove the attainment demonstration and related elements in the
SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS,
including the five percent annual emission reductions demonstration,
reasonable further progress (RFP) demonstration, and quantitative
milestones, based on ambient monitoring data that show that the Plan
was insufficient to achieve attainment of the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS by December 31, 2020, the State's projected
attainment date. Given that we are proposing to disapprove the
attainment demonstration, and given that the precursor demonstration
for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS largely relies on the
technical analyses and assumptions that provide the basis for the
attainment demonstration, we are also proposing to disapprove the
precursor demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS. Therefore, all precursors to the
formation of PM2.5 in the San Joaquin Valley (i.e.,
NOX, ammonia, SOX, and VOC) remain
``PM2.5 plan precursors'' as defined in 40 CFR 51.1000 for
purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for the Plan that is
the subject of this proposal.
If the EPA takes final action on the SJV PM2.5 Plan as
proposed, California will be required to develop and submit a revised
plan for the San Joaquin Valley area that addresses the applicable CAA
requirements, including the requirements of CAA section 189(d). Under
40 CFR 51.1006, the State will be required to submit an updated
precursor demonstration if it seeks to exempt sources of a particular
precursor from control requirements in the new Serious area attainment
demonstration. For these reasons, and because we are proposing to
disapprove the precursor demonstration on the basis of our proposed
disapproval of the attainment demonstration, we are not providing a
full evaluation of the precursor demonstration for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS in the SJV PM2.5 Plan at this time.
C. Attainment Plan Control Strategy
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
The overarching requirement for the CAA section 189(d) attainment
control strategy is that it provides for attainment of the standards as
expeditiously as practicable.\100\ The control strategy must include
any additional measures (beyond those already adopted in previous SIPs
for the area as RACM/RACT or BACM/BACT) that are needed for the area to
attain expeditiously. This includes reassessing any measures previously
rejected during the development of any Moderate area or Serious area
attainment plan control strategy.\101\ The plan must also demonstrate
that it will, at a minimum, achieve an annual five percent reduction in
emissions of direct PM2.5 or any PM2.5 plan
precursor from sources in the area until attainment, based on the most
recent emissions inventory for the area.\102\
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\100\ 81 FR 58010, 58100.
\101\ 40 CFR 50.1010(c)(2)(ii).
\102\ CAA section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c).
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In the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, the EPA clarified
its interpretation of the statutory language in CAA section 189(d)
requiring a state to submit a new attainment plan to achieve annual
reductions ``from the date of such submission until attainment,'' to
mean annual reductions beginning from the due date of such submission
until the new projected attainment date for the area based on the new
or additional control measures identified to achieve at least five
percent emissions reductions annually.\103\ This interpretation is
intended to make clear that even if a state is late in submitting its
CAA section 189(d) plan, the area must still achieve its annual five
percent emission reductions beginning from the date by
[[Page 38661]]
which the state was required to make its CAA section 189(d) submission,
not by some later date. Because the deadline for California to submit a
section 189(d) plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the San
Joaquin Valley was December 31, 2016, one year after the December 31,
2015 attainment date for these NAAQS under CAA section 188(c)(2), the
starting point for the five percent emission reduction requirement
under section 189(d) for this area is 2017.
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\103\ 81 FR 58010, 58101. The new projected attainment date is
established by the EPA in accordance with the provisions of CAA
sections 179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2), which require that the new
attainment date be as expeditious as practicable but no later than 5
years from the date of publication in the Federal Register of the
EPA's determination that the area failed to attain the relevant
NAAQS, except that the EPA may extend the attainment date by up to 5
additional years based on the severity of nonattainment and the
availability and feasibility of pollution control measures. Id. at
58103.
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As discussed in section III of this proposed rule, a state with a
Serious PM2.5 nonattainment area that fails to attain the
NAAQS by the applicable Serious area attainment date must also address
any statutory requirements applicable to Moderate and Serious
nonattainment area plans under CAA sections 172 and 189 of the CAA to
the extent that those requirements have not already been met. Because
the EPA has not previously taken action to approve the California SIP
as meeting the Serious nonattainment area planning requirements under
CAA sections 172 and 189 for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for
the San Joaquin Valley area, the EPA is reviewing the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for compliance with those requirements, including
the requirement for BACM.
Section 189(b)(1)(B) of the Act requires for any Serious
PM2.5 nonattainment area that the state submit provisions to
assure that BACM for the control of PM2.5 and
PM2.5 precursors shall be implemented no later than four
years after the date the area is reclassified as a Serious area. The
EPA has defined BACM in the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule to
mean ``any technologically and economically feasible control measure
that . . . can achieve greater permanent and enforceable emissions
reductions of direct PM2.5 emissions and/or emissions of
PM2.5 plan precursors from sources in the area than can be
achieved through the implementation of RACM on the same source(s). BACM
includes best available control technology (BACT).'' \104\
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\104\ 40 CFR 51.1000 (definitions). In longstanding guidance,
the EPA has similarly defined BACM to mean, ``among other things,
the maximum degree of emissions reduction achievable for a source or
source category, which is determined on a case-by-case basis
considering energy, environmental, and economic impacts.'' General
Preamble Addendum, 42010, 42013.
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The EPA generally considers BACM a control level that goes beyond
existing RACM-level controls, for example by expanding the use of RACM
controls or by requiring preventative measures instead of
remediation.\105\ Indeed, as implementation of BACM and BACT is
required when a Moderate nonattainment area is reclassified as Serious
due to its inability to attain the NAAQS through implementation of
``reasonable'' measures, it is logical that ``best'' control measures
should represent a more stringent and potentially more costly level of
control.\106\ If RACM and RACT level controls of emissions have been
insufficient to reach attainment, the CAA contemplates the
implementation of more stringent controls, controls on more sources, or
other adjustments to the control strategy necessary to attain the NAAQS
in the area.
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\105\ 81 FR 58010, 58081 and General Preamble Addendum, 42011,
42013.
\106\ Id. and General Preamble Addendum, 42009-42010.
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Consistent with longstanding guidance provided in the General
Preamble Addendum, the preamble to the PM2.5 SIP
Requirements Rule discusses the following steps for determining BACM
and BACT:
(1) Develop a comprehensive emissions inventory of the sources of
PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors;
(2) Identify potential control measures;
(3) Determine whether an available control measure or technology is
technologically feasible;
(4) Determine whether an available control measure or technology is
economically feasible; and
(5) Determine the earliest date by which a control measure or
technology can be implemented in whole or in part.\107\
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\107\ 81 FR 58010, 58083-58085.
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The EPA allows consideration of factors such as physical plant
layout, energy requirements, needed infrastructure, and workforce type
and habits when considering technological feasibility. For purposes of
evaluating economic feasibility, the EPA allows consideration of
factors such as the capital costs, operating and maintenance costs, and
cost effectiveness (i.e., cost per ton of pollutant reduced by a
measure or technology) associated with the measure or control.\108\
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\108\ 40 CFR 51.1010(a)(3) and 81 FR 58010, 58041-58042.
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Once these analyses are complete, the state must use this
information to develop enforceable control measures and submit them to
the EPA for evaluation as SIP provisions to meet the basic requirements
of CAA section 110 and any other applicable substantive provisions of
the Act.
2. Summary of the State's Submission and the EPA's Evaluation and
Proposed Action
The control strategy in the SJV PM2.5 Plan is based on
ongoing emissions reductions from baseline control measures. As the
term is used here, baseline measures are State and District regulations
adopted prior to the development of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that
continue to achieve emissions reductions through the projected 2020
attainment year and beyond. The 2018 PM2.5 Plan describes
these measures in Chapter 4,\109\ Appendix C (``Stationary Source
Control Measure Analyses''), and Appendix D (``Mobile Source Control
Measure Analyses''). Reductions from these baseline measures are
incorporated into the projected baseline inventories and reductions
from District measures are individually quantified in Appendix C.
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\109\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, Table 4-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan states that mobile sources emit over
85 percent of the NOX in the San Joaquin Valley and that
CARB has adopted and amended regulations to reduce public exposure to
diesel particulate matter, which includes direct PM2.5 and
NOX, from ``fuel sources, freight transport sources like
heavy-duty diesel trucks, transportation sources like passenger cars
and buses, and non-road sources like large construction equipment.''
\110\
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\110\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, 4-9. For CARB's
BACM analysis for mobile source measures, see 2018 PM2.5
Plan, Appendix D, including analyses for on-road light-duty vehicles
and fuels (starting on page D-17), on-road heavy-duty vehicles and
fuels (starting on page D-35), and non-road sources (starting on
page D-64).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given the need for substantial emissions reductions from mobile and
area sources to meet the NAAQS in California nonattainment areas, the
State of California has developed stringent control measures for on-
road and non-road mobile sources and the fuels that power them.
California has unique authority under CAA section 209 (subject to a
waiver or authorization as applicable by the EPA) to adopt and
implement new emissions standards for many categories of on-road
vehicles and engines and new and in-use non-road vehicles and engines.
The EPA has approved such mobile source regulations for which waiver
authorizations have been issued as revisions to the California
SIP.\111\
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\111\ For example, see 81 FR 39424 (June 16, 2016); 82 FR 14446
(March 21, 2017); and 83 FR 23232 (May 18, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CARB's mobile source program extends beyond regulations that are
subject to the waiver or authorization process set forth in CAA section
209 to
[[Page 38662]]
include standards and other requirements to control emissions from in-
use heavy-duty trucks and buses, gasoline and diesel fuel
specifications, and many other types of mobile sources. Generally,
these regulations have also been submitted and approved as revisions to
the California SIP.\112\
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\112\ For example, see the EPA's approval of standards and other
requirements to control emissions from in-use heavy-duty diesel
trucks (77 FR 20308, April 4, 2012), and revisions to the California
on-road reformulated gasoline and diesel fuel regulations (75 FR
26653, May 12, 2010).
