Air Plan Disapproval; New York and New Jersey; Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 9484-9498 [2022-02946]
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methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
to apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where EPA or an
Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the 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 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: February 1, 2022.
Meghan A. McCollister,
Regional Administrator, Region 7.
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart Q—Iowa
Part 52 of chapter I, title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations is proposed
to be amended as follows:
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
2. In § 52.820, the table in paragraph
(e) is amended by adding an entry for
‘‘(55)’’ in numerical order to read as
follows:
■
§ 52.820
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED IOWA NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS
Name of non regulatory SIP
provision
Applicable
geographic or
nonattainment
area
*
*
(55) Transport SIP for the 2015
Ozone Standard.
Statewide .......
*
[FR Doc. 2022–02935 Filed 2–18–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
EPA–R02–OAR–2021–0673; EPA–HQ–OAR–
2021–0663; FRL–9424–01–R2]
Air Plan Disapproval; New York and
New Jersey; Interstate Transport of Air
Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
is proposing to disapprove State
Implementation Plan (SIP) submittals
from New York and New Jersey
regarding interstate transport for the
2015 8-hour ozone national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS). This
provision requires that each state’s SIP
contain adequate provisions to prohibit
emissions from within the state from
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SUMMARY:
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State
submittal
date
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EPA approval date
Explanation
*
*
[Date of publication of the final
rule in the [Federal Register], [Federal Register citation of the final rule].
*
*
[EPA–R07–OAR–2021–0870; EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663; FRL–9468–01–R7]. This
transport SIP shows that Iowa does not
significantly contribute to ozone nonattainment or maintenance in any other state.
This submittal is approved as meeting the
requirements of Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
significantly contributing to
nonattainment or interfering with
maintenance of the NAAQS in other
states. The ‘‘good neighbor’’ or
‘‘interstate transport’’ requirement is
part of the broader set of
‘‘infrastructure’’ requirements, which
are designed to ensure that the
structural components of each state’s air
quality management program are
adequate to meet the state’s
responsibilities under the CAA. This
disapproval, if finalized, will establish a
2-year deadline for the EPA to
promulgate a Federal Implementation
Plan (FIP) to address the relevant
interstate transport requirements, unless
the EPA approves a subsequent SIP
submittal that meets these requirements.
Disapproval does not start a mandatory
sanctions clock.
Comments: Written comments
must be received on or before April 25,
2022.
DATES:
You may send comments,
identified as Docket No. EPA–R02–
OAR–2021–0673 to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov following the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
ADDRESSES:
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Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Participation’’ heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document. Out of an abundance of
caution for members of the public and
our staff, the EPA Docket Center and
Reading Room are open to the public by
appointment only to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID–19. Our Docket
Center staff also continues to provide
remote customer service via email,
phone, and webform. For further
information on the EPA Docket Center
services and the current status, please
visit us online at https://www.epa.gov/
dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kenneth Fradkin, Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 2, 290
Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, NY
10007–1866, (212) 637–3702, or by
email at Fradkin.Kenneth@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Public
Participation: Submit your comments,
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2022 / Proposed Rules
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R02–
OAR–2021–0673 at https://
www.regulations.gov. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed
from the docket. The EPA may publish
any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit to the EPA’s
docket at https://www.regulations.gov
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. 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).
There are two dockets supporting this
action, EPA–R02–OAR–2021–0673 and
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663. Docket No.
EPA–R02–OAR–2021–0673 contains
information specific to New York and
New Jersey, including the notice of
proposed rulemaking. Docket No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663 contains
additional modeling files, emissions
inventory files, technical support
documents, and other relevant
supporting documentation regarding
interstate transport of emissions for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS which are
being used to support this action. All
comments regarding information in
either of these dockets are to be made
in Docket No. EPA–R02–OAR–2021–
0673. For additional submission
methods, please contact Kenneth
Fradkin, Environmental Protection
Agency, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New
York, 10007–1866, (212) 637–3702, or
by email at Fradkin.Kenneth@epa.gov.
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. Due to public
health concerns related to COVID–19,
the EPA Docket Center and Reading
Room are open to the public by
appointment only. Our Docket Center
staff also continues to provide remote
customer service via email, phone, and
webform. For further information and
updates on the EPA Docket Center
services, please visit us online at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA continues to carefully and
continuously monitor information from
the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), local area health
departments, and our Federal partners
so that we can respond rapidly as
conditions change regarding COVID–19.
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The index to the docket for this
action, Docket No. EPA–R02–OAR–
2021–0673, is available electronically at
www.regulations.gov. While all
documents in the docket are listed in
the index, some information may not be
publicly available due to docket file size
restrictions or content (e.g., CBI).
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’
‘‘us,’’ and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
I. Background
A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, the EPA
promulgated a revision to the ozone
NAAQS (2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS),
lowering the level of both the primary
and secondary standards to 0.070 parts
per million (ppm).1 Section 110(a)(1) of
the CAA requires states to submit,
within 3 years after promulgation of a
new or revised standard, SIP
submissions meeting the applicable
requirements of section 110(a)(2).2 One
of these applicable requirements is
found in CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I),
otherwise known as the ‘‘interstate
transport’’ or ‘‘good neighbor’’
provision, which generally requires SIPs
to contain adequate provisions to
prohibit in-state emissions activities
from having certain adverse air quality
effects on other states due to interstate
transport of pollution. There are two socalled ‘‘prongs’’ within CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). A SIP for a new or
revised NAAQS must contain adequate
provisions prohibiting any source or
other type of emissions activity within
the state from emitting air pollutants in
amounts that will significantly
contribute to nonattainment of the
NAAQS in another state (prong 1) or
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in another state (prong 2). The
EPA and states must give independent
significance to prong 1 and prong 2
when evaluating downwind air quality
problems under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).3
B. Description of the EPA’s Four Step
Interstate Transport Regulatory Process
The EPA is using the 4-step interstate
transport framework (or 4-step
framework) to evaluate the states’ SIP
1 National Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Ozone, Final Rule, 80 FR 65292 (October 26, 2015).
Although the level of the standard is specified in
the units of ppm, ozone concentrations are also
described in parts per billion (ppb). For example,
0.070 ppm is equivalent to 70 ppb.
2 SIP revisions that are intended to meet the
applicable requirements of section 110(a)(1) and (2)
of the CAA are often referred to as infrastructure
SIPs and the applicable elements under section
110(a)(2) are referred to as infrastructure
requirements.
3 See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 909–
11 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
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submittals addressing the interstate
transport provision for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. The EPA has addressed
the interstate transport requirements of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) with
respect to prior ozone NAAQS in
several regional regulatory actions,
including the Cross-State Air Pollution
Rule (CSAPR), which addressed
interstate transport with respect to the
1997 ozone NAAQS as well as the 1997
and 2006 fine particulate matter
standards,4 and the Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule Update (CSAPR
Update) 5 and the Revised CSAPR
Update, both of which addressed the
2008 ozone NAAQS.6
Through the development and
implementation of the CSAPR
rulemakings and prior regional
rulemakings pursuant to the interstate
transport provision,7 the EPA, working
in partnership with states, developed
the following 4-step interstate transport
framework to evaluate a State’s
obligations to eliminate interstate
transport emissions under the interstate
transport provision for the ozone
NAAQS: (1) Identify monitoring sites
that are projected to have problems
attaining and/or maintaining the
NAAQS (i.e., nonattainment and/or
maintenance receptors); (2) identify
states that impact those air quality
problems in other (i.e., downwind)
states sufficiently such that the states
are considered ‘‘linked’’ and therefore
warrant further review and analysis; (3)
identify the emissions reductions
necessary (if any), applying a
multifactor analysis, to eliminate each
linked upwind state’s significant
contribution to nonattainment or
interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS at the locations identified in
Step 1; and (4) adopt permanent and
4 See Federal Implementation Plans: Interstate
Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone and
Correction of SIP Approvals, 76 FR 48208 (Aug. 8,
2011).
5 Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update for the
2008 Ozone NAAQS, 81 FR 74504 (Oct. 26, 2016).
6 In 2019, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
remanded the CSAPR Update to the extent it failed
to require upwind states to eliminate their
significant contribution by the next applicable
attainment date by which downwind states must
come into compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a). Wisconsin v.
EPA, 938 F.3d 303, 313 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The
Revised CSAPR Update for the 2008 Ozone
NAAQS, 86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021), responded
to the remand of the CSAPR Update in Wisconsin
and the vacatur of a separate rule, the ‘‘CSAPR
Close-Out,’’ 83 FR 65878 (December 21, 2018), in
New York v. EPA, 781 F. App’x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
7 In addition to the CSAPR rulemakings, other
regional rulemakings addressing ozone transport
include the ‘‘NOX SIP Call,’’ 63 FR 57356 (October
27, 1998), and the ‘‘Clean Air Interstate Rule’’
(CAIR), 70 FR 25162 (May 12, 2005).
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enforceable measures needed to achieve
those emissions reductions.
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C. Background on the EPA’s Ozone
Transport Modeling Information
In general, the EPA has performed
nationwide air quality modeling to
project ozone design values which are
used in combination with measured
data to identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors. To quantify the
contribution of emissions from specific
upwind states on 2023 ozone design
values for the identified downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors, the EPA performed
nationwide, state-level ozone source
apportionment modeling for 2023. The
source apportionment modeling
provided contributions to ozone at
receptors from precursor emissions of
anthropogenic nitrogen oxides (NOX)
and volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
in individual upwind states.
The EPA has released several
documents containing projected ozone
design values, contributions, and
information relevant to evaluating
interstate transport with respect to the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. First, on
January 6, 2017, the EPA published a
notice of data availability (NODA) in
which we requested comment on
preliminary interstate ozone transport
data including projected ozone design
values and interstate contributions for
2023 using a 2011 base year platform.8
In the NODA, the EPA used the year
2023 as the analytic year for this
preliminary modeling because that year
aligns with the expected attainment year
for Moderate ozone nonattainment areas
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.9 On
October 27, 2017, we released a
memorandum (October 2017
memorandum) containing updated
modeling data for 2023, which
incorporated changes made in response
to comments on the NODA, and noted
that the modeling may be useful for
states developing SIPs to address
interstate transport obligations for the
2008 ozone NAAQS.10 On March 27,
2018, we issued a memorandum (March
2018 memorandum) noting that the
same 2023 modeling data released in the
October 2017 memorandum could also
be useful for identifying potential
8 See Notice of Availability of the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Preliminary Interstate Ozone
Transport Modeling Data for the 2015 8-hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS),
82 FR 1733 (January 6, 2017).
9 82 FR at 1735.
10 See Information on the Interstate Transport
State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2008 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), October 27, 2017, available in
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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downwind air quality problems with
respect to the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS at Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework.11 The March 2018
memorandum also included the then
newly available contribution modeling
data for 2023 to assist states in
evaluating their impact on potential
downwind air quality problems for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS under Step
2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework.12 The EPA subsequently
issued two more memoranda in August
and October 2018, providing additional
information to states developing
interstate transport SIP submissions for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS
concerning, respectively, potential
contribution thresholds that may be
appropriate to apply in Step 2 of the 4step interstate transport framework, and
considerations for identifying
downwind areas that may have
problems maintaining the standard at
Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework.13
Since the release of the modeling data
shared in the March 2018
memorandum, the EPA performed
updated modeling using a 2016-based
emissions modeling platform (i.e.,
2016v1). This emissions platform was
developed under the EPA/MultiJurisdictional Organization (MJO)/state
collaborative project.14 This
collaborative project was a multi-year
joint effort by the EPA, MJOs, and states
to develop a new, more recent emissions
platform for use by the EPA and states
in regulatory modeling as an
improvement over the dated 2011-based
platform that the EPA had used to
11 See Information on the Interstate Transport
State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018 (‘‘March 2018
memorandum’’), available in Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
12 The March 2018 memorandum, however,
provided, ‘‘While the information in this
memorandum and the associated air quality
analysis data could be used to inform the
development of these SIPs, the information is not
a final determination regarding states’ obligations
under the good neighbor provision. Any such
determination would be made through notice-andcomment rulemaking.’’
13 See Analysis of Contribution Thresholds for
Use in Clean Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
Interstate Transport State Implementation Plan
Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards, August 31, 2018) (‘‘August
2018 memorandum’’), and Considerations for
Identifying Maintenance Receptors for Use in Clean
Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) Interstate
Transport State Implementation Plan Submissions
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, October 19, 2018, available in Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
14 The results of this modeling, as well as the
underlying modeling files, are included in Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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project ozone design values and
contribution data provided in the 2017
and 2018 memoranda. The EPA used
the 2016v1 emissions to project ozone
Design values and contributions for
2023. On October 30, 2020, in the
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the
Revised CSAPR Update, the EPA
released and accepted public comment
on 2023 modeling that used the 2016v1
emissions platform.15 Although the
Revised CSPAR Update addressed
transport for the 2008 ozone NAAQS,
the projected design values and
contributions from the 2016v1 platform
are also useful for identifying
downwind ozone problems and linkages
with respect to the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.16
Following the final Revised CSAPR
Update, the EPA made further updates
to the 2016 emissions platform to
include mobile emissions from the
EPA’s Motor Vehicle Emission
Simulator MOVES3 model 17 and
updated emissions projections for
electric generating units (EGUs) that
reflect the emissions reductions from
the Revised CSAPR Update, recent
information on plant closures, and other
sector trends. The construct of the
updated emissions platform, 2016v2, is
described in the Emissions Modeling
technical support document (TSD) for
this proposed rule. The EPA performed
air quality modeling of the 2016v2
emissions using the most recent public
release version of the Comprehensive
Air Quality Model with Extensions
(CAMx) photochemical modeling,
version 7.10.18 The EPA now proposes
to primarily rely on modeling based on
the updated and newly available 2016v2
emissions platform in evaluating these
submissions with respect to Steps 1 and
2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework. By using the updated
modeling results, the EPA is using the
most current and technically
appropriate information for this
proposed rulemaking. Section III of this
notice and the Air Quality Modeling
TSD for 2015 Ozone NAAQS Transport
SIP Proposed Actions included in
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663 for this proposal contains
additional detail on the EPA’s 2016v2
modeling. In this notice, the EPA is
15 See
85 FR 68964, 68981.
the Air Quality Modeling Technical
Support Document for the Final Revised Cross-State
Air Pollution Rule Update included in the
Headquarters Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
17 Additional details and documentation related
to the MOVES3 model can be found at https://
www.epa.gov/moves/latest-version-motor-vehicleemission-simulator-moves.
18 Ramboll Environment and Health, January
2021, www.camx.com.
16 See
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accepting public comment on this
updated 2023 modeling, which uses a
2016v2 emissions platform. Comments
on the EPA’s air quality modeling
should be submitted in the Regional
docket for this action, Docket No. EPA–
R02–OAR–2021–0673. Comments are
not being accepted in Docket EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
In some cases, states may rely on the
results of EPA modeling and/or
alternative modeling performed by
states or Multi-Jurisdictional
Organizations (MJOs) to evaluate
downwind air quality problems and
contributions as part of their
submissions. New York and New Jersey
have done so, and so we have evaluated
the use of that alternative modeling in
Section III.
D. The EPA’s Approach to Evaluating
Interstate Transport SIPs for the 2015 8Hour Ozone NAAQS
The EPA proposes to apply a
consistent set of policy judgments
across all states for purposes of
evaluating interstate transport
obligations and the approvability of
interstate transport SIP submittals for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. These
policy judgments reflect consistency
with relevant case law and past agency
practice as reflected in the CSAPR and
related rulemakings. Nationwide
consistency in approach is particularly
important in the context of interstate
ozone transport, which is a regionalscale pollution problem involving many
smaller contributors. Effective policy
solutions to the problem of interstate
ozone transport going back to the NOX
SIP Call have necessitated the
application of a uniform framework of
policy judgments in order to ensure an
‘‘efficient and equitable’’ approach. See
EME Homer City Generation, LP v. EPA,
572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014).
In the March, August, and October
2018 memoranda, the EPA recognized
that states may be able to establish
alternative approaches to addressing
their interstate transport obligations for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS that vary
from a nationally uniform framework.
The EPA emphasized in these
memoranda, however, that such
alternative approaches must be
technically justified and appropriate in
light of the facts and circumstances of
each particular state’s submittal. In
general, the EPA continues to believe
that deviation from a nationally
consistent approach to ozone transport
must be substantially justified and have
a well-documented technical basis that
is consistent with relevant case law.
Where states submitted SIPs that rely on
any such potential ‘‘flexibilities’’ as may
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have been identified or suggested in the
past, the EPA will evaluate whether the
state adequately justified the technical
and legal basis for doing so.
The EPA notes that certain concepts
included in an attachment to the March
2018 memorandum require unique
consideration, and these ideas do not
constitute agency guidance with respect
to transport obligations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS. Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum identified a
‘‘Preliminary List of Potential
Flexibilities’’ that could potentially
inform SIP development.19 However,
the EPA made clear in that Attachment
that the list of ideas were not
suggestions endorsed by the Agency but
rather ‘‘comments provided in various
forums’’ on which the EPA sought
‘‘feedback from interested
stakeholders.’’ 20 Further, Attachment A
stated, ‘‘EPA is not at this time making
any determination that the ideas
discussed below are consistent with the
requirements of the CAA, nor are we
specifically recommending that states
use these approaches.’’ 21 Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum,
therefore, does not constitute agency
guidance, but was intended to generate
further discussion around potential
approaches to addressing ozone
transport among interested stakeholders.
To the extent states sought to develop or
rely on these ideas in support of their
SIP submittals, the EPA will thoroughly
review the technical and legal
justifications for doing so.
The remainder of this section
describes the EPA’s proposed
framework with respect to analytic year,
definition of nonattainment and
maintenance receptors, selection of
contribution threshold, and multifactor
control strategy assessment.
1. Selection of Analytic Year
In general, the states and the EPA
must implement the interstate transport
provision in a manner ‘‘consistent with
the provisions of [title I of the CAA.]’’
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). This
requires, among other things, that these
obligations are addressed consistently
with the timeframes for downwind areas
to meet their CAA obligations. With
respect to ozone NAAQS, under CAA
section 181(a), this means obligations
must be addressed ‘‘as expeditiously as
practicable’’ and no later than the
schedule of attainment dates provided
in CAA section 181(a)(1).22 Several D.C.
19 March
20 Id.
2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
at A–1.
21 Id.
22 For attainment dates for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS, refer to CAA section 181(a), 40 CFR
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Circuit court decisions address the issue
of the relevant analytic year for the
purposes of evaluating ozone transport
air-quality problems. On September 13,
2019, the D.C. Circuit issued a decision
in Wisconsin v. EPA, remanding the
CSAPR Update to the extent that it
failed to require upwind states to
eliminate their significant contribution
by the next applicable attainment date
by which downwind states must come
into compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a).
938 F.3d at 313.
On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit
issued a decision in Maryland v. EPA
that cited the Wisconsin decision in
holding that the EPA must assess the
impact of interstate transport on air
quality at the next downwind
attainment date, including Marginal
area attainment dates, in evaluating the
basis for the EPA’s denial of a petition
under CAA section 126(b). Maryland v.
EPA, 958 F.3d 1185, 1203–04 (D.C. Cir.
