Air Plan Approval; Colorado; Addressing Remanded Portions of the Previously Approved Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 61249-61259 [2022-21815]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
Jeffrey M. Martin,
Assistant Director, Office of Regulation Policy
& Management, Office of the Secretary,
Department of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2022–21995 Filed 10–7–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R08–OAR–2019–0140; EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663; FRL–9782–02–R8]
Air Plan Approval; Colorado;
Addressing Remanded Portions of the
Previously Approved Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
On January 5, 2021, the
United States Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit granted the
Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA) motion for a voluntary remand
without vacatur of two parts of an EPA
2020 final rule approving Colorado’s
infrastructure state implementation plan
(SIP) submission for the 2015 8-hour
ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) (2020 final rule). In
this document, EPA is taking final
action to approve those two remanded
parts of the 2020 final rule. First, EPA
is finalizing our conclusion that
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP
submission meets the State’s good
neighbor obligations under Clean Air
Act (CAA) section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
Lastly, EPA is also finalizing our
conclusion that Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP submission provided
‘‘necessary assurances’’ of the State’s
authority to regulate agricultural sources
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i). EPA
is taking this action pursuant to the
CAA.
SUMMARY:
This rule is effective on
November 10, 2022.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established two
dockets for this action. The regional
docket, Docket ID No. EPA–R08–OAR–
2019–0140 contains information
specific to Colorado, including this final
rule document, and the notice of
proposed rulemaking. Docket ID 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
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DATES:
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2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS which were
used to support EPA’s proposed
approval. All documents in the docket
are listed on the www.regulations.gov
website. Although listed in the docket,
some information may not be publicly
available, e.g., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available through www.regulations.gov,
or please contact the person identified
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section for additional
availability information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amrita Singh, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA, Region 8, Mailcode
8ARD–IO, 1595 Wynkoop Street,
Denver, Colorado, 80202–1129,
telephone number: (303) 312–6103,
email address: singh.amrita@epa.gov; or
Ellen Schmitt, telephone number: (303)
312–6728, email address: schmitt.ellen@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means EPA.
I. Background
On May 6, 2022 (88 FR 27050), EPA
published a document in the Federal
Register proposing approval of the two
remanded parts of EPA’s 2020 final
rule.1 EPA’s May 2022 proposed
approval addressed (1) the adequacy of
Colorado’s infrastructure submission for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS under
the CAA’s ‘‘good neighbor provision,’’ 2
which generally requires SIPs to contain
adequate provisions to prohibit in-state
emissions from significantly
contributing to nonattainment or
interfering with the maintenance in
another state, and (2) the adequacy of
Colorado’s infrastructure submission for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i), particularly
with respect to Colorado’s authority to
regulate agricultural sources.3 The
rationale for EPA’s proposed action is
included in the May 6, 2022 proposal
and will not be repeated here.
II. Response to Comments
EPA received comments on the
proposed rule from an individual
citizen and the Center for Biological
61249
Diversity (the Center). We summarize
and respond to the comments below.
Individual Citizen
Comment: The commenter initially
states that ‘‘concerns regarding the 2015
Ozone NAAQS infrastructure
requirements highlight potential
problems regarding both the ‘Good
Neighbor Provision’ CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), as well as the adequate
implementation of [the] SIP regarding
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).’’ The
commenter believes that EPA’s use of
the 4-step interstate transport
framework is an effective method to
address the previously mentioned
concerns, but that there needs to be
adequate implementation and ‘‘more
stringent regulations reinforced
regarding step 3 and step 4, of the 4-step
interstate transport framework.’’ The
commenter recommends two
‘‘strategies’’ in order to make the 4-step
framework more stringent. For Step 3,
the commenter suggests re-evaluating
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) regulations, with a focus on
‘‘improving standards’’ related to Best
Available Control Technology (BACT).
Regarding Step 4, the commenter
recommends that EPA adopt measures
to reduce carbon via a cap-and-trade
system.
Response: These comments are not
relevant to the action EPA proposed. In
the proposed rule, EPA applied the
well-established 4-step framework for
assessing interstate ozone transport to
determine whether Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP meets the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). We invited comment
on our conclusions with respect to
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP, but did
not invite comment on the integrity and
process of the 4-step framework itself.4
Further, we determined that Colorado’s
emissions do not contribute at or above
the threshold of 1 percent of the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS (0.70 parts per
billion (ppb)) to any downwind
nonattainment or maintenance receptor
at Step 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework, and thus did not
reach the steps of the 4-step framework
discussed in this comment, i.e., analysis
of potential emissions controls at Step 3
or permanent and federally enforceable
control strategies to achieve emissions
reductions at Step 4.5 6 Thus, the
4 87
1 2020
final rule. Approval and Promulgation of
State Implementation Plan Revisions; Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards; Colorado and North Dakota,
85 FR 20169 (April 10, 2020).
2 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
3 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E)(i).
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FR 27054.
FR at 27056–58.
6 EPA’s determination not to further evaluate
Colorado’s contributions at Steps 3 or 4 of the
interstate transport framework was additionally
supported by the analysis provided in the Uinta
Basin technical support document (TSD) of this
5 87
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commenter’s recommended strategies
for Steps 3 and 4 are not relevant to
EPA’s determination that Colorado does
not significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state, and that therefore
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP
submission satisfies CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
Additionally, the commenter states
that ‘‘concerns regarding the 2015
Ozone NAAQS infrastructure
requirements highlight potential
problems regarding both the ‘Good
Neighbor Provision’ CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), as well as the adequate
implementation of SIP regarding CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E)(i),’’ but the
commenter does not explain what these
concerns or potential problems are.
Without knowing the specific concerns
to which the commenter is referring,
EPA cannot respond to this part of the
comment.
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The Center for Biological Diversity
Comment: The Center asserts that
EPA should have used an analytic year
of 2020 instead of 2023 and that EPA
made a ‘‘post hoc justification’’ for using
a 2023 analytic year. The Center states
that EPA is incorrect that most areas
downwind of Colorado have an
attainment date of August 3, 2024,
which is the attainment date for 2015
ozone moderate nonattainment areas.
The Center asserts that EPA has delayed
‘‘bumping up’’ downwind areas (or
determining that these areas have failed
to attain the 2015 ozone NAAQS by the
attainment date) and that these areas
should be designated moderate instead
of marginal. The Center also states that
Congress’ intent under the CAA is for
EPA to act on SIPs before the marginal
attainment date.7 The Center claims that
EPA is not justified in doing an analysis
based on acting on Colorado’s SIP
submission after the marginal
attainment date and also claims that
using a 2023 analytic year is
inconsistent with recent EPA actions
related to designations. Additionally,
the Center asserts that using an analytic
year of 2020 would ‘‘allow’’ EPA to use
monitored data in determining
action at proposal, evaluating Colorado’s emissions
contributions in the Uinta Basin during wintertime
inversion episodes that produce high ozone
conditions.
7 In accordance with CAA section 181(a)(1), an
area designated as nonattainment for a revised
ozone NAAQS must be classified, at the time of
designation, as marginal, moderate, serious, severe
or extreme, depending on the severity of the ozone
air quality problem in that nonattainment area.
Each classification threshold has an associated
attainment date, as well as other NAAQS
implementation-related provisions.