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As to stationary and area sources, the SJV PM2.5 Plan
states that stringent regulations adopted for prior attainment plans
continue to reduce emissions of NOX and direct
PM2.5.\113\ Specifically, Table 4-1 of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan identifies 33 District measures that limit
NOX and direct PM2.5 emissions from stationary
and area sources.\114\
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\113\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, 4-3. For the
District's BACM analysis for stationary and area source measures,
see 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix C.
\114\ Id. at Chapter 4, Table 4-1.
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a. Best Available Control Measures
The State's BACM demonstration is presented in Appendix C
(``Stationary Source Controls'') and Appendix D (``Mobile Source
Control Measure Analyses'') of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. As
discussed in section IV.A of this proposed rule, Appendix B
(``Emissions Inventory'') of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan contains
the planning inventories for direct PM2.5 and all
PM2.5 precursors (NOX, SOX, VOC, and
ammonia) for the San Joaquin Valley nonattainment area together with
documentation to support these inventories. Each inventory includes
emissions from stationary, area, on-road, and non-road emission
sources, and the State specifically identifies the condensable
component of direct PM2.5 for relevant stationary source and
area source categories. As discussed in section IV.B of this proposed
rule, the State concludes that the Plan should control emissions of
PM2.5 and NOX to reach attainment. Accordingly,
the BACM and BACT evaluation in the Plan addresses potential controls
for sources of those pollutants.
For stationary and area sources, the District identifies the
sources of direct PM2.5 and NOX in the San
Joaquin Valley that are subject to District emission control measures
and provides its evaluation of these regulations for compliance with
BACM requirements in Appendix C of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. As
part of its process for identifying candidate BACM and considering the
technical and economic feasibility of additional control measures, the
District reviewed the EPA's guidance documents on BACM, additional
guidance documents on control measures for direct PM2.5 and
NOX emission sources, and control measures implemented in
other ozone and PM2.5 nonattainment areas in California and
other states.\115\ The District also provides an analysis of several
SIP-approved VOC regulations that, according to the District, also
provide ammonia co-benefits.\116\
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\115\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Chapter 4, section 4.3.1.
\116\ Id. at Appendix C., section C.25.
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For mobile sources, CARB identifies the sources of direct
PM2.5 and NOX in the San Joaquin Valley that are
subject to the State's emission control measures and provides its
evaluation of these regulations for compliance with BACM requirements
in Appendix D of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. Appendix D describes
CARB's process for determining BACM, including identification of the
sources of direct PM2.5 and NOX in the San
Joaquin Valley, identification of potential control measures for such
sources, assessment of the stringency and feasibility of the potential
control measures, and adoption and implementation of feasible control
measures.\117\ Appendix D of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan also
describes the current efforts of the eight local jurisdiction
metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) to implement cost-effective
transportation control measures (TCMs) in the San Joaquin Valley.\118\
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\117\ Id. at Appendix D, Chapter II.
\118\ Id. at Appendix D, D-127 and D-128.
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Because we are proposing to disapprove the comprehensive precursor
demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS, all precursors to the formation of
PM2.5 (i.e., NOX, ammonia, SOX and
VOC) remain PM2.5 plan precursors subject to control
requirements under subpart 4 of part D, title I of the Act for purposes
of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley.
The SJV PM2.5 Plan contains State and District control
measures and related BACM analyses for sources of direct
PM2.5 and NOX in the San Joaquin Valley but does
not contain such measures or analyses for sources of SOX or
VOC emissions, given the State's assumption that these precursors would
not be subject to controls. Furthermore, while the District provides an
analysis of potential control of ammonia sources, the Plan does not
identify any specific, enforceable requirement to reduce ammonia
emissions in the area and does not demonstrate that the State or
District adequately considered potential control measures for ammonia
sources, given the State's assumption that ammonia would not be subject
to controls. Without an approvable precursor demonstration, the SJV
PM2.5 Plan does not satisfy BACM and BACT requirements for
sources of direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 plan precursors
for purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. We therefore
propose to disapprove the BACM/BACT demonstration in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for failure to meet the requirements of CAA
section 189(b)(1)(B) and 40 CFR 51.1010 for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS.
b. Five Percent Emission Reduction Requirement
The SJV PM2.5 Plan's demonstration of annual five
percent reductions in NOX emissions is in section 5.2 of the
2018 PM2.5 Plan. As shown in Table 3, the demonstration uses
the 2013 base year inventory as the starting point from which the five
percent per year emission reductions are calculated and uses 2017 as
the year from which the reductions start. The target required reduction
in 2017 is five percent of the base year (2013) inventory, which is
approximately 15.9 tpd of NOX, and the targets for
subsequent years are additional reductions of five percent each year
until the 2020 attainment year. The projected emissions inventories
reflect NOX emissions reductions achieved by baseline
control measures and the demonstration shows that these NOX
emissions reductions are greater than the required five percent per
year.
Table 3--2017-2020 Annual Five Percent Emission Reductions Demonstration for the San Joaquin Valley
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CEPAM
% Reduction 5% Target (tpd inventory
Year from 2013 base NOX) v1.05 (tpd Meets 5%?
year NOX)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2013 (base year).................... 317.3
[[Page 38663]]
2017................................ 5 301.3 233.4 Yes.
2018................................ 10 285.5 221.5 Yes.
2019................................ 15 269.6 214.5 Yes.
2020................................ 20 253.8 203.3 Yes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Table 5-2.
The State's methodology for calculating the five percent emission
reduction targets for the years 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020 is
consistent with CAA requirements as interpreted in the PM2.5
SIP Requirements Rule, and the Plan shows that NOX emissions
reductions from 2017 to 2020 are greater than the required five percent
per year. However, the language in section 189(d) compels us to
conclude that the five percent demonstration in the Plan does not meet
that section's requirement for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
CAA section 189(d) requires that the plan provide for annual reductions
of PM2.5 or a PM2.5 precursor of not less than
five percent each year from the date of submission of the plan until
the applicable attainment date approved by the EPA.\119\ The Plan
submitted by California does not demonstrate reductions after 2020
because it projects attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS by December 31, 2020. Because the EPA is proposing to disapprove
the attainment demonstration, as discussed in section IV.D, based on
ambient monitoring data for 2018-2020 indicating that the San Joaquin
Valley did not attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by the
December 31, 2020 attainment date projected by the State in the SJV
PM2.5 Plan, December 31, 2020 is not the applicable
attainment date for purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS
in this area, and the Plan does not meet the requirement to demonstrate
five percent reductions per year until attainment. Therefore, the EPA
is proposing to disapprove the demonstration of the five percent annual
emission reductions in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for failure to
meet the requirements of CAA section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c) for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\119\ Under 40 CFR 51.1000, the applicable attainment date is
the latest statutory date by which an area is required to attain a
particular PM2.5 NAAQS or the attainment date approved by
the EPA as part of an attainment plan for the area. For a Serious
nonattainment area subject to the requirements of CAA section
189(d), the EPA establishes the applicable attainment date in
accordance with the provisions of CAA sections 179(d)(3) and
172(a)(2). 81 FR 58010, 58103.
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D. Attainment Demonstration and Modeling
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
Section 189(d) of the CAA requires a state with a Serious
nonattainment area that failed to attain the NAAQS by the Serious area
attainment date to submit a revised attainment demonstration as part of
a new plan. The PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule explains that
the same general requirements that apply to Moderate and Serious area
plans under CAA sections 189(a) and 189(b) should apply to plans
developed pursuant to CAA section 189(d)--i.e., the plan must include a
demonstration (including air quality modeling) that the control
strategy provides for attainment of the PM2.5 NAAQS as
expeditiously as practicable.\120\ For purposes of determining the
attainment date that is as expeditious as practicable, the state must
conduct future year modeling that takes into account emissions growth,
known controls (including any controls that were previously determined
to be RACM/RACT or BACM/BACT), the five percent per year emissions
reductions required by CAA section 189(d), and any other emissions
controls that are needed for expeditious attainment of the NAAQS.
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\120\ 81 FR 58010, 58102.
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The EPA's PM2.5 modeling guidance \121\ (``Modeling
Guidance'' and ``Modeling Guidance Update'') recommends that a
photochemical model, such as the Comprehensive Air Quality Model with
Extensions (CAMx) or Community Multiscale Air Quality Model (CMAQ), be
used to simulate a base case, with meteorological and emissions inputs
reflecting a base case year, to replicate concentrations monitored in
that year. The model application to the base year undergoes a
performance evaluation to ensure that it satisfactorily corroborates
the concentrations monitored in that year. The model may then be used
to simulate emissions occurring in other years required for a plan,
namely the base year (which may differ from the base case year) and a
future year.\122\ The modeled response to the emission changes between
those years is used to calculate RRFs that are applied to the design
value in the base year to estimate the projected design value in the
future year for comparison against the NAAQS. Separate RRFs are
estimated for each chemical species component of PM2.5, and
for each quarter of the year, to reflect their differing responses to
seasonal meteorological conditions and emissions. Because each species
is handled separately, before applying an RRF, the base year design
value must be speciated using available chemical species measurements--
that is, each day's measured PM2.5 design value must be
split into its species components. The Modeling Guidance provides
additional detail on the recommended approach.\123\
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\121\ Memorandum dated November 29, 2018, from Richard Wayland,
Air Quality Assessment Division, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, EPA, to Regional Air Division Directors, EPA, Subject:
``Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze,'' (``Modeling Guidance''), and
memorandum dated June 28, 2011, from Tyler Fox, Air Quality Modeling
Group, OAQPS, EPA, to Regional Air Program Managers, EPA, Subject:
``Update to the 24 Hour PM2.5 NAAQS Modeled Attainment
Test,'' (``Modeling Guidance Update'').
