Finding of Failure To Attain the 2010 Sulfur Dioxide Standard; Tennessee; Sullivan County Nonattainment Area, 2095-2101 [2022-00028]
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Dated: January 7, 2022.
Lauren K. Roth,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2022–00475 Filed 1–12–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Indian Gaming Commission
25 CFR Part 559
RIN 3141–AA76
Facility License; Correction
National Indian Gaming
Commission, Department of the Interior.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Proposed rule; correction.
This document corrects the
preamble to a proposed rule published
in the Federal Register of December 1,
2021, regarding Facility Licenses. The
document contained incorrect dates for
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clarifies that comments are due January
31, 2022.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Hoenig, 202–632–7003.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Correction
In the Federal Register of December 1,
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68200, in the third column, change the
DATES caption to read:
DATES: Written comments on this
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before January 31, 2022.
Dated: January 6, 2022.
Michael Hoenig,
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[FR Doc. 2022–00625 Filed 1–12–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7565–01–P
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2021–0428; FRL–9374–01–
R4]
Finding of Failure To Attain the 2010
Sulfur Dioxide Standard; Tennessee;
Sullivan County Nonattainment Area
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to determine
that the Sullivan County, Tennessee
sulfur dioxide (SO2) nonattainment area
failed to attain the 2010 1-hour SO2
primary National Ambient Air Quality
Standard (NAAQS or standard) by the
applicable attainment date of October 4,
2018, based upon a weight of evidence
analysis of available quality-assured and
certified SO2 ambient air monitoring
data and SO2 emissions data from
January 2015 through December 2017. If
EPA finalizes this determination as
proposed, the State of Tennessee will be
required to submit revisions to the
Tennessee State Implementation Plan
(SIP) that, among other elements,
provide for expeditious attainment of
the 2010 SO2 standard.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before February 14, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2021–0428 at https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
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 (audio, video,
etc.) 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. 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, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Evan Adams, Air Regulatory
SUMMARY:
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Management Section, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air and
Radiation Division, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 4, 61 Forsyth
Street SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960.
Mr. Adams can be reached by telephone
at (404) 562–9009 or via electronic mail
at adams.evan@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. The 2010 SO2 NAAQS
B. Designations, Classifications, and
Attainment Dates for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS
II. Proposed Determinations and
Consequences
A. Applicable Statutory and Regulatory
Provisions
B. Monitoring Network Considerations
C. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring
Network
D. SO2 Data Considerations and Proposed
Determination
E. Consequences for SO2 Nonattainment
Areas Failing To Attain Standards by
Attainment Dates
III. Proposed Action and Request for Public
Comment
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
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I. Background
A. The 2010 SO2 NAAQS
Under section 109 of the Clean Air
Act (CAA or ‘‘Act’’), EPA has
established primary and secondary
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. The primary NAAQS
represent ambient air quality standards
the attainment and maintenance of
which EPA has determined, including a
margin of safety, are requisite to protect
the public health. The secondary
NAAQS represent ambient air quality
standards the attainment and
maintenance of which EPA has
determined are 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.
Under the CAA, EPA must establish a
NAAQS for SO2, which is primarily
released to the atmosphere through the
burning of fossil fuels by power plants
and other industrial facilities. Shortterm exposure to SO2 can damage the
human respiratory system and increase
breathing difficulties. Small children
and people with respiratory conditions,
such as asthma, are more sensitive to
the effects of SO2. Sulfur oxides at high
concentrations can also react with
compounds to form small particulates
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that can penetrate deeply into the lungs
and cause health problems.
EPA first established primary SO2
standards in 1971 at 0.14 parts per
million (ppm) over a 24-hour averaging
period and 0.3 ppm over an annual
averaging period.1 In June 2010, EPA
revised the primary NAAQS for SO2 to
provide increased protection of public
health, providing for revocation of the
1971 primary annual and 24-hour SO2
standards for most areas of the country
following area designations under the
new NAAQS.2 The 2010 NAAQS is 75
parts per billion (ppb) (equivalent to
0.075 ppm) over a 1-hour averaging
period.3 A violation of the 2010 1-hour
SO2 NAAQS occurs when the annual
99th percentile of ambient daily
maximum 1-hour average SO2
concentrations, averaged over a 3-year
period, exceeds 75 ppb.4
make a determination, based on the
area’s air quality as of the attainment
date, whether an area attained by that
date. If the EPA determines that an area
failed to attain by the attainment date,
EPA is required to publish that
determination in the Federal Register.
CAA section 179(c)(2). On June 25,
2021, EPA entered into a consent decree
with the Center for Biological Diversity
in the U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of California.7 The
consent decree requires EPA to finalize,
by January 31, 2022, or March 31, 2022,
depending on the nonattainment area, a
determination whether certain round 1
SO2 nonattainment areas (including the
Sullivan County Area) attained the 1hour SO2 standard by the October 4,
2018 attainment date. For the Sullivan
County Area, the consent decree
deadline is March 31, 2022.
B. Designations, Classifications, and
Attainment Dates for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS
Following promulgation of any new
or revised NAAQS, EPA is required by
CAA section 107(d) to designate areas
throughout the nation as attaining or not
attaining the NAAQS. On August 5,
2013, EPA finalized its first round
(round 1) of designations for the 2010
primary SO2 NAAQS.5 Specifically, in
the 2013 action, EPA designated 29
areas in 16 states as nonattainment for
the 2010 SO2 NAAQS, including a
portion of Sullivan County (hereinafter
referred to as ‘‘the Sullivan County
Area’’ or Area) in Tennessee. The
Sullivan County Area lies within a 3kilometer (km) radius circle centered
around the B–253 powerhouse at the
Eastman Chemical Company facility in
Kingsport, Tennessee (Eastman), which
encompasses an SO2 monitor operating
at the time of designation (Air Quality
System (AQS) Site ID: 47–163–0007).6
EPA’s round 1 designations for the 2010
SO2 NAAQS, including the Sullivan
County Area, became effective on
October 4, 2013. Pursuant to CAA
section 192(a), the attainment date for
the Area was no later than October 4,
2018, which is five years after the
effective date of the final action
designating each round 1 area as
nonattainment for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS.
Under CAA section 179(c) of the
CAA, within six months of the
attainment date, the EPA is required to
II. Proposed Determination and
Consequences
1 See
36 FR 8186 (April 30, 1971).
CFR 50.4(e).
3 See 75 FR 35520 (June 22, 2010).
4 40 CFR 50.17.
5 See 78 FR 47191 (August 5, 2013).
6 For exact descriptions of the Sullivan County
Area, refer to 40 CFR 81.343.
2 40
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A. Applicable Statutory and Regulatory
Provisions
Section 179(c)(1) of the CAA requires
EPA to determine whether a
nonattainment area attained an
applicable standard by the applicable
attainment date based on the area’s air
quality as of the applicable attainment
date. A determination of whether an
area’s air quality meets applicable
standards is generally based upon the
most recent three years of complete,
quality-assured data gathered at
established state and local air
monitoring stations (SLAMS) in a
nonattainment area and entered into the
EPA’s Air Quality System (AQS)
database.8 Data from ambient air
monitors operated by state and local
agencies in compliance with EPA’s
monitoring requirements must be
submitted to AQS.9 Monitoring agencies
annually certify that these data are
accurate to the best of their
knowledge.10 EPA uses the certified air
monitoring data to calculate design
values that are used to determine the
area’s air quality status in accordance
with 40 CFR part 50 Appendix T (for
SO2).
Specifically, under EPA regulations in
40 CFR 50.17 and in accordance with 40
CFR part 50 Appendix T, the 2010 1hour annual SO2 standard is met when
the design value is less than or equal to
75 ppb. Design values are calculated by
7 See Center for Biological Diversity et al v. EPA;
Case No. 3:20-cv-05436–EMC in the docket for this
proposed action.
8 AQS is EPA’s repository of ambient air quality
data.
9 40 CFR 58.16.
10 40 CFR 58.15.
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computing the three-year average of the
annual 99th percentile daily maximum
1-hour average concentrations.11 When
calculating 1-hour primary standard
design values, the calculated design
values are rounded to the nearest whole
number (i.e., 1 ppb) by convention. An
SO2 1-hour primary standard design
value is valid if it encompasses three
consecutive calendar years of complete
data. A year is considered complete
when all four quarters are complete, and
a quarter is complete when at least 75
percent of the sampling days are
complete. A sampling day is considered
complete if 75 percent of the hourly
concentration values are reported; this
includes data affected by exceptional
events that have been approved for
exclusion by the EPA Administrator.12
EPA notes that when determining the
attainment status of SO2 nonattainment
areas, including when making
determinations of attainment by the
attainment date, in addition to ambient
monitoring data, the Agency may also
consider air quality dispersion modeling
and/or a demonstration that the control
strategy in the SIP has been fully
implemented.13 With regard to the use
of monitoring data for such
determinations, EPA’s 2014
Nonattainment SO2 Guidance 14
specifically notes that ‘‘[i]f the EPA
determines that the air quality monitors
located in the affected area are located
in the area of maximum concentration,
the EPA may be able to use the data
from these monitors to make the
determination of attainment without the
use of air quality modeling data.’’ 15 The
modeling analysis of whether monitors
are located in the area of maximum
concentration is necessary where EPA is
making a determination that an area
attained by its attainment date based
solely on that monitoring information.