2020). The court noted that ‘‘section
126(b) incorporates the Good Neighbor
Provision,’’ and, therefore, ‘‘EPA must
find a violation [of section 126] if an
upwind source will significantly
contribute to downwind nonattainment
at the next downwind attainment
deadline. Therefore, the agency must
evaluate downwind air quality at that
deadline, not at some later date.’’ Id. at
1204 (emphasis added). The EPA
interprets the court’s holding in
Maryland as requiring the states and the
Agency, under the good neighbor
provision, to assess downwind air
quality as expeditiously as practicable
and no later than the next applicable
attainment date,23 which is now the
Moderate area attainment date under
CAA section 181 for ozone
nonattainment. The Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS is August 3, 2024.24 The
EPA believes that 2023 is now the
appropriate year for analysis of
interstate transport obligations for the
51.1303, and Additional Air Quality Designations
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective
Aug. 3, 2018).
23 We note that the court in Maryland did not
have occasion to evaluate circumstances in which
the EPA may determine that an upwind linkage to
a downwind air quality problem exists at Steps 1
and 2 of the interstate transport framework by a
particular attainment date, but for reasons of
impossibility or profound uncertainty the Agency is
unable to mandate upwind pollution controls by
that date. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320. The D.C.
Circuit noted in Wisconsin that upon a sufficient
showing, these circumstances may warrant
flexibility in effectuating the purpose of the
interstate transport provision.
24 See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303;
Additional Air Quality Designations for the 2015
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 83
FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective Aug. 3, 2018).
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2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS because the
2023 ozone season is the last relevant
ozone season during which achieved
emissions reductions in linked upwind
states could assist downwind states
with meeting the August 3, 2024
Moderate area attainment date for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
The EPA recognizes that the
attainment date for nonattainment areas
classified as Marginal for the 2015 8hour ozone NAAQS was August 3, 2021.
Under the Maryland holding, any
necessary emissions reductions to
satisfy interstate transport obligations
should have been implemented by no
later than this date. At the time of the
statutory deadline to submit interstate
transport SIPs (October 1, 2018), many
states relied upon the EPA modeling of
the year 2023, and no state provided an
alternative analysis using a 2021
analytic year (or the prior 2020 ozone
season). However, the EPA must act on
SIP submittals using the information
available at the time it takes such action.
In this circumstance, the EPA does not
believe it would be appropriate to
evaluate states’ obligations under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as of an
attainment date that is wholly in the
past, because the Agency interprets the
interstate transport provision as forward
looking. See 86 FR at 23074; see also
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322.
Consequently, in this proposal the EPA
will use the analytical year of 2023 to
evaluate each state’s CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) SIP submission with
respect to the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
In Step 1, the EPA identifies
monitoring sites that are projected to
have problems attaining and/or
maintaining the NAAQS in the 2023
analytic year. Where the EPA’s analysis
shows that a site does not fall under the
definition of a nonattainment or
maintenance receptor, that site is
excluded from further analysis under
the EPA’s 4-step interstate transport
framework. For sites that are identified
as a nonattainment or maintenance
receptor in 2023, we proceed to the next
Step of our 4-step interstate transport
framework by identifying the upwind
state’s contribution to those receptors.
The EPA’s approach to identifying
ozone nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in this action is consistent
with the approach used in previous
transport rulemakings. The EPA’s
approach gives independent
consideration to both the ‘‘contribute
significantly to nonattainment’’ and the
‘‘interfere with maintenance’’ prongs of
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CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I),
consistent with the D.C. Circuit’s
direction in North Carolina v. EPA.25
For the purpose of this proposal, the
EPA identifies nonattainment receptors
as those monitoring sites that are
projected to have average design values
that exceed the NAAQS and that are
also measuring nonattainment based on
the most recent monitored design
values. This approach is consistent with
prior transport rulemakings, such as the
CSAPR Update, where the EPA defined
nonattainment receptors as those areas
that both currently measure
nonattainment and that the EPA projects
will be in nonattainment in the future
analytic year (i.e., 2023).26
In addition, in this proposal, the EPA
identifies a receptor to be a
‘‘maintenance’’ receptor for purposes of
defining interference with maintenance,
consistent with the method used in the
CSAPR and upheld by the D.C. Circuit
in EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v.
EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 136 (D.C. Cir.
2015).27 Specifically, the EPA identified
maintenance receptors as those
receptors that would have difficulty
maintaining the relevant NAAQS in a
scenario that takes into account
historical variability in air quality at
that receptor. The variability in air
quality was determined by evaluating
the ‘‘maximum’’ future design value at
each receptor based on a projection of
the maximum measured design value
over the relevant period. The EPA
interprets the projected maximum
future design value to be a potential
future air quality outcome consistent
with the meteorology that yielded
maximum measured concentrations in
the ambient data set analyzed for that
receptor (i.e., ozone conducive
meteorology). The EPA also recognizes
that previously experienced
meteorological conditions (e.g.,
dominant wind direction, temperatures,
air mass patterns) promoting ozone
formation that led to maximum
concentrations in the measured data
may reoccur in the future. The
maximum design value gives a
reasonable projection of future air
25 See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 910–
11 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (holding that the EPA must give
‘‘independent significance’’ to each prong of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)).
26 See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016). This same
concept, relying on both current monitoring data
and modeling to define nonattainment receptor,
was also applied in CAIR. See 70 FR at 25241,
25249 (January 14, 2005); see also North Carolina,
531 F.3d at 913–14 (affirming as reasonable EPA’s
approach to defining nonattainment in CAIR).
27 See 76 FR 48208 (August 8, 2011). CSAPR
Update and Revised CSAPR Update also used this
approach. See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016) and
86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021).
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quality at the receptor under a scenario
in which such conditions do, in fact,
reoccur. The projected maximum design
value is used to identify upwind
emissions that, under those
circumstances, could interfere with the
downwind area’s ability to maintain the
NAAQS.
Recognizing that nonattainment
receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often
uses the term ‘‘maintenance-only’’ to
refer to those receptors that are not
nonattainment receptors. Consistent
with the concepts for maintenance
receptors, as described above, the EPA
identifies ‘‘maintenance-only’’ receptors
as those monitoring sites that have
projected average design values above
the level of the applicable NAAQS, but
that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values. In addition, those
monitoring sites with projected average
design values below the NAAQS, but
with projected maximum design values
above the NAAQS are also identified as
‘‘maintenance only’’ receptors, even if
they are currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values.
3. Step 2 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
In Step 2 the EPA quantifies the
contribution of each upwind state to
each receptor in the 2023 analytic year.
The contribution metric used in Step 2
is defined as the average impact from
each state to each receptor on the days
with the highest ozone concentrations at
the receptor based on the 2023
modeling. If a state’s contribution value
does not equal or exceed the threshold
of 1 percent of the NAAQS (i.e., 0.70
ppb for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS),
the upwind state is not ‘‘linked’’ to a
downwind air quality problem, and the
EPA, therefore, concludes that the state
does not significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in the
downwind states. However, if a state’s
contribution equals or exceeds the 1
percent threshold, the state’s emissions
are further evaluated in Step 3,
considering both air quality and cost as
part of a multi-factor analysis, to
determine what, if any, emissions might
be deemed ‘‘significant’’ and, thus, must
be eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The EPA is proposing
to rely in the first instance on the 1
percent threshold for the purpose of
evaluating a state’s contribution to
nonattainment or maintenance of the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (i.e., 0.70
ppb) at downwind receptors. This is
consistent with the Step 2 approach that
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the EPA applied in CSAPR for the 1997
ozone NAAQS, which has subsequently
been applied in the CSAPR Update
when evaluating interstate transport
obligations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.
The EPA continues to find 1 percent to
be an appropriate threshold. For ozone,
as the EPA found in the Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR), CSAPR, and
CSAPR Update, a portion of the
nonattainment problems from
anthropogenic sources in the U.S.
results from the combined impact of
relatively small contributions from
many upwind states, along with
contributions from in-state sources and,
in some cases, substantially larger
contributions from a subset of particular
upwind states. The EPA’s analysis
shows that much of the ozone transport
problem being analyzed in this
proposed rule is still the result of the
collective impacts of contributions from
many upwind states. Therefore,
application of a consistent contribution
threshold is necessary to identify those
upwind states that should have
responsibility for addressing their
contribution to the downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
problems to which they collectively
contribute. Continuing to use 1 percent
of the NAAQS as the screening metric
to evaluate collective contribution from
many upwind states also allows the EPA
(and states) to apply a consistent
framework to evaluate interstate
emissions transport under the interstate
transport provision from one NAAQS to
the next. See 81 FR at 74518. See also
86 FR at 23085 (reviewing and
explaining rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR
at 48237–38, for selection of the 1
percent threshold).
The EPA’s August 2018 memorandum
recognized that in certain
circumstances, a state may be able to
establish that an alternative contribution
threshold of 1 ppb is justifiable. Where
a state relies on this alternative
threshold, and where that state
determined that it was not linked at
Step 2 using the alternative threshold,
the EPA will evaluate whether the state
provided a technically sound
assessment of the appropriateness of
using this alternative threshold based on
the facts and circumstances underlying
its application in the particular SIP
submission.
4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
Consistent with the EPA’s
longstanding approach to eliminating
significant contribution or interference
with maintenance, at Step 3, states
linked at Steps 1 and 2 are generally
expected to prepare a multifactor
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assessment of potential emissions
controls. The EPA’s analysis at Step 3 in
prior Federal actions addressing
interstate transport requirements has
primarily focused on an evaluation of
cost-effectiveness of potential emissions
controls (on a marginal cost-per-ton
basis), the total emissions reductions
that may be achieved by requiring such
controls (if applied across all linked
upwind states), and an evaluation of the
air quality impacts such emissions
reductions would have on the
downwind receptors to which a state is
linked; other factors may potentially be
relevant if adequately supported. In
general, where the EPA’s or alternative
air quality and contribution modeling
establishes that a state is linked at Steps
1 and 2, it will be insufficient at Step
3 for a state merely to point to its
existing rules requiring control
measures as a basis for approval. In
general, the emissions-reducing effects
of all existing emissions control
requirements are already reflected in the
air quality results of the modeling for
Steps 1 and 2. If the state is shown to
still be linked to one or more downwind
receptor(s), states must provide a welldocumented evaluation determining
whether their emissions constitute
significant contribution or interference
with maintenance by evaluating
additional available control
opportunities by preparing a multifactor
assessment. While the EPA has not
prescribed a particular method for this
assessment, the EPA expects states at a
minimum to present a sufficient
technical evaluation. This would
typically include information on
emissions sources, applicable control
technologies, emissions reductions,
costs, cost effectiveness, and downwind
air quality impacts of the estimated
reductions, before concluding that no
additional emissions controls should be
required.28
5. Step 4 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
At Step 4, states (or the EPA) develop
permanent and federally enforceable
control strategies to achieve the
emissions reductions determined to be
necessary at Step 3 to eliminate
significant contribution to
28 As examples of general approaches for how
such an analysis could be conducted for their
sources, states could look to the CSAPR Update, 81
FR 74504, 74539–51; CSAPR, 76 FR 48208, 48246–
63; CAIR, 70 FR 25162, 25195–229; or the NOX SIP
Call, 63 FR 57356, 57399–405. See also Revised
CSAPR Update, 86 FR 23054, 23086–23116.
Consistently across these rulemakings, the EPA has
developed emissions inventories, analyzed different
levels of control stringency at different cost
thresholds, and assessed resulting downwind air
quality improvements.
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9489
nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS. For a state
linked at Steps 1 and 2 to rely on an
emissions control measure at Step 3 to
address its interstate transport
obligations, that measure must be
included in the state’s SIP so that it is
permanent and federally enforceable.
See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each
such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
provisions. . . .’’). See also CAA
110(a)(2)(A); Committee for a Better
Arvin v. U.S. E.P.A., 786 F.3d 1169,
1175–76 (9th Cir. 2015) (holding that
measures relied on by state to meet CAA
requirements must be included in the
SIP).
II. SIP Submissions Addressing
Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for
the 2015 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS
A. New York
On September 25, 2018, the New York
State Department of Environmental
Conservation (NYSDEC) submitted a
revision to its SIP addressing the
infrastructure SIP requirements for the
2015 ozone NAAQS, including the
interstate transport obligations pursuant
to the good neighbor provision. The
EPA finalized approval of elements of
New York’s submittal, except for the
portion of the SIP submittal addressing
the good neighbor provision, on June 23,
2021.29
In New York’s SIP submittal, the State
followed the 4-step framework for
determining its good neighbor
obligations. New York provided air
quality modeling (Steps 1 and 2) and a
list of already-enacted and ‘‘on-theway’’ state air pollution control
measures to conclude that New York
satisfied its good neighbor obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS (under Step
3). The State did not reach Step 4 of the
framework as it concluded that the State
did not need additional emissions
reductions at Step 3 to eliminate
significant contribution.
At Step 1, New York identified
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors based on the EPA’s 2023
projection modeling shared in the EPA
March 2018 memorandum. New York
identified nonattainment receptors at
the Stratford (receptor ID 90013007) and
Westport (receptor ID 90019003)
monitoring sites in Fairfield County, in
Connecticut, in 2023 and identified
maintenance receptors at the Greenwich
(receptor ID 900190017) and New Haven
(receptor ID 90099002) monitoring sites
in Fairfield and New Haven Counties, in
Connecticut, respectively, in 2023.
29 86
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New York submitted state-by-state
contribution modeling for 2023 based
on CAMx modeling performed by the
Maryland Department of the
Environment (MDE). New York coupled
2023 Community Multiscale Air Quality
(CMAQ) projection modeling with
MDE’s CAMx contribution modeling to
show that New York was linked to the
Stratford, Westport, Greenwich, and
New Haven monitoring sites in
Connecticut using a 1 percent of the
NAAQS threshold (0.70 ppb for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS). Based on
this information, New York conceded
that it was linked to four Connecticut
receptors at Step 2.
New York asserted that, despite its
contributions, the State had met its good
neighbor obligations through the
implementation and enforcement of
stringent NOX and VOC control
measures that the State asserted go well
beyond the EPA presumptive cost
threshold in the CSAPR Update for
highly cost-effective emissions
reductions, and through the ongoing
adoption and revision of additional
control measures to further ensure the
reduction of ozone in both New York
State and downwind areas.
New York cited its Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
rules, which have been required on
major sources of NOX throughout the
State since 1995, and have been
periodically updated (in 1999, 2004,
and 2010) to keep up with advances in
control technology. New York indicated
that the State’s RACT presumptive
emissions limits and facility-specific
emissions limits are based on inflationadjusted control cost valued at $5,500
per ton of NOX reduced, which New
York indicated was consistent with
typical costs to install selective catalytic
reduction (SCR) units, and above the
EPA’s $1,400 per ton control cost
threshold used for the CSAPR Update
that reflected the cost of turning on
already-existing SCR controls at EGUs.
New York also noted that the State’s
EGU NOX emissions rates are among the
lowest in the country, as reflected in its
CSAPR Update ozone season emissions
budget, which is lower than all other
states with the exception of New Jersey
and Maryland. New York indicated that
its $5,500 RACT control cost also
applied to non-EGUs.
New York also stated in the
September 2018 submittal that it was in
various stages of the rulemaking process
for additional measures to further
control NOX and VOC emissions from
EGU, non-EGU, area, and mobile
sources.
Additional NOX reductions would be
obtained, according to the State, through
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the following regulatory updates that
were, at the time of the submittal, under
development by the State: Establishing
new NOX limits for simple cycle
combustion turbines (or ‘‘peaking’’ 30
units), which New York noted would
benefit the New York Metropolitan Area
on hot summer days that are most
conducive to ozone formation (i.e., high
electric demand days) (6 NYCRR Part
227); establishing NOX limits for
distributed generation sources (6
NYCRR Part 222); applying NOX RACT
requirements to municipal waste
combustors (6 NYCRR Part 219);
requiring new installation,
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for aftermarket catalytic
converters (Part 218); and the adoption
of the CSAPR Update trading program (6
NYCRR Part 243).
New York’s submittal also indicates
that it will further control area-source
VOC emissions through updates to State
VOC RACT regulations for Oil and Gas
(6 NYCRR Part 203); Architectural and
Industrial Maintenance Coatings (6
NYCRR Part 205); Solvent Metal
Cleaning Processes (Part 226); Motor
Vehicle and Mobile Equipment
Refinishing and Recoating Operations (6
NYCRR Part 228, Subpart 228–1);
Gasoline Dispensing Sites and Transport
Vehicles (6 NYCRR Part 230); and
Consumer Products (6 NYCRR Part 235).
In its submittal to the EPA, New York
commented that the State’s mobile onroad sector alone (without considering
other state emissions) ‘‘significantly
impacted downwind monitors, with
2023 contributions as high as 4.64 ppb
at the Greenwich, Connecticut monitor’’
(receptor ID 90010017), based on CAMx
modeling conducted by the University
of Maryland.31
New York stated that the on-road
sector is controlled through the
inspection/maintenance and anti-idling
standards in 6 NYCRR Part 217, ‘‘Motor
Vehicle Emissions,’’ and the
implementation of the California LowEmission Vehicle Standards under 6
NYCRR Part 218, ‘‘Emission Standards
for Motor Vehicles and Motor Vehicle
Engines.’’
B. New Jersey
On May 13, 2019, New Jersey
submitted a SIP revision that addressed
infrastructure SIP requirements for the
30 Simple cycle combustion turbines, also known
as peaking units (peakers), run to meet electric load
during periods of peak electricity demand. These
peakers typically operate during periods of elevated
temperature when electric demand increases. Older
simple cycle combustion turbines sometimes have
no or only low-level NOX emission controls.
31 See Appendix C of New York’s submittal.
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2015 ozone NAAQS,32 including its
interstate transport obligations pursuant
to the good neighbor provision. Except
for the portion of the SIP submittal
addressing the good neighbor provision
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, the
EPA will act on the portion of the
submittal addressing the remaining
infrastructure SIP elements for the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS in a separate
action at a later date.
In New Jersey’s SIP submittal, the
State followed the 4-step framework
based on a 2023 analytic year for
evaluating its significant contribution.
New Jersey provided air quality
modeling (Steps 1 and 2), and a list of
its adopted and implemented air
pollution control measures, to
demonstrate that it satisfied its transport
obligations for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS (under Step 3). The State did
not reach Step 4 of the framework as it
concluded that the State did not need
additional emissions reductions to
eliminate significant contribution at
Step 3.
At Step 1, New Jersey identified areas
that the State potentially significantly
contributed to in other states based on
2023 regional modeling 33 conducted
under the coordination of the Ozone
Transport Commission (OTC) modeling
Committee. The OTC modeling used
CAMx modeling, version 6.3, to project
emissions to 2023 (using a 2011 base
year). OTC used the Eastern Regional
Technical Advisory Committee (ERTAC)
EGU Projection Tool to estimate
emissions from the EGU sector.
New Jersey identified four
nonattainment and four maintenance
receptors in the OTC/MANE–VU 12
kilometer (km) modeling domain
utilized in the OTC modeling.34 The
nonattainment receptors were located at
the Westport 35 (receptor ID 90019003)
monitoring site in Fairfield County, in
Connecticut; the Susan Wagner
(receptor ID 360850067) and Babylon
(receptor ID 36103002) monitoring sites
in Richmond and Suffolk Counties,
32 The SIP submittal also addressed the good
neighbor provision for the 2008 ozone NAAQS,
which EPA acted on in a separate action. The EPA
proposed disapproval on October 26, 2021, at 86 FR
60602 (November 3, 2021).
33 OTC modeling included in Appendix I of NJ
submittal.
34 OTC modeling generally followed the EPA
approach for identifying nonattainment and
maintenance receptors. Monitors in the Eastern U.S.
were projected as nonattainment (an average design
value greater than or equal to 71 ppb) or
maintenance only (a maximum design value greater
than or equal to 71 ppb) of the 2015 Ozone NAAQS
in 2023. The EPA’s approach for identifying ozone
nonattainment and maintenance receptors is
defined in section I.D.2.