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downwind nonattainment and
maintenance monitors. The Center
suggests that if EPA were to use a 2020
analytic year, the Agency would
determine that Colorado needs to reduce
the State’s emissions, and that such a
conclusion would benefit several
downwind areas such as Amador
County, California; Dallas-Fort Worth,
Texas; Houston, Texas; the Northern
Wasatch Front, Utah; Phoenix, Arizona;
San Antonio, Texas; the Uinta Basin,
and others.
Response: The Center supports its
preferred analytic year of 2020 by
arguing that if EPA had used an analytic
year of 2020, we would have concluded
that Colorado has good neighbor
obligations that, if met, would benefit
downwind areas including Amador
County, California; Dallas-Fort Worth,
Texas; Houston, Texas; Northern
Wasatch Front, Utah; Phoenix, Arizona;
San Antonio, Texas; and Uinta Basin,
Utah. We do not agree that the Center’s
assertions regarding Colorado’s
transport linkages in 2020 are correct.
However, it is not necessary to evaluate
the technical basis for these claims
because the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit (D.C. Circuit) previously rejected
a similar argument regarding sole
reliance on conditions that are wholly
in the past to assess good neighbor
obligations and upheld EPA’s
reasonable interpretation of the good
neighbor provision as forward-looking.8
In that case, Delaware argued that EPA
should have used data from the year SIP
submissions for the 2008 ozone NAAQS
were due (2011) instead of the future
analytic year that EPA used (2017) on
the theory that EPA would have
concluded in that circumstance that
upwind states had good neighbor
obligations with respect to Delaware.9
The court held that Delaware’s
argument could not ‘‘be reconciled with
the text of the Good Neighbor Provision,
which prohibits upwind States from
emitting in amounts ‘which will’
contribute to downwind
nonattainment.’’ The court concluded
that ‘‘[g]iven the use of the future tense,
it would be anomalous for EPA to
subject upwind States to good neighbor
obligations in 2017 by considering
which downwind States were once in
nonattainment in 2011.’’ 10 Likewise, in
the present circumstance, it would be
anomalous for EPA now in 2022 to
consider upwind states’ obligations
under the good neighbor provision
8 See Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d 303 (D.C. Cir.
2019).
9 Id. at 322.
10 Id. at 369.
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based solely on data from years that
have already passed.
For more than two decades, EPA has
taken a forward-looking approach in
evaluating good neighbor obligations;
using an analytic year that is wholly in
the past, as the Center urges, would be
inconsistent with the Agency’s past
practice.11 Furthermore, even prior to
Wisconsin, the D.C. Circuit upheld
EPA’s interpretation of ‘‘will’’ in CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as being both
future-tense and conveying a sense of
certainty.12 EPA’s use of forwardlooking projections in assessing good
neighbor obligations here continues to
give meaning to both senses of the
term.13 EPA’s rationale for the selection
of 2023 as the appropriate future
analytic year for assessing whether
Colorado has any good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
was presented in the proposed rule in
section II.A.2 and was not a ‘‘post hoc’’
justification as the Center asserts.
Further, 2023 continues to be the key
analytic year that EPA is using in
multiple other actions to address other
states’ good neighbor obligations under
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.14
Despite the Center’s argument to the
contrary, using a forward-looking
analysis to inform EPA’s evaluation of
good neighbor SIP submissions
pursuant to the requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) is not
incompatible with EPA using existing
record information to revise certain
designations under CAA section
107(d)(1) on remand. When EPA revised
some initial area designations for the
2015 ozone NAAQS on remand after
Clean Wisconsin v. EPA,15 EPA found it
appropriate in that specific
circumstance to use data available to the
agency at the time of the initial
designations in revising the boundaries
of some nonattainment areas to avoid
introducing inconsistencies within and
across nonattainment areas, some of
which were unaffected by the court’s
remand.16 The overall goal of the
11 See 63 FR 57356, 57375, 57377, 57386 (October
27, 1998) (NOX SIP Call); 70 FR 25162, 25241 (May
12, 2005) (Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR); 76 FR
48208, 48211 (August 8, 2011) (Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR); 81 FR 74505, 74526
(October 26, 2016) (CSAPR Update); 86 FR 23054,
23074 (April 30, 2021) (Revised CSAPR Update).
12 North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 914 (July
11, 2008).
13 See 86 FR at 23074.
14 See, e.g., 87 FR 20036, 20042 (April 6, 2022)
(proposing good neighbor federal implementation
plans (FIPs) for 26 states using a 2023 analytic
year).
15 964 F.3d 1145 (D.C. Cir. 2020).
16 86 FR 67864, 67868–67869 (November 30,
2021); see also EPA, Responses to Significant
Comments Received on EPA’s Revised Response to
State and Tribal Recommendations for the 2015
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Agency’s analytical approach to the
action revising initial area
designations—to avoid introducing
inconsistencies across areas—is entirely
consonant with EPA’s approach to
addressing good neighbor obligations
using a consistent analytic year for the
entire country, which, at the time of this
action, is 2023.
Part of the Center’s argument appears
to be a suggestion for an alternative
approach to identifying receptors at
Step 1 of the 4-step framework for the
purpose of assessing whether a state has
obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The Center suggests
that if EPA were to use an analytic year
of 2020, then EPA would identify
downwind air quality issues using only
measured values from 2020. But this
ignores that EPA’s methodology for
identifying receptors already gives
consideration to recent measured
values, including in 2020, while also
using forward-looking modeling
projections. Using only measured values
to identify receptors would introduce
several problems into EPA’s
methodology.
EPA explained how the Agency
identifies nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 1 of the
4-step framework for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in the proposed rule in section
II.A.3 and provided more detail in our
‘‘Air Quality Modeling Technical
Support Document: 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
Transport SIP Proposed Actions.’’ 17
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.18
• Monitoring sites with future year
average design values that exceed the
NAAQS and that are currently
measuring nonattainment are
considered nonattainment receptors.19
• Monitoring sites with projected
average design values or maximum
design values that exceed the NAAQS
are projected to be maintenance
receptors.20
EPA’s methodology for defining
maintenance and nonattainment
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) Addressing El Paso County, Texas and
Weld County, Colorado at 43–44 (November 2021),
available in Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2017–0548
(responding to commenters arguing EPA should be
using the most current information available to the
Agency in revising designations).
17 Available in Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663 (hereinafter ‘‘Air Quality Modeling TSD’’).
18 531 F.3d 896, 910–11 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
19 87 FR 27054; Air Quality Modeling TSD at 9.
20 Id.
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receptors uses projected air quality
modeling to capture variability such
that monitors that may be attaining
based on current data may still be
deemed a ‘‘maintenance receptor.’’
Under the Center’s idea of using only
actual monitoring data, it is unclear how
EPA would distinguish between those
monitors which should be maintenance
receptors and those which are not
receptors at all. Additionally, if EPA
were to use only recorded monitoring
data for 2020 in order to define
receptors and not use modeling, there
would be no way to measure upwind
state contributions to downwind
receptors at Step 2 of the 4-step
framework. EPA’s analysis uses
modeling in order to obtain information
for both components of the key
questions at Steps 1 and 2—indicating
where there are anticipated air quality
problems and which states are
contributing to those problems.
Moreover, as discussed above, using
only past measured data to identify
receptors would not align with the
forward-looking nature of the good
neighbor provision.
