Air Plan Disapproval; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Air Plan Disapproval; Region 5 Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 9838-9878 [2022-02953]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2022 / Proposed Rules
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R05–OAR–2022–0006; EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663; FRL–9431–01–R5]
Air Plan Disapproval; Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin;
Air Plan Disapproval; Region 5
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 Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
regarding interstate transport for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS). The ‘‘good
neighbor’’ or ‘‘interstate transport’’
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. 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: Written comments
must be received on or before April 25,
2022.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified as Docket No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2022–0006, by any of the
following methods: Federal Rulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov
following the online instructions for
submitting comments or via email to
arra.sarah@epa.gov. Include Docket ID
No. EPA–R05–OAR–2022–0006 in the
subject line of the message.
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
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SUMMARY:
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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 EPA Docket Center
services and the current status, please
visit us online at https://www.epa.gov/
dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Olivia Davidson, Environmental
Scientist, Attainment Planning and
Maintenance Section, Air Programs
Branch (AR–18J), Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 5, 77 West
Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois
60604, (312) 886–0266,
davidson.olivia@epa.gov. The EPA
Region 5 office is open from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
excluding Federal holidays and facility
closures due to COVID–19.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Participation: Submit your
comments, identified by Docket ID No.
EPA–R05–OAR–2022–0006, at https://
www.regulations.gov (our preferred
method), or the other methods
identified in the ADDRESSES section.
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).
There are two dockets supporting this
action, EPA–R05–OAR–2022–0006 and
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663. Docket No.
EPA–R05–OAR–2022–0006 contains
information specific to Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and
Wisconsin, including the notice of
proposed rulemaking. Docket No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663 contains
additional modeling files, emissions
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inventory files, technical support
documents, and other relevant
supporting documentation regarding
interstate transport of emissions for the
2015 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–R05–OAR–2022–
0006. For additional submission
methods, please contact Olivia
Davidson, (312) 886–0266,
davidson.olivia@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 EPA Docket Center services,
please visit us online at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
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–R05–OAR–2022–0006,
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 EPA.
I. Background
A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, EPA promulgated
a revision to the ozone NAAQS (2015
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
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
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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). 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 EPA’s Four Step
Interstate Transport Regulatory Process
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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 ozone
NAAQS. 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
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).
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
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Through the development and
implementation of the CSAPR
rulemakings and prior regional
rulemakings pursuant to the interstate
transport provision,7 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
enforceable measures needed to achieve
those emissions reductions.
C. Background on EPA’s Ozone
Transport Modeling Information
In general, 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, 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.
EPA has released several documents
containing projected ozone design
values, contributions, and information
relevant to evaluating interstate
transport with respect to the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. First, on January 6, 2017, EPA
published a notice of data availability
(NODA) in which we requested
comment on preliminary interstate
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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ozone transport data including projected
ozone design values and interstate
contributions for 2023 using a 2011 base
year platform.8 In the NODA, 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 ozone NAAQS.9 On
October 27, 2017, we released a
memorandum (October 2017
memorandum) containing updated 2011
platform-based 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 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 ozone NAAQS under Step 2 of the
4-step interstate transport framework.12
EPA subsequently issued two more
memoranda in August and October
2018, providing additional information
to states developing interstate transport
SIP submissions for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS concerning, respectively,
8 See Notice of Availability of the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Preliminary Interstate Ozone
Transport Modeling Data for the 2015 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 EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 or at https://
www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/
interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-andnotices.
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, available in
docket EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 or at https://
www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/
interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-andnotices.
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.’’
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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
Since the release of the modeling data
shared in the March 2018
memorandum, EPA has performed
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 EPA, MJOs,
and states to develop a new, more recent
emissions platform for use by EPA and
states in regulatory modeling as an
improvement over the dated 2011-based
platform that EPA had used to project
ozone design values and contribution
data provided in the 2017 and 2018
memoranda. 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, EPA released and
accepted public comment on 2023
modeling that used the 2016v1
emissions platform.15 See 85 FR 68964,
68981. Although the Revised CSAPR
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, EPA made further updates to
the 2016 emissions platform to include
mobile emissions from EPA’s Motor
Vehicle Emission Simulator MOVES3
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
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 or at https://
www.epa.gov/airmarkets/memo-and-supplementalinformation-regarding-interstate-transport-sips2015-ozone-naaqs.
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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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.18
EPA’s latest projections of the
baseline EGU emissions uses the version
6—Summer 2021 Reference Case of the
Integrated Planning Model (IPM).19 IPM
is a multi-regional, dynamic, and
deterministic linear programming model
of the U.S. electric power sector. The
model provides forecasts of least cost
capacity expansion, electricity dispatch,
and emission control strategies, while
meeting energy demand, environmental,
transmission, dispatch, and reliability
constraints.
The IPM version 6—Summer 2021
Reference Case incorporated recent
updates through the Summer of 2021 to
account for updated Federal and State
environmental regulations for EGUs.
This projected base case accounts for
the effects of the finalized Mercury and
Air Toxics Standards rule (MATS),
CSAPR, the CSAPR Update, the Revised
CSAPR Update, New Source Review
settlements, the final Effluent Limitation
Guidelines (ELG) Rule, the Coal
Combustion Residual (CCR) Rule, and
other on-the-books Federal and State
rules (including renewable energy tax
credit extensions from the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021) through
early 2021 impacting sulfur dioxide
(SO2), NOX, directly emitted particulate
matter, carbon dioxide, and power plant
operations. It also includes final actions
EPA has taken to implement the
Regional Haze Rule and Best Available
Retrofit Technology (BART)
requirements. Further, the EPA Platform
v6 uses demand projections from the
Energy Information Agency’s (EIA)
Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2020.
The IPM version 6—Summer 2021
Reference Case uses the National
Electric Energy Data System (NEEDS) v6
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 See Technical Support Document (TSD)
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling Platform
included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
19 Detailed information and documentation of
EPA’s Base Case, including all the underlying
assumptions, data sources, and architecture
parameters can be found on EPA’s website at:
https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sectormodeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021reference-case.
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database as its source for data on all
existing and planned-committed units.
Units are removed from the NEEDS
inventory only if a high degree of
certainty could be assigned to future
implementation of the announced future
closure or retirement. The available
retirement-related information was
reviewed for each unit, and the
following rules are applied to remove:
(i) Units that are listed as retired in the
December 2020 EIA Form 860M
(ii) Units that have a planned retirement
year prior to June 30, 2023 in the December
2020 EIA Form 860M
(iii) Units that have been cleared by a
regional transmission operator (RTO) or
independent system operator (ISO) to retire
before 2023, or whose RTO/ISO clearance to
retire is contingent on actions that can be
completed before 2023
(iv) Units that have committed specifically
to retire before 2023 under Federal or state
enforcement actions or regulatory
requirements
(v) And finally, units for which a
retirement announcement can be
corroborated by other available information.
Units required to retire pursuant to
enforcement actions or state rules on July 1,
2023 or later are retained in NEEDS v6.
Retirements or closures taking place
on or after July 1, 2023 are captured as
constraints on those units in the IPM
modeling, and the units are retired in
future year projections per the terms of
the related requirements. Any
retirements excluded from the NEEDS
v6 inventory can be viewed in the
NEEDS spreadsheet.20
As highlighted in previous
rulemakings, the IPM documentation,
and EPA’s Power Sector Modeling
website, EPA’s goal is to explain and
document the use of IPM in a
transparent and publicly accessible
manner, while also providing for
concurrent channels for improving the
model’s assumptions and representation
by soliciting constructive feedback to
improve the model. This includes
making all inputs and assumptions to
the model, output files from the model,
and IPM feedback form publicly
available on EPA’s website.
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 7.10.21 EPA now
proposes to primarily rely on modeling
20 The ‘‘Capacity Dropped’’ and the ‘‘Retired
Through 2023’’ worksheets in NEEDS lists all units
that are removed from the NEEDS v6 inventory—
NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data
can be found on EPA’s website at: https://
www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energydata-system-needs-v6.
21 Ramboll Environment and Health, January
2021, www.camx.com.
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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 and
generally referenced within this action
as 2016v2 modeling for 2023. By using
the updated modeling results, EPA is
using the most current and technically
appropriate information for this
proposed rulemaking. Section III of this
action 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, contain
additional detail on EPA’s 2016v2
modeling. In this action, EPA is
accepting public comment on this
updated 2023 modeling, which uses a
2016v2 emissions platform. Comments
on EPA’s air quality modeling should be
submitted in the Regional docket for
this action, docket ID No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2022–0006. Comments are not
being accepted in docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
States may have chosen to rely on the
results of EPA modeling and/or
alternative modeling performed by
states or MJOs to evaluate downwind air
quality problems and contributions as
part of their submissions. As most
Region 5 states have done so, in
Sections III.A, III.B, III.C, III.D, and III.E,
we evaluate how Region 5 states used
air quality modeling information in
their submissions.
D. EPA’s Approach to Evaluating
Interstate Transport SIPs for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS
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 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 to ensure an
‘‘efficient and equitable’’ approach. See
EME Homer City, 572 U.S. 489, 519
(2014).
In the March, August, and October
2018 memoranda, EPA recognized that
states may be able to establish
alternative approaches to addressing
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their interstate transport obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS that vary from
a nationally uniform framework. 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, 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 potential ‘‘flexibilities’’ as may have
been identified or suggested in the past,
EPA will evaluate whether the state
adequately justified the technical and
legal basis for doing so.
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.22 However,
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 EPA sought ‘‘feedback from
interested stakeholders.’’ 23 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.’’ 24
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,
EPA will thoroughly review the
technical and legal justifications for
doing so.
The remainder of this section
describes EPA’s proposed framework
with respect to analytic year, definition
of nonattainment and maintenance
receptors, selection of contribution
threshold, and multifactor control
strategy assessment.
22 March
23 Id.
2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
at A–1.
1. Selection of Analytic Year
In general, the states and 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).25 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.
On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit
issued a decision in Maryland v. EPA
that cited the Wisconsin decision in
holding that 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 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). 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,26 which is
25 For attainment dates for the 2015 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).
26 We note that the court in Maryland did not
have occasion to evaluate circumstances in which
EPA may determine that an upwind linkage to a
downwind air quality problem exists at steps 1 and
24 Id.
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now the Moderate area attainment date
under CAA section 181 for ozone
nonattainment. The Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS is August 3, 2024.27 EPA
believes that 2023 is now the
appropriate year for analysis of
interstate transport obligations for the
2015 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 ozone NAAQS.
EPA recognizes that the attainment
date for nonattainment areas classified
as Marginal for the 2015 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 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, EPA must act
on SIP submittals using the information
available at the time it takes such action.
In this circumstance, 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 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 ozone NAAQS.
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2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
In Step 1, EPA identifies monitoring
sites that are projected to have problems
attaining and/or maintaining the
NAAQS in the 2023 analytic year.
Where EPA’s analysis shows that a site
does not fall under the definition of a
nonattainment or maintenance receptor,
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.
27 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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that site is excluded from further
analysis under 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.
EPA’s approach to identifying ozone
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in this action is consistent
with the approach used in previous
transport rulemakings. 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.28
For the purpose of this proposal, 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 EPA defined
nonattainment receptors as those areas
that both currently measure
nonattainment and that EPA projects
will be in nonattainment in the future
analytic year (i.e., 2023).29
In addition, in this proposal, 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).30 Specifically, 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
28 See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d at 910–
11 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (holding that EPA must give
‘‘independent significance’’ to each prong of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)).
29 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 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).
30 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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over the relevant period. 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). 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.
Recognizing that nonattainment
receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, 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, 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, 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 ozone NAAQS), the
upwind state is not ‘‘linked’’ to a
downwind air quality problem, and
EPA, therefore, concludes that the state
does not significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in the
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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). 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 ozone
NAAQS (i.e., 0.70 ppb) at downwind
receptors. This is consistent with the
Step 2 approach that 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. EPA continues to
find 1 percent to be an appropriate
threshold. For ozone, as EPA found in
the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR),
CSAPR, and the CSAPR Update, a
portion of the nonattainment problems
from anthropogenic sources in the U.S.
result 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. 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 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 1 percent
threshold).
i. EPA’s Experience With Alternative
Step 2 Thresholds
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
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threshold, and where that state
determined that it was not linked at
Step 2 using the alternative threshold,
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.
EPA here shares further evaluation of
its experience since the issuance of the
August 2018 memorandum regarding
use of alternative thresholds at Step 2.
This experience leads the Agency to
now believe it may not be appropriate
to continue to attempt to recognize
alternative contribution thresholds at
Step 2. The August 2018 memorandum
stated that ‘‘it may be reasonable and
appropriate’’ for states to rely on an
alternative threshold of 1 ppb threshold
at Step 2.31 (The memorandum also
indicated that any higher alternative
threshold, such as 2 ppb, would likely
not be appropriate.) However, EPA also
provided that ‘‘air agencies should
consider whether the recommendations
in this guidance are appropriate for each
situation.’’ Following receipt and review
of 49 good neighbor SIP submittals for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, EPA’s
experience has been that nearly every
state that attempted to rely on a 1 ppb
threshold did not provide sufficient
information and analysis to support a
determination that an alternative
threshold was reasonable or appropriate
for that state.
For instance, in nearly all submittals,
the states did not provide EPA with
analysis specific to their state or the
receptors to which its emissions are
potentially linked. In one case, the
proposed approval of Iowa’s SIP
submittal, EPA expended its own
resources to attempt to supplement the
information submitted by the state, in
order to more thoroughly evaluate the
state-specific circumstances that could
support approval.32 It was at EPA’s sole
discretion to perform this analysis in
support of the state’s submittal, and the
Agency is not obligated to conduct
supplemental analysis to fill the gaps
whenever it believes a state’s analysis is
insufficient. The Agency no longer
intends to undertake supplemental
analysis of SIP submittals with respect
2018 memorandum at 4.
Plan Approval; Iowa; Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan Requirements for the 2015
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard, 85
FR 12232 (March 2, 2020). The Agency received
adverse comment on this proposed approval and
has not taken final action with respect to this
proposal.
9843
to alternative thresholds at Step 2 for
purposes of the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Furthermore, EPA’s experience since
2018 is that allowing for alternative Step
2 thresholds may be impractical or
otherwise inadvisable for a number of
additional policy reasons. For a regional
air pollutant such as ozone, consistency
in requirements and expectations across
all states is essential. Based on its
review of submittals to-date and after
further consideration of the policy
implications of attempting to recognize
an alternative Step 2 threshold for
certain states, the Agency now believes
the attempted use of different thresholds
at Step 2 with respect to the 2015 ozone
NAAQS raises substantial policy
consistency and practical
implementation concerns.33 The
availability of different thresholds at
Step 2 has the potential to result in
inconsistent application of good
neighbor obligations based solely on the
strength of a state’s implementation
plan submittal at Step 2 of the 4-Step
interstate transport framework. From the
perspective of ensuring effective
regional implementation of good
neighbor obligations, the more
important analysis is the evaluation of
the emissions reductions needed, if any,
to address a state’s significant
contribution after consideration of a
multifactor analysis at Step 3, including
a detailed evaluation that considers air
quality factors and cost. Where
alternative thresholds for purposes of
Step 2 may be ‘‘similar’’ in terms of
capturing the relative amount of upwind
contribution (as described in the August
2018 memorandum), nonetheless, use of
an alternative threshold would allow
certain states to avoid further evaluation
of potential emission controls while
other states must proceed to a Step 3
analysis. This can create significant
equity and consistency problems among
states.
Further, it is not clear that national
ozone transport policy is best served by
allowing for less stringent thresholds at
Step 2. EPA recognized in the August
2018 memorandum that there was some
similarity in the amount of total upwind
contribution captured (on a nationwide
basis) between 1 percent and 1 ppb.
However, EPA notes that while this may
be true in some sense, that is hardly a
compelling basis to move to a 1 ppb
threshold. Indeed, the 1 ppb threshold
has the disadvantage of losing a certain
31 August
32 Air
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33 EPA notes that Congress has placed on EPA a
general obligation to ensure the requirements of the
CAA are implemented consistently across states
and regions. See CAA section 301(a)(2). Where the
management and regulation of interstate pollution
levels spanning many states is at stake, consistency
in application of CAA requirements is paramount.
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amount of total upwind contribution for
further evaluation at Step 3 (e.g.,
roughly seven percent of total upwind
state contribution was lost according to
the modeling underlying the August
2018 memorandum; 34 in EPA’s updated
modeling, the amount lost is five
percent). Considering the core statutory
objective of ensuring elimination of all
significant contribution to
nonattainment or interference of the
NAAQS in other states and the broad,
regional nature of the collective
contribution problem with respect to
ozone, there does not appear to be a
compelling policy imperative in
allowing some states to use a 1 ppb
threshold while others rely on a 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold.
Consistency with past interstate
transport actions such as CSAPR, and
the CSAPR Update and Revised CSAPR
Update rulemakings (which used a Step
2 threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS
for two less stringent ozone NAAQS), is
also important. Continuing to use a 1
percent of NAAQS approach ensures
that as the NAAQS are revised and
made more stringent, an appropriate
increase in stringency at Step 2 occurs,
so as to ensure an appropriately larger
amount of total upwind-state
contribution is captured for purposes of
fully addressing interstate transport. See
76 FR 48208, 48237–38.
Therefore, notwithstanding the
August 2018 memorandum’s
recognition of the potential viability of
alternative step 2 thresholds, and in
particular, a potentially applicable 1
ppb threshold, EPA’s experience since
the issuance of that memorandum has
revealed substantial programmatic and
policy difficulties in attempting to
implement this approach. Nonetheless,
EPA is not at this time rescinding the
August 2018 memorandum. EPA invites
comment on this broader discussion of
issues associated with alternative
thresholds at Step 2. Depending on
comment and further evaluation of this
issue, EPA may determine to rescind the
August 2018 memorandum in the
future.
4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
Consistent with 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. EPA’s
analysis at Step 3 in prior Federal
actions addressing interstate transport
requirements has primarily focused on
34 See
August 2018 memorandum at 4.
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an evaluation of the 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
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 emissionsreducing 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 still to be linked to one or
more downwind receptor(s), the state
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 EPA has not prescribed a
particular method for this assessment,
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.35
5. Step 4 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
At Step 4, states (or 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
35 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, 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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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 Ozone NAAQS
Five of the six states within EPA
Region 5 that are included in this multistate proposed disapproval have chosen
to use air quality modeling performed
by the Lake Michigan Air Directors
Consortium (LADCO) 36 as an
alternative to or in addition to EPA’s
modeling for the purpose of identifying
downwind receptors and upwind state
contributions to these receptors relevant
to their submissions. The LADCO
modeling consisted of ozone season
(May 1–September 30, 2011) model
simulations using the Comprehensive
Air Quality Model with Extensions,
CAMx version 6.4 for a 2011 base year
and 2023 as the future analytic year. In
their modeling, LADCO used EPA’s
2011-based ‘‘EN’’ emissions modeling
platform, except for emissions from
EGU’s in 2023. In their modeling,
LADCO used the Eastern Regional
Technical Advisory Committee (ERTAC)
EGU Tool version 2.7 37 to provide EGU
emissions for 2023, whereas EPA used
projected EGU emissions based on
engineering analytics.38
LADCO provided projected 2023
future year average and maximum
design values using the methodology in
EPA’s 2014 modeling guidance.39
Although projected design values were
presented based on the 3x3 approach
and the ‘‘no water cell’’ approach,
described in the March 2018
memorandum, LADCO relied upon
design values from the 3x3 approach for
36 LADCO works collaboratively with state
governments, tribal governments, and various
Federal agencies in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
37 https://www.marama.org/2013-ertac-eguforecasting-tool-documentation.
38 Technical Support Document (TSD) Additional
Updates to Emissions Inventories for the Version
6.3, 2011 Emissions Modeling Platform for the Year
2023 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/
additional-updates-2011-and-2023-emissionsversion-63-platform-technical.
39 See EPA’s 2014 Draft Guidance Document,
‘‘Draft Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating
Attainment of Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2s,
and Regional Haze’’, https://www.epa.gov/sites/
default/files/2020–10/documents/draft-o3-pm-rhmodeling_guidance-2014.pdf.
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calculating contribution metric values at
each receptor.
Source apportionment modeling was
performed by LADCO using the CAMx
Anthropogenic Precursor Culpability
Assessment (APCA) tool to calculate
contributions from individual states to
ozone at downwind monitoring sites. In
their modeling, LADCO tracked ozone
contributions from only those states that
contributed at or above a 1 percent of
the NAAQS threshold to nonattainment
and maintenance monitors in the EPA
2023 modeling provided in the March
2018 memorandum.
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A. Illinois
Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency (IEPA) submitted a SIP revision
to address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
on May 21, 2019. The submission
utilized LADCO modeling results
previously mentioned. IEPA followed
the 4-step interstate transport
framework using an analytic year of
2023 to identify receptors, Illinois’
linkages to receptors, and assess some
emission reduction considerations. The
following sections will discuss IEPA’s
submission and the information
provided for each step in the process.
1. Information Provided by Illinois
Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework,
the IEPA relied on LADCO modeling to
identify monitoring sites that are
projected to have problems attaining or
maintaining the 2015 ozone NAAQS in
2023. As previously mentioned, the
LADCO modeling used the same
technique as EPA to calculate future
year design values which were used to
identify maintenance and
nonattainment receptors but used the
ERTAC EGU Tool for EGU emissions.
IEPA noted they believed that the
ERTAC EGU tool provides better
estimates of growth and forecasts than
EPA’s EGU emission projections. IEPA
identified two maintenance receptors in
the Great Lakes area (Sheboygan,
Wisconsin and Allegan County,
Michigan) as well as and three
nonattainment receptors and five
additional maintenance receptors in the
Northeast. Across the continental U.S.,
IEPA identified a total of twelve
nonattainment or maintenance
receptors: seven nonattainment
receptors and five maintenance
receptors.40
2. Information Provided by Illinois
Regarding Step 2
IEPA’s submittal at Step 2 presented
Illinois’ projected 2023 contribution of
40 IEPA’s
SIP submission, Table CC, page 15.
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ozone emissions to the downwind
maintenance and nonattainment
receptors and based on LADCO’s ‘‘with
water’’ modeling 41 IEPA used a
contribution threshold of 1 ppb to
define linkage as opposed to one
percent of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
standard (0.70 ppb). Illinois, relying on
the August 2018 memorandum, argued
that the state’s reliance on the 1 ppb
threshold to identify linkages was
justified. First, IEPA asserted that the
one percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold is arbitrary because it is not in
the CAA. Second, IEPA claimed that a
one percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold is inappropriate for the 2015
ozone NAAQS because 0.70 ppb is an
order of magnitude smaller than the
biases and errors typically documented
for regional photochemical modeling.
IEPA noted that 1 ppb is very small
compared to the allowable error in peak
performance and bias and in IEPA’s
view is a conservative Step 2
contribution threshold.
IEPA identified that Illinois is
projected to contribute 14.93 ppb and
19.25 ppb, respectively, in 2023 to two
maintenance receptors: Sheboygan,
Wisconsin (Site ID: 55–117–0006), and
Allegan, Michigan (Site ID: 26–005–
0003). IEPA concluded that Illinois is
linked above a contribution threshold of
1 ppb to these receptors.
3. Information Provided by Illinois
Regarding Step 3
IEPA provided several arguments to
justify their conclusion that no
additional emission reductions are
necessary to satisfy Illinois’ ozone
transport obligations. The submittal
stated that Illinois is developing new
NOX RACT standards for the Chicago
area that, in conjunction with existing
NOX reductions, are estimated to reduce
NOX emissions by up to 20,000 tons/
year relative to existing state and
Federal regulations impacting non-EGUs
since 2014. IEPA claims that these
reductions were not included in any
2023 modeling. Illinois claims these
expected emissions reductions,
alongside future Federal rules, will be
enough to meet Illinois’ good neighbor
obligations.
IEPA asserted that Illinois’
contributions to the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin and Allegan County
maintenance monitors, which are both
in the LADCO domain, can be addressed
in a manner that is fair and equitable for
all involved states through Illinois’
participation in LADCO. Illinois has
been a member of LADCO since 1991.
IEPA says that since the inception of
41 Id.
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Frm 00009
LADCO in 1991, ambient ozone
concentrations have drastically
decreased in the Lake Michigan region.
IEPA stated that it is working through
LADCO to refine ozone forecasting for
air quality and ozone receptors in the
Midwest through various means
including updating emissions
inventories and a base case for the
modeling that LADCO is preparing.
IEPA stated that it expects field data
from the 2017 Lake Michigan Ozone
Study will inform the LADCO states to
better simulate the meteorology and
chemistry of ozone in the Lake
Michigan area.
IEPA also attempted to rely on a
concept related to international
emissions, which was developed by
outside parties and listed in Attachment
A to the March 2018 memorandum.
IEPA noted that if international
emissions and offshore contributions to
receptors from LADCO’s modeling, 1.40
ppb to the Sheboygan, Wisconsin
receptor and 0.98 ppb at the Allegan
County receptor, were subtracted off the
top of the receptors’ maximum design
values, Allegan, Michigan receptor’s
maximum design value would be below
71 ppb and the Sheboygan, Wisconsin
receptor’s maximum design value
would drop down to 71.4 ppb. IEPA
noted that subtracting international and
offshore contributions would result in
Allegan County no longer qualifying as
a maintenance receptor.
4. Information Provided by Illinois
Regarding Step 4
IEPA did not consider any new
permanent and enforceable measures to
reduce emissions in the SIP submission.
IEPA instead noted they would continue
to assist LADCO with future modeling
and analysis and would work with EPA
to identify additional ‘‘flexibilities’’ to
define maintenance, quantify transport,
and demonstrate attainment.42
B. Indiana
On November 2, 2018 the Indiana
Department of Environmental
Management (IDEM) submitted a
revision to the Indiana SIP addressing
interstate transport of air pollution for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The
submission contained what the state
characterized as a weight of evidence
analysis of Indiana’s ozone transport
receptors utilizing LADCO modeling
results previously mentioned. Indiana
did not explicitly follow the 4-Step
interstate transport framework but did
examine downwind air quality and
Indiana’s contributions using an
analytic year of 2023 to describe
42 Illinois’
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Indiana’s linkages to receptors. The
following sections will describe IDEM’s
submission, and the information
provided for each step in the process.
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1. Information Provided by Indiana
Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 of the 4-Step framework,
IDEM identified monitoring sites that
are projected to have problems attaining
and/or maintaining the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in 2023. As previously
mentioned, the LADCO modeling used
the same technique as EPA to calculate
future year design values which were
used to identify maintenance and
nonattainment receptors but used the
ERTAC EGU Tool for EGU emissions.
IDEM noted they believed that the
ERTAC EGU tool provides better
estimates of growth and forecasts than
EPA’s EGU emission projections. IDEM
presented the LADCO results, based on
the ‘‘3x3’’ approach, which identified
ten receptors: Seven monitors with 2023
maximum design values above the
NAAQS, or maintenance receptors, and
three monitors with 2023 average design
values greater than the 2015 ozone
standard, or nonattainment receptors.43
2. Information Provided by Indiana
Regarding Step 2
IDEM’s submittal presented Indiana’s
projected 2023 ozone contributions to
maintenance and nonattainment
receptors projected by the LADCO
modeling. IDEM relied primarily on the
August 2018 memorandum to justify the
State’s reliance on a 1 ppb contribution
threshold to identify linkages, as
opposed to the 1 percent of the 2015
ozone NAAQS standard (0.70 ppb)
contribution threshold. IDEM noted that
(1) the tolerance level of ozone monitors
is 1 ppb and (2) model run results may
contain biases larger than 1 percent of
the NAAQS (0.70 ppb). Using a 1 ppb
threshold, IDEM identified that Indiana
is linked to three maintenance
receptors: Sheboygan, Wisconsin
(Monitor ID: 551170006), Allegan,
Michigan (Monitor ID: 260050003), and
Richmond, New York (Monitor ID:
360850067), and one nonattainment
receptor: Harford, Maryland (Monitor
ID: 240251001).44 45 However, IDEM
concluded on the basis of its weight of
evidence analysis, summarized in the
following subsection, that the monitors
at Sheboygan, Wisconsin and Allegan,
43 Indiana’s
SIP submission Attachment 1, Table
7, page 30.
44 Indiana’s SIP submission Attachment 1, Table
1, page 12.
45 IDEM acknowledged that both the Harford,
Maryland and Richmond, New York receptors are
nonattainment receptors in EPA’s modeling.
Indiana’s SIP submission Attachment 1, page 12.
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Michigan would be in attainment in
2023.46
3. Information Provided by Indiana
Regarding Step 3
IDEM cited Indiana’s rule
amendments under CSAPR to conclude
the State was already satisfying its good
neighbor obligations for the ozone
NAAQS.47 In support, IDEM provided a
weight-of-evidence analysis to justify
their conclusion that no additional
emission reductions as necessary to
satisfy Indiana’s ozone transport
obligations. The evidence consisted of
an ozone monitoring data analysis,
emissions analysis, and photochemical
modeling analyses, including a back
trajectory analysis.
IDEM provided information ozone
and emissions trends. They cited a
general decline in monitored ozone
concentrations across Indiana from 2007
through 2017, a decrease in Indiana’s
overall statewide NOX emissions and
VOC emissions from 2005 to 2014, a
decrease in Indiana EGU NOX emissions
from 2011 to 2016, and projected
decreases in Region 5 EGU NOX and
VOC emissions through 2023 relative to
a 2011 base year (based on both the
ERTAC EGU Tool and EPA’s EGU
projections using the Integrated
Planning Model (IPM)). IDEM credited
the downward emissions trends to
permanent and enforceable control
measures. IDEM made the argument that
overall decreasing ozone concentration
and emissions trends in the State, and
in the LADCO states, correlate with
reduced contributions to nonattainment
and maintenance receptors outside of
Indiana. IDEM also identified air quality
trends at the four downwind receptors
to which IDEM determined Indiana was
linked. IDEM asserted that a declining
trend in three-year design values at the
receptors in Harford, Maryland and
Richmond, New York in combination
with national emission reduction
regulations in place for EGUs, tighter
mobile source emission controls and
other transport related emission
reduction measures, would result in
those two receptors reaching attainment
over time. For the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin and Allegan, Michigan
receptors, IDEM concluded that if ozone
design value trends continued as
expected then those two receptors
would reach attainment before 2023.
IDEM also asserted they believed that
the receptors in the Northeast (Harford,
Maryland and Richmond, New York)
received a greater contribution from
46 Indiana’s SIP submission Attachment 1, page
38, 53.
47 Indiana’s SIP submission, page 6.
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local sources. IDEM represented EPA
had reached the same conclusion, citing
a May 14, 2018 presentation.
Next, IDEM presented an analysis of
NOx controls for EGUs and non-EGUs in
the state from 2008 to 2017. IDEM
considered current NOx control
measures, consent decree requirements,
and future fuel switches and retirements
for large EGUs and non-EGUs. IDEM
reported that the State has seen a
downward trend in annual NOX
emissions from both EGUs and nonEGUs due a combination of state and
Federal rules targeting fossil fueled
EGUs and other large sources of NOX.
IDEM argued that it would not be costeffective for non-EGUs to implement
further NOX controls because in 2017
there were more than 93% fewer NOX
emissions from non-EGUs when
compared to EGUs. IDEM stated they
expect to see continued future NOX
emission reductions through 2028 from
implementation of Federal rules, the
expected shutdown of nine EGUs,
planned fuel switches to natural gas for
three EGUs, and enforceable consent
decree caps on NOX emissions at eleven
EGUs. IDEM noted that future
retirements or retrofits to coal fired
EGUs in Indiana were expected to
reduce NOX emissions by several
thousand tons beyond those projected
by either LADCO or EPA. IDEM argued
that the non-modeled emission
reductions would further assure future
year attainment of the ozone NAAQS at
downwind receptors.
For their photochemical analyses,
IDEM presented LADCO modeling
results to show contributions from
individual states to 12 monitors,48 as
well as contributions from individual
sectors to the same 12 monitors.49 IDEM
noted that Indiana contributed above 1
ppb to monitors that would be receptors
based on EPA’s definitions. IDEM used
these data as the backdrop to several
arguments related to potential
flexibilities identified in Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum.50
IDEM stated that additional emissions
reductions from EGU and non-EGU
sources in Indiana are becoming more
difficult to require because of reduced
effectiveness of controls to make
significant decreases in ozone values,
operational concerns, and increased
48 Indiana’s
SIP submission, Attachment 1, Table
49 Indiana’s
SIP submission, Attachment 1, Table
9.
11.
50 Based on the reference to the potential
flexibilities in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum on page 2 of Attachment 1 to
Indiana’s SIP submission, EPA assumes the
reference to ‘‘flexibilities’’ on page 38 of
Attachment 1 likewise references Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum.
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costs for customers. IDEM asserted that
emission reductions from local mobile
and nonroad sources would be more
beneficial to the receptors than
additional reductions from EGUs and
non-EGUs in Indiana because EGUs and
non-EGUs contribute less to the
receptors than either the mobile or
nonroad sectors. IDEM also argued that
EPA should address contributions from
Canada and Mexico as well as
contributions from offshore commercial
marine vessels. In addition, IDEM
compared 2012–2017 monitoring data to
LADCO’s and EPA’s modeling and
concluded that all four linked receptors
were already below the projected 2023
design values. IDEM also calculated
Indiana’s portion of contribution to the
Harford, Maryland receptor as 0.077 ppb
(based on a contribution threshold of 1
ppb) and determined that Indiana
would need to reduce its contribution
by 0.0077 ppb to bring the Harford,
Maryland receptor into attainment.
IDEM argued that 0.0077 ppb is well
within the error of the model and it
would be ‘‘difficult’’ to translate into an
emission reduction requirement.51
Finally, IDEM provided a back
trajectory analysis to evaluate
contributions from Indiana to the
Harford, Maryland and Richmond, New
York receptors on exceedance days from
2015 to 2017. These back trajectories
were conducted at 10 meters and 750
meters and initialized at 18Z Greenwich
Mean Time over a three-year period
from 2015–2017. The trajectories were
run backwards over a 72-hour period
from the exceedance day measured at
each of the monitors. Considering the
Harford, Maryland receptor, Indiana
measured one back trajectory at 10
meters and six back trajectories at 750
meters that passed through Indiana. For
the Richmond, New York receptor, out
of 27 exceedance days, Indiana
measured three back trajectories at 10
meters and eight trajectories at 750
meters that passed through Indiana.
Indiana argues that only a fraction of the
exceedance days at the Harford and
Richmond receptors has back
trajectories that pass-through Indiana.
Based on this analysis, IDEM concluded
that those receptors are more likely to be
impacted by local emissions and
suggested that emission reductions
should come first from the surrounding
areas in the Northeast before from
Indiana.
4. Information Provided by Indiana
Regarding Step 4
IDEM did not provide a Step 4
analysis.
51 Indiana’s
SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 42.
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C. Michigan
Environment, Great Lakes and Energy
(EGLE) (formerly Michigan Department
of Environmental Quality) submitted a
SIP revision to address CAA Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on March 5, 2019.
EGLE utilized EPA modeling released
with the March 2018 memorandum and
LADCO modeling and followed the
4-step interstate transport framework
using an analytic year of 2023 to
describe Michigan’s linkages to
receptors in other states. The
submission also contained a weight-ofevidence analysis to support EGLE’s
conclusions. The following sections will
discuss EGLE’s submission and the
information provided for each step in
the process.
1. Information Provided by Michigan
Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework,
EGLE identified monitoring sites that
are projected to have problems attaining
and/or maintaining the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in 2023. EGLE presented the
results from both the EPA modeling
from the March 2018 memorandum and
LADCO (using both the with- and
without-water approaches). EGLE noted
that they believe the ERTAC EGU Tool
uses a more transparent and state-driven
data gathering mechanism for EGU
emissions and control projects. EPA’s
modeling projected 16 receptors to
which Michigan is projected to
contribute in 2023. LADCO modeling
(with and without water) identified 15
receptors to which Michigan is
projected to contribute in 2023.
2. Information Provided by Michigan
Regarding Step 2
The first part of EGLE’s submittal’s
step 2 analysis presented Michigan’s
projected contributions to maintenance
and nonattainment receptors in 2023
from both the LADCO modeling (with
and without water) and the EPA
modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum. The submittal noted
similar contribution concentrations
between the two, but found that the
LADCO results often yielded slightly
lower contribution from Michigan
sources than the EPA modeling for some
receptors. The state claimed this is
attributed to LADCO’s use of the ERTAC
EGU tool which they stated includes
information on EGU shutdowns and
facility-specific information not
included in the EPA modeling. EGLE
stated they had more confidence in the
LADCO modeling.
Further, EGLE attempted to rely on
the 1 ppb Significant Impact Level (SIL)
threshold from Guidance on Significant
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Impact Levels for Ozone and Fine
Particles in the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Permitting Program (April
17, 2018) 52 for the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD)
permitting program as an appropriate
contribution threshold to determine
whether Michigan was linked to any
receptors at step 2. Michigan argued that
if a stationary source’s contributions are
insignificant below 1 ppb, then a state’s
interstate transport contributions below
1 ppb are likewise insignificant. EGLE
performed an analysis on contribution
thresholds to analyze whether a 1 ppb
threshold is appropriate for identifying
Michigan’s linkages. The analysis
looked at all 15 receptors to which
Michigan contributes, based on the
LADCO with water modeling, and
plotted potential contribution
thresholds ranging from 0.5 to 1.4 ppb
against collective upwind contributions
from all source categories and states
with contribution above 0.5 ppb. EGLE
plotted the collective contribution as a
function of contribution threshold and
concluded the first inflection point
occurred in a majority of the collective
contribution at a contribution threshold
between 0.9 and 1 ppb, correlating with
the PSD permitting SIL of 1 ppb. Based
on this analysis, EGLE concluded that a
1 ppb contribution threshold was
appropriate for use in the good neighbor
context. EGLE also mentioned the
August 2018 memorandum, described
in Section I of this proposal, as
additional support for the use of a 1 ppb
contribution threshold.53
EGLE’s Step 2 conclusion was that,
based on LADCO with water modeling,
Michigan was projected to be linked
above a 1 ppb contribution threshold in
2023 to three maintenance receptors;
1.85 ppb to Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Site
ID: 36–081–0124), 1.22 ppb to Queens,
New York (Site ID: 36–085–0067), and
1.03 ppb to Richmond, New York (Site
ID: 55–117–0006).
3. Information Provided by Michigan
Regarding Step 3
EGLE provided what it characterized
as a ‘‘weight-of-evidence analysis’’ in
step 3 to justify their conclusion that no
additional emissions reductions are
necessary to satisfy Michigan’s ozone
transport obligations for the ozone
NAAQS. The evidence presented in
EGLE’s submittal consisted primarily of
an argument that upwind states should
have a lower responsibility to other
states when the upwind state is only
linked to maintenance-only receptors.
52 https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/201804/documents/sils_policy_guidance_document_
final_signed_4-17-18.pdf.
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EGLE’s analysis focused in large part on
the Sheboygan, Wisconsin maintenance
receptor (Site ID: 36–081–0124), as
EGLE concluded it was the receptor to
which Michigan was projected to
contribute the most in 2023 at 1.85 ppb.
On the issue of maintenance
receptors, the state referenced a concept
identified by outside parties and listed
in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum, which was to consider
whether the remedy for upwind states
linked to maintenance receptors could
be less stringent than those linked to
nonattainment receptors. EGLE
reasoned that because the CAA incudes
different SIP development requirements
for nonattainment and maintenance
areas, that likewise nonattainment and
maintenance areas should be treated
differently in good neighbor SIPs. EGLE
argued that because the CAA does not
require emission reductions from
maintenance areas, then upwind states
can potentially make a sufficient
showing they have no obligation to
reduce emissions to monitors in other
states projected to be maintaining the
NAAQS. EGLE said they believe the
reduction of projected contributions to
projected maintenance receptors is not
required in certain circumstances, such
as when: (1) The projected maintenance
exceedance is very small in magnitude,
(2) the projected contribution is very
small, especially compared to other
states’ contributions, (3) sector
contributions demonstrate the majority
of contribution is from either sources
already federally regulated or sources
without the possibility of additional
regulation, (4) there are large impacts of
international emissions, and (5) there
are downward emission trends.
Applying this logic to the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin receptor, EGLE argued that
because the projected maximum design
value at that receptor is 72.8 ppb, the
projected exceedance above the 2015
ozone NAAQS of 1.9 ppb is very small
(values are truncated to ppb, thus 70.9
ppb would be considered in attainment
of the NAAQS). Based on this number,
EGLE argued that further emissions
reductions from Michigan would be
overly burdensome. Secondly, citing a
potential flexibility in Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum related to
sector contribution, EGLE claimed that
77% of contribution to the Sheboygan
receptor is from federally regulated
sources or sources that cannot be
regulated by Michigan. EGLE noted that
the other sectors of contribution it
identified—oil and gas, EGUs, and nonEGUs—are already controlled by
Michigan. EGLE argued Michigan
sources should not be required to
implement additional contribution
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reductions in light of the relative size of
their contribution.
Citing Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum, again, EGLE argued
that the three receptors to which
Michigan is linked are heavily
influenced by international emissions
and other states. EGLE shared that
LADCO modeling projects Michigan’s
contribution to the Sheboygan receptor
(1.85 ppb) is less than projected
contributions from international
contributions and boundary conditions
(16.61 ppb), Illinois (14.93 ppb),
Wisconsin (9.1 ppb), biogenic sources
(7.19 ppb), and Indiana (6.19 ppb).
EGLE used these numbers and an
apportionment of contributions from
states and other sources to the amount
the Sheboygan monitor exceeds the
2015 ozone NAAQS to conclude that
additional emissions reductions from
Michigan should not be required.
Additionally, EGLE argued that
international contributions to the
Sheboygan receptor, which is
geographically close to Canada, should
be eliminated from the projected DV, in
which case the Sheboygan monitor
would be in attainment.
EGLE also cited Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum along with
an interpretation of EME Homer City to
argue that EPA cannot require
reductions that would result in a
reduction greater than an upwind state’s
portion of the difference between the
NAAQS and a maintenance receptor’s
projected maximum design value. EGLE
claimed that Michigan’s apportioned
contribution to three linked receptors,
when distributed proportionally among
other states that also contribute more
than 1 ppb to those receptors, is less
than 0.12 ppb, but that Michigan’s
responsibility to the exceedance is
actually substantially less than that
amount when the home state’s
responsibility is considered. EGLE also
stated Michigan’s apportioned
contribution is at less than 0.05 ppb of
the projected maintenance exceedance
at the Sheboygan receptor, which is less
than the variation among the modeled
maximum design values by both
LADCO and EPA. EGLE concluded that
because of built-in modeling noise it
would be ‘‘difficult’’ to either verify that
Michigan contributed 0.05 ppb to the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor or for
Michigan to require any additional
reduction from sources in the state.54
EGLE speculated it was quite likely that
the three linked receptors would
maintain the NAAQS without any
emissions reductions from Michigan at
54 Michigan’s
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Fmt 4701
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all because the projected exceedances
were small.
The state also stated that Michigan
has downward emissions trends (44%
and 18% reduction in industrial point
source NOX and VOC emissions from
2008 through 2016, respectively) that
are expected to continue to decline or
stay consistent over time due to
projected reductions in emissions from
point sources of NOX and VOCs EGUs,
mobile sources and through other
Federal measures. For EGUs, EGLE
pointed out that the shutdown of the
Marquette Board of Light & Power
Shiras Steam Plant shut down was not
included in either EPA or LADCO
modeling and that the U.S. Energy
Information Agency’s Annual Energy
Outlook anticipates growth in
renewable energy in Michigan in 2019
and a decline in coal beginning in 2022.
EGLE also provided a list of additional
coal-fired EGUs that they stated were
expected to retire by 2023. To support
the conclusion that emissions will
further be reduced from mobile sources
and through other Federal action, EGLE
listed several on the books and on the
way Federal regulations. Finally, EGLE
noted existing controls on the oil and
gas sector (applicable Federal
standards), non-EGUs (subject to the
NOX SIP Call), and EGUs (subject to
CSAPR Update).
4. Information Provided by Michigan
Regarding Step 4
EGLE concluded it would be
unreasonable for Michigan to take
further actions to address its obligations
under the good neighbor provisions for
the ozone NAAQS, and so at Step 4
EGLE determined that no permanent
and enforceable measures to reduce
emissions were necessary.
D. Minnesota
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
(MPCA) submitted a SIP revision to
address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
on October 1, 2018. The submission
utilized both EPA modeling released
with the March 2018 memorandum and
LADCO modeling results previously
mentioned. Minnesota followed the
4-step interstate transport framework
and used an analytic year of 2023 to
describe Minnesota’s lack of
contributions to out of state receptors
and assess emission reduction
considerations. The following sections
will summarize MPCA’s submission and
the information provided for each step
in the process.
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1. Information Provided by Minnesota
Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework,
MPCA identified monitoring sites that
are projected to have problems attaining
and/or maintaining the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in 2023 according to LADCO
modeling and EPA modeling released in
the March 2018 memorandum.55 As
previously mentioned, the LADCO
modeling efforts used the same
technique as EPA to calculate future
year design values which are used to
identify maintenance and
nonattainment receptors. The submittal
expressed MPCA’s opinion that the
ERTAC EGU tool used in LADCO’s
modeling is superior to EPA’s 2023en
modeling platform because the ERTAC
EGU tool addresses economic factors,
preserves system reliability, and
includes controls or emissions
reductions measure justified through
some legal framework.