35 Referenced as the Sherwood Island site in the
New Jersey submittal.
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respectively, in New York; and the
Edgewood (receptor ID 240251001)
monitoring site in Harford County,
Maryland. The maintenance receptors
were located at the Greenwich (receptor
ID 90010017), New Haven (receptor ID
90099002) and Stratford (receptor ID
90013007) monitoring sites in Fairfield,
New Haven, and Fairfield Counties, in
Connecticut, respectively; and the
Queens College (receptor ID 360810124)
in Queens County, in New York.
New Jersey relied on the OTC 2023
regional modeling using CAMx to
determine the nonattainment and
maintenance sites that it was linked to
as a potential significant contributor
based on its contribution above 1
percent of the NAAQS (0.70 ppb for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS). The OTC
modeling showed that New Jersey was
linked above the 1 percent threshold to
four receptors, including two
nonattainment receptors at the Westport
monitoring site in Connecticut and at
the Susan Wagner and Babylon
monitoring sites in New York.
Additionally, the modeling
demonstrated that New Jersey was
linked to maintenance receptors located
at the Greenwich, New Haven, and
Stratford monitoring sites in
Connecticut and the Babylon
monitoring site in New York.
New Jersey asserted that considering
air quality, emissions reductions from
the State’s adopted measures, and the
cost effectiveness of those measures, no
additional emissions reductions from
New Jersey are necessary to address its
good neighbor obligations to downwind
nonattainment and maintenance areas.
New Jersey noted that from 1990 to
2017, annual NOX and VOC emissions
in New Jersey have each decreased
approximately 77 percent. From 2011 to
2017, annual NOX and VOC emissions
decreased 31 percent and 17 percent,
respectively. From 2002 to 2017, for
point sources in the State, NOX was
reduced by 81 percent and VOC
emissions were reduced by 63 percent.
New Jersey also noted that its point
source emissions represent only about 8
percent of New Jersey’s total NOX
emissions, while mobile sources were
approximately 43 percent.
New Jersey stated that there has been
a significant decreasing trend in 8-hour
ozone design values in New Jersey,
approximately 40 percent from 1988 to
2017 and 13 percent from 2011 to 2017.
According to the State, the significant
decrease demonstrates the impact of
New Jersey control measures.
New Jersey provided a list 36 of its
post-2002 adopted NOX and VOC
36 Table
5 of the SIP submittal.
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control measures, including estimated
cost-effectiveness (dollar ($) per ton of
NOX reduced or VOC reduced), and the
EPA’s approval date 37 for many of the
measures. New Jersey notes that the
State has met Reasonably Available
Control Measures (RACM) and RACT
requirements and has gone beyond
RACM/RACT by adopting control
measures more stringent than Federal
rules and rules adopted by other states.
Furthermore, New Jersey states that its
rules are implemented statewide and
not limited to the Northern New JerseyNew York-Connecticut ozone
nonattainment area. New Jersey
highlighted several of its control
measures:
—Power generation rules, including
requirements for high electric demand
days (HEDD) when ozone
concentrations are highest. New
Jersey estimates NOX emissions
reduction during HEDD to be over 60
tons from a baseline without the rules;
—municipal waste combustor controls;
—stationary reciprocating internal
combustion engines (RICE) controls
(as low as 37 kW) used for distributed
generation or demand response (DG/
DR), which the State noted are often
operated on hot summer days that
often coincide with high ozone days;
—mobile source controls including New
Jersey’s Low Emission Vehicle
Program (NJ LEV) (based on
California’s program), which requires
a certain percentage of Zero Emission
Vehicles in the State, as well as its
rules for vehicle idling and heavyduty vehicle inspection and
maintenance using on-board
diagnostics technology; and
—various NOX and VOC measures to
address the EPA Control Techniques
Guideline (CTG), NOX Alternative
Control Technique (ACT) categories,
and updated controls at gasoline
dispensing facilities including
California Air Resources Board
(CARB) enhanced vapor recovery
certified Phase I vapor recovery
systems, dripless nozzles, and low
permeation hoses.
New Jersey also asserts that it has
implemented its control measures
before the attainment deadlines for
37 Control measures that the State identified as
‘‘USEPA Approval Pending’’ have been approved
by the EPA as follows: The EPA finalized approval
of the CTGs for Fiberglass Boat Manufacturing
Materials; Industrial Cleaning Solvents;
Miscellaneous Metal and Plastic Parts Coatings;
Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings; and Natural Gas
Engines and Turbines. 83 FR 50506 (October 9,
2018). The EPA approved revisions to New Jersey’s
I/M rules. 83 FR 21174 (May 9, 2018). The EPA
finalized approval of New Jersey’s Vapor Recovery
2017 Stage I and Refueling. 85 FR 36748 (June 18,
2020).
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9491
downwind nonattainment areas. New
Jersey provides the example of the New
Jersey power generation and HEDD rules
being effective in 2015 or earlier. New
Jersey further asserts that, when
determining New Jersey’s significant
contribution to interstate transport, the
State should not be penalized for its
early adoption of appropriate and
effective rules in advance of and more
stringent than other states.
In the State’s evaluation of cost
effectiveness, New Jersey claims that it
has gone beyond the measures of other
nearby and upwind states and
previously established the EPA cost
effectiveness thresholds. The State notes
that the cost-effectiveness values
associated with many of its adopted
rules are several times greater than the
threshold of $1,400 per ton NOX
reduced set for upwind states in the
CSAPR Update. For example, according
to the State’s list of existing NOX and
VOC control measures 38 included in its
SIP submittal, the control measures for
turbines operating during HEDD had a
cost effectiveness of $44,000 per ton
NOX reduced; the control measures for
oil-fired boilers operating during HEDD
had a cost effectiveness up to $18,000
per ton NOX reduced; and, for natural
gas compressor engines and turbines
rules adopted in 2017, the rules have a
cost effectiveness up to $26,020 per ton
NOX reduced, with SCR costs up to
$18,983 per ton NOX reduced.
III. EPA Evaluation
The EPA is proposing to find that the
New York SIP revision submitted on
September 25, 2018, and the New Jersey
SIP revision submitted on May 13, 2019,
do not meet the States’ obligations with
respect to prohibiting emissions that
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in any other state based on the
EPA’s evaluation of the SIP submissions
using the 4-step interstate transport
framework. Both States conceded that
they are linked to nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in another state
at Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework-which is confirmed
by the EPA’s most recent modeling.
However, neither state conducted an
adequate Step 3 analysis to conclude
that either state’s SIP contains adequate
measures to prohibit significant
contribution or interference with
maintenance. Both states conclude that
their existing (or certain ‘‘on-the-way’’)
control measures are already sufficient
to meet good neighbor obligations.
However, for this argument to provide
38 Table
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5 of the New Jersey SIP submittal.
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support for their conclusions, an
analysis as to why no additional control
measures are justified is needed. Neither
state provided such an analysis in their
respective SIP submittals. Therefore, as
discussed below, the EPA proposes to
disapprove both New York’s and New
Jersey’s good neighbor SIP submittals
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
A. New York
1. Results of the EPA’s Step 1 and Step
2 Modeling and Findings for New York
As described in section I, the EPA
performed air quality modeling using
the 2016v2 emissions platform to
project design values and contributions
for 2023. These data were examined to
determine if New York contributes at or
above the threshold of 1 percent of the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to
any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
Table 1, the data 39 indicate that in 2023,
emissions from New York contribute
greater than 1 percent of the standard to
nonattainment or maintenance-only
receptors in Stratford, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90013007), Westport,
Connecticut (receptor ID 90019003),
Greenwich, Connecticut (receptor ID
90010017), New Haven, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90099002), and Bucks
County, Pennsylvania (receptor ID
480170012).40
TABLE 1—NEW YORK LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
90013007 ..............................
90019003 ..............................
90010017 ..............................
90099002 ..............................
420170012 ............................
Stratford, CT .........................
Westport, CT .........................
Greenwich, CT ......................
New Haven, CT ....................
Bucks County, PA .................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Maintenance .........................
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by New York Regarding Step 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, New York relied
on EPA modeling released in the March
2018 memorandum to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this notice, the EPA has
recently updated this modeling using
the most current and technically
appropriate information. The EPA
proposes to primarily rely on the EPA’s
most recent modeling to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023.
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3. Evaluation of Information Provided
by New York Regarding Step 2
As described previously in this
notice, the EPA has recently updated
modeling to identify upwind state
contributions to nonattainment and/or
maintenance receptors in 2023. In this
proposal, the EPA relies on the Agency’s
most recently available modeling to
identify upwind contributions and
‘‘linkages’’ to downwind air quality
problems in 2023 using a threshold of
1 percent of the NAAQS. As shown in
Table 1, updated EPA modeling
identifies New York’s maximum
contribution to a downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptor
is greater than 1 percent of the standard
(i.e., 0.70 ppb).
39 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2023_DVs_Contributions_2016v2_Platform which is
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Although New York relied on
alternative modeling to the EPA’s
modeling at Step 2, New York
acknowledged in its SIP submission that
it is linked above 1 percent of the
NAAQS to one or more downwind
receptors in 2023. Because the
alternative modeling relied on by the
State also demonstrates that a linkage
exists between the State and downwind
receptors at Step 2, the EPA need not
conduct a comparative assessment of
the alternative modeling; the State
concedes that it is linked. New York’s
analysis corroborates the conclusion in
the EPA’s most recent modeling. The
EPA therefore will proceed to Step 3 of
the 4-step interstate transport
framework to assess arguments the State
presented as to why, despite this
linkage, the State should not be
considered to significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in any other
state such that additional emissions
reductions are required.
4. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 3
At Step 3 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, a state’s emissions
are further evaluated, in light of
multiple factors, including air quality
and cost considerations, to determine
what, if any, emissions significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance and, thus, must be
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
40 These modeling results are consistent with the
results of a prior round of 2023 modeling using the
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2023 Average
design value
(ppb)
74.2
76.1
73.0
71.8
70.7
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
75.1
76.4
73.7
73.9
72.2
New York
contribution
(ppb)
13.56
14.36
16.81
11.54
1.80
eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). To effectively evaluate
which emissions in the state should be
deemed ‘‘significant’’ and therefore
prohibited, states generally should
prepare an accounting of sources and
other emissions activity and assess
potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting
downwind air quality improvements.
The EPA has consistently applied this
general approach (i.e., Step 3 of the 4step interstate transport framework)
when identifying emissions
contributions that the Agency has
determined to be ‘‘significant’’ (or
interfere with maintenance) in each of
its prior Federal, regional ozone
transport rulemakings, and this
interpretation of the statute has been
upheld by the Supreme Court. See EME
Homer City, 572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014).
While the EPA has not directed states
that they must conduct a Step 3 analysis
in precisely the manner the EPA has
done in its prior regional transport
rulemakings, state implementation
plans addressing the obligations in CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must prohibit
‘‘any source or other type of emissions
activity within the State’’ from emitting
air pollutants which will contribute
significantly to downwind air quality
problems. Thus, states must complete
something similar to the EPA’s analysis
(or an alternative approach to defining
‘‘significance’’ that comports with the
2016v1 emissions platform which became available
to the public in the fall of 2020 in the Revised
CSAPR Update, as noted in Section I.
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statute’s objectives) to determine
whether and to what degree emissions
from a state should be ‘‘prohibited’’ to
eliminate emissions that will
‘‘contribute significantly to
nonattainment in, or interfere with
maintenance of,’’ the NAAQS in any
other state. New York did not conduct
such an analysis in its SIP submission.
Although in this action we are relying
on the results of the EPA’s most recent
air quality modeling results for receptor
identification and contributions, we will
continue to evaluate the analysis
provided by New York at Step 3 to
assess whether the analysis provided
adequately supports New York’s
conclusion, and whether the analysis
could apply to the linkages identified by
the EPA at Step 2.
As previously indicated in section
II.A, New York asserted in its September
2018 submittal that, despite its
contributions, the State had met its good
neighbor obligations through the
implementation and enforcement of
stringent NOX and VOC control
measures that go beyond the EPA’s
presumptive cost threshold in the
CSAPR Update for highly cost-effective
emissions reductions, and through the
ongoing adoption and revision of
additional control measures to further
ensure the reduction of ozone in both
New York and downwind areas.
The State’s submittal, however, did
not contain a demonstration at Step 3
that the State was adequately
controlling its emissions for the
purposes of the good neighbor
provision, particularly because New
York conceded in its submission that its
emissions were linked to Connecticut
receptors at Steps 1 and 2. The SIP
submittal pointed to the State’s existing
NOX RACT measures with presumptive
and facility-specific emission limits
based on $5,500 per ton of NOX
reduced, as well as ongoing state and
local emission control efforts to
conclude New York is already meeting
its good neighbor obligations for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. However,
the State’s submittal does not include a
sufficient examination or a technical
justification that could support the
conclusion that the State has no further
good neighbor obligations for the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS. In particular, the
State did not conduct in its submittal an
analysis of potential additional
emissions-reduction measures to further
reduce its impact on the identified
downwind receptors. For example, New
York did not include in its submission
an accounting of sources and other
emissions activity in the State along
with an analysis of potential NOX
emissions control technologies, their
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associated costs, estimated emissions
reductions, and downwind air quality
improvements. Nor does the submittal
include an analysis of whether such
potential additional control
technologies or measures could reduce
the impact of New York’s emissions on
out of state receptors. Though there is
not a prescribed method for a Step 3
analysis, EPA has consistently applied
Step 3 of the good neighbor framework
through a more rigorous evaluation of
potential additional control
technologies or measures than what was
provided in the SIP submission.
Identifying a range of various emissions
control measures that have been or may
be enacted at the state or local level,
without analysis of the impact of those
measures on the out of state receptors,
is not analytically sufficient. In general,
the air quality modeling that the EPA
has conducted (as well the modeling
relied on by New York in its submittal)
already accounts for ‘‘on-the-books’’
emissions control measures. Both sets of
modeling clearly establish continued
linkage from New York to downwind
receptors in 2023 at Steps 1 and 2,
despite those emissions control efforts.
New York’s September 2018 submittal
referenced regulatory updates that New
York asserted were in development and
would provide for additional NOX and
VOC reductions. The EPA notes that
New York has since adopted many of
these regulatory updates.41 New York
adopted 6 NYCRR Part 227, Subpart
227–3, ‘‘Ozone Season Oxides of
Nitrogen (NOX) Emission Limits for
Simple Cycle and Regenerative
Combustion Turbines,’’ with a State
effective date of January 16, 2020, that
lowered allowable NOX emissions from
peaking units during the ozone season
on high electric demand days, with
compliance dates of May 1, 2023 (100
ppmvd 42 limit), and May 1, 2025 (25
ppmvd limit for gas and 42 ppmvd limit
for oil).43 New York adopted a
regulation, 6 NYCRR Part 222,
‘‘Distributed Generation Sources,’’ with
a State effective date of March 25, 2020,
that established NOX emissions control
requirements for distributed generation
and price responsive generation
sources 44 with compliance dates of May
41 New York regulations are available at https://
www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/regulations.html.
42 The NO emission limits are on a part per
X
million dry volume basis (ppmvd), corrected to 15
percent oxygen.
43 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on May 18, 2020. The EPA
finalized approval on August 3, 2021. 86 FR 43956
(August 11, 2021).
44 Distributed generation (DG) sources are engines
used by host sites to supply electricity outside that
supplied by distribution utilities. This on-site
generation of electricity by DG sources is used by
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9493
1, 2021 and May 1, 2025.45 New York
adopted revisions, with a State effective
date of March 13, 2020, to NYCRR Part
219, including adoption of a new
Subpart 219–10, ‘‘Reasonably Available
Control Technology (RACT) For Oxides
of Nitrogen (NOX) At Municipal and
Private Solid Waste Incineration Units,’’
which established NOX limits for
municipal waste combustors with a
compliance date of March 14, 2021.46
New York adopted revisions to NYCRR
Part 218, subpart 218–7, ‘‘Aftermarket
Parts,’’ with a State effective date of
March 14, 2020, which required cleaner
California certified aftermarket catalytic
converters offered for sale or installed in
New York State beginning January 1,
2023.47 New York adopted revisions,
with a State effective date of January 11,
2020, to 6 NYCRR Part 205,
‘‘Architectural and Industrial
Maintenance Coatings,’’ with
compliance effective January 1, 2021,48
requiring more stringent VOC limits for
coatings.49 New York adopted revisions,
with a State effective date of November
1, 2019, to 6 NYCRR Part 226, ‘‘Solvent
Metal Cleaning Processes,’’ establishing
VOC content limits for cleaning solvents
used in operations not covered by other
regulations, beginning November 1,
2020.50 New York adopted revisions to
6 NYCRR Part 230, with a State effective
date of February 11, 2021, ‘‘Gasoline
Dispensing Sites and Transport
Vehicles,’’ and 6 NYCRR Part 235,
‘‘Consumer Products.’’ Updates to
NYCRR Part 230 include additional
VOC control requirements for facilities
during gasoline transfer operations
beginning February 5, 2021.51 Updates
to Part 235, which require compliance
by January 1, 2022, include revising and
a wide range of commercial, institutional, and
industrial facilities. DG applications range from
supplying electricity during blackouts to supplying
all a facility’s electricity demand year-round. NY’s
DG rule applies to sources enrolled in demand
response programs sponsored by the New York
Independent System Operator or transmission
utilities as well as sources used during times when
the cost of electricity supplied by utilities is high
(i.e., price-responsive generation sources).
45 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on October 15, 2020.
46 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on February 23, 2021.
47 As of December 1, 2021, New York had not
submitted a revised version of subpart 218–7 to the
EPA for SIP approval.
48 The compliance date for the sale of products is
January 1, 2021. The sell-through provision allows
for product manufactured before January 1, 2021, to
be sold through May 1, 2023.
49 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on October 15, 2020.
50 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on November 5, 2019. The
EPA finalized approval on April 19, 2020. 85 FR
28490 (May 13, 2020).
51 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on March 3, 2021.
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establishing VOC contents for consumer
products.52
Additionally, New York adopted a
revised version of 6 NYCRR Part 243,
‘‘CSAPR NOX Ozone Season Group 2
Trading Program,’’ with a State effective
date of January 2, 2019, in order to
allow New York to allocate CSAPR
allowances to regulated entities in New
York under an abbreviated SIP.53
However, the EPA notes that although
New York’s revised Part 243 replaced
the EPA’s default allocation procedures
for the control periods in 2021 and
beyond under the CSAPR Update FIP,
the revised state rules did not create any
enforceable emission limitations and
did not replace the enforceable emission
limitations set forth in the additional
trading program provisions established
under the CSAPR Update FIP.
Moreover, the allowance allocations
provisions adopted in Part 243 (as well
as the additional trading program
provisions established under the CSAPR
Update) are no longer in effect for New
York’s sources because those provisions
have been replaced as to the State’s
sources by the new trading program
provisions established under the
Revised CSAPR Update.54
In any case, in both the CSAPR
Update and the more recent Revised
CSAPR Update, the EPA found, in spite
of the nominal stringency of New York’s
control programs, additional emissions
reductions were achievable from EGUs
in the State. This was true even under
the level of control stringency the EPA
determined appropriate to eliminate
significant contribution for the 2008
ozone NAAQS. Further, the EPA has not
established a benchmark costeffectiveness threshold for good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, and New York in its submittal
has not conducted an analysis to
establish one for EPA to evaluate.
Additionally, while New York’s existing
control measures have undoubtedly
reduced the amount of transported
ozone pollution to other states and have
contributed to the downward emissions
trends and improving air quality in the
State, in light of continuing contribution
52 New York submitted the updated regulation for
SIP approval to the EPA on March 3, 2021.