\122\ In this section, we use the terms ``base case,'' ``base
year'' or ``baseline,'' and ``future year'' as described in section
2.3 of the EPA's Modeling Guidance. The ``base case'' modeling
simulates measured concentrations for a given time period, using
emissions and meteorology for that same year. The modeling ``base
year'' (which can be the same as the base case year) is the
emissions starting point for the plan and for projections to the
future year, both of which are modeled for the attainment
demonstration. Modeling Guidance, 37-38.
\123\ Modeling Guidance, section 4.4, ``What is the Modeled
Attainment Tests for the Annual Average PM2.5 NAAQS.''
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2. Summary of the State's Submission
As discussed in section IV.C, the SJV PM2.5 Plan
includes a modeled demonstration projecting that the San Joaquin Valley
would attain the 1997
[[Page 38664]]
annual PM2.5 NAAQS by December 31, 2020, based on ongoing
emissions reductions from baseline control measures. CARB conducted
photochemical modeling with the CMAQ model using inputs developed from
routinely available meteorological and air quality data, as well as
more detailed and extensive data from the DISCOVER-AQ field study
conducted in January and February of 2013.\124\ The Plan's primary
discussion of the photochemical modeling appears in Appendix K
(``Modeling Attainment Demonstration'') of the 2018 PM2.5
Plan. The State briefly summarizes the area's air quality problem in
Chapter 2 (``Air Quality Challenges and Trends'') and the modeling
results in Chapter 5.3 (``Attainment Demonstration and Modeling'') of
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. The State provides a conceptual model
of PM2.5 formation in the San Joaquin Valley as part of the
modeling protocol in Appendix L (``Modeling Protocol''). Appendix J
(``Modeling Emission Inventory'') describes emission input preparation
procedures. The State presents additional relevant information in
Appendix C (``Weight of Evidence Analysis'') of the CARB Staff Report,
which includes ambient trends and other data in support of the
attainment demonstration.
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\124\ NASA, ``Deriving Information on Surface conditions from
COlumn and VERtically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air
Quality,'' available at https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/discover-aq/.
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CARB's air quality modeling approach investigated the many inter-
connected facets of modeling ambient PM2.5 in the San
Joaquin Valley, including model input preparation, model performance
evaluation, use of the model output for the numerical NAAQS attainment
test, and modeling documentation. Specifically, this required the
development and evaluation of a conceptual model, modeling protocol,
episode (i.e., base year) selection, modeling domain, CMAQ model
selection, initial and boundary condition procedures, meteorological
model choice and performance, modeling emissions inventory preparation
procedures, model performance, attainment test procedure, adjustments
to baseline air quality for modeling, the 2020 attainment test, and an
unmonitored area analysis. These analyses are generally consistent with
the EPA's recommendations in the Modeling Guidance.
The model performance evaluation in Appendix K includes statistical
and graphical measures of model performance. The magnitude and timing
of predicted concentrations of total PM2.5, as well as of
its ammonium and nitrate components, generally match the occurrence of
elevated PM2.5 levels in the measured observations. A
comparison to other recent modeling efforts shows good model
performance on bias, error, and correlation with measurements, for
total PM2.5 and for most of its chemical components. The
Weight of Evidence Analysis shows the downward trend in NOX
emissions along with a 24 to 44 percent decrease in annual
PM2.5 design values between 1999 and 2017.\125\ The analysis
also shows decreases in daily PM2.5 concentrations during
winter, and in the frequency of high PM2.5 concentrations
generally.\126\ Available ambient air quality data show that total
PM2.5 and ammonium nitrate concentrations have declined over
the 2004-2017 period, despite some increases from time to time.\127\
These trends show that there has been an improvement in air quality due
to emissions reductions in the San Joaquin Valley.
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\125\ Weight of Evidence Analysis, 26-27, Figure 12, and Figure
24.
\126\ Id. at Figure 16 and Figure 17.
\127\ Id. at Figure 21.
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The State conducted three CMAQ \128\ simulations: (1) A 2013 base
year simulation to demonstrate that the model reasonably reproduced the
observed PM2.5 concentrations in the San Joaquin Valley; (2)
a 2013 baseline year simulation that was the same as the 2013 base year
simulation but excluded exceptional event emissions, such as wildfire
emissions; and (3) a 2020 future year simulation that reflects
projected emissions growth and reductions due to controls that have
already been adopted and implemented.
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\128\ CMAQ Version 5.0.2.
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Table 4 shows the 2013 base year and 2020 projected future year
annual PM2.5 design values at monitoring sites in the San
Joaquin Valley. The highest 2020 projected design value is 14.6 [mu]g/m
\3\ at the Bakersfield--California monitoring site, which is below the
15.0 [mu]g/m \3\ level of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
Table 4--Projected Future Annual PM2.5 Design Values at Monitoring Sites
in the San Joaquin Valley
[[mu]g/m\3\]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020
Monitoring site 2013 Base Projected
design value design value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bakersfield--California................. 17.2 14.6
Fresno--Garland......................... 16.9 14.2
Hanford................................. 16.5 13.3
Fresno--Hamilton & Winery............... 16.2 13.5
Clovis.................................. 16.1 13.4
Visalia................................. 16.0 13.5
Bakersfield--Planz...................... 15.0 12.4
Madera.................................. 14.9 12.5
Turlock................................. 14.2 11.9
Modesto................................. 13.1 11.4
Merced-M. Street........................ 13.1 10.9
Stockton................................ 13.0 11.0
Merced--S Coffee........................ 11.0 9.3
Manteca................................. 10.1 8.7
Tranquility............................. 7.7 6.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Table 5-4.
[[Page 38665]]
3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
The EPA has reviewed monitoring data recorded at air quality
monitors throughout the San Joaquin Valley PM2.5
nonattainment area to consider whether the area attained the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS by the December 31, 2020 attainment date
projected in the SJV PM2.5 Plan. We based our review on
preliminary but complete and quality-assured ambient air monitoring
data recorded during the three years preceding the State's identified
attainment date (2018-2020).\129\ The EPA has found that the
PM2.5 monitoring network in the San Joaquin Valley currently
meets or exceeds the requirements for the minimum number of monitoring
sites designated as State and Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS) for
PM2.5 and that CARB's and the District's annual network
plans meet the applicable requirements in 40 CFR part 58.\130\
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\129\ At the time of the EPA's review, the State had not yet
certified the 2020 ambient air monitoring data. We understand that
the State is working to certify the data and anticipate that the
2020 data will be certified prior to our final action. We do not
expect the certified data to differ significantly from the data
reflected in this proposal.
\130\ Letter dated October 26, 2020, from Gwen Yoshimura,
Manager, EPA Region 9, Air Quality Analysis Office, to Jon Klassen,
Director of Strategies and Incentives, SJVUAPCD, and letter dated
November 5, 2020, from Gwen Yoshimura, Manager, EPA Region 9, Air
Quality Analysis Office, to Ravi Ramalingam, Chief, Consumer
Products and Air Quality Assessment Branch, CARB.
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Table 5 shows the annual arithmetic means and preliminary annual
PM2.5 design values at each of the 18 SLAMS monitoring sites
within the San Joaquin Valley nonattainment area for the most recent
three-year period (2018-2020). The data show that the annual design
value for the 2018-2020 period ranged from 9.5 to 17.6 [mu]g/m \3\
across the area at monitors with valid design values, and that the
valid design values exceeded 15.0 [mu]g/m \3\ (i.e., the level of the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS) at eight of the monitoring sites,
indicating that the area did not attain the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS by the projected December 31, 2020 attainment
date.
As discussed in section IV.D.2, CARB's Weight of Evidence Analysis
shows a long-term downward trend in annual PM2.5 design
values through 2017, the latest year prior to development of the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for which air quality data were available. As
described in the Weight of Evidence Analysis, the San Joaquin Valley
has shown a general downward trend in measured PM2.5
concentrations despite the effects of extensive wildfires in 2008 and
unusual meteorological conditions during the 2013/2014 winter that
resulted in higher concentrations during those periods. Similarly, the
San Joaquin Valley area may have experienced higher than normal
PM2.5 concentrations in 2018 and 2020 due to wildfires in
the surrounding areas during the summer and fall months. Table 5 shows
that concentrations at all 17 monitors in the San Joaquin Valley area
with data spanning 2018 to 2020 are significantly higher in 2018 and
2020 relative to concentrations in 2019, possibly due to the wildfires
in those years.
Table 5--2018-2020 Annual PM2.5 Design Values for the San Joaquin Valley Nonattainment Area
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual arithmetic mean ([mu]g/m\3\) 2018-2020
------------------------------------------------ Annual design
County General location site AQS ID values ([mu]g/
2018 2019 2020 m\3\) \a\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fresno.................................... Fresno--Pacific............. 06-019-5025 17.1 11.2 18.7 15.7
Fresno--Garland............. 06-019-0011 16.2 11.1 19.2 15.5
Fresno--Foundry............. 06-019-2016 Inc Inc 20.3 \b\ 20.3
(Inv)
Clovis...................... 06-019-5001 14.3 10.3 18.4 14.4
(Inc) (Inv)
Tranquility................. 06-019-2009 11.1 5.8 11.5 9.5
Kern...................................... Bakersfield--Planz Road..... 06-029-0016 19.4 13.0 20.3 17.6
Bakersfield--California Ave. 06-029-0014 17.7 11.9 19.7 16.4
Bakersfield--Golden State 06-029-0010 18.1 12.4 20.0 16.8
Highway.
Kings..................................... Corcoran.................... 06-031-0004 17.2 12.1 19.5 16.3
Hanford..................... 06-031-1004 17.7 12.2 19.9 16.6
Madera.................................... Madera--Avenue 14........... 06-039-2010 14.0 9.7 16.9 13.5
Merced.................................... Merced--M Street............ 06-047-2510 14.2 9.6 15.5 13.1
Merced--Coffee.............. 06-047-0003 15.1 9.1 14.7 13.0
San Joaquin............................... Stockton.................... 06-077-1002 17.6 9.3 14.4 13.8
Manteca..................... 06-077-2010 13.4 8.3 14.8 12.2
(Inc) (Inv)
Stanislaus................................ Modesto..................... 06-099-0005 15.2 7.7 14.5 12.5
Turlock..................... 06-099-0006 17.2 10.7 15.5 14.5
Tulare.................................... Visalia..................... 06-107-2002 17.3 12.9 19.7 16.7
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: EPA, Preliminary 2020 AQS Design Value Report, AMP480, accessed June 15, 2021.