2. Information Provided by Minnesota
Regarding Step 2
MPCA’s submittal at Step 2 presented
Minnesota’s projected 2023 ozone
contributions to maintenance and
nonattainment receptors identified by
both LADCO modeling and EPA
modeling released in the March 2018
memorandum.55 The submittal noted
there were differences in identified
receptors between the two modeling
results, and that the LADCO results
overall yielded slightly lower projected
contributions to downwind receptors
from Minnesota sources than EPA
modeling.
Minnesota relied on a contribution
threshold of 1 percent of the ozone
NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to define linkages for
a state’s contribution to downwind air
quality problems. Both the LADCO
modeling and the EPA modeling
released in the March 2018
memorandum projected that Minnesota
contributes less than 1 percent of the
NAAQS to all downwind receptors.
MPCA showed in Table 2 of its
submission that the highest projected
contribution to a receptor in 2023 was
0.40 ppb, based on EPA modeling
released in the March 2018
memorandum, or 0.45 ppb, based on
LADCO ‘‘no water’’ modeling, to the
Milwaukee, Wisconsin receptor (Site ID:
55–079–0085). Based on this analysis,
MPCA concluded that Minnesota was
not linked above 1 percent of the
NAAQS to any downwind receptor, and
therefore would not contribute to
nonattainment or interference with
maintenance in other state with respect
to the ozone NAAQS.
3. Information Provided by Minnesota
Regarding Step 3
Despite concluding Minnesota was
not linked at Step 2, MPCA proceeded
with a Step 3 analysis. MPCA provided
air quality data in Step 3 to justify that
no additional emissions reductions are
necessary to satisfy their transport
obligations. MPCA provided evidence of
decreasing ambient ozone
concentrations in Minnesota from the
mid-1990s through 2017 as well as
decreasing NOX and VOC emissions
from the state from 2002 through 2015
to further support their conclusion.56
The state concluded that decreasing
ambient ozone concentrations in the
state point to Minnesota contributing
less to ozone in downwind states as
time goes on. Minnesota provided an
analysis of NOX and VOC emissions
levels in the state from 2002 through
2015 to further support this point.
According to MPCA, NOX emissions
have been steadily declining in the state
from all sectors and especially from
EGUs due to emission limits and
reductions required in that category.
MPCA also asserted that VOCs
emissions have also seen a similar
decline in Minnesota in the years
reported. MPCA concluded that
decreasing emissions in the state would
make it unlikely for the state to
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interference with
maintenance in downwind states.
4. Information Provided by Minnesota
Regarding Step 4
Citing declining emissions and their
conclusion that Minnesota was not
projected to contribute above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to any receptor, MPCA
concluded that no additional permanent
or enforceable measures would be
needed to address ozone transport
contribution from Minnesota sources.
MPCA determined the existing emission
controls would be sufficient to maintain
Minnesota’s continued contribution of
less than 1 percent of the NAAQS to
downwind receptors. In support of this
argument, Minnesota provided a list of
several Federal and State emissions
regulations applicable to sources in
Minnesota, including Part 70 permits,
the CSAPR NOX trading programs,
Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, and
various state standards for SO2,
particulate matter, NOX, NO2, and VOC.
Hence, Minnesota declined to consider
any new permanent and enforceable
measures to reduce emissions as part of
the Step 4 analysis.
E. Ohio
On September 28, 2018 the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
(OEPA) submitted a revision to the Ohio
SIP addressing interstate transport of air
pollution for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
OEPA stated that its submittal, which
relied on an analytic year of 2023,
conforms with EPA’s four-step
framework. The following sections will
describe what OEPA provided for each
step.
1. Information Provided by Ohio
Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework,
OEPA first identified 10 monitoring
sites in the Northeast and Midwest that
are projected to be nonattainment,
nonattainment/maintenance, or
maintenance-only receptors for the 2015
ozone NAAQS in 2023 based on
LADCO’s modeling and EPA’s method
for defining nonattainment and
maintenance receptors (See Table 1
below, reproduced from OEPA’s
submission).
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TABLE 1—OHIO’S PROJECTED 2023 NONATTAINMENT AND MAINTENANCE MONITORS
2023
Average DV
2023 Max
DV
OH
contribution
County
36–103–0002 .....
Suffolk ...............
NY
76
71.6
73.1
1.75
09–001–9003 .....
Fairfield ..............
CT
83
71.4
74.2
1.58
55 MPCA’s
State
2015–2017
DV
Site ID
SIP submittal at Tables 2 and 3, pages
8–9.
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Status
Nonattainment/
Maintenance.
Nonattainment/
Maintenance.
56 See Minnesota’s SIP submittal Figures 1–3,
pages 10–11.
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2023
Maintenance
DV (TX
approach)
Status
(TX approach)
69.7
Nonattainment.
73.7
Nonattainment/
Maintenance.
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TABLE 1—OHIO’S PROJECTED 2023 NONATTAINMENT AND MAINTENANCE MONITORS—Continued
2023
Average DV
2023 Max
DV
OH
contribution
County
24–035–1001 .....
Harford ..............
MD
75
71.0
73.3
2.83
36–085–0067
55–117–0006
09–009–9002
09–001–3007
36–081–0124
09–001–0017
26–005–0003
Richmond ..........
Sheyboygan ......
New Haven ........
Fairfield ..............
Queens ..............
Fairfield ..............
Allegan ..............
NY
WI
CT
CT
NY
CT
MI
76
80
82
83
74
79
73
70.9
70.5
69.9
69.8
69.2
68.9
68.8
72.4
72.8
72.6
73.7
71.0
71.2
71.5
2.24
1.17
1.12
1.84
1.88
1.05
0.19
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
State
2015–2017
DV
Site ID
OEPA then claimed that EPA’s
methodology for determining
maintenance-only receptors is
inappropriate because it is more
stringent than EPA’s methodology for
identifying nonattainment monitors and
is inconsistent with the CAA. In OEPA’s
view, EPA’s methodology results in
greater emissions reduction
requirements to address maintenance
receptors than nonattainment receptors.
Citing stakeholder-identified potential
flexibilities that were listed in an
attachment to EPA’s March 2018
memorandum, OEPA used an
alternative method developed by the
Texas Commission for Environmental
Quality (TCEQ) to identify maintenance
receptors. This method determines a
future year design value (DV) for
purposes of identifying maintenanceonly receptors by applying the modelpredicted relative response factor (RRF)
to the most recent 3-year design value
(i.e., 2011–2013 design value) within
the five-year base period (i.e., 2009–
2013), rather than the highest 3-year DV
in the same 5-year base period, which
is used in EPA’s approach. OEPA stated
that using the TCEQ approach accounts
for emissions reductions over the fiveyear period, while also accounting for
meteorological variability, since the
design value is calculated based on
monitoring data from a three-year
period. By using the TCEQ approach,
Ohio concluded that four monitors
which would be either nonattainment/
maintenance receptors under EPA’s
method would, under the TCEQ
method, actually be nonattainment-only
receptors (i.e., sites 261030002 in
Suffolk, New York, 240251001 in
Harford, Maryland) or monitors in
attainment (i.e., sites 360850067 in
Richmond, New York, and 360810124
in Queens, New York) in 2023.57
OEPA’s submittal provided
information on inter-annual
meteorological variability, ozone design
57 Ohio’s
SIP submission, Table 1.
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value trends at the four monitoring sites
that the state eliminated as receptors, as
well as recent and projected trends in
NOX and VOC emissions to support the
use of an alternative definition of
maintenance receptors. The
meteorological information provided in
OEPA’s submission included
nationwide maps showing the
maximum temperature anomaly (i.e.,
departure from the long-term average or
‘‘normal’’) for the period May through
October in the years 2011, 2012, and
2013. OEPA concluded from these maps
that temperatures in the Northeast and
Midwest were above or much above
average during May through October in
each of the years 2011, 2012, and 2013.
OEPA examined trends in ozone design
values at each of the four monitoring
sites in question and concluded that
design values at these sites have
declined substantially from 2000
through 2017 and that although there
has been a slight leveling off or increase
in recent years, this is no greater than
the normal year to year variability. In
addition, based on the emissions trends
data, OEPA stated that NOX emissions
have declined in concert with these
trends in design values and are
projected to continue to decline through
2028 for the continental U.S. as well as
those states that were projected to be
linked to the four monitors eliminated
under the TCEQ approach. Based on
their analysis of the meteorological and
ozone and emissions trends data, OEPA
concluded that the four monitoring sites
identified previously are not reasonably
expected to have difficulty maintaining
the standards in 2023.
2. Information Provided by Ohio
Regarding Step 2
OEPA’s submittal presented the
projected 2023 ozone contributions from
Ohio to ten maintenance and
nonattainment receptors in the
Northeast and Midwest using data from
the LADCO source apportionment
modeling. LADCO’s contribution data
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Status
Nonattainment/
Maintenance.
Maintenance .........
Maintenance .........
Maintenance .........
Maintenance .........
Maintenance .........
Maintenance .........
Maintenance—Not
Linked.
2023
Maintenance
DV (TX
approach)
Status
(TX approach)
67.0
Nonattainment.
68.0
71.1
72.6
73.7
70.1
71.2
71.5
Attainment.
Maintenance.
Maintenance.
Maintenance.
Attainment.
Maintenance.
Maintenance—Not
Linked.
identified a total of nine receptors in
2023 (3 nonattainment and 6
maintenance-only) with modeled
contributions from emissions in Ohio
that exceed both a one percent of the
2015 NAAQS threshold (i.e., 0.70 ppb)
and a 1 ppb contribution threshold
(Table 1). Despite acknowledging Ohio
was linked to the same number of
receptors under either a 1 percent of the
NAAQS or 1 ppb, OEPA maintained
they had concerns about both thresholds
being too stringent, noting that Ohio
would have two linkages if the
threshold were 3 percent and zero
linkages if the threshold were 4 percent.
As noted above, OEPA applied the
TCEQ method for identifying
maintenance-only receptors, and
concluded that four of the receptors to
which Ohio was linked would not have
difficulty maintaining the NAAQS in
2023. However, after eliminating these
four monitoring sites as having
maintenance issues, OEPA
acknowledged that Ohio would still be
linked to seven receptors in 2023.
3. Information Provided by Ohio
Regarding Step 3
OEPA provided what they
characterize as a weight of evidence
analysis in Step 3 to justify their
conclusion that no additional emissions
reductions are necessary to satisfy
Ohio’s interstate transport obligations
under the 2015 ozone NAAQS. OEPA
argued that their analysis demonstrated
that any additional controls beyond
those on the books or already planned
would result in overcontrol of sources
in Ohio, likely at cost-prohibitive levels.
First, OEPA attempted to show that
NOX and VOC 2023 emissions from
EGU, nonEGU, and onroad sectors had
been overestimated by 21,761 tons of
NOX and 3,240 tons of VOC annually,
and 7,040 tons of NOX and 878 tons of
VOC per ozone season. The submittal
performed an evaluation of the ERTAC
EGU Tool, emphasizing that projected
2023 EGU emissions from eight facilities
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were overestimated, analyzed through a
comparison of actual emissions data
obtained from EPA’s Clean Air Markets
Database (CAMD) and CSAPR/CSAPR
Update allocations obtained from EPA’s
CSAPR website with projected
emissions in 2023 obtained from ERTAC
EGU tool. OEPA also based its
conclusions on an expected increase of
natural gas sources projected by the U.S.
Energy Information’s Annual Energy
Outlook 2018 and recently permitted
natural gas facilities not reflected in the
ERTAC EGU tool. Further, OEPA
evaluated emissions from nine non-EGU
sources to claim EPA’s 2023 projected
emissions were overestimated. For this
analysis, OEPA compared actual
emissions data trends from Ohio’s
Emissions Inventory System18 with
projected emissions from EPA’s Air
Emissions Modeling Platform
2011v6.319 to conclude EPA’s
projections overestimated non-EGU
emissions. OEPA also asserted that
EPA’s projections of vehicle miles
traveled (VMT) were higher than the
local projections.
OEPA’s submittal also looked at NOX
and VOC emissions trends, and asserted
that from 2011 to 2016, NOX emissions
declined while VOC emissions
remained steady. Additionally, based on
state-specific data, OEPA posited that
Ohio’s VOC emissions will decrease
even more rapidly than predicted by
EPA because the large growth in the
State’s oil and gas sector had begun to
level off. OEPA attributed the trends it
identified to several Federal and State
programs, including SIP approved state
programs, non-SIP approved programs
such as NOX RACT, Architectural and
Industrial Maintenance (AIM) Coatings
rules, Ohio’s Beneficiary Mitigation
Plan for the Volkswagen settlement, and
Federal programs such as CAIR and
CSAPR, NOX SIP Call, the National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants (NESHAP), the Regional Haze
Rule, BART, SO2 Data Requirements
Rule, and MATS.
In addition to emissions trends data,
OEPA noted LADCO modeling projected
downwind trends in design values at
the ten receptors from 2000 through
2017 and included a reference to ‘‘a May
14, 2018 presentation, U.S. EPA Office
of Air Quality Planning and Standards
(OAQPS)’’.58 OEPA also stated that
LADCO sector-based source
apportionment modeling indicates a
significant contribution from onroad
sources at nine receptors. OEPA argued
that local onroad emissions should be
addressed by EPA before EPA requires
additional reductions from upwind
58 Ohio’s
SIP submission at 43.
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20:41 Feb 18, 2022
states. OEPA also suggested EPA should
take into account the impact on ozone
of the proposed Safer Affordable FuelEfficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule before
taking final action on SAFE. Further,
OEPA asserted that Ohio’s contribution
to nine monitors is in the 1 or 2 ppb
range while the home state and initial
and boundary contributions are each up
to 19 ppb, and the contribution from
Canada/Mexico is in the same range as
Ohio’s. OEPA argued that ignoring
international emissions sources and
placing all responsibility for addressing
receptors on upwind states would result
in overcontrol.
OEPA concluded that there were no
cost-effective measures to be taken for
EGU or non-EGU sources in Ohio. To
support this claim, OEPA pointed to the
cost effectiveness threshold of $1400/
ton from the CSAPR Update (81 FR
74508, October 26, 2016), and while
OEPA recognized that it was developed
for the 2008 ozone standard, OEPA
stated they believed it is a reasonable
cost-effectiveness level for the 2015
ozone NAAQS. As for non-EGUs, OEPA
asserted that those sectors were
adequately controlled by the Boiler
MACT and numerous other MACT
categories, BART, SO2 Data
Requirements Rule and other Federal
regulations.
4. Information Provided by Ohio
Regarding Step 4
OEPA concluded, based on its weight
of evidence analysis, that no additional
emissions reduction measures beyond
existing and planned controls are
necessary to address ozone transport
contribution from Ohio sources for the
2015 ozone NAAQS.
F. Wisconsin
Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources (WDNR) submitted a SIP
revision to address CAA Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on September 14, 2018.
The submittal notes state and Federal
rules applicable to sources in Wisconsin
that are relevant to interstate transport,
as well as Wisconsin’s participation in
LADCO. WDNR identified CAIR,
CSAPR, CSAPR Update, Wisconsin’s
regional haze SIP applicable for the
2008–2018 planning period, and state
PSD programs. Further, WDNR cited
continued consultation with LADCO,
three Wisconsin Administrative Code
statutes that could be relied on ‘‘[i]f
needed’’ to address disagreements for
SIP development in other states’
nonattainment areas, and an adequate
PSD program.59 The statues mentioned
include Wisconsin Administrative
59 Wisconsin’s
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9851
Code, Natural Resources (Wis. Admin.
Code, NR), subsections 285.11, 285.13
and 285.15. The first two address air
pollution control department duties and
powers. The third, Wisconsin Statute
285.15, entitled Interstate Agreement,
gives the governor the authority to enter
an agreement to solve interstate
pollution transport with Illinois,
Indiana and Michigan if the area
includes portions of both Wisconsin and
Illinois.60 WDNR does not explicitly
reach the conclusion that Wisconsin has
satisfied the good neighbor provision for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, but it is
implied. WDNR did not reference the 4step framework. WDNR did not rely on
any modeling, identify any receptors, or
determine whether Wisconsin
contributes any amount of ozone
precursor emissions to downwind
states. The submittal does not include
an analysis of potential NOX controls.
WDNR did not rely on any EPA
memoranda. No supporting
documentation was provided. Apart
from the cited rules and LADCO
membership, WDNR provided no
discussion or analysis to determine
whether they have any obligations
under the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
III. EPA Evaluation
EPA is proposing to find that the
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,
Ohio, and Wisconsin’s SIP submissions
do not meet the states’ obligations with
respect to prohibiting emissions that
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state based on EPA’s
evaluation of the SIP submissions using
the 4-step interstate transport
framework, and EPA is therefore
proposing to disapprove Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio,
and Wisconsin’s SIP submissions.
A. Illinois
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Illinois Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework,
IEPA identified monitoring sites that are
projected to have problems attaining or
maintaining the 2015 ozone NAAQS in
2023. As previously mentioned, the
LADCO modeling efforts used the same
technique as EPA to calculate future
year design values used to identify
maintenance and nonattainment
receptors. IEPA presented the LADCO
results with water cells, which
identified five monitors with 2023
maximum design values greater than the
60 See Wis. Admin. Code NR 285.15 (2021),
available at https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/
statutes/statutes/285/ii/11.
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2015 ozone standard, or maintenance
receptors, and seven monitors with 2023
average design values greater than the
2015 ozone standard, or nonattainment
receptors. Since new modeling has been
performed by EPA with updated
emission data, EPA proposes to rely on
the most recent modeling to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors with linkage to Wisconsin in
2023. Nonetheless, the alternative
modeling relied on by IEPA also
identified a number of nonattainment
and maintenance receptor sites in 2023.
See Table CC on page 15 of IEPA’s
submittal. Thus, even under the
alternative modeling of 2023, IEPA
acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and
maintenance receptors.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Illinois relied on alternative
modeling to EPA’s modeling, Illinois
acknowledged in their SIP submission
that it is linked to one or more
downwind receptors above either a 1
percent of the NAAQS or a 1 ppb
contribution threshold 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, EPA need
not conduct a comparative assessment
of the alternative modeling; the state
concedes that it is linked. IEPA’s
analysis corroborates the conclusion in
EPA’s most recent modeling in that the
modeling demonstrates the State to be
linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to
a downwind receptor, as described in
the next section.
IEPA, relying on a concept listed in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum, attempted to justify the
use of a 1 ppb threshold at step 2 to
identify whether the state was ‘‘linked’’
to a projected downwind nonattainment
or maintenance receptor. As explained
in Section I above, the concepts
presented in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum were developed by
outside parties; they are neither
guidance nor determined by EPA to be
consistent with the CAA. However,
EPA’s August 2018 memorandum also
addressed possible alternative
thresholds and suggested that, with
appropriate additional analysis, it may
be reasonable for states to use a 1 ppb
contribution threshold, as an alternative
to a 1 percent of the NAAQS threshold,
at Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate
transport framework for the purposes of
identifying linkages to downwind
receptors.
As an initial matter, EPA does not
accept Illinois’ argument that a 1
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percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold at Step 2 is ‘‘inappropriate’’
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS due to
modeling biases and errors.61 The
explanation for how the 1 percent
contribution threshold was originally
derived is available in the 2011 CSAPR
rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208, 48237–38.
Further, in the CSAPR Update, EPA reanalyzed the threshold for purposes of
the 2008 ozone NAAQS and determined
it was appropriate to continue to apply
this threshold. EPA compared the 1
percent threshold to a 0.5 percent of
NAAQS threshold and a 5 percent of
NAAQS threshold. EPA found that the
lower threshold did not capture
appreciably more upwind state
contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold
allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further
analysis. See Final CSAPR Update Air
Quality Modeling TSD, at 27–30 (EPA–
HQ–OAR–2015–0596–0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015
ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5
ppb) only captures approximately 50
percent of the total upwind
contribution. Compared to a 1 percent
threshold, a 5 percent threshold would,
on average, forgo 27 percent of the total
upwind contribution. As EPA noted in
the August 2018 memorandum, the use
of even a 2 ppb contribution threshold
under the modeling released with the
March 2018 memorandum would only
capture about 55 percent of all upwind
contributions, and therefore ‘‘emission
reductions from states linked at that
higher threshold may be insufficient to
address collective upwind state
contribution to downwind air quality
problems.’’ 31
With these figures in mind, IEPA’s
claims that the contribution threshold
should be substantially higher than 1 or
even 2 ppb solely on the basis of
modeling uncertainty cannot be
accepted. First, both LADCO’s and
EPA’s modeling techniques are
sufficiently reliable and fit for the
purpose to measure upwind
contribution levels down to at least one
percent of the NAAQS. EPA’s
recommended model attainment test is
based on application of the model in a
relative sense rather than relying upon
absolute model predictions.62 All
61 Illinois’
SIP submission at 8, 14.
Section 4.1’ ‘‘Overview of Modeled
Attainment Test in EPA Modeling Guidance for
Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5,
and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454–R–
18–009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modelingguidance-documents.
62 See
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models have limitations resulting from
uncertainties in inputs and scientific
formulation. To minimize the effects of
these uncertainties, the modeling is
anchored to base period measured data
in EPA’s guidance approach for
projecting design values. Notably, EPA
also uses our source apportionment
modeling in a relative sense when
calculating the average contribution
metric (used to identify linkages). In this
method the magnitude of the
contribution metric is tied to the
magnitude of the projected average
design value which is tied to the base
period average measured design value.
EPA’s guidance has not established a
bright line criteria for judging whether
or not statistical measures of model
performance constitute acceptable or
unacceptable model performance. So,
contrary to what Illinois appears to be
claiming with regards to modeling
biases, there are no EPA recommended
measures of allowable error. Although
EPA does not typically focus on using
particular benchmarks as the sole
criteria for model performance, EPA
notes that the model performance for
the updated modeling based on the
2016v2 emissions platform is generally
within the benchmarks recommended
by Emery.63
EPA has successfully applied a 1
percent of NAAQS threshold to identify
linked upwind states in three prior
rulemakings. And the D.C. Circuit has
declined to establish bright line criteria
for model performance. In upholding
EPA’s approach to evaluating interstate
transport in CSAPR, the D.C. Circuit
held that they would not ‘‘invalidate
EPA’s predictions solely because there
might be discrepancies between those
predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise
of prediction.’’ EME Homer City
Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118,
135 (2015). The court continued to note
that ‘‘the fact that a ‘model does not fit
every application perfectly is no
criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.’’’ Id.
at 135–36 (quoting Chemical
Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28
F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
Finally, EPA’s August 2018
memorandum provided that whether
use of a 1 ppb threshold is appropriate
must be based on an evaluation of statespecific circumstances, and no such
evaluation was included in the
63 Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G.
Russel, M. Talat Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh
Kumar (2017). Recommendations on statistics and
benchmarks to assess photochemical model
performance, Journal of the Air & Waste
Management Association, 67:5,582–598, DOI:
10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
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submission. IEPA did not conduct such
an analysis. EPA’s experience with the
alternative Step 2 thresholds is further
discussed in Section I.D.3.i. As
discussed there, EPA is considering
withdrawing the August 2018
memorandum.
However, based on both the state’s
alternative modeling and EPA’s updated
modeling, the state is projected to
contribute greater than both the 1
percent and alternative 1 ppb
thresholds. While EPA does not, in this
action, approve of the IEPA’s
application of the 1 ppb threshold,
based on Illinois’ linkages greater than
1 ppb to projected downwind
nonattainment or maintenance
receptors, the state’s use of this
alternative threshold at step 2 of the 4step interstate framework would not
alter our review and proposed
disapproval this SIP submittal.
3. Results of EPA’s Step 1 and Step 2
Modeling and Findings for Illinois
As described in Section I, EPA
performed air quality modeling using
9853
the 2016v2 emissions platform to
project design values and contributions
for 2023. These data were examined to
determine if Illinois contributes at or
above the threshold of 1 percent of the
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
Table 2, the data 64 indicate that in 2023,
emissions from Illinois contribute
greater than 1 percent of the standard to
nonattainment or maintenance-only
receptors in Wisconsin.65
TABLE 2—ILLINOIS LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
550590025 .............................
550590019 .............................
551010020 .............................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Racine, WI ............................
Maintenance .........................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
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Therefore, based on EPA’s evaluation
of the information submitted by IEPA,
and based on EPA’s most recent
modeling results for 2023, EPA proposes
to find that Illinois is linked at Steps 1
and 2 and has an obligation to assess
potential emissions reductions from
sources or other emissions activity at
Step 3 of the 4-step framework. EPA
will proceed to Step 3 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework to assess
the 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.
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 for relevant
64 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file:’’
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx’’ which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
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2023 Average
design value
(ppb)
69.2
72.8
71.3
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
72.3
73.7
73.2
Illinois
contribution
(ppb)
18.55
18.13
13.86
pollutants and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. 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 EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner 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 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. IEPA did not conduct such
an analysis in Illinois’ SIP submission.
IEPA argued that Illinois’
contributions to the nonattainment
monitors in the LADCO domain, namely
the Allegan and Sheboygan receptors,
EPA can be fairly and adequately
addressed through Illinois’ participation
in LADCO. Though IEPA suggested that
LADCO may be partially responsible for
decreases in ambient ozone
concentrations in the Lake Michigan
area, LADCO is not a regulatory agency
responsible for implementing emissions
controls. Furthermore, Illinois did not
provide any information on any planned
emission reductions, or evaluation of
control strategies that the LADCO states
intend to implement within their
domain, that would reduce either the
ozone concentrations or Illinois’
contributions at the nonattainment or
maintenance monitors to which IEPA
identified Illinois as linked. IEPA’s basis
for concluding that LADCO
participation may relieve Illinois of any
good neighbor obligations to downwind
receptors is entirely unsubstantiated
and does not present any basis on which
EPA can approve IEPA’s SIP submittal.
As such, EPA proposes to find Illinois’
LADCO participation as inadequate to
resolve Illinois’ good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
65 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 Illinois 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 ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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The submittal also stated that Illinois
is developing new NOX RACT standards
for the Chicago area that, in conjunction
with existing regulations and future
Federal reductions, are estimated to
reduce NOX emissions by up to 20,000
tons/year which had not yet been
reflected in modeling to 2023. However,
Illinois failed to provide any
information on the control measures or
implementation schedule that would
achieve the estimated 20,000 tons/year
in reductions. IEPA did not quantify
how the emissions reductions they
estimated would impact air quality at
downwind receptors or Illinois’
contributions. In fact, Illinois has not
yet finalized the NOX RACT rule for
Chicago. In general, any changes in the
emissions inventory and on-the-books
controls relevant to emissions in 2023
have now been incorporated into EPA’s
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform, which projects a continuing
contribution from Illinois to out of state
receptors above a threshold of 1 percent
of the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite
these measures. Therefore, IEPA’s SIP
submission should have evaluated the
availability of additional air quality
controls to improve downwind air
quality at nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 3.
Additionally, states may not rely on
non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements. See CAA section
110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such [SIP] shall . . .
contain adequate provisions . . . .’’).
See also CAA section 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). IEPA did not
attempt to revise Illinois’ SIP to include
these measures in order to implement
its good neighbor obligations. Further,
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 EPA’s 4-step framework to define
‘‘significant contribution.’’ IEPA did not
identify the control measures, provide
an assessment of the overall effects of
these measures, note when the
reductions would be achieved, or
explain what the overall resulting air
quality effects would be at identified out
of state receptors. IEPA did not evaluate
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. IEPA
did not offer an explanation as to
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whether any faster or more stringent
emissions reductions that may be
available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges
states are not necessarily bound to
follow its own analytical framework at
Step 3, IEPA did not attempt to
determine or justify an appropriate
uniform cost-effectiveness threshold for
the more stringent 2015 ozone NAAQS.
This would have been similar to the
approach to defining significant
contribution that EPA has applied in
prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and
or the CSAPR Update, even if such an
analysis is not technically mandatory.
Finally, under the Wisconsin
decision, states and 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. The
IEPA’s submittal is insufficient to the
extent the implementation timeframes
for identified control measures were left
unidentified, unexplained, or too
uncertain to permit EPA to form a
judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor
obligations have been met.
IEPA also attempted to rely on a
concept related to international
emissions identified in Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum—a
concept that apparently had its origins
outside EPA and was not endorsed or
recommend by EPA at the time or since.
IEPA noted that Illinois would be linked
to only one receptor if international and
offshore emissions were simply
subtracted from the receptor’s maximum
design values. As explained in Section
I.D above, the concepts presented in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum were neither guidance
nor determined by EPA to be consistent
with the CAA. EPA made clear at the
time that it would thoroughly review
the technical and legal justifications
states put forward in relying on any
concepts from Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum. In this case,
what IEPA proposes is clearly
unacceptable.
The state’s reasoning related to
international and offshore emissions is
inapplicable to the requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The good
neighbor provision requires states and
EPA to address interstate transport of air
pollution that contributes to downwind
states’ ability to attain and maintain
NAAQS. Whether emissions from other
states or other countries also contribute
to the same downwind air quality issue
is irrelevant in assessing whether a
downwind state has an air quality
problem, or whether an upwind state is
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significantly contributing to that
problem. States are not obligated under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce
emissions sufficient on their own to
resolve downwind receptors’
nonattainment or maintenance
problems. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ‘‘significant
contribution’’ or ‘‘interference’’ with the
ability of other states to attain or
maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin
specifically rejected petitioner
arguments suggesting that upwind states
should be excused from good neighbor
obligations on the basis that some other
source of emissions (whether
international or another upwind state)
could be considered the ‘‘but-for’’ cause
of downwind air quality problem. See
938 F.3d at 323–324. The court viewed
petitioners’ arguments as essentially an
argument ‘‘that an upwind state
‘contributes significantly’ to downwind
nonattainment only when its emissions
are the sole cause of downwind
nonattainment.’’ Id. at 324. The court
explained that ‘‘an upwind state can
‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause.’’ Id. at 324–325.
See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571
F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (rejecting
the argument ‘‘that ‘significantly
contribute’ unambiguously means
‘strictly cause’ ’’ because there is ‘‘no
reason why the statute precludes EPA
from determining that [an] addition of
[pollutant] into the atmosphere is
significant even though a nearby
county’s nonattainment problem would
still persist in its absence’’); Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ‘‘there
likely would have been no violation at
all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]’’ is
‘‘merely a rephrasing of the but-for
causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County’’). Therefore, a state is
not excused from eliminating its
significant contribution on the basis that
international emissions also contribute
some amount of pollution to the same
receptors to which the state is linked.
Illinois’ argument related to
international and offshore emissions
fails to change the status of any receptor
at Step 1, to eliminate Illinois’ linkages
at Step 2, or to provide sufficient
evidence that Illinois does not
contribute significantly to receptors at
Step 3.
We therefore propose that Illinois was
required to analyze emissions from the
sources and other emissions activity
from within the state to determine
whether its contributions were
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significant, and we propose to
disapprove its submission because
Illinois 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. IEPA
identified future NOX RACT standards
for the Chicago area and unnamed
Federal rules were sufficient to resolve
Illinois’ good neighbor obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS. However,
Illinois did not revise its SIP to include
these emission reductions in a revision
to its SIP to ensure the reductions were
permanent and enforceable. As a result,
EPA proposes to disapprove Illinois’
submittal on the separate,66 additional
basis that the Illinois has not included
permanent and enforceable emissions
reductions in its SIP as necessary to
meet the obligations of CAA section
110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
6. Conclusion
Based on EPA’s evaluation of Illinois
SIP submission, EPA is proposing to
find that the portion of Illinois’ May 21,
2018 SIP submission addressing CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet
the state’s interstate transport
obligations, because it fails to contain
the necessary provisions to eliminate
emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the 2015
ozone NAAQS in any other state.
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B. Indiana
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Indiana Regarding Step 1
IDEM relied on LADCO modeling
released in 2018 to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this action, LADCO
performed a modeling demonstration
like that of EPA’s 2018 transport
modeling efforts, except with use of the
ERTAC EGU Tool for EGU emissions.
LADCO identified nonattainment and
maintenance receptors using EPA
methodology identified in Section I.
IDEM elected to rely on LADCO’s
66 Pointing to anticipated upcoming emission
reductions is not sufficient as a step 3 analysis, for
the reasons discussed in Section 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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modeling results, which identified
similar receptors to EPA’s modeling
included in the March 2018 memo.
Since new modeling has been
performed by EPA which includes
updated emission data using the 2016v2
platform, EPA proposes to primarily
rely on the most recent modeling to
identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023 (see
Table 3 further in this action).
Nonetheless, the LADCO modeling
relied on by IDEM also identified a
number of nonattainment and
maintenance receptor sites in 2023. See
Table 7 on page 30 of Attachment 1 to
Indiana’s submittal. Thus, even under
the LADCO modeling for 2023, IDEM
acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and
maintenance receptors.
IDEM essentially argues that two of
the receptors to which Indiana was
linked would not actually be receptors
in 2023. Based on updated modeling of
EPA’s 2016v2 emissions platform, EPA
agrees with IDEM that that the Allegan,
Michigan monitor is not expected to be
a receptor in 2023, but not the receptor
in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Regardless,
EPA disagrees with the line of reasoning
IDEM put forward to argue that those
two monitors would not be receptors to
the extent such reasoning could be
applied to Indiana’s linkages in EPA’s
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform. First, IDEM concluded that if
ozone design value trends continued as
expected then those two receptors
would reach attainment before 2023. In
addition, IDEM compared 2012–2017
monitoring data with LADCO’s and
EPA’s modeling and concluded that the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin and Allegan,
Michigan receptor monitors were
already below the 2023 projections.
Additionally, EPA’s updated modeling,
which considers more recent design
values and emissions, continues to find
that Indiana is linked to downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors, despite downward trends in
emissions and design values
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Indiana relied on alternative
modeling to EPA’s modeling, Indiana
acknowledged in its SIP submission that
it is linked to one or more downwind
receptors above either a 1 percent of the
NAAQS or 1 ppb contribution threshold
in 2023. Because the alternative
modeling relied on by IDEM also
demonstrates that a linkage exists
between the state and one or more
downwind receptors at Step 2, EPA
need not conduct a comparative
assessment of the alternative modeling;
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9855
the State concedes that it is linked.
IDEM’s analysis corroborates the
conclusion in EPA’s most recent
modeling, described in the next section.
IDEM additionally utilized a 1 ppb
threshold at Step 2 to identify whether
it was linked to a projected downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptor.
As discussed in EPA’s August 2018
memorandum, with appropriate
additional analysis it may be reasonable
for states to use a 1 ppb contribution
threshold, as an alternative to a 1
percent threshold, at Step 2 of the 4Step interstate transport framework, for
the purposes of identifying linkages to
downwind receptors. However, IDEM’s
submission did not contain any
additional analysis of contributions at
the receptors to which they were linked
to support their claim that a 1 ppb
threshold was an appropriate Step 2
screening threshold. Rather, IDEM
claimed that a threshold of 1 percent
was too low because it is less than the
ozone monitoring ‘‘tolerance level’’ of 1
ppb (i.e., precision) used for reporting
measured ozone concentrations. In its
submittal IDEM failed to provide any
basis for asserting that the precision of
an ozone monitor is applicable to the
precision of ozone contributions which
are not a directly measured quantity.
Regardless, total upwind contributions
are well above 1 ppb at all receptors to
which Indiana is linked based on
modeling by LADCO and by EPA. In
addition, Indiana alone contributes
above 1 ppb to several downwind
receptors. Because contributions are not
directly measured, modeling is used to
apportion projected ozone design values
into contributions from individual states
and other sources of ozone precursors
(e.g., fires and biogenic sources). The
projected ozone design values are
calculated using the method
recommended in EPA’s modeling
guidance.67 As part of this method,
projected design values are reported
with a precision of a tenth of a ppb.
Consistent with our modeling guidance,
ozone contributions are evaluated with
a precision of a tenth of a ppb. For
example, a contribution of 0.6999 . . .
ppb is reported as 0.69 ppb and
evaluated as 0.6 ppb which is below the
1 percent threshold.
Indiana seemingly conflates the
contribution threshold at Step 2 with a
Step 3 determination of ‘‘significance’’
(which is reached only after the
application of a multi-factor analysis),
regardless EPA does not accept
67 Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air
Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze.
November 2018. EPA 454–R–18–009. https://
www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modeling-guidancedocuments.
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Indiana’s argument that a 1 percent of
the NAAQS contribution threshold at
Step 2 is ‘‘not appropriate’’ for the 2015
ozone NAAQS on the basis of
unwarranted modeling reliability
concerns.68 The explanation for how the
1 percent contribution threshold was
originally derived is available in the
2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR
48208, 48237–38. Further, in the CSAPR
Update, EPA re-analyzed the threshold
for purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS
and determined it was appropriate to
continue to apply this threshold. EPA
compared the 1 percent threshold to a
0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold and a
5 percent of NAAQS threshold. EPA
found that the lower threshold did not
capture appreciably more upwind state
contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold
allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further
analysis. See Final CSAPR Update Air
Quality Modeling TSD, at 27–30 (EPA–
HQ–OAR–2015–0596–0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015
ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold would
forgo nearly 30 percent of the total
upwind contribution, on average, for
those receptors to which Indiana is
linked using a 1 percent threshold. As
EPA noted in the August 2018
memorandum, the use of even a 2 ppb
contribution threshold under the
modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum would only capture about
55 percent of all upwind contributions,
and therefore ‘‘emission reductions from
states linked at that higher threshold
may be insufficient to address collective
upwind state contribution to downwind
air quality problems.’’ 69
With these figures in mind, IDEM’s
claims that the contribution threshold
should be substantially higher than 1 or
even 2 ppb solely on the basis of
modeling uncertainty cannot be
accepted. First, both IDEM’s and EPA’s
modeling techniques are sufficiently
reliable and fit for the purpose to
measure upwind contribution levels
down to at least one percent of the
NAAQS. EPA’s recommended model
attainment test is based on application
of the model in a relative sense rather
than relying upon absolute model
predictions.70 All models have
limitations resulting from uncertainties
in inputs and scientific formulation. To
minimize the effects of these
uncertainties, the modeling is anchored
to base period measured data in EPA’s
guidance approach for projecting design
values. Notably, EPA also uses our
source apportionment modeling in a
relative sense when calculating the
average contribution metric (used to
identify linkages). In this method the
magnitude of the contribution metric is
tied to the magnitude of the projected
average design value which is tied to the
base period average measured design
value. EPA’s guidance has not
established a bright-line criteria for
judging whether or not statistical
measures of model performance
constitute acceptable or unacceptable
model performance. So, contrary to
what Indiana appears to be claiming
with regards to modeling biases, there
are no EPA recommended measures of
allowable error. Although EPA does not
typically focus on using particular
benchmarks as the sole criteria for
model performance, EPA notes that the
model performance for the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
emissions platform is generally within
the benchmarks recommended by
Emery, et al., (2017).71
EPA has successfully applied a 1
percent of NAAQS threshold to identify
linked upwind states in three prior
rulemakings. And the D.C. Circuit has
declined to establish bright line criteria
for model performance. In upholding
EPA’s approach to evaluating interstate
transport in CSAPR, the Supreme Court
held that they would not ‘‘invalidate
EPA’s predictions solely because there
might be discrepancies between those
predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise
of prediction.’’ EME Homer City
Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118,
135 (2015). The court continued to note
that ‘‘the fact that a ‘model does not fit
every application perfectly is no
criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.’ ’’
Id. at 135–36 (quoting Chemical
Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28
F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
EPA’s August 2018 memorandum
provided that whether use of a 1 ppb
threshold is appropriate must be based
on an evaluation of state-specific
circumstances, and no such evaluation
was included in the submission. EPA’s
experience with the alternative Step 2
thresholds is further discussed in
Section I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA
is considering withdrawing the August
2018 memorandum.
3. Results of EPA’s Step 1 and Step 2
Modeling and Findings for Indiana
As described in Section I, 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 Indiana contributes at or
above the threshold of 1 percent of the
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
Table 3, the data 72 indicate that in 2023,
emissions from Indiana contribute
greater than 1 percent of the standard to
nonattainment or maintenance-only
receptors in Wisconsin, Illinois,
Connecticut, and Pennsylvania.73
TABLE 3—INDIANA LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
550590025 .............................
170310032 .............................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Cook, IL ................................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
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68 Indiana’s
SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 4.
2018 memorandum at 4.
70 See Section 4.1’ ‘‘Overview of Modeled
Attainment Test in EPA Modeling Guidance for
Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5,
and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454–R–
18–009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modelingguidance-documents.
71 Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G.
Russel, M. Talat Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh
Kumar (2017). Recommendations on statistics and
69 August
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benchmarks to assess photochemical model
performance, Journal of the Air & Waste
Management Association, 67:5,582–598, DOI:
10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
72 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
73 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)
69.2
69.8
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
72.3
72.4
Indiana
contribution
(ppb)
7.10
7.03
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 Indiana 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 ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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9857
TABLE 3—INDIANA LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING—Continued
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
550590019 .............................
551010020 .............................
170317002 .............................
170310076 .............................
170310001 .............................
170314201 .............................
90099002 ...............................
90019003 ...............................
90013007 ...............................
420170012 .............................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Racine, WI ............................
Cook, IL ................................
Cook, IL ................................
Cook, IL ................................
Cook, IL ................................
New Haven, CT ....................
Fairfield, CT ..........................
Fairfield, CT ..........................
Bucks, PA .............................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
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Therefore, based on EPA’s evaluation
of the information submitted by IDEM,
and based on EPA’s most recent
modeling results for 2023, EPA proposes
to find that Indiana is linked at Steps 1
and 2 and has an obligation to assess
potential emissions reductions from
sources or other emissions activity at
Step 3 of the 4-Step framework. EPA
therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the
4-Step interstate transport framework to
assess the 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.
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 for relevant
pollutants and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. 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
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Supreme Court. See EME Homer City,
572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014). While EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner 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 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. IDEM did not conduct such
an analysis in their SIP submission.
IDEM first asserted that Indiana’s rule
amendments under CSAPR meant that
Indiana was already meeting the good
neighbor requirements for the 2015
ozone NAAQS. The 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 one or more
receptors in 2023 at Steps 1 and 2. The
SIP submittal pointed to the state’s
existing NOX control measures, consent
decree requirements, and future fuel
switches and retirements for large EGUs
and non-EGUs for the years 2008
through 2017 to conclude Indiana is
already meeting its good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 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
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2023
Average
design value
(ppb)
72.8
71.3
70.1
69.3
69.6
69.9
71.8
76.1
74.2
70.7
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
73.7
73.2
73.0
72.1
73.4
73.4
73.9
76.4
75.1
72.2
Indiana
contribution
(ppb)
6.60
6.60
6.33
6.21
5.44
4.65
0.87
0.76
0.75
0.73
no further good neighbor obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS. In particular,
the state did not conduct in its submittal
an analysis of potential additional
emissions reductions measures to
further reduce its impact on the
identified downwind receptors. For
example, although Indiana did include
in its submission a list of controls at
individual emissions units at facilities
in the state, IDEM did not analyze
additional 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 Indiana’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 Indiana 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 Indiana in its
submittal) already accounts for ‘‘on-thebooks’’ emissions control measures.
Both sets of modeling clearly establish
continued linkage from Indiana to
downwind receptors in 2023 at Steps 1
and 2, despite those emissions control
efforts.
IDEM provided what they
characterized as a weight of evidence
analysis consisting of monitoring data,
emissions data, and photochemical
modeling to justify their conclusion that
no additional emission reductions
would be necessary to satisfy Indiana’s
ozone transport obligations. First, IDEM
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presented evidence of downward trends
of statewide ozone concentrations and
emissions, as well as a decrease in
projected EGU emissions in 2023
relative to 2011. Despite these trends,
however, the LADCO modeling that
Indiana depended on for its submittal
still identified that Indiana would
contribute over 1 ppb to one or more
receptors in 2023.
As for downwind design value trends,
EPA disagrees that IDEM’s reliance on
trends data to conclude that the Harford,
Maryland and Richmond, New York
monitors would reach attainment ‘‘over
time’’ is sufficient to support a
conclusion that Indiana has no good
neighbor obligations. The states and
EPA are to address interstate transport
obligations ‘‘as expeditiously as
practicable’’ and no later than the
attainment schedule set in accordance
with CAA section 181(a). See North
Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–13;
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313–20;
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New York
v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (D.C. Cir.
2020); New York v. EPA, 781 Fed. App’x
4, 6–7 (D.C. Cir. 2019). IDEM asserted
that EGUs are well controlled in Indiana
and cited several state and Federal
regulations that EGUs may be subject to
in Indiana. 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 EPA’s
4-Step framework to define ‘‘significant
contribution.’’ IDEM did not provide an
assessment of the overall effects of the
identified control measures or explain
what the overall resulting air quality
effects would be at identified out of
State receptors. IDEM did not perform
an analysis of all large NOX emitting
EGU for factors that may affect the
facilities’ emissions, including but not
limited to allowance prices, fuel prices,
and enforceable limits. IDEM did not
evaluate 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. IDEM
did not offer an explanation as to
whether any faster or more stringent
emissions reductions that may be
available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges
states are not necessarily bound to
follow its own analytical framework at
Step 3, IDEM did not attempt to
determine or justify an appropriate
uniform cost-effectiveness threshold.
This would have been similar to the
approach to defining significant
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contribution that EPA has applied in
prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and
or the CSAPR Update, even if such an
analysis is not technically mandatory.