In the case of the Sullivan County Area,
the SLAMS monitors did not start
collecting data until the middle of 2016;
therefore, a valid 2015–2017 design
value based on three consecutive
11 As defined in 40 CFR part 50, Appendix T,
section 1(c), daily maximum 1-hour values refer to
the maximum 1-hour SO2 concentration values
measured from midnight to midnight that are used
in the NAAQS computations.
12 See 40 CFR part 50, Appendix T, sections 1(c),
3(b), 4(c), and 5(a).
13 For the Sullivan County Area, EPA has not yet
approved an attainment demonstration with
accompanying emission limits into the SIP. Thus,
EPA cannot analyze compliance with an approved
SIP control strategy.
14 EPA, Guidance for 1-Hour SO Nonattainment
2
Area SIP Submissions (April 2014) (‘‘2014 SO2
Guidance’’), p.49, available at: https://www.epa.gov/
sites/default/files/2016-06/documents/
20140423guidance_nonattainment_sip.pdf.
15 Id., p.50.
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calendar years cannot be calculated.16
EPA’s proposed determination that the
area did not attain by its attainment date
is, therefore, based on a technical
analysis of the weight of available
evidence — including monitoring data
and emissions data from the relevant
time period, as described in section II.C
and II.D of this notice. As noted, the
determination of whether the monitors
are located in the area of maximum
concentration is not needed in this
situation, because a demonstration is
not being made that the Area has
attained the 2010 SO2 NAAQS by the
October 4, 2018, attainment date.
B. Monitoring Network Considerations
Section 110(a)(2)(B)(i) of the CAA
requires states to establish and operate
air monitoring networks to compile data
on ambient air quality for all criteria
pollutants. EPA’s monitoring
requirements are specified by regulation
in 40 CFR part 58. These requirements
are applicable to the state, and where
delegated, to local air monitoring
agencies that operate criteria pollutant
monitors. The regulations in 40 CFR
part 58 establish specific requirements
for operating air quality surveillance
networks to measure ambient
concentrations of SO2, including
requirements for measurement methods,
network design, quality assurance
procedures, and the minimum number
of monitoring sites designated as
SLAMS. In sections 4.4 and 4.5 of
Appendix D to 40 CFR part 58, EPA
specifies minimum SLAMS monitoring
requirements for SO2. SLAMS produce
data that are eligible for comparison
with the NAAQS, and therefore, the
monitor must be an approved federal
reference method (FRM), federal
equivalent method (FEM), or approved
regional method (ARM) monitor.
Appendix A to 40 CFR part 58 specifies
quality assurance requirements for
SLAMS monitors. The minimum
number of required SO2 SLAMS is
described in sections 4.4.2 and 4.4.3 of
Appendix D to 40 CFR part 58.
According to section 4.4.2, the
minimum number of required SO2
monitoring sites is determined by the
population weighted emissions index
for each state’s core based statistical
area. Section 4.4.3 describes additional
monitors that may be required by an
EPA regional administrator.
Under 40 CFR 58.10, states are
required to submit annual monitoring
16 The current SO monitoring network in the
2
Area, which is comprised of four SLAMS monitors
and represented in Tennessee’s ambient air
monitoring network plan, is designed to measure
SO2 air quality in the areas of expected maximum
1-hour SO2 concentration.
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network plans (AMNP) for ambient air
monitoring networks for approval by
EPA. Each AMNP discusses the status of
the air monitoring network as required
under 40 CFR 58.10 and addresses the
operation and maintenance of the air
monitoring network, including any
proposed modifications to the network.
EPA reviews these AMNPs for
compliance with the applicable
monitoring network design
requirements in 40 CFR part 58.17 EPA
also conducts regular technical systems
audits (TSAs) during which EPA
reviews and inspects ambient air
monitoring programs to assess
compliance with applicable regulations
concerning the collection, analysis,
validation, and reporting of ambient air
quality data.18
For the Sullivan County Area, the
Tennessee Department of Environment
and Conservation (TDEC) is responsible
for assuring that the Area meets air
quality monitoring requirements. TDEC
submitted an annual monitoring
network plan to EPA that describes the
various monitoring sites operated by
TDEC.19 EPA approved TDEC’s most
recent AMNP on September 30, 2021,
and concluded that the air agency’s
ambient air monitoring network meets
or exceeds the requirements for the
minimum number of SLAMS for all
criteria pollutants, including SO2, in the
Sullivan County Area.20 For additional
information related to Sullivan County
Area’s SO2 monitoring network,
including EPA’s TSAs and the State’s
response and air monitoring data, please
refer to EPA’s technical support
document (TSD) located in the docket
for this proposed action (Sullivan
County TSD).21
C. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring
Network
During the round 1 SO2 designations
in 2013, Eastman operated an industrial
17 See, e.g., letter dated September 14, 2020, from
Caroline Y. Freeman, Director, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA Region IV, to Michelle Owenby,
Director, Division of Air Pollution Control, TDEC.
Copies of EPA letters responding to Tennessee’s
AMNPs for 2016–2020 are included in the docket
for this proposed action.
18 See 40 CFR part 58, appendix A, section 2.5.
19 See, e.g., Tennessee’s current AMNP ‘‘2021
Tennessee Annual Monitoring Network Plan.’’ EPA
Region 4 approved the 2021 AMNP on September
30, 2021. Copies of Tennessee’s AMNPs for 2015–
2021 are included in the docket for this proposed
action.
20 See letter dated September 30, 2021, from
Caroline Y. Freeman, Director, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA Region IV, to Michelle Owenby,
Director, Division of Air Pollution Control, TDEC in
the docket for this proposed action.
21 See Technical Support Document Finding of
Failure to Attain the 2010 1-Hour SO2 NAAQS For
the Sullivan County, Tennessee Nonattainment
Area in the docket for this proposed action.
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SO2 monitor near the facility at the Ross
N. Robinson site (AQS ID: 47–163–
0007). From 2010 to 2012, Tennessee
certified to EPA that all industryoperated monitoring data in Tennessee,
including the Eastman SO2 monitor, met
EPA regulatory requirements, including
quality assurance requirements. EPA
used this data as the basis for an SO2
nonattainment determination on August
13, 2013, based on a 2009–2011 design
value of 196 ppb at the Ross N.
Robinson industrial monitor.
In September 2013 (and subsequently
in 2016), after an EPA TSA, EPA found
that Tennessee was unable to provide
the required quality assurance records
and documentation for the industryoperated air monitoring sites in Sullivan
County. EPA determined that the
Eastman industrial monitors were not
meeting the quality assurance
requirements in 40 CFR part 58
Appendix A and therefore not
comparable to the NAAQS. As a result
of EPA’s TSA findings, TDEC assigned
a NAAQS exclusion flag to the Ross N.
Robinson industrial monitor’s data in
AQS beginning in September 2013 to
indicate the data did not meet
regulatory requirements. For the 2015–
2017 period, no valid SO2 monitoring
data were collected in the Area from
January 1, 2015, to July 20, 2016.
Consequently, the Area did not have a
valid SO2 design value for the 2015–
2017 period. See Sullivan County TSD
for more details on EPA’s TSAs.
To characterize SO2 concentrations in
the Sullivan County Area, Tennessee
began operating a SLAMS SO2 monitor
(AQS ID: 47–163–6001) on July 21,
2016, adjacent to the Ross N. Robinson
industrial monitoring site under an
EPA-approved quality assurance project
plan, and in accordance with EPA’s
regulatory requirements at Appendix D
to 40 CFR part 58. The Ross N. Robinson
SLAMS site is located adjacent to
Eastman’s industrial monitor of the
same name on Wilburn Drive in
Kingsport. On September 1, 2016, TDEC
also installed a second monitor (AQS
ID: 47–163–6002) at the Skyland Drive
industrial monitoring site to further
characterize high elevation SO2
concentrations in the complex terrain
around the Sullivan County Area. This
monitor was sited in accordance with
the normalized air modeling conducted
by Tennessee in accordance with 40
CFR part 58 and EPA’s SO2 Monitoring
Technical Assistance Document
(TAD).22 The Skyland Drive SLAMS
22 See SO NAAQS Designations Source-Oriented
2
Monitoring Technical Assistance Document (TADs),
Draft February 2016 in the docket for this proposed
action.