In response to the comment arguing
that using a 2020 analytic year would
‘‘allow’’ EPA to use actual monitor data,
EPA points out that, in fact, the
identification of receptors at Step 1 of
the 4-step framework already considers
measured ozone design values from
2020, as explained in section 3.1 of the
Air Quality Modeling TSD. In other
words, while EPA uses a future analytic
year to define good neighbor
obligations, our assessment of likely air
quality conditions in that future year is
informed by, among other things, recent
and historical ambient air quality
monitoring data.
EPA acknowledges that, at the time
the Agency originally acted on
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP in the
2020 final rule, good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
should have been met no later than the
marginal attainment date of August 3,
2021.21 But, as explained above, the
D.C. Circuit has agreed that it is
reasonable for EPA to look to a future
year in evaluating transport obligations,
even if the Agency would have been
able to evaluate an earlier year had they
acted sooner. Indeed, in EPA’s Revised
CSAPR Update rule, on remand from
the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Wisconsin,
EPA did not continue to assess
obligations based on a 2017 analytic
year (as had been used in the 2016
21 See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313, 319; Maryland
v. EPA, 958 F.3d 1185, 1203–04 (D.C. Cir. 2020); see
also CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303; 83 FR
25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
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61251
CSAPR Update) but instead used 2021,
associated with the serious area
attainment date for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS.22 Similarly, here, EPA’s choice
of a 2023 analytic year is based on the
fact that 2023 air quality will impact
whether areas attain by the relevant
moderate attainment date of August 3,
2024.
The Center’s contention that EPA
should not look to the moderate area
attainment date because EPA has not yet
finalized the Agency’s action making
those areas downwind of Colorado
moderate is incorrect. EPA has issued a
proposed finding, and signed a final
finding, that a number of marginal areas
failed to attain by the 2021 attainment
date, and per the statute, now that EPA
has finalized this determination, these
areas will be reclassified to moderate by
operation of law on the effective date of
the final rule (30 days after publication
in the Federal Register).23 However, the
timing of that action does not affect
when the moderate attainment date
would be. EPA is not permitted under
the statute to adjust the attainment dates
for areas under a given classification;
that is, no matter when EPA finalizes
the determination that an area failed to
attain by its attainment date and
reclassifies that area, the attainment
date remains fixed, based on the number
of years from the area’s initial
designation.24 To illustrate this point,
the attainment date for moderate areas
that were designated on August 3, 2018
under the 2015 ozone NAAQS is August
3, 2024, regardless of when EPA
finalizes the action that will reclassify
areas to moderate. August 3, 2024 is also
the attainment date for any area that was
initially designated moderate under the
2015 ozone NAAQS on August 3, 2018.
Thus, based on Wisconsin and
Maryland, good neighbor obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS should be met
‘‘as expeditiously as practicable but not
later than’’ the next applicable
attainment date. For this NAAQS, the
next attainment date is the moderate
attainment date of August 3, 2024.25
For all of these reasons, EPA rejects
the Center’s contention that we should
have used a 2020 analytic year to
evaluate Colorado’s good neighbor
22 See 86 FR 23054, 23057 n.16 (April 30, 2021)
(noting that 2020 was also not appropriate to use
since that year too was wholly in the past).
23 Proposed Rule, Determinations of Attainment
by the Attainment Date, Extensions of the
Attainment Date, and Reclassification of Areas
Classified as Marginal for the 2015 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards, 87 FR 21842 (April
13, 2022). Final Rule signed on September 15, 2022.
24 See CAA section 181(a)(1); 40 CFR 51.1303; 83
FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
25 The San Antonio, Texas nonattainment area
has a different moderate attainment date.
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obligations in this action and maintains
that selecting 2023 as the analytic year
is appropriate.
Comment: As part of their comment
that EPA must disapprove Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP submission under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), the
Center criticizes EPA’s modeling for
failing to properly account for emissions
related to EPA’s withdrawal of
California Clean Car Rules Waiver. The
Center states that the ‘‘repeal of [the
withdrawal of] California’s waiver to
have more stringent emissions limits for
on-road mobile sources has not yet been
finalized’’ and points to EPA’s normal
practice of including only emissions
changes resulting from final regulatory
actions in our modeling. The Center
says that since the repeal of the
withdrawal of California’s waiver has
not been finalized, EPA’s emissions
inventory should be based on the onroad mobile sources from states like
California and Colorado as if they are
not complying with their respective
state’s clean car rule requirements, such
as the zero emissions vehicle (ZEV)
requirements and low-emissions vehicle
(LEV) requirements. The Center believes
it is arbitrary for EPA to base their
emissions inventories on these states
having emissions limits for on-road
mobile sources which are not permitted
without a preemption waiver.
Response: The Center is correct that it
is the Agency’s general practice to
include only emissions reductions from
finalized legal and regulatory
requirements in our ozone transport
modeling. EPA’s 2023 modeling using
the 2016v2 platform reflects an updated
assessment of the emissions inventory
nationwide based on changes in federal
and state rules and other relevant
changes in the emissions inventory.
We disagree with the Center that the
Agency did not appropriately consider
emissions changes related to the repeal
of the CAA waiver for California’s
Advanced Clean Car program in our
emissions inventory and subsequent
interstate transport modeling. EPA
finalized the decision to withdraw a
2013 CAA waiver previously provided
to California for the State’s greenhouse
gas (GHG) and ZEV programs under
section 209 of the CAA on September
27, 2019.26 However, EPA then
reconsidered that decision and finalized
a repeal of the withdrawal of the CAA
waiver of preemption for California’s
GHG and ZEV sale mandate on March
14, 2022.27 Whether it was appropriate
to include these emissions changes in
our 2023 modeling at the time we
26 84
27 87
FR 51310.
FR 14332.
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conducted the modeling is effectively
moot, since EPA did in fact repeal the
withdrawal of the waiver by March of
this year.
EPA’s projected emissions for the
updated 2023 modeling used in this
action use, in relevant part, mobile
source emissions inventories provided
by the California Air Resources Board
(specifically, EMFAC2017), which
incorporate emissions reductions from
California’s GHG emissions standards
and ZEV sale mandate, while for the
remaining states the inventories are
based on MOVES3.28 MOVES3 reflects
the impacts of the Tier 3 Motor Vehicle
Emission and Fuel Standards rule
which harmonized the California LEV
and federal requirements for low
emissions vehicles.29 ZEV populations
in the modeling were based on actual
registration data for the modeling base
year and were grown to future years
according to Annual Energy Outlook
forecasts.30 Thus, EPA’s updated 2023
modeling appropriately included
emissions changes regarding California’s
GHG and ZEV sale mandate waiver, as
well as LEV emissions standards
nationwide by virtue of EPA’s inclusion
of the Tier 3 program in our modeling.
Additionally, the September 27, 2019
rulemaking did not affect California’s
low emissions vehicle III (LEV III
emission standards.)
Overall, while the Center is correct
that it is the Agency’s general practice
to include only emissions reductions
from final rules in our modeling, there
is no merit to the remainder of this
comment, because EPA has in fact
repealed the withdrawal of the waiver
as to California’s GHG and ZEV rules
and thus they were appropriately
incorporated into the modeling.
Comment: The Center further asserts
that EPA wrongly ignored receptor
values above the level of the NAAQS.