As discussed previously, both the
LADCO modeling relied on by the state
and EPA’s updated modeling indicates
sources in Indiana are linked to
downwind air quality problems for the
2015 ozone standard. However,
Indiana’s SIP submittal did not include
an analysis of potential NOX emissions
control technologies, associated costs,
estimated emissions reductions, and
downwind air quality in order to
determine whether the State had
eliminated the State’s downwind
contribution in amounts which will
significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance. Thus, EPA proposes to
disapprove Indiana’s SIP submission on
the separate, additional basis that the
SIP submittal did not assess additional
emission control opportunities.
IDEM concluded it is not costeffective to evaluate and implement
controls on non-EGUs in the state on the
sole basis that the majority of NOX
emissions in the state come from EGUs.
EPA cannot accept the assertion as it is
insufficiently supported. Costeffectiveness must be assessed in the
context of the specific CAA program;
assessing cost-effectiveness in the
context of ozone transport should reflect
a more comprehensive evaluation of the
nature of the interstate transport
problem, the total emissions reductions
available at several cost thresholds, and
the air quality impacts of the reductions
at downwind receptors. EPA notes that
there are as many as two dozen nonEGU facilities in Indiana with more than
300 tons per year of NOX emissions
each, but IDEM did not analyze control
opportunities at these sources at all in
the SIP submission.
IDEM also argued that additional
emissions reductions from EGU and
non-EGU sources in Indiana ‘‘are getting
more difficult to mandate’’ because of
reduced effectiveness of controls to
make significant decreases in ozone
values, operational concerns, and
increased costs for customers.74 Again,
the SIP submission does not contain
sufficient evidence to support that
conclusion. IDEM did not identify
controls that had reduced effectiveness
or explain why they believed they had
reduced effectiveness. IDEM did not
describe what any operational concerns
were for any controls, nor did IDEM
provide any information to support their
claim that controls would increase costs
for consumers. While Indiana’s existing
74 Indiana’s
PO 00000
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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 the Revised CSAPR
Update, EPA’s analysis found that
despite Indiana’s existing control
programs, additional emissions
reductions were achievable from EGUs
in the state, even under the level of
control stringency EPA determined
appropriate to eliminate significant
contribution for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. In any case, EPA has not
established a benchmark costeffectiveness threshold for good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, and IDEM in its submittal has
not conducted an analysis to establish
one for EPA to evaluate.
IDEM also identified several planned
retirements or retrofits to coal fired
EGUs in Indiana that were not included
in any modeling available at the time of
Indiana’s submission and stated they
would reduce emissions several
thousand tons beyond the modeling.
Further, EPA’s assessment of future air
quality conditions generally accounts
for on-the-books emission reductions
and the most up-to-date forecast of
future emissions in the absence of the
transport policy being evaluated (i.e.,
base case conditions).75 As described in
more detail in Section I, EPA’s latest
projections of the baseline EGU
emissions uses the version 6—Summer
2021 Reference Case of the IPM. The
IPM version 6—Summer 2021 Reference
Case uses the NEEDS v6 database as its
source for data on all existing and
planned-committed units. Units are
removed from the NEEDS inventory
only if a high degree of certainty could
be assigned to future implementation of
the announced future closure or
retirement. Any retirements excluded
from the NEEDS v6 inventory can be
viewed in the NEEDS spreadsheet.76
EPA looked into the upcoming
retirements cited by IDEM and
following the guidelines regarding
retirements for the IPM version—6
Summer 2021 Reference Case certain
units are not excluded from the NEEDS
v6 inventory. There are other
retirements that were not included in
the SIP submission that were excluded
75 See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at
68979.
76 The ‘‘Capacity Dropped’’ and the ‘‘Retired
Through 2023’’ worksheets in NEEDS lists all units
that are removed from the NEEDS v6 inventory—
NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data
can be found on EPA’s website at: https://
www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energydata-system-needs-v6.
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from the NEEDS v6 inventory for the
2023 projections. This includes
retirements at AES Petersburg, Merom,
and RM Schahfer. In other words, in
general, any changes in the emissions
inventory and on-the-books controls
relevant to emissions in 2023 have now
been incorporated into the EPA’s
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform, which projects a continuing
contribution from Indiana to out of state
receptors above a threshold of 1 percent
of the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite
these measures. Therefore, in light of
continuing contribution to out of state
receptors from Indiana notwithstanding
these identified retirements, IDEM’s SIP
submission should have evaluated the
availability of additional air quality
controls to improve downwind air
quality at nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 3
Furthermore, under the Wisconsin
decision, states and 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. The
IDEM’s submittal is insufficient to the
extent the implementation timeframes
for several claimed expected shutdowns
were left unidentified, unexplained, or
too uncertain to permit EPA to form a
judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor
obligations have been met.
Additionally, IDEM explained in only
the most general terms how the
unaccounted emissions reductions
would influence downwind air quality
or Indiana’s contributions to other state.
IDEM also did not quantify how the
emissions reductions they estimated
would impact air quality at downwind
receptors or Indiana’s contributions.
IDEM did not demonstrate that the
downwind improvements from these
regulations and programs would be
sufficient to eliminate Indiana’s linkages
or prohibit the State’s emissions in
amounts that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in any other state.
IDEM also made several arguments
related to potential flexibilities
identified in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum.77 As explained
previously in Section I, the concepts
presented in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum were neither
77 Based on the reference to the potential
flexibilities in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum on page 2 of Attachment 1 to
Indiana’s SIP submission, EPA assumes the
reference to ‘‘flexibilities’’ on page 38 of
Attachment 1 likewise references Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum.
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guidance nor determined by EPA to be
consistent with the CAA. EPA will
thoroughly review the technical and
legal justifications IDEM put forward in
their attempt to use a potential
flexibility from Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum.
IDEM suggested that local emissions
reductions from the jurisdiction where
downwind receptors are located should
first be implemented and accounted for
before imposing obligations on upwind
states under the interstate transport
provision. IDEM represented that EPA
had concluded that monitors in the
Northeast ‘‘are impacted from more
local emissions’’ by citing a May 14,
2018 presentation. The purpose of that
presentation was to share a technical,
exploratory analysis of ozone trends.
IDEM misrepresented the contents of
the presentation, which labeled the
results as ‘‘preliminary’’ and indicated
that ‘‘[f]urther exploration of the relative
contribution from various source sectors
within the NE Corridor and in nearby
upwind states might also be
informative.’’ 78 These preliminary
results of that analysis are generally
consistent with EPA’s updated
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform. Although EPA’s modeling
shows that a large portion of the
transport problem affecting the
receptors in Coastal Connecticut is
indeed from sources within the Ozone
Transport Region (OTR), a substantial
portion of the transport problem at these
receptors, on the order of 25 percent, is
the result of transport from states
outside the OTR. However, the
relevance of that presentation to the
evaluation of Indiana’s good neighbor
obligations is not clear. As already
discussed, the statute and the case law
(particularly the holdings in Wisconsin
and Maryland) make clear that good
neighbor obligations are not merely
supplementary to or deferable until after
local emission reductions are achieved.
Further, based on EPA’s modeling
released with the March 2018
memorandum, nearly all of the
receptors to which Indiana is linked are
also heavily impacted by distant
upwind state emissions in addition to
local sources and sources in neighboring
states. The Wisconsin decision’s holding
in regard to international contribution
(discussed in more detail later) is
equally applicable to an upwind state’s
claims that some other state’s emissions,
or local emissions, are more to blame
than its own emissions. See 938 F.3d
303 at 323–25 (‘‘an upwind state can
‘contribute’ to downwind
78 Indiana’s
PO 00000
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9859
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause’’).
There is nothing in the CAA that
supports Indiana’s position on local
sources, and Indiana does not provide
grounds on which to approve its SIP
submission. The D.C. Circuit has held
on five different occasions that the
timing framework for addressing
interstate transport obligations must be
consistent with the downwind areas’
attainment schedule. In particular, for
the ozone NAAQS, the states and EPA
are to address interstate transport
obligations ‘‘as expeditiously as
practicable’’ and no later than the
attainment schedule set in accordance
with CAA section 181(a). See North
Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–13;
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313–20;
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New York
v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (D.C. Cir.
2020); New York v. EPA, 781 Fed. App’x
4, 6–7 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The court in
Wisconsin explained its reasoning in
part by noting that downwind
jurisdictions often may need to heavily
rely on emissions reductions from
upwind states in order to achieve
attainment of the NAAQS, 938 F.3d at
316–17; such states would face
increased regulatory burdens including
the risk of bumping up to a higher
nonattainment classification if
attainment is not reached by the
relevant deadline, Maryland, 958 F.3d at
1204. The statutory framework of the
CAA and these cases establish clearly
that states and EPA must address
interstate transport obligations in line
with the attainment schedule provided
in the CAA in order to timely assist
downwind states in attaining and
maintain the NAAQS, and this schedule
is ‘‘central to the regulatory scheme.’’
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 316 (quoting
Sierra Club v. EPA, 294 F.3d 155, 161
(D.C. Cir. 2002)).
IDEM similarly suggested that
international and offshore emissions
contributions should be part of the good
neighbor calculus. IDEM’s reasoning
related to international and offshore
emissions is inapplicable to the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The good neighbor
provision requires states and EPA to
address interstate transport of air
pollution that contributes to downwind
states’ ability to attain and maintain
NAAQS. Whether emissions from other
states or other countries also contribute
to the same downwind air quality issue
is irrelevant in assessing whether a
downwind state has an air quality
problem, or whether an upwind state is
significantly contributing to that
problem. States are not obligated under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce
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emissions sufficient on their own to
resolve downwind receptors’
nonattainment or maintenance
problems. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ‘‘significant
contribution’’ or ‘‘interference’’ with the
ability of other states to attain or
maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin
specifically rejected petitioner
arguments suggesting that upwind states
should be excused from good neighbor
obligations on the basis that some other
source of emissions (whether
international or another upwind state)
could be considered the ‘‘but-for’’ cause
of downwind air quality problem. See
938 F.3d at 323–324. The court viewed
petitioners’ arguments as essentially an
argument ‘‘that an upwind state
‘contributes significantly’ to downwind
nonattainment only when its emissions
are the sole cause of downwind
nonattainment.’’ Id. at 324. The court
explained that ‘‘an upwind state can
‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause.’’ Id. at 324–325.
See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571
F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (rejecting
the argument ‘‘that ‘significantly
contribute’ unambiguously means
‘strictly cause’’’ because there is ‘‘no
reason why the statute precludes EPA
from determining that [an] addition of
[pollutant] into the atmosphere is
significant even though a nearby
county’s nonattainment problem would
still persist in its absence’’); Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ‘‘there
likely would have been no violation at
all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]’’ is
‘‘merely a rephrasing of the but-for
causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County’’). Therefore, a state is
not excused from eliminating its
significant contribution on the basis that
international emissions also contribute
some amount of pollution to the same
receptors to which the state is linked.
IDEM also calculated Indiana’s
portion of contribution to the Harford,
Maryland receptor was 0.077 ppb, and
determined that Indiana would need to
reduce its contribution by 0.0077 ppb
(based on a contribution threshold of 1
ppb) to bring the Maryland receptor into
attainment. IDEM argued that 0.0077
ppb is well within the error of the
model and would be ‘‘difficult’’ to
translate into an emission reduction
requirement.79 We first note that this
approach is a deviation from EPA’s
traditional approach of apportioning
79 Indiana’s
SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 42.
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upwind-state responsibility at Step 3
using a uniform cost of control metric
set at a level that maximizes costeffectiveness of emissions reductions in
relation to downwind state impacts
across all linked states. Thus, this is not
how EPA has interpreted the statutory
term ‘‘significant’’ in the past, and EPA
does not reach a conclusion whether
this approach would be approvable, had
IDEM had imposed emissions
reductions in line with this logic.
We do not need to reach that point in
the analysis, however, because, having
selected that approach to defining its
obligations, IDEM proceeded to ignore
the result. IDEM’s submission identified
Indiana’s proportional contribution as
0.077 ppb to the Harford, Maryland
receptor. Having acknowledged Indiana
was responsible for eliminating up to
0.0077 ppb of contribution, IDEM
claimed that because that amount was
within the ‘‘error of the model’’ that it
would be ‘‘difficult’’ to require that
amount of reductions from Indiana
sources.
This argument does not rise to the
level of acceptable proof. EPA has
routinely been capable of successfully
implementing good neighbor obligations
through the CSAPR framework, and
achieving significant downwind air
quality improvements through upwindstate reductions, at levels of ‘‘significant
contribution’’ comparable or even less
than those found in Indiana’s
submission, irrespective of alleged
modeling errors. See Wisconsin, 938
F.3d at 322–23 (rejecting Wisconsin’s
argument that it should not face good
neighbor obligations on the basis that its
emission reductions would only
improve a downwind receptor by two
ten-thousandths of a part per billion).
After measuring Indiana’s significant
contribution, IDEM suggested that
modeling uncertainty was too great to
either require emissions reductions. But
IDEM had measured the state’s
significant contribution and was
therefore identifying the measurable
amount of significant contribution the
state was legally responsible for
eliminating. See Michigan v. EPA, 213
F.3d 663, 683–84 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
(significant contribution must be
‘‘measurable’’). Further, scientific
uncertainty may only be invoked to
avoid comporting with the requirements
of the CAA when ‘‘the scientific
uncertainty is so profound that it
precludes . . . reasoned judgment’’
Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438
(2007). See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318–
19 (‘‘Scientific uncertainty, however,
does not excuse EPA’s failure to align
the deadline for eliminating upwind
States’ significant contributions with the
PO 00000
Frm 00024
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deadline for downwind attainment of
the NAAQS.’’). See also EME Homer
City, 795 F.3d 118, 135–36 (‘‘We will
not invalidate EPA’s predictions solely
because there might be discrepancies
between those predictions and the real
world. That possibility is inherent in the
enterprise of prediction.’’). IDEM’s
arguments related to modeling
uncertainty do not establish a level of
uncertainty so high as to preclude
reasoned judgement.
IDEM provided an analysis of back
trajectories from the Harford and
Richmond receptors to support its
contention that Indiana does not
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or maintenance at those
monitors, and that the receptors are
more impacted by local emissions
anyway. IDEM also relied on an EPA
presentation from 2018 to support this
conclusion.
As already discussed, the statute and
the case law (particularly the holdings
in Wisconsin and Maryland) make clear
that good neighbor obligations are not
merely supplementary to or deferable
until after local emission reductions are
achieved. Further, all of the receptors to
which Indiana is linked are heavily
impacted by upwind state emissions in
addition to local sources and
conditions. The Wisconsin decision’s
holding in regard to international
contribution (discussed previously) is
equally applicable to an upwind state’s
claims that some other state’s emissions,
or local emissions, are more to blame
than its own emissions. See 938 F.3d
303 at 323–25 (‘‘an upwind state can
‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause’’).
Further, EPA finds Indiana’s back
trajectory analysis to be deficient in
proving that Indiana does not contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
maintenance at the Harford and
Richmond monitors that the State was
linked to in the LADCO modeling.
Indiana’s back trajectory analysis shows
a linkage between Indiana and the
monitors when evaluating two altitudes,
10 meters and 750 meters, on several of
the exceedance days at these monitoring
sites. By only evaluating two altitudes,
Indiana neglects to consider the wide
range of heights that might show back
trajectories leading back to Indiana,
potentially further tying the state to
more exceedance events. Furthermore,
10 meters is too low of an altitude to
measure long range transport and it
would have been appropriate for
Indiana to analyze several higher
altitudes to bolster its back trajectory
analysis.
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Back trajectories alone are not
sufficient to disconnect upwind States
from downwind receptors. Relying
solely on back trajectories for
establishing linkages neglects the
myriad of factors, most importantly
photochemical reactions, that are
important for determining the
magnitude of ozone and precursor
transport from upwind states to
downwind receptors. In this regard,
EPA and LADCO modeling which
accounts for 3 dimensional
meteorological conditions, regional
emissions, and photochemical reactions
is the most complete, and technically
sound method to establish linkages
between upwind states and downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors.
The information and claims presented
by IDEM did not provide sufficient
evidence to support alternative
conclusions that EPA is proposing to
make in this action: Namely, that
several receptors exist, Indiana
contributes to those receptors above a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold, and that Indiana continues to
have good neighbor obligations that
need to be addressed for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. We therefore propose that
Indiana 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
Indiana failed to do so.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 4
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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. IDEM
identified the State’s existing NOX
control measures, consent decree
requirements, and future fuel switches
and retirements for large EGUs and nonEGUs for the years 2008 through 2017 80
States may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements. See
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such
[SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
80 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
II.B.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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provisions . . . .’’). See also CAA
section 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). However, the state did not
revise its SIP to include these emission
reductions in a revision to its SIP to
ensure the reductions were permanent
and enforceable. As a result, EPA
proposes to disapprove Indiana’s
submittal on the separate, additional
basis that Indiana has not included
permanent and enforceable emissions
reductions in its SIP as necessary to
meet the obligations of CAA section
110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).6.
6. Conclusion
Based on EPA’s evaluation of
Indiana’s SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of
Indiana’s November 12, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state’s interstate transport obligations,
because it fails to contain the necessary
provisions to eliminate emissions that
will contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state.
C. Michigan
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Michigan Regarding Step 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, Michigan relied
primarily on the LADCO modeling
released in 2018 to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this action, LADCO
performed a modeling demonstration
like that of EPA modeling released with
the March 2018 memorandum, except
with use of the ERTAC EGU Tool to
replace specific EGU information.
LADCO identified nonattainment and
maintenance receptors using EPA
methodology. EGLE elected to rely on
LADCO’s ‘‘water only’’ modeling
results, but also presented results from
EPA’s modeling released with the
March 2018 memorandum. EGLE noted
that in general, design values in the
LADCO modeling were lower. However,
since new modeling has been performed
by EPA which includes updated
emission data using the 2016v2
platform, EPA proposes to primarily
rely on the most recent modeling to
identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023.
Nonetheless, the alternative modeling
relied on by EGLE also identified a
number of nonattainment and
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9861
maintenance receptor sites in 2023. See
Table 2 on page 14 of EGLE’s submittal.
Thus, even under its alternative
modeling of 2023, EGLE acknowledges
in its submittal the existence of several
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Michigan relied on
alternative modeling to EPA’s modeling,
EGLE acknowledged in their SIP
submission that Michigan is linked
above either a 1 percent of the NAAQS
or 1 ppb or threshold to one or more
downwind receptors in 2023 (1.85 ppb
to Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Site ID: 36–
081–0124), 1.22 ppb to Queens, New
York (Site ID: 36–085–0067), and 1.03
ppb to Richmond, New York (Site ID:
55–117–0006)). Because the alternative
modeling relied on by the state also
demonstrates that a linkage exists
between the state and downwind
receptors at Step 2, EPA need not
conduct a comparative assessment of
the alternative modeling; the state
concedes that it is linked. EGLE’s
analysis corroborates the conclusion in
EPA’s most recent modeling, described
in the next section.
EGLE, relying on a concept from
outside parties listed in Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum,
attempted to justify the use of a 1 ppb
threshold at Step 2 to identify whether
the state was ‘‘linked’’ to a projected
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. In part, EGLE
attempted to justify the use of a 1 ppb
contribution threshold based on the
2018 PSD SIL guidance document.
EGLE also referenced EPA’s August
2018 memorandum, which said that
with appropriate additional analysis it
may be reasonable for states to use a 1
ppb contribution threshold, as an
alternative to a one percent threshold, at
Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate transport
framework for the purposes of
identifying linkages to downwind
receptors. As explained in Section I
above, the concepts presented in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum were neither guidance
nor determined by EPA to be consistent
with the CAA. Further, EGLE did not
explain the relevance of the SILs
Guidance to which it referred. This
guidance relates to a different provision
of the Clean Air Act regarding
implementation of the prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD)
permitting program, i.e., a program that
applies in areas that have been
designated attainment of the NAAQS,
and it is not applicable to the good
neighbor provision, which requires
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states to eliminate significant
contribution or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS at known
and ongoing air quality problem areas in
other states. Further, it is not correct to
conflate the use of the term
‘‘significance’’ as used in the SIL
guidance, with the term ‘‘contribution,’’
which is the appliable statutory term
that EPA applies at Step 2 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework.
(‘‘Significance’’ within the 4-step
framework is evaluated at Step 3
through a multifactor analysis, for those
states that are determined to
‘‘contribute’’ to downwind receptors at
Steps 1 and 2. See Section I.D.4 above.)
Given the fundamentally different
statutory objectives and context, EPA
disagrees with EGLE’s contention that
the SIL guidance is applicable in the
good neighbor context.
EGLE’s attempt to show ‘‘inflection
points’’ through collectively presenting
contribution data at each linked
receptor and its claim that 1 ppb reflects
the most meaningful inflection point are
likewise not compelling. The presented
data show a range of upwind
contribution levels captured by different
contribution thresholds depending on
which receptor is analyzed. Certain
receptors show a substantial downward
trend in captured total upwind
contribution well before a threshold of
1 ppb. Therefore, EPA does not find this
evidence supportive of a 1 ppb
threshold.
EPA does not accept Michigan’s
position that a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2 ‘‘may
not be appropriate’’ for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS due to modeling biases and
errors.81 The explanation for how the 1
percent contribution threshold was
originally derived is available in the
2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR
48208, 48237–38. Further, in the CSAPR
Update, EPA re-analyzed the threshold
for purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS
and determined it was appropriate to
continue to apply this threshold. EPA
compared the 1 percent threshold to a
0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold and a
5 percent of NAAQS threshold. EPA
found that the lower threshold did not
capture appreciably more upwind state
contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold
allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further
analysis. See Final CSAPR Update Air
Quality Modeling TSD, at 27–30 (EPA–
HQ–OAR–2015–0596–0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015
ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
81 Michigan’s
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emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5
ppb) only captures approximately 50
percent of the total upwind
contribution. Compared to a 1 percent
threshold, a 5 percent threshold would,
on average, forgo 27 percent) of the total
upwind contribution. As EPA noted in
the August 2018 memorandum, the use
of a 2 ppb contribution threshold under
the modeling released with the March
2018 memorandum would only capture
about 55 percent of all upwind
contributions, and therefore ‘‘emission
reductions from states linked at that
higher threshold may be insufficient to
address collective upwind state
contribution to downwind air quality
problems.’’31
With these figures in mind, EGLE’s
claim based on unwarranted concerns
over modeling uncertainty cannot be
accepted. Both LADCO’s and EPA’s
modeling techniques are sufficiently
reliable and fit for the purpose to
measure upwind contribution levels
down to at least one 1 percent of the
NAAQS. EPA’s recommended model
attainment test is based on application
of the model in a relative sense rather
than relying upon absolute model
predictions.82 All models have
limitations resulting from uncertainties
in inputs and scientific formulation. To
minimize the effects of these
uncertainties, the modeling is anchored
to base period measured data in EPA’s
guidance approach for projecting design
values. Notably, EPA also uses our
source apportionment modeling in a
relative sense when calculating the
average contribution metric (used to
identify linkages). In this method the
magnitude of the contribution metric is
tied to the magnitude of the projected
average design value which is tied to the
base period average measured design
value. EPA’s guidance has not
established a bright-line criteria for
judging whether or not statistical
measures of model performance
constitute acceptable or unacceptable
model performance. So, contrary to
what Michigan appears to be claiming
with regards to modeling biases, there
are no EPA recommended measures of
allowable error. Although EPA does not
typically focus on using particular
benchmarks as the sole criteria for
model performance, EPA notes that the
model performance for the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
emissions platform is generally within
82 See
Section 4.1’ ‘‘Overview of Modeled
Attainment Test in EPA Modeling Guidance for
Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5,
and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454–R–
18–009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modelingguidance-documents.
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the benchmarks recommended by
Emery.83
EPA has successfully applied a 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold to
identify linked upwind states in three
prior rulemakings. And the D.C. Circuit
has also declined to establish bright line
criteria for model performance. In
upholding EPA’s approach to evaluating
interstate transport in CSAPR, the D.C.
Circuit held that they would not
‘‘invalidate EPA’s predictions solely
because there might be discrepancies
between those predictions and the real
world. That possibility is inherent in the
enterprise of prediction.’’ EME Homer
City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d
118, 135 (2015). The court continued to
note that ‘‘the fact that a ‘model does
not fit every application perfectly is no
criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.’ ’’
Id. at 135–36 (quoting Chemical
Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28
F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
EPA’s August 2018 memorandum
provided that whether use of a 1 ppb
threshold is appropriate must be based
on an evaluation of state-specific
circumstances, and no such evaluation
was included in the submission. EPA’s
experience with the alternative Step 2
thresholds is further discussed in
Section I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA
is considering withdrawing the August
2018 memorandum.
Based on EPA’s updated modeling (as
well as the LADCO’s 2018 modeling
(with water) the state elected to rely on
in its SIP submission), the state is
projected to contribute greater than both
the 1 percent and alternative 1 ppb
thresholds. While EPA does not, in this
action, approve of the state’s application
of the 1 ppb threshold, based on its
linkages greater than 1 ppb to projected
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptors, the state’s use of
this alternative threshold at Step 2 of
the 4-Step interstate framework is
inconsequential to our action on this
SIP submission.
3. Results of EPA’s Step 1 and Step 2
Modeling and Findings for Michigan
As described in Section I, 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 Michigan contributes at or
above the threshold of 1 percent of the
83 Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G.
Russel, M. Talat Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh
Kumar (2017). Recommendations on statistics and
benchmarks to assess photochemical model
performance, Journal of the Air & Waste
Management Association, 67:5,582–598, DOI:
10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
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2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
9863
Table 4, the data 84 indicate that in 2023, to nonattainment or maintenance-only
emissions from Michigan contribute
receptors in Illinois, Connecticut,
greater than one percent of the standard Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.85
TABLE 4—MICHIGAN LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
(county, state)
Nonattainment/
maintenance
170314201 ...........................
170310076 ...........................
90099002 .............................
170317002 ...........................
170310032 ...........................
550590025 ...........................
550590019 ...........................
90010017 .............................
551010020 ...........................
90013007 .............................
170310001 ...........................
90019003 .............................
420170012 ...........................
Cook, IL ...............................
Cook, IL ...............................
New Haven, CT ...................
Cook, IL ...............................
Cook, IL ...............................
Kenosha, WI ........................
Kenosha, WI ........................
Fairfield, CT .........................
Racine, CT ...........................
Fairfield, CT .........................
Cook, IL ...............................
Fairfield, CT .........................
Bucks, PA ............................
Maintenance ...........................
Maintenance ...........................
Nonattainment .........................
Maintenance ...........................
Maintenance ...........................
Maintenance ...........................
Nonattainment .........................
Nonattainment .........................
Nonattainment .........................
Nonattainment .........................
Maintenance ...........................
Nonattainment .........................
Nonattainment .........................
Therefore, based on EPA’s evaluation
of the information submitted by EGLE,
and based on EPA’s most recent
modeling results for 2023, EPA proposes
to find that Michigan is linked at Steps
1 and 2 and has an obligation to assess
potential emissions reductions from
sources or other emissions activity at
Step 3 of the 4-step framework. EPA
therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the
4-step interstate transport framework to
assess the 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.
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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 for relevant
pollutants and assess potential,
84 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file
‘‘2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx’’ which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
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2023
Average
design value
(ppb)
69.9
69.3
71.8
70.1
69.8
69.2
72.8
73.0
71.3
74.2
69.6
76.1
70.7
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
73.4
72.1
73.9
73.0
72.4
72.3
73.7
73.7
73.2
75.1
73.4
76.4
72.2
Michigan
contribution
(ppb)
1.67
1.54
1.27
1.26
1.21
1.17
1.07
1.07
1.02
0.94
0.93
0.92
0.75
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. 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 EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner 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 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.
EGLE did not conduct a sufficient
step 3 analysis in Michigan’s SIP
submission. As explained previously, at
Step 3 EGLE instead applied a weight of
evidence analysis to argue that the state
needed no additional emission
reductions despite concluding Michigan
was linked to three receptors at Step 2.
The evidence presented in EGLE’s
submittal consisted primarily of support
for the argument that upwind states
should have a lower responsibility to
other states when the upwind state is
only linked to maintenance receptors.
EGLE’s analysis focused on the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin maintenance
receptor (Site ID: 36–081–0124), as
EGLE concluded it was the receptor to
which Michigan was projected to
contribute the most in 2023 at 1.85 ppb.
EGLE also relied on several ideas in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum to further discount the
importance of its own emissions. As
noted in Section I, the ideas listed in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum were not agency guidance
nor had EPA determined them to be
consistent with the requirements of the
CAA. EPA will thoroughly review the
technical and legal justifications ELGE
made put forward in their attempt to use
them as flexibilities.
In its submittal, EGLE cited a concept
in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum to ‘‘[c]onsider whether
the remedy for upwind states linked to
maintenance receptors could be less
85 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 Illinois 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 & Contributions Revised
CSAPR Update.xlsx’’ in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
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stringent than those linked to
nonattainment receptors’’ and argued
that because the CAA incudes different
SIP development requirements for
nonattainment and maintenance areas,
that likewise nonattainment and
maintenance areas should be treated
differently in good neighbor SIPs. EGLE
posited that because the CAA does not
require emission reductions from
maintenance areas, then upwind states
can potentially make a sufficient
showing they have no obligation to
reduce emissions to monitors in other
states projected to be maintaining the
NAAQS. EGLE specifically noted that
(1) the projected exceedance at the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor is very
small, (2) the majority of the projected
contribution to the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin receptor is from federally
regulated sources or sources Michigan
cannot otherwise regulate, (3)
Michigan’s projected contribution to all
three linked receptors is small
compared to the projected contribution
from other states and sources, (4) there
are large projected contributions to the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor from
international emissions, (5) Michigan’s
contributions to projected exceedance at
the three maintenance receptors are
small relative to other sources that also
contribute more than 1 ppb to those
receptors, (6) the modeling variability is
greater than Michigan’s contributions to
the amount of the projected exceedance
at each linked receptor and (7) there is
a downward emissions trend in
Michigan.
As a general matter, EPA disagrees
with EGLE’s premise that if no emission
reductions are needed for the receptor to
which Michigan contributes the most,
that automatically no emission
reductions are needed for the other
receptors to which Michigan is linked.
EGLE unreasonably failed to analyze
receptor-specific circumstances present
at other receptors to which it was
linked, and this is particularly the case
because EGLE chose to rely so heavily
on receptor-specific information to
support their conclusions with respect
to the Sheboygan receptor. Further,
while the set of receptors to which
Michigan is linked has changed in the
most recent modeling (and now
includes nonattainment receptors), EPA
disagrees with Michigan’s arguments to
the extent such reasoning could be
applied to Michigan’s linkages
identified in EPA’s 2016v2 emissions
platform modeling.
EGLE argued that because the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor, had a
small projected exceedance over the
NAAQS, requiring additional emission
reductions in Michigan would be
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‘‘premature’’ and ‘‘burdensome.’’ 86
EGLE’s premise goes beyond the
concept in Attachment A to the 2018
memorandum that emission-reduction
obligations as to maintenance receptors
may be different; rather, EGLE argues
that not only should Michigan have
lower obligations with respect to
maintenance receptors, but no
obligations at all. Under the D.C.
Circuit’s decision in North Carolina,
states and EPA are required to give
independent significance to the
‘‘interference with maintenance’’ prong
of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). 531 F.3d at
910. Since CSAPR, EPA’s nationally
consistent policy framework for
addressing interstate ozone transport
has given meaning to this prong through
a separate definition of maintenance
receptors at step 1 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework. For
states linked only to those receptors,
EPA has found it appropriate to apply
an emissions control solution that is
uniform with the strategy applied for
states that are linked to nonattainment
receptors. See 76 FR at 48271. EPA’s
approach to addressing interference
with maintenance under prong 2 for
ozone NAAQS has been upheld twice,
including on remand from the Supreme
Court decision EGLE cited. See EME
Homer City Generation, L.P., 795 F.3d at
136; Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 325–27. See
also 86 FR at 23074. Particularly given
this context, Michigan’s SIP does not
provide sufficient evidence to support
less stringent or even no standards of
emissions reductions relative to what
would result from EPA’s historical
approach of addressing emissions
activities from upwind states that are
linked to maintenance-only receptors.
Further, EPA believes it would be
inconsistent with the CAA for EPA to
identify receptors that are at risk of
NAAQS violations given certain
conditions due to transported upwind
emissions and then not prohibit the
emissions that place the receptor at risk.
The Supreme Court held that it was a
permissible interpretation of the statute
to apportion responsibility for states
linked to nonattainment receptors
considering ‘‘both the magnitude of
upwind states’ contributions and the
cost associated with eliminating them.’’
EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 518–19. It
is equally reasonable and permissible to
use these factors to apportion
responsibility among upwind states
linked to maintenance receptors because
the goal in both instances is to prohibit
the ‘‘amounts’’ of pollution that will
either significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
86 See
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maintenance of the NAAQS downwind.
See Id. 515 n.18 (finding EPA’s uniformcost approach reasonable as to both
prongs of the good neighbor provision).
EPA’s updated modeling indicates that
Michigan will remain linked to
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance receptors for the 2015
ozone standard at least through 2023.
Consequently, EPA believes EGLE’s
assertion that upwind states linked to
maintenance-only receptors should be
held to less stringent standards of
emissions reductions (as compared to
states linked to a nonattainment
receptor) is inappropriate, whether
applied to its downwind linkages in
either the modeling EGLE relied on or
in EPA’s more recent modeling.
EGLE also claimed that Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum
suggested states linked only to
maintenance receptors should consider
whether emissions reduction factors
should be influenced by high
international contributions and high
contributions from other states and
sources. As a concept presented by
outside parties, Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum listed an idea
that states may consider whether air
quality, cost, or emission reduction
factors should be weighted differently in
areas where international contributions
are relatively high. EPA did not at the
time endorse this concept, nor does it
do so now. However, EGLE did not
present an approach or explain how
international contributions to the linked
receptors should influence the
weighting of air quality, cost, or
emission reductions at Step 3. Rather,
EGLE suggested that if a receptor is near
an international border, then
international contribution could simply
be removed from that monitor’s
projected design value. This is neither
appropriate nor acceptable under the
good neighbor provision or any other
provision of the Clean Air Act.
Michigan’s approach effectively takes
the position that no air quality problem
should be deemed to exist at a
downwind receptor location under the
false assumption that the international
portion of emissions affecting that area
simply do not exist. EPA categorically
rejects this approach as an entirely
unacceptable form of air quality
planning.
EGLE further cited contributions from
other states and sources to the linkages
it identified to conclude it would be
‘‘unreasonable’’ for linked states with
relatively low contributions to reduce
their contributions.87 The Step 2
threshold (whether at 1 percent or 1
87 See
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ppb) is intended to reflect the
‘‘collective contribution’’ nature of the
interstate ozone transport problem and
the complexity of the various linkages
among states. Cf. EME Homer City, 572
U.S. at 515–16. The threshold functions
as a screening step toward a more
detailed analysis of emission-reduction
opportunities across all of the states that
contribute to some extent (i.e., above the
threshold) to a downwind air quality
problem. To simply conclude that
nothing need be done regarding
emissions that exceed the step 2
threshold because those emissions can
be characterized as ‘‘small’’ compared to
others’ emissions (by the upwind state’s
lights at least) is an attempt to simply
move the ‘‘contribution’’ threshold at
Step 2 and is clearly insufficient at Step
3.
Whether emissions from other states
or other countries also contribute to the
same downwind air quality issue is
irrelevant in assessing whether a
downwind state has an air quality
problem, or whether an upwind state is
significantly contributing to that
problem. States are not obligated under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce
emissions sufficient on their own to
resolve downwind receptors’
nonattainment or maintenance
problems. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ‘‘significant
contribution’’ or ‘‘interference’’ with the
ability of other states to attain or
maintain the NAAQS.
Further, the court in Wisconsin
explained that downwind jurisdictions
often may need to heavily rely on
emissions reductions from upwind
states in order to achieve attainment of
the NAAQS, 938 F.3d at 316–17; such
states would face increased regulatory
burdens including the risk of bumping
up to a higher nonattainment
classification if attainment is not
reached by the relevant deadline,
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204. Indeed, the
D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin specifically
rejected petitioner arguments suggesting
that upwind states should be excused
from good neighbor obligations on the
basis that some other source of
emissions (whether international or
another upwind state) could be
considered the ‘‘but-for’’ cause of
downwind air quality problem. 938 F.3d
at 323–324. The court viewed
petitioners’ arguments as essentially an
argument ‘‘that an upwind state
‘contributes significantly’ to downwind
nonattainment only when its emissions
are the sole cause of downwind
nonattainment.’’ 938 F.3d at 324. The
court explained that ‘‘an upwind state
can ‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
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not the but-for cause.’’ Id. at 324–325.
See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571
F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (rejecting
the argument ‘‘that ‘significantly
contribute’ unambiguously means
‘strictly cause’ ’’ because there is ‘‘no
reason why the statute precludes EPA
from determining that [an] addition of
[pollutant] into the atmosphere is
significant even though a nearby
county’s nonattainment problem would
still persist in its absence’’); Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ‘‘there
likely would have been no violation at
all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]’’ is
‘‘merely a rephrasing of the but-for
causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County.’’). Therefore, a state is
not excused from eliminating its
significant contribution on the basis that
emissions from other sources also
contribute some amount of pollution to
the same receptors to which the state is
linked. Thus, the state’s arguments
related to contributions from other
sources, including removing
international emissions from projected
design values at the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin monitor, are insufficient at
Step 3 of the analysis.
EGLE’s submission included an
apportionment analysis to quantify
individual states’ relative responsibility
of the projected exceedances at the three
linked receptors. EGLE cited
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum as well as EME Homer
City Generation to suggest Michigan
could be found to be only responsible
for eliminating its share of the projected
exceedances relative to other states that
also contribute more than 1 ppb to the
same receptors. We first note that this
approach is a deviation from EPA’s
traditional approach of apportioning
upwind-state responsibility at Step 3
using a uniform cost of control metric
set at a level that maximizes costeffectiveness of emissions reductions in
relation to downwind state impacts
across all linked states. Thus, this is not
how EPA has interpreted the statutory
term ‘‘significant’’ in the past, and EPA
does not reach a conclusion whether
this approach would be approvable, had
EGLE had imposed emissions
reductions in line with this logic. We do
not need to reach that point in the
analysis, however, because, having
selected that approach to defining its
obligations, EGLE proceeded to ignore
the result.
EGLE’s submission identified
Michigan’s proportional contribution as
less than 0.12 ppb to the three linked
receptors and .05 ppb to the Sheboygan,
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9865
Wisconsin receptor. Having
acknowledged Michigan was
responsible for eliminating up to 0.12
ppb of contribution to the downwind
receptors, EGLE claimed that modeling
‘‘noise’’ made it ‘‘difficult’’ to require
that amount of reductions from
Michigan sources. EGLE further opined
that the downwind jurisdiction’s share
of responsibilities likely made
Michigan’s contributions even lower
and the projected exceedances were so
small that those three receptors were
likely to not have difficulty attaining the
NAAQS anyway. EPA has routinely
been capable of successfully
implementing good neighbor obligations
through the CSAPR framework, and
achieving significant downwind air
quality improvements through upwindstate reductions, at levels of ‘‘significant
contribution’’ comparable or even less
than those found in Michigan’s
submittal, irrespective of alleged
‘‘modeling noise.’’ See Wisconsin, 938
F.3d at 322–23 (rejecting Wisconsin’s
argument that it should not face good
neighbor obligations on the basis that its
emission reductions would only
improve a downwind receptor by two
ten-thousandths of a part per billion).
After measuring Michigan’s
significant contribution, EGLE suggested
that modeling uncertainty was too great
to either require emissions reductions or
demonstrate that EGLE had any linkages
to maintenance receptors at all. But
EGLE had measured the state’s
significant contribution and was
therefore identifying the measurable
amount of significant contribution the
state was legally responsible for
eliminating. See Michigan v. EPA, 213
F.3d 663, 683–84 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
(significant contribution must be
‘‘measurable’’). Further, scientific
uncertainty may only be invoked to
avoid comporting with the requirements
of the CAA when ‘‘the scientific
uncertainty is so profound that it
precludes . . . reasoned judgment’’
Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438
(2007). See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318–
19 (‘‘Scientific uncertainty, however,
does not excuse EPA’s failure to align
the deadline for eliminating upwind
States’ significant contributions with the
deadline for downwind attainment of
the NAAQS.’’). See also EME Homer
City, 795 F.3d 118, 135–36 (‘‘We will
not invalidate EPA’s predictions solely
because there might be discrepancies
between those predictions and the real
world. That possibility is inherent in the
enterprise of prediction.’’). EGLE’s
arguments related to modeling
uncertainty or ‘‘noise’’ do not establish
a level of uncertainty so high as to
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preclude reasoned judgement. EGLE
argued that the three maintenance
receptors at issue could maintain the
NAAQS without further emissions
reductions from any linked upwind
state. In support, EGLE’s submission
provided a list of on-the-way and onthe-books emission reductions measures
to argue that Michigan’s good neighbor
obligations were already satisfied. EGLE
provided references to certain facility
retirements in Michigan, Federal mobile
source rules, Federal rules reducing
NOX and VOCs such as MATS and the
Oil and Natural Gas Industry Standards,
the NOX SIP Call, and CSAPR Update.
EPA’s assessment of future air quality
conditions generally already accounts
for on-the-books emission reductions
and the most up-to-date forecast of
future emissions in the absence of the
transport policy being evaluated (i.e.,
base case conditions).88 As described in
more detail in Section I, EPA’s latest
projections of the baseline EGU
emissions uses the version 6—Summer
2021 Reference Case of the IPM.89 The
IPM version 6—Summer 2021 Reference
Case uses the NEEDS v6 database as its
source for data on all existing and
planned-committed units. Units are
removed from the NEEDS inventory
only if a high degree of certainty could
be assigned to future implementation of
the announced future closure or
retirement. Any retirements excluded
from the NEEDS v6 inventory can be
viewed in the NEEDS spreadsheet.90
The inventory for these projections
takes account of the retirement of the
Marquette Board of Light & Power
Shiras Steam Plant, Lansing Board of
Water and Light, Eckert Station, Units 1
and 3–6; DTE, River Rouge, Unit 3; We
Energies, Presque Isle Power Plant,
Units 5–9; DTE St. Clair, Units 1–4 and
6–7; DTE Trenton Channel, Unit 9;
Wyandotte, Unit 5; Consumers Energy
Karn, Units 1–2.
Additionally, EPA’s modeling using
the 2016v2 emissions platform accounts
for the onroad and nonroad rules that
Michigan identified, such as the Tier 3
88 See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at
68979.
89 Detailed information and documentation of
EPA’s Base Case, including all the underlying
assumptions, data sources, and architecture
parameters can be found on EPA’s website at:
https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sectormodeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021reference-case.
90 We note that for one of the units EGLE listed
as projected to retire, Wyandotte—Unit 5, this
facility was still included in the NEEDS as
operating. Additionally, the unit IDs listed by EGLE
in the SIP submittal may be different from those
listed in EPA’s NEEDS v6 inventory—NEEDS v6
Summer 2021 Reference Case, however we have
verified that these emissions decreases have been
accounted for in our most recent modeling.
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Motor Vehicle Emission and Fuel
Standards, to the extent still on the
books and projected to have ozoneprecursor emissions consequences.91
In other words, changes in the
emissions inventory and on-the-books
controls relevant to emissions in 2023
that EGLE claims EPA missed in its
prior modeling have now been
incorporated into EPA’s most recent
modeling of 2023 using the 2016v2
emissions platform. This modeling
projects a continuing contribution from
Michigan to thirteen out-of-state
receptors above a threshold of 1 percent
of the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite
these measures—nine of which have
contribution from Michigan above 1 ppb
and seven of which are nonattainment
receptors (see Table 4).92 Therefore, in
light of continuing contribution to out of
state receptors from Michigan
notwithstanding these identified on-thebooks control measures, EGLE’s SIP
submission should have evaluated the
availability of additional air quality
controls to improve downwind air
quality at nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 3.
Nor does EGLE’s listing of existing
control measures or overall emission
trends serve as an adequate substitute
for a Step 3 analysis of additional
potential emission reductions. In
general, the listing of existing or on-theway control measures, whether
approved into the State’s SIP or not,
does not substitute for a complete step
3 analysis under EPA’s 4-step
framework to define ‘‘significant
contribution.’’ ELGE did not provide an
assessment of the overall effects of these
measures, when the emissions
reductions would be achieved, and what
the overall resulting air quality effects
would be at identified out of state
receptors. EGLE did not identify which
portion of ongoing emissions trends
were not already accounted for in steps
1 and 2 of the analysis (EPA addresses
specific identified changes in emissions
inventory in the discussion above).
EGLE did not evaluate additional,
potential emissions control
opportunities, or their costs or impacts,
or attempt to analyze whether, if
applied more broadly across linked
91 See Technical Support Document (TSD)
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling Platform
included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
92 Notably, in focusing its Step 3 analysis only on
a single receptor, EGLE gave no weight to the scope
of its contribution to downwind air quality
problems. Linkages to thirteen receptor sites in
EPA’s most recent modeling indicate that
Michigan’s emissions have widespread effects in
other states—effects that the State’s SIP submittal
would do nothing to address.
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states, the emissions reductions would
constitute the elimination of significant
contribution on a regional scale. The
state did not offer an explanation as to
whether any faster or more stringent
emissions reductions that may be
available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although 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. This would have been
similar to the approach to defining
significant contribution that EPA has
applied in prior rulemakings such as
CSAPR and or the CSAPR Update, even
if such an analysis is not technically
mandatory.