53 CSAPR provided a process for the submission
and approval of SIP revisions to replace certain
provisions of the CSAPR FIPs while the remaining
FIP provisions continue to apply. This type of
CSAPR SIP is termed an abbreviated SIP.
54 The regulations implementing the Revised
CSAPR Update provide that, for states subject to the
Revised CSAPR Update and with respect to control
periods after 2020, the EPA will no longer
administer state trading program provisions
approved under SIP revisions addressing the
CSAPR Update’s trading program. See 40 CFR
52.38(b)(16)(ii).
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to out of state receptors from the State
at Steps 1 and 2 despite these measures,
New York’s SIP submission failed to
provide an adequate analysis at Step 3.
As of December 1, 2021, New York
had not yet adopted revisions to 6
NYCRR Part 203, ‘‘Oil and Gas
Sector,’’ 55 or NYCRR Part 228, Subpart
228–1, ‘‘Motor Vehicle and Mobile
Equipment Refinishing and Recoating
Operation.’’
The EPA also notes that New York’s
6 NYCRR Part 227, Subpart 227–3,
which was approved into the SIP after
EPA’s receipt of this September 2018
submittal, and which implements NOX
limits on combustion turbines that
operate as peaking units, will not be
fully phased in until 2025, which is past
the August 3, 2024 Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Additionally, New York said
that the State’s mobile on-road sector
alone significantly impacted downwind
monitors and noted that it controls its
mobile emissions through its
inspection/maintenance (I/M) and antiidling standards. However, New York
did not explain the role its I/M and antiidling standards play in eliminating its
significant contribution.
The EPA acknowledges that New
York’s RACT presumptive emissions
limits and facility-specific emissions
limits are based on an inflation-adjusted
control cost valued at $5,500 per ton of
NOX reduced.
In general, however, the listing of
existing or ‘‘on-the-way’’ control
measures, whether approved into the
State’s SIP or not, does not substitute for
a complete Step 3 analysis under the
EPA’s 4-step framework to define
‘‘significant contribution.’’ New York’s
submittal does not include an
assessment of the overall effects of these
measures, when the reductions would
be achieved, and what the overall
resulting air quality effects would be
observed at identified out-of-state
receptors. The State’s submittal does not
include an evaluation of additional
potential emissions control
opportunities, or their costs or impacts,
or attempt to analyze whether, if
applied more broadly across linked
states, the emissions reductions would
constitute the elimination of significant
contribution on a regional scale. The
State’s submittal did not contain an
explanation as to whether any faster or
more stringent emissions reductions
that may be available were prohibitively
costly or infeasible. Although the EPA
acknowledges states are not necessarily
55 New York filed a notice of proposed
rulemaking on April 20, 2021. See https://
www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/122829.html.
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bound to follow its own analytical
framework at Step 3, we note that the
State did not attempt to determine or
justify an appropriate uniform costeffectiveness threshold for the more
stringent 2015 ozone NAAQS, nor did
the State offer an alternative to this
analytical framework for determining
‘‘significant contribution’’ in its
submittal. This would have been similar
to the approach to defining significant
contribution that the EPA has applied in
prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and
the CSAPR Update.
Further, the EPA’s modeling already
accounts for ‘‘on-the-books’’ control
measures, and the State has not
explained which of its measures were
not already included in the EPA’s
modeling and thus deserve to be further
credited as reducing the impact of the
State’s emissions beyond what the
EPA’s air quality modeling has already
accounted for. In light of continuing
contribution to out of state receptors
from the State (at Steps 1 and 2) despite
these measures, New York’s SIP
submission failed to evaluate the
availability of any additional controls to
improve downwind air quality at
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors at Step 3.
Finally, under the Wisconsin
decision, states and the EPA may not
delay implementation of measures
necessary to address good neighbor
requirements beyond the next
applicable attainment date without a
showing of impossibility or necessity.
See 938 F.3d at 320. In those cases
where the measures identified by the
State had implementation timeframes
beyond the next relevant attainment
dates the submission did not offer a
demonstration of impossibility of earlier
implementation of those control
measures.56 Similarly, the State’s
submittal is insufficient to the extent the
implementation timeframes for
identified control measures were left
unidentified, unexplained, or too
uncertain to permit the EPA to form a
judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor
obligations have been met.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework calls for
development of permanent and
56 While Wisconsin was decided after the state
made its submission, EPA must evaluate the SIP
based on the information available at the time of its
action, including any relevant changes in caselaw
or other requirements. States are generally free to
withdraw and resubmit their SIP submissions in
light of intervening changes in the law. The State
of New York has not done so in this case.
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federally enforceable control strategies
to achieve the emissions reductions
determined to be necessary at Step 3 to
eliminate significant contribution to
nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS. New York
identified a number of measures that
were either in development or
anticipated to occur in the future (See
section III.4).57 However, the State had
not revised its SIP to include these
emission reductions to ensure the
reductions were permanent and
enforceable. Although New York has
subsequently adopted many of the
measures identified in section III.4,
several measures have not been
approved into the SIP, either because
the State failed to submit (e.g., 6 NYCRR
Part 218, Subpart 218–7, ‘‘Aftermarket
Parts) or the EPA has not yet finalized
approval into the SIP. Therefore, the
emission reductions associated with
those rules are not permanent and
enforceable. As a result, EPA proposes
to disapprove New York’s submittal on
the separate, additional basis that New
York has not included permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions in its
SIP as necessary to meet the obligations
of 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
6. Conclusion
Based on the EPA’s evaluation of New
York’s’ SIP submission, the EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of
New York’s September 25, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
State’s interstate transport obligations
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS,
because it fails to contain the necessary
provisions to eliminate emissions in
amounts that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in any other state.
9495
B. New Jersey
1. Results of the EPA’s Step 1 and Step
2 Modeling and Findings for New Jersey
As described in section I, the EPA
performed air quality modeling using
the 2016v2 emissions platform to
project design values and contributions
for 2023. These data were examined to
determine if New Jersey contributes at
or above the threshold of 1 percent of
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (0.70
ppb) to any downwind nonattainment
or maintenance receptor. As shown in
Table 2, the data 58 indicate that in 2023
emissions from New Jersey contribute
greater than 1 percent of the standard to
nonattainment or maintenance-only
receptors in Stratford, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90013007), Westport,
Connecticut (receptor ID 90019003),
Greenwich, Connecticut (receptor ID
90010017), Madison, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90099002), and Bucks
County, Pennsylvania (receptor ID
480170012).59
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TABLE 2—NEW JERSEY LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
90013007 ..............................
90019003 ..............................
90010017 ..............................
90099002 ..............................
420170012 ............................
Stratford, CT .........................
Westport, CT .........................
Greenwich, CT ......................
Madison, CT .........................
Bucks County, PA .................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Nonattainment .......................
Maintenance .........................
2023 Average
design value
(ppb)
74.2
76.1
73.0
71.8
70.7
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
75.1
76.4
73.7
73.9
72.2
New Jersey
contribution
(ppb)
7.43
8.85
6.90
5.67
5.79
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by New Jersey Regarding Step 1
As noted in section II.B., New Jersey
submitted OTC modeling that identified
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. Although the State
used a different modeling approach
(utilizing 2011 based modeling and the
ERTAC EGU Projection tool), than the
EPA’s modeling, which used a 2016based emissions platform developed
under an EPA/MJO/state collaborative
project, New Jersey’s alternative
modeling also identified a number of
nonattainment and maintenance
receptor sites in 2023. See page 9 of the
May 30, 2019 SIP submission. New
Jersey determined that there were
nonattainment or maintenance problems
at eight locations in Connecticut, New
York, and Maryland, which exceeded
the 5 locations in Connecticut and
Pennsylvania that the EPA determined
to have nonattainment or maintenance
problems. Based on both the New Jersey
and the EPA modeling, nonattainment
and maintenance receptors are projected
in 2023 at Step 1. Thus, even under the
alternative modeling of 2023, New
Jersey acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and
maintenance receptors.
Although New Jersey relied on
alternative modeling to the EPA’s
modeling at Step 2, New Jersey
acknowledged in its SIP submission that
it is linked above 1 percent of the
NAAQS (0.70 ppb for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS) to one or more
downwind receptors in 2023. Because
the alternative modeling relied on by
the State also demonstrates that a
linkage exists between the State and
downwind receptors at Step 2, the EPA
need not conduct a comparative
assessment of the alternative modeling;
the State concedes that it is linked. New
Jersey’s analysis corroborates the
conclusion in the EPA’s most recent
modeling. The EPA therefore will
proceed to Step 3 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework to assess arguments
the State presented as to why, despite
this linkage, the State should not be
considered to significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in any other
57 Pointing to anticipated upcoming emission
reductions, even if they were not included in the
analysis at Steps 1 and 2, is not sufficient as a Step
3 analysis, for the reasons discussed in Section
III.A.4. In this section, we explain that to the extent
such anticipated reductions are not included in the
SIP and rendered permanent and enforceable,
reliance on such anticipated reductions is also
insufficient at Step 4.
58 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2023_DVs_Contributions_2016v2_Platform which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
59 These modeling results are consistent with the
results of a prior round of 2023 modeling using the
2016v1 emissions platform which became available
to the public in the fall of 2020 in the Revised
CSAPR Update, as noted in Section I. That
modeling showed that New Jersey had a maximum
contribution greater than 0.70 ppb to at least one
nonattainment or maintenance-only receptor in
2023. These modeling results are included in the
file ‘‘Ozone Design Values And Contributions
Revised CSAPR Update.xlsx’’ in docket EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
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state such that additional emissions
reductions are required.
4. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 3
At Step 3 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, a state’s emissions
are further evaluated, in light of
multiple factors, including air quality
and cost considerations, to determine
what, if any, emissions significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance and, thus, must be
eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
To effectively evaluate which
emissions in the state should be deemed
‘‘significant’’ and therefore prohibited,
states generally should prepare an
accounting of sources and other
emissions activity and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. The EPA has
consistently applied this general
approach (i.e., Step 3 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework) when
identifying emissions contributions that
the Agency has determined to be
‘‘significant’’ (or interfere with
maintenance) in each of its prior
Federal, regional ozone transport
rulemakings, and this interpretation of
the statute has been upheld by the
Supreme Court. See EME Homer City,
572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014). While the EPA
has not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner the EPA has done in its
prior regional transport rulemakings,
state implementation plans addressing
the obligations in CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must prohibit ‘‘any
source or other type of emissions
activity within the State’’ from emitting
air pollutants which will contribute
significantly to downwind air quality
problems. Thus, states must complete
something similar to the EPA’s analysis
(or an alternative approach to defining
‘‘significance’’ that comports with the
statute’s objectives) to determine
whether and to what degree emissions
from a state should be ‘‘prohibited’’ to
eliminate emissions that will
‘‘contribute significantly to
nonattainment in, or interfere with
maintenance of,’’ the NAAQS in any
other state. New Jersey did not conduct
such an analysis in its SIP submission.
As previously noted, New Jersey
asserted in its May 2019 submittal that
considering air quality, the emissions
reductions from New Jersey’s adopted
measures, and the cost effectiveness of
those measures, no additional emissions
reductions from New Jersey are
necessary to address its good neighbor
obligations to downwind nonattainment
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and maintenance areas. New Jersey
stated that control measures were
adopted and implemented before
attainment deadlines and go beyond
previously established the EPA cost
effectiveness thresholds. New Jersey
also provided information documenting
the emissions reductions that have been
made throughout the State beginning in
2002 with corresponding improvements
in air quality in New Jersey to
demonstrate the impact of New Jersey’s
control measures.
New Jersey’s submittal, however, did
not contain a demonstration at Step 3
that the State was adequately
controlling its emissions for purposes of
the good neighbor provision,
particularly because the State conceded
in its submission that it was potentially
significantly contributing to eight
receptors in 2023 at Steps 1 and 2. The
SIP submittal pointed to the State’s
existing NOX and VOC control measures
that were adopted by the State to
conclude New Jersey is already meeting
its good neighbor obligations for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. However,
the State’s submittal does not include a
sufficient examination or a technical
justification that could support the
conclusion that the State has no further
good neighbor obligations for the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS. In particular, the
State did not conduct in its submittal an
analysis of potential additional
emissions-reduction measures to further
reduce its impact on the identified
downwind receptors. For example, New
Jersey did not include in its submission
an accounting of individual emissions
units at facilities in the State along with
an analysis of potential NOX emissions
control technologies, their associated
costs, estimated emissions reductions,
and downwind air quality
improvements. Nor does the submittal
include an analysis of whether such
potential, additional control
technologies or measures could reduce
the impact of New Jersey’s emissions on
out of state receptors. Though there is
not a prescribed method for a Step 3
analysis, the EPA has consistently
applied Step 3 of the good neighbor
framework through a more rigorous
evaluation of potential additional
control technologies or measures than
what New Jersey provided in its
submission. Identifying a range of
various emissions control measures that
have been or may be enacted at the state
level, without analysis of the impact of
those measures on the out of state
receptors, is not analytically sufficient.
In general, the air quality modeling that
EPA has conducted (as well the
modeling relied on by New Jersey in its
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submittal) already accounts for ‘‘on-thebooks’’ emissions control measures.
Both sets of modeling clearly establish
continued linkage from New Jersey to
downwind receptors in 2023 at Steps 1
and 2, despite those emissions control
efforts.
The EPA acknowledges that the
State’s control measures listed in the
State’s SIP submittal may be nominally
more stringent than the EPA costthresholds used for the CSAPR Update
or Revised CSAPR Update. But those
cost-thresholds were for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS (a less stringent NAAQS than
the 2015 ozone NAAQS). Further, in the
Revised CSAPR Update, the EPA found
that despite the nominal stringency of
New Jersey’s control programs,
additional emissions reductions were
achievable from EGUs in the State, even
under the level of control stringency the
EPA determined appropriate to
eliminate significant contribution for
the 2008 ozone NAAQS. In any case, the
EPA has not established a benchmark
cost-effectiveness threshold for good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, and New Jersey in its submittal
has not conducted an analysis to
establish one for the EPA to evaluate.
Additionally, while New Jersey’s
existing control measures have
undoubtedly reduced the amount of
transported ozone pollution to other
states and have contributed to the
downward emissions trends and
improving air quality in the State as
shown in the State’s SIP submittal, in
light of continuing contribution to out of
state receptors from the State at Steps 1
and 2 despite these measures, New
Jersey’s SIP submission failed to provide
an adequate analysis at Step 3.
We therefore propose that New Jersey
was required to analyze emissions from
the sources and other emissions activity
from within the state to determine
whether its contributions were
significant, and we propose to
disapprove its submission because New
Jersey failed to do so.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework calls for
development of permanent and
federally enforceable control strategies
to achieve the emissions reductions
determined to be necessary at Step 3 to
eliminate significant contribution to
nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS. As
mentioned previously, New Jersey’s SIP
submission did not contain an
evaluation of additional emission
control opportunities (or establish that
no additional controls are required),
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thus, no information was provided at
Step 4. As a result, EPA proposes to
disapprove New Jersey’s submittal on
the separate, additional basis that the
State has not developed permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions
necessary to meet the obligations of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
6. Conclusion
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
Based on the EPA’s evaluation of New
Jersey’s SIP submission, the EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of
New Jersey’s May 13, 2019 SIP
submission addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
State’s interstate transport obligations
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS,
because it fails to contain the necessary
provisions to eliminate emissions in
amounts that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in any other state.
IV. Proposed Action
We are proposing to disapprove the
portion of New York’s and New Jersey’s
SIP submissions pertaining to interstate
transport of air pollution which will
significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in other states. Under CAA
section 110(c)(1), disapproval, if
finalized, would establish a 2-year
deadline for the EPA to promulgate a
FIP for New York and New Jersey to
address interstate transport
requirements for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS, unless the EPA approves a SIP
that meets these requirements.
Disapproval does not start a mandatory
sanctions clock for New York and New
Jersey. The remaining elements of New
York’s September 25, 2018 submission,
and New Jersey’s May 13, 2019
submission are not addressed in this
action and either have been or will be
acted on in separate rulemakings.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
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A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action and was therefore not
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget for review.
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action merely
proposes to disapprove a SIP
submission as not meeting the CAA.
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
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. This action does not apply
on any Indian reservation land, any
other area where the EPA or an Indian
tribe has demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction, or non-reservation areas of
Indian country. 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 it merely proposes to
disapprove a SIP submission as not
meeting the CAA.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
H. Executive Order 13211, Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This proposed action does not impose
an information collection burden under
the PRA because it does not contain any
information collection activities
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
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9497
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes the human health or
environmental risk addressed by this
action will not have potential
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on minority, low-income or indigenous
populations. This action merely
proposes to disapprove a SIP
submission as not meeting the CAA.
K. CAA Section 307(b)(1)
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs
judicial review of final actions by the
EPA. This section provides, in part, that
petitions for review must be filed in the
D.C. Circuit: (i) When the agency action
consists of ‘‘nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions
taken, by the Administrator,’’ or (ii)
when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, if ‘‘such action is based on
a determination of nationwide scope or
effect and if in taking such action the
Administrator finds and publishes that
such action is based on such a
determination.’’ For locally or regionally
applicable final actions, the CAA
reserves to the EPA complete discretion
whether to invoke the exception in
(ii).60
The EPA anticipates that this
proposed rulemaking, if finalized,
would be ‘‘nationally applicable’’
within the meaning of CAA section
307(b)(1) because it would take final
action on SIP submittals for the 2015
ozone NAAQS for two states, which are
located in two different Federal judicial
circuits. It would apply uniform,
nationwide analytical methods, policy
judgments, and interpretation with
respect to the same CAA obligations,
i.e., implementation of good neighbor
requirements under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS for states across the country,
and final action would be based on this
common core of determinations,
described in further detail below.
If the EPA takes final action on this
proposed rulemaking, in the alternative,
60 In deciding whether to invoke the exception by
making and publishing a finding that an action is
based on a determination of nationwide scope or
effect, the Administrator takes into account a
number of policy considerations, including his
judgment balancing the benefit of obtaining the D.C.
Circuit’s authoritative centralized review versus
allowing development of the issue in other contexts
and the best use of agency resources.
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the Administrator intends to exercise
the complete discretion afforded to him
under the CAA to make and publish a
finding that the final action (to the
extent a court finds the action to be
locally or regionally applicable) is based
on a determination of ‘‘nationwide
scope or effect’’ within the meaning of
CAA section 307(b)(1). Through this
rulemaking action (in conjunction with
a series of related actions on other SIP
submissions for the same CAA
obligations), the EPA interprets and
applies section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I) of the
CAA for the 2015 ozone NAAQS based
on a common core of nationwide policy
judgments and technical analysis
concerning the interstate transport of
pollutants throughout the continental
U.S. In particular, the EPA is applying
here (and in other proposed actions
related to the same obligations) the
same, nationally consistent 4-step
framework for assessing good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
The EPA relies on a single set of
updated, 2016-base year photochemical
grid modeling results of the year 2023
as the primary basis for its assessment
of air quality conditions and
contributions at Steps 1 and 2 of that
framework. Further, the EPA proposes
to determine and apply a set of
nationally consistent policy judgments
to apply the 4-step framework. The EPA
has selected a nationally uniform
analytic year (2023) for this analysis and
is applying a nationally uniform
approach to nonattainment and
maintenance receptors and a nationally
uniform approach to contribution
threshold analysis.61 For these reasons,
the Administrator intends, if this
proposed action is finalized, to exercise
the complete discretion afforded to him
under the CAA to make and publish a
finding that this action is based on one
or more determinations of nationwide
scope or effect for purposes of CAA
section 307(b)(1).62
61 A finding of nationwide scope or effect is also
appropriate for actions that cover states in multiple
judicial circuits. In the report on the 1977
Amendments that revised section 307(b)(1) of the
CAA, Congress noted that the Administrator’s
determination that the ‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’
exception applies would be appropriate for any
action that has a scope or effect beyond a single
judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95–294 at 323,
324, reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402–03.