The Center points to Step 2 of the 4-step
interstate transport framework, as
described in the proposed rule for this
action,31 where the contribution metric
is defined as the average impact from
28 EPA, Latest Version of MOter Vehicle Emission
Simulator (MOVES), available at https://
www.epa.gov/moves/latest-version-motor-vehicleemission-simulator-moves (last visited September
19, 2022).
29 81 FR 23414, at 23450. As indicated in the
Final Rule for Control of Air Pollution from Motor
Vehicles: Tier 3 Motor Vehicle Emission and Fuel
Standards, ‘‘The Tier 3 program is identical to LEV
III in most major respects for light-duty vehicles
(and heavy-duty vehicles . . .)’’.
30 See Technical Support Document (TSD)
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling Platform,
section 4.3.2, in particular Table 4–43. Dated:
February 2022. (2016v2 TSD). Included under
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
31 87 FR 27055.
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each state to each receptor on the days
with the highest ozone concentrations at
the receptor based on the 2023
modeling. The Center states that by
using this protocol, ‘‘EPA is ignoring
impacts from upwind states on days
with high ozone concentrations,
including concentrations above the level
of the NAAQS, but which aren’t
necessarily the highest ozone
concentration. This is ignoring an
important aspect of the problem; that is
days above the level of the NAAQS but
still not the highest days.’’ The Center
states that EPA criticized Colorado for
using the same calculations when the
State submitted its designations
recommendations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, ‘‘not because those areas
violated the NAAQS but rather because
they contributed to violations.’’ 32 The
Center concludes that there is no
difference between intra-state
contribution and inter-state contribution
and that it is arbitrary for EPA to ignore
the above-the-NAAQS level days
because failure to address them means
downwind areas will continue to
struggle to reach attainment.
Response: Through the development
and implementation of the CSAPR
rulemakings as well as prior regional
rulemakings pursuant to the interstate
transport provision, EPA, working in
partnership with states, developed the
4-step interstate transport framework to
evaluate states’ obligations to eliminate
interstate transport emissions under the
good neighbor provision for the ozone
NAAQS. This includes Step 2 of the 4step framework which identifies states
that impact air quality problem
(nonattainment or maintenance)
receptors in downwind states
sufficiently such that the states are
considered ‘‘linked’’ and therefore
warrant further review and analysis of
their air quality impacts. As the Center
notes in their comment, EPA evaluated
Colorado’s contribution (as we did every
other state’s) based on the average
relative downwind impact calculated
over multiple days. The number of days
used in calculating the average
contribution metric has historically
been determined in a manner that is
generally consistent with EPA’s
recommendations for projecting future
year ozone design values.33 Our ozone
attainment demonstration modeling
guidance at the time CSAPR was
originally promulgated recommended
using all model-predicted days above
33 The Center’s comment is only relevant to EPA’s
summertime ozone analysis since the Agency’s
wintertime ozone analysis for the Uinta Basin does
not use model predicted design values.
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the NAAQS to calculate future year
design values.34 In 2014, EPA issued
draft revised guidance that changed the
recommended number of days to the
top-10 model predicted days.35 For the
CSAPR Update, promulgated in 2016,
EPA transitioned to calculating design
values based on this draft revised
approach. The revised modeling
guidance was finalized in 2018.36 Since
that time EPA has consistently
calculated both the ozone design values
and the contributions based on the top10 day approach. As this guidance is
finalized, we will continue to base our
average contribution metric in
accordance with the top-10 day
approach. Thus, EPA disagrees with the
Center’s claim that EPA’s current
modeling approach for identifying
contributing upwind states is arbitrary
and contrary to law or that the Agency
must disapprove Colorado’s good
neighbor SIP revision for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Further, the Center has not
supplied any information establishing
that, had EPA used a larger set of days
with high ozone concentrations at
identified out of state nonattainment or
maintenance receptors to calculate
contribution values at Step 2, Colorado’s
contribution would then be found to
exceed the 1 percent of NAAQS
threshold at any of these receptors.
Additionally, EPA disagrees with the
Center’s statement that EPA ‘‘criticized’’
Colorado for using the same calculations
when the State submitted its
designations recommendations for the
2015 ozone NAAQS. The Center refers
to page 28 of EPA’s final designation
technical support document
(designation TSD) 37 supporting
Colorado’s designations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS, and we believe the
Center is referring to EPA’s assessment
of the Denver nonattainment area’s
meteorology.
As an initial matter, the technical
analysis and process for designations
34 EPA, ‘‘Guidance on the Use of Models and
Other Analyses for Demonstrating Attainment of
Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional
Haze,’’ 2007, available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/
default/files/2020-10/documents/final-03-pm-rhguidance.pdf.
35 EPA, ‘‘Draft Modeling Guidance for
Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for
Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze,’’ 2014, available
at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-10/
documents/draft-o3-pm-rh-modeling_guidance2014.pdf.
36 EPA, ‘‘Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating
Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5 and Regional
Haze,’’ 2018, available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/
default/files/2020-10/documents/o3-pm-rhmodeling_guidance-2018.pdf.
37 EPA, ‘‘Colorado: Denver Metro/North Front
Range Nonattainment Area Final Area Designations
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards Technical Support Document (TSD).’’
Docket No. EPA–R08–OAR–2019–0140.
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falls under a separate set of guidance
and policies than the modeling
guidance that EPA follows for purposes
of interstate transport.38 Thus, we do
not agree that EPA’s designation TSD
methodology should be considered
relevant or even analogous to EPA’s
Step 2 analysis in this action.
Nonetheless, during the process of
designating nonattainment areas, the
evaluation of meteorological data helps
to assess the fate and transport of
emissions contributing to ozone
concentrations and to identify areas
potentially contributing to the
monitored violations. During a
designation review for a new NAAQS,
the results of meteorological data
analysis may inform the determination
of nonattainment area boundaries. At
the time of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
designations, to determine how
meteorological conditions, including,
but not limited to, weather, transport
patterns, and stagnation conditions,
could affect the fate and transport of
ozone and precursor emissions from
sources in the area, EPA evaluated
2014–2016 HYSPLIT (Hybrid SingleParticle Lagrangian Integrated
Trajectory) trajectories at 100, 500, and
1000 meters above ground level that
illustrate the three-dimensional paths
traveled by air parcels to a violating
monitor. In EPA’s 2015 ozone NAAQS
designation TSD for Colorado, the
Agency provided figures of the 24-hour
HYSPLIT back trajectories for each
exceedance day for the violating
monitors in 2013–2015, while the State
of Colorado focused on the four highest
exceedance days in each of those three
years in its own designation TSD. EPA
concluded that even though EPA’s total
number of trajectories differ from those
conducted by the State of Colorado, the
geographic distribution of trajectory
hours was the same between the two
analyses.39 EPA did not criticize
Colorado’s methodology per se in the
designations TSD but simply identified
a difference in approach while noting
that it produced the same result.
However, this was in the context of
EPA’s comparison of HYSPLIT back
trajectory data for purposes of
evaluating the designation of a
nonattainment area, which is entirely
separate from the use of photochemical
38 See EPA, ‘‘EPA Guidance on the Area
Designations for the 2015 Ozone NAAQS,’’
available at https://www.epa.gov/ozonedesignations/ozone-designations-guidance-anddata#A.