Further, the state’s attempt to
categorize certain sectors of emissions
as beyond its regulatory control is
unpersuasive. Clearly the state
possesses regulatory authority over its
EGU and non-EGU large stationary
sources as well as authority over other
types of ‘‘emissions activity within the
state,’’ see CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i).
And while mobile sources are generally
regulated at the Federal level under title
II of the Clean Air Act, the state also has
the authority to undertake any number
of measures to reduce emissions from
mobile sources through means and
techniques that are not preempted by
title II. See, e.g., CAA sections 182(b)(3),
182(b)(4), 182(c)(3), 182(c)(4), 182(c)(5),
182(d)(1), 182(e)(3), and 182(e)(4)
(identifying programs to control mobile
source emissions that states are required
to implement depending on the degree
of ozone nonattainment). Specifically
with respect to EGUs, EPA notes that no
EGU NOX control program has yet been
established to implement good neighbor
requirements for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Thus reliance on prior
programs, such as the CSAPR Update or
Revised CSAPR Update, is misplaced,
since those programs only addressed
good neighbor obligations under the less
stringent 2008 ozone NAAQS.
Finally, under the Wisconsin
decision, states and 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 Michigan 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 that would go into effect after
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2024. 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 EPA to form a
judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor
obligations have been met.
For the reasons listed above, EPA
proposes to find that Michigan has not
satisfied its obligations of the good
neighbor SIP provisions at Step 3 of the
4-step transport framework. We propose
that Michigan was required to analyze
emissions more fully 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 Michigan failed to
do so.
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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
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. EGLE
provided references to on the books and
on the way Federal mobile source rules,
MATS and the Oil and Natural Gas
Industry Standards, the NOX SIP Call,
and CSAPR Update. As an initial matter,
pointing to or listing existing state or
Federal control measures is not what is
called for at Step 4. Rather Step 4
requires the development of permanent
and enforceable measures to implement
those measures determined to be
required at Step 3. EGLE claimed that
nothing was required of Michigan at
Step 3 and thus EGLE stated that it did
not believe anything was required at
Step 4. Therefore, we do not interpret
the list of existing state or Federal
measures to be EGLE’s attempt at
implementation at Step 4.
Because Michigan’s SIP submission
did not contain an evaluation of
additional emission control
opportunities (or establish that no
additional controls are required), no
information was provided at Step 4. As
a result, EPA proposes to disapprove
Michigan’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).
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6. Conclusion
Based on EPA’s evaluation of EGLE’s
SIP submission, EPA is proposing to
find that the portion of Michigan’s
March 5, 2019 SIP submission
addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state’s interstate transport obligations,
because it fails to contain the necessary
provisions to eliminate emissions that
will contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state.
D. Minnesota
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Minnesota Regarding Steps 1 and 2
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, Minnesota relied
on both LADCO modeling and EPA
modeling released in the March 2018
memorandum and to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. As described
previously, LADCO performed a
modeling demonstration like that of
EPA’s 2018 transport modeling, except
with use of the ERTAC EGU Tool to
supplement state specific EGU
information. LADCO identified
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors using EPA methodology.
MPCA presented several nonattainment
and maintenance receptors identified by
both LADCO modeling, showing ‘‘no
water’’ and ‘‘with water’’ results and
EPA modeling released with the March
2018 memorandum. Since new
modeling has been performed by EPA
with updated emission data, EPA
proposes to primarily rely on the most
recent modeling to identify
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023. MPCA made several
criticisms of EPA’s method for
projecting EGU emissions in EPA’s
modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum. Although EPA does not
agree with those criticisms, we note that
EPA is relying on a different method for
projecting emissions from EGUs in the
updated modeling using the 2016v2
emissions platform as explained in more
detail in Section I.
Nonetheless, the alternative modeling
relied on by MPCA also identified a
number of nonattainment and
maintenance receptor sites in 2023. See
Tables 2 and 3 on pages 8 and 9 of
MPCA’s submittal. Thus, even under the
alternative modeling of 2023, MPCA
acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and
maintenance receptors.
At Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate
transport framework, MPCA relied on
both LADCO modeling and EPA
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9867
modeling released in the March 2018
memorandum to identify upwind state
linkages to nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023. Based
on both modeling results, MPCA
concluded that Minnesota would
contribute below 1 percent of the
NAAQS to receptors in 2023. However,
in this proposal, EPA relies on the
Agency’s most recently available
modeling, which uses a more recent
base year and more up-to-date emissions
inventories, 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 5
(explained in the next section), the
updated EPA modeling identifies
Minnesota’s maximum contribution to a
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor is greater than 1
percent of the standard (i.e., 0.70 ppb).
Although the state did not rely on a 1
ppb contribution threshold in its SIP
submittal, EPA recognizes that the
modeling the MPCA used relied on the
most recently available EPA modeling at
the time the state submitted its SIP
submittal (EPA modeling released in the
March 2018 memorandum as well as the
LADCO modeling). The 2018 modeling
indicated the state was not projected to
contribute above one 1 percent of the
NAAQS to a projected downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptor.
Therefore, the state may not have
considered analyzing the reasonableness
and appropriateness of a 1 ppb
threshold at Step 2 of the 4-step Step
interstate transport framework per the
August 2018 memorandum. EPA’s
August 2018 memorandum provided
that whether use of a 1 ppb threshold
is appropriate must be based on an
evaluation of state-specific
circumstances, and no such evaluation
was included in the submission. EPA’s
experience with the alternative Step 2
thresholds is further discussed in
Section I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA
is considering withdrawing the August
2018 memorandum.
2. Results of EPA’s Step 1 and Step 2
Modeling and Findings for Minnesota
As described in Section I, 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 Minnesota contributes at or
above the threshold of 1 percent of the
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
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Table 5, the data 93 indicate that in 2023,
emissions from Minnesota contribute
greater than 1 percent of the standards
to two maintenance-only receptors in
Illinois. These modeling results are
consistent with the results of a prior
round of 2023 modeling using the
2016v1 emissions platform that became
available to the public in the fall of 2020
in the Revised CSAPR Update, as noted
in Section I, which showed that
Minnesota had a maximum contribution
of 0.86 ppb to a nonattainment or
maintenance receptor in 2023.94
TABLE 5—MINNESOTA LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
Nonattainment/maintenance
170310001 .............................
170310076 .............................
Cook .....................................
Cook .....................................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
69.6
69.3
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
73.4
72.1
Minnesota
contribution
(ppb)
0.97
0.79
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 for relevant
pollutants and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. 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 EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner 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 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. MPCA did not conduct such
an analysis in their SIP submission.
Neither the LADCO modeling nor
EPA modeling released with the March
2018 memorandum indicated that
Minnesota would contribute over 1
percent of the NAAQS to any
nonattainment or maintenance receptor
in 2023. Therefore, MPCA stated they
did not consider it necessary to consider
further emission reductions because
Minnesota was not projected to
contribute to downwind air quality
issues above the contribution threshold.
Despite this, Minnesota provided
supporting analysis to strengthen the
conclusions of the modeling results.
MPCA presented evidence that ambient
ozone concentrations in Minnesota had
been at or below the NAAQS from the
late 1990s to 2017, and that NOX and
VOCs emissions had been steadily
decreasing from 2002 through 2015.
MPCA asserted that these trends would
translate to continued reductions in
ozone being transported from the state
to nonattainment or maintenance
receptors. Additionally, MPCA listed
several state and Federal regulatory
programs that control or incentivize
NOX and VOC limits, including the
CSAPR NOX trading program.
EPA does not dispute the evidence
about ambient ozone concentrations and
NOX and VOC emissions trends or
existence of the NOX and VOC controls
presented by Minnesota.95 However, as
explained in Section I.C, the most recent
EPA modeling captures numerous
updates to the 2016 emissions platform,
including all existing CSAPR trading
programs, in the baseline,96 and that
modeling confirms that most these
control programs were not sufficient to
eliminate Minnesota’s linkage at Steps 1
and 2 under the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
The state therefore has good neighbor
obligations under the 2015 8-hour
NAAQS and is obligated at Step 3 to
assess additional control measures using
a multifactor analysis.
MPCA identified state permitting
programs, rules, voluntary programs,
and the CSAPR NOX trading program,
93 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
94 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 Minnesota 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.
95 See Minnesota’s SIP submittal Figures 1–3,
pages 10–11.
96 For a complete explanation of air quality
modeling of the 2016v2 emissions platform
modeling, please see ‘‘AQ Modeling TSD_2016v2
Platform.pdf’’ included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
Based on EPA’s evaluation of the
information submitted by MPCA, and
based on EPA’s most recent modeling
results for 2023 using the 2016v2
emissions platform, EPA proposes to
find that Minnesota is linked at Steps 1
and 2 and has an obligation to assess
potential emissions reductions from
sources or other emissions activity at
Step 3 of the 4-Step framework. Despite
the linkage EPA determines exists at
Step 2, the state concluded in its
submission based on other factors that
it should not be considered to
significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in other
states. Therefore, EPA will proceed to
evaluate MPCA’s additional analyses at
Step 3 of the 4-Step interstate transport
framework.
4. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 3
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among others, as NOX and VOC control
measures which satisfy Minnesota’s
good neighbor obligations under the
2015 ozone NAAQs. In general,
however, the listing of existing or onthe-way control measures, whether
approved into the state’s SIP or not,
does not substitute for a complete Step
3 analysis under EPA’s 4-step
framework to define ‘‘significant
contribution.’’ Minnesota’s submission
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. Minnesota’s
submission 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 submission did not
contain an explanation as to whether
any faster or more stringent emissions
reductions that may be available were
prohibitively costly or infeasible.
Furthermore, states may not rely on
non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements, and Minnesota has not
revised its SIP to contain the CSAPR
NOX trading program or the non-SIP
approved rules MPCA identified. See
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such
[SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
provisions . . . .’’). See also CAA
section 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).
As mentioned above, EPA has newly
available information that indicates
sources in Minnesota are linked to
downwind air quality problems for the
2015 ozone standard. Therefore, EPA
proposes to disapprove Minnesota’s
August 20, 2018 interstate transport SIP
submission on the separate, additional
basis that the SIP submittal did not
assess additional emissions control
opportunities.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-Step interstate
transport frameworks 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. MPCA
identified state permitting programs,
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rules, voluntary programs, and the
CSAPR NOX trading program, among
others, as NOX and VOC control
measures which are not all part of
Minnesota’s SIP. Although the state has
since incorporated some of these control
measures into their SIP, Minnesota did
not revise its SIP to include all these
emission reductions in a revision to its
SIP to ensure the reductions were
permanent and enforceable and
eliminate their significant contribution
to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS. As a result,
EPA proposes to disapprove
Minnesota’s submittal on the separate,
additional basis that the Minnesota 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 EPA’s evaluation of
Minnesota’s SIP submission and after
consideration of updated EPA modeling
using the 2016-based emissions
modeling platform, EPA is proposing to
find that the portion of Minnesota’s
October 1, 2018 SIP submission
addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state’s interstate transport obligations
for 2015 ozone NAAQS, because it fails
to contain the necessary provisions to
eliminate emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in any other state.
E. Ohio
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Ohio Regarding Steps 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, OEPA relied on
LADCO modeling released in 2018 to
identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023. As
described previously in this action,
LADCO performed modeling similar to
EPA’s modeling released in the March
2018 memorandum, except with use of
ERTAC for projecting future year EGU
emissions. LADCO identified
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors using EPA methodology.
OEPA elected to rely on LADCO’s ‘‘3x3’’
modeling results, which identified
similar receptors to EPA’s modeling
included in the March 2018
memorandum.
However, OEPA elected to use an
alternative method developed by TCEQ
for identifying maintenance receptors at
Step 1 of the 4-step framework. Using
the TCEQ method to identify
maintenance receptors OEPA claimed
that four maintenance receptors based
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9869
on EPA’s approach would not have
difficulty maintaining the NAAQS in
2023. OEPA relied on the potential
flexibilities in Attachment A to the
March 2018 in support of its use of the
TCEQ method. As explained in Section
I.C above, the concepts presented in
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum were neither guidance
nor determined by EPA to be consistent
with the CAA. OEPA submitted Ohio’s
SIP submission before EPA released its
October 2018 memorandum discussing
maintenance receptors. Regardless, EPA
will examine the legal and technical
merits of OEPA’s arguments related to
the use of an alternative maintenanceonly definition in light of the October
2018 memorandum. OEPA has not
adequately explained or justified how
TCEQ’s method for identifying
maintenance receptors reasonably
identifies areas that will have difficulty
maintaining the NAAQS. That is, EPA
proposes to find that OEPA has
provided no sound technical basis for
how TCEQ’s methodology gives
meaning to the CAA’s instruction that
states submit good neighbor SIPs that
prohibit their states’ emissions from
interfering with the maintenance of the
NAAQS in another state.
In North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d
896, 909–11 (D.C. Cir. 2008), the D.C.
Circuit rejected EPA’s CAIR on the basis
that EPA had not adequately given
meaning to the phrase ‘‘interfere with
maintenance’’ in the good neighbor
provision. Specifically, North Carolina
argued that it had counties that were
projected to attain the NAAQS in the
future analytic year, but were at risk of
falling back into nonattainment due to
interference from upwind sources,
particularly given year-to-year
variability in ozone levels. The court
agreed, holding that EPA’s rule did not
adequately protect ‘‘[a]reas that find
themselves barely meeting attainment.’’
Id. at 910. Consequently, EPA has
developed a methodology, used in its
2011 CSAPR and its 2016 CSAPR
Update and Revised CSAPR Update, for
identifying areas that may struggle to
maintain the NAAQS. See 76 FR at
48227–28. EPA’s approach to addressing
maintenance receptors was upheld in
the EME Homer City litigation. See 795
F.3d 118, 136–37. It was also upheld in
Wisconsin. 938 F.3d at 325–26. In
Wisconsin, the court noted that four
upwind states were linked only to
maintenance receptors and rejected the
argument that application of the same
control level as EPA imposes for those
states linked to nonattainment receptors
was unreasonable or unlawful absent a
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particularized showing of overcontrol.
Id. at 327.
In order to explain the differences
between TCEQ’s and EPA’s
methodology for identifying
maintenance receptors, it is helpful to
provide some additional context for
how EPA projects future air quality.
EPA’s air quality modeling guidance has
long recommended developing a base
design value (i.e., the design value that
will be used as a starting point to model
and analyze for purposes of projecting
future air quality concentrations) that is
the average of three design values
spanning a five-year period, centered
around one year for which an emissions
inventory will be submitted (e.g., if 2011
was the base emissions inventory year,
a state would use monitored values from
2009–2011, 2010–2012, 2011–2013 as
the starting point for projecting air
quality concentrations in future years).
The average of these three design values
is then multiplied by a relative response
factor to generate an average design
value for the future year. If a receptor’s
average future year design value is
greater than or equal to the level of the
NAAQS, and the receptor has recent
monitored data that violates the
NAAQS, that receptor is considered a
‘‘nonattainment’’ receptor at step 1. To
identify maintenance receptors, EPA’s
methodology looks to the highest design
value of the three DVs used to calculate
the 5-year weighted average design
value (e.g., in the 2011 example, if
2009–2011 had the highest design value
of 2009–2011, 2010–2012, and 2011–
2013). EPA then applies the same
relative response factor to that highest
design value to generate a projected
future maximum design value. Where a
receptor’s maximum design value
exceeds the level of the NAAQS, EPA
has deemed those receptors to be
‘‘maintenance’’ receptors. This
methodology was designed to address
the D.C. Circuit’s holding that the CAA’s
‘‘interference with maintenance’’ prong
requires states and EPA to protect areas
that may struggle with maintaining the
standard in the face of variable
conditions.
For its maintenance receptors, TCEQ
elected not to use the highest design
value of the three DVs making up the
base period average design value.
Instead, Texas (and by extension, Ohio),
used the most recent design value of the
three DVs, regardless of whether the
most recent design value was highest or
lowest. OEPA’s proffered explanation
for using the most recent design value
to identify maintenance receptors was
that the latest design value ‘‘takes into
consideration . . . any emissions
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reductions that might have occurred.’’ 97
OEPA in its submission did not explain
why or how this methodology identifies
those areas that may be meeting the
NAAQS or that may be projected to
meet the NAAQS but may nevertheless
struggle to maintain the NAAQS, given
interannual variability in ozone
conducive meteorology. In fact, because
the TCEQ’s methodology adopted by
OEPA uses the most recent design value
to capture more recent emissions
reductions rather than capture variable
conditions, the methodology appears to
be aimed at limiting receptors which
could be identified as maintenance
receptors, compared to EPA’s
methodology, which was designed to
identify those areas that might struggle
to maintain the NAAQS in ozone
conducive conditions.
EPA disagrees that the use of latest
three years for calculating a DV properly
accounts for the effects of
meteorological variability for the
purpose of identifying projected
maintenance receptors. Rather, the use
of a three-year average is intended to
average out, not account for, the effects
of inter-annual variability in ozone
conducive meteorology. EPA reviewed
the information provided by OEPA and
proposes to find that the information is
insufficient to support the use of an
alternative approach. OEPA analysis of
meteorological information did not
discuss or consider how other
meteorological factors that are typically
associated with high ozone episodes
such as humidity, solar radiation,
vertical mixing, and/or other
meteorological indicators such as
cooling-degree days to confirm whether
conditions affecting these monitors may
have been conducive to ozone formation
during the 2009 through 2013 base
period. In addition, the ozone trends
data provided in OEPA submittal
indicate that several of the receptors in
Coastal Connecticut to which Ohio is
linked by more than 1 ppb continue to
measure ozone design values close to or
exceeding 80 ppb with no overall
downward trend in the most recent data
in the submittal.98 In any event, OEPA’s
use of an alternative approach to
identifying maintenance receptors does
not result in a dispositive change in
receptor status for purposes of EPA’s
evaluation of OEPA’s SIP submittal at
Step 1 because OEPA did not reach the
conclusion that there were no receptors
in 2023 or claim at Step 2 that Ohio was
not linked to any receptor on the basis
97 TCEQ
submission at 3–39 to 3–40.
‘‘2010 Thru 2020 Ozone Design
Values.xlsx’’ in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2021–0663.
98 See
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of the use of an alternative definition of
maintenance receptor.
In conclusion, the modeling relied on
by OEPA identified a number of
nonattainment and maintenance
receptor sites in the Midwest and
Northeast in 2023. See Table 1 on page
8 of OEPA’s submittal. Under EPA’s
approach to defining nonattainment and
maintenance receptors, Ohio was shown
to be linked to three ‘‘nonattainment/
maintenance’’ receptors and six
‘‘maintenance’’ receptors. Under an
alternative approach to defining
receptors (discussed below), OEPA
concluded that Ohio was shown to be
linked to two ‘‘nonattainment’’
receptors, one ‘‘nonattainment/
maintenance’’ receptor, and four
‘‘maintenance’’ receptors. Thus, based
on using the LADCO’s 2023 modeling
and even under an alternative approach
to defining ‘‘maintenance’’ receptors,
OEPA acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in the Midwest
and Northeast. EPA further evaluates
Ohio’s linkage to these receptors in the
following section.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided
by the State Regarding Step 2
Although OEPA relied on alternative
modeling to EPA’s modeling, OEPA
acknowledged in their SIP submission
that Ohio is linked above either a 1
percent of the NAAQS or a 1 ppb
contribution threshold to one or more
downwind receptors in 2023. Because
the LADCO modeling relied on by the
state also demonstrates that a linkage
exists between the state and downwind
receptors at Step 2, EPA need not
conduct a comparative assessment of
the alternative modeling; the state
concedes that it is linked above either
1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb.
The state additionally evaluated the
use of an alternative threshold
exceeding 1 ppb at Step 2 to identify
whether the state was ‘‘linked’’ to a
projected downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. EPA’s August
2018 memorandum provided that
whether use of a 1 ppb threshold is
appropriate must be based on an
evaluation of state-specific
circumstances, but that the use of a
threshold greater than 1 ppb at Step 2
would likely not be appropriate because
higher thresholds would not capture a
sufficient amount of total upwind state
contribution to allow for the
development of effective remedies at
Step 3.31 In particular, EPA found that
a 2 ppb threshold would cause 45% of
total upwind contribution to be
removed from further analysis across all
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receptors as compared to a 1 percent of
NAAQS threshold.
EPA does not accept Ohio’s position
that a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2 is
‘‘impractical and infeasible’’ for the
2015 ozone NAAQS because ‘‘it results
in very small contributions having
substantial consequences.’’ 99 This
argument conflates the contribution
threshold at Step 2 with a determination
of ‘‘significance’’ reached at Step 3 after
a multi-factor analysis. In its submittal,
OEPA justified a higher threshold than
either 1 percent or 1 ppb by noting that,
if applied, these alternative thresholds
(3 or 4 percent of the NAAQS) would
progressively de-link the State from an
increasing number of identified
downwind receptors. EPA likewise
disagrees with this reasoning; selecting
progressively higher contribution
thresholds simply on the basis that they
would excuse an ever greater number of
upwind states from having any good
neighbor obligations lacks any
persuasive technical justification and is
inconsistent with the purposes of the
Act.
The explanation for how the 1 percent
contribution threshold was originally
derived is available in the 2011 CSAPR
rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208, 48237–38.
Further, in the CSAPR Update, EPA reanalyzed the threshold for purposes of
the 2008 ozone NAAQS and determined
it was appropriate to continue to apply
this threshold. EPA compared the 1
percent threshold to a 0.5 percent of
NAAQS threshold and a 5 percent of
NAAQS threshold. EPA found that the
lower threshold did not capture
appreciably more upwind state
contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold
allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further
analysis. See Final CSAPR Update Air
Quality Modeling TSD, at 27–30 (EPA–
HQ–OAR–2015–0596–0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015
ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2
emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5
ppb) only captures approximately 50
percent of the total upwind
contribution. Compared to a 1 percent
9871
threshold, a 5 percent threshold would,
on average, forgo 27 nearly 30 percent)
of the total upwind contribution. As
EPA noted in the August 2018
memorandum, the use of a 2 ppb
contribution threshold under the
modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum would only capture about
55 percent of all upwind contributions,
and therefore ‘‘emission reductions from
states linked at that higher threshold
may be insufficient to address collective
upwind state contribution to downwind
air quality problems.’’31
Based on EPA’s updated modeling
and the LADCO modeling, the state is
projected to contribute greater than both
the 1 percent and alternative 1 ppb
thresholds. While EPA does not, in this
action, approve of the state’s application
of the 1 ppb threshold, based on its
linkages greater than 1 ppb to projected
downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptors, the state’s use of
this alternative threshold at Step 2 of
the 4-Step interstate framework would
not alter our review and proposed
disapproval of this SIP submittal.
TABLE 6—OHIO LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Receptor ID
Location
(county, state)
Nonattainment/maintenance
90099002 ...............................
90019003 ...............................
420170012 .............................
90013007 ...............................
170317002 .............................
550590019 .............................
550590025 .............................
170310032 .............................
170314201 .............................
170310076 .............................
90010017 ...............................
551010020 .............................
170310001 .............................
New Haven, CT ....................
Fairfield, CT ..........................
Bucks, PA .............................
Fairfield, CT ..........................
Cook, IL ................................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Kenosha, WI .........................
Cook, IL ................................
Cook, IL ................................
Cook, IL ................................
Fairfield, CT ..........................
Racine, WI ............................
Cook, IL ................................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Maintenance .........................
Nonattainment ......................
Nonattainment ......................
Maintenance .........................
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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). As explained in
Section II.E, Ohio relied on a
combination of both cost and air quality
factors to determine that there were no
further reductions necessary for Ohio to
99 Michigan’s
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meet its obligations under the interstate
transport provision. In this subsection,
we have evaluated the information
provided by the state at Step 3 to
support this conclusion.
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 for relevant
pollutants and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. EPA has
consistently applied this general
2023
Average
design value
(ppb)
71.8
76.1
70.7
74.2
70.1
72.8
69.2
69.8
69.9
69.3
73.0
71.3
69.6
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76.4
72.2
75.1
73.0
73.7
72.3
72.4
73.4
72.1
73.7
73.2
73.4
Ohio
Contribution
(ppb)
1.94
1.90
1.88
1.87
1.69
1.67
1.33
1.26
1.23
1.23
1.18
1.00
0.82
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 EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner EPA has done in its prior
regional transport rulemakings, state
implementation plans addressing the
SIP submission at 16.
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design value
(ppb)
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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 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. OEPA did not conduct such
an analysis in their SIP submission.
OEPA’s submission concluded that
projected emissions were overestimated
for the EGU, non-EGU, and onroad
sectors. OEPA claimed that the ERTAC
EGU tool’s emissions inventories were
overestimated for eight specific sources
for various reasons, including adoption
of rules in late 2016 and early 2017,
CSAPR and CSAPR Update allocations,
and substantive changes in plant
operation. The submission also asserted
that ERTAC EGU tool version 2.7 does
not consider that future energy
generation sources will likely be a
steady level of coal with increasing
natural gas and renewable fuels, citing
an un-enumerated number of natural gas
source permits issued by Ohio and
projected trends identified in the US
Energy Information Administration’s
Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2018.100
Similarly, the submission claimed
projected emissions from EPA’s Air
Emissions Modeling Platform 2011v6.3
were overestimated for nine non-EGU
point sources, primarily based on actual
emissions trends from 2010 to 2017.
OEPA also claimed that EPA over
projected onroad emissions using 2023
vehicle miles traveled (VMT). However,
OEPA did not explain how accounting
for changed projected emissions from
those 17 sources or the onroad sector
would have resulted in different
outcomes with regards to the
identification of downwind receptors or
Ohio’s contributions or linkages in the
2023 analytic year. Furthermore,
nationwide trends and an unspecified
number of state permits are insufficient
by themselves to support a conclusion
that EGUs in Ohio would not be affected
by generation shifting. EPA notes the
information presented from the AEO is
related to nationwide trends and OEPA
did not explain what the nationwide
trends revealed about Ohio’s level of
100 See https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/archive/
aeo18/, last accessed 1/18/2022.
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contribution or good neighbor
obligations to downwind receptors.
Merely claiming that the modeling used
to project receptors and contributions
relies on overestimated emissions
projections without an explanation of
how the inputs would affect the
outcome is not enough to draw a
conclusion at Step 2 that Ohio is not
linked to any downwind receptor or a
conclusion at Step 3 that Ohio does not
contribute significantly or interfere with
maintenance in any other state.
Considered individually or in the
context of the other information and
arguments put forward by OEPA, select
EGU, non-EGU, and onroad emissions
evaluations and nation-wide projections
of fuel types fail to show that additional
emissions reductions are either not costeffective or permanent and federally
enforceable. OEPA did not demonstrate
that the downwind improvements from
these regulations and programs would
be sufficient to eliminate the state’s
significant contribution or interference
with maintenance.
Further, EPA’s assessment of future
air quality conditions generally
accounts for on-the-books emission
reductions and the most up-to-date
forecast of future emissions in the
absence of the transport policy being
evaluated (i.e., base case conditions).101
As described in more detail in Section
I, EPA’s latest projections of the baseline
EGU emissions uses the version 6—
Summer 2021 Reference Case of the
IPM.102 The IPM version 6—Summer
2021 Reference Case uses the NEEDS v6
database as its source for data on all
existing and planned-committed units.
Units are removed from the NEEDS
inventory only if a high degree of
certainty could be assigned to future
implementation of the announced future
closure or retirement. Any retirements
excluded from the NEEDS v6 inventory
can be viewed in the NEEDS
spreadsheet.103 The inventory for these
projections contains various Ohio EGUs
including the Avon Lake Power Plant in
Lorain County (Facility ID 0247030013),
Painesville Municipal Electric Plant in
Lake County (Facility ID 0243110008),
101 See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at
68979.
102 Detailed information and documentation of
EPA’s Base Case, including all the underlying
assumptions, data sources, and architecture
parameters can be found on EPA’s website at:
https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sectormodeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021reference-case.
103 The ‘‘Capacity Dropped’’ and the ‘‘Retired
Through 2023’’ worksheets in NEEDS lists all units
that are removed from the NEEDS v6 inventory—
NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data
can be found on EPA’s website at: https://
www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energydata-system-needs-v6.
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and the Department of Public Utilities,
City of Orrville in Wayne County
(Facility ID 0285010188). Mingo
Junction Energy Center in Jefferson
County (Facility ID 0641090234) and the
Conesville Power Plant (Facility ID
0616000000) retired in 2020.
Also, EPA’s non-EGU emissions
inventory in the updated modeling
using the 2016v2 emissions platform
does not include either Carmeuse Lime
Inc Millersville Operations (Facility ID
0372000081) or RockTenn CP, LLC
(Facility ID 0616010001). EPA’s latest
modeling also uses emissions
inventories that incorporate Ohio’s
submitted 2023 VMT data.104 In other
words, in general, any changes in the
emissions inventory and on-the-books
controls relevant to emissions in 2023
have now been incorporated into EPA’s
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform, which projects a continuing
contribution from Ohio to out of state
receptors above a threshold of 1 percent
of the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite
these measures. Therefore, in light of
continuing contribution to out of state
receptors from Indiana notwithstanding
these identified retirements, OEPA’s SIP
submission should have evaluated the
availability of additional air quality
controls to improve downwind air
quality at nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 3.
Ohio’s projected contribution to
downwind receptors in EPA’s updated
modeling is lower relative to the
LADCO modeling results presented in
OEPA’s submission; it could be
assumed that these decreases are due to
overestimation of sources that were
corrected in the updated modeling.
These results could also be attributed to
Federal programs in place (NOX RACT,
AIM Coatings Rules, CSAPR, NOx SIP
Call, NESHAPs, RHR, BART, SO2 Data
Requirements rule, and MATS) as OEPA
suggests. Regardless, despite the
lessened projected contributions, Ohio’s
contributions continue to be projected
to be above 1 percent of the NAAQS to
one or more receptors in 2023 as shown
in Table 6.
OEPA’s assessment of actual and
projected NOX and VOC emissions
trends and listing of various regulations
likewise do not support a conclusion
that existing controls in Ohio
adequately address the state’s good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. For one, OEPA listed
numerous non-SIP measures and states
may not rely on non-SIP measures to
104 Technical Support Document (TSD)
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling Platform,
section 4.3.2. Available in the Headquarters docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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meet SIP requirements. See CAA section
110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such [SIP] shall . . .
contain adequate provisions . . . .’’).
See also CAA section 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). OEPA did not
attempt to revise Ohio’s SIP to include
all these measures.105 In general, 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 EPA’s
4-step framework to define ‘‘significant
contribution.’’ OEPA’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-ofstate receptors. The state’s submission
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 submission did not contain an
explanation as to whether any faster or
more stringent emissions reductions
that may be available were prohibitively
costly or infeasible. Second, the
information and claims presented by
OEPA did not provide sufficient
evidence to support alternative
conclusions that EPA is proposing to
make in this action: Namely, that
several receptors exist, Ohio contributes
to those receptors above a 1 percent of
the NAAQS contribution threshold, and
that Ohio continues to have good
neighbor obligations that need to be
addressed for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
OEPA also pointed to declining
design values at the ten receptors
identified by LADCO to support their
conclusion that no further emissions
reductions were required from Ohio to
meet their interstate transport
obligations. They additionally reference
a May 14, 2018 EPA presentation,
stating that EPA indicated remaining
ozone air quality problems were
becoming more local and less regional
in nature. While it is true that since
2011, design values have generally
declined, air quality problems at some
locations are projected to continue out
to 2023 and beyond, based on EPA’s
105 EPA notes that OEPA submitted a source
specific NOX emission limit contained in the Ohio
NOX RACT Rules for approval into the Ohio SIP,
approved by EPA on September 8, 2017 (82 FR
42451).
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2018 modeling provided in the March
2018 memorandum, LADCO’s modeling
completed in 2018, EPA’s modeling
results used in the Revised CSAPR
Update, and EPA’s updated modeling
results. In addition, each of these
modeling analyses show that Ohio will
contribute to the air quality problems in
excess of 1 percent of the 2015 ozone
standards in 2023. Regarding the May
14, 2018 presentation, EPA assumes the
state is referencing a presentation given
by an EPA air quality modeler, which
Indiana attached to their SIP
submission. The purpose of that
presentation was to share a technical,
exploratory analysis of ozone trends.
The results of that presentation, which
were labeled as ‘‘preliminary’’ indicated
that ‘‘[f]urther exploration of the relative
contribution from various source sectors
within the NE Corridor and in nearby
upwind states might also be
informative.’’ 106 The preliminary
results of that analysis are generally
consistent with EPA’s updated
modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform. Although EPA’s modeling
shows that a large portion of the
transport problem affecting the
receptors in Coastal Connecticut is
indeed from sources within the Ozone
Transport Region (OTR), a substantial
portion of the transport problem at these
receptors, on the order of 25 percent, is
the result of transport from states
outside the OTR. However, the
relevance of that presentation to the
evaluation of Ohio’s good neighbor
obligations is not clear. As already
discussed, the statute and the case law
(particularly the holdings in Wisconsin
and Maryland) make clear that good
neighbor obligations are not merely
supplementary to or deferable until after
local emission reductions are achieved.
Further, based on EPA’s modeling
released with the March 2018
memorandum, nearly all of the
receptors to which Ohio is linked are
also heavily impacted by distant
upwind state emissions in addition to
local sources and sources in neighboring
states. The Wisconsin decision’s holding
in regard to international contribution
(discussed in more detail later) is
equally applicable to an upwind state’s
claims that some other state’s emissions,
or local emissions, are more to blame
than its own emissions. See 938 F.3d
303 at 323–25 (‘‘an upwind state can
‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause’’).
OEPA also put forward an argument
that onroad mobile sources in
downwind states should be more
106 Indiana’s
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9873
stringently controlled before any
additional sources in upwind states.
This is equivalent to the claim that local
emissions reductions from the
jurisdiction where the downwind
receptor is located must first be
implemented and accounted for before
imposing obligations on upwind states
under the interstate transport provision.
However, there is nothing in the CAA
that supports that position, and it does
not provide grounds on which to
approve OEPA’s SIP submission. The
D.C. Circuit has held on five different
occasions that the timing framework for
addressing interstate transport
obligations must be consistent with the
downwind areas’ attainment schedule.
In particular, for the ozone NAAQS, the
states and EPA are to address interstate
transport obligations ‘‘as expeditiously
as practicable’’ and no later than the
attainment schedule set in accordance
with CAA section 181(a). See North
Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–13;
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313–20;
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New York
v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (DC Cir.
2020); New York v. EPA, 781 Fed. App’x
4, 6–7 (DC Cir. 2019). The court in
Wisconsin explained that downwind
jurisdictions often may need to heavily
rely on emissions reductions from
upwind states in order to achieve
attainment of the NAAQS, 938 F.3d at
316–17; such states would face
increased regulatory burdens including
the risk of bumping up to a higher
nonattainment classification if
attainment is not reached by the
relevant deadline, Maryland, 958 F.3d at
1204. The statutory framework of the
CAA and these cases establish clearly
that states and EPA must address
interstate transport obligations in line
with the attainment schedule provided
in the Act in order to timely assist
downwind states in attaining and
maintain the NAAQS, and this schedule
is ‘‘central to the regulatory scheme.’’
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 316 (quoting
Sierra Club v. EPA, 294 F.3d 155, 161
(D.C. Cir. 2002)).
As for the suggestion that EPA should
assess the SAFE Vehicles Rule’s impact
on ozone before finalizing, EPA and the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration finalized the revisions
to the greenhouse gas (GHG) and CAFE
standards for light duty vehicles in
2020.107 However, that final action is
not expected to have a meaningful
impact on ozone-precursor emissions.
Because the vehicles affected by the
107 The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE)
Vehicles Rule for Model Years 2021–2026 Passenger
Cars and Light Trucks, 85 FR 24174 (April 30, 2020)
(SAFE Vehicles Rule).
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2017–2025 GHG standards would still
need to meet applicable criteria
pollutant emissions standards (e.g., the
Tier 3 emissions standards; see 79 FR
23414), the SAFE Vehicles Rule
anticipated that any impacts of the
SAFE Vehicles Rule on ozone precursor
emissions ‘‘would most likely be far too
small to observe.’’ See 85 FR 25041. On
December 30, 2021, EPA revised the
GHG light duty standards for model
years 2023 and later to make them more
stringent.108 The impacts of the SAFE
Vehicles Rule are included in the
2016v2 onroad emissions as described
in the emissions modeling TSD in
Section 4.3.2.109
Further, OEPA makes the argument
that assigning all responsibility to Ohio
and other upwind states for downwind
air quality problems despite home state
and international contributions would
result in overcontrol of Ohio sources.
OEPA’s reasoning related to emissions
in downwind states and international
emissions is inapplicable to the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). As an initial matter,
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) only
requires that upwind states prohibit
those emissions that ‘‘contribute
significantly to nonattainment’’ or
‘‘interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS.’’ It does not require that the
upwind states bear the full burden of
bringing downwind states into
attainment or that a threshold ppb
improvement from upwind states
emission reductions be met in order for
them to be required (once the 1 percent
threshold has been satisfied). However,
the good neighbor provision does
require states and EPA to address
interstate transport of air pollution that
contributes to downwind states’ ability
to attain and maintain NAAQS. Whether
emissions from other states or other
countries also contribute to the same
downwind air quality issue is irrelevant
in assessing whether a downwind state
has an air quality problem, or whether
an upwind state is significantly
contributing to that problem. States are
not obligated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce emissions
sufficient on their own to resolve
downwind receptors’ nonattainment or
maintenance problems. Rather, states
are obligated to eliminate their own
‘‘significant contribution’’ or
108 Revised 2023 and Later Model Year Light-Duty
Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Standards, 86
FR 74434 (December 30, 2021).
109 See Technical Support Document (TSD)
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling Platform
included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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‘‘interference’’ with the ability of other
states to attain or maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, after OEPA submitted Ohio’s
SIP submission, the D.C. Circuit in
Wisconsin specifically rejected
petitioner arguments suggesting that
upwind states should be excused from
good neighbor obligations on the basis
that some other source of emissions
(whether international or another
upwind state) could be considered the
‘‘but-for’’ cause of downwind air quality
problem. 938 F.3d 303 at 323–324. The
court viewed petitioners’ arguments as
essentially an argument ‘‘that an
upwind state ‘contributes significantly’
to downwind nonattainment only when
its emissions are the sole cause of
downwind nonattainment.’’ 938 F.3d
303 at 324. The court explained that ‘‘an
upwind state can ‘contribute’ to
downwind nonattainment even if its
emissions are not the but-for cause.’’ Id.
at 324–325. See also Catawba County v.
EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009)
(rejecting the argument ‘‘that
‘significantly contribute’ unambiguously
means ‘strictly cause’’’ because there is
‘‘no reason why the statute precludes
EPA from determining that [an] addition
of [pollutant] into the atmosphere is
significant even though a nearby
county’s nonattainment problem would
still persist in its absence’’); Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ‘‘there
likely would have been no violation at
all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]’’ is
‘‘merely a rephrasing of the but-for
causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County.’’). Therefore, a state is
not excused from eliminating its
significant contribution on the basis that
international emissions, or emissions
from other sources, also contribute some
amount of pollution to the same
receptors to which the state is linked.
Finally, as part of its costeffectiveness evaluation, OEPA relied
on its EGUs being subject to the CSAPR
Update (which reflected a stringency at
the nominal marginal cost threshold of
$1400/ton (2011$) for the 2008 8-hour
ozone NAAQS) to argue that it has
already implemented all cost-effective
emissions reductions. For non-EGUs,
OEPA did not identify a costeffectiveness threshold, but rather listed
a few regulations (the Boiler MACT and
other MACT categories, BART, SO2 Data
Requirements Rule and other
unidentified Federal regulations) to
draw the conclusion that emissions
reductions had been achieved from nonEGUs in Ohio. First, the CSAPR Update
did not regulate non-electric generating
units, and thus this analysis is
PO 00000
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incomplete. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at
318–20. Second, relying on the CSAPR
Update’s (or any other CAA program’s)
determination of cost-effectiveness
without further Step 3 analysis is not
approvable. Cost-effectiveness must be
assessed in the context of the specific
CAA program; assessing costeffectiveness in the context of ozone
transport should reflect a more
comprehensive evaluation of the nature
of the interstate transport problem, the
total emissions reductions available at
several cost thresholds, and the air
quality impacts of the reductions at
downwind receptors. While EPA has
not established a benchmark costeffectiveness value for 2015 ozone
NAAQS interstate transport obligations,
because the 2015 ozone NAAQS is a
more stringent and more protective air
quality standard, it is reasonable to
expect control measures or strategies to
address interstate transport under this
NAAQS to reflect higher marginal
control costs. As such, the marginal cost
threshold of $1,400/ton for the CSAPR
Update (which addresses the 2008
ozone NAAQS and is in 2011$) is not
an appropriate cost threshold and
cannot be approved as a benchmark to
use for interstate transport SIP
submissions for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. The lack of a sufficient costeffectiveness evaluation also means that
Ohio’s claims that requiring additional
emissions reductions would result in
overcontrol is premature. Ohio’s
submission does present sufficient
evidence to support that conclusion.
In addition, the updated EPA
modeling captures all existing CSAPR
trading programs in the baseline, and
that modeling confirms that these
control programs were not sufficient to
eliminate Ohio’s linkage at Steps 1 and
2 under the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The
state was therefore obligated at Step 3 to
assess additional control measures
using a multifactor analysis.
Finally, relying on a FIP at Step 3 is
per se not approvable if the state has not
adopted that program into its SIP and
instead continues to rely on the FIP.
States may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements. See
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such
[SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
provisions . . . .’’). See also CAA
section 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). We therefore propose that Ohio
was required to analyze emissions from
the sources and other emissions activity
from within the state to determine
whether its contributions were
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significant, and we propose to
disapprove its submission because Ohio
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. OEPA
identified NOX RACT rules limiting
NOX emissions from new and existing
sources, VOC reduction measures
through control of architectural and
industrial maintenance coatings, and
reallocation of funds received through a
settlement with Volkswagen to be
applied to on-road and off-road mobile
emissions reductions through
replacements and infrastructure
updates.110 However, OEPA did not
revise Ohio’s SIP to include these
emission reductions in a revision to its
SIP to ensure the reductions were
permanent and enforceable.105 As a
result, EPA proposes to disapprove
OEPA submittal on the separate,
additional basis that the Ohio has not
9875
included permanent and enforceable
emissions reductions in its SIP as
necessary to meet the obligations of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
to have difficulty attaining or
maintaining the NAAQS or reach a
conclusion about whether Wisconsin is
linked to any receptors.
6. Conclusion
Based on EPA’s evaluation of Ohio’s
SIP submission, EPA is proposing to
find that the portion of Ohio’s
September 28, 2018 SIP submission
addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state’s interstate transport obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, because it
fails to contain the necessary provisions
to eliminate emissions that will
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state.
2. Results of EPA’s Step 1 and Step 2
Modeling and Findings for Wisconsin
F. Wisconsin
1. Evaluation of Information Provided
by Wisconsin Regarding Steps 1 and 2
WDNR did not perform an analysis
under the 4-step framework to assess
Wisconsin’s good neighbor obligations.
The submission did not identify areas in
other states that may have trouble
attaining or maintaining the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Nor did WDNR perform a Step
2 analysis to identify Wisconsin’s
contribution to areas that are projected
As described in Section I, 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 Wisconsin contributes at or
above the threshold of one percent of
the 2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to
any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
Table 7, the data 111 indicate that in
2023, emissions from Wisconsin
contribute greater than one percent of
the standard to nonattainment or
maintenance-only receptors in
Illinois.112 Therefore, based on EPA’s
evaluation of the information submitted
by WDNR, and based on EPA’s most
recent modeling results for 2023, EPA
proposes to find that Wisconsin is
linked at Steps 1 and 2 and has an
obligation to assess potential emissions
reductions from sources or other
emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-step
framework.
TABLE 7—WISCONSIN LINKAGE RESULTS BASED ON EPA UPDATED 2023 MODELING
Location
(county, state)
Receptor ID
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170310032
170314201
170310076
170310001
170317002
.............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
Cook,
Cook,
Cook,
Cook,
Cook,
IL
IL
IL
IL
IL
................................
................................
................................
................................
................................
Nonattainment/maintenance
Maintenance
Maintenance
Maintenance
Maintenance
Maintenance
2023
Average
design value
(ppb)
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
69.8
69.9
69.3
69.6
70.1
2023
Maximum
design value
(ppb)
72.4
73.4
72.1
73.4
73.0
Wisconsin
contribution
(ppb)
2.61
2.55
2.47
2.41
1.47
As shown in Table 7, the updated
EPA modeling identifies Wisconsin’s
maximum contribution Because the
entire technical basis for the state’s
submittal is that the state has satisfied
good neighbor obligations through
implementation of various rules,
including CSAPR Update, EPA proposes
to disapprove the SIP submission based
on EPA’s finding that WDNR has not
provided adequate information to allow
EPA to assess whether Wisconsin has
adequate provisions to prohibit
emissions in amounts which will
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance in any other state. Though
this deficiency would be sufficient on
its own to disapprove Wisconsin’s good
neighbor submission, EPA will proceed
to evaluate the additional points raised
by WDNR at Step 3 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework.
3. Evaluation of Information Provided
Regarding Step 3
110 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
[Ohio step 3 analysis section]. 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.
111 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provide in the file
‘‘2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx’’ which is
included in docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.
112 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 Wisconsin 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 ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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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).
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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 for relevant
pollutants and assess potential,
additional emissions reduction
opportunities and resulting downwind
air quality improvements. 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 EPA has
not directed states that they must
conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely
the manner 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 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. The state did not conduct
such an analysis in their SIP
submission.