Notes: Inc = Incomplete data. Inv = Invalid design value due to incomplete data. Design values shown in bold type do not meet the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS.
\a\ This preliminary design value includes all available data; no data flagged for exceptional events have been excluded.
\b\ The preliminary 2018-2020 design value at Fresno-Foundry (AQS ID: 06-019-2016) is based on concentration data from January 1, 2020 to December 31,
2020. The site began operation in 2020; therefore, data from January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2019 are not available. Based on 40 CFR part 50, Appendix
N, section 4.1(b), three years of valid annual means are required to produce a valid annual PM2.5 NAAQS design value. Thus, the Fresno-Foundry 2018-
2020 preliminary design value is considered invalid.
Under 40 CFR part 50, appendix N, because the 2018-2020 preliminary
design value exceeded the 15.0 [mu]g/m \3\ level of the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS, the San Joaquin Valley area did not attain the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by December 31, 2020, as projected
in the SJV PM2.5 Plan. Therefore, the EPA is proposing to
disapprove the attainment
[[Page 38666]]
demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS for failure to meet the requirements of CAA
sections 189(d) and 179(d) and 40 CFR 51.1011(b). Because our proposal
is based on ambient monitoring data clearly indicating that the Plan
was insufficient to achieve attainment of the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS by the December 31, 2020 attainment date, we do
not provide a full evaluation of the attainment demonstration analyses
for these NAAQS at this time.
E. Reasonable Further Progress and Quantitative Milestones
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
CAA section 172(c)(2) provides that all nonattainment area plans
shall require RFP toward attainment. In addition, CAA section 189(c)
requires that all PM2.5 nonattainment area SIPs include
quantitative milestones to be achieved every three years until the area
is redesignated to attainment and that demonstrate RFP. Section 171(l)
of the Act defines RFP as ``such annual incremental reductions in
emissions of the relevant air pollutant as are required by [Part D] or
may reasonably be required by the Administrator for the purpose of
ensuring attainment of the applicable [NAAQS] by the applicable date.''
Neither subpart 1 nor subpart 4 of part D, title I of the Act requires
that states achieve a set percentage of emission reductions in any
given year for purposes of satisfying the RFP requirement. For purposes
of the PM2.5 NAAQS, the EPA has interpreted the RFP
requirement to require that the nonattainment area plans show annual
incremental emission reductions sufficient to maintain generally linear
progress toward attainment by the applicable deadline.\131\
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\131\ General Preamble Addendum, 42015.
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Attainment plans for PM2.5 nonattainment areas should
include detailed schedules for compliance with emission regulations in
the area and provide corresponding annual emission reductions to be
achieved by each milestone in the schedule.\132\ In reviewing an
attainment plan under subpart 4, the EPA considers whether the annual
incremental emission reductions to be achieved are reasonable in light
of the statutory objective of timely attainment. Although early
implementation of the most cost-effective control measures is often
appropriate, states should consider both cost-effectiveness and
pollution reduction effectiveness when developing implementation
schedules for control measures and may implement measures that are more
effective at reducing PM2.5 earlier to provide greater
public health benefits.\133\
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\132\ Id. at 42016.
\133\ Id.
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The PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule establishes specific
regulatory requirements for purposes of satisfying the Act's RFP
requirements and provides related guidance in the preamble to the rule.
Specifically, under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, each
PM2.5 attainment plan must contain an RFP analysis that
includes, at minimum, the following four components: (1) An
implementation schedule for control measures; (2) RFP projected
emissions for direct PM2.5 and all PM2.5 plan
precursors for each applicable milestone year, based on the anticipated
control measure implementation schedule; (3) a demonstration that the
control strategy and implementation schedule will achieve reasonable
progress toward attainment between the base year and the attainment
year; and (4) a demonstration that by the end of the calendar year for
each milestone date for the area, pollutant emissions will be at levels
that reflect either generally linear progress or stepwise progress in
reducing emissions on an annual basis between the base year and the
attainment year.\134\ Additionally, states should estimate the RFP
projected emissions for each quantitative milestone year by sector on a
pollutant-by-pollutant basis.\135\
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\134\ 40 CFR 51.1012(a).
\135\ 81 FR 58010, 58056.
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Section 189(c) of the Act requires that PM2.5 attainment
plans include quantitative milestones that demonstrate RFP. The purpose
of the quantitative milestones is to allow periodic evaluation of the
area's progress towards attainment of the NAAQS consistent with RFP
requirements. Because RFP is an annual emission reduction requirement
and the quantitative milestones are to be achieved every three years,
when a state demonstrates compliance with the quantitative milestone
requirement, it should also demonstrate that RFP has been achieved
during each of the relevant three years. Quantitative milestones should
provide an objective means to evaluate progress toward attainment
meaningfully, e.g., through imposition of emission controls in the
attainment plan and the requirement to quantify those required emission
reductions. The CAA also requires states to submit milestone reports
(due 90 days after each milestone), and these reports should include
calculations and any assumptions made by the state concerning how RFP
has been met, e.g., through quantification of emission reductions to
date.\136\
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\136\ General Preamble Addendum, 42016-42017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CAA does not specify the starting point for counting the three-
year periods for quantitative milestones under CAA section 189(c). In
the General Preamble and General Preamble Addendum, the EPA interpreted
the CAA to require that the starting point for the first three-year
period be the due date for the Moderate area plan submission.\137\ In
keeping with this historical approach, the EPA established December 31,
2014, the deadline that the EPA established for a state's submission of
any additional attainment-related SIP elements necessary to satisfy the
subpart 4 Moderate area requirements for the 1997 PM2.5
NAAQS, as the starting point for the first three-year period under CAA
section 189(c) for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley.\138\
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\137\ General Preamble, 13539, and General Preamble Addendum,
42016.
\138\ 79 FR 31566 (June 2, 2014) (final rule establishing
subpart 4 moderate area classifications and deadline for related SIP
submissions). Although this final rule did not affect any action
that the EPA had previously taken under CAA section 110(k) on a SIP
for a PM2.5 nonattainment area, the EPA noted that states
may need to submit additional SIP elements to fully comply with the
applicable requirements of subpart 4, even for areas with previously
approved PM2.5 attainment plans, and that the deadline
for any such additional plan submissions was December 31, 2014. Id.
at 31569.
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Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, each attainment
plan submission for an area designated nonattainment for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS before January 15, 2015, must contain
quantitative milestones to be achieved no later than three years after
December 31, 2014, and every three years thereafter until the milestone
date that falls within three years after the applicable attainment
date.\139\ If the area fails to attain, this post-attainment date
milestone provides the EPA with the tools necessary to monitor the
area's continued progress toward attainment while the state develops a
new attainment plan.\140\ Quantitative milestones must provide for
objective evaluation of RFP toward timely attainment of the
PM2.5 NAAQS in the area and include, at minimum, a metric
for tracking progress achieved in implementing SIP control measures,
including BACM and BACT, by each milestone date.\141\
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\139\ 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4).
\140\ 81 FR 58010, 58064.
\141\ Id. at 58064 and 58092.
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Because the EPA designated the San Joaquin Valley area as
nonattainment for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS effective
[[Page 38667]]
April 5, 2005,\142\ the plan for this area must contain quantitative
milestones to be achieved no later than three years after December 31,
2014 (i.e., by December 31, 2017), and every three years thereafter
until the milestone date that falls within three years after the
applicable attainment date.\143\
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\142\ 70 FR 944 (January 5, 2005).
\143\ 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4).
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2. Summary of the State's Submission
Appendix H (``RFP, Quantitative Milestones, and Contingency'') of
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan contains the State's RFP demonstration
and quantitative milestones for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS,\144\ and the Valley State SIP Strategy contains the control
measure commitments that CARB has identified as mobile source
quantitative milestones for the 2020 milestone date.\145\ Given the
State's conclusions that ammonia, SOX, and VOC emissions do
not contribute significantly to PM2.5 levels that exceed the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin Valley, as
discussed in section IV.B of this proposed rule, the RFP demonstration
provided by the State addresses emissions of direct PM2.5
and NOX.\146\ Similarly, the State developed quantitative
milestones based upon implementation of control strategy measures in
the adopted SIP and in the SJV PM2.5 Plan that achieve
reductions in emissions of direct PM2.5 and
NOX.\147\ For the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, the
RFP demonstration in the Plan shows generally linear progress toward
attainment.
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\144\ As discussed in footnote 32, all references to Appendix H
in this proposed rule are to the revised version submitted on
February 11, 2020, which replaces the version submitted with the
2018 PM2.5 Plan on May 10, 2019.
\145\ Valley State SIP Strategy, Table 7 (identifying State
measures scheduled for action between 2017 and 2020, inter alia) and
CARB Resolution 18-49, ``San Joaquin Valley Supplement to the 2016
State Strategy for the State Implementation Plan'' (October 25,
2018), 5 (adopting State commitment to begin public processes and
propose for Board consideration the list of proposed SIP measures
outlined in the Valley State SIP Strategy and included in Attachment
A, according to the schedule set forth therein).
\146\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H-1.
\147\ Id. at H-18 and H-19 (District milestones), and H-21 and
H-22 (State milestones).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We describe the RFP demonstration and quantitative milestones in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan in greater detail below.