39 EPA, ‘‘Colorado: Denver Metro/North Front
Range Nonattainment Area Final Area Designations
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards Technical Support Document (TSD).’’
Docket No. EPA–R08–OAR–2019–0140.
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grid modeling projections for purposes
of assessing contribution at Step 2 of the
4-step interstate transport framework.
Therefore, the Center’s statement not
only misinterprets the content and
purpose of EPA’s 2015 ozone NAAQS
designation TSD for Colorado, but also
mischaracterizes its significance to this
action.40
Comment: The Center claims that
‘‘EPA’s failure to analyze Colorado’s
contribution to wintertime ozone levels
is arbitrary and capricious’’ and
therefore the Agency must disapprove
the State’s good neighbor SIP. The
Center states that wintertime ozone is an
issue in basins in the Western United
States where oil and gas extraction
occurs, not just in the Uinta Basin area.
The Center asserts that EPA arbitrarily
treated the Uinta Basin as unique. The
Center points to the Upper Green River
Basin area in Wyoming, which was
designated as nonattainment for the
2008 ozone NAAQS due to wintertime
ozone.41
Additionally, the Center notes that
some areas, though not designated as
nonattainment for wintertime ozone,
will have a difficult time coming into
attainment without addressing
wintertime ozone. The Center cites the
Denver Metro/North Front Range
(DMNFR) nonattainment area as an
example and provides March 2021
monitor values at various Colorado
monitors in support. The Center further
states that the DMNFR monitor values
cannot be explained by stratospheric
intrusion or wildfire. While the Center
notes that they do not expect EPA to
analyze Colorado’s ‘‘interstate’’
contribution to Colorado, the Center
states that DMNFR values demonstrate
that EPA is wrong to claim that the
Uinta Basin’s wintertime ozone problem
is unique. The Center asserts that EPA
must ‘‘do an analysis, using the same
methodology as summertime ozone, for
other Western areas with significant oil
and gas production and winter weather
to determine if Colorado is significantly
contributing to them.’’ Additionally, the
Center claims that ‘‘while EPA uses a
40 The Center also fails to recognize that focusing
on the top-10 days of ozone concentrations, as EPA
does for purposes of evaluating contribution at Step
2, can sometimes utilize days that are lower than
the level of the NAAQS if not all 10 days used for
these calculations exceed the NAAQS. The Center’s
assumption that using only the top-10 days
necessarily excludes other days that exceed the
NAAQS is not correct. As EPA explained in our
2018 modeling guidance, using the top-10 highest
days yields an analytically robust result, can be
applied even as NAAQS are revised, and yields
better estimates than the previous guidance
approach. See ‘‘Modeling Guidance for
Demonstrating Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5
and Regional Haze,’’ 2018 at 105.
41 77 FR 30088 (May 21, 2012).
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1% threshold for determining if there is
significant contribution to summertime
ozone, EPA appears to be using a 50%
or more, that is upwind states would
have to be the main cause, threshold for
significant contribution for wintertime
ozone.’’ The Center also insists that
‘‘EPA must do an analysis to determine
which states contribute more than 1% to
wintertime ozone in the Uinta Basin, the
Denver Metro/North Front Range, and
other areas with areas with wintertime
ozone problems and then come up with
emission reduction requirements for
those upwind contributors.’’ Finally, the
Center states that EPA previously
redefined the ozone season for Colorado
and many other Western States to be
year-round and that the Agency ‘‘is
acting like the ozone season for
Colorado and other Western States is
only the summertime but EPA cannot
undo its previous rulemaking to create
year round ozone seasons via the
preamble to this proposed rule.’’
Response: EPA agrees with the Center
that the occurrence of high levels of
ozone in the wintertime, in the presence
of snow cover and emissions from oil
and gas operations, is not limited to the
Unita Basin. EPA used the word
‘‘unique’’ in two separate instances in
the proposed rule and in the
accompanying Uinta Basin Technical
Support Document,42 but did not mean
to suggest that the Uinta Basin is unique
in experiencing wintertime ozone
events. Instead, in both the proposal and
the Uinta Basin TSD, EPA referred to
the Uinta Basin’s unique topography.43
Also, in the proposal, EPA referred to
the unique analytical challenges in
assessing whether there is interstate
transport of ozone and its precursors
from Colorado during wintertime
episodes in Utah.44
However, we do not agree that we did
not conduct an analysis of the potential
for transport of ozone under these
circumstances. We performed a separate
analysis for the Uinta Basin because, as
explained in the Uinta Basin TSD, we
acknowledged that the modeling we
would otherwise use is not reliable for
projecting high ozone levels associated
with wintertime inversions in that area.
Additionally, the Uinta Basin is the only
wintertime ozone area that is currently
designated as nonattainment or
maintenance for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
and is the only area with high
wintertime ozone that is immediately
adjacent to the Colorado border. As
42 EPA, Technical Support Document (TSD)
Ozone Transport Analysis: Colorado and the Uinta
Basin Nonattainment Area, April 2022 (Uinta Basin
TSD).
43 87 FR at 27057; Uinta Basin TSD at 5.
44 87 FR at 27057.
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explained in the Uinta Basin TSD, high
ozone levels during the winter in the
Uinta Basin area are associated with
stagnant meteorological conditions that
result in the build-up of local ozone
precursor emissions and snow cover
which enhances the reflectivity of solar
radiation which, in turn, accelerates
photochemical reactions of the trapped
precursors to form locally high ozone
concentrations. Because of the stagnant
conditions, transport of precursor
emissions from outside the immediate
area are likely to be minimal, at most.
In any case, the Center has not provided
any information to support its notion
that Colorado significantly contributes
to nonattainment or interferes with
maintenance in the Uinta Basin, much
less in other areas farther from Colorado
experiencing high wintertime ozone
levels.
The Center cites the Upper Green
River Basin area as another area that
periodically experiences wintertime
ozone. EPA designated this area as
nonattainment for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS for wintertime ozone.45 We are
aware that one of the monitors in this
nonattainment area is violating the 2015
ozone NAAQS according to the 2021
design value; however, as discussed
below, we do not believe emissions
from Colorado contribute to this design
value.46
The Upper Green River Basin is
located in western Wyoming, about halfway between the southern and northern
borders of the State. The southernmost
border of the nonattainment area is at
least 80 miles from the closest Colorado
border. In EPA’s technical support
document that supported the Agency’s
designation for the Upper Green River
Basin 2008 ozone NAAQS
nonattainment area, we stated that
‘‘ozone exceedances almost always
occur when winds are low indicating
that there is little to no transport of
ozone or precursors from distant sources
outside the proposed nonattainment
area.’’ 47 The Agency also indicated that
the wind field trajectory analyses led to
the conclusion that regional transport
for the area is insignificant, and localscale precursor emissions transport is
the dominant means of precursor
transport during high ozone periods.48
Additionally, during a high fidelity
trajectory analysis conducted by
Wyoming in support of its
recommendation for the southern
boundary of the Upper Green River
Basin nonattainment area, emissions
from sources south of the nonattainment
boundary were consistently transported
east and out of the region without
entering the area with violating
monitors.49 Furthermore, multiple
research studies have found that
wintertime ozone is a local
phenomenon that is not affected by long
range transport.50 Based on this
information, EPA finds that it is
reasonable to conclude that Colorado
does not significantly contribute to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
(or the 2008 ozone NAAQS) in the
Upper Green River Basin area.