WDNR listed several rules relevant to
interstate transport and seemingly relied
on its participation in LADCO to suggest
sources in Wisconsin are adequately
controlled for purposes of the good
neighbor provision for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. WDNR mentioned Wisconsin’s
FIPs under CSAPR and CSAPR Update.
EPA disagrees that this is a sufficient
approach for assessing good neighbor
obligations.
First, the CSAPR Update did not
regulate non-electric generating units,
and thus this analysis is incomplete. See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318–20. Second,
relying on the CSAPR Update (or any
other CAA program) without further
Step 3 analysis is not approvable. While
EPA has not established a benchmark
cost-effectiveness value for 2015 ozone
NAAQS interstate transport obligations,
because the 2015 ozone NAAQS is a
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more stringent and more protective air
quality standard, it is reasonable to
expect control measures or strategies to
address interstate transport under this
NAAQS to reflect higher marginal
control costs. As such, the CSAPR
Update Rule is not an appropriate
analysis and cannot be approved to
satisfy interstate transport obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
In addition, the updated EPA
modeling captures all existing CSAPR
trading programs in the baseline, and
that modeling confirms that these
control programs were not sufficient to
eliminate the Wisconsin’s linkage at
Steps 1 and 2 under the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. The state was therefore
obligated at Step 3 to assess additional
control measures using a multifactor
analysis.
Finally, relying on a FIP at Step 3 is
per se not approvable if the state has not
adopted that program into its SIP and
instead continues to rely on the FIP.
States may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements. See
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each such
[SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
provisions . . . .’’). See also CAA
section 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).
WDNR cited continued consultation
with LADCO, three Wis. Admin. Code
subsections that could be relied on ‘‘if
needed’’ to address disagreements for
SIP development in other states’
nonattainment areas, and an adequate
PSD program. WDNR did not attempt to
revise Wisconsin’s SIP to include to
include all these measures. In general,
the listing of existing or on-the-way
control measures, including potential
future emissions reductions obtained
through participation in LADCO,
whether approved into the state’s SIP or
not, does not substitute for a complete
Step 3 analysis under EPA’s 4-step
framework to define ‘‘significant
contribution.’’ WDNR did not identify
control measures, provide an
assessment of the overall effects of these
measures, note when the reductions
would be achieved, or explain what the
overall resulting air quality effects
would be at identified out of state
receptors. WDNR did not evaluate
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. WDNR
did not offer an explanation as to
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whether any faster or more stringent
emissions reductions that may be
available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges
states are not necessarily bound to
follow its own analytical framework at
Step 3, WDNR did not attempt to
determine or justify an appropriate
uniform cost-effectiveness threshold.
This would have been similar to the
approach to defining significant
contribution that EPA has applied in
prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and
or the CSAPR Update, even if such an
analysis is not technically mandatory.
As mentioned previously, Wis.
Admin. Code NR 285.15, entitled
Interstate Agreement, gives the governor
the authority to enter an agreement to
solve interstate pollution transport with
Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan if the
area includes portions of both
Wisconsin and Illinois. Furthermore,
Wis. Admin. Code, NR 285.1560 does
not provide for emission reductions
toward resolving good neighbor
obligations, as while the statute allows
for consultation, there is no indication
this rule has been exercised to resolve
good neighbor obligations or explain
how the rule would impact areas in
Illinois to which Wisconsin is linked.
Under the Wisconsin decision, states
and 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. Wisconsin’s
submittal is insufficient to the extent the
implementation timeframes for the cited
control measures were left unidentified,
unexplained, or too uncertain to permit
EPA to form a judgment as to whether
the timing requirements for good
neighbor obligations have been met.
We therefore propose that Wisconsin
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
Wisconsin failed to do so.
4. 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, Wisconsin’s SIP
submission did not contain an
evaluation of additional emission
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control opportunities (or establish that
no additional controls are required),
thus, no information was provided at
Step 4. As a result, EPA proposes to
disapprove Wisconsin’ 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).
the PRA because it does not contain any
information collection activities.
5. Conclusion
Based on EPA’s evaluation of
Wisconsin’s SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of
Wisconsin’s September 14, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet
Wisconsin’s interstate transport
obligations, because it fails to contain
the necessary provisions to eliminate
emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the 2015
ozone NAAQS in any other state.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
IV. Proposed Action
We are proposing to disapprove the
portions of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin’s SIP
submissions pertaining to interstate
transport of air pollution which will
significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states. Under CAA section
110(c)(1), disapproval would establish a
2-year deadline for EPA to promulgate
a FIP for states to address the CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) interstate
transport requirements pertaining to
significant contribution to
nonattainment and interference with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states, unless EPA approves a
SIP that meets these requirements.
Disapproval does not start a mandatory
sanctions clock for Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, or
Wisconsin. The remaining elements of
the states’ submissions are not
addressed in this action and either have
been or will be acted on in a separate
rulemaking.
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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
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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.
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 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
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045
as applying only to those regulatory
actions that concern environmental
health or safety risks that EPA has
reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This 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.
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9877
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
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 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 EPA complete discretion
whether to invoke the exception in
(ii).113
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 six states, which are located
in three 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 EPA takes final action on this
proposed rulemaking, in the alternative,
113 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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lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS3
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), 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, 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. EPA relies
on a single set of updated, 2016-base
year photochemical grid modeling
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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, EPA
proposes to determine and apply a set
of nationally consistent policy
judgments to apply the 4-step
framework. 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.114 For these reasons, the
Administrator intends, if this proposed
action is finalized, to exercise the
complete discretion afforded to him
114 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.
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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).115
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.
Debra Shore,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2022–02953 Filed 2–18–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
115 EPA may take a consolidated, single final
action on all of 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 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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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 35 (Tuesday, February 22, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 9838-9878]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-02953]
[[Page 9837]]
Vol. 87
Tuesday,
No. 35
February 22, 2022
Part III
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 52
Air Plan Disapproval; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio,
Wisconsin; Air Plan Disapproval; Region 5 Interstate Transport of Air
Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2022 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 9838]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006; EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663; FRL-9431-01-R5]
Air Plan Disapproval; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,
Ohio, Wisconsin; Air Plan Disapproval; Region 5 Interstate Transport of
Air Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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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 Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin regarding interstate transport for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS). The ``good
neighbor'' or ``interstate transport'' 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. 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: Written comments must be received on or before April
25, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified as Docket No. EPA-R05-OAR-
2022-0006, by any of the following methods: Federal Rulemaking Portal
at https://www.regulations.gov following the online instructions for
submitting comments or via email to [email protected]. Include Docket
ID No. EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006 in the subject line of the message.
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 EPA Docket
Center services and the current status, please visit us online at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Olivia Davidson, Environmental
Scientist, Attainment Planning and Maintenance Section, Air Programs
Branch (AR-18J), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 5, 77 West
Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886-0266,
[email protected]. The EPA Region 5 office is open from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding Federal holidays and
facility closures due to COVID-19.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Participation: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID
No. EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006, at https://www.regulations.gov (our
preferred method), or the other methods identified in the ADDRESSES
section. 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).
There are two dockets supporting this action, EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006
and EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663. Docket No. EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006 contains
information specific to Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio,
and Wisconsin, 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 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-R05-OAR-2022-0006. For additional submission
methods, please contact Olivia Davidson, (312) 886-0266,
[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 EPA Docket Center services, please visit us
online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
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-R05-OAR-2022-0006, 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 EPA.
I. Background
A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, EPA promulgated a revision to the ozone NAAQS
(2015 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
[[Page 9839]]
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). 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 EPA's Four Step Interstate Transport Regulatory
Process
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 ozone NAAQS. 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\ 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 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 EPA's Ozone Transport Modeling Information
In general, 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, 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.
EPA has released several documents containing projected ozone
design values, contributions, and information relevant to evaluating
interstate transport with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS. First, on
January 6, 2017, 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,
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 ozone NAAQS.\9\ On
October 27, 2017, we released a memorandum (October 2017 memorandum)
containing updated 2011 platform-based 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 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 ozone NAAQS under Step 2 of the 4-
step interstate transport framework.\12\ EPA subsequently issued two
more memoranda in August and October 2018, providing additional
information to states developing interstate transport SIP submissions
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS concerning, respectively,
[[Page 9840]]
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 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 EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
\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, available in docket EPA-HQ-OAR-
2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
\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 EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/memo-and-supplemental-information-regarding-interstate-transport-sips-2015-ozone-naaqs.
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Since the release of the modeling data shared in the March 2018
memorandum, EPA has performed 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 EPA, MJOs, and states to develop a new, more recent
emissions platform for use by EPA and states in regulatory modeling as
an improvement over the dated 2011-based platform that EPA had used to
project ozone design values and contribution data provided in the 2017
and 2018 memoranda. 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, EPA
released and accepted public comment on 2023 modeling that used the
2016v1 emissions platform.\15\ See 85 FR 68964, 68981. Although the
Revised CSAPR 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, EPA made further updates
to the 2016 emissions platform to include mobile emissions from 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.\18\
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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\ See Technical Support Document (TSD) Preparation of
Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2 North American Emissions
Modeling Platform included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
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EPA's latest projections of the baseline EGU emissions uses the
version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case of the Integrated Planning Model
(IPM).\19\ IPM is a multi-regional, dynamic, and deterministic linear
programming model of the U.S. electric power sector. The model provides
forecasts of least cost capacity expansion, electricity dispatch, and
emission control strategies, while meeting energy demand,
environmental, transmission, dispatch, and reliability constraints.
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\19\ Detailed information and documentation of EPA's Base Case,
including all the underlying assumptions, data sources, and
architecture parameters can be found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sector-modeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021-reference-case.
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The IPM version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case incorporated recent
updates through the Summer of 2021 to account for updated Federal and
State environmental regulations for EGUs. This projected base case
accounts for the effects of the finalized Mercury and Air Toxics
Standards rule (MATS), CSAPR, the CSAPR Update, the Revised CSAPR
Update, New Source Review settlements, the final Effluent Limitation
Guidelines (ELG) Rule, the Coal Combustion Residual (CCR) Rule, and
other on-the-books Federal and State rules (including renewable energy
tax credit extensions from the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021)
through early 2021 impacting sulfur dioxide (SO2),
NOX, directly emitted particulate matter, carbon dioxide,
and power plant operations. It also includes final actions EPA has
taken to implement the Regional Haze Rule and Best Available Retrofit
Technology (BART) requirements. Further, the EPA Platform v6 uses
demand projections from the Energy Information Agency's (EIA) Annual
Energy Outlook (AEO) 2020.
The IPM version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case uses the National
Electric Energy Data System (NEEDS) v6 database as its source for data
on all existing and planned-committed units. Units are removed from the
NEEDS inventory only if a high degree of certainty could be assigned to
future implementation of the announced future closure or retirement.
The available retirement-related information was reviewed for each
unit, and the following rules are applied to remove:
(i) Units that are listed as retired in the December 2020 EIA
Form 860M
(ii) Units that have a planned retirement year prior to June 30,
2023 in the December 2020 EIA Form 860M
(iii) Units that have been cleared by a regional transmission
operator (RTO) or independent system operator (ISO) to retire before
2023, or whose RTO/ISO clearance to retire is contingent on actions
that can be completed before 2023
(iv) Units that have committed specifically to retire before
2023 under Federal or state enforcement actions or regulatory
requirements
(v) And finally, units for which a retirement announcement can
be corroborated by other available information. Units required to
retire pursuant to enforcement actions or state rules on July 1,
2023 or later are retained in NEEDS v6.
Retirements or closures taking place on or after July 1, 2023 are
captured as constraints on those units in the IPM modeling, and the
units are retired in future year projections per the terms of the
related requirements. Any retirements excluded from the NEEDS v6
inventory can be viewed in the NEEDS spreadsheet.\20\
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\20\ The ``Capacity Dropped'' and the ``Retired Through 2023''
worksheets in NEEDS lists all units that are removed from the NEEDS
v6 inventory--NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data can be
found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energy-data-system-needs-v6.
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As highlighted in previous rulemakings, the IPM documentation, and
EPA's Power Sector Modeling website, EPA's goal is to explain and
document the use of IPM in a transparent and publicly accessible
manner, while also providing for concurrent channels for improving the
model's assumptions and representation by soliciting constructive
feedback to improve the model. This includes making all inputs and
assumptions to the model, output files from the model, and IPM feedback
form publicly available on EPA's website.
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.\21\
EPA now proposes to primarily rely on modeling
[[Page 9841]]
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 and generally referenced within
this action as 2016v2 modeling for 2023. By using the updated modeling
results, EPA is using the most current and technically appropriate
information for this proposed rulemaking. Section III of this action
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, contain additional detail on EPA's 2016v2 modeling. In
this action, EPA is accepting public comment on this updated 2023
modeling, which uses a 2016v2 emissions platform. Comments on EPA's air
quality modeling should be submitted in the Regional docket for this
action, docket ID No. EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006. Comments are not being
accepted in docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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\21\ Ramboll Environment and Health, January 2021, www.camx.com.
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States may have chosen to rely on the results of EPA modeling and/
or alternative modeling performed by states or MJOs to evaluate
downwind air quality problems and contributions as part of their
submissions. As most Region 5 states have done so, in Sections III.A,
III.B, III.C, III.D, and III.E, we evaluate how Region 5 states used
air quality modeling information in their submissions.
D. EPA's Approach to Evaluating Interstate Transport SIPs for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS
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 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 to ensure an
``efficient and equitable'' approach. See EME Homer City, 572 U.S. 489,
519 (2014).
In the March, August, and October 2018 memoranda, EPA recognized
that states may be able to establish alternative approaches to
addressing their interstate transport obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS that vary from a nationally uniform framework. 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, 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 potential
``flexibilities'' as may have been identified or suggested in the past,
EPA will evaluate whether the state adequately justified the technical
and legal basis for doing so.
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.\22\ However, 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 EPA
sought ``feedback from interested stakeholders.'' \23\ 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.'' \24\ 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, EPA will thoroughly review the technical and legal
justifications for doing so.
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\22\ March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
\23\ Id. at A-1.
\24\ Id.
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The remainder of this section describes 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 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).\25\ 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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\25\ For attainment dates for the 2015 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 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 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). 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,\26\ which is
[[Page 9842]]
now the Moderate area attainment date under CAA section 181 for ozone
nonattainment. The Moderate area attainment date for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS is August 3, 2024.\27\ EPA believes that 2023 is now the
appropriate year for analysis of interstate transport obligations for
the 2015 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 ozone NAAQS.
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\26\ We note that the court in Maryland did not have occasion to
evaluate circumstances in which 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.
\27\ 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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EPA recognizes that the attainment date for nonattainment areas
classified as Marginal for the 2015 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 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, EPA must act on SIP submittals using the
information available at the time it takes such action. In this
circumstance, 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 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 ozone NAAQS.
2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
In Step 1, EPA identifies monitoring sites that are projected to
have problems attaining and/or maintaining the NAAQS in the 2023
analytic year. Where 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 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.
EPA's approach to identifying ozone nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in this action is consistent with the approach used in
previous transport rulemakings. 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.\28\
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\28\ See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d at 910-11 (D.C. Cir.
2008) (holding that 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, 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 EPA defined nonattainment receptors as those areas
that both currently measure nonattainment and that EPA projects will be
in nonattainment in the future analytic year (i.e., 2023).\29\
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\29\ 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 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, 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).\30\ Specifically, 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. 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). 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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\30\ 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, 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, 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, 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 ozone NAAQS), the upwind state is not ``linked''
to a downwind air quality problem, and EPA, therefore, concludes that
the state does not significantly contribute to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in the
[[Page 9843]]
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). 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 ozone NAAQS
(i.e., 0.70 ppb) at downwind receptors. This is consistent with the
Step 2 approach that 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. EPA
continues to find 1 percent to be an appropriate threshold. For ozone,
as EPA found in the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR), CSAPR, and the
CSAPR Update, a portion of the nonattainment problems from
anthropogenic sources in the U.S. result 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. 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 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 1 percent threshold).
i. EPA's Experience With Alternative Step 2 Thresholds
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, 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.
EPA here shares further evaluation of its experience since the
issuance of the August 2018 memorandum regarding use of alternative
thresholds at Step 2. This experience leads the Agency to now believe
it may not be appropriate to continue to attempt to recognize
alternative contribution thresholds at Step 2. The August 2018
memorandum stated that ``it may be reasonable and appropriate'' for
states to rely on an alternative threshold of 1 ppb threshold at Step
2.\31\ (The memorandum also indicated that any higher alternative
threshold, such as 2 ppb, would likely not be appropriate.) However,
EPA also provided that ``air agencies should consider whether the
recommendations in this guidance are appropriate for each situation.''
Following receipt and review of 49 good neighbor SIP submittals for the
2015 ozone NAAQS, EPA's experience has been that nearly every state
that attempted to rely on a 1 ppb threshold did not provide sufficient
information and analysis to support a determination that an alternative
threshold was reasonable or appropriate for that state.
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\31\ August 2018 memorandum at 4.
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For instance, in nearly all submittals, the states did not provide
EPA with analysis specific to their state or the receptors to which its
emissions are potentially linked. In one case, the proposed approval of
Iowa's SIP submittal, EPA expended its own resources to attempt to
supplement the information submitted by the state, in order to more
thoroughly evaluate the state-specific circumstances that could support
approval.\32\ It was at EPA's sole discretion to perform this analysis
in support of the state's submittal, and the Agency is not obligated to
conduct supplemental analysis to fill the gaps whenever it believes a
state's analysis is insufficient. The Agency no longer intends to
undertake supplemental analysis of SIP submittals with respect to
alternative thresholds at Step 2 for purposes of the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
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\32\ Air Plan Approval; Iowa; Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan Requirements for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standard, 85 FR 12232 (March 2, 2020). The Agency
received adverse comment on this proposed approval and has not taken
final action with respect to this proposal.
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Furthermore, EPA's experience since 2018 is that allowing for
alternative Step 2 thresholds may be impractical or otherwise
inadvisable for a number of additional policy reasons. For a regional
air pollutant such as ozone, consistency in requirements and
expectations across all states is essential. Based on its review of
submittals to-date and after further consideration of the policy
implications of attempting to recognize an alternative Step 2 threshold
for certain states, the Agency now believes the attempted use of
different thresholds at Step 2 with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS
raises substantial policy consistency and practical implementation
concerns.\33\ The availability of different thresholds at Step 2 has
the potential to result in inconsistent application of good neighbor
obligations based solely on the strength of a state's implementation
plan submittal at Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate transport framework.
From the perspective of ensuring effective regional implementation of
good neighbor obligations, the more important analysis is the
evaluation of the emissions reductions needed, if any, to address a
state's significant contribution after consideration of a multifactor
analysis at Step 3, including a detailed evaluation that considers air
quality factors and cost. Where alternative thresholds for purposes of
Step 2 may be ``similar'' in terms of capturing the relative amount of
upwind contribution (as described in the August 2018 memorandum),
nonetheless, use of an alternative threshold would allow certain states
to avoid further evaluation of potential emission controls while other
states must proceed to a Step 3 analysis. This can create significant
equity and consistency problems among states.
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\33\ EPA notes that Congress has placed on EPA a general
obligation to ensure the requirements of the CAA are implemented
consistently across states and regions. See CAA section 301(a)(2).
Where the management and regulation of interstate pollution levels
spanning many states is at stake, consistency in application of CAA
requirements is paramount.
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Further, it is not clear that national ozone transport policy is
best served by allowing for less stringent thresholds at Step 2. EPA
recognized in the August 2018 memorandum that there was some similarity
in the amount of total upwind contribution captured (on a nationwide
basis) between 1 percent and 1 ppb. However, EPA notes that while this
may be true in some sense, that is hardly a compelling basis to move to
a 1 ppb threshold. Indeed, the 1 ppb threshold has the disadvantage of
losing a certain
[[Page 9844]]
amount of total upwind contribution for further evaluation at Step 3
(e.g., roughly seven percent of total upwind state contribution was
lost according to the modeling underlying the August 2018 memorandum;
\34\ in EPA's updated modeling, the amount lost is five percent).
Considering the core statutory objective of ensuring elimination of all
significant contribution to nonattainment or interference of the NAAQS
in other states and the broad, regional nature of the collective
contribution problem with respect to ozone, there does not appear to be
a compelling policy imperative in allowing some states to use a 1 ppb
threshold while others rely on a 1 percent of the NAAQS threshold.
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\34\ See August 2018 memorandum at 4.
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Consistency with past interstate transport actions such as CSAPR,
and the CSAPR Update and Revised CSAPR Update rulemakings (which used a
Step 2 threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS for two less stringent ozone
NAAQS), is also important. Continuing to use a 1 percent of NAAQS
approach ensures that as the NAAQS are revised and made more stringent,
an appropriate increase in stringency at Step 2 occurs, so as to ensure
an appropriately larger amount of total upwind-state contribution is
captured for purposes of fully addressing interstate transport. See 76
FR 48208, 48237-38.
Therefore, notwithstanding the August 2018 memorandum's recognition
of the potential viability of alternative step 2 thresholds, and in
particular, a potentially applicable 1 ppb threshold, EPA's experience
since the issuance of that memorandum has revealed substantial
programmatic and policy difficulties in attempting to implement this
approach. Nonetheless, EPA is not at this time rescinding the August
2018 memorandum. EPA invites comment on this broader discussion of
issues associated with alternative thresholds at Step 2. Depending on
comment and further evaluation of this issue, EPA may determine to
rescind the August 2018 memorandum in the future.
4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
Consistent with 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. EPA's analysis
at Step 3 in prior Federal actions addressing interstate transport
requirements has primarily focused on an evaluation of the 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 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 still to be linked to
one or more downwind receptor(s), the state 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 EPA has not prescribed a particular method for this
assessment, 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.\35\
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\35\ 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, 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 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 Ozone NAAQS
Five of the six states within EPA Region 5 that are included in
this multi-state proposed disapproval have chosen to use air quality
modeling performed by the Lake Michigan Air Directors Consortium
(LADCO) \36\ as an alternative to or in addition to EPA's modeling for
the purpose of identifying downwind receptors and upwind state
contributions to these receptors relevant to their submissions. The
LADCO modeling consisted of ozone season (May 1-September 30, 2011)
model simulations using the Comprehensive Air Quality Model with
Extensions, CAMx version 6.4 for a 2011 base year and 2023 as the
future analytic year. In their modeling, LADCO used EPA's 2011-based
``EN'' emissions modeling platform, except for emissions from EGU's in
2023. In their modeling, LADCO used the Eastern Regional Technical
Advisory Committee (ERTAC) EGU Tool version 2.7 \37\ to provide EGU
emissions for 2023, whereas EPA used projected EGU emissions based on
engineering analytics.\38\
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\36\ LADCO works collaboratively with state governments, tribal
governments, and various Federal agencies in Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
\37\ https://www.marama.org/2013-ertac-egu-forecasting-tool-documentation.
\38\ Technical Support Document (TSD) Additional Updates to
Emissions Inventories for the Version 6.3, 2011 Emissions Modeling
Platform for the Year 2023 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/additional-updates-2011-and-2023-emissions-version-63-platform-technical.
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LADCO provided projected 2023 future year average and maximum
design values using the methodology in EPA's 2014 modeling
guidance.\39\ Although projected design values were presented based on
the 3x3 approach and the ``no water cell'' approach, described in the
March 2018 memorandum, LADCO relied upon design values from the 3x3
approach for
[[Page 9845]]
calculating contribution metric values at each receptor.
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\39\ See EPA's 2014 Draft Guidance Document, ``Draft Modeling
Guidance for Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for
Ozone, PM2s, and Regional Haze'', https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-10/documents/draft-o3-pm-rh-modeling_guidance-2014.pdf.
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Source apportionment modeling was performed by LADCO using the CAMx
Anthropogenic Precursor Culpability Assessment (APCA) tool to calculate
contributions from individual states to ozone at downwind monitoring
sites. In their modeling, LADCO tracked ozone contributions from only
those states that contributed at or above a 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold to nonattainment and maintenance monitors in the EPA 2023
modeling provided in the March 2018 memorandum.
A. Illinois
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) submitted a SIP
revision to address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on May 21, 2019. The
submission utilized LADCO modeling results previously mentioned. IEPA
followed the 4-step interstate transport framework using an analytic
year of 2023 to identify receptors, Illinois' linkages to receptors,
and assess some emission reduction considerations. The following
sections will discuss IEPA's submission and the information provided
for each step in the process.
1. Information Provided by Illinois Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework, the IEPA relied on LADCO
modeling to identify monitoring sites that are projected to have
problems attaining or maintaining the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023. As
previously mentioned, the LADCO modeling used the same technique as EPA
to calculate future year design values which were used to identify
maintenance and nonattainment receptors but used the ERTAC EGU Tool for
EGU emissions. IEPA noted they believed that the ERTAC EGU tool
provides better estimates of growth and forecasts than EPA's EGU
emission projections. IEPA identified two maintenance receptors in the
Great Lakes area (Sheboygan, Wisconsin and Allegan County, Michigan) as
well as and three nonattainment receptors and five additional
maintenance receptors in the Northeast. Across the continental U.S.,
IEPA identified a total of twelve nonattainment or maintenance
receptors: seven nonattainment receptors and five maintenance
receptors.\40\
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\40\ IEPA's SIP submission, Table CC, page 15.
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2. Information Provided by Illinois Regarding Step 2
IEPA's submittal at Step 2 presented Illinois' projected 2023
contribution of ozone emissions to the downwind maintenance and
nonattainment receptors and based on LADCO's ``with water'' modeling
\41\ IEPA used a contribution threshold of 1 ppb to define linkage as
opposed to one percent of the 2015 ozone NAAQS standard (0.70 ppb).
Illinois, relying on the August 2018 memorandum, argued that the
state's reliance on the 1 ppb threshold to identify linkages was
justified. First, IEPA asserted that the one percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold is arbitrary because it is not in the CAA.
Second, IEPA claimed that a one percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold is inappropriate for the 2015 ozone NAAQS because 0.70 ppb is
an order of magnitude smaller than the biases and errors typically
documented for regional photochemical modeling. IEPA noted that 1 ppb
is very small compared to the allowable error in peak performance and
bias and in IEPA's view is a conservative Step 2 contribution
threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Id.
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IEPA identified that Illinois is projected to contribute 14.93 ppb
and 19.25 ppb, respectively, in 2023 to two maintenance receptors:
Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Site ID: 55-117-0006), and Allegan, Michigan
(Site ID: 26-005-0003). IEPA concluded that Illinois is linked above a
contribution threshold of 1 ppb to these receptors.
3. Information Provided by Illinois Regarding Step 3
IEPA provided several arguments to justify their conclusion that no
additional emission reductions are necessary to satisfy Illinois' ozone
transport obligations. The submittal stated that Illinois is developing
new NOX RACT standards for the Chicago area that, in
conjunction with existing NOX reductions, are estimated to
reduce NOX emissions by up to 20,000 tons/year relative to
existing state and Federal regulations impacting non-EGUs since 2014.
IEPA claims that these reductions were not included in any 2023
modeling. Illinois claims these expected emissions reductions,
alongside future Federal rules, will be enough to meet Illinois' good
neighbor obligations.
IEPA asserted that Illinois' contributions to the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin and Allegan County maintenance monitors, which are both in
the LADCO domain, can be addressed in a manner that is fair and
equitable for all involved states through Illinois' participation in
LADCO. Illinois has been a member of LADCO since 1991. IEPA says that
since the inception of LADCO in 1991, ambient ozone concentrations have
drastically decreased in the Lake Michigan region. IEPA stated that it
is working through LADCO to refine ozone forecasting for air quality
and ozone receptors in the Midwest through various means including
updating emissions inventories and a base case for the modeling that
LADCO is preparing. IEPA stated that it expects field data from the
2017 Lake Michigan Ozone Study will inform the LADCO states to better
simulate the meteorology and chemistry of ozone in the Lake Michigan
area.
IEPA also attempted to rely on a concept related to international
emissions, which was developed by outside parties and listed in
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum. IEPA noted that if
international emissions and offshore contributions to receptors from
LADCO's modeling, 1.40 ppb to the Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor and
0.98 ppb at the Allegan County receptor, were subtracted off the top of
the receptors' maximum design values, Allegan, Michigan receptor's
maximum design value would be below 71 ppb and the Sheboygan, Wisconsin
receptor's maximum design value would drop down to 71.4 ppb. IEPA noted
that subtracting international and offshore contributions would result
in Allegan County no longer qualifying as a maintenance receptor.
4. Information Provided by Illinois Regarding Step 4
IEPA did not consider any new permanent and enforceable measures to
reduce emissions in the SIP submission. IEPA instead noted they would
continue to assist LADCO with future modeling and analysis and would
work with EPA to identify additional ``flexibilities'' to define
maintenance, quantify transport, and demonstrate attainment.\42\
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\42\ Illinois' SIP submission at 16.
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B. Indiana
On November 2, 2018 the Indiana Department of Environmental
Management (IDEM) submitted a revision to the Indiana SIP addressing
interstate transport of air pollution for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The
submission contained what the state characterized as a weight of
evidence analysis of Indiana's ozone transport receptors utilizing
LADCO modeling results previously mentioned. Indiana did not explicitly
follow the 4-Step interstate transport framework but did examine
downwind air quality and Indiana's contributions using an analytic year
of 2023 to describe
[[Page 9846]]
Indiana's linkages to receptors. The following sections will describe
IDEM's submission, and the information provided for each step in the
process.
1. Information Provided by Indiana Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 of the 4-Step framework, IDEM identified monitoring
sites that are projected to have problems attaining and/or maintaining
the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023. As previously mentioned, the LADCO
modeling used the same technique as EPA to calculate future year design
values which were used to identify maintenance and nonattainment
receptors but used the ERTAC EGU Tool for EGU emissions. IDEM noted
they believed that the ERTAC EGU tool provides better estimates of
growth and forecasts than EPA's EGU emission projections. IDEM
presented the LADCO results, based on the ``3x3'' approach, which
identified ten receptors: Seven monitors with 2023 maximum design
values above the NAAQS, or maintenance receptors, and three monitors
with 2023 average design values greater than the 2015 ozone standard,
or nonattainment receptors.\43\
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\43\ Indiana's SIP submission Attachment 1, Table 7, page 30.
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2. Information Provided by Indiana Regarding Step 2
IDEM's submittal presented Indiana's projected 2023 ozone
contributions to maintenance and nonattainment receptors projected by
the LADCO modeling. IDEM relied primarily on the August 2018 memorandum
to justify the State's reliance on a 1 ppb contribution threshold to
identify linkages, as opposed to the 1 percent of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
standard (0.70 ppb) contribution threshold. IDEM noted that (1) the
tolerance level of ozone monitors is 1 ppb and (2) model run results
may contain biases larger than 1 percent of the NAAQS (0.70 ppb). Using
a 1 ppb threshold, IDEM identified that Indiana is linked to three
maintenance receptors: Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Monitor ID: 551170006),
Allegan, Michigan (Monitor ID: 260050003), and Richmond, New York
(Monitor ID: 360850067), and one nonattainment receptor: Harford,
Maryland (Monitor ID: 240251001).\44\ \45\ However, IDEM concluded on
the basis of its weight of evidence analysis, summarized in the
following subsection, that the monitors at Sheboygan, Wisconsin and
Allegan, Michigan would be in attainment in 2023.\46\
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\44\ Indiana's SIP submission Attachment 1, Table 1, page 12.
\45\ IDEM acknowledged that both the Harford, Maryland and
Richmond, New York receptors are nonattainment receptors in EPA's
modeling. Indiana's SIP submission Attachment 1, page 12.
\46\ Indiana's SIP submission Attachment 1, page 38, 53.
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3. Information Provided by Indiana Regarding Step 3
IDEM cited Indiana's rule amendments under CSAPR to conclude the
State was already satisfying its good neighbor obligations for the
ozone NAAQS.\47\ In support, IDEM provided a weight-of-evidence
analysis to justify their conclusion that no additional emission
reductions as necessary to satisfy Indiana's ozone transport
obligations. The evidence consisted of an ozone monitoring data
analysis, emissions analysis, and photochemical modeling analyses,
including a back trajectory analysis.
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\47\ Indiana's SIP submission, page 6.
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IDEM provided information ozone and emissions trends. They cited a
general decline in monitored ozone concentrations across Indiana from
2007 through 2017, a decrease in Indiana's overall statewide
NOX emissions and VOC emissions from 2005 to 2014, a
decrease in Indiana EGU NOX emissions from 2011 to 2016, and
projected decreases in Region 5 EGU NOX and VOC emissions
through 2023 relative to a 2011 base year (based on both the ERTAC EGU
Tool and EPA's EGU projections using the Integrated Planning Model
(IPM)). IDEM credited the downward emissions trends to permanent and
enforceable control measures. IDEM made the argument that overall
decreasing ozone concentration and emissions trends in the State, and
in the LADCO states, correlate with reduced contributions to
nonattainment and maintenance receptors outside of Indiana. IDEM also
identified air quality trends at the four downwind receptors to which
IDEM determined Indiana was linked. IDEM asserted that a declining
trend in three-year design values at the receptors in Harford, Maryland
and Richmond, New York in combination with national emission reduction
regulations in place for EGUs, tighter mobile source emission controls
and other transport related emission reduction measures, would result
in those two receptors reaching attainment over time. For the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin and Allegan, Michigan receptors, IDEM concluded
that if ozone design value trends continued as expected then those two
receptors would reach attainment before 2023. IDEM also asserted they
believed that the receptors in the Northeast (Harford, Maryland and
Richmond, New York) received a greater contribution from local sources.
IDEM represented EPA had reached the same conclusion, citing a May 14,
2018 presentation.
Next, IDEM presented an analysis of NOx controls for EGUs and non-
EGUs in the state from 2008 to 2017. IDEM considered current NOx
control measures, consent decree requirements, and future fuel switches
and retirements for large EGUs and non-EGUs. IDEM reported that the
State has seen a downward trend in annual NOX emissions from
both EGUs and non-EGUs due a combination of state and Federal rules
targeting fossil fueled EGUs and other large sources of NOX.
IDEM argued that it would not be cost-effective for non-EGUs to
implement further NOX controls because in 2017 there were
more than 93% fewer NOX emissions from non-EGUs when
compared to EGUs. IDEM stated they expect to see continued future
NOX emission reductions through 2028 from implementation of
Federal rules, the expected shutdown of nine EGUs, planned fuel
switches to natural gas for three EGUs, and enforceable consent decree
caps on NOX emissions at eleven EGUs. IDEM noted that future
retirements or retrofits to coal fired EGUs in Indiana were expected to
reduce NOX emissions by several thousand tons beyond those
projected by either LADCO or EPA. IDEM argued that the non-modeled
emission reductions would further assure future year attainment of the
ozone NAAQS at downwind receptors.
For their photochemical analyses, IDEM presented LADCO modeling
results to show contributions from individual states to 12
monitors,\48\ as well as contributions from individual sectors to the
same 12 monitors.\49\ IDEM noted that Indiana contributed above 1 ppb
to monitors that would be receptors based on EPA's definitions. IDEM
used these data as the backdrop to several arguments related to
potential flexibilities identified in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum.\50\ IDEM stated that additional emissions reductions from
EGU and non-EGU sources in Indiana are becoming more difficult to
require because of reduced effectiveness of controls to make
significant decreases in ozone values, operational concerns, and
increased
[[Page 9847]]
costs for customers. IDEM asserted that emission reductions from local
mobile and nonroad sources would be more beneficial to the receptors
than additional reductions from EGUs and non-EGUs in Indiana because
EGUs and non-EGUs contribute less to the receptors than either the
mobile or nonroad sectors. IDEM also argued that EPA should address
contributions from Canada and Mexico as well as contributions from
offshore commercial marine vessels. In addition, IDEM compared 2012-
2017 monitoring data to LADCO's and EPA's modeling and concluded that
all four linked receptors were already below the projected 2023 design
values. IDEM also calculated Indiana's portion of contribution to the
Harford, Maryland receptor as 0.077 ppb (based on a contribution
threshold of 1 ppb) and determined that Indiana would need to reduce
its contribution by 0.0077 ppb to bring the Harford, Maryland receptor
into attainment. IDEM argued that 0.0077 ppb is well within the error
of the model and it would be ``difficult'' to translate into an
emission reduction requirement.\51\
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\48\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1, Table 9.
\49\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1, Table 11.
\50\ Based on the reference to the potential flexibilities in
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum on page 2 of Attachment 1
to Indiana's SIP submission, EPA assumes the reference to
``flexibilities'' on page 38 of Attachment 1 likewise references
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum.
\51\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 42.
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Finally, IDEM provided a back trajectory analysis to evaluate
contributions from Indiana to the Harford, Maryland and Richmond, New
York receptors on exceedance days from 2015 to 2017. These back
trajectories were conducted at 10 meters and 750 meters and initialized
at 18Z Greenwich Mean Time over a three-year period from 2015-2017. The
trajectories were run backwards over a 72-hour period from the
exceedance day measured at each of the monitors. Considering the
Harford, Maryland receptor, Indiana measured one back trajectory at 10
meters and six back trajectories at 750 meters that passed through
Indiana. For the Richmond, New York receptor, out of 27 exceedance
days, Indiana measured three back trajectories at 10 meters and eight
trajectories at 750 meters that passed through Indiana. Indiana argues
that only a fraction of the exceedance days at the Harford and Richmond
receptors has back trajectories that pass-through Indiana. Based on
this analysis, IDEM concluded that those receptors are more likely to
be impacted by local emissions and suggested that emission reductions
should come first from the surrounding areas in the Northeast before
from Indiana.
4. Information Provided by Indiana Regarding Step 4
IDEM did not provide a Step 4 analysis.
C. Michigan
Environment, Great Lakes and Energy (EGLE) (formerly Michigan
Department of Environmental Quality) submitted a SIP revision to
address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on March 5, 2019. EGLE utilized
EPA modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum and LADCO modeling
and followed the 4-step interstate transport framework using an
analytic year of 2023 to describe Michigan's linkages to receptors in
other states. The submission also contained a weight-of-evidence
analysis to support EGLE's conclusions. The following sections will
discuss EGLE's submission and the information provided for each step in
the process.
1. Information Provided by Michigan Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework, EGLE identified monitoring
sites that are projected to have problems attaining and/or maintaining
the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023. EGLE presented the results from both the
EPA modeling from the March 2018 memorandum and LADCO (using both the
with- and without-water approaches). EGLE noted that they believe the
ERTAC EGU Tool uses a more transparent and state-driven data gathering
mechanism for EGU emissions and control projects. EPA's modeling
projected 16 receptors to which Michigan is projected to contribute in
2023. LADCO modeling (with and without water) identified 15 receptors
to which Michigan is projected to contribute in 2023.
2. Information Provided by Michigan Regarding Step 2
The first part of EGLE's submittal's step 2 analysis presented
Michigan's projected contributions to maintenance and nonattainment
receptors in 2023 from both the LADCO modeling (with and without water)
and the EPA modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum. The
submittal noted similar contribution concentrations between the two,
but found that the LADCO results often yielded slightly lower
contribution from Michigan sources than the EPA modeling for some
receptors. The state claimed this is attributed to LADCO's use of the
ERTAC EGU tool which they stated includes information on EGU shutdowns
and facility-specific information not included in the EPA modeling.
EGLE stated they had more confidence in the LADCO modeling.
Further, EGLE attempted to rely on the 1 ppb Significant Impact
Level (SIL) threshold from Guidance on Significant Impact Levels for
Ozone and Fine Particles in the Prevention of Significant Deterioration
Permitting Program (April 17, 2018) \52\ for the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD) permitting program as an appropriate
contribution threshold to determine whether Michigan was linked to any
receptors at step 2. Michigan argued that if a stationary source's
contributions are insignificant below 1 ppb, then a state's interstate
transport contributions below 1 ppb are likewise insignificant. EGLE
performed an analysis on contribution thresholds to analyze whether a 1
ppb threshold is appropriate for identifying Michigan's linkages. The
analysis looked at all 15 receptors to which Michigan contributes,
based on the LADCO with water modeling, and plotted potential
contribution thresholds ranging from 0.5 to 1.4 ppb against collective
upwind contributions from all source categories and states with
contribution above 0.5 ppb. EGLE plotted the collective contribution as
a function of contribution threshold and concluded the first inflection
point occurred in a majority of the collective contribution at a
contribution threshold between 0.9 and 1 ppb, correlating with the PSD
permitting SIL of 1 ppb. Based on this analysis, EGLE concluded that a
1 ppb contribution threshold was appropriate for use in the good
neighbor context. EGLE also mentioned the August 2018 memorandum,
described in Section I of this proposal, as additional support for the
use of a 1 ppb contribution threshold.\53\
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\52\ https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2018-04/documents/sils_policy_guidance_document_final_signed_4-17-18.pdf.
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EGLE's Step 2 conclusion was that, based on LADCO with water
modeling, Michigan was projected to be linked above a 1 ppb
contribution threshold in 2023 to three maintenance receptors; 1.85 ppb
to Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Site ID: 36-081-0124), 1.22 ppb to Queens, New
York (Site ID: 36-085-0067), and 1.03 ppb to Richmond, New York (Site
ID: 55-117-0006).
3. Information Provided by Michigan Regarding Step 3
EGLE provided what it characterized as a ``weight-of-evidence
analysis'' in step 3 to justify their conclusion that no additional
emissions reductions are necessary to satisfy Michigan's ozone
transport obligations for the ozone NAAQS. The evidence presented in
EGLE's submittal consisted primarily of an argument that upwind states
should have a lower responsibility to other states when the upwind
state is only linked to maintenance-only receptors.
[[Page 9848]]
EGLE's analysis focused in large part on the Sheboygan, Wisconsin
maintenance receptor (Site ID: 36-081-0124), as EGLE concluded it was
the receptor to which Michigan was projected to contribute the most in
2023 at 1.85 ppb.
On the issue of maintenance receptors, the state referenced a
concept identified by outside parties and listed in Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum, which was to consider whether the remedy for
upwind states linked to maintenance receptors could be less stringent
than those linked to nonattainment receptors. EGLE reasoned that
because the CAA incudes different SIP development requirements for
nonattainment and maintenance areas, that likewise nonattainment and
maintenance areas should be treated differently in good neighbor SIPs.
EGLE argued that because the CAA does not require emission reductions
from maintenance areas, then upwind states can potentially make a
sufficient showing they have no obligation to reduce emissions to
monitors in other states projected to be maintaining the NAAQS. EGLE
said they believe the reduction of projected contributions to projected
maintenance receptors is not required in certain circumstances, such as
when: (1) The projected maintenance exceedance is very small in
magnitude, (2) the projected contribution is very small, especially
compared to other states' contributions, (3) sector contributions
demonstrate the majority of contribution is from either sources already
federally regulated or sources without the possibility of additional
regulation, (4) there are large impacts of international emissions, and
(5) there are downward emission trends.
Applying this logic to the Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor, EGLE
argued that because the projected maximum design value at that receptor
is 72.8 ppb, the projected exceedance above the 2015 ozone NAAQS of 1.9
ppb is very small (values are truncated to ppb, thus 70.9 ppb would be
considered in attainment of the NAAQS). Based on this number, EGLE
argued that further emissions reductions from Michigan would be overly
burdensome. Secondly, citing a potential flexibility in Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum related to sector contribution, EGLE claimed
that 77% of contribution to the Sheboygan receptor is from federally
regulated sources or sources that cannot be regulated by Michigan. EGLE
noted that the other sectors of contribution it identified--oil and
gas, EGUs, and non-EGUs--are already controlled by Michigan. EGLE
argued Michigan sources should not be required to implement additional
contribution reductions in light of the relative size of their
contribution.
Citing Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum, again, EGLE
argued that the three receptors to which Michigan is linked are heavily
influenced by international emissions and other states. EGLE shared
that LADCO modeling projects Michigan's contribution to the Sheboygan
receptor (1.85 ppb) is less than projected contributions from
international contributions and boundary conditions (16.61 ppb),
Illinois (14.93 ppb), Wisconsin (9.1 ppb), biogenic sources (7.19 ppb),
and Indiana (6.19 ppb). EGLE used these numbers and an apportionment of
contributions from states and other sources to the amount the Sheboygan
monitor exceeds the 2015 ozone NAAQS to conclude that additional
emissions reductions from Michigan should not be required.
Additionally, EGLE argued that international contributions to the
Sheboygan receptor, which is geographically close to Canada, should be
eliminated from the projected DV, in which case the Sheboygan monitor
would be in attainment.
EGLE also cited Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum along
with an interpretation of EME Homer City to argue that EPA cannot
require reductions that would result in a reduction greater than an
upwind state's portion of the difference between the NAAQS and a
maintenance receptor's projected maximum design value. EGLE claimed
that Michigan's apportioned contribution to three linked receptors,
when distributed proportionally among other states that also contribute
more than 1 ppb to those receptors, is less than 0.12 ppb, but that
Michigan's responsibility to the exceedance is actually substantially
less than that amount when the home state's responsibility is
considered. EGLE also stated Michigan's apportioned contribution is at
less than 0.05 ppb of the projected maintenance exceedance at the
Sheboygan receptor, which is less than the variation among the modeled
maximum design values by both LADCO and EPA. EGLE concluded that
because of built-in modeling noise it would be ``difficult'' to either
verify that Michigan contributed 0.05 ppb to the Sheboygan, Wisconsin
receptor or for Michigan to require any additional reduction from
sources in the state.\54\ EGLE speculated it was quite likely that the
three linked receptors would maintain the NAAQS without any emissions
reductions from Michigan at all because the projected exceedances were
small.