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monitor site is located with Eastman’s
industrial SO2 monitor of the same
name on Skyland Drive at Bagwell St. in
Kingsport. The primary monitors 23 at
each of these sites are FEM monitors.
Valid hourly SO2 data for the Area
became available for the remainder of
the design value period (i.e., from July
21, 2016, to December 31, 2017) once
the Ross N. Robinson SLAMS site
started operating. These monitoring data
have been reported to AQS and certified
by TDEC. Eastman stopped reporting
data to AQS in 2016 for their industrial
monitors and ceased operating these
monitors in 2019. During the 2015–2017
design value period, the TDEC SLAMS
monitors did not collect data in 2015 or
the first half of 2016. Therefore, a valid
2015–2017 design value cannot be
calculated for the nonattainment area.
In 2017, Tennessee committed to
expanding its existing SO2 ambient air
monitoring network within the
nonattainment area.24 In 2018, EPA
approved the portion of TDEC’s AMNP
that added two SLAMS monitors within
the Sullivan County Area to characterize
the expected areas of maximum 1-hour
SO2 concentrations near the Eastman
facility.25 TDEC subsequently began
operating the two additional SLAMS
sites at Happy Hill (AQS ID: 47–163–
6004) in October 2018 and Andrew
Johnson Elementary School (AQS ID:
47–163–6003) in January 2019 to
characterize the areas of expected
maximum 1-hour SO2 concentrations
around the facility. These monitors were
sited in accordance with the normalized
air modeling conducted by Tennessee in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58 and
EPA’s SO2 TAD. EPA approved the SO2
23 A primary monitor is a term defined in 40 CFR
part 58 that means the monitor identified by the
monitoring organization that provides
concentration data used for comparison to the
NAAQS. For any specific site, only one monitor for
each pollutant can be designated in AQS as primary
monitor for a given period of time. The primary
monitor identifies the default data source for
creating a combined site record for purposes of
NAAQS comparisons.
24 In 2017, EPA commented on TDEC’s SO draft
2
attainment SIP for the Sullivan County Area and
recommended that the State expand the monitoring
network within the nonattainment area to verify
that the SO2 emission reduction measures proposed
in the attainment SIP at the time would ensure
attainment of the 1-hour standard. See EPA 2017
comment letter found in the docket for this
proposed action. Tennessee submitted an
attainment SIP for the Sullivan County Area on May
11, 2017. EPA proposed approval of the attainment
SIP on June 29, 2018 (83 FR 30609) but has not
finalized approval as of this action.
25 See letter dated July 24, 2018, from Beverly
Banister, Director, Air, Pesticides and Toxic
Management Division, EPA Region IV, to Michelle
Owenby, Director, Division of Air Pollution
Control, TDEC included in the docket for this
proposed action.
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portion of TDEC’s AMNP in 2016, 2018,
2019, and 2020.26
D. SO2 Data Considerations and
Proposed Determination
As discussed in section II.C above, air
monitoring data in the area from January
1, 2015, to July 20, 2016, did not meet
the quality assurance requirements in 40
CFR part 58 Appendix A and therefore
are not comparable to the NAAQS.
Therefore, a valid 2015–2017 design
value could not be determined for the
nonattainment area. In lieu of a 2015–
2017, 3-year design value, EPA has
developed a weight of evidence
assessment based on available air
quality monitoring data and sourcespecific SO2 emissions in the Area from
January 2015 through December 2017 to
support the determination that the
Sullivan County Area did not attain the
1-hour SO2 standard by the October 4,
2018, attainment date based on the
area’s air quality as of the attainment
date. This section summarizes EPA’s
weight of evidence approach and data
considerations for the nonattainment
area. More detailed discussions on the
air monitoring and SO2 emission data
are provided in EPA’s Sullivan County
TSD located in the docket for this
proposed action.
1. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring Data
As discussed in section I.B above, the
applicable attainment date for the
Sullivan County Area, is October 4,
2018. In accordance with Appendix T to
40 CFR part 50, determinations of SO2
NAAQS compliance are based on three
consecutive calendar years of data. To
determine the air quality as of the
attainment date in the nonattainment
area, EPA reviewed the available data
collected during the three calendar
years immediately preceding the
attainment date for the Sullivan County
Area (i.e., January 1, 2015, through
December 31, 2017), as well as SO2
emissions data at Eastman.
As discussed above, no NAAQScomparable SO2 monitoring data is
available for the Area for January 1,
2015, to July 20, 2016. The available
SLAMS SO2 data for the Sullivan
County Area from July 21, 2016, through
December 31, 2017, have been certified
by TDEC. EPA has also evaluated the
completeness of these data in
accordance with the requirements of 40
CFR part 50, Appendix T. The data
collected by TDEC in the three calendar
years preceding the attainment date
meet the quarterly completeness criteria
26 The most recent TDEC AMNP, submitted and
approved in 2020, includes four SO2 SLAMS in the
nonattainment area which will provide NAAQScomparable monitoring data moving forward.
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for only 6 out of 12 quarters at the Ross
N. Robinson SO2 monitor since the
monitor began operation on July 21,
2016, and 5 out of 12 quarters at the
Skyland Drive SO2 monitor since the
monitor began operation on September
1, 2016. The available annual 99th
percentile daily maximum 1-hour
average SO2 data at each monitoring site
within the Sullivan County Area for the
2015–2017 period are presented in
Table 1.
TABLE 1—2015–2017 SO2 MONITORING DATA FOR THE SULLIVAN COUNTY AREA
Annual 99th percentile daily
maximum 1-hour average
(ppb)
Site
(AQS ID)
2015
Ross N. Robinson (47–163–6001) ...................................................
Skyland Dr. (47–163–6002) ..............................................................
2016
Design value valid?
2017
a N/A
b 152
a N/A
b 91
92
78
No.
No.
Notes:
a The SLAMS monitors did not collect data in 2015.
b The Ross N. Robinson monitor had only two quarters of complete data in 2016 due to the monitor beginning operation on July 21, 2016. The
Skyland Drive monitor had only one quarter of complete data in 2016 due to the monitor beginning operation on September 1, 2016.
Source: EPA AQS Design Value Report, retrieved September 14, 2021.
The data in Table 1 indicates that
although the two sites in the Sullivan
County Area did not have complete data
in 2015 and 2016 to determine a 3-year
design value, both monitors consistently
measured 99th percentile daily
maximum 1-hour SO2 concentrations
above the 75 ppb level of the 1-hour
NAAQS in 2016 and 2017, after
beginning operation in mid-2016. Both
monitors have complete 2017 datasets.
For an area to attain the 2010 SO2
NAAQS by the October 4, 2018,
attainment date, the design value based
upon monitored air quality data from
2015–2017 at each eligible monitoring
sites must be equal to or less than 75
ppb for the 1-hour standard. Table 1
above shows that the annual 99th
percentile daily maximum 1-hour
average at each monitoring site exceeds
75 ppb in 2016 and 2017. See also Table
1 in the Sullivan County TSD.
2. Eastman SO2 Emissions Data
As mentioned above, in round 1 SO2
designations, EPA designated as
nonattainment the portion of Sullivan
County within a 3-km radius circle
centered at Eastman’s B–253
powerhouse, which at the time of
designations encompassed the one
monitor that was violating the 2010 1hour SO2 NAAQS based on 2009–2011
air quality data. Table 2 shows that the
SO2 emissions, expressed in tons per
year (tpy), from Eastman account for
more than 99 percent of the total SO2
emissions in Sullivan County during the
2015–2017 period relevant for this
proposed determination that the Area
failed to attain the SO2 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date. Prior to the
Sullivan County Area being designated
as nonattainment for the 2010 1-hour
SO2 NAAQS in 2013, Eastman operated
15 coal-fired boilers at their facility to
generate steam and electricity. As
discussed in more detail in the Sullivan
County TSD for this proposed action,
Eastman’s annual SO2 emissions have
been steadily decreasing since 2013 due
primarily to the changes in operations of
the coal-fired boilers.
TABLE 2—2015–2017 SO2 EMISSION DATA FOR THE SULLIVAN COUNTY SO2 NONATTAINMENT AREA
Total Sullivan
County SO2
emissions from
all sources
(tpy)
Calendar year
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2015 .....................................................................................................................................................................
2016 .....................................................................................................................................................................
2017 .....................................................................................................................................................................