Additionally, as we stated previously,
the Center has not provided any
information to support their notion that
Colorado significantly contributes to
nonattainment or interferes with
maintenance during wintertime ozone
events in the Upper Green River Basin,
or any other western area experiencing
wintertime ozone events.
As the Center acknowledges, their
comments about the DMNFR
nonattainment area are not relevant to
this rulemaking because the issue EPA
is addressing under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) is whether Colorado
contributes significantly to
nonattainment or interferes with
maintenance in other states, not
Colorado’s own nonattainment and
maintenance problems.
EPA disagrees with the Center’s
assertion that EPA should conduct the
same analysis for wintertime ozone
transport as the Agency does for
summertime ozone transport. As EPA
explained in our proposed approval and
the Uinta Basin TSD, there are no
reliable models that accurately predict
wintertime ozone levels and
contributions.51 In addition, currently
48 Id.
49 Id.
45 77
FR 30088 (May 21, 2012). Then, on May 4,
2016 (86 FR 26697), EPA published a determination
that the Upper Green River Basin Area attained the
2008 ozone NAAQS based on 2012 to 2014 ambient
air quality data.
46 Monitor 560350099 in Sublette, Wyoming is
measuring 74 ppb according to EPA’s current
quality-assured monitor design value data. https://
www.epa.gov/air-trends/air-quality-designvalues#dvtool.
47 EPA, Wyoming Area Designations for the 2008
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards
TSD at 46–48, located in Docket No. EPA–R08–
OAR–2019–0140.
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50 See generally Oltmans, Samuel et al., ‘‘O3,
CH4, CO2, CO, NO2 and NMHC aircraft
measurements in the Uinta Basin oil and gas region
under low and high ozone conditions in winter
2012 and 2013,’’ Elementa: Science of the
Anthropocene, 4, 000132, (2016).; ENVIRON, ‘‘Final
Report: 2014 Uinta Basin Winter Ozone Study,’’
February 2015, available at https://documents.deq.
utah.gov/air-quality/planning/air-quality-policy/
DAQ-2015-021002.pdf (last visited September 19,
2022) (‘‘ENVIRON Final Report’’).
51 87 FR at 27057; Uinta Basin TSD at 8 (‘‘Current
state-of-the-science national scale modeling tools
and inventories are not designed to characterize
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available emissions inventories are not
sufficiently refined to accurately
estimate emissions from oil and gas
production during transient wintertime
events. Therefore, in this action, EPA
relied on other methods of analysis as
opposed to computer-based modeling
when reviewing wintertime ozone
areas.52
The Center is incorrect to claim that
the Agency appears to be using 50
percent or more of the NAAQS as a
threshold for significant contribution for
wintertime ozone for the Uinta Basin.
EPA has reviewed our proposal and the
Uinta Basin TSD for this action and
cannot find what the commenter is
referencing, nor has commenter
provided a citation. The Center seems to
think EPA is using a higher contribution
threshold for wintertime ozone than we
do for a Step 2 analysis for summertime
ozone. This is incorrect. For
summertime ozone, EPA is able to use
current state-of-the science
photochemical modeling for Step 1 and
Step 2 and this allows us to set and use
a contribution threshold of 1 percent for
the purpose of evaluating a state’s
contribution to nonattainment or
maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS (i.e., 0.70 ppb) at downwind
receptors. As explained previously,
since our current photochemical
modeling does not fully capture
wintertime ozone events, we cannot rely
on modeling to assess a state’s
contribution in wintertime ozone areas.
However, knowing that the Uinta Basin
has nonattainment monitors, EPA
performed an extensive analysis, as
documented in the Uinta Basin TSD for
this action. The results of the in-depth
analysis conducted in the Uinta Basin
TSD support EPA’s conclusion that
interstate transport of air pollution from
Colorado does not significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in the Utah portion of the Uinta
Basin.
In regard to the Center’s argument
about year-round ozone, the Center does
not provide a cite where EPA ‘‘redefined
the ozone season’’ so we are unable to
address that assertion specifically. With
respect to the Center’s statement that
‘‘EPA is acting like the ozone season for
Colorado and other Western States is
these conditions in a manner that would provide
confidence in quantifying interstate contributions.’’)
and Figure 3 (showing how the model ‘‘understate
measured data by an extremely large amount’’ for
wintertime ozone).
52 See ‘‘Utah: Northern Wasatch Front, Southern
Wasatch Front, and Uinta Basin Final Area
Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards Technical Support Document
(TSD)’’ and the Uinta Basin TSD specific for this
action.
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only the summertime,’’ EPA disagrees.
By the Center’s own admission, EPA
designated the Upper Green River Basin
area in Wyoming as nonattainment for
the 2008 ozone NAAQS based on
wintertime ozone. Additionally, in the
Uinta Basin TSD for this very action,
EPA provided an in-depth analysis on
whether Colorado significantly
contributed interstate transport air
pollution to a 2015 ozone
nonattainment area for wintertime
ozone, the Uinta Basin. Thus, EPA
acknowledges that ozone nonattainment
can be a wintertime problem and
thoroughly addressed whether
emissions from Colorado significantly
contribute to nonattainment or interfere
with maintenance of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in those areas in the proposed
rule, the Uinta Basin TSD for this
action, and in this final action.
In summary, EPA disagrees with the
Center’s claims that EPA failed to
properly analyze Colorado’s
contribution to wintertime ozone
nonattainment and maintenance of the
2015 ozone NAAQS and that we must
disapprove the State’s good neighbor
SIP provisions for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.
Comment: The Center challenges the
emissions inventory on which EPA’s
2023 modeling is based, asserting that
EPA ignored increased emissions from
the construction and operation of the
Uinta Basin Railway in our emissions
inventory platform and modeling. The
Center notes that the U.S. Surface
Transportation Board (STB) recently
approved the construction and
operation of the Uinta Basin Railway, ‘‘a
planned 88-mile long railway that
would transport crude oil from Myton
and Leland Bench, Utah to Kyune,
Utah.’’ According to the Center, by
approving a cheaper means of
transporting crude oil to the Gulf Coast
than the trucking industry, the oil
railway is intended to quadruple oil
production in the Uinta Basin from
roughly 90,000 barrels per day to
350,000 barrels per day. The Center
indicates that in order to meet that
increased oil demand, up to 3,330 new
wells would need to be drilled in the
Uinta Basin over the next 15 years, also
increasing the number of trucking miles
to support the oil fields. The Center also
points to a Uinta Basin Railway final
environmental impact statement (EIS)
conducted by STB that estimates that
after 15 years, and under a high oil
production scenario,53 the annual
53 For the EIS, the STB created two potential
scenarios for future oil development in the Uinta
Basin, a low oil production scenario and a high oil
production scenario. These scenarios corresponded
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61255
emissions associated with oil and gas
development, including trucking, for
carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen oxides
(NOX), and volatile organic compounds
(VOC) would be 4,454 tons per year
(tpy), 3,146 tpy, and 5,558 tpy,
respectively. The Center believes these
emissions are underestimated. The
Center further cites EIS estimates of
annual emissions associated with rail
operations along the 88-mile long rail
line, excluding downline emissions in
Utah and Colorado, for CO, NOX, and
VOCs of 405 tpy, 1,056 tpy, and 40 tpy,
respectively. The Center also includes a
table of estimated downline emissions
of criteria pollutants from the increase
in trains traveling in Colorado per day,
and states that NOX and VOC emissions
along downline segments (excluding
emissions in attainment areas) would
total 5,771.05 tpy and 205.33 tpy,
respectively, and CO emissions would
total 2,076.41 tpy. The Center concludes
that ‘‘EPA must revise its analysis to
consider these increased emissions
caused by the U.S. Government’s final
approval of the Uinta Basin Railway.’’