Reasonable Further Progress
The State addresses the RFP and quantitative milestone requirements
in Appendix H to the 2018 PM2.5 Plan submitted in February
2020. The Plan estimates that emissions of direct PM2.5 and
NOX will generally decline from the 2013 base year to the
projected 2020 attainment year, and beyond to the 2023 post-attainment
quantitative milestone year. The Plan's emissions inventory shows that
direct PM2.5 and NOX are emitted by a large
number and range of sources in the San Joaquin Valley. Table H-2 in
Appendix H contains an anticipated implementation schedule for District
regulatory control measures and Table 4-8 in Chapter 4 of the 2018
PM2.5 Plan contains an anticipated implementation schedule
for CARB control measures in the San Joaquin Valley. Table H-5 in
Appendix H contains projected emissions for each quantitative milestone
year. These emission levels reflect baseline emission projections
through the 2023 post-attainment milestone year.\148\
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\148\ Id. at tables H-3 to H-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SJV PM2.5 Plan identifies emission reductions needed
for attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by 2020,\149\
and identifies San Joaquin Valley's progress toward attainment in each
milestone year.\150\ The State and District set RFP targets for each of
the quantitative milestone years as shown in Table H-8 of Appendix H of
the 2018 PM2.5 Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\149\ Id. at Table H-6.
\150\ Id. at Table H-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the Plan, reductions in both direct PM2.5
and NOX emissions from 2013 base year levels result in
emission levels consistent with attainment in the 2020 attainment year.
Based on these analyses, the State and District conclude that the
adopted control strategy is adequate to meet the RFP requirement for
the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
Quantitative Milestones
Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan identifies the
milestone dates of December 31, 2017, December 31, 2020, and December
31, 2023, for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS.\151\ Appendix H also
identifies target emission levels to meet the RFP requirement for
direct PM2.5 and NOX emissions for each of these
milestone years,\152\ and State and District control measures that will
achieve emission reductions in the years leading up to each of the
milestones, in accordance with the control strategy in the Plan.\153\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\151\ Id. at Table H-12.
\152\ Id. at Table H-8.
\153\ Id. at H-18 and H-19 (District milestones), and H-21 and
H-22 (State milestones).
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The Plan includes quantitative milestones for mobile, stationary,
and area sources. For mobile sources, CARB has developed quantitative
milestones that provide for an evaluation of RFP based on the
implementation of specific control measures by the relevant three-year
milestones. For each quantitative milestone year, the Plan provides for
evaluating RFP by tracking State and District implementation of
regulatory measures and SIP commitments during the three-year period
leading to each milestone date, consistent with the control strategy in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan.\154\ The identified regulatory measures
include State measures for light-duty vehicles and non-road vehicles
and several District measures for stationary and area sources.\155\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\154\ Id. We note that the District's identified quantitative
milestones for 2023 appear to contain a typographical error, as they
include a District report on ``[t]he status of SIP measures adopted
between 2017 and 2020 as per the schedule included in the adopted
Plan.'' Id. at H-18 and H-19. We understand that the District
intended to refer here to the status of SIP measures adopted between
2020 and 2023, consistent with the schedule in the 2018
PM2.5 Plan.
\155\ Id. at H-18 and H-19 (District milestones), and H-21 and
H-22 (State milestones).
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CARB submitted its 2017 Quantitative Milestone Report for the San
Joaquin Valley to the EPA on December 20, 2018.\156\ The report
includes a certification that CARB and the District met the 2017
quantitative milestones identified in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for
the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS and discusses the State's and
District's progress on implementing the three CARB measures and six
District measures identified in Appendix H as quantitative milestones
for the 2017 milestone year. On February 15, 2021, the EPA determined
that the 2017 Quantitative Milestone Report was adequate.\157\ In our
evaluation of the 2017 Quantitative Milestone Report, we found that the
control measures in the Plan are in effect, consistent with the RFP
demonstration in the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS, but we noted that the determination of adequacy
did not constitute approval of any component of the SJV
PM2.5 Plan.\158\
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\156\ Letter dated December 20, 2018, from Richard W. Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Michael Stoker, Regional Administrator,
EPA Region 9, with attachment ``2017 Quantitative Milestone Report
for the 1997 and 2006 NAAQS.''
\157\ Letter dated February 15, 2021, from Deborah Jordan,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX, to Richard W. Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, with enclosure titled ``EPA Evaluation of
2017 Quantitative Milestone Report.''
\158\ Id.
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3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
As discussed in section IV.D, we are proposing to disapprove the
attainment demonstration for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in
the SJV PM2.5 Plan because the area did not attain by the
State's projected attainment date, which was December 31, 2020. As a
result, the RFP
[[Page 38668]]
demonstration in the Plan does not achieve the statutory purpose of RFP
to ``ensure attainment'' under CAA section 171(l) and the quantitative
milestones do not ``demonstrate [RFP] toward attainment by the
applicable date'' under CAA section 189(c). We are, therefore,
proposing to disapprove the RFP and quantitative milestone elements of
the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS for failure to meet the requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(2),
171(1), and 189(c) and 40 CFR 51.1012 and 51.1013.
F. Contingency Measures
1. Requirements for Contingency Measures
Under CAA section 172(c)(9), each state required to make a
nonattainment plan SIP submission must include, in such plan,
contingency measures to be implemented if an area fails to meet RFP
(``RFP contingency measures'') or fails to attain the NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date (``attainment contingency measures''). Under
the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, states must include
contingency measures that will be implemented following a determination
by the EPA that the state has failed: (1) To meet any RFP requirement
in the approved SIP; (2) to meet any quantitative milestone in the
approved SIP; (3) to submit a required quantitative milestone report;
or (4) to attain the applicable PM2.5 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date.\159\ Contingency measures must be fully
adopted rules or control measures that are ready to be implemented
quickly upon failure to meet RFP or failure of the area to meet the
relevant NAAQS by the applicable attainment date.\160\
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\159\ 40 CFR 51.1014(a).
\160\ 81 FR 58010, 58066 and General Preamble Addendum, 42015.
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The purpose of contingency measures is to continue progress in
reducing emissions while a state revises its SIP to meet the missed RFP
requirement or to correct ongoing nonattainment. Neither the CAA nor
the EPA's implementing regulations establish a specific level of
emission reductions that implementation of contingency measures must
achieve, but the EPA recommends that contingency measures should
provide for emission reductions equivalent to approximately one year of
reductions needed for RFP in the nonattainment area at issue,
calculated as the overall level of reductions needed to demonstrate
attainment divided by the number of years from the base year to the
attainment year. In general, we expect all actions needed to effect
full implementation of the measures to occur within 60 days after the
EPA notifies the state of a failure to meet RFP or to attain.\161\
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\161\ 81 FR 58010, 58066. See also General Preamble, 13512,
13543-13544, and General Preamble Addendum, 42014-42015.
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To satisfy the requirements of 40 CFR 51.1014, the contingency
measures adopted as part of a PM2.5 attainment plan must
consist of control measures for the area that are not otherwise
required to meet other nonattainment plan requirements (e.g., to meet
RACM/RACT requirements) and must specify the timeframe within which
their requirements become effective following any of the EPA
determinations specified in 40 CFR 51.1014(a). In a 2016 decision
called Bahr v. EPA (``Bahr''),\162\ the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
rejected the EPA's interpretation of CAA section 172(c)(9) to allow
approval of already-implemented control measures as contingency
measures. In Bahr, the Ninth Circuit concluded that contingency
measures must be measures that are triggered and implemented only after
the EPA determines that an area failed to meet RFP requirements or to
attain by the applicable attainment date. Thus, within the geographic
jurisdiction of the Ninth Circuit, already implemented measures cannot
serve as contingency measures under CAA section 172(c)(9). To comply
with section 172(c)(9), a state must develop, adopt, and submit a
contingency measure to be triggered upon a failure to meet an RFP
milestone, failure to meet a quantitative milestone requirement, or
failure to attain the NAAQS by the applicable attainment date.
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\162\ Bahr v. EPA, 836 F.3d 1218, 1235-1237 (9th Cir. 2016).
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2. Summary of the State's Submission
The SJV PM2.5 Plan addresses the contingency measure
requirement for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS in section 5.6
and Appendix H (specifically, section H.3 (``Contingency Measures''))
of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan. The Plan relies on revisions to the
District's wood-burning rule (Rule 4901) and refers to a SIP revision
submitted by CARB on October 23, 2017, titled ``State Implementation
Plan Attainment Contingency Measures for the San Joaquin Valley 15
[mu]g/m \3\ Annual PM2.5 NAAQS'' (``2017 Contingency Measure
SIP'').\163\ On March 19, 2021, CARB withdrew the 2017 Contingency
Measure SIP submission.\164\ Therefore, we are not evaluating the 2017
Contingency Measure SIP as part of this action.
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\163\ Letter dated October 23, 2017, from Richard W. Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Alexis Strauss, Acting Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 9.
\164\ Letter dated March 19, 2021, from Richard W. Corey,
Executive Officer, CARB, to Deborah Jordan, Acting Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 9, transmitting CARB Executive Order S-21-
004.
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With respect to the District contingency measure, the 2018
PM2.5 Plan states that the District will amend Rule 4901 to
include a requirement that would be triggered upon a determination by
the EPA that the San Joaquin Valley failed to meet a regulatory
requirement necessitating implementation of a contingency measure.\165\
As discussed in section II.C, the District adopted amendments to Rule
4901 on June 20, 2019, including a contingency measure in section 5.7.3
of the amended rule. In the EPA's July 22, 2020 final action to approve
Rule 4901, as amended June 20, 2019, we did not evaluate section 5.7.3
of the amended rule for compliance with CAA requirements for
contingency measures.\166\ We are now evaluating section 5.7.3 of Rule
4901 for compliance with the requirements for contingency measures for
purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\165\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix H, H-25.
\166\ 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020) (final approval of Rule 4901);
85 FR 1131, 1132-1133 (January 9, 2020) (proposed approval of Rule
4901).