As shown in Table 2, the total annual
SO2 emissions from Eastman decreased
over 7,000 tpy from 17,978 tpy in 2015
to 10,746 tpy in 2017. During 2015–
2017, the annual emissions were highest
in 2015, when no air monitoring data is
available, and emissions decreased
significantly in 2016 and 2017. The
decrease was primarily because of the
conversion of two large coal-fired
boilers, Boilers 27 and 28 in the B–253
powerhouse, from burning coal to
natural gas fuel that was completed in
2016. These two boiler conversions
were part of a larger SO2 emissions
control project beginning in 2014 and
ending in 2018, which converted all five
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boilers in the B–253 powerhouse from
burning coal to burn natural gas fuel.
These conversions had a significant
impact on SO2 emissions: Emissions
from the B–253 powerhouse decreased
from 14,171 tpy in 2012 to less than 10
tpy in 2019.27 The total annual SO2
emissions from the entire Eastman
facility decreased from 21,246 tpy in
2012 to 4,510 tpy in 2019. See Sullivan
County TSD for complete details of the
27 The conversion of the B–253 boilers from
burning coal to natural gas was completed in
October 2018. Thus, the SO2 emissions from the B–
253 powerhouse dropped significantly to 10 tpy in
2019.
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17,980
14,325
10,792
Eastman SO2
emissions
(tpy)
17,978
14,324
10,746
boiler conversions and resulting
emissions changes.
It is important to also consider trends
in hourly SO2 emissions since the 2010
SO2 NAAQS is a short-term standard
that is evaluated using hourly
measurements of ambient SO2
concentrations. EPA’s evaluation of
Eastman’s hourly emissions data found
that their emissions were over 33
percent higher during the period from
January 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016, (when
no valid ambient monitoring data was
available), than the July 1, 2016, through
December 31, 2017, period (when valid
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ambient monitoring data show
exceedances of the NAAQS).28
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3. Weight of Evidence Analysis
Conclusions and Proposed
Determination
To determine the air quality in the
Sullivan County Area as of the
applicable attainment date, EPA
reviewed the available ambient
monitoring data and annual and hourly
SO2 emissions data at Eastman from
January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2017.
As shown in Table 1, the available SO2
ambient monitoring data in the Sullivan
County Area indicates that the 99th
percentile maximum daily 1-hour SO2
concentration in both 2016 and 2017
exceeded the 1-hour SO2 NAAQS level
of 75 ppb. The primary SO2 emissions
sources in the nonattainment area are
the coal-fired boilers at Eastman. Both
the annual SO2 emissions and the
hourly SO2 emissions from the Eastman
boilers were significantly higher from
January 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016, when
air monitoring data are not available,
than from July 1, 2016, through
December 31, 2017, when air
monitoring data are available. Ambient
SO2 concentrations are very sourceoriented, and in this case, the Eastman
boilers make up virtually the entire
emissions inventory for the Area.
Considering that the ambient measured
concentrations exceeded the level of the
NAAQS in 2016 and 2017, when
emissions from the primary source of
SO2 were lower than they were in 2015,
EPA believes it is reasonable to expect
that the 99th percentile maximum daily
1-hour SO2 concentration in 2015 likely
also exceeded the level of 75 ppb.
Consequently, the three-year average of:
The 99th percentile value for 2015
(likely exceeded the level of the
NAAQS), 2016 (exceeded the level of
the NAAQS), and 2017 (exceeded the
level of the NAAQS) almost certainly
would have resulted in a design value
that violated the NAAQS. EPA therefore
proposes to find that this analysis of
available ambient concentration data
and SO2 emissions data demonstrates by
a weight of evidence that the Sullivan
County Area failed to attain the 1-hour
SO2 NAAQS by the required attainment
date of October 4, 2018.
E. Consequences for SO2 Nonattainment
Areas Failing To Attain Standards by
Attainment Dates
The consequences for SO2
nonattainment areas for failing to attain
the standard by the applicable
attainment date are set forth in CAA
28 See Figure 5 and Table 3 of the Sullivan County
TSD in the docket for this proposed action.
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section 179(d). Under section 179(d), a
state must submit a SIP revision for the
area meeting the requirements of CAA
sections 110 and 172, the latter of which
requires, among other elements, a
demonstration of attainment and
reasonable further progress, and
contingency measures. In addition,
under CAA section 179(d)(2), the SIP
revision must include such additional
measures as EPA may reasonably
prescribe, including all measures that
can be feasibly implemented in the area
in light of technological achievability,
costs, and any non-air quality and other
air quality-related health and
environmental impacts.
In this case, the dominant source of
SO2 emissions in the Sullivan County
Area is the Eastman facility. EPA
expects that information concerning
potential additional control measures
would be collected by TDEC as part of
its development of the SIP revision to
address the requirements that would be
triggered by a final finding of failure to
attain for the Area. The State is required
to submit the SIP revision within one
year after EPA publishes a final action
in the Federal Register determining that
the nonattainment area failed to attain
the applicable SO2 standard by the
applicable attainment date. In addition
to triggering requirements for a new SIP
submittal, a final determination that a
nonattainment area failed to attain the
NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date would trigger the implementation
of contingency measures adopted into
the SIP under 172(c)(9).
Under CAA sections 179(d)(3) and
172(a)(2), the new attainment date for
each nonattainment area is the date by
which attainment can be achieved as
expeditiously as practicable, but no later
than five years after EPA publishes a
final action in the Federal Register
determining that the nonattainment area
failed to attain the applicable SO2
standard by the applicable attainment
date.29
III. Proposed Action and Request for
Public Comment
Under CAA section 179(c)(1), EPA
proposes to determine that the Sullivan
County Area failed to attain the 2010 1hour SO2 standard by the applicable
attainment date of October 4, 2018. This
determination is based upon a weight of
evidence analysis of available quality
assured and certified SO2 monitored air
quality data and emissions data from
January 2015 through December 2017 in
29 Pursuant to CAA sections 172(a)(2)(D) and
192(a), the attainment date extension provision
under section 172(a)(2)(A) does not apply to the
SO2 NAAQS.
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lieu of a valid 2015–2017 design value.
If finalized as proposed, the State of
Tennessee would be required under
CAA section 179(d) to submit a revision
to the SIP for the Sullivan County Area.
The required SIP revision for the area
must, among other elements,
demonstrate expeditious attainment of
the standards within the period
prescribed by CAA section 179(d). If
finalized as proposed, the SIP revision
required under CAA section 179(d)
would be due for submittal to EPA no
later than one year after the publication
date of the final action.
EPA is soliciting public comments on
the issues discussed in this notice.30
The Agency will accept comments from
the public on this proposal for the next
30 days. The deadline and instruction
on how to submit comment can be
found in the DATES and ADDRESSES
sections of this notice. EPA will
consider these comments before taking
final action.
IV. 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 therefore was 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
provisions of the PRA because it does
not contain any information collection
activities.
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 action, if
finalized, would require the state to
adopt and submit a SIP revision to
satisfy CAA requirements and would
30 The scope of this proposed action is limited to
whether the Sullivan County Area attained the 1hour SO2 standard by the applicable October 4,
2018, attainment date. Therefore, EPA is not
soliciting further comment on the approvability of
the State’s 2017 SO2 attainment SIP that the Agency
previously proposed to approve on June 29, 2018.
See 83 FR 30609. The comment period for that
proposal closed on July 30, 2018. EPA has not yet
taken final action on that SIP submission.
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not itself directly regulate any small
entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more, as described in UMRA (2 U.S.C.
1531–1538) and does not significantly
or uniquely affect small governments.
This action itself imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local, or
tribal governments, or the private sector.
This action proposes to determine that
the Sullivan County Area failed to attain
the NAAQS by the applicable
attainment date. If finalized, this
determination would trigger existing
statutory timeframes for the State to
submit SIP revisions. Such a
determination in and of itself does not
impose any federal intergovernmental
mandate.
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.
jspears on DSK121TN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
F. Executive Order 13175, Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. The proposed finding of
failure to attain SO2 NAAQS does not
apply to tribal areas, and the proposed
rule would not impose a burden on
Indian reservation lands or other areas
where EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction. Thus, this proposed rule
does not have tribal implications and
will not impose substantial direct costs
on tribal governments or preempt tribal
law as specified by Executive Order
13175.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
as applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern environmental
health or safety risks that 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 proposed action
is not subject to Executive Order 13045
because the effect of this proposed
action, if finalized, would be to trigger
additional planning requirements under
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17:38 Jan 12, 2022
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the CAA. This proposed action does not
establish an environmental standard
intended to mitigate health or safety
risks.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This proposed rule 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)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not
have disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority populations, lowincome populations and/or indigenous
peoples, as specified in Executive Order
12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The effect of this proposed action, if
finalized, would be to trigger additional
planning requirements under the CAA.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Lead, Pollution, Sulfur dioxide.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: December 29, 2021.