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\54\ Michigan's SIP submission at 27.
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The state also stated that Michigan has downward emissions trends
(44% and 18% reduction in industrial point source NOX and
VOC emissions from 2008 through 2016, respectively) that are expected
to continue to decline or stay consistent over time due to projected
reductions in emissions from point sources of NOX and VOCs
EGUs, mobile sources and through other Federal measures. For EGUs, EGLE
pointed out that the shutdown of the Marquette Board of Light & Power
Shiras Steam Plant shut down was not included in either EPA or LADCO
modeling and that the U.S. Energy Information Agency's Annual Energy
Outlook anticipates growth in renewable energy in Michigan in 2019 and
a decline in coal beginning in 2022. EGLE also provided a list of
additional coal-fired EGUs that they stated were expected to retire by
2023. To support the conclusion that emissions will further be reduced
from mobile sources and through other Federal action, EGLE listed
several on the books and on the way Federal regulations. Finally, EGLE
noted existing controls on the oil and gas sector (applicable Federal
standards), non-EGUs (subject to the NOX SIP Call), and EGUs
(subject to CSAPR Update).
4. Information Provided by Michigan Regarding Step 4
EGLE concluded it would be unreasonable for Michigan to take
further actions to address its obligations under the good neighbor
provisions for the ozone NAAQS, and so at Step 4 EGLE determined that
no permanent and enforceable measures to reduce emissions were
necessary.
D. Minnesota
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) submitted a SIP revision
to address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on October 1, 2018. The
submission utilized both EPA modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum and LADCO modeling results previously mentioned. Minnesota
followed the 4-step interstate transport framework and used an analytic
year of 2023 to describe Minnesota's lack of contributions to out of
state receptors and assess emission reduction considerations. The
following sections will summarize MPCA's submission and the information
provided for each step in the process.
[[Page 9849]]
1. Information Provided by Minnesota Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework, MPCA identified monitoring
sites that are projected to have problems attaining and/or maintaining
the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023 according to LADCO modeling and EPA
modeling released in the March 2018 memorandum.\55\ As previously
mentioned, the LADCO modeling efforts used the same technique as EPA to
calculate future year design values which are used to identify
maintenance and nonattainment receptors. The submittal expressed MPCA's
opinion that the ERTAC EGU tool used in LADCO's modeling is superior to
EPA's 2023en modeling platform because the ERTAC EGU tool addresses
economic factors, preserves system reliability, and includes controls
or emissions reductions measure justified through some legal framework.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ MPCA's SIP submittal at Tables 2 and 3, pages 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Information Provided by Minnesota Regarding Step 2
MPCA's submittal at Step 2 presented Minnesota's projected 2023
ozone contributions to maintenance and nonattainment receptors
identified by both LADCO modeling and EPA modeling released in the
March 2018 memorandum.\55\ The submittal noted there were differences
in identified receptors between the two modeling results, and that the
LADCO results overall yielded slightly lower projected contributions to
downwind receptors from Minnesota sources than EPA modeling.
Minnesota relied on a contribution threshold of 1 percent of the
ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to define linkages for a state's contribution to
downwind air quality problems. Both the LADCO modeling and the EPA
modeling released in the March 2018 memorandum projected that Minnesota
contributes less than 1 percent of the NAAQS to all downwind receptors.
MPCA showed in Table 2 of its submission that the highest projected
contribution to a receptor in 2023 was 0.40 ppb, based on EPA modeling
released in the March 2018 memorandum, or 0.45 ppb, based on LADCO ``no
water'' modeling, to the Milwaukee, Wisconsin receptor (Site ID: 55-
079-0085). Based on this analysis, MPCA concluded that Minnesota was
not linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to any downwind receptor, and
therefore would not contribute to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance in other state with respect to the ozone NAAQS.
3. Information Provided by Minnesota Regarding Step 3
Despite concluding Minnesota was not linked at Step 2, MPCA
proceeded with a Step 3 analysis. MPCA provided air quality data in
Step 3 to justify that no additional emissions reductions are necessary
to satisfy their transport obligations. MPCA provided evidence of
decreasing ambient ozone concentrations in Minnesota from the mid-1990s
through 2017 as well as decreasing NOX and VOC emissions
from the state from 2002 through 2015 to further support their
conclusion.\56\
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\56\ See Minnesota's SIP submittal Figures 1-3, pages 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The state concluded that decreasing ambient ozone concentrations in
the state point to Minnesota contributing less to ozone in downwind
states as time goes on. Minnesota provided an analysis of
NOX and VOC emissions levels in the state from 2002 through
2015 to further support this point. According to MPCA, NOX
emissions have been steadily declining in the state from all sectors
and especially from EGUs due to emission limits and reductions required
in that category. MPCA also asserted that VOCs emissions have also seen
a similar decline in Minnesota in the years reported. MPCA concluded
that decreasing emissions in the state would make it unlikely for the
state to contribute significantly to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance in downwind states.
4. Information Provided by Minnesota Regarding Step 4
Citing declining emissions and their conclusion that Minnesota was
not projected to contribute above 1 percent of the NAAQS to any
receptor, MPCA concluded that no additional permanent or enforceable
measures would be needed to address ozone transport contribution from
Minnesota sources. MPCA determined the existing emission controls would
be sufficient to maintain Minnesota's continued contribution of less
than 1 percent of the NAAQS to downwind receptors. In support of this
argument, Minnesota provided a list of several Federal and State
emissions regulations applicable to sources in Minnesota, including
Part 70 permits, the CSAPR NOX trading programs, Mercury and
Air Toxics Standards, and various state standards for SO2,
particulate matter, NOX, NO2, and VOC. Hence,
Minnesota declined to consider any new permanent and enforceable
measures to reduce emissions as part of the Step 4 analysis.
E. Ohio
On September 28, 2018 the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
(OEPA) submitted a revision to the Ohio SIP addressing interstate
transport of air pollution for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. OEPA stated that
its submittal, which relied on an analytic year of 2023, conforms with
EPA's four-step framework. The following sections will describe what
OEPA provided for each step.
1. Information Provided by Ohio Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework, OEPA first identified 10
monitoring sites in the Northeast and Midwest that are projected to be
nonattainment, nonattainment/maintenance, or maintenance-only receptors
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023 based on LADCO's modeling and EPA's
method for defining nonattainment and maintenance receptors (See Table
1 below, reproduced from OEPA's submission).
Table 1--Ohio's Projected 2023 Nonattainment and Maintenance Monitors
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023
2015-2017 2023 OH Maintenance Status (TX
Site ID County State DV Average DV 2023 Max DV contribution Status DV (TX approach)
approach)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-103-0002........ Suffolk............ NY 76 71.6 73.1 1.75 Nonattainment/ 69.7 Nonattainment.
Maintenance.
09-001-9003........ Fairfield.......... CT 83 71.4 74.2 1.58 Nonattainment/ 73.7 Nonattainment/
Maintenance. Maintenance.
[[Page 9850]]
24-035-1001........ Harford............ MD 75 71.0 73.3 2.83 Nonattainment/ 67.0 Nonattainment.
Maintenance.
36-085-0067........ Richmond........... NY 76 70.9 72.4 2.24 Maintenance..... 68.0 Attainment.
55-117-0006........ Sheyboygan......... WI 80 70.5 72.8 1.17 Maintenance..... 71.1 Maintenance.
09-009-9002........ New Haven.......... CT 82 69.9 72.6 1.12 Maintenance..... 72.6 Maintenance.
09-001-3007........ Fairfield.......... CT 83 69.8 73.7 1.84 Maintenance..... 73.7 Maintenance.
36-081-0124........ Queens............. NY 74 69.2 71.0 1.88 Maintenance..... 70.1 Attainment.
09-001-0017........ Fairfield.......... CT 79 68.9 71.2 1.05 Maintenance..... 71.2 Maintenance.
26-005-0003........ Allegan............ MI 73 68.8 71.5 0.19 Maintenance--Not 71.5 Maintenance--No
Linked. t Linked.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OEPA then claimed that EPA's methodology for determining
maintenance-only receptors is inappropriate because it is more
stringent than EPA's methodology for identifying nonattainment monitors
and is inconsistent with the CAA. In OEPA's view, EPA's methodology
results in greater emissions reduction requirements to address
maintenance receptors than nonattainment receptors. Citing stakeholder-
identified potential flexibilities that were listed in an attachment to
EPA's March 2018 memorandum, OEPA used an alternative method developed
by the Texas Commission for Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to identify
maintenance receptors. This method determines a future year design
value (DV) for purposes of identifying maintenance-only receptors by
applying the model-predicted relative response factor (RRF) to the most
recent 3-year design value (i.e., 2011-2013 design value) within the
five-year base period (i.e., 2009-2013), rather than the highest 3-year
DV in the same 5-year base period, which is used in EPA's approach.
OEPA stated that using the TCEQ approach accounts for emissions
reductions over the five-year period, while also accounting for
meteorological variability, since the design value is calculated based
on monitoring data from a three-year period. By using the TCEQ
approach, Ohio concluded that four monitors which would be either
nonattainment/maintenance receptors under EPA's method would, under the
TCEQ method, actually be nonattainment-only receptors (i.e., sites
261030002 in Suffolk, New York, 240251001 in Harford, Maryland) or
monitors in attainment (i.e., sites 360850067 in Richmond, New York,
and 360810124 in Queens, New York) in 2023.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Ohio's SIP submission, Table 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OEPA's submittal provided information on inter-annual
meteorological variability, ozone design value trends at the four
monitoring sites that the state eliminated as receptors, as well as
recent and projected trends in NOX and VOC emissions to
support the use of an alternative definition of maintenance receptors.
The meteorological information provided in OEPA's submission included
nationwide maps showing the maximum temperature anomaly (i.e.,
departure from the long-term average or ``normal'') for the period May
through October in the years 2011, 2012, and 2013. OEPA concluded from
these maps that temperatures in the Northeast and Midwest were above or
much above average during May through October in each of the years
2011, 2012, and 2013. OEPA examined trends in ozone design values at
each of the four monitoring sites in question and concluded that design
values at these sites have declined substantially from 2000 through
2017 and that although there has been a slight leveling off or increase
in recent years, this is no greater than the normal year to year
variability. In addition, based on the emissions trends data, OEPA
stated that NOX emissions have declined in concert with
these trends in design values and are projected to continue to decline
through 2028 for the continental U.S. as well as those states that were
projected to be linked to the four monitors eliminated under the TCEQ
approach. Based on their analysis of the meteorological and ozone and
emissions trends data, OEPA concluded that the four monitoring sites
identified previously are not reasonably expected to have difficulty
maintaining the standards in 2023.
2. Information Provided by Ohio Regarding Step 2
OEPA's submittal presented the projected 2023 ozone contributions
from Ohio to ten maintenance and nonattainment receptors in the
Northeast and Midwest using data from the LADCO source apportionment
modeling. LADCO's contribution data identified a total of nine
receptors in 2023 (3 nonattainment and 6 maintenance-only) with modeled
contributions from emissions in Ohio that exceed both a one percent of
the 2015 NAAQS threshold (i.e., 0.70 ppb) and a 1 ppb contribution
threshold (Table 1). Despite acknowledging Ohio was linked to the same
number of receptors under either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb,
OEPA maintained they had concerns about both thresholds being too
stringent, noting that Ohio would have two linkages if the threshold
were 3 percent and zero linkages if the threshold were 4 percent.
As noted above, OEPA applied the TCEQ method for identifying
maintenance-only receptors, and concluded that four of the receptors to
which Ohio was linked would not have difficulty maintaining the NAAQS
in 2023. However, after eliminating these four monitoring sites as
having maintenance issues, OEPA acknowledged that Ohio would still be
linked to seven receptors in 2023.
3. Information Provided by Ohio Regarding Step 3
OEPA provided what they characterize as a weight of evidence
analysis in Step 3 to justify their conclusion that no additional
emissions reductions are necessary to satisfy Ohio's interstate
transport obligations under the 2015 ozone NAAQS. OEPA argued that
their analysis demonstrated that any additional controls beyond those
on the books or already planned would result in overcontrol of sources
in Ohio, likely at cost-prohibitive levels.
First, OEPA attempted to show that NOX and VOC 2023
emissions from EGU, nonEGU, and onroad sectors had been overestimated
by 21,761 tons of NOX and 3,240 tons of VOC annually, and
7,040 tons of NOX and 878 tons of VOC per ozone season. The
submittal performed an evaluation of the ERTAC EGU Tool, emphasizing
that projected 2023 EGU emissions from eight facilities
[[Page 9851]]
were overestimated, analyzed through a comparison of actual emissions
data obtained from EPA's Clean Air Markets Database (CAMD) and CSAPR/
CSAPR Update allocations obtained from EPA's CSAPR website with
projected emissions in 2023 obtained from ERTAC EGU tool. OEPA also
based its conclusions on an expected increase of natural gas sources
projected by the U.S. Energy Information's Annual Energy Outlook 2018
and recently permitted natural gas facilities not reflected in the
ERTAC EGU tool. Further, OEPA evaluated emissions from nine non-EGU
sources to claim EPA's 2023 projected emissions were overestimated. For
this analysis, OEPA compared actual emissions data trends from Ohio's
Emissions Inventory System18 with projected emissions from EPA's Air
Emissions Modeling Platform 2011v6.319 to conclude EPA's projections
overestimated non-EGU emissions. OEPA also asserted that EPA's
projections of vehicle miles traveled (VMT) were higher than the local
projections.
OEPA's submittal also looked at NOX and VOC emissions
trends, and asserted that from 2011 to 2016, NOX emissions
declined while VOC emissions remained steady. Additionally, based on
state-specific data, OEPA posited that Ohio's VOC emissions will
decrease even more rapidly than predicted by EPA because the large
growth in the State's oil and gas sector had begun to level off. OEPA
attributed the trends it identified to several Federal and State
programs, including SIP approved state programs, non-SIP approved
programs such as NOX RACT, Architectural and Industrial
Maintenance (AIM) Coatings rules, Ohio's Beneficiary Mitigation Plan
for the Volkswagen settlement, and Federal programs such as CAIR and
CSAPR, NOX SIP Call, the National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP), the Regional Haze Rule, BART,
SO2 Data Requirements Rule, and MATS.
In addition to emissions trends data, OEPA noted LADCO modeling
projected downwind trends in design values at the ten receptors from
2000 through 2017 and included a reference to ``a May 14, 2018
presentation, U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards
(OAQPS)''.\58\ OEPA also stated that LADCO sector-based source
apportionment modeling indicates a significant contribution from onroad
sources at nine receptors. OEPA argued that local onroad emissions
should be addressed by EPA before EPA requires additional reductions
from upwind states. OEPA also suggested EPA should take into account
the impact on ozone of the proposed Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient
(SAFE) Vehicles Rule before taking final action on SAFE. Further, OEPA
asserted that Ohio's contribution to nine monitors is in the 1 or 2 ppb
range while the home state and initial and boundary contributions are
each up to 19 ppb, and the contribution from Canada/Mexico is in the
same range as Ohio's. OEPA argued that ignoring international emissions
sources and placing all responsibility for addressing receptors on
upwind states would result in overcontrol.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Ohio's SIP submission at 43.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OEPA concluded that there were no cost-effective measures to be
taken for EGU or non-EGU sources in Ohio. To support this claim, OEPA
pointed to the cost effectiveness threshold of $1400/ton from the CSAPR
Update (81 FR 74508, October 26, 2016), and while OEPA recognized that
it was developed for the 2008 ozone standard, OEPA stated they believed
it is a reasonable cost-effectiveness level for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
As for non-EGUs, OEPA asserted that those sectors were adequately
controlled by the Boiler MACT and numerous other MACT categories, BART,
SO2 Data Requirements Rule and other Federal regulations.
4. Information Provided by Ohio Regarding Step 4
OEPA concluded, based on its weight of evidence analysis, that no
additional emissions reduction measures beyond existing and planned
controls are necessary to address ozone transport contribution from
Ohio sources for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
F. Wisconsin
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) submitted a SIP
revision to address CAA Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) on September 14,
2018. The submittal notes state and Federal rules applicable to sources
in Wisconsin that are relevant to interstate transport, as well as
Wisconsin's participation in LADCO. WDNR identified CAIR, CSAPR, CSAPR
Update, Wisconsin's regional haze SIP applicable for the 2008-2018
planning period, and state PSD programs. Further, WDNR cited continued
consultation with LADCO, three Wisconsin Administrative Code statutes
that could be relied on ``[i]f needed'' to address disagreements for
SIP development in other states' nonattainment areas, and an adequate
PSD program.\59\ The statues mentioned include Wisconsin Administrative
Code, Natural Resources (Wis. Admin. Code, NR), subsections 285.11,
285.13 and 285.15. The first two address air pollution control
department duties and powers. The third, Wisconsin Statute 285.15,
entitled Interstate Agreement, gives the governor the authority to
enter an agreement to solve interstate pollution transport with
Illinois, Indiana and Michigan if the area includes portions of both
Wisconsin and Illinois.\60\ WDNR does not explicitly reach the
conclusion that Wisconsin has satisfied the good neighbor provision for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, but it is implied. WDNR did not reference the 4-
step framework. WDNR did not rely on any modeling, identify any
receptors, or determine whether Wisconsin contributes any amount of
ozone precursor emissions to downwind states. The submittal does not
include an analysis of potential NOX controls. WDNR did not
rely on any EPA memoranda. No supporting documentation was provided.
Apart from the cited rules and LADCO membership, WDNR provided no
discussion or analysis to determine whether they have any obligations
under the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Wisconsin's SIP submission at 4.
\60\ See Wis. Admin. Code NR 285.15 (2021), available at https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/285/ii/11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. EPA Evaluation
EPA is proposing to find that the Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin's SIP submissions do not meet the
states' obligations with respect to prohibiting emissions that
contribute significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance
of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state based on EPA's evaluation of
the SIP submissions using the 4-step interstate transport framework,
and EPA is therefore proposing to disapprove Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin's SIP submissions.
A. Illinois
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Illinois Regarding Step 1
For Step 1 in the 4-step framework, IEPA identified monitoring
sites that are projected to have problems attaining or maintaining the
2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023. As previously mentioned, the LADCO modeling
efforts used the same technique as EPA to calculate future year design
values used to identify maintenance and nonattainment receptors. IEPA
presented the LADCO results with water cells, which identified five
monitors with 2023 maximum design values greater than the
[[Page 9852]]
2015 ozone standard, or maintenance receptors, and seven monitors with
2023 average design values greater than the 2015 ozone standard, or
nonattainment receptors. Since new modeling has been performed by EPA
with updated emission data, EPA proposes to rely on the most recent
modeling to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors with
linkage to Wisconsin in 2023. Nonetheless, the alternative modeling
relied on by IEPA also identified a number of nonattainment and
maintenance receptor sites in 2023. See Table CC on page 15 of IEPA's
submittal. Thus, even under the alternative modeling of 2023, IEPA
acknowledges in its submittal the existence of several nonattainment
and maintenance receptors.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Illinois relied on alternative modeling to EPA's modeling,
Illinois acknowledged in their SIP submission that it is linked to one
or more downwind receptors above either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or a 1
ppb contribution threshold 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, EPA need not conduct a
comparative assessment of the alternative modeling; the state concedes
that it is linked. IEPA's analysis corroborates the conclusion in EPA's
most recent modeling in that the modeling demonstrates the State to be
linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to a downwind receptor, as
described in the next section.
IEPA, relying on a concept listed in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum, attempted to justify the use of a 1 ppb threshold at step 2
to identify whether the state was ``linked'' to a projected downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptor. As explained in Section I above,
the concepts presented in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum
were developed by outside parties; they are neither guidance nor
determined by EPA to be consistent with the CAA. However, EPA's August
2018 memorandum also addressed possible alternative thresholds and
suggested that, with appropriate additional analysis, it may be
reasonable for states to use a 1 ppb contribution threshold, as an
alternative to a 1 percent of the NAAQS threshold, at Step 2 of the 4-
Step interstate transport framework for the purposes of identifying
linkages to downwind receptors.
As an initial matter, EPA does not accept Illinois' argument that a
1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold at Step 2 is
``inappropriate'' for the 2015 ozone NAAQS due to modeling biases and
errors.\61\ The explanation for how the 1 percent contribution
threshold was originally derived is available in the 2011 CSAPR
rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208, 48237-38. Further, in the CSAPR Update,
EPA re-analyzed the threshold for purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS and
determined it was appropriate to continue to apply this threshold. EPA
compared the 1 percent threshold to a 0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold
and a 5 percent of NAAQS threshold. EPA found that the lower threshold
did not capture appreciably more upwind state contribution compared to
the 1 percent threshold, while the 5 percent threshold allowed too much
upwind state contribution to drop out from further analysis. See Final
CSAPR Update Air Quality Modeling TSD, at 27-30 (EPA-HQ-OAR-2015-0596-
0144). If EPA were to apply this analysis to the 2015 ozone NAAQS using
the updated modeling based on the 2016v2 emissions platform, a 5
percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5 ppb) only
captures approximately 50 percent of the total upwind contribution.
Compared to a 1 percent threshold, a 5 percent threshold would, on
average, forgo 27 percent of the total upwind contribution. As EPA
noted in the August 2018 memorandum, the use of even a 2 ppb
contribution threshold under the modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum would only capture about 55 percent of all upwind
contributions, and therefore ``emission reductions from states linked
at that higher threshold may be insufficient to address collective
upwind state contribution to downwind air quality problems.'' \31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Illinois' SIP submission at 8, 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With these figures in mind, IEPA's claims that the contribution
threshold should be substantially higher than 1 or even 2 ppb solely on
the basis of modeling uncertainty cannot be accepted. First, both
LADCO's and EPA's modeling techniques are sufficiently reliable and fit
for the purpose to measure upwind contribution levels down to at least
one percent of the NAAQS. EPA's recommended model attainment test is
based on application of the model in a relative sense rather than
relying upon absolute model predictions.\62\ All models have
limitations resulting from uncertainties in inputs and scientific
formulation. To minimize the effects of these uncertainties, the
modeling is anchored to base period measured data in EPA's guidance
approach for projecting design values. Notably, EPA also uses our
source apportionment modeling in a relative sense when calculating the
average contribution metric (used to identify linkages). In this method
the magnitude of the contribution metric is tied to the magnitude of
the projected average design value which is tied to the base period
average measured design value. EPA's guidance has not established a
bright line criteria for judging whether or not statistical measures of
model performance constitute acceptable or unacceptable model
performance. So, contrary to what Illinois appears to be claiming with
regards to modeling biases, there are no EPA recommended measures of
allowable error. Although EPA does not typically focus on using
particular benchmarks as the sole criteria for model performance, EPA
notes that the model performance for the updated modeling based on the
2016v2 emissions platform is generally within the benchmarks
recommended by Emery.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See Section 4.1' ``Overview of Modeled Attainment Test in
EPA Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454-R-18-
009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modeling-guidance-documents.
\63\ Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G. Russel, M. Talat
Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh Kumar (2017). Recommendations on
statistics and benchmarks to assess photochemical model performance,
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 67:5,582-598,
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA has successfully applied a 1 percent of NAAQS threshold to
identify linked upwind states in three prior rulemakings. And the D.C.
Circuit has declined to establish bright line criteria for model
performance. In upholding EPA's approach to evaluating interstate
transport in CSAPR, the D.C. Circuit held that they would not
``invalidate EPA's predictions solely because there might be
discrepancies between those predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise of prediction.'' EME Homer
City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 135 (2015). The court
continued to note that ``the fact that a `model does not fit every
application perfectly is no criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.''' Id. at 135-36 (quoting
Chemical Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C.
Cir. 1994).
Finally, EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided that whether use of
a 1 ppb threshold is appropriate must be based on an evaluation of
state-specific circumstances, and no such evaluation was included in
the
[[Page 9853]]
submission. IEPA did not conduct such an analysis. EPA's experience
with the alternative Step 2 thresholds is further discussed in Section
I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA is considering withdrawing the August
2018 memorandum.
However, based on both the state's alternative modeling and EPA's
updated modeling, the state is projected to contribute greater than
both the 1 percent and alternative 1 ppb thresholds. While EPA does
not, in this action, approve of the IEPA's application of the 1 ppb
threshold, based on Illinois' linkages greater than 1 ppb to projected
downwind nonattainment or maintenance receptors, the state's use of
this alternative threshold at step 2 of the 4-step interstate framework
would not alter our review and proposed disapproval this SIP submittal.
3. Results of EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for
Illinois
As described in Section I, 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
Illinois contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the 2015
ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or maintenance
receptor. As shown in Table 2, the data \64\ indicate that in 2023,
emissions from Illinois contribute greater than 1 percent of the
standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in
Wisconsin.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file:''
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx'' which is included in docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\65\ 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 Illinois 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 ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
Table 2--Illinois Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Illinois
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
550590025.................... Kenosha, WI..... Maintenance.... 69.2 72.3 18.55
550590019.................... Kenosha, WI..... Nonattainment.. 72.8 73.7 18.13
551010020.................... Racine, WI...... Nonattainment.. 71.3 73.2 13.86
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, based on EPA's evaluation of the information submitted
by IEPA, and based on EPA's most recent modeling results for 2023, EPA
proposes to find that Illinois is linked at Steps 1 and 2 and has an
obligation to assess potential emissions reductions from sources or
other emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-step framework. EPA will
proceed to Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport framework to
assess the 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.
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner 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 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. IEPA did not conduct
such an analysis in Illinois' SIP submission.
IEPA argued that Illinois' contributions to the nonattainment
monitors in the LADCO domain, namely the Allegan and Sheboygan
receptors, EPA can be fairly and adequately addressed through Illinois'
participation in LADCO. Though IEPA suggested that LADCO may be
partially responsible for decreases in ambient ozone concentrations in
the Lake Michigan area, LADCO is not a regulatory agency responsible
for implementing emissions controls. Furthermore, Illinois did not
provide any information on any planned emission reductions, or
evaluation of control strategies that the LADCO states intend to
implement within their domain, that would reduce either the ozone
concentrations or Illinois' contributions at the nonattainment or
maintenance monitors to which IEPA identified Illinois as linked.
IEPA's basis for concluding that LADCO participation may relieve
Illinois of any good neighbor obligations to downwind receptors is
entirely unsubstantiated and does not present any basis on which EPA
can approve IEPA's SIP submittal. As such, EPA proposes to find
Illinois' LADCO participation as inadequate to resolve Illinois' good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
[[Page 9854]]
The submittal also stated that Illinois is developing new
NOX RACT standards for the Chicago area that, in conjunction
with existing regulations and future Federal reductions, are estimated
to reduce NOX emissions by up to 20,000 tons/year which had
not yet been reflected in modeling to 2023. However, Illinois failed to
provide any information on the control measures or implementation
schedule that would achieve the estimated 20,000 tons/year in
reductions. IEPA did not quantify how the emissions reductions they
estimated would impact air quality at downwind receptors or Illinois'
contributions. In fact, Illinois has not yet finalized the
NOX RACT rule for Chicago. In general, any changes in the
emissions inventory and on-the-books controls relevant to emissions in
2023 have now been incorporated into EPA's modeling using the 2016v2
emissions platform, which projects a continuing contribution from
Illinois to out of state receptors above a threshold of 1 percent of
the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite these measures. Therefore, IEPA's
SIP submission should have evaluated the availability of additional air
quality controls to improve downwind air quality at nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 3.
Additionally, states may not rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each such [SIP] shall . .
. contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also CAA section
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). IEPA did not
attempt to revise Illinois' SIP to include these measures in order to
implement its good neighbor obligations. Further, 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 EPA's 4-step framework to define ``significant contribution.''
IEPA did not identify the control measures, provide an assessment of
the overall effects of these measures, note when the reductions would
be achieved, or explain what the overall resulting air quality effects
would be at identified out of state receptors. IEPA did not evaluate
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. IEPA did
not offer an explanation as to whether any faster or more stringent
emissions reductions that may be available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges states are not necessarily bound
to follow its own analytical framework at Step 3, IEPA did not attempt
to determine or justify an appropriate uniform cost-effectiveness
threshold for the more stringent 2015 ozone NAAQS. This would have been
similar to the approach to defining significant contribution that EPA
has applied in prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and or the CSAPR Update,
even if such an analysis is not technically mandatory.
Finally, under the Wisconsin decision, states and 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. The IEPA's
submittal is insufficient to the extent the implementation timeframes
for identified control measures were left unidentified, unexplained, or
too uncertain to permit EPA to form a judgment as to whether the timing
requirements for good neighbor obligations have been met.
IEPA also attempted to rely on a concept related to international
emissions identified in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum--a
concept that apparently had its origins outside EPA and was not
endorsed or recommend by EPA at the time or since. IEPA noted that
Illinois would be linked to only one receptor if international and
offshore emissions were simply subtracted from the receptor's maximum
design values. As explained in Section I.D above, the concepts
presented in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum were neither
guidance nor determined by EPA to be consistent with the CAA. EPA made
clear at the time that it would thoroughly review the technical and
legal justifications states put forward in relying on any concepts from
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum. In this case, what IEPA
proposes is clearly unacceptable.
The state's reasoning related to international and offshore
emissions is inapplicable to the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The good neighbor provision requires states and EPA
to address interstate transport of air pollution that contributes to
downwind states' ability to attain and maintain NAAQS. Whether
emissions from other states or other countries also contribute to the
same downwind air quality issue is irrelevant in assessing whether a
downwind state has an air quality problem, or whether an upwind state
is significantly contributing to that problem. States are not obligated
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce emissions sufficient on
their own to resolve downwind receptors' nonattainment or maintenance
problems. Rather, states are obligated to eliminate their own
``significant contribution'' or ``interference'' with the ability of
other states to attain or maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin specifically rejected
petitioner arguments suggesting that upwind states should be excused
from good neighbor obligations on the basis that some other source of
emissions (whether international or another upwind state) could be
considered the ``but-for'' cause of downwind air quality problem. See
938 F.3d at 323-324. The court viewed petitioners' arguments as
essentially an argument ``that an upwind state `contributes
significantly' to downwind nonattainment only when its emissions are
the sole cause of downwind nonattainment.'' Id. at 324. The court
explained that ``an upwind state can `contribute' to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are not the but-for cause.'' Id. at
324-325. See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir.
2009) (rejecting the argument ``that `significantly contribute'
unambiguously means `strictly cause' '' because there is ``no reason
why the statute precludes EPA from determining that [an] addition of
[pollutant] into the atmosphere is significant even though a nearby
county's nonattainment problem would still persist in its absence'');
Miss. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790 F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C.
Cir. 2015) (observing that the argument that ``there likely would have
been no violation at all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]'' is ``merely a rephrasing of the but-
for causation rule that we rejected in Catawba County''). Therefore, a
state is not excused from eliminating its significant contribution on
the basis that international emissions also contribute some amount of
pollution to the same receptors to which the state is linked. Illinois'
argument related to international and offshore emissions fails to
change the status of any receptor at Step 1, to eliminate Illinois'
linkages at Step 2, or to provide sufficient evidence that Illinois
does not contribute significantly to receptors at Step 3.
We therefore propose that Illinois was required to analyze
emissions from the sources and other emissions activity from within the
state to determine whether its contributions were
[[Page 9855]]
significant, and we propose to disapprove its submission because
Illinois 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. IEPA identified future
NOX RACT standards for the Chicago area and unnamed Federal
rules were sufficient to resolve Illinois' good neighbor obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. However, Illinois did not revise its SIP to
include these emission reductions in a revision to its SIP to ensure
the reductions were permanent and enforceable. As a result, EPA
proposes to disapprove Illinois' submittal on the separate,\66\
additional basis that the Illinois has not included permanent and
enforceable emissions reductions in its SIP as necessary to meet the
obligations of CAA section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ Pointing to anticipated upcoming emission reductions is not
sufficient as a step 3 analysis, for the reasons discussed in
Section 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Conclusion
Based on EPA's evaluation of Illinois SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of Illinois' May 21, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state's interstate transport obligations, because it fails to contain
the necessary provisions to eliminate emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the
2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state.
B. Indiana
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Indiana Regarding Step 1
IDEM relied on LADCO modeling released in 2018 to identify
nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this action, LADCO performed a modeling demonstration
like that of EPA's 2018 transport modeling efforts, except with use of
the ERTAC EGU Tool for EGU emissions. LADCO identified nonattainment
and maintenance receptors using EPA methodology identified in Section
I. IDEM elected to rely on LADCO's modeling results, which identified
similar receptors to EPA's modeling included in the March 2018 memo.
Since new modeling has been performed by EPA which includes updated
emission data using the 2016v2 platform, EPA proposes to primarily rely
on the most recent modeling to identify nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in 2023 (see Table 3 further in this action).
Nonetheless, the LADCO modeling relied on by IDEM also identified a
number of nonattainment and maintenance receptor sites in 2023. See
Table 7 on page 30 of Attachment 1 to Indiana's submittal. Thus, even
under the LADCO modeling for 2023, IDEM acknowledges in its submittal
the existence of several nonattainment and maintenance receptors.
IDEM essentially argues that two of the receptors to which Indiana
was linked would not actually be receptors in 2023. Based on updated
modeling of EPA's 2016v2 emissions platform, EPA agrees with IDEM that
that the Allegan, Michigan monitor is not expected to be a receptor in
2023, but not the receptor in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Regardless, EPA
disagrees with the line of reasoning IDEM put forward to argue that
those two monitors would not be receptors to the extent such reasoning
could be applied to Indiana's linkages in EPA's modeling using the
2016v2 emissions platform. First, IDEM concluded that if ozone design
value trends continued as expected then those two receptors would reach
attainment before 2023. In addition, IDEM compared 2012-2017 monitoring
data with LADCO's and EPA's modeling and concluded that the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin and Allegan, Michigan receptor monitors were already below
the 2023 projections. Additionally, EPA's updated modeling, which
considers more recent design values and emissions, continues to find
that Indiana is linked to downwind nonattainment and maintenance
receptors, despite downward trends in emissions and design values
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Indiana relied on alternative modeling to EPA's modeling,
Indiana acknowledged in its SIP submission that it is linked to one or
more downwind receptors above either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb
contribution threshold in 2023. Because the alternative modeling relied
on by IDEM also demonstrates that a linkage exists between the state
and one or more downwind receptors at Step 2, EPA need not conduct a
comparative assessment of the alternative modeling; the State concedes
that it is linked. IDEM's analysis corroborates the conclusion in EPA's
most recent modeling, described in the next section.
IDEM additionally utilized a 1 ppb threshold at Step 2 to identify
whether it was linked to a projected downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As discussed in EPA's August 2018 memorandum,
with appropriate additional analysis it may be reasonable for states to
use a 1 ppb contribution threshold, as an alternative to a 1 percent
threshold, at Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate transport framework, for
the purposes of identifying linkages to downwind receptors. However,
IDEM's submission did not contain any additional analysis of
contributions at the receptors to which they were linked to support
their claim that a 1 ppb threshold was an appropriate Step 2 screening
threshold. Rather, IDEM claimed that a threshold of 1 percent was too
low because it is less than the ozone monitoring ``tolerance level'' of
1 ppb (i.e., precision) used for reporting measured ozone
concentrations. In its submittal IDEM failed to provide any basis for
asserting that the precision of an ozone monitor is applicable to the
precision of ozone contributions which are not a directly measured
quantity. Regardless, total upwind contributions are well above 1 ppb
at all receptors to which Indiana is linked based on modeling by LADCO
and by EPA. In addition, Indiana alone contributes above 1 ppb to
several downwind receptors. Because contributions are not directly
measured, modeling is used to apportion projected ozone design values
into contributions from individual states and other sources of ozone
precursors (e.g., fires and biogenic sources). The projected ozone
design values are calculated using the method recommended in EPA's
modeling guidance.\67\ As part of this method, projected design values
are reported with a precision of a tenth of a ppb. Consistent with our
modeling guidance, ozone contributions are evaluated with a precision
of a tenth of a ppb. For example, a contribution of 0.6999 . . . ppb is
reported as 0.69 ppb and evaluated as 0.6 ppb which is below the 1
percent threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for
Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454-
R-18-009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modeling-guidance-documents.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indiana seemingly conflates the contribution threshold at Step 2
with a Step 3 determination of ``significance'' (which is reached only
after the application of a multi-factor analysis), regardless EPA does
not accept
[[Page 9856]]
Indiana's argument that a 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold
at Step 2 is ``not appropriate'' for the 2015 ozone NAAQS on the basis
of unwarranted modeling reliability concerns.\68\ The explanation for
how the 1 percent contribution threshold was originally derived is
available in the 2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208, 48237-38.
Further, in the CSAPR Update, EPA re-analyzed the threshold for
purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS and determined it was appropriate to
continue to apply this threshold. EPA compared the 1 percent threshold
to a 0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold and a 5 percent of NAAQS threshold.
EPA found that the lower threshold did not capture appreciably more
upwind state contribution compared to the 1 percent threshold, while
the 5 percent threshold allowed too much upwind state contribution to
drop out from further analysis. See Final CSAPR Update Air Quality
Modeling TSD, at 27-30 (EPA-HQ-OAR-2015-0596-0144). If EPA were to
apply this analysis to the 2015 ozone NAAQS using the updated modeling
based on the 2016v2 emissions platform, a 5 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold would forgo nearly 30 percent of the total
upwind contribution, on average, for those receptors to which Indiana
is linked using a 1 percent threshold. As EPA noted in the August 2018
memorandum, the use of even a 2 ppb contribution threshold under the
modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum would only capture
about 55 percent of all upwind contributions, and therefore ``emission
reductions from states linked at that higher threshold may be
insufficient to address collective upwind state contribution to
downwind air quality problems.'' \69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 4.
\69\ August 2018 memorandum at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With these figures in mind, IDEM's claims that the contribution
threshold should be substantially higher than 1 or even 2 ppb solely on
the basis of modeling uncertainty cannot be accepted. First, both
IDEM's and EPA's modeling techniques are sufficiently reliable and fit
for the purpose to measure upwind contribution levels down to at least
one percent of the NAAQS. EPA's recommended model attainment test is
based on application of the model in a relative sense rather than
relying upon absolute model predictions.\70\ All models have
limitations resulting from uncertainties in inputs and scientific
formulation. To minimize the effects of these uncertainties, the
modeling is anchored to base period measured data in EPA's guidance
approach for projecting design values. Notably, EPA also uses our
source apportionment modeling in a relative sense when calculating the
average contribution metric (used to identify linkages). In this method
the magnitude of the contribution metric is tied to the magnitude of
the projected average design value which is tied to the base period
average measured design value. EPA's guidance has not established a
bright-line criteria for judging whether or not statistical measures of
model performance constitute acceptable or unacceptable model
performance. So, contrary to what Indiana appears to be claiming with
regards to modeling biases, there are no EPA recommended measures of
allowable error. Although EPA does not typically focus on using
particular benchmarks as the sole criteria for model performance, EPA
notes that the model performance for the updated modeling based on the
2016v2 emissions platform is generally within the benchmarks
recommended by Emery, et al., (2017).\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ See Section 4.1' ``Overview of Modeled Attainment Test in
EPA Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454-R-18-
009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modeling-guidance-documents.
\71\ Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G. Russel, M. Talat
Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh Kumar (2017). Recommendations on
statistics and benchmarks to assess photochemical model performance,
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 67:5,582-598,
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA has successfully applied a 1 percent of NAAQS threshold to
identify linked upwind states in three prior rulemakings. And the D.C.
Circuit has declined to establish bright line criteria for model
performance. In upholding EPA's approach to evaluating interstate
transport in CSAPR, the Supreme Court held that they would not
``invalidate EPA's predictions solely because there might be
discrepancies between those predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise of prediction.'' EME Homer
City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 135 (2015). The court
continued to note that ``the fact that a `model does not fit every
application perfectly is no criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.' '' Id. at 135-36 (quoting
Chemical Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C.
Cir. 1994).
EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided that whether use of a 1 ppb
threshold is appropriate must be based on an evaluation of state-
specific circumstances, and no such evaluation was included in the
submission. EPA's experience with the alternative Step 2 thresholds is
further discussed in Section I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA is
considering withdrawing the August 2018 memorandum.
3. Results of EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for Indiana
As described in Section I, 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
Indiana contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the 2015
ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or maintenance
receptor. As shown in Table 3, the data \72\ indicate that in 2023,
emissions from Indiana contribute greater than 1 percent of the
standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in Wisconsin,
Illinois, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx which is included in docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\73\ 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 Indiana 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 ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
Table 3--Indiana Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Indiana
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
550590025.................... Kenosha, WI..... Maintenance.... 69.2 72.3 7.10
170310032.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.8 72.4 7.03
[[Page 9857]]
550590019.................... Kenosha, WI..... Nonattainment.. 72.8 73.7 6.60
551010020.................... Racine, WI...... Nonattainment.. 71.3 73.2 6.60
170317002.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 70.1 73.0 6.33
170310076.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.3 72.1 6.21
170310001.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.6 73.4 5.44
170314201.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.9 73.4 4.65
90099002..................... New Haven, CT... Nonattainment.. 71.8 73.9 0.87
90019003..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 76.1 76.4 0.76
90013007..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 74.2 75.1 0.75
420170012.................... Bucks, PA....... Maintenance.... 70.7 72.2 0.73
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, based on EPA's evaluation of the information submitted
by IDEM, and based on EPA's most recent modeling results for 2023, EPA
proposes to find that Indiana is linked at Steps 1 and 2 and has an
obligation to assess potential emissions reductions from sources or
other emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-Step framework. EPA
therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the 4-Step interstate transport
framework to assess the 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.
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner 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 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. IDEM did not conduct
such an analysis in their SIP submission.
IDEM first asserted that Indiana's rule amendments under CSAPR
meant that Indiana was already meeting the good neighbor requirements
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The 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 one or more receptors in 2023 at Steps 1
and 2. The SIP submittal pointed to the state's existing NOX
control measures, consent decree requirements, and future fuel switches
and retirements for large EGUs and non-EGUs for the years 2008 through
2017 to conclude Indiana is already meeting its good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 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 ozone NAAQS. In particular, the state did not conduct in its
submittal an analysis of potential additional emissions reductions
measures to further reduce its impact on the identified downwind
receptors. For example, although Indiana did include in its submission
a list of controls at individual emissions units at facilities in the
state, IDEM did not analyze additional 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 Indiana'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 Indiana
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
Indiana in its submittal) already accounts for ``on-the-books''
emissions control measures. Both sets of modeling clearly establish
continued linkage from Indiana to downwind receptors in 2023 at Steps 1
and 2, despite those emissions control efforts.
IDEM provided what they characterized as a weight of evidence
analysis consisting of monitoring data, emissions data, and
photochemical modeling to justify their conclusion that no additional
emission reductions would be necessary to satisfy Indiana's ozone
transport obligations. First, IDEM
[[Page 9858]]
presented evidence of downward trends of statewide ozone concentrations
and emissions, as well as a decrease in projected EGU emissions in 2023
relative to 2011. Despite these trends, however, the LADCO modeling
that Indiana depended on for its submittal still identified that
Indiana would contribute over 1 ppb to one or more receptors in 2023.
As for downwind design value trends, EPA disagrees that IDEM's
reliance on trends data to conclude that the Harford, Maryland and
Richmond, New York monitors would reach attainment ``over time'' is
sufficient to support a conclusion that Indiana has no good neighbor
obligations. The states and EPA are to address interstate transport
obligations ``as expeditiously as practicable'' and no later than the
attainment schedule set in accordance with CAA section 181(a). See
North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911-13; Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-20;
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New York v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (D.C.
Cir. 2020); New York v. EPA, 781 Fed. App'x 4, 6-7 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
IDEM asserted that EGUs are well controlled in Indiana and cited
several state and Federal regulations that EGUs may be subject to in
Indiana. 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 EPA's 4-Step
framework to define ``significant contribution.'' IDEM did not provide
an assessment of the overall effects of the identified control measures
or explain what the overall resulting air quality effects would be at
identified out of State receptors. IDEM did not perform an analysis of
all large NOX emitting EGU for factors that may affect the
facilities' emissions, including but not limited to allowance prices,
fuel prices, and enforceable limits. IDEM did not evaluate 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. IDEM did not offer an
explanation as to whether any faster or more stringent emissions
reductions that may be available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges states are not necessarily bound
to follow its own analytical framework at Step 3, IDEM did not attempt
to determine or justify an appropriate uniform cost-effectiveness
threshold. This would have been similar to the approach to defining
significant contribution that EPA has applied in prior rulemakings such
as CSAPR and or the CSAPR Update, even if such an analysis is not
technically mandatory. As discussed previously, both the LADCO modeling
relied on by the state and EPA's updated modeling indicates sources in
Indiana are linked to downwind air quality problems for the 2015 ozone
standard. However, Indiana's SIP submittal did not include an analysis
of potential NOX emissions control technologies, associated
costs, estimated emissions reductions, and downwind air quality in
order to determine whether the State had eliminated the State's
downwind contribution in amounts which will significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance. Thus, EPA proposes to
disapprove Indiana's SIP submission on the separate, additional basis
that the SIP submittal did not assess additional emission control
opportunities.
IDEM concluded it is not cost-effective to evaluate and implement
controls on non-EGUs in the state on the sole basis that the majority
of NOX emissions in the state come from EGUs. EPA cannot
accept the assertion as it is insufficiently supported. Cost-
effectiveness must be assessed in the context of the specific CAA
program; assessing cost-effectiveness in the context of ozone transport
should reflect a more comprehensive evaluation of the nature of the
interstate transport problem, the total emissions reductions available
at several cost thresholds, and the air quality impacts of the
reductions at downwind receptors. EPA notes that there are as many as
two dozen non-EGU facilities in Indiana with more than 300 tons per
year of NOX emissions each, but IDEM did not analyze control
opportunities at these sources at all in the SIP submission.