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Rule 4901 is designed to limit emissions generated by the use of
wood burning fireplaces, wood burning heaters, and outdoor wood burning
devices. The rule establishes requirements for the sale/transfer,
operation, and installation of wood burning devices and for advertising
the sale of seasoned wood consistent with a moisture content limit
within the San Joaquin Valley. The rule includes a two-tiered, episodic
wood burning curtailment requirement that applies during four winter
months, November through February. During a level one episodic wood
burning curtailment, section 5.7.1 prohibits any person from operating
a wood burning fireplace or unregistered wood burning heater, but
permits the use of a properly operated wood burning heater that meets
certification requirements and has a current registration with the
District. Sections 5.9 through 5.11 impose specific registration
requirements on any person operating a wood burning fireplace or wood
burning heater and section 5.12 imposes specific certification
requirements on wood burning heater professionals. During a level two
episodic wood burning curtailment, operation of any wood burning device
is prohibited by section 5.7.2.
Prior to the 2019-2020 wood burning season, the District imposed a
level one
[[Page 38669]]
curtailment when the PM2.5 concentration was forecasted to
be between 20 [mu]g/m \3\ and 65 [mu]g/m \3\ and imposed a level two
curtailment when the PM2.5 concentration was forecasted to
be above 65 [mu]g/m \3\ or the PM10 concentration was
forecasted to be above 135 [mu]g/m \3\. In 2019 the District adopted
revisions to Rule 4901 to lower the wood burning curtailment thresholds
in the ``hot spot'' counties of Madera, Fresno, and Kern. The District
lowered the level one PM2.5 threshold for these three
counties from 20 [mu]g/m \3\ to 12 [mu]g/m \3\, and the level two
PM2.5 threshold from 65 [mu]g/m \3\ to 35 [mu]g/m \3\. The
District did not modify the curtailment thresholds for other counties
in the San Joaquin Valley--those levels remain at 20 [mu]g/m \3\ for
level one and 65 [mu]g/m \3\ for level two.
The District's 2019 revision to Rule 4901 also included the
addition of a contingency measure in section 5.7.3 of the rule,
requiring that 60 days following the effective date of an EPA
determination that the San Joaquin Valley has failed to attain the
1997, 2006, or 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date, the PM2.5 curtailment levels of any county that has
failed to attain the applicable standard will be lowered to the
curtailment levels in place for hot spot counties. The District
estimates that the potential emissions reduction of direct
PM2.5 would be in the range of 0.014 tpd (if the contingency
measure is triggered in Kings County but not the other non-hot spot
counties) to 0.387 tpd (if the contingency measure is triggered in all
five of the non-hot spot counties), but there would be no emissions
reduction if, at the time of the determination of failure to attain the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by the attainment date, violations
of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS are observed only at monitors
in the hot spot counties.\167\ The corresponding potential
NOX emissions reduction would be in the range of 0.002 tpd
to 0.060 tpd, respectively, but once again, there would be no emissions
reduction if the violations are monitored in the hot spot counties
only.\168\ The EPA has already approved Rule 4901, as amended in 2019,
as a revision to the California SIP.\169\
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\167\ See Table B-13 in Appendix B from the District's Final
Staff Report (June 20, 2019) for revisions to Rule 4901.
\168\ NOX emissions reductions from the contingency
measure are based on the District's estimates for direct
PM2.5 emissions using the ratio of direct
PM2.5 to NOX in Table 1, page 8, of the
District's Final Staff Report (June 20, 2019) for revisions to Rule
4901.
\169\ 85 FR 44206 (July 22, 2020).
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Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan also provides updated
emissions estimates for the year following the State's projected
attainment year (i.e., 2021) to evaluate whether the emission
reductions from the contingency measures are sufficient. Table H-3 in
Appendix H of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan shows that the emission
reductions between 2020 and 2021 are estimated to be 0.5 tpd of direct
PM2.5 and 12.3 tpd of NOX (based on the annual
average inventory).
3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
We have evaluated the contingency provision in Rule 4901 (i.e.,
section 5.7.3 of the rule) for compliance with the requirements of CAA
section 172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1014 and find that the measure meets
some, but not all, of the applicable requirements for contingency
measures. The contingency provision in Rule 4901 is structured to be
undertaken if the area fails to attain the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS,
not before, and therefore is consistent with the Bahr decision
disallowing already-implemented measures for contingency measure
purposes under CAA section 172(c)(9). Furthermore, the contingency
provision in Rule 4901 would achieve emission reductions above and
beyond those that are projected to be achieved if the EPA finds that
monitoring locations in counties outside of Fresno, Kern, or Madera
counties (i.e., the ``hot spot'' counties listed in the rule) are
violating the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS as of the attainment
date. In accordance with 40 CFR 51.1014, the contingency provision in
Rule 4901 identifies a specific triggering mechanism. In this case, the
triggering mechanism in the rule is the EPA's final determination that
San Joaquin Valley has failed to attain the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS by the applicable attainment date.\170\ The rule
also specifies a timeframe within which its requirements become
effective after a failure-to-attain determination (i.e., 60 days from
the effective date of the EPA's final determination), and would take
effect with minimal further action by the State or the EPA.
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\170\ Section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901 states that ``the District
shall notify the public of an Episodic Curtailment for the
PM2.5 curtailment levels described in Sections 5.7.1.2
and 5.7.2.2 for any county that has failed to attain the applicable
standard.'' (emphasis added) We interpret this to mean that the
District would apply the more stringent curtailment provisions for
any county identified in the EPA's final rule making the
determination that the San Joaquin Valley failed to attain the
applicable PM2.5 NAAQS.
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Conversely, we have identified several deficiencies with respect to
the contingency measure element of the SJV PM2.5 Plan.
First, the contingency provisions of Rule 4901 do not address the
potential for State failures to meet RFP, to meet a quantitative
milestone, or to submit a quantitative milestone report. In addition,
the contingency measure provisions of Rule 4901 are not structured to
achieve any additional emissions reductions if the EPA finds that the
monitoring locations in the ``hot spot'' counties (i.e., Fresno, Kern,
or Madera) are the only counties in the San Joaquin Valley that are
violating the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS as of the attainment
date. To qualify as a contingency measure, a measure must be structured
to achieve emissions reductions if triggered; however, the contingency
provisions of Rule 4901 provide for such reductions only under certain
circumstances. Thus, the contingency provisions of Rule 4901 should be
revised to provide for additional emissions reductions in the San
Joaquin Valley (if triggered) regardless of which monitoring site(s) is
determined to be violating the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS as of
the attainment date.
Furthermore, CAA section 172(c)(9) requires that the plan provide
for the implementation of contingency measures to be undertaken if the
area fails to attain the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date. Given our proposed disapproval of the
State's attainment demonstration for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS, as described in section IV.D.3 of this proposed rule, it is not
possible to determine whether emission reductions from contingency
measures in the SJV PM2.5 Plan that are intended to take
effect upon an EPA finding that the area failed to attain the standards
are in fact surplus to the attainment demonstration, as required by
section 172(c)(9).
For these reasons, we are proposing to disapprove the contingency
measure element of the SJV PM2.5 Plan for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS. If we finalize this proposal, we will remove
from the California SIP the contingency provision in Rule 4901 (section
5.7.3) because this provision does not satisfy CAA requirements for
contingency measures and is severable from the remainder of Rule 4901.
The disapproval of section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901 would have no effect on
our prior approval of the rule for purposes of meeting the BACM and MSM
requirements for the 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS in the San Joaquin
Valley,\171\ which
[[Page 38670]]
would remain in effect for all but section 5.7.3 of Rule 4901.
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\171\ 85 FR 44206 (final approval of Rule 4901) and 85 FR 44192
(determination that Rule 4901 implements BACM and MSM for
residential wood burning).
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G. Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets
1. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
Section 176(c) of the CAA requires federal actions in nonattainment
and maintenance areas to conform to the goals of the state's SIP to
eliminate or reduce the severity and number of violations of the NAAQS
and achieve timely attainment of the standards. Conformity to the SIP's
goals means that such actions will not: (1) Cause or contribute to
violations of a NAAQS, (2) worsen the severity of an existing
violation, or (3) delay timely attainment of any NAAQS or any interim
milestone.
Actions involving Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) or Federal
Transit Administration (FTA) funding or approval are subject to the
EPA's transportation conformity rule, codified at 40 CFR part 93,
subpart A. Under this rule, metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs)
in nonattainment and maintenance areas coordinate with state and local
air quality and transportation agencies, the EPA, the FHWA, and the FTA
to demonstrate that an area's regional transportation plans (RTPs) and
transportation improvement programs conform to the applicable SIP. This
demonstration is typically done by showing that estimated emissions
from existing and planned highway and transit systems are less than or
equal to the motor vehicle emissions budgets (MVEBs or ``budgets'')
contained in all control strategy SIPs. Budgets are generally
established for specific years and specific pollutants or precursors
and must reflect all of the motor vehicle control measures contained in
the attainment and RFP demonstrations.\172\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\172\ 40 CFR 93.118(e)(4)(v).
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Under the PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, Serious area
PM2.5 attainment plans must include appropriate quantitative
milestones and projected RFP emission levels for direct
PM2.5 and all PM2.5 plan precursors in each
milestone year.\173\ For an area designated nonattainment for the 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS before January 15, 2015, the attainment plan
must contain quantitative milestones to be achieved no later than three
years after December 31, 2014, and every three years thereafter until
the milestone date that falls within three years after the applicable
attainment date.\174\ As the EPA explained in the preamble to the
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule, it is important to include a
post-attainment year quantitative milestone to ensure that, if the area
fails to attain by the attainment date, the EPA can continue to monitor
the area's progress toward attainment while the state develops a new
attainment plan.\175\ Although the post-attainment year quantitative
milestone is a required element of a Serious area plan, it is not
necessary to demonstrate transportation conformity for 2023 or to use
the 2023 budgets in transportation conformity determinations until such
time as the area fails to attain the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS.