62 The EPA may take a consolidated, single final
action on all the proposed SIP disapproval actions
with respect to obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Should EPA take a single final action on all such
disapprovals, this action would be nationally
applicable, and the EPA would also anticipate, in
the alternative, making and publishing a finding
that such final action is based on a determination
of nationwide scope or effect.
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Ozone.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: January 31, 2022.
Lisa Garcia,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. 2022–02946 Filed 2–18–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2021–0841; EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663; FRL–9423–01–R4]
Air Plan Disapproval; Kentucky;
Interstate Transport Requirements for
the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA
or Agency) is proposing to disapprove a
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submittal from the Kentucky Energy and
Environment Cabinet, Department of
Environmental Quality (DAQ) (herein
after referred to as Kentucky or the
Commonwealth) regarding the interstate
transport requirements for the 2015 8hour ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS or standard). The
‘‘Good Neighbor’’ or ‘‘Interstate
Transport’’ provision requires that each
state’s implementation plan contain
adequate provisions to prohibit
emissions from within the state from
significantly contributing to
nonattainment or interfering with
maintenance of the NAAQS in other
states. This requirement is part of the
broader set of ‘‘infrastructure’’
requirements, which are designed to
ensure that the structural components of
each state’s air quality management
program are adequate to meet the state’s
responsibilities under the CAA. This
disapproval, if finalized, will establish a
2-year deadline for EPA to promulgate
a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) to
address the relevant interstate transport
requirements, unless EPA approves a
subsequent SIP submittal that meets
these requirements. Disapproval does
not start a mandatory sanctions clock.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 25, 2022.
Withdrawals: As of February 22, 2022,
the proposed rule published in
SUMMARY:
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December 30, 2019, at 84 FR 71854, is
withdrawn.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2021–0841, through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov following the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2021–0841 for this rulemaking.
Comments received may be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on submitting
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Participation’’ heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document. Out of an abundance of
caution for members of the public and
staff, the EPA Docket Center and
Reading Room are open to the public by
appointment only to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID–19. The Docket
Center staff also continues to provide
remote customer service via email,
phone, and webform. For further
information on EPA Docket Center
services and the current status, please
visit EPA online at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Evan Adams of the 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.
Mr. Adams can be reached by telephone
at (404) 562–9009, or via electronic mail
at adams.evan@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Public
Participation: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2021–0841, at https://
www.regulations.gov. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed
from the docket. EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit to EPA’s docket at
https://www.regulations.gov 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).
E:\FR\FM\22FEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 35 (Tuesday, February 22, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 9484-9498]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-02946]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673; EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663; FRL-9424-01-R2]
Air Plan Disapproval; New York and New Jersey; Interstate
Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to disapprove State
Implementation Plan (SIP) submittals from New York and New Jersey
regarding interstate transport for the 2015 8-hour ozone national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS). This provision requires that
each state's SIP contain adequate provisions to prohibit emissions from
within the state from significantly contributing to nonattainment or
interfering with maintenance of the NAAQS in other states. The ``good
neighbor'' or ``interstate transport'' requirement is part of the
broader set of ``infrastructure'' requirements, which are designed to
ensure that the structural components of each state's air quality
management program are adequate to meet the state's responsibilities
under the CAA. This disapproval, if finalized, will establish a 2-year
deadline for the EPA to promulgate a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP)
to address the relevant interstate transport requirements, unless the
EPA approves a subsequent SIP submittal that meets these requirements.
Disapproval does not start a mandatory sanctions clock.
DATES: Comments: Written comments must be received on or before April
25, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified as Docket No. EPA-R02-OAR-
2021-0673 to the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov following the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Docket ID
No. for this rulemaking. Comments received may be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided. For detailed instructions on sending comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process, see the ``Public Participation''
heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document. Out
of an abundance of caution for members of the public and our staff, the
EPA Docket Center and Reading Room are open to the public by
appointment only to reduce the risk of transmitting COVID-19. Our
Docket Center staff also continues to provide remote customer service
via email, phone, and webform. For further information on the EPA
Docket Center services and the current status, please visit us online
at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kenneth Fradkin, Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 2, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, NY
10007-1866, (212) 637-3702, or by email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Public Participation: Submit your comments,
[[Page 9485]]
identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673 at https://www.regulations.gov. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or
removed from the docket. The EPA may publish any comment received to
its public docket. Do not submit to the EPA's docket at https://www.regulations.gov 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. 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).
There are two dockets supporting this action, EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673
and EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663. Docket No. EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673 contains
information specific to New York and New Jersey, including the notice
of proposed rulemaking. Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 contains
additional modeling files, emissions inventory files, technical support
documents, and other relevant supporting documentation regarding
interstate transport of emissions for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS which
are being used to support this action. All comments regarding
information in either of these dockets are to be made in Docket No.
EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673. For additional submission methods, please
contact Kenneth Fradkin, Environmental Protection Agency, 290 Broadway,
25th Floor, New York, 10007-1866, (212) 637-3702, or by email at
[email protected]. 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. Due to public health concerns related to COVID-
19, the EPA Docket Center and Reading Room are open to the public by
appointment only. Our Docket Center staff also continues to provide
remote customer service via email, phone, and webform. For further
information and updates on the EPA Docket Center services, please visit
us online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA continues to carefully and continuously monitor information
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), local area
health departments, and our Federal partners so that we can respond
rapidly as conditions change regarding COVID-19.
The index to the docket for this action, Docket No. EPA-R02-OAR-
2021-0673, is available electronically at www.regulations.gov. While
all documents in the docket are listed in the index, some information
may not be publicly available due to docket file size restrictions or
content (e.g., CBI).
Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,'' and ``our'' means the
EPA.
I. Background
A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, the EPA promulgated a revision to the ozone
NAAQS (2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS), lowering the level of both the primary
and secondary standards to 0.070 parts per million (ppm).\1\ Section
110(a)(1) of the CAA requires states to submit, within 3 years after
promulgation of a new or revised standard, SIP submissions meeting the
applicable requirements of section 110(a)(2).\2\ One of these
applicable requirements is found in CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I),
otherwise known as the ``interstate transport'' or ``good neighbor''
provision, which generally requires SIPs to contain adequate provisions
to prohibit in-state emissions activities from having certain adverse
air quality effects on other states due to interstate transport of
pollution. There are two so-called ``prongs'' within CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). A SIP for a new or revised NAAQS must contain
adequate provisions prohibiting any source or other type of emissions
activity within the state from emitting air pollutants in amounts that
will significantly contribute to nonattainment of the NAAQS in another
state (prong 1) or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in another
state (prong 2). The EPA and states must give independent significance
to prong 1 and prong 2 when evaluating downwind air quality problems
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).\3\
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\1\ National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone, Final
Rule, 80 FR 65292 (October 26, 2015). Although the level of the
standard is specified in the units of ppm, ozone concentrations are
also described in parts per billion (ppb). For example, 0.070 ppm is
equivalent to 70 ppb.
\2\ SIP revisions that are intended to meet the applicable
requirements of section 110(a)(1) and (2) of the CAA are often
referred to as infrastructure SIPs and the applicable elements under
section 110(a)(2) are referred to as infrastructure requirements.
\3\ See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 909-11 (D.C. Cir.
2008).
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B. Description of the EPA's Four Step Interstate Transport Regulatory
Process
The EPA is using the 4-step interstate transport framework (or 4-
step framework) to evaluate the states' SIP submittals addressing the
interstate transport provision for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The EPA
has addressed the interstate transport requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) with respect to prior ozone NAAQS in several
regional regulatory actions, including the Cross-State Air Pollution
Rule (CSAPR), which addressed interstate transport with respect to the
1997 ozone NAAQS as well as the 1997 and 2006 fine particulate matter
standards,\4\ and the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update (CSAPR
Update) \5\ and the Revised CSAPR Update, both of which addressed the
2008 ozone NAAQS.\6\
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\4\ See Federal Implementation Plans: Interstate Transport of
Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone and Correction of SIP Approvals,
76 FR 48208 (Aug. 8, 2011).
\5\ Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update for the 2008 Ozone
NAAQS, 81 FR 74504 (Oct. 26, 2016).
\6\ In 2019, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals remanded the
CSAPR Update to the extent it failed to require upwind states to
eliminate their significant contribution by the next applicable
attainment date by which downwind states must come into compliance
with the NAAQS, as established under CAA section 181(a). Wisconsin
v. EPA, 938 F.3d 303, 313 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The Revised CSAPR Update
for the 2008 Ozone NAAQS, 86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021), responded to
the remand of the CSAPR Update in Wisconsin and the vacatur of a
separate rule, the ``CSAPR Close-Out,'' 83 FR 65878 (December 21,
2018), in New York v. EPA, 781 F. App'x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
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Through the development and implementation of the CSAPR rulemakings
and prior regional rulemakings pursuant to the interstate transport
provision,\7\ the EPA, working in partnership with states, developed
the following 4-step interstate transport framework to evaluate a
State's obligations to eliminate interstate transport emissions under
the interstate transport provision for the ozone NAAQS: (1) Identify
monitoring sites that are projected to have problems attaining and/or
maintaining the NAAQS (i.e., nonattainment and/or maintenance
receptors); (2) identify states that impact those air quality problems
in other (i.e., downwind) states sufficiently such that the states are
considered ``linked'' and therefore warrant further review and
analysis; (3) identify the emissions reductions necessary (if any),
applying a multifactor analysis, to eliminate each linked upwind
state's significant contribution to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS at the locations identified in Step 1; and (4)
adopt permanent and
[[Page 9486]]
enforceable measures needed to achieve those emissions reductions.
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\7\ In addition to the CSAPR rulemakings, other regional
rulemakings addressing ozone transport include the ``NOX
SIP Call,'' 63 FR 57356 (October 27, 1998), and the ``Clean Air
Interstate Rule'' (CAIR), 70 FR 25162 (May 12, 2005).
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C. Background on the EPA's Ozone Transport Modeling Information
In general, the EPA has performed nationwide air quality modeling
to project ozone design values which are used in combination with
measured data to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors. To
quantify the contribution of emissions from specific upwind states on
2023 ozone design values for the identified downwind nonattainment and
maintenance receptors, the EPA performed nationwide, state-level ozone
source apportionment modeling for 2023. The source apportionment
modeling provided contributions to ozone at receptors from precursor
emissions of anthropogenic nitrogen oxides (NOX) and
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in individual upwind states.
The EPA has released several documents containing projected ozone
design values, contributions, and information relevant to evaluating
interstate transport with respect to the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
First, on January 6, 2017, the EPA published a notice of data
availability (NODA) in which we requested comment on preliminary
interstate ozone transport data including projected ozone design values
and interstate contributions for 2023 using a 2011 base year
platform.\8\ In the NODA, the EPA used the year 2023 as the analytic
year for this preliminary modeling because that year aligns with the
expected attainment year for Moderate ozone nonattainment areas for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.\9\ On October 27, 2017, we released a
memorandum (October 2017 memorandum) containing updated modeling data
for 2023, which incorporated changes made in response to comments on
the NODA, and noted that the modeling may be useful for states
developing SIPs to address interstate transport obligations for the
2008 ozone NAAQS.\10\ On March 27, 2018, we issued a memorandum (March
2018 memorandum) noting that the same 2023 modeling data released in
the October 2017 memorandum could also be useful for identifying
potential downwind air quality problems with respect to the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS at Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework.\11\
The March 2018 memorandum also included the then newly available
contribution modeling data for 2023 to assist states in evaluating
their impact on potential downwind air quality problems for the 2015 8-
hour ozone NAAQS under Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework.\12\ The EPA subsequently issued two more memoranda in August
and October 2018, providing additional information to states developing
interstate transport SIP submissions for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS
concerning, respectively, potential contribution thresholds that may be
appropriate to apply in Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework, and considerations for identifying downwind areas that may
have problems maintaining the standard at Step 1 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework.\13\
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\8\ See Notice of Availability of the Environmental Protection
Agency's Preliminary Interstate Ozone Transport Modeling Data for
the 2015 8-hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS),
82 FR 1733 (January 6, 2017).
\9\ 82 FR at 1735.
\10\ See Information on the Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2008 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), October 27, 2017, available in Docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\11\ See Information on the Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018 (``March 2018 memorandum''),
available in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\12\ The March 2018 memorandum, however, provided, ``While the
information in this memorandum and the associated air quality
analysis data could be used to inform the development of these SIPs,
the information is not a final determination regarding states'
obligations under the good neighbor provision. Any such
determination would be made through notice-and-comment rulemaking.''
\13\ See Analysis of Contribution Thresholds for Use in Clean
Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards, August 31, 2018) (``August 2018
memorandum''), and Considerations for Identifying Maintenance
Receptors for Use in Clean Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
Interstate Transport State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, October 19, 2018,
available in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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Since the release of the modeling data shared in the March 2018
memorandum, the EPA performed updated modeling using a 2016-based
emissions modeling platform (i.e., 2016v1). This emissions platform was
developed under the EPA/Multi-Jurisdictional Organization (MJO)/state
collaborative project.\14\ This collaborative project was a multi-year
joint effort by the EPA, MJOs, and states to develop a new, more recent
emissions platform for use by the EPA and states in regulatory modeling
as an improvement over the dated 2011-based platform that the EPA had
used to project ozone design values and contribution data provided in
the 2017 and 2018 memoranda. The EPA used the 2016v1 emissions to
project ozone Design values and contributions for 2023. On October 30,
2020, in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the Revised CSAPR
Update, the EPA released and accepted public comment on 2023 modeling
that used the 2016v1 emissions platform.\15\ Although the Revised CSPAR
Update addressed transport for the 2008 ozone NAAQS, the projected
design values and contributions from the 2016v1 platform are also
useful for identifying downwind ozone problems and linkages with
respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS.\16\
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\14\ The results of this modeling, as well as the underlying
modeling files, are included in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\15\ See 85 FR 68964, 68981.
\16\ See the Air Quality Modeling Technical Support Document for
the Final Revised Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update included in
the Headquarters Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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Following the final Revised CSAPR Update, the EPA made further
updates to the 2016 emissions platform to include mobile emissions from
the EPA's Motor Vehicle Emission Simulator MOVES3 model \17\ and
updated emissions projections for electric generating units (EGUs) that
reflect the emissions reductions from the Revised CSAPR Update, recent
information on plant closures, and other sector trends. The construct
of the updated emissions platform, 2016v2, is described in the
Emissions Modeling technical support document (TSD) for this proposed
rule. The EPA performed air quality modeling of the 2016v2 emissions
using the most recent public release version of the Comprehensive Air
Quality Model with Extensions (CAMx) photochemical modeling, version
7.10.\18\ The EPA now proposes to primarily rely on modeling based on
the updated and newly available 2016v2 emissions platform in evaluating
these submissions with respect to Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework. By using the updated modeling results,
the EPA is using the most current and technically appropriate
information for this proposed rulemaking. Section III of this notice
and the Air Quality Modeling TSD for 2015 Ozone NAAQS Transport SIP
Proposed Actions included in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 for
this proposal contains additional detail on the EPA's 2016v2 modeling.
In this notice, the EPA is
[[Page 9487]]
accepting public comment on this updated 2023 modeling, which uses a
2016v2 emissions platform. Comments on the EPA's air quality modeling
should be submitted in the Regional docket for this action, Docket No.
EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673. Comments are not being accepted in Docket EPA-
HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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\17\ Additional details and documentation related to the MOVES3
model can be found at https://www.epa.gov/moves/latest-version-motor-vehicle-emission-simulator-moves.
\18\ Ramboll Environment and Health, January 2021, www.camx.com.
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In some cases, states may rely on the results of EPA modeling and/
or alternative modeling performed by states or Multi-Jurisdictional
Organizations (MJOs) to evaluate downwind air quality problems and
contributions as part of their submissions. New York and New Jersey
have done so, and so we have evaluated the use of that alternative
modeling in Section III.
D. The EPA's Approach to Evaluating Interstate Transport SIPs for the
2015 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS
The EPA proposes to apply a consistent set of policy judgments
across all states for purposes of evaluating interstate transport
obligations and the approvability of interstate transport SIP
submittals for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. These policy judgments
reflect consistency with relevant case law and past agency practice as
reflected in the CSAPR and related rulemakings. Nationwide consistency
in approach is particularly important in the context of interstate
ozone transport, which is a regional-scale pollution problem involving
many smaller contributors. Effective policy solutions to the problem of
interstate ozone transport going back to the NOX SIP Call
have necessitated the application of a uniform framework of policy
judgments in order to ensure an ``efficient and equitable'' approach.
See EME Homer City Generation, LP v. EPA, 572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014).
In the March, August, and October 2018 memoranda, the EPA
recognized that states may be able to establish alternative approaches
to addressing their interstate transport obligations for the 2015 8-
hour ozone NAAQS that vary from a nationally uniform framework. The EPA
emphasized in these memoranda, however, that such alternative
approaches must be technically justified and appropriate in light of
the facts and circumstances of each particular state's submittal. In
general, the EPA continues to believe that deviation from a nationally
consistent approach to ozone transport must be substantially justified
and have a well-documented technical basis that is consistent with
relevant case law. Where states submitted SIPs that rely on any such
potential ``flexibilities'' as may have been identified or suggested in
the past, the EPA will evaluate whether the state adequately justified
the technical and legal basis for doing so.
The EPA notes that certain concepts included in an attachment to
the March 2018 memorandum require unique consideration, and these ideas
do not constitute agency guidance with respect to transport obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum
identified a ``Preliminary List of Potential Flexibilities'' that could
potentially inform SIP development.\19\ However, the EPA made clear in
that Attachment that the list of ideas were not suggestions endorsed by
the Agency but rather ``comments provided in various forums'' on which
the EPA sought ``feedback from interested stakeholders.'' \20\ Further,
Attachment A stated, ``EPA is not at this time making any determination
that the ideas discussed below are consistent with the requirements of
the CAA, nor are we specifically recommending that states use these
approaches.'' \21\ Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum,
therefore, does not constitute agency guidance, but was intended to
generate further discussion around potential approaches to addressing
ozone transport among interested stakeholders. To the extent states
sought to develop or rely on these ideas in support of their SIP
submittals, the EPA will thoroughly review the technical and legal
justifications for doing so.
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\19\ March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
\20\ Id. at A-1.
\21\ Id.
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The remainder of this section describes the EPA's proposed
framework with respect to analytic year, definition of nonattainment
and maintenance receptors, selection of contribution threshold, and
multifactor control strategy assessment.
1. Selection of Analytic Year
In general, the states and the EPA must implement the interstate
transport provision in a manner ``consistent with the provisions of
[title I of the CAA.]'' CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). This requires,
among other things, that these obligations are addressed consistently
with the timeframes for downwind areas to meet their CAA obligations.
With respect to ozone NAAQS, under CAA section 181(a), this means
obligations must be addressed ``as expeditiously as practicable'' and
no later than the schedule of attainment dates provided in CAA section
181(a)(1).\22\ Several D.C. Circuit court decisions address the issue
of the relevant analytic year for the purposes of evaluating ozone
transport air-quality problems. On September 13, 2019, the D.C. Circuit
issued a decision in Wisconsin v. EPA, remanding the CSAPR Update to
the extent that it failed to require upwind states to eliminate their
significant contribution by the next applicable attainment date by
which downwind states must come into compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a). 938 F.3d at 313.