Daniel Blackman,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. 2022–00028 Filed 1–12–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2020–0446; FRL–9398–01–
R4]
Air Plan Approval; KY; Jefferson
County Emissions Statements
Requirements for the 2015 8-Hour
Ozone Standard Nonattainment Area
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
revision to the Jefferson County portion
of the Kentucky State Implementation
Plan (SIP) submitted by the
Commonwealth of Kentucky through
the Kentucky Division for Air Quality
SUMMARY:
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2101
(KDAQ) to EPA on August 12, 2020. The
proposed revision was submitted by
KDAQ on behalf of the Louisville Metro
Air Pollution Control District
(LMAPCD) to address the emissions
statement requirements for the 2015 8hour ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) for the Jefferson
County portion of the Louisville,
Kentucky 2015 8-hour ozone
nonattainment area (hereinafter referred
to as ‘‘Jefferson County’’). Jefferson
County is part of the Kentucky portion
of the Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana
2015 8-hour ozone nonattainment area
(hereinafter referred to as ‘‘the
Louisville, KY Area’’) which is
comprised of Bullitt, Jefferson, and
Oldham Counties in Kentucky. EPA will
consider the emissions statement
requirements for the Bullitt and Oldham
County portions of the Louisville, KY
Area in a separate action. This action is
being proposed pursuant to the Clean
Air Act (CAA or Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before February 14, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2020–0446 at
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
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 (audio, video,
etc.) 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. 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, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
www2.epa.gov/dockets/commentingepa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tiereny Bell, Air Regulatory
Management Section, Air Planning and
Implementation Branch, Air and
Radiation Division, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 4, 61 Forsyth
Street SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303–8960.
The telephone number is (404) 562–
9088. Ms. Bell can also be reached via
electronic mail at bell.tiereny@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 9 (Thursday, January 13, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 2095-2101]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-00028]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R04-OAR-2021-0428; FRL-9374-01-R4]
Finding of Failure To Attain the 2010 Sulfur Dioxide Standard;
Tennessee; Sullivan County Nonattainment Area
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
determine that the Sullivan County, Tennessee sulfur dioxide
(SO2) nonattainment area failed to attain the 2010 1-hour
SO2 primary National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS or
standard) by the applicable attainment date of October 4, 2018, based
upon a weight of evidence analysis of available quality-assured and
certified SO2 ambient air monitoring data and SO2
emissions data from January 2015 through December 2017. If EPA
finalizes this determination as proposed, the State of Tennessee will
be required to submit revisions to the Tennessee State Implementation
Plan (SIP) that, among other elements, provide for expeditious
attainment of the 2010 SO2 standard.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before February 14, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R04-
OAR-2021-0428 at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments. Once submitted, comments cannot
be edited or removed from Regulations.gov. 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 (audio, video, etc.) 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. 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, the full EPA public comment
policy, information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general
guidance on making effective comments, please visit https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Evan Adams, Air Regulatory
[[Page 2096]]
Management Section, Air Planning and Implementation Branch, Air and
Radiation Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 4, 61
Forsyth Street SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303-8960. Mr. Adams can be
reached by telephone at (404) 562-9009 or via electronic mail at
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. The 2010 SO2 NAAQS
B. Designations, Classifications, and Attainment Dates for the
2010 SO2 NAAQS
II. Proposed Determinations and Consequences
A. Applicable Statutory and Regulatory Provisions
B. Monitoring Network Considerations
C. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring Network
D. SO2 Data Considerations and Proposed Determination
E. Consequences for SO2 Nonattainment Areas Failing
To Attain Standards by Attainment Dates
III. Proposed Action and Request for Public Comment
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
A. The 2010 SO2 NAAQS
Under section 109 of the Clean Air Act (CAA or ``Act''), EPA has
established primary and secondary 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. The primary NAAQS
represent ambient air quality standards the attainment and maintenance
of which EPA has determined, including a margin of safety, are
requisite to protect the public health. The secondary NAAQS represent
ambient air quality standards the attainment and maintenance of which
EPA has determined are 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.
Under the CAA, EPA must establish a NAAQS for SO2, which
is primarily released to the atmosphere through the burning of fossil
fuels by power plants and other industrial facilities. Short-term
exposure to SO2 can damage the human respiratory system and
increase breathing difficulties. Small children and people with
respiratory conditions, such as asthma, are more sensitive to the
effects of SO2. Sulfur oxides at high concentrations can
also react with compounds to form small particulates that can penetrate
deeply into the lungs and cause health problems.
EPA first established primary SO2 standards in 1971 at
0.14 parts per million (ppm) over a 24-hour averaging period and 0.3
ppm over an annual averaging period.\1\ In June 2010, EPA revised the
primary NAAQS for SO2 to provide increased protection of
public health, providing for revocation of the 1971 primary annual and
24-hour SO2 standards for most areas of the country
following area designations under the new NAAQS.\2\ The 2010 NAAQS is
75 parts per billion (ppb) (equivalent to 0.075 ppm) over a 1-hour
averaging period.\3\ A violation of the 2010 1-hour SO2
NAAQS occurs when the annual 99th percentile of ambient daily maximum
1-hour average SO2 concentrations, averaged over a 3-year
period, exceeds 75 ppb.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 36 FR 8186 (April 30, 1971).
\2\ 40 CFR 50.4(e).
\3\ See 75 FR 35520 (June 22, 2010).
\4\ 40 CFR 50.17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Designations, Classifications, and Attainment Dates for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS
Following promulgation of any new or revised NAAQS, EPA is required
by CAA section 107(d) to designate areas throughout the nation as
attaining or not attaining the NAAQS. On August 5, 2013, EPA finalized
its first round (round 1) of designations for the 2010 primary
SO2 NAAQS.\5\ Specifically, in the 2013 action, EPA
designated 29 areas in 16 states as nonattainment for the 2010
SO2 NAAQS, including a portion of Sullivan County
(hereinafter referred to as ``the Sullivan County Area'' or Area) in
Tennessee. The Sullivan County Area lies within a 3-kilometer (km)
radius circle centered around the B-253 powerhouse at the Eastman
Chemical Company facility in Kingsport, Tennessee (Eastman), which
encompasses an SO2 monitor operating at the time of
designation (Air Quality System (AQS) Site ID: 47-163-0007).\6\ EPA's
round 1 designations for the 2010 SO2 NAAQS, including the
Sullivan County Area, became effective on October 4, 2013. Pursuant to
CAA section 192(a), the attainment date for the Area was no later than
October 4, 2018, which is five years after the effective date of the
final action designating each round 1 area as nonattainment for the
2010 SO2 NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See 78 FR 47191 (August 5, 2013).
\6\ For exact descriptions of the Sullivan County Area, refer to
40 CFR 81.343.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under CAA section 179(c) of the CAA, within six months of the
attainment date, the EPA is required to make a determination, based on
the area's air quality as of the attainment date, whether an area
attained by that date. If the EPA determines that an area failed to
attain by the attainment date, EPA is required to publish that
determination in the Federal Register. CAA section 179(c)(2). On June
25, 2021, EPA entered into a consent decree with the Center for
Biological Diversity in the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of California.\7\ The consent decree requires EPA to finalize,
by January 31, 2022, or March 31, 2022, depending on the nonattainment
area, a determination whether certain round 1 SO2
nonattainment areas (including the Sullivan County Area) attained the
1-hour SO2 standard by the October 4, 2018 attainment date.
For the Sullivan County Area, the consent decree deadline is March 31,
2022.
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\7\ See Center for Biological Diversity et al v. EPA; Case No.
3:20-cv-05436-EMC in the docket for this proposed action.
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II. Proposed Determination and Consequences
A. Applicable Statutory and Regulatory Provisions
Section 179(c)(1) of the CAA requires EPA to determine whether a
nonattainment area attained an applicable standard by the applicable
attainment date based on the area's air quality as of the applicable
attainment date. A determination of whether an area's air quality meets
applicable standards is generally based upon the most recent three
years of complete, quality-assured data gathered at established state
and local air monitoring stations (SLAMS) in a nonattainment area and
entered into the EPA's Air Quality System (AQS) database.\8\ Data from
ambient air monitors operated by state and local agencies in compliance
with EPA's monitoring requirements must be submitted to AQS.\9\
Monitoring agencies annually certify that these data are accurate to
the best of their knowledge.\10\ EPA uses the certified air monitoring
data to calculate design values that are used to determine the area's
air quality status in accordance with 40 CFR part 50 Appendix T (for
SO2).
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\8\ AQS is EPA's repository of ambient air quality data.
\9\ 40 CFR 58.16.
\10\ 40 CFR 58.15.