The Center states that the approval by
the STB ‘‘is a final action by the federal
government itself’’ and ‘‘EPA cannot
justify ignoring it based on a claim that
EPA does not consider future actions
which are not final actions.’’
Response: The STB, which provided
the notice of approval as well as the EIS
to which the Center refers to in their
comment, is an independent federal
agency that is charged with the
economic regulation of various modes of
transportation, primarily freight rail.
The STB’s Office of Environmental
Assessment (OEA) prepared an EIS
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA). The NEPA process
is intended to assist the STB and the
public in identifying and assessing the
potential environmental consequences
of a proposed action before a decision
on a proposed action. In a December 21,
2021 document the STB authorized
construction and operation of the
proposed rail line and, among three
build alternatives, specifically
authorized the Whitmore Park
Alternative because it would avoid and
to estimated ranges of rail traffic. Under the low oil
production scenario, total oil production in the
Uinta Basin would increase by an average of
130,000 barrels per day compared to historical
production levels. Under the high oil production
scenario, total oil production in the Uinta Basin
would increase by an average of 350,000 barrels per
day. In the EIS, STB’s Office of Environmental
Analysis (OEA) notes that some of the assumptions
made here are conservative and therefore may
overstate the total future oil production in the Basin
and the potential impacts. Surface Transportation
Board, Final Environmental Impact Statement,
August 6, 2021 (Final EIS), at 3.15–4.
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minimize major environmental impacts.
EPA is aware of the STB’s EIS and final
decision; in fact, as part of the comment
process for the EIS, EPA filed comments
on September 2, 2021, recommending
certain changes to an air emissions
dispersion model that the OEA ran as
part of the environmental review
process.54
The Center’s comments suggest that
since the STB issued a final EIS and
authorized the Railway construction
and operation, then the emissions
predicted in the EIS (and particularly
the high oil production scenario) should
be considered final as well and should
have been incorporated into EPA’s
modeling for purposes of assessing
Colorado’s contribution to
nonattainment and interference with
maintenance for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states.
Our 2016v2 modeling of 2023 did not
include projected increases in emissions
from the Uinta Basin Railway project or
from the associated projected increase
in emissions of ozone precursor
emissions from expanded oil and gas
operations that are associated with the
Uinta Basin Railway. However, we
disagree with the Center that this
potential increase in emissions would
change our analysis for Colorado for
several reasons.
First, any potential increase in
emissions in Utah associated with the
Railway is not relevant to assessing
Colorado’s good neighbor obligations.
The Center does not explain how
projected emissions increases due to the
construction and operation of the Uinta
Basin Railway as a whole are relevant to
whether emissions from Colorado
contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states. The selected Whitmore
Park Alternative extends approximately
88 miles from terminus points in the
Uinta Basin from around Myton, Utah,
and Leland Bench, Utah, to an existing
rail line near Kyune, Utah. The EIS does
not specify if the possible new well
drilling and trucking could occur from
wells outside the State of Utah as well
as inside the State. However, the final
EIS indicated that OEA assumed that
future oil and gas development,
including well drilling and operation
along with construction and operation
54 EPA expressed concern that OEA’s use of a
‘‘flagpole height’’ (i.e., the height above the ground
for which the model predicts the concentration of
a pollutant) for one of the modeling scenarios
described in the final EIS might under-predict air
pollutant concentrations for that modeling scenario.
In response to EPA’s letter, OEA reran the model
scenario without using a flagpole height and found
the new results to be identical to the results
reported in the final EIS.
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of related facilities, such as pipelines,
would occur throughout the Uinta Basin
in the fields shown in Figure 3.15–1 of
the EIS.55 None of these fields within
the cumulative impacts analysis study
area—which extends approximately 18
miles into the Yampa Intrastate Air
Quality Control Region in Colorado—are
located within Colorado.56
We also note that in the EIS, OEA
identified 27 reasonably foreseeable
future actions within the area of the
cumulative impacts study that could
have cumulative impacts in addition to
estimated additional exploration and
drilling of oil wells. We again note that
none of these activities were estimated
to take place within Colorado.57
Therefore, while we do not know for
certain where or in which state drilling
would occur, estimations indicate that
most, if not all, of the expanded
production and exploration (and its
associated foreseeable future actions)
would occur within Utah. It is not
possible to determine with much
certainty what emissions may be
released in Colorado based on the
information supplied by the Center or in
the EIS, or when, or in what quantity
these emissions would occur.
Further, the STB approval for
construction and operation of the
Railway does not in itself equate to
approval of any new oil and gas
development or drilling in the small
portion of the Uinta Basin area located
in Colorado. We do not know how many
of the high oil production scenario’s
estimated 3,330 wells will be drilled
and operating and by what year (e.g., the
total amount of wells is not expected
until after 15 years), nor do we know
what controls or limits they will be
operating under. We also do not know
if wells in the Uinta Basin will be
operating at the high oil production
scenario (3,330 wells), the low oil
production scenario (1,245 wells), or
some other production level. Thus, the
emissions associated with increased
well development because of the Uinta
Basin Railway—to the extent any such
development may occur in the small
portion of the Uinta Basin that is located
in Colorado—are too speculative to
assume they would impact our analysis
of potential ozone transport from
Colorado.
The Center points to the downline
segment analysis of railroad emissions
that extended to Denver, Colorado.58
The EIS states that the total NOX and
VOC emissions at any particular
55 Final
EIS, Section 3.15.4.
EIS, Section 3.25–3, Figure 3.15–1.
57 Final EIS, Section 3.15–2.
58 See Final EIS, Section 3.7.
56 Final
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downline location/segment will vary
depending on total train traffic, local
background concentrations, and local
topographic and meteorological
conditions.59 Further, the EIS states
‘‘that increases in concentrations
measured at air quality monitoring sites,
if any, are expected to be negligible’’
and that ‘‘[t]he increased downline rail
traffic associated with the proposed rail
line would not lead to a violation of the
NAAQS for counties that are in
attainment, and would not increase the
severity of conditions in counties that
are not in attainment.’’ 60 Nonetheless,
assuming there may be some increase in
railroad emissions in Colorado
associated with the Uinta Basin Railway
project, these emissions increases are
too small when viewed in comparison
with the total amount of ozoneprecursor emissions from Colorado to
reasonably be expected to alter the
results of our modeling at Step 1 and
Step 2. Even an increase in NOX
emissions of 5,771.06 tpy and in VOC
emissions of 205.33 tpy would be a very
small change in the total statewide
emissions of these pollutants from
Colorado, which are projected in 2023
to be 145,621 tpy NOX and 555,631 tpy
VOC.61 Considering that our current
2023 modeling indicates that the largest
impact Colorado makes at any
downwind receptor is only 0.20 ppb in
2023 (Denton County, Texas, Site ID
481210034), this very small change in
statewide emissions cannot reasonably
be anticipated to change our modeling
results.62 63
59 Final
EIS at 3.7–17.