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\22\ For attainment dates for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, refer
to CAA section 181(a), 40 CFR 51.1303, and Additional Air Quality
Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective Aug. 3, 2018).
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On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit issued a decision in Maryland v.
EPA that cited the Wisconsin decision in holding that the EPA must
assess the impact of interstate transport on air quality at the next
downwind attainment date, including Marginal area attainment dates, in
evaluating the basis for the EPA's denial of a petition under CAA
section 126(b). Maryland v. EPA, 958 F.3d 1185, 1203-04 (D.C. Cir.
2020). The court noted that ``section 126(b) incorporates the Good
Neighbor Provision,'' and, therefore, ``EPA must find a violation [of
section 126] if an upwind source will significantly contribute to
downwind nonattainment at the next downwind attainment deadline.
Therefore, the agency must evaluate downwind air quality at that
deadline, not at some later date.'' Id. at 1204 (emphasis added). The
EPA interprets the court's holding in Maryland as requiring the states
and the Agency, under the good neighbor provision, to assess downwind
air quality as expeditiously as practicable and no later than the next
applicable attainment date,\23\ which is now the Moderate area
attainment date under CAA section 181 for ozone nonattainment. The
Moderate area attainment date for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS is August
3, 2024.\24\ The EPA believes that 2023 is now the appropriate year for
analysis of interstate transport obligations for the
[[Page 9488]]
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS because the 2023 ozone season is the last
relevant ozone season during which achieved emissions reductions in
linked upwind states could assist downwind states with meeting the
August 3, 2024 Moderate area attainment date for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS.
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\23\ We note that the court in Maryland did not have occasion to
evaluate circumstances in which the EPA may determine that an upwind
linkage to a downwind air quality problem exists at Steps 1 and 2 of
the interstate transport framework by a particular attainment date,
but for reasons of impossibility or profound uncertainty the Agency
is unable to mandate upwind pollution controls by that date. See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320. The D.C. Circuit noted in Wisconsin that
upon a sufficient showing, these circumstances may warrant
flexibility in effectuating the purpose of the interstate transport
provision.
\24\ See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303; Additional Air
Quality Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective Aug. 3, 2018).
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The EPA recognizes that the attainment date for nonattainment areas
classified as Marginal for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS was August 3,
2021. Under the Maryland holding, any necessary emissions reductions to
satisfy interstate transport obligations should have been implemented
by no later than this date. At the time of the statutory deadline to
submit interstate transport SIPs (October 1, 2018), many states relied
upon the EPA modeling of the year 2023, and no state provided an
alternative analysis using a 2021 analytic year (or the prior 2020
ozone season). However, the EPA must act on SIP submittals using the
information available at the time it takes such action. In this
circumstance, the EPA does not believe it would be appropriate to
evaluate states' obligations under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as of
an attainment date that is wholly in the past, because the Agency
interprets the interstate transport provision as forward looking. See
86 FR at 23074; see also Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322. Consequently, in
this proposal the EPA will use the analytical year of 2023 to evaluate
each state's CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) SIP submission with respect
to the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
In Step 1, the EPA identifies monitoring sites that are projected
to have problems attaining and/or maintaining the NAAQS in the 2023
analytic year. Where the EPA's analysis shows that a site does not fall
under the definition of a nonattainment or maintenance receptor, that
site is excluded from further analysis under the EPA's 4-step
interstate transport framework. For sites that are identified as a
nonattainment or maintenance receptor in 2023, we proceed to the next
Step of our 4-step interstate transport framework by identifying the
upwind state's contribution to those receptors.
The EPA's approach to identifying ozone nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in this action is consistent with the approach
used in previous transport rulemakings. The EPA's approach gives
independent consideration to both the ``contribute significantly to
nonattainment'' and the ``interfere with maintenance'' prongs of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), consistent with the D.C. Circuit's
direction in North Carolina v. EPA.\25\
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\25\ See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 910-11 (D.C. Cir.
2008) (holding that the EPA must give ``independent significance''
to each prong of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)).
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For the purpose of this proposal, the EPA identifies nonattainment
receptors as those monitoring sites that are projected to have average
design values that exceed the NAAQS and that are also measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent monitored design values. This
approach is consistent with prior transport rulemakings, such as the
CSAPR Update, where the EPA defined nonattainment receptors as those
areas that both currently measure nonattainment and that the EPA
projects will be in nonattainment in the future analytic year (i.e.,
2023).\26\
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\26\ See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016). This same concept,
relying on both current monitoring data and modeling to define
nonattainment receptor, was also applied in CAIR. See 70 FR at
25241, 25249 (January 14, 2005); see also North Carolina, 531 F.3d
at 913-14 (affirming as reasonable EPA's approach to defining
nonattainment in CAIR).
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In addition, in this proposal, the EPA identifies a receptor to be
a ``maintenance'' receptor for purposes of defining interference with
maintenance, consistent with the method used in the CSAPR and upheld by
the D.C. Circuit in EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d
118, 136 (D.C. Cir. 2015).\27\ Specifically, the EPA identified
maintenance receptors as those receptors that would have difficulty
maintaining the relevant NAAQS in a scenario that takes into account
historical variability in air quality at that receptor. The variability
in air quality was determined by evaluating the ``maximum'' future
design value at each receptor based on a projection of the maximum
measured design value over the relevant period. The EPA interprets the
projected maximum future design value to be a potential future air
quality outcome consistent with the meteorology that yielded maximum
measured concentrations in the ambient data set analyzed for that
receptor (i.e., ozone conducive meteorology). The EPA also recognizes
that previously experienced meteorological conditions (e.g., dominant
wind direction, temperatures, air mass patterns) promoting ozone
formation that led to maximum concentrations in the measured data may
reoccur in the future. The maximum design value gives a reasonable
projection of future air quality at the receptor under a scenario in
which such conditions do, in fact, reoccur. The projected maximum
design value is used to identify upwind emissions that, under those
circumstances, could interfere with the downwind area's ability to
maintain the NAAQS.
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\27\ See 76 FR 48208 (August 8, 2011). CSAPR Update and Revised
CSAPR Update also used this approach. See 81 FR 74504 (October 26,
2016) and 86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021).
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Recognizing that nonattainment receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often uses the term ``maintenance-only''
to refer to those receptors that are not nonattainment receptors.
Consistent with the concepts for maintenance receptors, as described
above, the EPA identifies ``maintenance-only'' receptors as those
monitoring sites that have projected average design values above the
level of the applicable NAAQS, but that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent official design values. In
addition, those monitoring sites with projected average design values
below the NAAQS, but with projected maximum design values above the
NAAQS are also identified as ``maintenance only'' receptors, even if
they are currently measuring nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values.
3. Step 2 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
In Step 2 the EPA quantifies the contribution of each upwind state
to each receptor in the 2023 analytic year. The contribution metric
used in Step 2 is defined as the average impact from each state to each
receptor on the days with the highest ozone concentrations at the
receptor based on the 2023 modeling. If a state's contribution value
does not equal or exceed the threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS (i.e.,
0.70 ppb for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS), the upwind state is not
``linked'' to a downwind air quality problem, and the EPA, therefore,
concludes that the state does not significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in the
downwind states. However, if a state's contribution equals or exceeds
the 1 percent threshold, the state's emissions are further evaluated in
Step 3, considering both air quality and cost as part of a multi-factor
analysis, to determine what, if any, emissions might be deemed
``significant'' and, thus, must be eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The EPA is proposing to rely in the first instance
on the 1 percent threshold for the purpose of evaluating a state's
contribution to nonattainment or maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS (i.e., 0.70 ppb) at downwind receptors. This is consistent with
the Step 2 approach that
[[Page 9489]]
the EPA applied in CSAPR for the 1997 ozone NAAQS, which has
subsequently been applied in the CSAPR Update when evaluating
interstate transport obligations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. The EPA
continues to find 1 percent to be an appropriate threshold. For ozone,
as the EPA found in the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR), CSAPR, and
CSAPR Update, a portion of the nonattainment problems from
anthropogenic sources in the U.S. results from the combined impact of
relatively small contributions from many upwind states, along with
contributions from in-state sources and, in some cases, substantially
larger contributions from a subset of particular upwind states. The
EPA's analysis shows that much of the ozone transport problem being
analyzed in this proposed rule is still the result of the collective
impacts of contributions from many upwind states. Therefore,
application of a consistent contribution threshold is necessary to
identify those upwind states that should have responsibility for
addressing their contribution to the downwind nonattainment and
maintenance problems to which they collectively contribute. Continuing
to use 1 percent of the NAAQS as the screening metric to evaluate
collective contribution from many upwind states also allows the EPA
(and states) to apply a consistent framework to evaluate interstate
emissions transport under the interstate transport provision from one
NAAQS to the next. See 81 FR at 74518. See also 86 FR at 23085
(reviewing and explaining rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR at 48237-38, for
selection of the 1 percent threshold).
The EPA's August 2018 memorandum recognized that in certain
circumstances, a state may be able to establish that an alternative
contribution threshold of 1 ppb is justifiable. Where a state relies on
this alternative threshold, and where that state determined that it was
not linked at Step 2 using the alternative threshold, the EPA will
evaluate whether the state provided a technically sound assessment of
the appropriateness of using this alternative threshold based on the
facts and circumstances underlying its application in the particular
SIP submission.
4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
Consistent with the EPA's longstanding approach to eliminating
significant contribution or interference with maintenance, at Step 3,
states linked at Steps 1 and 2 are generally expected to prepare a
multifactor assessment of potential emissions controls. The EPA's
analysis at Step 3 in prior Federal actions addressing interstate
transport requirements has primarily focused on an evaluation of cost-
effectiveness of potential emissions controls (on a marginal cost-per-
ton basis), the total emissions reductions that may be achieved by
requiring such controls (if applied across all linked upwind states),
and an evaluation of the air quality impacts such emissions reductions
would have on the downwind receptors to which a state is linked; other
factors may potentially be relevant if adequately supported. In
general, where the EPA's or alternative air quality and contribution
modeling establishes that a state is linked at Steps 1 and 2, it will
be insufficient at Step 3 for a state merely to point to its existing
rules requiring control measures as a basis for approval. In general,
the emissions-reducing effects of all existing emissions control
requirements are already reflected in the air quality results of the
modeling for Steps 1 and 2. If the state is shown to still be linked to
one or more downwind receptor(s), states must provide a well-documented
evaluation determining whether their emissions constitute significant
contribution or interference with maintenance by evaluating additional
available control opportunities by preparing a multifactor assessment.
While the EPA has not prescribed a particular method for this
assessment, the EPA expects states at a minimum to present a sufficient
technical evaluation. This would typically include information on
emissions sources, applicable control technologies, emissions
reductions, costs, cost effectiveness, and downwind air quality impacts
of the estimated reductions, before concluding that no additional
emissions controls should be required.\28\
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\28\ As examples of general approaches for how such an analysis
could be conducted for their sources, states could look to the CSAPR
Update, 81 FR 74504, 74539-51; CSAPR, 76 FR 48208, 48246-63; CAIR,
70 FR 25162, 25195-229; or the NOX SIP Call, 63 FR 57356,
57399-405. See also Revised CSAPR Update, 86 FR 23054, 23086-23116.
Consistently across these rulemakings, the EPA has developed
emissions inventories, analyzed different levels of control
stringency at different cost thresholds, and assessed resulting
downwind air quality improvements.
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5. Step 4 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
At Step 4, states (or the EPA) develop permanent and federally
enforceable control strategies to achieve the emissions reductions
determined to be necessary at Step 3 to eliminate significant
contribution to nonattainment or interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS. For a state linked at Steps 1 and 2 to rely on an emissions
control measure at Step 3 to address its interstate transport
obligations, that measure must be included in the state's SIP so that
it is permanent and federally enforceable. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)
(``Each such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate provisions. . . .'').
See also CAA 110(a)(2)(A); Committee for a Better Arvin v. U.S. E.P.A.,
786 F.3d 1169, 1175-76 (9th Cir. 2015) (holding that measures relied on
by state to meet CAA requirements must be included in the SIP).
II. SIP Submissions Addressing Interstate Transport of Air Pollution
for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS
A. New York
On September 25, 2018, the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) submitted a revision to its SIP
addressing the infrastructure SIP requirements for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, including the interstate transport obligations pursuant to the
good neighbor provision. The EPA finalized approval of elements of New
York's submittal, except for the portion of the SIP submittal
addressing the good neighbor provision, on June 23, 2021.\29\
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\29\ 86 FR 35034 (July 1, 2021).
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In New York's SIP submittal, the State followed the 4-step
framework for determining its good neighbor obligations. New York
provided air quality modeling (Steps 1 and 2) and a list of already-
enacted and ``on-the-way'' state air pollution control measures to
conclude that New York satisfied its good neighbor obligations for the
2015 ozone NAAQS (under Step 3). The State did not reach Step 4 of the
framework as it concluded that the State did not need additional
emissions reductions at Step 3 to eliminate significant contribution.
At Step 1, New York identified nonattainment and maintenance
receptors based on the EPA's 2023 projection modeling shared in the EPA
March 2018 memorandum. New York identified nonattainment receptors at
the Stratford (receptor ID 90013007) and Westport (receptor ID
90019003) monitoring sites in Fairfield County, in Connecticut, in 2023
and identified maintenance receptors at the Greenwich (receptor ID
900190017) and New Haven (receptor ID 90099002) monitoring sites in
Fairfield and New Haven Counties, in Connecticut, respectively, in
2023.
[[Page 9490]]
New York submitted state-by-state contribution modeling for 2023
based on CAMx modeling performed by the Maryland Department of the
Environment (MDE). New York coupled 2023 Community Multiscale Air
Quality (CMAQ) projection modeling with MDE's CAMx contribution
modeling to show that New York was linked to the Stratford, Westport,
Greenwich, and New Haven monitoring sites in Connecticut using a 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold (0.70 ppb for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS). Based on this information, New York conceded that it was linked
to four Connecticut receptors at Step 2.
New York asserted that, despite its contributions, the State had
met its good neighbor obligations through the implementation and
enforcement of stringent NOX and VOC control measures that
the State asserted go well beyond the EPA presumptive cost threshold in
the CSAPR Update for highly cost-effective emissions reductions, and
through the ongoing adoption and revision of additional control
measures to further ensure the reduction of ozone in both New York
State and downwind areas.
New York cited its Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT)
rules, which have been required on major sources of NOX
throughout the State since 1995, and have been periodically updated (in
1999, 2004, and 2010) to keep up with advances in control technology.
New York indicated that the State's RACT presumptive emissions limits
and facility-specific emissions limits are based on inflation-adjusted
control cost valued at $5,500 per ton of NOX reduced, which
New York indicated was consistent with typical costs to install
selective catalytic reduction (SCR) units, and above the EPA's $1,400
per ton control cost threshold used for the CSAPR Update that reflected
the cost of turning on already-existing SCR controls at EGUs. New York
also noted that the State's EGU NOX emissions rates are
among the lowest in the country, as reflected in its CSAPR Update ozone
season emissions budget, which is lower than all other states with the
exception of New Jersey and Maryland. New York indicated that its
$5,500 RACT control cost also applied to non-EGUs.
New York also stated in the September 2018 submittal that it was in
various stages of the rulemaking process for additional measures to
further control NOX and VOC emissions from EGU, non-EGU,
area, and mobile sources.
Additional NOX reductions would be obtained, according
to the State, through the following regulatory updates that were, at
the time of the submittal, under development by the State: Establishing
new NOX limits for simple cycle combustion turbines (or
``peaking'' \30\ units), which New York noted would benefit the New
York Metropolitan Area on hot summer days that are most conducive to
ozone formation (i.e., high electric demand days) (6 NYCRR Part 227);
establishing NOX limits for distributed generation sources
(6 NYCRR Part 222); applying NOX RACT requirements to
municipal waste combustors (6 NYCRR Part 219); requiring new
installation, recordkeeping and reporting requirements for aftermarket
catalytic converters (Part 218); and the adoption of the CSAPR Update
trading program (6 NYCRR Part 243).
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\30\ Simple cycle combustion turbines, also known as peaking
units (peakers), run to meet electric load during periods of peak
electricity demand. These peakers typically operate during periods
of elevated temperature when electric demand increases. Older simple
cycle combustion turbines sometimes have no or only low-level
NOX emission controls.
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New York's submittal also indicates that it will further control
area-source VOC emissions through updates to State VOC RACT regulations
for Oil and Gas (6 NYCRR Part 203); Architectural and Industrial
Maintenance Coatings (6 NYCRR Part 205); Solvent Metal Cleaning
Processes (Part 226); Motor Vehicle and Mobile Equipment Refinishing
and Recoating Operations (6 NYCRR Part 228, Subpart 228-1); Gasoline
Dispensing Sites and Transport Vehicles (6 NYCRR Part 230); and
Consumer Products (6 NYCRR Part 235).
In its submittal to the EPA, New York commented that the State's
mobile on-road sector alone (without considering other state emissions)
``significantly impacted downwind monitors, with 2023 contributions as
high as 4.64 ppb at the Greenwich, Connecticut monitor'' (receptor ID
90010017), based on CAMx modeling conducted by the University of
Maryland.\31\
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\31\ See Appendix C of New York's submittal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
New York stated that the on-road sector is controlled through the
inspection/maintenance and anti-idling standards in 6 NYCRR Part 217,
``Motor Vehicle Emissions,'' and the implementation of the California
Low-Emission Vehicle Standards under 6 NYCRR Part 218, ``Emission
Standards for Motor Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Engines.''
B. New Jersey
On May 13, 2019, New Jersey submitted a SIP revision that addressed
infrastructure SIP requirements for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,\32\ including
its interstate transport obligations pursuant to the good neighbor
provision. Except for the portion of the SIP submittal addressing the
good neighbor provision for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, the EPA will
act on the portion of the submittal addressing the remaining
infrastructure SIP elements for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS in a
separate action at a later date.
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\32\ The SIP submittal also addressed the good neighbor
provision for the 2008 ozone NAAQS, which EPA acted on in a separate
action. The EPA proposed disapproval on October 26, 2021, at 86 FR
60602 (November 3, 2021).
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In New Jersey's SIP submittal, the State followed the 4-step
framework based on a 2023 analytic year for evaluating its significant
contribution. New Jersey provided air quality modeling (Steps 1 and 2),
and a list of its adopted and implemented air pollution control
measures, to demonstrate that it satisfied its transport obligations
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (under Step 3). The State did not reach
Step 4 of the framework as it concluded that the State did not need
additional emissions reductions to eliminate significant contribution
at Step 3.
At Step 1, New Jersey identified areas that the State potentially
significantly contributed to in other states based on 2023 regional
modeling \33\ conducted under the coordination of the Ozone Transport
Commission (OTC) modeling Committee. The OTC modeling used CAMx
modeling, version 6.3, to project emissions to 2023 (using a 2011 base
year). OTC used the Eastern Regional Technical Advisory Committee
(ERTAC) EGU Projection Tool to estimate emissions from the EGU sector.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ OTC modeling included in Appendix I of NJ submittal.
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New Jersey identified four nonattainment and four maintenance
receptors in the OTC/MANE-VU 12 kilometer (km) modeling domain utilized
in the OTC modeling.\34\ The nonattainment receptors were located at
the Westport \35\ (receptor ID 90019003) monitoring site in Fairfield
County, in Connecticut; the Susan Wagner (receptor ID 360850067) and
Babylon (receptor ID 36103002) monitoring sites in Richmond and Suffolk
Counties,
[[Page 9491]]
respectively, in New York; and the Edgewood (receptor ID 240251001)
monitoring site in Harford County, Maryland. The maintenance receptors
were located at the Greenwich (receptor ID 90010017), New Haven
(receptor ID 90099002) and Stratford (receptor ID 90013007) monitoring
sites in Fairfield, New Haven, and Fairfield Counties, in Connecticut,
respectively; and the Queens College (receptor ID 360810124) in Queens
County, in New York.