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Specifically, under EPA regulations in 40 CFR 50.17 and in
accordance with 40 CFR part 50 Appendix T, the 2010 1-hour annual
SO2 standard is met when the design value is less than or
equal to 75 ppb. Design values are calculated by
[[Page 2097]]
computing the three-year average of the annual 99th percentile daily
maximum 1-hour average concentrations.\11\ When calculating 1-hour
primary standard design values, the calculated design values are
rounded to the nearest whole number (i.e., 1 ppb) by convention. An
SO2 1-hour primary standard design value is valid if it
encompasses three consecutive calendar years of complete data. A year
is considered complete when all four quarters are complete, and a
quarter is complete when at least 75 percent of the sampling days are
complete. A sampling day is considered complete if 75 percent of the
hourly concentration values are reported; this includes data affected
by exceptional events that have been approved for exclusion by the EPA
Administrator.\12\
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\11\ As defined in 40 CFR part 50, Appendix T, section 1(c),
daily maximum 1-hour values refer to the maximum 1-hour
SO2 concentration values measured from midnight to
midnight that are used in the NAAQS computations.
\12\ See 40 CFR part 50, Appendix T, sections 1(c), 3(b), 4(c),
and 5(a).
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EPA notes that when determining the attainment status of
SO2 nonattainment areas, including when making
determinations of attainment by the attainment date, in addition to
ambient monitoring data, the Agency may also consider air quality
dispersion modeling and/or a demonstration that the control strategy in
the SIP has been fully implemented.\13\ With regard to the use of
monitoring data for such determinations, EPA's 2014 Nonattainment
SO2 Guidance \14\ specifically notes that ``[i]f the EPA
determines that the air quality monitors located in the affected area
are located in the area of maximum concentration, the EPA may be able
to use the data from these monitors to make the determination of
attainment without the use of air quality modeling data.'' \15\ The
modeling analysis of whether monitors are located in the area of
maximum concentration is necessary where EPA is making a determination
that an area attained by its attainment date based solely on that
monitoring information. In the case of the Sullivan County Area, the
SLAMS monitors did not start collecting data until the middle of 2016;
therefore, a valid 2015-2017 design value based on three consecutive
calendar years cannot be calculated.\16\ EPA's proposed determination
that the area did not attain by its attainment date is, therefore,
based on a technical analysis of the weight of available evidence --
including monitoring data and emissions data from the relevant time
period, as described in section II.C and II.D of this notice. As noted,
the determination of whether the monitors are located in the area of
maximum concentration is not needed in this situation, because a
demonstration is not being made that the Area has attained the 2010
SO2 NAAQS by the October 4, 2018, attainment date.
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\13\ For the Sullivan County Area, EPA has not yet approved an
attainment demonstration with accompanying emission limits into the
SIP. Thus, EPA cannot analyze compliance with an approved SIP
control strategy.
\14\ EPA, Guidance for 1-Hour SO2 Nonattainment Area
SIP Submissions (April 2014) (``2014 SO2 Guidance''),
p.49, available at: https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-06/documents/20140423guidance_nonattainment_sip.pdf.
\15\ Id., p.50.
\16\ The current SO2 monitoring network in the Area,
which is comprised of four SLAMS monitors and represented in
Tennessee's ambient air monitoring network plan, is designed to
measure SO2 air quality in the areas of expected maximum
1-hour SO2 concentration.
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B. Monitoring Network Considerations
Section 110(a)(2)(B)(i) of the CAA requires states to establish and
operate air monitoring networks to compile data on ambient air quality
for all criteria pollutants. EPA's monitoring requirements are
specified by regulation in 40 CFR part 58. These requirements are
applicable to the state, and where delegated, to local air monitoring
agencies that operate criteria pollutant monitors. The regulations in
40 CFR part 58 establish specific requirements for operating air
quality surveillance networks to measure ambient concentrations of
SO2, including requirements for measurement methods, network
design, quality assurance procedures, and the minimum number of
monitoring sites designated as SLAMS. In sections 4.4 and 4.5 of
Appendix D to 40 CFR part 58, EPA specifies minimum SLAMS monitoring
requirements for SO2. SLAMS produce data that are eligible
for comparison with the NAAQS, and therefore, the monitor must be an
approved federal reference method (FRM), federal equivalent method
(FEM), or approved regional method (ARM) monitor. Appendix A to 40 CFR
part 58 specifies quality assurance requirements for SLAMS monitors.
The minimum number of required SO2 SLAMS is described in
sections 4.4.2 and 4.4.3 of Appendix D to 40 CFR part 58. According to
section 4.4.2, the minimum number of required SO2 monitoring
sites is determined by the population weighted emissions index for each
state's core based statistical area. Section 4.4.3 describes additional
monitors that may be required by an EPA regional administrator.
Under 40 CFR 58.10, states are required to submit annual monitoring
network plans (AMNP) for ambient air monitoring networks for approval
by EPA. Each AMNP discusses the status of the air monitoring network as
required under 40 CFR 58.10 and addresses the operation and maintenance
of the air monitoring network, including any proposed modifications to
the network. EPA reviews these AMNPs for compliance with the applicable
monitoring network design requirements in 40 CFR part 58.\17\ EPA also
conducts regular technical systems audits (TSAs) during which EPA
reviews and inspects ambient air monitoring programs to assess
compliance with applicable regulations concerning the collection,
analysis, validation, and reporting of ambient air quality data.\18\
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\17\ See, e.g., letter dated September 14, 2020, from Caroline
Y. Freeman, Director, Air and Radiation Division, EPA Region IV, to
Michelle Owenby, Director, Division of Air Pollution Control, TDEC.
Copies of EPA letters responding to Tennessee's AMNPs for 2016-2020
are included in the docket for this proposed action.
\18\ See 40 CFR part 58, appendix A, section 2.5.
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For the Sullivan County Area, the Tennessee Department of
Environment and Conservation (TDEC) is responsible for assuring that
the Area meets air quality monitoring requirements. TDEC submitted an
annual monitoring network plan to EPA that describes the various
monitoring sites operated by TDEC.\19\ EPA approved TDEC's most recent
AMNP on September 30, 2021, and concluded that the air agency's ambient
air monitoring network meets or exceeds the requirements for the
minimum number of SLAMS for all criteria pollutants, including
SO2, in the Sullivan County Area.\20\ For additional
information related to Sullivan County Area's SO2 monitoring
network, including EPA's TSAs and the State's response and air
monitoring data, please refer to EPA's technical support document (TSD)
located in the docket for this proposed action (Sullivan County
TSD).\21\
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\19\ See, e.g., Tennessee's current AMNP ``2021 Tennessee Annual
Monitoring Network Plan.'' EPA Region 4 approved the 2021 AMNP on
September 30, 2021. Copies of Tennessee's AMNPs for 2015-2021 are
included in the docket for this proposed action.
\20\ See letter dated September 30, 2021, from Caroline Y.
Freeman, Director, Air and Radiation Division, EPA Region IV, to
Michelle Owenby, Director, Division of Air Pollution Control, TDEC
in the docket for this proposed action.
\21\ See Technical Support Document Finding of Failure to Attain
the 2010 1-Hour SO2 NAAQS For the Sullivan County,
Tennessee Nonattainment Area in the docket for this proposed action.
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C. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring Network
During the round 1 SO2 designations in 2013, Eastman
operated an industrial
[[Page 2098]]
SO2 monitor near the facility at the Ross N. Robinson site
(AQS ID: 47-163-0007). From 2010 to 2012, Tennessee certified to EPA
that all industry-operated monitoring data in Tennessee, including the
Eastman SO2 monitor, met EPA regulatory requirements,
including quality assurance requirements. EPA used this data as the
basis for an SO2 nonattainment determination on August 13,
2013, based on a 2009-2011 design value of 196 ppb at the Ross N.
Robinson industrial monitor.
In September 2013 (and subsequently in 2016), after an EPA TSA, EPA
found that Tennessee was unable to provide the required quality
assurance records and documentation for the industry-operated air
monitoring sites in Sullivan County. EPA determined that the Eastman
industrial monitors were not meeting the quality assurance requirements
in 40 CFR part 58 Appendix A and therefore not comparable to the NAAQS.
As a result of EPA's TSA findings, TDEC assigned a NAAQS exclusion flag
to the Ross N. Robinson industrial monitor's data in AQS beginning in
September 2013 to indicate the data did not meet regulatory
requirements. For the 2015-2017 period, no valid SO2
monitoring data were collected in the Area from January 1, 2015, to
July 20, 2016. Consequently, the Area did not have a valid
SO2 design value for the 2015-2017 period. See Sullivan
County TSD for more details on EPA's TSAs.
To characterize SO2 concentrations in the Sullivan
County Area, Tennessee began operating a SLAMS SO2 monitor
(AQS ID: 47-163-6001) on July 21, 2016, adjacent to the Ross N.