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\173\ 40 CFR 51.1012(a), 51.1013(a)(1).
\174\ 40 CFR 51.1013(a)(4) and 81 FR 58010, 58058 and 58063-
58064 (August 24, 2016).
\175\ 81 FR 58010, 58063-58064.
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PM2.5 plans should identify budgets for direct
PM2.5, NOX, and all other PM2.5
precursors for which on-road emissions are determined to significantly
contribute to PM2.5 levels in the area for each RFP
milestone year and the attainment year, if the plan demonstrates
attainment. All direct PM2.5 SIP budgets should include
direct PM2.5 motor vehicle emissions from tailpipes, brake
wear, and tire wear. With respect to PM2.5 from re-entrained
road dust and emissions of VOC, SO2, and/or ammonia, the
transportation conformity provisions of 40 CFR part 93, subpart A,
apply only if the EPA Regional Administrator or the director of the
state air agency has made a finding that emissions of these pollutants
within the area are a significant contributor to the PM2.5
nonattainment problem and has so notified the MPO and Department of
Transportation (DOT), or if the applicable implementation plan (or
implementation plan submission) includes any of these pollutants in the
approved (or adequate) budget as part of the RFP, attainment, or
maintenance strategy.\176\
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\176\ 40 CFR 93.102(b)(3), 93.102(b)(2)(v), and 93.122(f); see
also Conformity Rule preambles at 69 FR 40004, 40031-40036 (July 1,
2004), 70 FR 24280, 24283-24285 (May 6, 2005) and 70 FR 31354 (June
1, 2005).
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By contrast, transportation conformity requirements apply with
respect to emissions of NOX unless both the EPA Regional
Administrator and the director of the state air agency have made a
finding that transportation-related emissions of NOX within
the nonattainment area are not a significant contributor to the
PM2.5 nonattainment problem and have so notified the MPO and
DOT, or the applicable implementation plan (or implementation plan
submission) does not establish an approved (or adequate) budget for
such emissions as part of the RFP, attainment, or maintenance
strategy.\177\
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\177\ 40 CFR 93.102(b)(2)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is not always necessary for states to establish motor vehicle
emissions budgets for all PM2.5 precursors. The
PM2.5 SIP Requirements Rule allows a state to demonstrate
that emissions of certain precursors do not contribute significantly to
PM2.5 levels that exceed the NAAQS in a nonattainment area,
in which case the state may exclude such precursor(s) from its control
evaluations for the specific NAAQS at issue. If a state successfully
demonstrates that the emissions of one or more of the PM2.5
precursors from all sources do not contribute significantly to
PM2.5 levels in the subject area, then it is not necessary
to establish motor vehicle emissions budgets for such precursor(s).
Alternatively, the transportation conformity regulations contain
criteria for determining whether emissions of one or more
PM2.5 precursors are insignificant for transportation
conformity purposes.\178\ For a pollutant or precursor to be considered
an insignificant contributor based on the transportation conformity
rule's criteria, the control strategy SIP must demonstrate that it
would be unreasonable to expect that such an area would experience
enough motor vehicle emissions growth in that pollutant and/or
precursor for a NAAQS violation to occur. Insignificance determinations
are based on factors such as air quality, SIP motor vehicle control
measures, trends and projections of motor vehicle emissions, and the
percentage of the total attainment plan emissions inventory for the
NAAQS at issue that is comprised of motor vehicle emissions. The EPA's
rationale for providing for insignificance determinations is described
in the July 1, 2004 revision to the Transportation Conformity
Rule.\179\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\178\ 40 CFR 93.109(f).
\179\ 69 FR 40004.
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Transportation conformity trading mechanisms are allowed under 40
CFR 93.124 where a state establishes appropriate mechanisms for such
trades. The basis for the trading mechanism is the SIP attainment
modeling that establishes the relative contribution of each
PM2.5 precursor pollutant. The applicability of emission
trading between conformity budgets for conformity purposes is described
in 40 CFR 93.124(c).
The EPA's process for determining the adequacy of a budget consists
of three
[[Page 38671]]
basic steps: (1) Notifying the public of a SIP submittal; (2) providing
the public the opportunity to comment on the budget during a public
comment period; and, (3) making a finding of adequacy or inadequacy.
The EPA can notify the public by either posting an announcement that
the EPA has received SIP budgets on the EPA's adequacy website,\180\ or
through a Federal Register notice of proposed rulemaking when the EPA
reviews the adequacy of an implementation plan budget simultaneously
with its review and action on the SIP itself.\181\
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\180\ 40 CFR 93.118(f)(1).
\181\ 40 CFR 93.118(f)(2).
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2. Summary of the State's Submission
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan includes budgets for direct
PM2.5 and NOX emissions, calculated using annual
average daily emissions, for 2017, 2020, and 2023 (RFP milestone year,
attainment year, and post-attainment quantitative milestone year,
respectively).\182\ The Plan establishes separate direct
PM2.5 and NOX subarea budgets for each county, or
partial county (for Kern County), in the San Joaquin Valley.\183\ CARB
calculated the budgets using EMFAC2014, CARB's latest version of the
EMFAC model for estimating emissions from on-road vehicles operating in
California that was available at the time of Plan development, and the
latest modeled vehicle miles traveled and speed distributions from the
San Joaquin Valley MPOs from the Final 2017 Federal Transportation
Improvement Program, adopted in September 2016. The budgets reflect
annual average emissions because those emissions are linked with the
District's attainment demonstration for the 1997 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\182\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, Table 3-1.
\183\ 40 CFR 93.124(c) and (d).
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The direct PM2.5 budgets include tailpipe, brake wear,
and tire wear emissions but do not include paved road dust, unpaved
road dust, and road construction dust emissions.\184\ The State is not
required to include re-entrained road dust in the budgets under section
93.103(b)(3) unless the EPA or the State has made a finding that these
emissions are significant. Neither the State nor the EPA has made such
a finding, but the Plan does include a discussion of the significance/
insignificance factors for re-entrained road dust.\185\ The budgets
included in the 2018 PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS are shown in Table 6.
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\184\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D-122 to D-123.
\185\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D-121 and D-122.
Table 6--Motor Vehicle Emission Budgets for the San Joaquin Valley for the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS
[Annual average, tpd]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2017 (RFP year) 2020 (Attainment year) 2023 (Post-attainment
---------------------------------------------------- year)
County -------------------------
PM2.5 NOX PM2.5 NOX PM2.5 NOX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fresno............................ 0.9 28.5 0.9 25.3 0.8 15.1
Kern.............................. 0.8 28.0 0.8 23.3 0.7 13.3
Kings............................. 0.2 5.8 0.2 4.8 0.2 2.8
Madera............................ 0.2 5.3 0.2 4.2 0.2 2.5
Merced............................ 0.3 10.7 0.3 8.9 0.3 5.3
San Joaquin....................... 0.7 14.9 0.6 11.9 0.6 7.6
Stanislaus........................ 0.4 11.9 0.4 9.6 0.4 6.1
Tulare............................ 0.4 10.8 0.4 8.5 0.4 5.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, Table 3-1. Budgets are rounded to the nearest tenth of a ton.
The State did not include budgets for VOC, SO2, or
ammonia. As discussed in section IV.B of this proposed rule, the State
submitted a PM2.5 precursor demonstration documenting its
conclusion that control of these precursors would not significantly
contribute to attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. The
State also included a discussion of the significance/insignificance
factors for ammonia, SO2, and VOC to demonstrate a finding
of insignificance under the transportation conformity rule.\186\
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\186\ 40 CFR 93.109(f).
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In the submittal letter for the 2018 PM2.5 Plan, CARB
requested that the EPA limit the duration of the approval of the
budgets to the period before the effective date of the EPA's adequacy
finding for any subsequently submitted budgets.\187\
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\187\ Letter dated May 9, 2019, from Richard W. Corey, Executive
Officer, CARB, to Mike Stoker, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 9,
3.
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Conformity Trading Mechanism
The 2018 PM2.5 Plan also includes a proposed trading
mechanism for transportation conformity analyses that would allow
future decreases in NOX emissions from on-road mobile
sources to offset any on-road increases in direct PM2.5
emissions. The State is proposing to use a 6.5 to 1 NOX to
PM2.5 ratio for the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. This
ratio was derived by performing a sensitivity analysis based on a 30
percent reduction of NOX or PM2.5 emissions and
calculating the corresponding effect on design values at sites in
Bakersfield and Fresno.
To ensure that the trading mechanism does not affect the ability of
the San Joaquin Valley to meet the NOX budget, the
NOX emissions reductions available to supplement the
PM2.5 budget would be only those remaining after the
NOX budget has been met.\188\ The Plan also provides that
the San Joaquin Valley MPOs shall clearly document the calculations
used in the trading, along with any additional reductions of
NOX and PM2.5 emissions in the conformity
analysis.
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\188\ 2018 PM2.5 Plan, Appendix D, D-126 and D-127.