IDEM also argued that additional emissions reductions from EGU and
non-EGU sources in Indiana ``are getting more difficult to mandate''
because of reduced effectiveness of controls to make significant
decreases in ozone values, operational concerns, and increased costs
for customers.\74\ Again, the SIP submission does not contain
sufficient evidence to support that conclusion. IDEM did not identify
controls that had reduced effectiveness or explain why they believed
they had reduced effectiveness. IDEM did not describe what any
operational concerns were for any controls, nor did IDEM provide any
information to support their claim that controls would increase costs
for consumers. While Indiana'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 the Revised CSAPR Update, EPA's analysis found that
despite Indiana's existing control programs, additional emissions
reductions were achievable from EGUs in the state, even under the level
of control stringency EPA determined appropriate to eliminate
significant contribution for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. In any case, EPA has
not established a benchmark cost-effectiveness threshold for good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, and IDEM in its
submittal has not conducted an analysis to establish one for EPA to
evaluate.
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\74\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 37.
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IDEM also identified several planned retirements or retrofits to
coal fired EGUs in Indiana that were not included in any modeling
available at the time of Indiana's submission and stated they would
reduce emissions several thousand tons beyond the modeling. Further,
EPA's assessment of future air quality conditions generally accounts
for on-the-books emission reductions and the most up-to-date forecast
of future emissions in the absence of the transport policy being
evaluated (i.e., base case conditions).\75\ As described in more detail
in Section I, EPA's latest projections of the baseline EGU emissions
uses the version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case of the IPM. The IPM
version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case uses the NEEDS v6 database as its
source for data on all existing and planned-committed units. Units are
removed from the NEEDS inventory only if a high degree of certainty
could be assigned to future implementation of the announced future
closure or retirement. Any retirements excluded from the NEEDS v6
inventory can be viewed in the NEEDS spreadsheet.\76\ EPA looked into
the upcoming retirements cited by IDEM and following the guidelines
regarding retirements for the IPM version--6 Summer 2021 Reference Case
certain units are not excluded from the NEEDS v6 inventory. There are
other retirements that were not included in the SIP submission that
were excluded
[[Page 9859]]
from the NEEDS v6 inventory for the 2023 projections. This includes
retirements at AES Petersburg, Merom, and RM Schahfer. In other words,
in general, any changes in the emissions inventory and on-the-books
controls relevant to emissions in 2023 have now been incorporated into
the EPA's modeling using the 2016v2 emissions platform, which projects
a continuing contribution from Indiana to out of state receptors above
a threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS (at Steps 1 and 2) despite these
measures. Therefore, in light of continuing contribution to out of
state receptors from Indiana notwithstanding these identified
retirements, IDEM's SIP submission should have evaluated the
availability of additional air quality controls to improve downwind air
quality at nonattainment and maintenance receptors at Step 3
Furthermore, under the Wisconsin decision, states and 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. The IDEM's
submittal is insufficient to the extent the implementation timeframes
for several claimed expected shutdowns were left unidentified,
unexplained, or too uncertain to permit EPA to form a judgment as to
whether the timing requirements for good neighbor obligations have been
met.
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\75\ See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at 68979.
\76\ The ``Capacity Dropped'' and the ``Retired Through 2023''
worksheets in NEEDS lists all units that are removed from the NEEDS
v6 inventory--NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data can be
found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energy-data-system-needs-v6.
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Additionally, IDEM explained in only the most general terms how the
unaccounted emissions reductions would influence downwind air quality
or Indiana's contributions to other state. IDEM also did not quantify
how the emissions reductions they estimated would impact air quality at
downwind receptors or Indiana's contributions. IDEM did not demonstrate
that the downwind improvements from these regulations and programs
would be sufficient to eliminate Indiana's linkages or prohibit the
State's emissions in amounts that will contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in any other
state.
IDEM also made several arguments related to potential flexibilities
identified in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum.\77\ As
explained previously in Section I, the concepts presented in Attachment
A to the March 2018 memorandum were neither guidance nor determined by
EPA to be consistent with the CAA. EPA will thoroughly review the
technical and legal justifications IDEM put forward in their attempt to
use a potential flexibility from Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum.
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\77\ Based on the reference to the potential flexibilities in
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum on page 2 of Attachment 1
to Indiana's SIP submission, EPA assumes the reference to
``flexibilities'' on page 38 of Attachment 1 likewise references
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum.
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IDEM suggested that local emissions reductions from the
jurisdiction where downwind receptors are located should first be
implemented and accounted for before imposing obligations on upwind
states under the interstate transport provision. IDEM represented that
EPA had concluded that monitors in the Northeast ``are impacted from
more local emissions'' by citing a May 14, 2018 presentation. The
purpose of that presentation was to share a technical, exploratory
analysis of ozone trends. IDEM misrepresented the contents of the
presentation, which labeled the results as ``preliminary'' and
indicated that ``[f]urther exploration of the relative contribution
from various source sectors within the NE Corridor and in nearby upwind
states might also be informative.'' \78\ These preliminary results of
that analysis are generally consistent with EPA's updated modeling
using the 2016v2 emissions platform. Although EPA's modeling shows that
a large portion of the transport problem affecting the receptors in
Coastal Connecticut is indeed from sources within the Ozone Transport
Region (OTR), a substantial portion of the transport problem at these
receptors, on the order of 25 percent, is the result of transport from
states outside the OTR. However, the relevance of that presentation to
the evaluation of Indiana's good neighbor obligations is not clear. As
already discussed, the statute and the case law (particularly the
holdings in Wisconsin and Maryland) make clear that good neighbor
obligations are not merely supplementary to or deferable until after
local emission reductions are achieved. Further, based on EPA's
modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum, nearly all of the
receptors to which Indiana is linked are also heavily impacted by
distant upwind state emissions in addition to local sources and sources
in neighboring states. The Wisconsin decision's holding in regard to
international contribution (discussed in more detail later) is equally
applicable to an upwind state's claims that some other state's
emissions, or local emissions, are more to blame than its own
emissions. See 938 F.3d 303 at 323-25 (``an upwind state can
`contribute' to downwind nonattainment even if its emissions are not
the but-for cause'').
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\78\ Indiana's SIP submission, Appendix E at 4, 17.
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There is nothing in the CAA that supports Indiana's position on
local sources, and Indiana does not provide grounds on which to approve
its SIP submission. The D.C. Circuit has held on five different
occasions that the timing framework for addressing interstate transport
obligations must be consistent with the downwind areas' attainment
schedule. In particular, for the ozone NAAQS, the states and EPA are to
address interstate transport obligations ``as expeditiously as
practicable'' and no later than the attainment schedule set in
accordance with CAA section 181(a). See North Carolina, 531 F.3d at
911-13; Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-20; Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New
York v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (D.C. Cir. 2020); New York v. EPA, 781
Fed. App'x 4, 6-7 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The court in Wisconsin explained
its reasoning in part by noting that downwind jurisdictions often may
need to heavily rely on emissions reductions from upwind states in
order to achieve attainment of the NAAQS, 938 F.3d at 316-17; such
states would face increased regulatory burdens including the risk of
bumping up to a higher nonattainment classification if attainment is
not reached by the relevant deadline, Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204. The
statutory framework of the CAA and these cases establish clearly that
states and EPA must address interstate transport obligations in line
with the attainment schedule provided in the CAA in order to timely
assist downwind states in attaining and maintain the NAAQS, and this
schedule is ``central to the regulatory scheme.'' Wisconsin, 938 F.3d
at 316 (quoting Sierra Club v. EPA, 294 F.3d 155, 161 (D.C. Cir.
2002)).
IDEM similarly suggested that international and offshore emissions
contributions should be part of the good neighbor calculus. IDEM's
reasoning related to international and offshore emissions is
inapplicable to the requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The
good neighbor provision requires states and EPA to address interstate
transport of air pollution that contributes to downwind states' ability
to attain and maintain NAAQS. Whether emissions from other states or
other countries also contribute to the same downwind air quality issue
is irrelevant in assessing whether a downwind state has an air quality
problem, or whether an upwind state is significantly contributing to
that problem. States are not obligated under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce
[[Page 9860]]
emissions sufficient on their own to resolve downwind receptors'
nonattainment or maintenance problems. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ``significant contribution'' or ``interference''
with the ability of other states to attain or maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin specifically rejected
petitioner arguments suggesting that upwind states should be excused
from good neighbor obligations on the basis that some other source of
emissions (whether international or another upwind state) could be
considered the ``but-for'' cause of downwind air quality problem. See
938 F.3d at 323-324. The court viewed petitioners' arguments as
essentially an argument ``that an upwind state `contributes
significantly' to downwind nonattainment only when its emissions are
the sole cause of downwind nonattainment.'' Id. at 324. The court
explained that ``an upwind state can `contribute' to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are not the but-for cause.'' Id. at
324-325. See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir.
2009) (rejecting the argument ``that `significantly contribute'
unambiguously means `strictly cause''' because there is ``no reason why
the statute precludes EPA from determining that [an] addition of
[pollutant] into the atmosphere is significant even though a nearby
county's nonattainment problem would still persist in its absence'');
Miss. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790 F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C.
Cir. 2015) (observing that the argument that ``there likely would have
been no violation at all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]'' is ``merely a rephrasing of the but-
for causation rule that we rejected in Catawba County''). Therefore, a
state is not excused from eliminating its significant contribution on
the basis that international emissions also contribute some amount of
pollution to the same receptors to which the state is linked.
IDEM also calculated Indiana's portion of contribution to the
Harford, Maryland receptor was 0.077 ppb, and determined that Indiana
would need to reduce its contribution by 0.0077 ppb (based on a
contribution threshold of 1 ppb) to bring the Maryland receptor into
attainment. IDEM argued that 0.0077 ppb is well within the error of the
model and would be ``difficult'' to translate into an emission
reduction requirement.\79\ We first note that this approach is a
deviation from EPA's traditional approach of apportioning upwind-state
responsibility at Step 3 using a uniform cost of control metric set at
a level that maximizes cost-effectiveness of emissions reductions in
relation to downwind state impacts across all linked states. Thus, this
is not how EPA has interpreted the statutory term ``significant'' in
the past, and EPA does not reach a conclusion whether this approach
would be approvable, had IDEM had imposed emissions reductions in line
with this logic.
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\79\ Indiana's SIP submission, Attachment 1 at 42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We do not need to reach that point in the analysis, however,
because, having selected that approach to defining its obligations,
IDEM proceeded to ignore the result. IDEM's submission identified
Indiana's proportional contribution as 0.077 ppb to the Harford,
Maryland receptor. Having acknowledged Indiana was responsible for
eliminating up to 0.0077 ppb of contribution, IDEM claimed that because
that amount was within the ``error of the model'' that it would be
``difficult'' to require that amount of reductions from Indiana
sources.
This argument does not rise to the level of acceptable proof. EPA
has routinely been capable of successfully implementing good neighbor
obligations through the CSAPR framework, and achieving significant
downwind air quality improvements through upwind-state reductions, at
levels of ``significant contribution'' comparable or even less than
those found in Indiana's submission, irrespective of alleged modeling
errors. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322-23 (rejecting Wisconsin's
argument that it should not face good neighbor obligations on the basis
that its emission reductions would only improve a downwind receptor by
two ten-thousandths of a part per billion).
After measuring Indiana's significant contribution, IDEM suggested
that modeling uncertainty was too great to either require emissions
reductions. But IDEM had measured the state's significant contribution
and was therefore identifying the measurable amount of significant
contribution the state was legally responsible for eliminating. See
Michigan v. EPA, 213 F.3d 663, 683-84 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (significant
contribution must be ``measurable''). Further, scientific uncertainty
may only be invoked to avoid comporting with the requirements of the
CAA when ``the scientific uncertainty is so profound that it precludes
. . . reasoned judgment'' Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438 (2007).
See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318-19 (``Scientific uncertainty, however,
does not excuse EPA's failure to align the deadline for eliminating
upwind States' significant contributions with the deadline for downwind
attainment of the NAAQS.''). See also EME Homer City, 795 F.3d 118,
135-36 (``We will not invalidate EPA's predictions solely because there
might be discrepancies between those predictions and the real world.
That possibility is inherent in the enterprise of prediction.'').
IDEM's arguments related to modeling uncertainty do not establish a
level of uncertainty so high as to preclude reasoned judgement.
IDEM provided an analysis of back trajectories from the Harford and
Richmond receptors to support its contention that Indiana does not
contribute significantly to nonattainment or maintenance at those
monitors, and that the receptors are more impacted by local emissions
anyway. IDEM also relied on an EPA presentation from 2018 to support
this conclusion.
As already discussed, the statute and the case law (particularly
the holdings in Wisconsin and Maryland) make clear that good neighbor
obligations are not merely supplementary to or deferable until after
local emission reductions are achieved. Further, all of the receptors
to which Indiana is linked are heavily impacted by upwind state
emissions in addition to local sources and conditions. The Wisconsin
decision's holding in regard to international contribution (discussed
previously) is equally applicable to an upwind state's claims that some
other state's emissions, or local emissions, are more to blame than its
own emissions. See 938 F.3d 303 at 323-25 (``an upwind state can
`contribute' to downwind nonattainment even if its emissions are not
the but-for cause'').
Further, EPA finds Indiana's back trajectory analysis to be
deficient in proving that Indiana does not contribute significantly to
nonattainment or maintenance at the Harford and Richmond monitors that
the State was linked to in the LADCO modeling. Indiana's back
trajectory analysis shows a linkage between Indiana and the monitors
when evaluating two altitudes, 10 meters and 750 meters, on several of
the exceedance days at these monitoring sites. By only evaluating two
altitudes, Indiana neglects to consider the wide range of heights that
might show back trajectories leading back to Indiana, potentially
further tying the state to more exceedance events. Furthermore, 10
meters is too low of an altitude to measure long range transport and it
would have been appropriate for Indiana to analyze several higher
altitudes to bolster its back trajectory analysis.
[[Page 9861]]
Back trajectories alone are not sufficient to disconnect upwind
States from downwind receptors. Relying solely on back trajectories for
establishing linkages neglects the myriad of factors, most importantly
photochemical reactions, that are important for determining the
magnitude of ozone and precursor transport from upwind states to
downwind receptors. In this regard, EPA and LADCO modeling which
accounts for 3 dimensional meteorological conditions, regional
emissions, and photochemical reactions is the most complete, and
technically sound method to establish linkages between upwind states
and downwind nonattainment and maintenance receptors.
The information and claims presented by IDEM did not provide
sufficient evidence to support alternative conclusions that EPA is
proposing to make in this action: Namely, that several receptors exist,
Indiana contributes to those receptors above a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold, and that Indiana continues to have good
neighbor obligations that need to be addressed for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. We therefore propose that Indiana 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 Indiana 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. IDEM identified the State's
existing NOX control measures, consent decree requirements,
and future fuel switches and retirements for large EGUs and non-EGUs
for the years 2008 through 2017 \80\ States may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each
such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also
CAA section 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).
However, the state did not revise its SIP to include these emission
reductions in a revision to its SIP to ensure the reductions were
permanent and enforceable. As a result, EPA proposes to disapprove
Indiana's submittal on the separate, additional basis that Indiana has
not included permanent and enforceable emissions reductions in its SIP
as necessary to meet the obligations of CAA section
110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).6.
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\80\ 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 II.B.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 EPA's evaluation of Indiana's SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of Indiana's November 12, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state's interstate transport obligations, because it fails to contain
the necessary provisions to eliminate emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the
2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state.
C. Michigan
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Michigan Regarding Step 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, Michigan
relied primarily on the LADCO modeling released in 2018 to identify
nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023. As described
previously in this action, LADCO performed a modeling demonstration
like that of EPA modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum,
except with use of the ERTAC EGU Tool to replace specific EGU
information. LADCO identified nonattainment and maintenance receptors
using EPA methodology. EGLE elected to rely on LADCO's ``water only''
modeling results, but also presented results from EPA's modeling
released with the March 2018 memorandum. EGLE noted that in general,
design values in the LADCO modeling were lower. However, since new
modeling has been performed by EPA which includes updated emission data
using the 2016v2 platform, EPA proposes to primarily rely on the most
recent modeling to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors in
2023. Nonetheless, the alternative modeling relied on by EGLE also
identified a number of nonattainment and maintenance receptor sites in
2023. See Table 2 on page 14 of EGLE's submittal. Thus, even under its
alternative modeling of 2023, EGLE acknowledges in its submittal the
existence of several nonattainment and maintenance receptors.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by the State Regarding Step 2
Although Michigan relied on alternative modeling to EPA's modeling,
EGLE acknowledged in their SIP submission that Michigan is linked above
either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb or threshold to one or more
downwind receptors in 2023 (1.85 ppb to Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Site ID:
36-081-0124), 1.22 ppb to Queens, New York (Site ID: 36-085-0067), and
1.03 ppb to Richmond, New York (Site ID: 55-117-0006)). Because the
alternative modeling relied on by the state also demonstrates that a
linkage exists between the state and downwind receptors at Step 2, EPA
need not conduct a comparative assessment of the alternative modeling;
the state concedes that it is linked. EGLE's analysis corroborates the
conclusion in EPA's most recent modeling, described in the next
section.
EGLE, relying on a concept from outside parties listed in
Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum, attempted to justify the use
of a 1 ppb threshold at Step 2 to identify whether the state was
``linked'' to a projected downwind nonattainment or maintenance
receptor. In part, EGLE attempted to justify the use of a 1 ppb
contribution threshold based on the 2018 PSD SIL guidance document.
EGLE also referenced EPA's August 2018 memorandum, which said that with
appropriate additional analysis it may be reasonable for states to use
a 1 ppb contribution threshold, as an alternative to a one percent
threshold, at Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate transport framework for
the purposes of identifying linkages to downwind receptors. As
explained in Section I above, the concepts presented in Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum were neither guidance nor determined by EPA
to be consistent with the CAA. Further, EGLE did not explain the
relevance of the SILs Guidance to which it referred. This guidance
relates to a different provision of the Clean Air Act regarding
implementation of the prevention of significant deterioration (PSD)
permitting program, i.e., a program that applies in areas that have
been designated attainment of the NAAQS, and it is not applicable to
the good neighbor provision, which requires
[[Page 9862]]
states to eliminate significant contribution or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS at known and ongoing air quality problem areas
in other states. Further, it is not correct to conflate the use of the
term ``significance'' as used in the SIL guidance, with the term
``contribution,'' which is the appliable statutory term that EPA
applies at Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport framework.
(``Significance'' within the 4-step framework is evaluated at Step 3
through a multifactor analysis, for those states that are determined to
``contribute'' to downwind receptors at Steps 1 and 2. See Section
I.D.4 above.) Given the fundamentally different statutory objectives
and context, EPA disagrees with EGLE's contention that the SIL guidance
is applicable in the good neighbor context.
EGLE's attempt to show ``inflection points'' through collectively
presenting contribution data at each linked receptor and its claim that
1 ppb reflects the most meaningful inflection point are likewise not
compelling. The presented data show a range of upwind contribution
levels captured by different contribution thresholds depending on which
receptor is analyzed. Certain receptors show a substantial downward
trend in captured total upwind contribution well before a threshold of
1 ppb. Therefore, EPA does not find this evidence supportive of a 1 ppb
threshold.
EPA does not accept Michigan's position that a 1 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold at Step 2 ``may not be appropriate'' for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS due to modeling biases and errors.\81\ The
explanation for how the 1 percent contribution threshold was originally
derived is available in the 2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208,
48237-38. Further, in the CSAPR Update, EPA re-analyzed the threshold
for purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS and determined it was appropriate
to continue to apply this threshold. EPA compared the 1 percent
threshold to a 0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold and a 5 percent of NAAQS
threshold. EPA found that the lower threshold did not capture
appreciably more upwind state contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further analysis. See Final CSAPR Update
Air Quality Modeling TSD, at 27-30 (EPA-HQ-OAR-2015-0596-0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015 ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2 emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5 ppb) only captures
approximately 50 percent of the total upwind contribution. Compared to
a 1 percent threshold, a 5 percent threshold would, on average, forgo
27 percent) of the total upwind contribution. As EPA noted in the
August 2018 memorandum, the use of a 2 ppb contribution threshold under
the modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum would only capture
about 55 percent of all upwind contributions, and therefore ``emission
reductions from states linked at that higher threshold may be
insufficient to address collective upwind state contribution to
downwind air quality problems.''\31\
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\81\ Michigan's SIP submission at 16.
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With these figures in mind, EGLE's claim based on unwarranted
concerns over modeling uncertainty cannot be accepted. Both LADCO's and
EPA's modeling techniques are sufficiently reliable and fit for the
purpose to measure upwind contribution levels down to at least one 1
percent of the NAAQS. EPA's recommended model attainment test is based
on application of the model in a relative sense rather than relying
upon absolute model predictions.\82\ All models have limitations
resulting from uncertainties in inputs and scientific formulation. To
minimize the effects of these uncertainties, the modeling is anchored
to base period measured data in EPA's guidance approach for projecting
design values. Notably, EPA also uses our source apportionment modeling
in a relative sense when calculating the average contribution metric
(used to identify linkages). In this method the magnitude of the
contribution metric is tied to the magnitude of the projected average
design value which is tied to the base period average measured design
value. EPA's guidance has not established a bright-line criteria for
judging whether or not statistical measures of model performance
constitute acceptable or unacceptable model performance. So, contrary
to what Michigan appears to be claiming with regards to modeling
biases, there are no EPA recommended measures of allowable error.
Although EPA does not typically focus on using particular benchmarks as
the sole criteria for model performance, EPA notes that the model
performance for the updated modeling based on the 2016v2 emissions
platform is generally within the benchmarks recommended by Emery.\83\
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\82\ See Section 4.1' ``Overview of Modeled Attainment Test in
EPA Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze. November 2018. EPA 454-R-18-
009. https://www.epa.gov/scram/sip-modeling-guidance-documents.
\83\ Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G. Russel, M. Talat
Odman, Greg Yarwood and Naresh Kumar (2017). Recommendations on
statistics and benchmarks to assess photochemical model performance,
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 67:5,582-598,
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2016.1265027.
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EPA has successfully applied a 1 percent of the NAAQS threshold to
identify linked upwind states in three prior rulemakings. And the D.C.
Circuit has also declined to establish bright line criteria for model
performance. In upholding EPA's approach to evaluating interstate
transport in CSAPR, the D.C. Circuit held that they would not
``invalidate EPA's predictions solely because there might be
discrepancies between those predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise of prediction.'' EME Homer
City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 135 (2015). The court
continued to note that ``the fact that a `model does not fit every
application perfectly is no criticism; a model is meant to simplify
reality in order to make it tractable.' '' Id. at 135-36 (quoting
Chemical Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259, 1264 (D.C.
Cir. 1994).
EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided that whether use of a 1 ppb
threshold is appropriate must be based on an evaluation of state-
specific circumstances, and no such evaluation was included in the
submission. EPA's experience with the alternative Step 2 thresholds is
further discussed in Section I.D.3.i. As discussed there, EPA is
considering withdrawing the August 2018 memorandum.
Based on EPA's updated modeling (as well as the LADCO's 2018
modeling (with water) the state elected to rely on in its SIP
submission), the state is projected to contribute greater than both the
1 percent and alternative 1 ppb thresholds. While EPA does not, in this
action, approve of the state's application of the 1 ppb threshold,
based on its linkages greater than 1 ppb to projected downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptors, the state's use of this
alternative threshold at Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate framework is
inconsequential to our action on this SIP submission.
3. Results of EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for
Michigan
As described in Section I, 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
Michigan contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the
[[Page 9863]]
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in Table 4, the data \84\ indicate that
in 2023, emissions from Michigan contribute greater than one percent of
the standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in
Illinois, Connecticut, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.\85\
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\84\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file
``2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx'' which is included in docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\85\ 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 Illinois 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 &
Contributions Revised CSAPR Update.xlsx'' in docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
Table 4--Michigan Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Michigan
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
(county, state) maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
170314201.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.9 73.4 1.67
170310076.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.3 72.1 1.54
90099002..................... New Haven, CT... Nonattainment.. 71.8 73.9 1.27
170317002.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 70.1 73.0 1.26
170310032.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.8 72.4 1.21
550590025.................... Kenosha, WI..... Maintenance.... 69.2 72.3 1.17
550590019.................... Kenosha, WI..... Nonattainment.. 72.8 73.7 1.07
90010017..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 73.0 73.7 1.07
551010020.................... Racine, CT...... Nonattainment.. 71.3 73.2 1.02
90013007..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 74.2 75.1 0.94
170310001.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.6 73.4 0.93
90019003..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 76.1 76.4 0.92
420170012.................... Bucks, PA....... Nonattainment.. 70.7 72.2 0.75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, based on EPA's evaluation of the information submitted
by EGLE, and based on EPA's most recent modeling results for 2023, EPA
proposes to find that Michigan is linked at Steps 1 and 2 and has an
obligation to assess potential emissions reductions from sources or
other emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-step framework. EPA
therefore will proceed to Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework to assess the 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.
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner 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 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.
EGLE did not conduct a sufficient step 3 analysis in Michigan's SIP
submission. As explained previously, at Step 3 EGLE instead applied a
weight of evidence analysis to argue that the state needed no
additional emission reductions despite concluding Michigan was linked
to three receptors at Step 2. The evidence presented in EGLE's
submittal consisted primarily of support for the argument that upwind
states should have a lower responsibility to other states when the
upwind state is only linked to maintenance receptors. EGLE's analysis
focused on the Sheboygan, Wisconsin maintenance receptor (Site ID: 36-
081-0124), as EGLE concluded it was the receptor to which Michigan was
projected to contribute the most in 2023 at 1.85 ppb. EGLE also relied
on several ideas in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum to
further discount the importance of its own emissions. As noted in
Section I, the ideas listed in Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum were not agency guidance nor had EPA determined them to be
consistent with the requirements of the CAA. EPA will thoroughly review
the technical and legal justifications ELGE made put forward in their
attempt to use them as flexibilities.
In its submittal, EGLE cited a concept in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum to ``[c]onsider whether the remedy for upwind states
linked to maintenance receptors could be less
[[Page 9864]]
stringent than those linked to nonattainment receptors'' and argued
that because the CAA incudes different SIP development requirements for
nonattainment and maintenance areas, that likewise nonattainment and
maintenance areas should be treated differently in good neighbor SIPs.
EGLE posited that because the CAA does not require emission reductions
from maintenance areas, then upwind states can potentially make a
sufficient showing they have no obligation to reduce emissions to
monitors in other states projected to be maintaining the NAAQS. EGLE
specifically noted that (1) the projected exceedance at the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin receptor is very small, (2) the majority of the projected
contribution to the Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor is from federally
regulated sources or sources Michigan cannot otherwise regulate, (3)
Michigan's projected contribution to all three linked receptors is
small compared to the projected contribution from other states and
sources, (4) there are large projected contributions to the Sheboygan,
Wisconsin receptor from international emissions, (5) Michigan's
contributions to projected exceedance at the three maintenance
receptors are small relative to other sources that also contribute more
than 1 ppb to those receptors, (6) the modeling variability is greater
than Michigan's contributions to the amount of the projected exceedance
at each linked receptor and (7) there is a downward emissions trend in
Michigan.
As a general matter, EPA disagrees with EGLE's premise that if no
emission reductions are needed for the receptor to which Michigan
contributes the most, that automatically no emission reductions are
needed for the other receptors to which Michigan is linked. EGLE
unreasonably failed to analyze receptor-specific circumstances present
at other receptors to which it was linked, and this is particularly the
case because EGLE chose to rely so heavily on receptor-specific
information to support their conclusions with respect to the Sheboygan
receptor. Further, while the set of receptors to which Michigan is
linked has changed in the most recent modeling (and now includes
nonattainment receptors), EPA disagrees with Michigan's arguments to
the extent such reasoning could be applied to Michigan's linkages
identified in EPA's 2016v2 emissions platform modeling.
EGLE argued that because the Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor, had a
small projected exceedance over the NAAQS, requiring additional
emission reductions in Michigan would be ``premature'' and
``burdensome.'' \86\ EGLE's premise goes beyond the concept in
Attachment A to the 2018 memorandum that emission-reduction obligations
as to maintenance receptors may be different; rather, EGLE argues that
not only should Michigan have lower obligations with respect to
maintenance receptors, but no obligations at all. Under the D.C.
Circuit's decision in North Carolina, states and EPA are required to
give independent significance to the ``interference with maintenance''
prong of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). 531 F.3d at 910. Since CSAPR,
EPA's nationally consistent policy framework for addressing interstate
ozone transport has given meaning to this prong through a separate
definition of maintenance receptors at step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework. For states linked only to those receptors, EPA has
found it appropriate to apply an emissions control solution that is
uniform with the strategy applied for states that are linked to
nonattainment receptors. See 76 FR at 48271. EPA's approach to
addressing interference with maintenance under prong 2 for ozone NAAQS
has been upheld twice, including on remand from the Supreme Court
decision EGLE cited. See EME Homer City Generation, L.P., 795 F.3d at
136; Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 325-27. See also 86 FR at 23074.
Particularly given this context, Michigan's SIP does not provide
sufficient evidence to support less stringent or even no standards of
emissions reductions relative to what would result from EPA's
historical approach of addressing emissions activities from upwind
states that are linked to maintenance-only receptors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ See Michigan SIP submission p. 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, EPA believes it would be inconsistent with the CAA for EPA
to identify receptors that are at risk of NAAQS violations given
certain conditions due to transported upwind emissions and then not
prohibit the emissions that place the receptor at risk. The Supreme
Court held that it was a permissible interpretation of the statute to
apportion responsibility for states linked to nonattainment receptors
considering ``both the magnitude of upwind states' contributions and
the cost associated with eliminating them.'' EME Homer City, 572 U.S.
at 518-19. It is equally reasonable and permissible to use these
factors to apportion responsibility among upwind states linked to
maintenance receptors because the goal in both instances is to prohibit
the ``amounts'' of pollution that will either significantly contribute
to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS downwind.
See Id. 515 n.18 (finding EPA's uniform-cost approach reasonable as to
both prongs of the good neighbor provision). EPA's updated modeling
indicates that Michigan will remain linked to downwind nonattainment
and maintenance receptors for the 2015 ozone standard at least through
2023. Consequently, EPA believes EGLE's assertion that upwind states
linked to maintenance-only receptors should be held to less stringent
standards of emissions reductions (as compared to states linked to a
nonattainment receptor) is inappropriate, whether applied to its
downwind linkages in either the modeling EGLE relied on or in EPA's
more recent modeling.
EGLE also claimed that Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum
suggested states linked only to maintenance receptors should consider
whether emissions reduction factors should be influenced by high
international contributions and high contributions from other states
and sources. As a concept presented by outside parties, Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum listed an idea that states may consider
whether air quality, cost, or emission reduction factors should be
weighted differently in areas where international contributions are
relatively high. EPA did not at the time endorse this concept, nor does
it do so now. However, EGLE did not present an approach or explain how
international contributions to the linked receptors should influence
the weighting of air quality, cost, or emission reductions at Step 3.
Rather, EGLE suggested that if a receptor is near an international
border, then international contribution could simply be removed from
that monitor's projected design value. This is neither appropriate nor
acceptable under the good neighbor provision or any other provision of
the Clean Air Act. Michigan's approach effectively takes the position
that no air quality problem should be deemed to exist at a downwind
receptor location under the false assumption that the international
portion of emissions affecting that area simply do not exist. EPA
categorically rejects this approach as an entirely unacceptable form of
air quality planning.
EGLE further cited contributions from other states and sources to
the linkages it identified to conclude it would be ``unreasonable'' for
linked states with relatively low contributions to reduce their
contributions.\87\ The Step 2 threshold (whether at 1 percent or 1
[[Page 9865]]
ppb) is intended to reflect the ``collective contribution'' nature of
the interstate ozone transport problem and the complexity of the
various linkages among states. Cf. EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 515-16.
The threshold functions as a screening step toward a more detailed
analysis of emission-reduction opportunities across all of the states
that contribute to some extent (i.e., above the threshold) to a
downwind air quality problem. To simply conclude that nothing need be
done regarding emissions that exceed the step 2 threshold because those
emissions can be characterized as ``small'' compared to others'
emissions (by the upwind state's lights at least) is an attempt to
simply move the ``contribution'' threshold at Step 2 and is clearly
insufficient at Step 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See Michigan SIP submission p. 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether emissions from other states or other countries also
contribute to the same downwind air quality issue is irrelevant in
assessing whether a downwind state has an air quality problem, or
whether an upwind state is significantly contributing to that problem.
States are not obligated under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce
emissions sufficient on their own to resolve downwind receptors'
nonattainment or maintenance problems. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ``significant contribution'' or ``interference''
with the ability of other states to attain or maintain the NAAQS.
Further, the court in Wisconsin explained that downwind
jurisdictions often may need to heavily rely on emissions reductions
from upwind states in order to achieve attainment of the NAAQS, 938
F.3d at 316-17; such states would face increased regulatory burdens
including the risk of bumping up to a higher nonattainment
classification if attainment is not reached by the relevant deadline,
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204. Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin
specifically rejected petitioner arguments suggesting that upwind
states should be excused from good neighbor obligations on the basis
that some other source of emissions (whether international or another
upwind state) could be considered the ``but-for'' cause of downwind air
quality problem. 938 F.3d at 323-324. The court viewed petitioners'
arguments as essentially an argument ``that an upwind state
`contributes significantly' to downwind nonattainment only when its
emissions are the sole cause of downwind nonattainment.'' 938 F.3d at
324. The court explained that ``an upwind state can `contribute' to
downwind nonattainment even if its emissions are not the but-for
cause.'' Id. at 324-325. See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20,
39 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (rejecting the argument ``that `significantly
contribute' unambiguously means `strictly cause' '' because there is
``no reason why the statute precludes EPA from determining that [an]
addition of [pollutant] into the atmosphere is significant even though
a nearby county's nonattainment problem would still persist in its
absence''); Miss. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790 F.3d 138, 163
n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (observing that the argument that ``there likely
would have been no violation at all . . . if it were not for the
emissions resulting from [another source]'' is ``merely a rephrasing of
the but-for causation rule that we rejected in Catawba County.'').
Therefore, a state is not excused from eliminating its significant
contribution on the basis that emissions from other sources also
contribute some amount of pollution to the same receptors to which the
state is linked. Thus, the state's arguments related to contributions
from other sources, including removing international emissions from
projected design values at the Sheboygan, Wisconsin monitor, are
insufficient at Step 3 of the analysis.
EGLE's submission included an apportionment analysis to quantify
individual states' relative responsibility of the projected exceedances
at the three linked receptors. EGLE cited Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum as well as EME Homer City Generation to suggest
Michigan could be found to be only responsible for eliminating its
share of the projected exceedances relative to other states that also
contribute more than 1 ppb to the same receptors. We first note that
this approach is a deviation from EPA's traditional approach of
apportioning upwind-state responsibility at Step 3 using a uniform cost
of control metric set at a level that maximizes cost-effectiveness of
emissions reductions in relation to downwind state impacts across all
linked states. Thus, this is not how EPA has interpreted the statutory
term ``significant'' in the past, and EPA does not reach a conclusion
whether this approach would be approvable, had EGLE had imposed
emissions reductions in line with this logic. We do not need to reach
that point in the analysis, however, because, having selected that
approach to defining its obligations, EGLE proceeded to ignore the
result.
EGLE's submission identified Michigan's proportional contribution
as less than 0.12 ppb to the three linked receptors and .05 ppb to the
Sheboygan, Wisconsin receptor. Having acknowledged Michigan was
responsible for eliminating up to 0.12 ppb of contribution to the
downwind receptors, EGLE claimed that modeling ``noise'' made it
``difficult'' to require that amount of reductions from Michigan
sources. EGLE further opined that the downwind jurisdiction's share of
responsibilities likely made Michigan's contributions even lower and
the projected exceedances were so small that those three receptors were
likely to not have difficulty attaining the NAAQS anyway. EPA has
routinely been capable of successfully implementing good neighbor
obligations through the CSAPR framework, and achieving significant
downwind air quality improvements through upwind-state reductions, at
levels of ``significant contribution'' comparable or even less than
those found in Michigan's submittal, irrespective of alleged ``modeling
noise.'' See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322-23 (rejecting Wisconsin's
argument that it should not face good neighbor obligations on the basis
that its emission reductions would only improve a downwind receptor by
two ten-thousandths of a part per billion).
After measuring Michigan's significant contribution, EGLE suggested
that modeling uncertainty was too great to either require emissions
reductions or demonstrate that EGLE had any linkages to maintenance
receptors at all. But EGLE had measured the state's significant
contribution and was therefore identifying the measurable amount of
significant contribution the state was legally responsible for
eliminating. See Michigan v. EPA, 213 F.3d 663, 683-84 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
(significant contribution must be ``measurable''). Further, scientific
uncertainty may only be invoked to avoid comporting with the
requirements of the CAA when ``the scientific uncertainty is so
profound that it precludes . . . reasoned judgment'' Massachusetts v.
EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438 (2007). See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318-19
(``Scientific uncertainty, however, does not excuse EPA's failure to
align the deadline for eliminating upwind States' significant
contributions with the deadline for downwind attainment of the
NAAQS.''). See also EME Homer City, 795 F.3d 118, 135-36 (``We will not
invalidate EPA's predictions solely because there might be
discrepancies between those predictions and the real world. That
possibility is inherent in the enterprise of prediction.''). EGLE's
arguments related to modeling uncertainty or ``noise'' do not establish
a level of uncertainty so high as to
[[Page 9866]]
preclude reasoned judgement. EGLE argued that the three maintenance
receptors at issue could maintain the NAAQS without further emissions
reductions from any linked upwind state. In support, EGLE's submission
provided a list of on-the-way and on-the-books emission reductions
measures to argue that Michigan's good neighbor obligations were
already satisfied. EGLE provided references to certain facility
retirements in Michigan, Federal mobile source rules, Federal rules
reducing NOX and VOCs such as MATS and the Oil and Natural
Gas Industry Standards, the NOX SIP Call, and CSAPR Update.
EPA's assessment of future air quality conditions generally already
accounts for on-the-books emission reductions and the most up-to-date
forecast of future emissions in the absence of the transport policy
being evaluated (i.e., base case conditions).\88\ As described in more
detail in Section I, EPA's latest projections of the baseline EGU
emissions uses the version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case of the
IPM.\89\ The IPM version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case uses the NEEDS
v6 database as its source for data on all existing and planned-
committed units. Units are removed from the NEEDS inventory only if a
high degree of certainty could be assigned to future implementation of
the announced future closure or retirement. Any retirements excluded
from the NEEDS v6 inventory can be viewed in the NEEDS spreadsheet.\90\
The inventory for these projections takes account of the retirement of
the Marquette Board of Light & Power Shiras Steam Plant, Lansing Board
of Water and Light, Eckert Station, Units 1 and 3-6; DTE, River Rouge,
Unit 3; We Energies, Presque Isle Power Plant, Units 5-9; DTE St.
Clair, Units 1-4 and 6-7; DTE Trenton Channel, Unit 9; Wyandotte, Unit
5; Consumers Energy Karn, Units 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at 68979.
\89\ Detailed information and documentation of EPA's Base Case,
including all the underlying assumptions, data sources, and
architecture parameters can be found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sector-modeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021-reference-case.
\90\ We note that for one of the units EGLE listed as projected
to retire, Wyandotte--Unit 5, this facility was still included in
the NEEDS as operating. Additionally, the unit IDs listed by EGLE in
the SIP submittal may be different from those listed in EPA's NEEDS
v6 inventory--NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case, however we have
verified that these emissions decreases have been accounted for in
our most recent modeling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, EPA's modeling using the 2016v2 emissions platform
accounts for the onroad and nonroad rules that Michigan identified,
such as the Tier 3 Motor Vehicle Emission and Fuel Standards, to the
extent still on the books and projected to have ozone-precursor
emissions consequences.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ See Technical Support Document (TSD) Preparation of
Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2 North American Emissions
Modeling Platform included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In other words, changes in the emissions inventory and on-the-books
controls relevant to emissions in 2023 that EGLE claims EPA missed in
its prior modeling have now been incorporated into EPA's most recent
modeling of 2023 using the 2016v2 emissions platform. This modeling
projects a continuing contribution from Michigan to thirteen out-of-
state receptors above a threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS (at Steps 1
and 2) despite these measures--nine of which have contribution from
Michigan above 1 ppb and seven of which are nonattainment receptors
(see Table 4).\92\ Therefore, in light of continuing contribution to
out of state receptors from Michigan notwithstanding these identified
on-the-books control measures, EGLE's SIP submission should have
evaluated the availability of additional air quality controls to
improve downwind air quality at nonattainment and maintenance receptors
at Step 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ Notably, in focusing its Step 3 analysis only on a single
receptor, EGLE gave no weight to the scope of its contribution to
downwind air quality problems. Linkages to thirteen receptor sites
in EPA's most recent modeling indicate that Michigan's emissions
have widespread effects in other states--effects that the State's
SIP submittal would do nothing to address.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nor does EGLE's listing of existing control measures or overall
emission trends serve as an adequate substitute for a Step 3 analysis
of additional potential emission reductions. In general, 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 EPA's 4-step framework to define ``significant contribution.''
ELGE did not provide an assessment of the overall effects of these
measures, when the emissions reductions would be achieved, and what the
overall resulting air quality effects would be at identified out of
state receptors. EGLE did not identify which portion of ongoing
emissions trends were not already accounted for in steps 1 and 2 of the
analysis (EPA addresses specific identified changes in emissions
inventory in the discussion above). EGLE did not evaluate 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 did not offer
an explanation as to whether any faster or more stringent emissions
reductions that may be available were prohibitively costly or
infeasible. Although 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.
This would have been similar to the approach to defining significant
contribution that EPA has applied in prior rulemakings such as CSAPR
and or the CSAPR Update, even if such an analysis is not technically
mandatory.
Further, the state's attempt to categorize certain sectors of
emissions as beyond its regulatory control is unpersuasive. Clearly the
state possesses regulatory authority over its EGU and non-EGU large
stationary sources as well as authority over other types of ``emissions
activity within the state,'' see CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). And while
mobile sources are generally regulated at the Federal level under title
II of the Clean Air Act, the state also has the authority to undertake
any number of measures to reduce emissions from mobile sources through
means and techniques that are not preempted by title II. See, e.g., CAA
sections 182(b)(3), 182(b)(4), 182(c)(3), 182(c)(4), 182(c)(5),
182(d)(1), 182(e)(3), and 182(e)(4) (identifying programs to control
mobile source emissions that states are required to implement depending
on the degree of ozone nonattainment). Specifically with respect to
EGUs, EPA notes that no EGU NOX control program has yet been
established to implement good neighbor requirements for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Thus reliance on prior programs, such as the CSAPR Update or
Revised CSAPR Update, is misplaced, since those programs only addressed
good neighbor obligations under the less stringent 2008 ozone NAAQS.
Finally, under the Wisconsin decision, states and 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 Michigan 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 that would go into effect
after
[[Page 9867]]
2024. 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 EPA to form a
judgment as to whether the timing requirements for good neighbor
obligations have been met.
For the reasons listed above, EPA proposes to find that Michigan
has not satisfied its obligations of the good neighbor SIP provisions
at Step 3 of the 4-step transport framework. We propose that Michigan
was required to analyze emissions more fully 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 Michigan 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. EGLE provided references to
on the books and on the way Federal mobile source rules, MATS and the
Oil and Natural Gas Industry Standards, the NOX SIP Call,
and CSAPR Update. As an initial matter, pointing to or listing existing
state or Federal control measures is not what is called for at Step 4.
Rather Step 4 requires the development of permanent and enforceable
measures to implement those measures determined to be required at Step
3. EGLE claimed that nothing was required of Michigan at Step 3 and
thus EGLE stated that it did not believe anything was required at Step
4. Therefore, we do not interpret the list of existing state or Federal
measures to be EGLE's attempt at implementation at Step 4.
Because Michigan's SIP submission did not contain an evaluation of
additional emission control opportunities (or establish that no
additional controls are required), no information was provided at Step
4. As a result, EPA proposes to disapprove Michigan'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 EPA's evaluation of EGLE's SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of Michigan's March 5, 2019 SIP
submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state's interstate transport obligations, because it fails to contain
the necessary provisions to eliminate emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the
2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state.
D. Minnesota
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Minnesota Regarding Steps 1
and 2
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, Minnesota
relied on both LADCO modeling and EPA modeling released in the March
2018 memorandum and to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors
in 2023. As described previously, LADCO performed a modeling
demonstration like that of EPA's 2018 transport modeling, except with
use of the ERTAC EGU Tool to supplement state specific EGU information.
LADCO identified nonattainment and maintenance receptors using EPA
methodology. MPCA presented several nonattainment and maintenance
receptors identified by both LADCO modeling, showing ``no water'' and
``with water'' results and EPA modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum. Since new modeling has been performed by EPA with updated
emission data, EPA proposes to primarily rely on the most recent
modeling to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors in 2023.
MPCA made several criticisms of EPA's method for projecting EGU
emissions in EPA's modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum.
Although EPA does not agree with those criticisms, we note that EPA is
relying on a different method for projecting emissions from EGUs in the
updated modeling using the 2016v2 emissions platform as explained in
more detail in Section I.