Robinson industrial monitoring site under an EPA-approved quality
assurance project plan, and in accordance with EPA's regulatory
requirements at Appendix D to 40 CFR part 58. The Ross N. Robinson
SLAMS site is located adjacent to Eastman's industrial monitor of the
same name on Wilburn Drive in Kingsport. On September 1, 2016, TDEC
also installed a second monitor (AQS ID: 47-163-6002) at the Skyland
Drive industrial monitoring site to further characterize high elevation
SO2 concentrations in the complex terrain around the
Sullivan County Area. This monitor was sited in accordance with the
normalized air modeling conducted by Tennessee in accordance with 40
CFR part 58 and EPA's SO2 Monitoring Technical Assistance
Document (TAD).\22\ The Skyland Drive SLAMS monitor site is located
with Eastman's industrial SO2 monitor of the same name on
Skyland Drive at Bagwell St. in Kingsport. The primary monitors \23\ at
each of these sites are FEM monitors. Valid hourly SO2 data
for the Area became available for the remainder of the design value
period (i.e., from July 21, 2016, to December 31, 2017) once the Ross
N. Robinson SLAMS site started operating. These monitoring data have
been reported to AQS and certified by TDEC. Eastman stopped reporting
data to AQS in 2016 for their industrial monitors and ceased operating
these monitors in 2019. During the 2015-2017 design value period, the
TDEC SLAMS monitors did not collect data in 2015 or the first half of
2016. Therefore, a valid 2015-2017 design value cannot be calculated
for the nonattainment area.
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\22\ See SO2 NAAQS Designations Source-Oriented
Monitoring Technical Assistance Document (TADs), Draft February 2016
in the docket for this proposed action.
\23\ A primary monitor is a term defined in 40 CFR part 58 that
means the monitor identified by the monitoring organization that
provides concentration data used for comparison to the NAAQS. For
any specific site, only one monitor for each pollutant can be
designated in AQS as primary monitor for a given period of time. The
primary monitor identifies the default data source for creating a
combined site record for purposes of NAAQS comparisons.
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In 2017, Tennessee committed to expanding its existing
SO2 ambient air monitoring network within the nonattainment
area.\24\ In 2018, EPA approved the portion of TDEC's AMNP that added
two SLAMS monitors within the Sullivan County Area to characterize the
expected areas of maximum 1-hour SO2 concentrations near the
Eastman facility.\25\ TDEC subsequently began operating the two
additional SLAMS sites at Happy Hill (AQS ID: 47-163-6004) in October
2018 and Andrew Johnson Elementary School (AQS ID: 47-163-6003) in
January 2019 to characterize the areas of expected maximum 1-hour
SO2 concentrations around the facility. These monitors were
sited in accordance with the normalized air modeling conducted by
Tennessee in accordance with 40 CFR part 58 and EPA's SO2
TAD. EPA approved the SO2 portion of TDEC's AMNP in 2016,
2018, 2019, and 2020.\26\
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\24\ In 2017, EPA commented on TDEC's SO2 draft
attainment SIP for the Sullivan County Area and recommended that the
State expand the monitoring network within the nonattainment area to
verify that the SO2 emission reduction measures proposed
in the attainment SIP at the time would ensure attainment of the 1-
hour standard. See EPA 2017 comment letter found in the docket for
this proposed action. Tennessee submitted an attainment SIP for the
Sullivan County Area on May 11, 2017. EPA proposed approval of the
attainment SIP on June 29, 2018 (83 FR 30609) but has not finalized
approval as of this action.
\25\ See letter dated July 24, 2018, from Beverly Banister,
Director, Air, Pesticides and Toxic Management Division, EPA Region
IV, to Michelle Owenby, Director, Division of Air Pollution Control,
TDEC included in the docket for this proposed action.
\26\ The most recent TDEC AMNP, submitted and approved in 2020,
includes four SO2 SLAMS in the nonattainment area which
will provide NAAQS-comparable monitoring data moving forward.
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D. SO2 Data Considerations and Proposed Determination
As discussed in section II.C above, air monitoring data in the area
from January 1, 2015, to July 20, 2016, did not meet the quality
assurance requirements in 40 CFR part 58 Appendix A and therefore are
not comparable to the NAAQS. Therefore, a valid 2015-2017 design value
could not be determined for the nonattainment area. In lieu of a 2015-
2017, 3-year design value, EPA has developed a weight of evidence
assessment based on available air quality monitoring data and source-
specific SO2 emissions in the Area from January 2015 through
December 2017 to support the determination that the Sullivan County
Area did not attain the 1-hour SO2 standard by the October
4, 2018, attainment date based on the area's air quality as of the
attainment date. This section summarizes EPA's weight of evidence
approach and data considerations for the nonattainment area. More
detailed discussions on the air monitoring and SO2 emission
data are provided in EPA's Sullivan County TSD located in the docket
for this proposed action.
1. Sullivan County SO2 Monitoring Data
As discussed in section I.B above, the applicable attainment date
for the Sullivan County Area, is October 4, 2018. In accordance with
Appendix T to 40 CFR part 50, determinations of SO2 NAAQS
compliance are based on three consecutive calendar years of data. To
determine the air quality as of the attainment date in the
nonattainment area, EPA reviewed the available data collected during
the three calendar years immediately preceding the attainment date for
the Sullivan County Area (i.e., January 1, 2015, through December 31,
2017), as well as SO2 emissions data at Eastman.
As discussed above, no NAAQS-comparable SO2 monitoring
data is available for the Area for January 1, 2015, to July 20, 2016.
The available SLAMS SO2 data for the Sullivan County Area
from July 21, 2016, through December 31, 2017, have been certified by
TDEC. EPA has also evaluated the completeness of these data in
accordance with the requirements of 40 CFR part 50, Appendix T. The
data collected by TDEC in the three calendar years preceding the
attainment date meet the quarterly completeness criteria
[[Page 2099]]
for only 6 out of 12 quarters at the Ross N. Robinson SO2
monitor since the monitor began operation on July 21, 2016, and 5 out
of 12 quarters at the Skyland Drive SO2 monitor since the
monitor began operation on September 1, 2016. The available annual 99th
percentile daily maximum 1-hour average SO2 data at each
monitoring site within the Sullivan County Area for the 2015-2017
period are presented in Table 1.
Table 1--2015-2017 SO2 Monitoring Data for the Sullivan County Area
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual 99th percentile daily maximum 1-hour
average (ppb)
Site (AQS ID) ------------------------------------------------ Design value valid?
2015 2016 2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ross N. Robinson (47-163-6001). \a\ N/A \b\ 152 92 No.
Skyland Dr. (47-163-6002)...... \a\ N/A \b\ 91 78 No.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ The SLAMS monitors did not collect data in 2015.
\b\ The Ross N. Robinson monitor had only two quarters of complete data in 2016 due to the monitor beginning
operation on July 21, 2016. The Skyland Drive monitor had only one quarter of complete data in 2016 due to the
monitor beginning operation on September 1, 2016.
Source: EPA AQS Design Value Report, retrieved September 14, 2021.
The data in Table 1 indicates that although the two sites in the
Sullivan County Area did not have complete data in 2015 and 2016 to
determine a 3-year design value, both monitors consistently measured
99th percentile daily maximum 1-hour SO2 concentrations
above the 75 ppb level of the 1-hour NAAQS in 2016 and 2017, after
beginning operation in mid-2016. Both monitors have complete 2017
datasets.
For an area to attain the 2010 SO2 NAAQS by the October
4, 2018, attainment date, the design value based upon monitored air
quality data from 2015-2017 at each eligible monitoring sites must be
equal to or less than 75 ppb for the 1-hour standard. Table 1 above
shows that the annual 99th percentile daily maximum 1-hour average at
each monitoring site exceeds 75 ppb in 2016 and 2017. See also Table 1
in the Sullivan County TSD.
2. Eastman SO2 Emissions Data
As mentioned above, in round 1 SO2 designations, EPA
designated as nonattainment the portion of Sullivan County within a 3-
km radius circle centered at Eastman's B-253 powerhouse, which at the
time of designations encompassed the one monitor that was violating the
2010 1-hour SO2 NAAQS based on 2009-2011 air quality data.
Table 2 shows that the SO2 emissions, expressed in tons per
year (tpy), from Eastman account for more than 99 percent of the total
SO2 emissions in Sullivan County during the 2015-2017 period
relevant for this proposed determination that the Area failed to attain
the SO2 NAAQS by the applicable attainment date. Prior to
the Sullivan County Area being designated as nonattainment for the 2010
1-hour SO2 NAAQS in 2013, Eastman operated 15 coal-fired
boilers at their facility to generate steam and electricity. As
discussed in more detail in the Sullivan County TSD for this proposed
action, Eastman's annual SO2 emissions have been steadily
decreasing since 2013 due primarily to the changes in operations of the
coal-fired boilers.