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\34\ OTC modeling generally followed the EPA approach for
identifying nonattainment and maintenance receptors. Monitors in the
Eastern U.S. were projected as nonattainment (an average design
value greater than or equal to 71 ppb) or maintenance only (a
maximum design value greater than or equal to 71 ppb) of the 2015
Ozone NAAQS in 2023. The EPA's approach for identifying ozone
nonattainment and maintenance receptors is defined in section I.D.2.
\35\ Referenced as the Sherwood Island site in the New Jersey
submittal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Jersey relied on the OTC 2023 regional modeling using CAMx to
determine the nonattainment and maintenance sites that it was linked to
as a potential significant contributor based on its contribution above
1 percent of the NAAQS (0.70 ppb for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS). The
OTC modeling showed that New Jersey was linked above the 1 percent
threshold to four receptors, including two nonattainment receptors at
the Westport monitoring site in Connecticut and at the Susan Wagner and
Babylon monitoring sites in New York. Additionally, the modeling
demonstrated that New Jersey was linked to maintenance receptors
located at the Greenwich, New Haven, and Stratford monitoring sites in
Connecticut and the Babylon monitoring site in New York.
New Jersey asserted that considering air quality, emissions
reductions from the State's adopted measures, and the cost
effectiveness of those measures, no additional emissions reductions
from New Jersey are necessary to address its good neighbor obligations
to downwind nonattainment and maintenance areas.
New Jersey noted that from 1990 to 2017, annual NOX and
VOC emissions in New Jersey have each decreased approximately 77
percent. From 2011 to 2017, annual NOX and VOC emissions
decreased 31 percent and 17 percent, respectively. From 2002 to 2017,
for point sources in the State, NOX was reduced by 81
percent and VOC emissions were reduced by 63 percent. New Jersey also
noted that its point source emissions represent only about 8 percent of
New Jersey's total NOX emissions, while mobile sources were
approximately 43 percent.
New Jersey stated that there has been a significant decreasing
trend in 8-hour ozone design values in New Jersey, approximately 40
percent from 1988 to 2017 and 13 percent from 2011 to 2017. According
to the State, the significant decrease demonstrates the impact of New
Jersey control measures.
New Jersey provided a list \36\ of its post-2002 adopted
NOX and VOC control measures, including estimated cost-
effectiveness (dollar ($) per ton of NOX reduced or VOC
reduced), and the EPA's approval date \37\ for many of the measures.
New Jersey notes that the State has met Reasonably Available Control
Measures (RACM) and RACT requirements and has gone beyond RACM/RACT by
adopting control measures more stringent than Federal rules and rules
adopted by other states. Furthermore, New Jersey states that its rules
are implemented statewide and not limited to the Northern New Jersey-
New York-Connecticut ozone nonattainment area. New Jersey highlighted
several of its control measures:
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\36\ Table 5 of the SIP submittal.
\37\ Control measures that the State identified as ``USEPA
Approval Pending'' have been approved by the EPA as follows: The EPA
finalized approval of the CTGs for Fiberglass Boat Manufacturing
Materials; Industrial Cleaning Solvents; Miscellaneous Metal and
Plastic Parts Coatings; Paper, Film, and Foil Coatings; and Natural
Gas Engines and Turbines. 83 FR 50506 (October 9, 2018). The EPA
approved revisions to New Jersey's I/M rules. 83 FR 21174 (May 9,
2018). The EPA finalized approval of New Jersey's Vapor Recovery
2017 Stage I and Refueling. 85 FR 36748 (June 18, 2020).
--Power generation rules, including requirements for high electric
demand days (HEDD) when ozone concentrations are highest. New Jersey
estimates NOX emissions reduction during HEDD to be over 60
tons from a baseline without the rules;
--municipal waste combustor controls;
--stationary reciprocating internal combustion engines (RICE) controls
(as low as 37 kW) used for distributed generation or demand response
(DG/DR), which the State noted are often operated on hot summer days
that often coincide with high ozone days;
--mobile source controls including New Jersey's Low Emission Vehicle
Program (NJ LEV) (based on California's program), which requires a
certain percentage of Zero Emission Vehicles in the State, as well as
its rules for vehicle idling and heavy-duty vehicle inspection and
maintenance using on-board diagnostics technology; and
--various NOX and VOC measures to address the EPA Control
Techniques Guideline (CTG), NOX Alternative Control
Technique (ACT) categories, and updated controls at gasoline dispensing
facilities including California Air Resources Board (CARB) enhanced
vapor recovery certified Phase I vapor recovery systems, dripless
nozzles, and low permeation hoses.
New Jersey also asserts that it has implemented its control
measures before the attainment deadlines for downwind nonattainment
areas. New Jersey provides the example of the New Jersey power
generation and HEDD rules being effective in 2015 or earlier. New
Jersey further asserts that, when determining New Jersey's significant
contribution to interstate transport, the State should not be penalized
for its early adoption of appropriate and effective rules in advance of
and more stringent than other states.
In the State's evaluation of cost effectiveness, New Jersey claims
that it has gone beyond the measures of other nearby and upwind states
and previously established the EPA cost effectiveness thresholds. The
State notes that the cost-effectiveness values associated with many of
its adopted rules are several times greater than the threshold of
$1,400 per ton NOX reduced set for upwind states in the
CSAPR Update. For example, according to the State's list of existing
NOX and VOC control measures \38\ included in its SIP
submittal, the control measures for turbines operating during HEDD had
a cost effectiveness of $44,000 per ton NOX reduced; the
control measures for oil-fired boilers operating during HEDD had a cost
effectiveness up to $18,000 per ton NOX reduced; and, for
natural gas compressor engines and turbines rules adopted in 2017, the
rules have a cost effectiveness up to $26,020 per ton NOX
reduced, with SCR costs up to $18,983 per ton NOX reduced.
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\38\ Table 5 of the New Jersey SIP submittal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. EPA Evaluation
The EPA is proposing to find that the New York SIP revision
submitted on September 25, 2018, and the New Jersey SIP revision
submitted on May 13, 2019, do not meet the States' obligations with
respect to prohibiting emissions that contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in any other state based on the EPA's evaluation of the SIP
submissions using the 4-step interstate transport framework. Both
States conceded that they are linked to nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in another state at Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework-which is confirmed by the EPA's most recent
modeling. However, neither state conducted an adequate Step 3 analysis
to conclude that either state's SIP contains adequate measures to
prohibit significant contribution or interference with maintenance.
Both states conclude that their existing (or certain ``on-the-way'')
control measures are already sufficient to meet good neighbor
obligations. However, for this argument to provide
[[Page 9492]]
support for their conclusions, an analysis as to why no additional
control measures are justified is needed. Neither state provided such
an analysis in their respective SIP submittals. Therefore, as discussed
below, the EPA proposes to disapprove both New York's and New Jersey's
good neighbor SIP submittals for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS.
A. New York
1. Results of the EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for New
York
As described in section I, the EPA performed air quality modeling
using the 2016v2 emissions platform to project design values and
contributions for 2023. These data were examined to determine if New
York contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the 2015 8-
hour ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in Table 1, the data \39\ indicate that
in 2023, emissions from New York contribute greater than 1 percent of
the standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in
Stratford, Connecticut (receptor ID 90013007), Westport, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90019003), Greenwich, Connecticut (receptor ID 90010017),
New Haven, Connecticut (receptor ID 90099002), and Bucks County,
Pennsylvania (receptor ID 480170012).\40\
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\39\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2023_DVs_Contributions_2016v2_Platform which is included in docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\40\ These modeling results are consistent with the results of a
prior round of 2023 modeling using the 2016v1 emissions platform
which became available to the public in the fall of 2020 in the
Revised CSAPR Update, as noted in Section I.
Table 1--New York Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum New York
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
90013007..................... Stratford, CT... Nonattainment.. 74.2 75.1 13.56
90019003..................... Westport, CT.... Nonattainment.. 76.1 76.4 14.36
90010017..................... Greenwich, CT... Nonattainment.. 73.0 73.7 16.81
90099002..................... New Haven, CT... Nonattainment.. 71.8 73.9 11.54
420170012.................... Bucks County, PA Maintenance.... 70.7 72.2 1.80
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by New York Regarding Step 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, New York
relied on EPA modeling released in the March 2018 memorandum to
identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this notice, the EPA has recently updated this modeling
using the most current and technically appropriate information. The EPA
proposes to primarily rely on the EPA's most recent modeling to
identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023.
3. Evaluation of Information Provided by New York Regarding Step 2
As described previously in this notice, the EPA has recently
updated modeling to identify upwind state contributions to
nonattainment and/or maintenance receptors in 2023. In this proposal,
the EPA relies on the Agency's most recently available modeling to
identify upwind contributions and ``linkages'' to downwind air quality
problems in 2023 using a threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS. As shown
in Table 1, updated EPA modeling identifies New York's maximum
contribution to a downwind nonattainment or maintenance receptor is
greater than 1 percent of the standard (i.e., 0.70 ppb).
Although New York relied on alternative modeling to the EPA's
modeling at Step 2, New York acknowledged in its SIP submission that it
is linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to one or more downwind
receptors in 2023. Because the alternative modeling relied on by the
State also demonstrates that a linkage exists between the State and
downwind receptors at Step 2, the EPA need not conduct a comparative
assessment of the alternative modeling; the State concedes that it is
linked. New York's analysis corroborates the conclusion in the EPA's
most recent modeling. The EPA therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the
4-step interstate transport framework to assess arguments the State
presented as to why, despite this linkage, the State should not be
considered to significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance of the NAAQS in any other state such that additional
emissions reductions are required.
4. Evaluation of Information Provided Regarding Step 3
At Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, a state's
emissions are further evaluated, in light of multiple factors,
including air quality and cost considerations, to determine what, if
any, emissions significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance and, thus, must be eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). To effectively evaluate which emissions in the
state should be deemed ``significant'' and therefore prohibited, states
generally should prepare an accounting of sources and other emissions
activity and assess potential, additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind air quality improvements. The EPA
has consistently applied this general approach (i.e., Step 3 of the 4-
step interstate transport framework) when identifying emissions
contributions that the Agency has determined to be ``significant'' (or
interfere with maintenance) in each of its prior Federal, regional
ozone transport rulemakings, and this interpretation of the statute has
been upheld by the Supreme Court. See EME Homer City, 572 U.S. 489, 519
(2014). While the EPA has not directed states that they must conduct a
Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner the EPA has done in its prior
regional transport rulemakings, state implementation plans addressing
the obligations in CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must prohibit ``any
source or other type of emissions activity within the State'' from
emitting air pollutants which will contribute significantly to downwind
air quality problems. Thus, states must complete something similar to
the EPA's analysis (or an alternative approach to defining
``significance'' that comports with the
[[Page 9493]]
statute's objectives) to determine whether and to what degree emissions
from a state should be ``prohibited'' to eliminate emissions that will
``contribute significantly to nonattainment in, or interfere with
maintenance of,'' the NAAQS in any other state. New York did not
conduct such an analysis in its SIP submission. Although in this action
we are relying on the results of the EPA's most recent air quality
modeling results for receptor identification and contributions, we will
continue to evaluate the analysis provided by New York at Step 3 to
assess whether the analysis provided adequately supports New York's
conclusion, and whether the analysis could apply to the linkages
identified by the EPA at Step 2.
As previously indicated in section II.A, New York asserted in its
September 2018 submittal that, despite its contributions, the State had
met its good neighbor obligations through the implementation and
enforcement of stringent NOX and VOC control measures that
go beyond the EPA's presumptive cost threshold in the CSAPR Update for
highly cost-effective emissions reductions, and through the ongoing
adoption and revision of additional control measures to further ensure
the reduction of ozone in both New York and downwind areas.
The State's submittal, however, did not contain a demonstration at
Step 3 that the State was adequately controlling its emissions for the
purposes of the good neighbor provision, particularly because New York
conceded in its submission that its emissions were linked to
Connecticut receptors at Steps 1 and 2. The SIP submittal pointed to
the State's existing NOX RACT measures with presumptive and
facility-specific emission limits based on $5,500 per ton of
NOX reduced, as well as ongoing state and local emission
control efforts to conclude New York is already meeting its good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. However, the
State's submittal does not include a sufficient examination or a
technical justification that could support the conclusion that the
State has no further good neighbor obligations for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. In particular, the State did not conduct in its submittal
an analysis of potential additional emissions-reduction measures to
further reduce its impact on the identified downwind receptors. For
example, New York did not include in its submission an accounting of
sources and other emissions activity in the State along with an
analysis of potential NOX emissions control technologies,
their associated costs, estimated emissions reductions, and downwind
air quality improvements. Nor does the submittal include an analysis of
whether such potential additional control technologies or measures
could reduce the impact of New York's emissions on out of state
receptors. Though there is not a prescribed method for a Step 3
analysis, EPA has consistently applied Step 3 of the good neighbor
framework through a more rigorous evaluation of potential additional
control technologies or measures than what was provided in the SIP
submission. Identifying a range of various emissions control measures
that have been or may be enacted at the state or local level, without
analysis of the impact of those measures on the out of state receptors,
is not analytically sufficient. In general, the air quality modeling
that the EPA has conducted (as well the modeling relied on by New York
in its submittal) already accounts for ``on-the-books'' emissions
control measures. Both sets of modeling clearly establish continued
linkage from New York to downwind receptors in 2023 at Steps 1 and 2,
despite those emissions control efforts.
New York's September 2018 submittal referenced regulatory updates
that New York asserted were in development and would provide for
additional NOX and VOC reductions. The EPA notes that New
York has since adopted many of these regulatory updates.\41\ New York
adopted 6 NYCRR Part 227, Subpart 227-3, ``Ozone Season Oxides of
Nitrogen (NOX) Emission Limits for Simple Cycle and
Regenerative Combustion Turbines,'' with a State effective date of
January 16, 2020, that lowered allowable NOX emissions from
peaking units during the ozone season on high electric demand days,
with compliance dates of May 1, 2023 (100 ppmvd \42\ limit), and May 1,
2025 (25 ppmvd limit for gas and 42 ppmvd limit for oil).\43\ New York
adopted a regulation, 6 NYCRR Part 222, ``Distributed Generation
Sources,'' with a State effective date of March 25, 2020, that
established NOX emissions control requirements for
distributed generation and price responsive generation sources \44\
with compliance dates of May 1, 2021 and May 1, 2025.\45\ New York
adopted revisions, with a State effective date of March 13, 2020, to
NYCRR Part 219, including adoption of a new Subpart 219-10,
``Reasonably Available Control Technology (RACT) For Oxides of Nitrogen
(NOX) At Municipal and Private Solid Waste Incineration
Units,'' which established NOX limits for municipal waste
combustors with a compliance date of March 14, 2021.\46\ New York
adopted revisions to NYCRR Part 218, subpart 218-7, ``Aftermarket
Parts,'' with a State effective date of March 14, 2020, which required
cleaner California certified aftermarket catalytic converters offered
for sale or installed in New York State beginning January 1, 2023.\47\
New York adopted revisions, with a State effective date of January 11,
2020, to 6 NYCRR Part 205, ``Architectural and Industrial Maintenance
Coatings,'' with compliance effective January 1, 2021,\48\ requiring
more stringent VOC limits for coatings.\49\ New York adopted revisions,
with a State effective date of November 1, 2019, to 6 NYCRR Part 226,
``Solvent Metal Cleaning Processes,'' establishing VOC content limits
for cleaning solvents used in operations not covered by other
regulations, beginning November 1, 2020.\50\ New York adopted revisions
to 6 NYCRR Part 230, with a State effective date of February 11, 2021,
``Gasoline Dispensing Sites and Transport Vehicles,'' and 6 NYCRR Part
235, ``Consumer Products.'' Updates to NYCRR Part 230 include
additional VOC control requirements for facilities during gasoline
transfer operations beginning February 5, 2021.\51\ Updates to Part
235, which require compliance by January 1, 2022, include revising and
[[Page 9494]]
establishing VOC contents for consumer products.\52\
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\41\ New York regulations are available at https://www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/regulations.html.
\42\ The NOX emission limits are on a part per
million dry volume basis (ppmvd), corrected to 15 percent oxygen.
\43\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on May 18, 2020. The EPA finalized approval on August 3,
2021. 86 FR 43956 (August 11, 2021).
\44\ Distributed generation (DG) sources are engines used by
host sites to supply electricity outside that supplied by
distribution utilities. This on-site generation of electricity by DG
sources is used by a wide range of commercial, institutional, and
industrial facilities. DG applications range from supplying
electricity during blackouts to supplying all a facility's
electricity demand year-round. NY's DG rule applies to sources
enrolled in demand response programs sponsored by the New York
Independent System Operator or transmission utilities as well as
sources used during times when the cost of electricity supplied by
utilities is high (i.e., price-responsive generation sources).
\45\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on October 15, 2020.
\46\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on February 23, 2021.
\47\ As of December 1, 2021, New York had not submitted a
revised version of subpart 218-7 to the EPA for SIP approval.
\48\ The compliance date for the sale of products is January 1,
2021. The sell-through provision allows for product manufactured
before January 1, 2021, to be sold through May 1, 2023.
\49\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on October 15, 2020.
\50\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on November 5, 2019. The EPA finalized approval on April
19, 2020. 85 FR 28490 (May 13, 2020).
\51\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on March 3, 2021.
\52\ New York submitted the updated regulation for SIP approval
to the EPA on March 3, 2021.
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Additionally, New York adopted a revised version of 6 NYCRR Part
243, ``CSAPR NOX Ozone Season Group 2 Trading Program,''
with a State effective date of January 2, 2019, in order to allow New
York to allocate CSAPR allowances to regulated entities in New York
under an abbreviated SIP.\53\ However, the EPA notes that although New
York's revised Part 243 replaced the EPA's default allocation
procedures for the control periods in 2021 and beyond under the CSAPR
Update FIP, the revised state rules did not create any enforceable
emission limitations and did not replace the enforceable emission
limitations set forth in the additional trading program provisions
established under the CSAPR Update FIP. Moreover, the allowance
allocations provisions adopted in Part 243 (as well as the additional
trading program provisions established under the CSAPR Update) are no
longer in effect for New York's sources because those provisions have
been replaced as to the State's sources by the new trading program
provisions established under the Revised CSAPR Update.\54\
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\53\ CSAPR provided a process for the submission and approval of
SIP revisions to replace certain provisions of the CSAPR FIPs while
the remaining FIP provisions continue to apply. This type of CSAPR
SIP is termed an abbreviated SIP.
\54\ The regulations implementing the Revised CSAPR Update
provide that, for states subject to the Revised CSAPR Update and
with respect to control periods after 2020, the EPA will no longer
administer state trading program provisions approved under SIP
revisions addressing the CSAPR Update's trading program. See 40 CFR
52.38(b)(16)(ii).
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In any case, in both the CSAPR Update and the more recent Revised
CSAPR Update, the EPA found, in spite of the nominal stringency of New
York's control programs, additional emissions reductions were
achievable from EGUs in the State. This was true even under the level
of control stringency the EPA determined appropriate to eliminate
significant contribution for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. Further, the EPA has
not established a benchmark cost-effectiveness threshold for good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, and New York in its
submittal has not conducted an analysis to establish one for EPA to
evaluate. Additionally, while New York's existing control measures have
undoubtedly reduced the amount of transported ozone pollution to other
states and have contributed to the downward emissions trends and
improving air quality in the State, in light of continuing contribution
to out of state receptors from the State at Steps 1 and 2 despite these
measures, New York's SIP submission failed to provide an adequate
analysis at Step 3.