Nonetheless, the alternative modeling relied on by MPCA also
identified a number of nonattainment and maintenance receptor sites in
2023. See Tables 2 and 3 on pages 8 and 9 of MPCA's submittal. Thus,
even under the alternative modeling of 2023, MPCA acknowledges in its
submittal the existence of several nonattainment and maintenance
receptors.
At Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate transport framework, MPCA relied
on both LADCO modeling and EPA modeling released in the March 2018
memorandum to identify upwind state linkages to nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023. Based on both modeling results, MPCA
concluded that Minnesota would contribute below 1 percent of the NAAQS
to receptors in 2023. However, in this proposal, EPA relies on the
Agency's most recently available modeling, which uses a more recent
base year and more up-to-date emissions inventories, 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 5
(explained in the next section), the updated EPA modeling identifies
Minnesota's maximum contribution to a downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor is greater than 1 percent of the standard (i.e.,
0.70 ppb). Although the state did not rely on a 1 ppb contribution
threshold in its SIP submittal, EPA recognizes that the modeling the
MPCA used relied on the most recently available EPA modeling at the
time the state submitted its SIP submittal (EPA modeling released in
the March 2018 memorandum as well as the LADCO modeling). The 2018
modeling indicated the state was not projected to contribute above one
1 percent of the NAAQS to a projected downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. Therefore, the state may not have considered
analyzing the reasonableness and appropriateness of a 1 ppb threshold
at Step 2 of the 4-step Step interstate transport framework per the
August 2018 memorandum. EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided that
whether use of a 1 ppb threshold is appropriate must be based on an
evaluation of state-specific circumstances, and no such evaluation was
included in the submission. EPA's experience with the alternative Step
2 thresholds is further discussed in Section I.D.3.i. As discussed
there, EPA is considering withdrawing the August 2018 memorandum.
2. Results of EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for
Minnesota
As described in Section I, 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
Minnesota contributes at or above the threshold of 1 percent of the
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in
[[Page 9868]]
Table 5, the data \93\ indicate that in 2023, emissions from Minnesota
contribute greater than 1 percent of the standards to two maintenance-
only receptors in Illinois. These modeling results are consistent with
the results of a prior round of 2023 modeling using the 2016v1
emissions platform that became available to the public in the fall of
2020 in the Revised CSAPR Update, as noted in Section I, which showed
that Minnesota had a maximum contribution of 0.86 ppb to a
nonattainment or maintenance receptor in 2023.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file:
2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx which is included in docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\94\ 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 Minnesota 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 5--Minnesota Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Minnesota
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
170310001.................... Cook............ Maintenance.... 69.6 73.4 0.97
170310076.................... Cook............ Maintenance.... 69.3 72.1 0.79
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on EPA's evaluation of the information submitted by MPCA, and
based on EPA's most recent modeling results for 2023 using the 2016v2
emissions platform, EPA proposes to find that Minnesota is linked at
Steps 1 and 2 and has an obligation to assess potential emissions
reductions from sources or other emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-
Step framework. Despite the linkage EPA determines exists at Step 2,
the state concluded in its submission based on other factors that it
should not be considered to significantly contribute to nonattainment
or interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in other states. Therefore,
EPA will proceed to evaluate MPCA's additional analyses at Step 3 of
the 4-Step interstate transport framework.
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner 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 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. MPCA did not conduct
such an analysis in their SIP submission.
Neither the LADCO modeling nor EPA modeling released with the March
2018 memorandum indicated that Minnesota would contribute over 1
percent of the NAAQS to any nonattainment or maintenance receptor in
2023. Therefore, MPCA stated they did not consider it necessary to
consider further emission reductions because Minnesota was not
projected to contribute to downwind air quality issues above the
contribution threshold. Despite this, Minnesota provided supporting
analysis to strengthen the conclusions of the modeling results. MPCA
presented evidence that ambient ozone concentrations in Minnesota had
been at or below the NAAQS from the late 1990s to 2017, and that
NOX and VOCs emissions had been steadily decreasing from
2002 through 2015. MPCA asserted that these trends would translate to
continued reductions in ozone being transported from the state to
nonattainment or maintenance receptors. Additionally, MPCA listed
several state and Federal regulatory programs that control or
incentivize NOX and VOC limits, including the CSAPR
NOX trading program.
EPA does not dispute the evidence about ambient ozone
concentrations and NOX and VOC emissions trends or existence
of the NOX and VOC controls presented by Minnesota.\95\
However, as explained in Section I.C, the most recent EPA modeling
captures numerous updates to the 2016 emissions platform, including all
existing CSAPR trading programs, in the baseline,\96\ and that modeling
confirms that most these control programs were not sufficient to
eliminate Minnesota's linkage at Steps 1 and 2 under the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. The state therefore has good neighbor obligations under the 2015
8-hour NAAQS and is obligated at Step 3 to assess additional control
measures using a multifactor analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ See Minnesota's SIP submittal Figures 1-3, pages 10-11.
\96\ For a complete explanation of air quality modeling of the
2016v2 emissions platform modeling, please see ``AQ Modeling
TSD_2016v2 Platform.pdf'' included in docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-
0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
MPCA identified state permitting programs, rules, voluntary
programs, and the CSAPR NOX trading program,
[[Page 9869]]
among others, as NOX and VOC control measures which satisfy
Minnesota's good neighbor obligations under the 2015 ozone NAAQs. 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 EPA's 4-step framework
to define ``significant contribution.'' Minnesota's submission 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.
Minnesota's submission 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 submission
did not contain an explanation as to whether any faster or more
stringent emissions reductions that may be available were prohibitively
costly or infeasible. Furthermore, states may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements, and Minnesota has not revised its
SIP to contain the CSAPR NOX trading program or the non-SIP
approved rules MPCA identified. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each
such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also
CAA section 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).
As mentioned above, EPA has newly available information that
indicates sources in Minnesota are linked to downwind air quality
problems for the 2015 ozone standard. Therefore, EPA proposes to
disapprove Minnesota's August 20, 2018 interstate transport SIP
submission on the separate, additional basis that the SIP submittal did
not assess additional emissions control opportunities.
5. Evaluation of Information Provided Regarding Step 4
Step 4 of the 4-Step interstate transport frameworks 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. MPCA identified state
permitting programs, rules, voluntary programs, and the CSAPR
NOX trading program, among others, as NOX and VOC
control measures which are not all part of Minnesota's SIP. Although
the state has since incorporated some of these control measures into
their SIP, Minnesota did not revise its SIP to include all these
emission reductions in a revision to its SIP to ensure the reductions
were permanent and enforceable and eliminate their significant
contribution to nonattainment or interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS. As a result, EPA proposes to disapprove Minnesota's submittal on
the separate, additional basis that the Minnesota 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 EPA's evaluation of Minnesota's SIP submission and after
consideration of updated EPA modeling using the 2016-based emissions
modeling platform, EPA is proposing to find that the portion of
Minnesota's October 1, 2018 SIP submission addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the state's interstate transport
obligations for 2015 ozone NAAQS, because it fails to contain the
necessary provisions to eliminate emissions that will contribute
significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in any other state.
E. Ohio
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Ohio Regarding Steps 1
At Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, OEPA relied
on LADCO modeling released in 2018 to identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in 2023. As described previously in this action,
LADCO performed modeling similar to EPA's modeling released in the
March 2018 memorandum, except with use of ERTAC for projecting future
year EGU emissions. LADCO identified nonattainment and maintenance
receptors using EPA methodology. OEPA elected to rely on LADCO's
``3x3'' modeling results, which identified similar receptors to EPA's
modeling included in the March 2018 memorandum.
However, OEPA elected to use an alternative method developed by
TCEQ for identifying maintenance receptors at Step 1 of the 4-step
framework. Using the TCEQ method to identify maintenance receptors OEPA
claimed that four maintenance receptors based on EPA's approach would
not have difficulty maintaining the NAAQS in 2023. OEPA relied on the
potential flexibilities in Attachment A to the March 2018 in support of
its use of the TCEQ method. As explained in Section I.C above, the
concepts presented in Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum were
neither guidance nor determined by EPA to be consistent with the CAA.
OEPA submitted Ohio's SIP submission before EPA released its October
2018 memorandum discussing maintenance receptors. Regardless, EPA will
examine the legal and technical merits of OEPA's arguments related to
the use of an alternative maintenance-only definition in light of the
October 2018 memorandum. OEPA has not adequately explained or justified
how TCEQ's method for identifying maintenance receptors reasonably
identifies areas that will have difficulty maintaining the NAAQS. That
is, EPA proposes to find that OEPA has provided no sound technical
basis for how TCEQ's methodology gives meaning to the CAA's instruction
that states submit good neighbor SIPs that prohibit their states'
emissions from interfering with the maintenance of the NAAQS in another
state.
In North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 909-11 (D.C. Cir. 2008),
the D.C. Circuit rejected EPA's CAIR on the basis that EPA had not
adequately given meaning to the phrase ``interfere with maintenance''
in the good neighbor provision. Specifically, North Carolina argued
that it had counties that were projected to attain the NAAQS in the
future analytic year, but were at risk of falling back into
nonattainment due to interference from upwind sources, particularly
given year-to-year variability in ozone levels. The court agreed,
holding that EPA's rule did not adequately protect ``[a]reas that find
themselves barely meeting attainment.'' Id. at 910. Consequently, EPA
has developed a methodology, used in its 2011 CSAPR and its 2016 CSAPR
Update and Revised CSAPR Update, for identifying areas that may
struggle to maintain the NAAQS. See 76 FR at 48227-28. EPA's approach
to addressing maintenance receptors was upheld in the EME Homer City
litigation. See 795 F.3d 118, 136-37. It was also upheld in Wisconsin.
938 F.3d at 325-26. In Wisconsin, the court noted that four upwind
states were linked only to maintenance receptors and rejected the
argument that application of the same control level as EPA imposes for
those states linked to nonattainment receptors was unreasonable or
unlawful absent a
[[Page 9870]]
particularized showing of overcontrol. Id. at 327.
In order to explain the differences between TCEQ's and EPA's
methodology for identifying maintenance receptors, it is helpful to
provide some additional context for how EPA projects future air
quality. EPA's air quality modeling guidance has long recommended
developing a base design value (i.e., the design value that will be
used as a starting point to model and analyze for purposes of
projecting future air quality concentrations) that is the average of
three design values spanning a five-year period, centered around one
year for which an emissions inventory will be submitted (e.g., if 2011
was the base emissions inventory year, a state would use monitored
values from 2009-2011, 2010-2012, 2011-2013 as the starting point for
projecting air quality concentrations in future years). The average of
these three design values is then multiplied by a relative response
factor to generate an average design value for the future year. If a
receptor's average future year design value is greater than or equal to
the level of the NAAQS, and the receptor has recent monitored data that
violates the NAAQS, that receptor is considered a ``nonattainment''
receptor at step 1. To identify maintenance receptors, EPA's
methodology looks to the highest design value of the three DVs used to
calculate the 5-year weighted average design value (e.g., in the 2011
example, if 2009-2011 had the highest design value of 2009-2011, 2010-
2012, and 2011-2013). EPA then applies the same relative response
factor to that highest design value to generate a projected future
maximum design value. Where a receptor's maximum design value exceeds
the level of the NAAQS, EPA has deemed those receptors to be
``maintenance'' receptors. This methodology was designed to address the
D.C. Circuit's holding that the CAA's ``interference with maintenance''
prong requires states and EPA to protect areas that may struggle with
maintaining the standard in the face of variable conditions.
For its maintenance receptors, TCEQ elected not to use the highest
design value of the three DVs making up the base period average design
value. Instead, Texas (and by extension, Ohio), used the most recent
design value of the three DVs, regardless of whether the most recent
design value was highest or lowest. OEPA's proffered explanation for
using the most recent design value to identify maintenance receptors
was that the latest design value ``takes into consideration . . . any
emissions reductions that might have occurred.'' \97\ OEPA in its
submission did not explain why or how this methodology identifies those
areas that may be meeting the NAAQS or that may be projected to meet
the NAAQS but may nevertheless struggle to maintain the NAAQS, given
interannual variability in ozone conducive meteorology. In fact,
because the TCEQ's methodology adopted by OEPA uses the most recent
design value to capture more recent emissions reductions rather than
capture variable conditions, the methodology appears to be aimed at
limiting receptors which could be identified as maintenance receptors,
compared to EPA's methodology, which was designed to identify those
areas that might struggle to maintain the NAAQS in ozone conducive
conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ TCEQ submission at 3-39 to 3-40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA disagrees that the use of latest three years for calculating a
DV properly accounts for the effects of meteorological variability for
the purpose of identifying projected maintenance receptors. Rather, the
use of a three-year average is intended to average out, not account
for, the effects of inter-annual variability in ozone conducive
meteorology. EPA reviewed the information provided by OEPA and proposes
to find that the information is insufficient to support the use of an
alternative approach. OEPA analysis of meteorological information did
not discuss or consider how other meteorological factors that are
typically associated with high ozone episodes such as humidity, solar
radiation, vertical mixing, and/or other meteorological indicators such
as cooling-degree days to confirm whether conditions affecting these
monitors may have been conducive to ozone formation during the 2009
through 2013 base period. In addition, the ozone trends data provided
in OEPA submittal indicate that several of the receptors in Coastal
Connecticut to which Ohio is linked by more than 1 ppb continue to
measure ozone design values close to or exceeding 80 ppb with no
overall downward trend in the most recent data in the submittal.\98\ In
any event, OEPA's use of an alternative approach to identifying
maintenance receptors does not result in a dispositive change in
receptor status for purposes of EPA's evaluation of OEPA's SIP
submittal at Step 1 because OEPA did not reach the conclusion that
there were no receptors in 2023 or claim at Step 2 that Ohio was not
linked to any receptor on the basis of the use of an alternative
definition of maintenance receptor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ See ``2010 Thru 2020 Ozone Design Values.xlsx'' in docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In conclusion, the modeling relied on by OEPA identified a number
of nonattainment and maintenance receptor sites in the Midwest and
Northeast in 2023. See Table 1 on page 8 of OEPA's submittal. Under
EPA's approach to defining nonattainment and maintenance receptors,
Ohio was shown to be linked to three ``nonattainment/maintenance''
receptors and six ``maintenance'' receptors. Under an alternative
approach to defining receptors (discussed below), OEPA concluded that
Ohio was shown to be linked to two ``nonattainment'' receptors, one
``nonattainment/maintenance'' receptor, and four ``maintenance''
receptors. Thus, based on using the LADCO's 2023 modeling and even
under an alternative approach to defining ``maintenance'' receptors,
OEPA acknowledges in its submittal the existence of several
nonattainment and maintenance receptors in the Midwest and Northeast.
EPA further evaluates Ohio's linkage to these receptors in the
following section.
2. Evaluation of Information Provided by the State Regarding Step 2
Although OEPA relied on alternative modeling to EPA's modeling,
OEPA acknowledged in their SIP submission that Ohio is linked above
either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or a 1 ppb contribution threshold to
one or more downwind receptors in 2023. Because the LADCO modeling
relied on by the state also demonstrates that a linkage exists between
the state and downwind receptors at Step 2, EPA need not conduct a
comparative assessment of the alternative modeling; the state concedes
that it is linked above either 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb.
The state additionally evaluated the use of an alternative
threshold exceeding 1 ppb at Step 2 to identify whether the state was
``linked'' to a projected downwind nonattainment or maintenance
receptor. EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided that whether use of a 1
ppb threshold is appropriate must be based on an evaluation of state-
specific circumstances, but that the use of a threshold greater than 1
ppb at Step 2 would likely not be appropriate because higher thresholds
would not capture a sufficient amount of total upwind state
contribution to allow for the development of effective remedies at Step
3.\31\ In particular, EPA found that a 2 ppb threshold would cause 45%
of total upwind contribution to be removed from further analysis across
all
[[Page 9871]]
receptors as compared to a 1 percent of NAAQS threshold.
EPA does not accept Ohio's position that a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2 is ``impractical and infeasible'' for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS because ``it results in very small contributions
having substantial consequences.'' \99\ This argument conflates the
contribution threshold at Step 2 with a determination of
``significance'' reached at Step 3 after a multi-factor analysis. In
its submittal, OEPA justified a higher threshold than either 1 percent
or 1 ppb by noting that, if applied, these alternative thresholds (3 or
4 percent of the NAAQS) would progressively de-link the State from an
increasing number of identified downwind receptors. EPA likewise
disagrees with this reasoning; selecting progressively higher
contribution thresholds simply on the basis that they would excuse an
ever greater number of upwind states from having any good neighbor
obligations lacks any persuasive technical justification and is
inconsistent with the purposes of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ Michigan's SIP submission at 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The explanation for how the 1 percent contribution threshold was
originally derived is available in the 2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR
48208, 48237-38. Further, in the CSAPR Update, EPA re-analyzed the
threshold for purposes of the 2008 ozone NAAQS and determined it was
appropriate to continue to apply this threshold. EPA compared the 1
percent threshold to a 0.5 percent of NAAQS threshold and a 5 percent
of NAAQS threshold. EPA found that the lower threshold did not capture
appreciably more upwind state contribution compared to the 1 percent
threshold, while the 5 percent threshold allowed too much upwind state
contribution to drop out from further analysis. See Final CSAPR Update
Air Quality Modeling TSD, at 27-30 (EPA-HQ-OAR-2015-0596-0144). If EPA
were to apply this analysis to the 2015 ozone NAAQS using the updated
modeling based on the 2016v2 emissions platform, a 5 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold (i.e., 3.5 ppb) only captures
approximately 50 percent of the total upwind contribution. Compared to
a 1 percent threshold, a 5 percent threshold would, on average, forgo
27 nearly 30 percent) of the total upwind contribution. As EPA noted in
the August 2018 memorandum, the use of a 2 ppb contribution threshold
under the modeling released with the March 2018 memorandum would only
capture about 55 percent of all upwind contributions, and therefore
``emission reductions from states linked at that higher threshold may
be insufficient to address collective upwind state contribution to
downwind air quality problems.''\31\
Based on EPA's updated modeling and the LADCO modeling, the state
is projected to contribute greater than both the 1 percent and
alternative 1 ppb thresholds. While EPA does not, in this action,
approve of the state's application of the 1 ppb threshold, based on its
linkages greater than 1 ppb to projected downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptors, the state's use of this alternative threshold at
Step 2 of the 4-Step interstate framework would not alter our review
and proposed disapproval of this SIP submittal.
Table 6--Ohio Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Ohio
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value Contribution
(county, state) maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
90099002..................... New Haven, CT... Nonattainment.. 71.8 73.9 1.94
90019003..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 76.1 76.4 1.90
420170012.................... Bucks, PA....... Maintenance.... 70.7 72.2 1.88
90013007..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 74.2 75.1 1.87
170317002.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 70.1 73.0 1.69
550590019.................... Kenosha, WI..... Nonattainment.. 72.8 73.7 1.67
550590025.................... Kenosha, WI..... Maintenance.... 69.2 72.3 1.33
170310032.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.8 72.4 1.26
170314201.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.9 73.4 1.23
170310076.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.3 72.1 1.23
90010017..................... Fairfield, CT... Nonattainment.. 73.0 73.7 1.18
551010020.................... Racine, WI...... Nonattainment.. 71.3 73.2 1.00
170310001.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.6 73.4 0.82
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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). As explained in Section II.E, Ohio relied on a
combination of both cost and air quality factors to determine that
there were no further reductions necessary for Ohio to meet its
obligations under the interstate transport provision. In this
subsection, we have evaluated the information provided by the state at
Step 3 to support this conclusion.
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner EPA has
done in its prior regional transport rulemakings, state implementation
plans addressing the
[[Page 9872]]
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
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. OEPA did not conduct such an analysis in their SIP
submission.
OEPA's submission concluded that projected emissions were
overestimated for the EGU, non-EGU, and onroad sectors. OEPA claimed
that the ERTAC EGU tool's emissions inventories were overestimated for
eight specific sources for various reasons, including adoption of rules
in late 2016 and early 2017, CSAPR and CSAPR Update allocations, and
substantive changes in plant operation. The submission also asserted
that ERTAC EGU tool version 2.7 does not consider that future energy
generation sources will likely be a steady level of coal with
increasing natural gas and renewable fuels, citing an un-enumerated
number of natural gas source permits issued by Ohio and projected
trends identified in the US Energy Information Administration's Annual
Energy Outlook (AEO) 2018.\100\ Similarly, the submission claimed
projected emissions from EPA's Air Emissions Modeling Platform 2011v6.3
were overestimated for nine non-EGU point sources, primarily based on
actual emissions trends from 2010 to 2017. OEPA also claimed that EPA
over projected onroad emissions using 2023 vehicle miles traveled
(VMT). However, OEPA did not explain how accounting for changed
projected emissions from those 17 sources or the onroad sector would
have resulted in different outcomes with regards to the identification
of downwind receptors or Ohio's contributions or linkages in the 2023
analytic year. Furthermore, nationwide trends and an unspecified number
of state permits are insufficient by themselves to support a conclusion
that EGUs in Ohio would not be affected by generation shifting. EPA
notes the information presented from the AEO is related to nationwide
trends and OEPA did not explain what the nationwide trends revealed
about Ohio's level of contribution or good neighbor obligations to
downwind receptors. Merely claiming that the modeling used to project
receptors and contributions relies on overestimated emissions
projections without an explanation of how the inputs would affect the
outcome is not enough to draw a conclusion at Step 2 that Ohio is not
linked to any downwind receptor or a conclusion at Step 3 that Ohio
does not contribute significantly or interfere with maintenance in any
other state. Considered individually or in the context of the other
information and arguments put forward by OEPA, select EGU, non-EGU, and
onroad emissions evaluations and nation-wide projections of fuel types
fail to show that additional emissions reductions are either not cost-
effective or permanent and federally enforceable. OEPA did not
demonstrate that the downwind improvements from these regulations and
programs would be sufficient to eliminate the state's significant
contribution or interference with maintenance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ See https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/archive/aeo18/, last
accessed 1/18/2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, EPA's assessment of future air quality conditions
generally accounts for on-the-books emission reductions and the most
up-to-date forecast of future emissions in the absence of the transport
policy being evaluated (i.e., base case conditions).\101\ As described
in more detail in Section I, EPA's latest projections of the baseline
EGU emissions uses the version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case of the
IPM.\102\ The IPM version 6--Summer 2021 Reference Case uses the NEEDS
v6 database as its source for data on all existing and planned-
committed units. Units are removed from the NEEDS inventory only if a
high degree of certainty could be assigned to future implementation of
the announced future closure or retirement. Any retirements excluded
from the NEEDS v6 inventory can be viewed in the NEEDS
spreadsheet.\103\ The inventory for these projections contains various
Ohio EGUs including the Avon Lake Power Plant in Lorain County
(Facility ID 0247030013), Painesville Municipal Electric Plant in Lake
County (Facility ID 0243110008), and the Department of Public
Utilities, City of Orrville in Wayne County (Facility ID 0285010188).
Mingo Junction Energy Center in Jefferson County (Facility ID
0641090234) and the Conesville Power Plant (Facility ID 0616000000)
retired in 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ See 81 FR 74504 at 74517; 85 FR 68964 at 68979.
\102\ Detailed information and documentation of EPA's Base Case,
including all the underlying assumptions, data sources, and
architecture parameters can be found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/epas-power-sector-modeling-platform-v6-using-ipm-summer-2021-reference-case.
\103\ The ``Capacity Dropped'' and the ``Retired Through 2023''
worksheets in NEEDS lists all units that are removed from the NEEDS
v6 inventory--NEEDS v6 Summer 2021 Reference Case. This data can be
found on EPA's website at: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energy-data-system-needs-v6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, EPA's non-EGU emissions inventory in the updated modeling
using the 2016v2 emissions platform does not include either Carmeuse
Lime Inc Millersville Operations (Facility ID 0372000081) or RockTenn
CP, LLC (Facility ID 0616010001). EPA's latest modeling also uses
emissions inventories that incorporate Ohio's submitted 2023 VMT
data.\104\ In other words, in general, any changes in the emissions
inventory and on-the-books controls relevant to emissions in 2023 have
now been incorporated into EPA's modeling using the 2016v2 emissions
platform, which projects a continuing contribution from Ohio to out of
state receptors above a threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS (at Steps 1
and 2) despite these measures. Therefore, in light of continuing
contribution to out of state receptors from Indiana notwithstanding
these identified retirements, OEPA's SIP submission should have
evaluated the availability of additional air quality controls to
improve downwind air quality at nonattainment and maintenance receptors
at Step 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\104\ Technical Support Document (TSD) Preparation of Emissions
Inventories for the 2016v2 North American Emissions Modeling
Platform, section 4.3.2. Available in the Headquarters docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ohio's projected contribution to downwind receptors in EPA's
updated modeling is lower relative to the LADCO modeling results
presented in OEPA's submission; it could be assumed that these
decreases are due to overestimation of sources that were corrected in
the updated modeling. These results could also be attributed to Federal
programs in place (NOX RACT, AIM Coatings Rules, CSAPR, NOx
SIP Call, NESHAPs, RHR, BART, SO2 Data Requirements rule,
and MATS) as OEPA suggests. Regardless, despite the lessened projected
contributions, Ohio's contributions continue to be projected to be
above 1 percent of the NAAQS to one or more receptors in 2023 as shown
in Table 6.
OEPA's assessment of actual and projected NOX and VOC
emissions trends and listing of various regulations likewise do not
support a conclusion that existing controls in Ohio adequately address
the state's good neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. For
one, OEPA listed numerous non-SIP measures and states may not rely on
non-SIP measures to
[[Page 9873]]
meet SIP requirements. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each such [SIP]
shall . . . contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also CAA
section 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). OEPA did
not attempt to revise Ohio's SIP to include all these measures.\105\ In
general, 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 EPA's 4-step framework to define
``significant contribution.'' OEPA'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 submission 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 submission
did not contain an explanation as to whether any faster or more
stringent emissions reductions that may be available were prohibitively
costly or infeasible. Second, the information and claims presented by
OEPA did not provide sufficient evidence to support alternative
conclusions that EPA is proposing to make in this action: Namely, that
several receptors exist, Ohio contributes to those receptors above a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold, and that Ohio continues to
have good neighbor obligations that need to be addressed for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ EPA notes that OEPA submitted a source specific
NOX emission limit contained in the Ohio NOX
RACT Rules for approval into the Ohio SIP, approved by EPA on
September 8, 2017 (82 FR 42451).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OEPA also pointed to declining design values at the ten receptors
identified by LADCO to support their conclusion that no further
emissions reductions were required from Ohio to meet their interstate
transport obligations. They additionally reference a May 14, 2018 EPA
presentation, stating that EPA indicated remaining ozone air quality
problems were becoming more local and less regional in nature. While it
is true that since 2011, design values have generally declined, air
quality problems at some locations are projected to continue out to
2023 and beyond, based on EPA's 2018 modeling provided in the March
2018 memorandum, LADCO's modeling completed in 2018, EPA's modeling
results used in the Revised CSAPR Update, and EPA's updated modeling
results. In addition, each of these modeling analyses show that Ohio
will contribute to the air quality problems in excess of 1 percent of
the 2015 ozone standards in 2023. Regarding the May 14, 2018
presentation, EPA assumes the state is referencing a presentation given
by an EPA air quality modeler, which Indiana attached to their SIP
submission. The purpose of that presentation was to share a technical,
exploratory analysis of ozone trends. The results of that presentation,
which were labeled as ``preliminary'' indicated that ``[f]urther
exploration of the relative contribution from various source sectors
within the NE Corridor and in nearby upwind states might also be
informative.'' \106\ The preliminary results of that analysis are
generally consistent with EPA's updated modeling using the 2016v2
emissions platform. Although EPA's modeling shows that a large portion
of the transport problem affecting the receptors in Coastal Connecticut
is indeed from sources within the Ozone Transport Region (OTR), a
substantial portion of the transport problem at these receptors, on the
order of 25 percent, is the result of transport from states outside the
OTR. However, the relevance of that presentation to the evaluation of
Ohio's good neighbor obligations is not clear. As already discussed,
the statute and the case law (particularly the holdings in Wisconsin
and Maryland) make clear that good neighbor obligations are not merely
supplementary to or deferable until after local emission reductions are
achieved. Further, based on EPA's modeling released with the March 2018
memorandum, nearly all of the receptors to which Ohio is linked are
also heavily impacted by distant upwind state emissions in addition to
local sources and sources in neighboring states. The Wisconsin
decision's holding in regard to international contribution (discussed
in more detail later) is equally applicable to an upwind state's claims
that some other state's emissions, or local emissions, are more to
blame than its own emissions. See 938 F.3d 303 at 323-25 (``an upwind
state can `contribute' to downwind nonattainment even if its emissions
are not the but-for cause'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Indiana's SIP submission, Appendix E at 4, 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OEPA also put forward an argument that onroad mobile sources in
downwind states should be more stringently controlled before any
additional sources in upwind states. This is equivalent to the claim
that local emissions reductions from the jurisdiction where the
downwind receptor is located must first be implemented and accounted
for before imposing obligations on upwind states under the interstate
transport provision. However, there is nothing in the CAA that supports
that position, and it does not provide grounds on which to approve
OEPA's SIP submission. The D.C. Circuit has held on five different
occasions that the timing framework for addressing interstate transport
obligations must be consistent with the downwind areas' attainment
schedule. In particular, for the ozone NAAQS, the states and EPA are to
address interstate transport obligations ``as expeditiously as
practicable'' and no later than the attainment schedule set in
accordance with CAA section 181(a). See North Carolina, 531 F.3d at
911-13; Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-20; Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204; New
York v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 1226 (DC Cir. 2020); New York v. EPA, 781
Fed. App'x 4, 6-7 (DC Cir. 2019). The court in Wisconsin explained that
downwind jurisdictions often may need to heavily rely on emissions
reductions from upwind states in order to achieve attainment of the
NAAQS, 938 F.3d at 316-17; such states would face increased regulatory
burdens including the risk of bumping up to a higher nonattainment
classification if attainment is not reached by the relevant deadline,
Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204. The statutory framework of the CAA and
these cases establish clearly that states and EPA must address
interstate transport obligations in line with the attainment schedule
provided in the Act in order to timely assist downwind states in
attaining and maintain the NAAQS, and this schedule is ``central to the
regulatory scheme.'' Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 316 (quoting Sierra Club v.
EPA, 294 F.3d 155, 161 (D.C. Cir. 2002)).
As for the suggestion that EPA should assess the SAFE Vehicles
Rule's impact on ozone before finalizing, EPA and the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration finalized the revisions to the greenhouse
gas (GHG) and CAFE standards for light duty vehicles in 2020.\107\
However, that final action is not expected to have a meaningful impact
on ozone-precursor emissions. Because the vehicles affected by the
[[Page 9874]]
2017-2025 GHG standards would still need to meet applicable criteria
pollutant emissions standards (e.g., the Tier 3 emissions standards;
see 79 FR 23414), the SAFE Vehicles Rule anticipated that any impacts
of the SAFE Vehicles Rule on ozone precursor emissions ``would most
likely be far too small to observe.'' See 85 FR 25041. On December 30,
2021, EPA revised the GHG light duty standards for model years 2023 and
later to make them more stringent.\108\ The impacts of the SAFE
Vehicles Rule are included in the 2016v2 onroad emissions as described
in the emissions modeling TSD in Section 4.3.2.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule
for Model Years 2021-2026 Passenger Cars and Light Trucks, 85 FR
24174 (April 30, 2020) (SAFE Vehicles Rule).
\108\ Revised 2023 and Later Model Year Light-Duty Vehicle
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Standards, 86 FR 74434 (December 30, 2021).
\109\ See Technical Support Document (TSD) Preparation of
Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2 North American Emissions
Modeling Platform included in the Headquarters docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, OEPA makes the argument that assigning all responsibility
to Ohio and other upwind states for downwind air quality problems
despite home state and international contributions would result in
overcontrol of Ohio sources. OEPA's reasoning related to emissions in
downwind states and international emissions is inapplicable to the
requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). As an initial matter,
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) only requires that upwind states
prohibit those emissions that ``contribute significantly to
nonattainment'' or ``interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS.'' It does
not require that the upwind states bear the full burden of bringing
downwind states into attainment or that a threshold ppb improvement
from upwind states emission reductions be met in order for them to be
required (once the 1 percent threshold has been satisfied). However,
the good neighbor provision does require states and EPA to address
interstate transport of air pollution that contributes to downwind
states' ability to attain and maintain NAAQS. Whether emissions from
other states or other countries also contribute to the same downwind
air quality issue is irrelevant in assessing whether a downwind state
has an air quality problem, or whether an upwind state is significantly
contributing to that problem. States are not obligated under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to reduce emissions sufficient on their own
to resolve downwind receptors' nonattainment or maintenance problems.
Rather, states are obligated to eliminate their own ``significant
contribution'' or ``interference'' with the ability of other states to
attain or maintain the NAAQS.
Indeed, after OEPA submitted Ohio's SIP submission, the D.C.
Circuit in Wisconsin specifically rejected petitioner arguments
suggesting that upwind states should be excused from good neighbor
obligations on the basis that some other source of emissions (whether
international or another upwind state) could be considered the ``but-
for'' cause of downwind air quality problem. 938 F.3d 303 at 323-324.
The court viewed petitioners' arguments as essentially an argument
``that an upwind state `contributes significantly' to downwind
nonattainment only when its emissions are the sole cause of downwind
nonattainment.'' 938 F.3d 303 at 324. The court explained that ``an
upwind state can `contribute' to downwind nonattainment even if its
emissions are not the but-for cause.'' Id. at 324-325. See also Catawba
County v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (rejecting the argument
``that `significantly contribute' unambiguously means `strictly
cause''' because there is ``no reason why the statute precludes EPA
from determining that [an] addition of [pollutant] into the atmosphere
is significant even though a nearby county's nonattainment problem
would still persist in its absence''); Miss. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality
v. EPA, 790 F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (observing that the
argument that ``there likely would have been no violation at all . . .
if it were not for the emissions resulting from [another source]'' is
``merely a rephrasing of the but-for causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County.''). Therefore, a state is not excused from eliminating
its significant contribution on the basis that international emissions,
or emissions from other sources, also contribute some amount of
pollution to the same receptors to which the state is linked.
Finally, as part of its cost-effectiveness evaluation, OEPA relied
on its EGUs being subject to the CSAPR Update (which reflected a
stringency at the nominal marginal cost threshold of $1400/ton (2011$)
for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS) to argue that it has already
implemented all cost-effective emissions reductions. For non-EGUs, OEPA
did not identify a cost-effectiveness threshold, but rather listed a
few regulations (the Boiler MACT and other MACT categories, BART,
SO2 Data Requirements Rule and other unidentified Federal
regulations) to draw the conclusion that emissions reductions had been
achieved from non-EGUs in Ohio. First, the CSAPR Update did not
regulate non-electric generating units, and thus this analysis is
incomplete. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318-20. Second, relying on the
CSAPR Update's (or any other CAA program's) determination of cost-
effectiveness without further Step 3 analysis is not approvable. Cost-
effectiveness must be assessed in the context of the specific CAA
program; assessing cost-effectiveness in the context of ozone transport
should reflect a more comprehensive evaluation of the nature of the
interstate transport problem, the total emissions reductions available
at several cost thresholds, and the air quality impacts of the
reductions at downwind receptors. While EPA has not established a
benchmark cost-effectiveness value for 2015 ozone NAAQS interstate
transport obligations, because the 2015 ozone NAAQS is a more stringent
and more protective air quality standard, it is reasonable to expect
control measures or strategies to address interstate transport under
this NAAQS to reflect higher marginal control costs. As such, the
marginal cost threshold of $1,400/ton for the CSAPR Update (which
addresses the 2008 ozone NAAQS and is in 2011$) is not an appropriate
cost threshold and cannot be approved as a benchmark to use for
interstate transport SIP submissions for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The lack
of a sufficient cost-effectiveness evaluation also means that Ohio's
claims that requiring additional emissions reductions would result in
overcontrol is premature. Ohio's submission does present sufficient
evidence to support that conclusion.
In addition, the updated EPA modeling captures all existing CSAPR
trading programs in the baseline, and that modeling confirms that these
control programs were not sufficient to eliminate Ohio's linkage at
Steps 1 and 2 under the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The state was therefore
obligated at Step 3 to assess additional control measures using a
multifactor analysis.
Finally, relying on a FIP at Step 3 is per se not approvable if the
state has not adopted that program into its SIP and instead continues
to rely on the FIP. States may not rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each such [SIP] shall . .
. contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also CAA section
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). We therefore
propose that Ohio was required to analyze emissions from the sources
and other emissions activity from within the state to determine whether
its contributions were
[[Page 9875]]
significant, and we propose to disapprove its submission because Ohio
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. OEPA identified
NOX RACT rules limiting NOX emissions from new
and existing sources, VOC reduction measures through control of
architectural and industrial maintenance coatings, and reallocation of
funds received through a settlement with Volkswagen to be applied to
on-road and off-road mobile emissions reductions through replacements
and infrastructure updates.\110\ However, OEPA did not revise Ohio's
SIP to include these emission reductions in a revision to its SIP to
ensure the reductions were permanent and enforceable.\105\ As a result,
EPA proposes to disapprove OEPA submittal on the separate, additional
basis that the Ohio has not included permanent and enforceable
emissions reductions in its SIP as necessary to meet the obligations of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(d)(i)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ 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 [Ohio step 3 analysis section]. 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Conclusion
Based on EPA's evaluation of Ohio's SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of Ohio's September 28, 2018 SIP
submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet the
state's interstate transport obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,
because it fails to contain the necessary provisions to eliminate
emissions that will contribute significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state.
F. Wisconsin
1. Evaluation of Information Provided by Wisconsin Regarding Steps 1
and 2
WDNR did not perform an analysis under the 4-step framework to
assess Wisconsin's good neighbor obligations. The submission did not
identify areas in other states that may have trouble attaining or
maintaining the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Nor did WDNR perform a Step 2
analysis to identify Wisconsin's contribution to areas that are
projected to have difficulty attaining or maintaining the NAAQS or
reach a conclusion about whether Wisconsin is linked to any receptors.
2. Results of EPA's Step 1 and Step 2 Modeling and Findings for
Wisconsin
As described in Section I, 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
Wisconsin contributes at or above the threshold of one percent of the
2015 ozone NAAQS (0.70 ppb) to any downwind nonattainment or
maintenance receptor. As shown in Table 7, the data \111\ indicate that
in 2023, emissions from Wisconsin contribute greater than one percent
of the standard to nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in
Illinois.\112\ Therefore, based on EPA's evaluation of the information
submitted by WDNR, and based on EPA's most recent modeling results for
2023, EPA proposes to find that Wisconsin is linked at Steps 1 and 2
and has an obligation to assess potential emissions reductions from
sources or other emissions activity at Step 3 of the 4-step framework.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provide in the file
``2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx'' which is included in docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\112\ 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 Wisconsin 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 ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
Table 7--Wisconsin Linkage Results Based on EPA Updated 2023 Modeling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 Average 2023 Maximum Wisconsin
Receptor ID Location Nonattainment/ design value design value contribution
(county, state) maintenance (ppb) (ppb) (ppb)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
170310032.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.8 72.4 2.61
170314201.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.9 73.4 2.55
170310076.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.3 72.1 2.47
170310001.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 69.6 73.4 2.41
170317002.................... Cook, IL........ Maintenance.... 70.1 73.0 1.47
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in Table 7, the updated EPA modeling identifies
Wisconsin's maximum contribution Because the entire technical basis for
the state's submittal is that the state has satisfied good neighbor
obligations through implementation of various rules, including CSAPR
Update, EPA proposes to disapprove the SIP submission based on EPA's
finding that WDNR has not provided adequate information to allow EPA to
assess whether Wisconsin has adequate provisions to prohibit emissions
in amounts which will contribute significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance in any other state. Though this deficiency
would be sufficient on its own to disapprove Wisconsin's good neighbor
submission, EPA will proceed to evaluate the additional points raised
by WDNR at Step 3 of the 4-step interstate transport framework.
3. 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).
[[Page 9876]]
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
for relevant pollutants and assess potential, additional emissions
reduction opportunities and resulting downwind air quality
improvements. 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 EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner 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 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. The state did not
conduct such an analysis in their SIP submission.
WDNR listed several rules relevant to interstate transport and
seemingly relied on its participation in LADCO to suggest sources in
Wisconsin are adequately controlled for purposes of the good neighbor
provision for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. WDNR mentioned Wisconsin's FIPs
under CSAPR and CSAPR Update. EPA disagrees that this is a sufficient
approach for assessing good neighbor obligations.
First, the CSAPR Update did not regulate non-electric generating
units, and thus this analysis is incomplete. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at
318-20. Second, relying on the CSAPR Update (or any other CAA program)
without further Step 3 analysis is not approvable. While EPA has not
established a benchmark cost-effectiveness value for 2015 ozone NAAQS
interstate transport obligations, because the 2015 ozone NAAQS is a
more stringent and more protective air quality standard, it is
reasonable to expect control measures or strategies to address
interstate transport under this NAAQS to reflect higher marginal
control costs. As such, the CSAPR Update Rule is not an appropriate
analysis and cannot be approved to satisfy interstate transport
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
In addition, the updated EPA modeling captures all existing CSAPR
trading programs in the baseline, and that modeling confirms that these
control programs were not sufficient to eliminate the Wisconsin's
linkage at Steps 1 and 2 under the 2015 ozone NAAQS. The state was
therefore obligated at Step 3 to assess additional control measures
using a multifactor analysis.
Finally, relying on a FIP at Step 3 is per se not approvable if the
state has not adopted that program into its SIP and instead continues
to rely on the FIP. States may not rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (``Each such [SIP] shall . .
. contain adequate provisions . . . .''). See also CAA section
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).
WDNR cited continued consultation with LADCO, three Wis. Admin.
Code subsections that could be relied on ``if needed'' to address
disagreements for SIP development in other states' nonattainment areas,
and an adequate PSD program. WDNR did not attempt to revise Wisconsin's
SIP to include to include all these measures. In general, the listing
of existing or on-the-way control measures, including potential future
emissions reductions obtained through participation in LADCO, whether
approved into the state's SIP or not, does not substitute for a
complete Step 3 analysis under EPA's 4-step framework to define
``significant contribution.'' WDNR did not identify control measures,
provide an assessment of the overall effects of these measures, note
when the reductions would be achieved, or explain what the overall
resulting air quality effects would be at identified out of state
receptors. WDNR did not evaluate 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. WDNR did not offer an explanation as to whether
any faster or more stringent emissions reductions that may be available
were prohibitively costly or infeasible. Although EPA acknowledges
states are not necessarily bound to follow its own analytical framework
at Step 3, WDNR did not attempt to determine or justify an appropriate
uniform cost-effectiveness threshold. This would have been similar to
the approach to defining significant contribution that EPA has applied
in prior rulemakings such as CSAPR and or the CSAPR Update, even if
such an analysis is not technically mandatory.
As mentioned previously, Wis. Admin. Code NR 285.15, entitled
Interstate Agreement, gives the governor the authority to enter an
agreement to solve interstate pollution transport with Illinois,
Indiana, and Michigan if the area includes portions of both Wisconsin
and Illinois. Furthermore, Wis. Admin. Code, NR 285.1560 does not
provide for emission reductions toward resolving good neighbor
obligations, as while the statute allows for consultation, there is no
indication this rule has been exercised to resolve good neighbor
obligations or explain how the rule would impact areas in Illinois to
which Wisconsin is linked. Under the Wisconsin decision, states and 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.
Wisconsin's submittal is insufficient to the extent the implementation
timeframes for the cited control measures were left unidentified,
unexplained, or too uncertain to permit EPA to form a judgment as to
whether the timing requirements for good neighbor obligations have been
met.
We therefore propose that Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin failed to do so.
4. 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,
Wisconsin's SIP submission did not contain an evaluation of additional
emission
[[Page 9877]]
control opportunities (or establish that no additional controls are
required), thus, no information was provided at Step 4. As a result,
EPA proposes to disapprove Wisconsin' 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).
5. Conclusion
Based on EPA's evaluation of Wisconsin's SIP submission, EPA is
proposing to find that the portion of Wisconsin's September 14, 2018
SIP submission addressing CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) does not meet
Wisconsin's interstate transport obligations, because it fails to
contain the necessary provisions to eliminate emissions that will
contribute significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance
of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in any other state.
IV. Proposed Action
We are proposing to disapprove the portions of Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin's SIP submissions pertaining
to interstate transport of air pollution which will significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the 2015
ozone NAAQS in other states. Under CAA section 110(c)(1), disapproval
would establish a 2-year deadline for EPA to promulgate a FIP for
states to address the CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) interstate
transport requirements pertaining to significant contribution to
nonattainment and interference with maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states, unless EPA approves a SIP that meets these
requirements. Disapproval does not start a mandatory sanctions clock
for Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, or Wisconsin. The
remaining elements of the states' submissions are not addressed in this
action and either have been or will be acted on in a separate
rulemaking.
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 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
EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect children,
per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in section 2-202 of
the Executive Order. This 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
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 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 EPA complete discretion whether to invoke
the exception in (ii).\113\
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\113\ 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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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 six states, which are located in three 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 EPA takes final action on this proposed rulemaking, in the
alternative,
[[Page 9878]]
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), 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, 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. 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, EPA proposes to determine and apply a set of nationally
consistent policy judgments to apply the 4-step framework. 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.\114\ 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).\115\
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\114\ 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.
\115\ EPA may take a consolidated, single final action on all of
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 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.
Debra Shore,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2022-02953 Filed 2-18-22; 8:45 am]
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