Table 2--2015-2017 SO2 Emission Data for the Sullivan County SO2
Nonattainment Area
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Sullivan
County SO2 Eastman SO2
Calendar year emissions from emissions
all sources (tpy)
(tpy)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015.................................. 17,980 17,978
2016.................................. 14,325 14,324
2017.................................. 10,792 10,746
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in Table 2, the total annual SO2 emissions from
Eastman decreased over 7,000 tpy from 17,978 tpy in 2015 to 10,746 tpy
in 2017. During 2015-2017, the annual emissions were highest in 2015,
when no air monitoring data is available, and emissions decreased
significantly in 2016 and 2017. The decrease was primarily because of
the conversion of two large coal-fired boilers, Boilers 27 and 28 in
the B-253 powerhouse, from burning coal to natural gas fuel that was
completed in 2016. These two boiler conversions were part of a larger
SO2 emissions control project beginning in 2014 and ending
in 2018, which converted all five boilers in the B-253 powerhouse from
burning coal to burn natural gas fuel. These conversions had a
significant impact on SO2 emissions: Emissions from the B-
253 powerhouse decreased from 14,171 tpy in 2012 to less than 10 tpy in
2019.\27\ The total annual SO2 emissions from the entire
Eastman facility decreased from 21,246 tpy in 2012 to 4,510 tpy in
2019. See Sullivan County TSD for complete details of the boiler
conversions and resulting emissions changes.
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\27\ The conversion of the B-253 boilers from burning coal to
natural gas was completed in October 2018. Thus, the SO2
emissions from the B-253 powerhouse dropped significantly to 10 tpy
in 2019.
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It is important to also consider trends in hourly SO2
emissions since the 2010 SO2 NAAQS is a short-term standard
that is evaluated using hourly measurements of ambient SO2
concentrations. EPA's evaluation of Eastman's hourly emissions data
found that their emissions were over 33 percent higher during the
period from January 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016, (when no valid ambient
monitoring data was available), than the July 1, 2016, through December
31, 2017, period (when valid
[[Page 2100]]
ambient monitoring data show exceedances of the NAAQS).\28\
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\28\ See Figure 5 and Table 3 of the Sullivan County TSD in the
docket for this proposed action.
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3. Weight of Evidence Analysis Conclusions and Proposed Determination
To determine the air quality in the Sullivan County Area as of the
applicable attainment date, EPA reviewed the available ambient
monitoring data and annual and hourly SO2 emissions data at
Eastman from January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2017. As shown in Table
1, the available SO2 ambient monitoring data in the Sullivan
County Area indicates that the 99th percentile maximum daily 1-hour
SO2 concentration in both 2016 and 2017 exceeded the 1-hour
SO2 NAAQS level of 75 ppb. The primary SO2
emissions sources in the nonattainment area are the coal-fired boilers
at Eastman. Both the annual SO2 emissions and the hourly
SO2 emissions from the Eastman boilers were significantly
higher from January 1, 2015, to June 30, 2016, when air monitoring data
are not available, than from July 1, 2016, through December 31, 2017,
when air monitoring data are available. Ambient SO2
concentrations are very source-oriented, and in this case, the Eastman
boilers make up virtually the entire emissions inventory for the Area.
Considering that the ambient measured concentrations exceeded the level
of the NAAQS in 2016 and 2017, when emissions from the primary source
of SO2 were lower than they were in 2015, EPA believes it is
reasonable to expect that the 99th percentile maximum daily 1-hour
SO2 concentration in 2015 likely also exceeded the level of
75 ppb. Consequently, the three-year average of: The 99th percentile
value for 2015 (likely exceeded the level of the NAAQS), 2016 (exceeded
the level of the NAAQS), and 2017 (exceeded the level of the NAAQS)
almost certainly would have resulted in a design value that violated
the NAAQS. EPA therefore proposes to find that this analysis of
available ambient concentration data and SO2 emissions data
demonstrates by a weight of evidence that the Sullivan County Area
failed to attain the 1-hour SO2 NAAQS by the required
attainment date of October 4, 2018.
E. Consequences for SO2 Nonattainment Areas Failing To Attain Standards
by Attainment Dates
The consequences for SO2 nonattainment areas for failing
to attain the standard by the applicable attainment date are set forth
in CAA section 179(d). Under section 179(d), a state must submit a SIP
revision for the area meeting the requirements of CAA sections 110 and
172, the latter of which requires, among other elements, a
demonstration of attainment and reasonable further progress, and
contingency measures. In addition, under CAA section 179(d)(2), the SIP
revision must include such additional measures as EPA may reasonably
prescribe, including all measures that can be feasibly implemented in
the area in light of technological achievability, costs, and any non-
air quality and other air quality-related health and environmental
impacts.
In this case, the dominant source of SO2 emissions in
the Sullivan County Area is the Eastman facility. EPA expects that
information concerning potential additional control measures would be
collected by TDEC as part of its development of the SIP revision to
address the requirements that would be triggered by a final finding of
failure to attain for the Area. The State is required to submit the SIP
revision within one year after EPA publishes a final action in the
Federal Register determining that the nonattainment area failed to
attain the applicable SO2 standard by the applicable
attainment date. In addition to triggering requirements for a new SIP
submittal, a final determination that a nonattainment area failed to
attain the NAAQS by the applicable attainment date would trigger the
implementation of contingency measures adopted into the SIP under
172(c)(9).
Under CAA sections 179(d)(3) and 172(a)(2), the new attainment date
for each nonattainment area is the date by which attainment can be
achieved as expeditiously as practicable, but no later than five years
after EPA publishes a final action in the Federal Register determining
that the nonattainment area failed to attain the applicable
SO2 standard by the applicable attainment date.\29\
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\29\ Pursuant to CAA sections 172(a)(2)(D) and 192(a), the
attainment date extension provision under section 172(a)(2)(A) does
not apply to the SO2 NAAQS.
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III. Proposed Action and Request for Public Comment
Under CAA section 179(c)(1), EPA proposes to determine that the
Sullivan County Area failed to attain the 2010 1-hour SO2
standard by the applicable attainment date of October 4, 2018. This
determination is based upon a weight of evidence analysis of available
quality assured and certified SO2 monitored air quality data
and emissions data from January 2015 through December 2017 in lieu of a
valid 2015-2017 design value. If finalized as proposed, the State of
Tennessee would be required under CAA section 179(d) to submit a
revision to the SIP for the Sullivan County Area. The required SIP
revision for the area must, among other elements, demonstrate
expeditious attainment of the standards within the period prescribed by
CAA section 179(d). If finalized as proposed, the SIP revision required
under CAA section 179(d) would be due for submittal to EPA no later
than one year after the publication date of the final action.
EPA is soliciting public comments on the issues discussed in this
notice.\30\ The Agency will accept comments from the public on this
proposal for the next 30 days. The deadline and instruction on how to
submit comment can be found in the DATES and ADDRESSES sections of this
notice. EPA will consider these comments before taking final action.
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\30\ The scope of this proposed action is limited to whether the
Sullivan County Area attained the 1-hour SO2 standard by
the applicable October 4, 2018, attainment date. Therefore, EPA is
not soliciting further comment on the approvability of the State's
2017 SO2 attainment SIP that the Agency previously
proposed to approve on June 29, 2018. See 83 FR 30609. The comment
period for that proposal closed on July 30, 2018. EPA has not yet
taken final action on that SIP submission.
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IV. 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 therefore
was 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 provisions of the PRA because it does not contain any information
collection activities.
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 action, if finalized, would require the state to adopt and
submit a SIP revision to satisfy CAA requirements and would
[[Page 2101]]
not itself directly regulate any small entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate of $100 million
or more, as described in UMRA (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538) and does not
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. This action itself
imposes no enforceable duty on any state, local, or tribal governments,
or the private sector. This action proposes to determine that the
Sullivan County Area failed to attain the NAAQS by the applicable
attainment date. If finalized, this determination would trigger
existing statutory timeframes for the State to submit SIP revisions.
Such a determination in and of itself does not impose any federal
intergovernmental mandate.
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, Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. The proposed finding of failure to attain
SO2 NAAQS does not apply to tribal areas, and the proposed
rule would not impose a burden on Indian reservation lands or other
areas where EPA or an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction. Thus, this proposed rule does not have tribal
implications and will not impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as specified by Executive Order
13175.
G. Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that 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 proposed action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because the effect of this proposed action, if finalized,
would be to trigger additional planning requirements under the CAA.
This proposed action does not establish an environmental standard
intended to mitigate health or safety risks.
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This proposed rule 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)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). The
effect of this proposed action, if finalized, would be to trigger
additional planning requirements under the CAA.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Lead, Pollution, Sulfur
dioxide.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: December 29, 2021.
Daniel Blackman,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. 2022-00028 Filed 1-12-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P