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3. The EPA's Evaluation and Proposed Action
The EPA generally first conducts a preliminary review of budgets
submitted with an attainment or maintenance plan for PM2.5
for adequacy, prior to taking action on the plan itself, and did so
with respect to the PM2.5 budgets in the 2018
PM2.5 Plan. On June 18, 2019, the EPA announced the
availability of the 2018 PM2.5 Plan with MVEBs and a 30-day
public comment period. This announcement was posted on the EPA's
Adequacy website at: https://www.epa.gov/state-and-local-
[[Page 38672]]
transportation/state-implementation-plans-sip-submissions-currently-
under-epa. The comment period for this notification ended on July 18,
2019. We did not receive any comments during this comment period.
We have reviewed the motor vehicle emissions budgets in the 2018
PM2.5 Plan and find that, because we are proposing to
disapprove the attainment demonstration and related elements of the SJV
PM2.5 Plan for purposes of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS based on the area's failure to attain by the State's projected
attainment date, the budgets cannot be consistent with the applicable
requirements for RFP and attainment of the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS. Therefore, we are proposing to find that the motor vehicle
emissions budgets do not meet applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements, including the adequacy criteria specified in the
transportation conformity rule.\189\ As discussed earlier in sections
IV.C, IV.D, and IV.E, we are proposing to disapprove the Plan's five
percent, attainment, and RFP demonstrations. In addition, because we
are proposing to disapprove the five percent and RFP demonstrations,
the budgets are not consistent with the applicable requirements for the
five percent annual reductions and RFP. Therefore, we are proposing to
disapprove the budgets in the SJV PM2.5 Plan. Our proposed
disapproval relates only to the 1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS, and
does not affect the status of the budgets for the 1997 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS or the previously-approved budgets for the 2006
PM2.5 NAAQS and related trading mechanism, which remain in
effect for those PM2.5 NAAQS. Because we are disapproving
the attainment and RFP demonstrations, the budgets are not eligible for
a protective finding.\190\
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\189\ 40 CFR 93.118(e)(4).
\190\ 40 CFR 93.120(a)(3).
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If our proposed disapproval of the budgets is finalized, upon the
effective date of our final rule, the area would be subject to a
conformity freeze under 40 CFR 93.120 of the transportation conformity
rule. No new transportation plan, transportation improvement program
(TIP), or project may be found to conform until the State submits
another control strategy implementation plan revision fulfilling the
same CAA requirements, the EPA finds the budgets in the revised plan
adequate or approves the budgets, the MPO makes a conformity
determination for the new budgets, and the U.S. Department of
Transportation makes a conformity determination.\191\ In addition, only
transportation projects outside of the first four years of the current
conforming transportation plan and TIP or that meets the requirements
of 40 CFR 93.104(f) during the resulting conformity freeze may be found
to conform until California submits a new attainment plan for the 1997
annual PM2.5 NAAQS and (1) the EPA finds the submitted
budgets adequate per 40 CFR 93.118 or (2) the EPA approves the new
attainment plan and conformity to the new plan is determined.\192\
Furthermore, if, as a result of our final disapproval action, the EPA
imposes highway sanctions under section 179(b)(1) of the Act two years
from the effective date of our final rule, then the conformity status
of the transportation plan and TIP will lapse on that date and no new
transportation plan, TIP, or project may be found to conform until
California submits a new plan for the 1997 annual PM2.5
NAAQS, and conformity to the plan is determined.\193\
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\191\ 40 CFR 93.120(a)(2).
\192\ Id.
\193\ 40 CFR 93.120(a)(1).
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H. Nonattainment New Source Review Requirements Under CAA Section
189(e)
CAA section 189(e) specifically requires that the control
requirements applicable to major stationary sources of direct
PM2.5 also apply to major stationary sources of
PM2.5 precursors, except where the Administrator determines
that such sources do not contribute significantly to PM2.5
levels that exceed the standards in the area.\194\ The control
requirements applicable to major stationary sources of direct
PM2.5 in a Serious PM2.5 nonattainment area
include, at minimum, the requirements of a nonattainment NSR permit
program meeting the requirements of CAA sections 172(c)(5) and
189(b)(3). As part of our April 7, 2015 final action to reclassify the
San Joaquin Valley area as Serious nonattainment for the 1997
PM2.5 standards, we established a May 7, 2016 deadline for
the State to submit nonattainment NSR SIP revisions addressing the
requirements of CAA sections 189(b)(3) and 189(e) of the Act for the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS.
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\194\ General Preamble, 13539 and 13541-13542.
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California submitted nonattainment NSR SIP revisions to address the
subpart 4 requirements for the San Joaquin Valley Serious
PM2.5 nonattainment area on November 20, 2019. We are not
proposing any action on this submission at this time. We will act on
this submission through a separate rulemaking, as appropriate.
V. Proposed Action
For the reasons discussed in this proposed rule, under CAA section
110(k)(3), the EPA is proposing to approve in part and disapprove in
part the portions of the SJV PM2.5 Plan that pertain to the
1997 annual PM2.5 NAAQS for the San Joaquin Valley
nonattainment area as follows:
(1) We are proposing to approve the 2013 base year emissions
inventories as meeting the requirements of CAA section 172(c)(3) and 40
CFR 51.1008; and
(2) We are proposing to disapprove the following elements:
(a) The precursor demonstration as not meeting the requirements of
40 CFR 51.1006,
(b) The BACM/BACT demonstration as not meeting the requirements of
CAA section 189(b)(1)(B) and 40 CFR 51.1010,
(c) The five percent demonstration as not meeting the requirements
of CAA section 189(d) and 40 CFR 51.1010(c),
(d) The attainment demonstration as not meeting the requirements of
CAA sections 189(d) and 179(d) and 40 CFR 51.1011(b),
(e) The RFP demonstration as not meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 172(c)(2) and 171(1) and 40 CFR 51.1012,
(f) The quantitative milestone demonstration as not meeting the
requirements of CAA section 189(c) and 40 CFR 51.1013,
(g) The contingency measures as not meeting the requirements of CAA
section 172(c)(9) and 40 CFR 51.1014, and
(h) The motor vehicle emissions budgets as not meeting the
requirements of CAA section 176(c) and 40 CFR 93.118(e)(4).
A. Effect of Finalizing the Proposed Disapproval Actions
If we finalize disapprovals of the precursor demonstration, BACM/
BACT demonstration, five percent demonstration, attainment
demonstration, RFP and milestone demonstrations, motor vehicle emission
budgets, or contingency measures, the offset sanction in CAA section
179(b)(2) will be applied in the San Joaquin Valley area 18 months
after the effective date of such final disapproval. For new or modified
major stationary sources in the area, the ratio of emission reductions
to increased emissions shall be at least 2 to 1. The highway funding
sanctions in CAA section 179(b)(1) will apply in the area six months
after the offset sanction is imposed. Neither sanction will be imposed
if California
[[Page 38673]]
submits and we approve SIP revisions meeting the applicable CAA
requirements prior to the implementation of the sanctions.\195\
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\195\ See 40 CFR 52.31, which sets forth in detail the sanctions
consequences of a final disapproval.
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In addition to the sanctions, CAA section 110(c)(1) provides that
the EPA must promulgate a federal implementation plan (FIP) addressing
any disapproved elements of the plan two years after the effective date
of disapproval unless the State submits, and the EPA approves, the
required SIP submittal. As a result of the EPA's December 6, 2018
determination that California had failed to submit the required
attainment plan for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS, among other
required SIP submissions for the San Joaquin Valley,\196\ the EPA is
already subject to a statutory deadline to promulgate a FIP for this
purpose no later than two years after the effective date of that
determination.\197\
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\196\ 83 FR 62720.
\197\ Id.
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Furthermore, if we take final action disapproving the SJV
PM2.5 Plan, a conformity freeze will take effect upon the
effective date of any final disapproval (usually 30 days after
publication of the final action in the Federal Register). A conformity
freeze means that only projects in the first four years of the most
recent RTP and TIP can proceed. During a freeze, no new RTPs, TIPs, or
RTP/TIP amendments can be found to conform.\198\
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\198\ See 40 CFR 93.120(a).
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Finally, if the EPA takes final action on the SJV PM2.5
Plan as proposed, California will be required to develop and submit a
revised plan for the San Joaquin Valley area that addresses the
applicable CAA requirements, including the requirements of CAA section
189(d). In accordance with sections 179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2) of the CAA,
the revised plan must demonstrate attainment as expeditiously as
practicable and no later than five years from the date of the EPA's
determination that the area failed to attain (i.e., by November 23,
2021), except that the EPA may extend the attainment date to a date no
later than 10 years from the date of this determination (i.e., to
November 23, 2026), considering the severity of nonattainment and the
availability and feasibility of pollution control measures.\199\
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\199\ 81 FR 84481, 84482 (November 23, 2016) (final EPA action
determining that the San Joaquin Valley had failed to attain the
1997 PM2.5 NAAQS by the December 31, 2015 Serious area
attainment date).
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The EPA is soliciting public comments on the issues discussed in
this proposed rule. We will accept comments from the public on this
proposal for the next 30 days.
VI. Incorporation by Reference
In this document, the EPA is proposing to amend regulatory text
that includes incorporation by reference. As explained in section
IV.F.3 of this preamble, the EPA is proposing to remove section 5.7.3
of SJVUAPCD Rule 4901 from the California State Implementation Plan,
which is incorporated by reference in accordance with the requirements
of 1 CFR part 51.
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www2.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action and was
therefore not submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the PRA because this proposed SIP disapproval, if finalized, will not
in-and-of itself create any new information collection burdens but will
simply disapprove certain State requirements for inclusion in the SIP.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. This
proposed SIP disapproval, if finalized, will not in-and-of itself
create any new requirements but will simply disapprove certain state
requirements for inclusion in the SIP.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. This action proposes to disapprove pre-existing
requirements under state or local law and imposes no new requirements.
Accordingly, no additional costs to state, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector, result from this action.
E. 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.
F. Executive Order 13175: Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175, because the SIP revision that the EPA is
proposing to disapprove would not apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where the EPA or an Indian tribe has demonstrated
that a tribe has jurisdiction, and will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law. Thus, Executive
Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because this proposed SIP disapproval, if
finalized, will not in-and-of itself create any new regulations but
will simply disapprove certain state requirements for inclusion in the
SIP.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
Section 12(d) of the NTTAA directs the EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory activities unless to do so would
be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. The EPA
believes that this action is not subject to the requirements of section
12(d) of the NTTAA because application of those requirements would be
inconsistent with the CAA.
[[Page 38674]]
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Population
The EPA lacks the discretionary authority to address environmental
justice in this rulemaking.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Ammonia,
Incorporation by reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Sulfur dioxide, Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: July 12, 2021.
Deborah Jordan,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2021-15551 Filed 7-21-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P