As of December 1, 2021, New York had not yet adopted revisions to 6
NYCRR Part 203, ``Oil and Gas Sector,'' \55\ or NYCRR Part 228, Subpart
228-1, ``Motor Vehicle and Mobile Equipment Refinishing and Recoating
Operation.''
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\55\ New York filed a notice of proposed rulemaking on April 20,
2021. See https://www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/122829.html.
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The EPA also notes that New York's 6 NYCRR Part 227, Subpart 227-3,
which was approved into the SIP after EPA's receipt of this September
2018 submittal, and which implements NOX limits on
combustion turbines that operate as peaking units, will not be fully
phased in until 2025, which is past the August 3, 2024 Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Additionally, New York said
that the State's mobile on-road sector alone significantly impacted
downwind monitors and noted that it controls its mobile emissions
through its inspection/maintenance (I/M) and anti-idling standards.
However, New York did not explain the role its I/M and anti-idling
standards play in eliminating its significant contribution.
The EPA acknowledges that New York's RACT presumptive emissions
limits and facility-specific emissions limits are based on an
inflation-adjusted control cost valued at $5,500 per ton of
NOX reduced.
In general, however, the listing of existing or ``on-the-way''
control measures, whether approved into the State's SIP or not, does
not substitute for a complete Step 3 analysis under the EPA's 4-step
framework to define ``significant contribution.'' New York's submittal
does not include an assessment of the overall effects of these
measures, when the reductions would be achieved, and what the overall
resulting air quality effects would be observed at identified out-of-
state receptors. The State's submittal does not include an evaluation
of additional potential emissions control opportunities, or their costs
or impacts, or attempt to analyze whether, if applied more broadly
across linked states, the emissions reductions would constitute the
elimination of significant contribution on a regional scale. The
State's submittal did not contain an explanation as to whether any
faster or more stringent emissions reductions that may be available
were prohibitively costly or infeasible. Although the EPA acknowledges
states are not necessarily bound to follow its own analytical framework
at Step 3, we note that the State did not attempt to determine or
justify an appropriate uniform cost-effectiveness threshold for the
more stringent 2015 ozone NAAQS, nor did the State offer an alternative
to this analytical framework for determining ``significant
contribution'' in its submittal. This would have been similar to the
approach to defining significant contribution that the EPA has applied
in prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and the CSAPR Update.
Further, the EPA's modeling already accounts for ``on-the-books''
control measures, and the State has not explained which of its measures
were not already included in the EPA's modeling and thus deserve to be
further credited as reducing the impact of the State's emissions beyond
what the EPA's air quality modeling has already accounted for. In light
of continuing contribution to out of state receptors from the State (at
Steps 1 and 2) despite these measures, New York's SIP submission failed
to evaluate the availability of any additional controls to improve
downwind air quality at nonattainment and maintenance receptors at Step
3.
Finally, under the Wisconsin decision, states and the EPA may not
delay implementation of measures necessary to address good neighbor
requirements beyond the next applicable attainment date without a
showing of impossibility or necessity. See 938 F.3d at 320. In those
cases where the measures identified by the State had implementation
timeframes beyond the next relevant attainment dates the submission did
not offer a demonstration of impossibility of earlier implementation of
those control measures.\56\ Similarly, the State's submittal is
insufficient to the extent the implementation timeframes for identified
control measures were left unidentified, unexplained, or too uncertain
to permit the EPA to form a judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor obligations have been met.
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\56\ While Wisconsin was decided after the state made its
submission, EPA must evaluate the SIP based on the information
available at the time of its action, including any relevant changes
in caselaw or other requirements. States are generally free to
withdraw and resubmit their SIP submissions in light of intervening
changes in the law. The State of New York has not done so in this
case.
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5. Evaluation of Information Provided Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-step interstate transport framework calls for
development of permanent and
[[Page 9495]]
federally enforceable control strategies to achieve the emissions
reductions determined to be necessary at Step 3 to eliminate
significant contribution to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS. New York identified a number of measures that
were either in development or anticipated to occur in the future (See
section III.4).\57\ However, the State had not revised its SIP to
include these emission reductions to ensure the reductions were
permanent and enforceable. Although New York has subsequently adopted
many of the measures identified in section III.4, several measures have
not been approved into the SIP, either because the State failed to
submit (e.g., 6 NYCRR Part 218, Subpart 218-7, ``Aftermarket Parts) or
the EPA has not yet finalized approval into the SIP. Therefore, the
emission reductions associated with those rules are not permanent and
enforceable. As a result, EPA proposes to disapprove New York's
submittal on the separate, additional basis that New York has not
included permanent and enforceable emissions reductions in its SIP as
necessary to meet the obligations of 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
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\57\ Pointing to anticipated upcoming emission reductions, even
if they were not included in the analysis at Steps 1 and 2, is not
sufficient as a Step 3 analysis, for the reasons discussed in
Section III.A.4. In this section, we explain that to the extent such
anticipated reductions are not included in the SIP and rendered
permanent and enforceable, reliance on such anticipated reductions
is also insufficient at Step 4.
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6. Conclusion
Based on the EPA's evaluation of New York's' SIP submission, the
EPA is proposing to find that the portion of New York's September 25,
2018 SIP submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not
meet the State's interstate transport obligations for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS, because it fails to contain the necessary provisions to
eliminate emissions in amounts that will contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in any other
state.
B. New Jersey
1. Results of the EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for New
Jersey
As described in section I, the EPA performed air quality modeling
using the 2016v2 emissions platform to project design values and
contributions for 2023. These data were examined to determine if New
Jersey contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in Table 2, the data \58\ indicate that
in 2023 emissions from New Jersey contribute greater than 1 percent of
the standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in
Stratford, Connecticut (receptor ID 90013007), Westport, Connecticut
(receptor ID 90019003), Greenwich, Connecticut (receptor ID 90010017),
Madison, Connecticut (receptor ID 90099002), and Bucks County,
Pennsylvania (receptor ID 480170012).\59\
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\58\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2023_DVs_Contributions_2016v2_Platform which is included in docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\59\ These modeling results are consistent with the results of a
prior round of 2023 modeling using the 2016v1 emissions platform
which became available to the public in the fall of 2020 in the
Revised CSAPR Update, as noted in Section I. That modeling showed
that New Jersey had a maximum contribution greater than 0.70 ppb to
at least one nonattainment or maintenance-only receptor in 2023.
These modeling results are included in the file ``Ozone Design
Values And Contributions Revised CSAPR Update.xlsx'' in docket EPA-
HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
Table 2--New Jersey Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum New Jersey
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
90013007..................... Stratford, CT... Nonattainment.. 74.2 75.1 7.43
90019003..................... Westport, CT.... Nonattainment.. 76.1 76.4 8.85
90010017..................... Greenwich, CT... Nonattainment.. 73.0 73.7 6.90
90099002..................... Madison, CT..... Nonattainment.. 71.8 73.9 5.67
420170012.................... Bucks County, PA Maintenance.... 70.7 72.2 5.79
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by New Jersey Regarding Step 1
As noted in section II.B., New Jersey submitted OTC modeling that
identified nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023. Although
the State used a different modeling approach (utilizing 2011 based
modeling and the ERTAC EGU Projection tool), than the EPA's modeling,
which used a 2016-based emissions platform developed under an EPA/MJO/
state collaborative project, New Jersey's alternative modeling also
identified a number of nonattainment and maintenance receptor sites in
2023. See page 9 of the May 30, 2019 SIP submission. New Jersey
determined that there were nonattainment or maintenance problems at
eight locations in Connecticut, New York, and Maryland, which exceeded
the 5 locations in Connecticut and Pennsylvania that the EPA determined
to have nonattainment or maintenance problems. Based on both the New
Jersey and the EPA modeling, nonattainment and maintenance receptors
are projected in 2023 at Step 1. Thus, even under the alternative
modeling of 2023, New Jersey acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and maintenance receptors.
3. Evaluation of Information Provided by the State Regarding Step 2
Although New Jersey relied on alternative modeling to the EPA's
modeling at Step 2, New Jersey acknowledged in its SIP submission that
it is linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS (0.70 ppb for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS) to one or more downwind receptors in 2023. Because the
alternative modeling relied on by the State also demonstrates that a
linkage exists between the State and downwind receptors at Step 2, the
EPA need not conduct a comparative assessment of the alternative
modeling; the State concedes that it is linked. New Jersey's analysis
corroborates the conclusion in the EPA's most recent modeling. The EPA
therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework to assess arguments the State presented as to why, despite
this linkage, the State should not be considered to significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS
in any other
[[Page 9496]]
state such that additional emissions reductions are required.
4. Evaluation of Information Provided Regarding Step 3
At Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, a state's
emissions are further evaluated, in light of multiple factors,
including air quality and cost considerations, to determine what, if
any, emissions significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance and, thus, must be eliminated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
To effectively evaluate which emissions in the state should be
deemed ``significant'' and therefore prohibited, states generally
should prepare an accounting of sources and other emissions activity
and assess potential, additional emissions reduction opportunities and
resulting downwind air quality improvements. The EPA has consistently
applied this general approach (i.e., Step 3 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework) when identifying emissions contributions that the
Agency has determined to be ``significant'' (or interfere with
maintenance) in each of its prior Federal, regional ozone transport
rulemakings, and this interpretation of the statute has been upheld by
the Supreme Court. See EME Homer City, 572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014). While
the EPA has not directed states that they must conduct a Step 3
analysis in precisely the manner the EPA has done in its prior regional
transport rulemakings, state implementation plans addressing the
obligations in CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must prohibit ``any
source or other type of emissions activity within the State'' from
emitting air pollutants which will contribute significantly to downwind
air quality problems. Thus, states must complete something similar to
the EPA's analysis (or an alternative approach to defining
``significance'' that comports with the statute's objectives) to
determine whether and to what degree emissions from a state should be
``prohibited'' to eliminate emissions that will ``contribute
significantly to nonattainment in, or interfere with maintenance of,''
the NAAQS in any other state. New Jersey did not conduct such an
analysis in its SIP submission.
As previously noted, New Jersey asserted in its May 2019 submittal
that considering air quality, the emissions reductions from New
Jersey's adopted measures, and the cost effectiveness of those
measures, no additional emissions reductions from New Jersey are
necessary to address its good neighbor obligations to downwind
nonattainment and maintenance areas. New Jersey stated that control
measures were adopted and implemented before attainment deadlines and
go beyond previously established the EPA cost effectiveness thresholds.
New Jersey also provided information documenting the emissions
reductions that have been made throughout the State beginning in 2002
with corresponding improvements in air quality in New Jersey to
demonstrate the impact of New Jersey's control measures.
New Jersey's submittal, however, did not contain a demonstration at
Step 3 that the State was adequately controlling its emissions for
purposes of the good neighbor provision, particularly because the State
conceded in its submission that it was potentially significantly
contributing to eight receptors in 2023 at Steps 1 and 2. The SIP
submittal pointed to the State's existing NOX and VOC
control measures that were adopted by the State to conclude New Jersey
is already meeting its good neighbor obligations for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS. However, the State's submittal does not include a
sufficient examination or a technical justification that could support
the conclusion that the State has no further good neighbor obligations
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. In particular, the State did not
conduct in its submittal an analysis of potential additional emissions-
reduction measures to further reduce its impact on the identified
downwind receptors. For example, New Jersey did not include in its
submission an accounting of individual emissions units at facilities in
the State along with an analysis of potential NOX emissions
control technologies, their associated costs, estimated emissions
reductions, and downwind air quality improvements. Nor does the
submittal include an analysis of whether such potential, additional
control technologies or measures could reduce the impact of New
Jersey's emissions on out of state receptors. Though there is not a
prescribed method for a Step 3 analysis, the EPA has consistently
applied Step 3 of the good neighbor framework through a more rigorous
evaluation of potential additional control technologies or measures
than what New Jersey provided in its submission. Identifying a range of
various emissions control measures that have been or may be enacted at
the state level, without analysis of the impact of those measures on
the out of state receptors, is not analytically sufficient. In general,
the air quality modeling that EPA has conducted (as well the modeling
relied on by New Jersey in its submittal) already accounts for ``on-
the-books'' emissions control measures. Both sets of modeling clearly
establish continued linkage from New Jersey to downwind receptors in
2023 at Steps 1 and 2, despite those emissions control efforts.
The EPA acknowledges that the State's control measures listed in
the State's SIP submittal may be nominally more stringent than the EPA
cost-thresholds used for the CSAPR Update or Revised CSAPR Update. But
those cost-thresholds were for the 2008 ozone NAAQS (a less stringent
NAAQS than the 2015 ozone NAAQS). Further, in the Revised CSAPR Update,
the EPA found that despite the nominal stringency of New Jersey's
control programs, additional emissions reductions were achievable from
EGUs in the State, even under the level of control stringency the EPA
determined appropriate to eliminate significant contribution for the
2008 ozone NAAQS. In any case, the EPA has not established a benchmark
cost-effectiveness threshold for good neighbor obligations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS, and New Jersey in its submittal has not conducted an
analysis to establish one for the EPA to evaluate. Additionally, while
New Jersey's existing control measures have undoubtedly reduced the
amount of transported ozone pollution to other states and have
contributed to the downward emissions trends and improving air quality
in the State as shown in the State's SIP submittal, in light of
continuing contribution to out of state receptors from the State at
Steps 1 and 2 despite these measures, New Jersey's SIP submission
failed to provide an adequate analysis at Step 3.
We therefore propose that New Jersey was required to analyze
emissions from the sources and other emissions activity from within the
state to determine whether its contributions were significant, and we
propose to disapprove its submission because New Jersey failed to do
so.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-step interstate transport framework calls for
development of permanent and federally enforceable control strategies
to achieve the emissions reductions determined to be necessary at Step
3 to eliminate significant contribution to nonattainment or
interference with maintenance of the NAAQS. As mentioned previously,
New Jersey's SIP submission did not contain an evaluation of additional
emission control opportunities (or establish that no additional
controls are required),
[[Page 9497]]
thus, no information was provided at Step 4. As a result, EPA proposes
to disapprove New Jersey's submittal on the separate, additional basis
that the State has not developed permanent and enforceable emissions
reductions necessary to meet the obligations of CAA section
110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
6. Conclusion
Based on the EPA's evaluation of New Jersey's SIP submission, the
EPA is proposing to find that the portion of New Jersey's May 13, 2019
SIP submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet
the State's interstate transport obligations for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS, because it fails to contain the necessary provisions to
eliminate emissions in amounts that will contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in any other
state.
IV. Proposed Action
We are proposing to disapprove the portion of New York's and New
Jersey's SIP submissions pertaining to interstate transport of air
pollution which will significantly contribute to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS in other
states. Under CAA section 110(c)(1), disapproval, if finalized, would
establish a 2-year deadline for the EPA to promulgate a FIP for New
York and New Jersey to address interstate transport requirements for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, unless the EPA approves a SIP that meets
these requirements. Disapproval does not start a mandatory sanctions
clock for New York and New Jersey. The remaining elements of New York's
September 25, 2018 submission, and New Jersey's May 13, 2019 submission
are not addressed in this action and either have been or will be acted
on in separate rulemakings.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action and was
therefore not submitted to the Office of Management and Budget for
review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This proposed action does not impose an information collection
burden under 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 merely proposes to disapprove a SIP submission as not meeting
the CAA.
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. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
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. This action does not apply on any Indian
reservation land, any other area where the EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has jurisdiction, or non-reservation areas of
Indian country. 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 it merely proposes to disapprove a SIP
submission as not meeting the CAA.
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
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes the human health or environmental risk addressed
by this action will not have potential disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental effects on minority, low-income
or indigenous populations. This action merely proposes to disapprove a
SIP submission as not meeting the CAA.
K. CAA Section 307(b)(1)
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs judicial review of final
actions by the EPA. This section provides, in part, that petitions for
review must be filed in the D.C. Circuit: (i) When the agency action
consists of ``nationally applicable regulations promulgated, or final
actions taken, by the Administrator,'' or (ii) when such action is
locally or regionally applicable, if ``such action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope or effect and if in taking such
action the Administrator finds and publishes that such action is based
on such a determination.'' For locally or regionally applicable final
actions, the CAA reserves to the EPA complete discretion whether to
invoke the exception in (ii).\60\
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\60\ In deciding whether to invoke the exception by making and
publishing a finding that an action is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect, the Administrator takes into account a
number of policy considerations, including his judgment balancing
the benefit of obtaining the D.C. Circuit's authoritative
centralized review versus allowing development of the issue in other
contexts and the best use of agency resources.
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The EPA anticipates that this proposed rulemaking, if finalized,
would be ``nationally applicable'' within the meaning of CAA section
307(b)(1) because it would take final action on SIP submittals for the
2015 ozone NAAQS for two states, which are located in two different
Federal judicial circuits. It would apply uniform, nationwide
analytical methods, policy judgments, and interpretation with respect
to the same CAA obligations, i.e., implementation of good neighbor
requirements under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS for states across the country, and final action would be based on
this common core of determinations, described in further detail below.
If the EPA takes final action on this proposed rulemaking, in the
alternative,
[[Page 9498]]
the Administrator intends to exercise the complete discretion afforded
to him under the CAA to make and publish a finding that the final
action (to the extent a court finds the action to be locally or
regionally applicable) is based on a determination of ``nationwide
scope or effect'' within the meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1). Through
this rulemaking action (in conjunction with a series of related actions
on other SIP submissions for the same CAA obligations), the EPA
interprets and applies section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I) of the CAA for the
2015 ozone NAAQS based on a common core of nationwide policy judgments
and technical analysis concerning the interstate transport of
pollutants throughout the continental U.S. In particular, the EPA is
applying here (and in other proposed actions related to the same
obligations) the same, nationally consistent 4-step framework for
assessing good neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The EPA
relies on a single set of updated, 2016-base year photochemical grid
modeling results of the year 2023 as the primary basis for its
assessment of air quality conditions and contributions at Steps 1 and 2
of that framework. Further, the EPA proposes to determine and apply a
set of nationally consistent policy judgments to apply the 4-step
framework. The EPA has selected a nationally uniform analytic year
(2023) for this analysis and is applying a nationally uniform approach
to nonattainment and maintenance receptors and a nationally uniform
approach to contribution threshold analysis.\61\ For these reasons, the
Administrator intends, if this proposed action is finalized, to
exercise the complete discretion afforded to him under the CAA to make
and publish a finding that this action is based on one or more
determinations of nationwide scope or effect for purposes of CAA
section 307(b)(1).\62\
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\61\ A finding of nationwide scope or effect is also appropriate
for actions that cover states in multiple judicial circuits. In the
report on the 1977 Amendments that revised section 307(b)(1) of the
CAA, Congress noted that the Administrator's determination that the
``nationwide scope or effect'' exception applies would be
appropriate for any action that has a scope or effect beyond a
single judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294 at 323, 324,
reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402-03.
\62\ The EPA may take a consolidated, single final action on all
the proposed SIP disapproval actions with respect to obligations
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Should EPA take a single final action on all such disapprovals, this
action would be nationally applicable, and the EPA would also
anticipate, in the alternative, making and publishing a finding that
such final action is based on a determination of nationwide scope or
effect.
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Ozone.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: January 31, 2022.
Lisa Garcia,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
[FR Doc. 2022-02946 Filed 2-18-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P