60 Id.
61 Annual State and County Summaries of
Emissions Used in Air Quality Modeling, US
Inventory State SCC 2016v2 20 aug2021, Federal
Implementation Plan Addressing Regional Ozone
Transport for the 2015 Primary Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standard, Docket Id. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2021–0668–0100_attachment_3.
62 In addition, as evident from our analysis in the
Uinta Basin TSD, these downline railroad emissions
in Colorado would only be relevant to assessing
transport into the Uinta Basin to the extent those
emissions are occurring within the Colorado
portion of the Uinta Basin itself. This is because our
analysis in the TSD shows that emissions from
outside the Uinta Basin do not transport into the
Basin during wintertime inversion conditions. The
emissions from trains passing through the Colorado
portion of the Uinta Basin during a wintertime
inversion episode would be only a very small
fraction of the total railroad emissions increase
projected in Colorado in the EIS, as presented in the
table on page 8 of the Center’s comments. Such a
small emission increase would not be enough to
change our conclusion in the Uinta Basin TSD that
emissions from Colorado do not significantly
contribute to the ozone issues in the Utah portion
of the Uinta Basin.
63 Design values and contributions at individual
monitoring sites nationwide are provided in the file
‘‘2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx,’’ which is
included in Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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The estimations of emissions
included in the information provided by
the Center and in the EIS are largely
influenced by what eventual production
levels will occur in the Uinta Basin
following the completion of the Uinta
Basin Railway project. The production
rates and resulting changes to emissions
in the Uinta Basin and any downline
emissions stemming from the project
can be influenced by a multitude of
factors, including how long it takes to
complete the project, as well as various
market condition factors such as general
domestic and global economic
conditions, commodity pricing, and the
strategic and capital investment
decisions of oil producers and their
customers.64 In OEA’s analysis in the
EIS, conservative assumptions were
generally made when evaluating air
quality impacts (i.e., modeling air
quality impacts using a production
value of 5,750 wells, well above the
estimated 3,330 wells under the high oil
production scenario).65 66 However,
without increased certainty on when
this project will be completed (and how
that relates to air quality conditions at
that time), how quickly production in
the Uinta Basin will change as a result
of the construction, or how much
production will change, it is not
appropriate nor is it feasible, at this
time, for EPA to consider the inclusion
or consideration of any changes in
emissions as a result of the Uinta Basin
Railway project in this action.
Additionally, there are other factors that
could counterbalance any projected
increase in emissions in Colorado once
the Uinta Basin Railway is in operation,
including possible emissions reductions
that might occur from avoided crude oil
truck trips into or through Colorado.
This degree of uncertainty makes it too
difficult for EPA to determine what the
actual impacts may be from this project
at this time, though we recognize the
potential need to assess the air quality
impacts of this project in the future
(particularly as related to an increase in
emissions from Utah); however, EPA is
confident that the emissions change in
Colorado that could result from this
project would not be sufficient to
change our conclusions in this action.
In summary, EPA disagrees with the
Center’s comments that EPA’s current
64 Final
EIS, Section 3.15–3.
EIS, Section 3.15–32.
66 Based on Bureau of Land Management (BLM),
‘‘Bureau of Land Management Monument Butte Oil
and Gas Development Project Environmental
Impact Statement,’’ 2016. Final Environmental
Impact Statement for Newfield Exploration
Corporation Monument Butte Oil and Gas
Development Project in Uintah and Duchesne
Counties, Utah.
65 Final
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modeling and analysis fails to
appropriately consider predicted direct
or indirect emissions from the
construction and operation of the Uinta
Basin Railway. Based on our review of
the available information, any potential
increase in emissions in Colorado from
this project are too small and too
speculative to reasonably be anticipated
to change the results either of our 2023
modeling analysis at Steps 1 and 2, or
our assessment of the potential for
transport from Colorado within the
Uinta Basin.
Comment: The Center asserts that
EPA must disapprove Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP submission under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) (adequate
resources and authority) because the
State of Colorado lacks adequate legal
authority to regulate emissions from
agriculture sources. The Center quotes
Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.) 25–
7–109(8)(a) and argues that the
provision prohibits Colorado from
regulating agriculture sources other than
those that are major sources. The Center
states that Colorado cannot apply RACT
or protect visibility or air quality related
values for Class I areas from agriculture
facilities.
Furthermore, the Center asserts that
EPA must also disapprove the SIP under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (interstate
transport prong 4) and 110(a)(2)(J)
(consultation with government officials,
public notification, and PSD and
visibility protection) because agriculture
emissions can cause visibility
impartment. Additionally, the Center
argues that EPA must disapprove the
SIP submission under section
110(a)(2)(A) (emissions limits and other
control measures) because, according to
the Center, Colorado cannot assure that
it will maintain the NAAQS because the
State lacks the legal authority to regulate
emissions from agriculture and
pesticides.
The Center asserts that on remand,
EPA wasted the Tenth Circuit’s and the
Center’s time because, according to the
Center, EPA says the same thing on
remand that they said before remand.
The Center acknowledges a letter from
Colorado but argues that Colorado’s
statement that it regulates agricultural
sources through minor source
permitting is not true because Colorado
has never issued a minor source air
permit for a farm or concentrated animal
feeding operations (CAFO) and that EPA
has not provided evidence to the
contrary. The Center further argues that
C.R.S. 25–7–109(8)(a) does not mention
minor source permitting as an exception
and that minor sources are not title V,
PSD, or non-attainment new source
review (NSR) sources. Furthermore, the
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Center points out that there are no New
Source Performance Standards for
CAFOs.
The Center further asserts that fugitive
emissions are not included in
determining if most sources are major.
The Center states that pesticides are a
major contributor to ozone formation
and animal waste is a major contributor
to visibility impairment and
interference with air quality related
values. The Center argues that Colorado
cannot regulate fugitive emissions based
on the plain language of C.R.S. 25–7–
109(8)(a).
The Center also challenges EPA’s
interpretation of C.R.S. 25–7–109(8)(a)
that if it is necessary to regulate
agricultural sources beyond those that
are major sources in order to attain or
maintain the NAAQS, then the State has
authority to do so. The Center states that
Part C, Part D, and title V do not say that
states must independently attain and
maintain the NAAQS. The Center
concludes by saying that Colorado has
failed to attain the ozone NAAQS five
times and that EPA cannot promise to
address the State’s lack of authority to
regulate non-major agriculture sources
tomorrow, during review of the State’s
nonattainment SIP, when it is required
to address the issue today.
Response: EPA disagrees with this
comment. First, EPA did not waste the
Tenth Circuit’s or the Center’s time, nor
did EPA say the exact same thing on
remand as EPA said before remand, as
the Center contends. Rather, when EPA
sought voluntary remand, the Agency
specifically said that ‘‘EPA intends to
review its analysis of the State
Authority Element and may provide
additional explanation of its reading of
Colorado’s agriculture provision.’’ 67 On
remand, EPA has done exactly that—
because of concerns raised about the
State’s authority, EPA reevaluated
C.R.S. 25–7–109(8)(a) (‘‘agriculture
provision’’) and verified our reading of
that provision with Colorado. By letter,
Colorado explained the State’s authority
under the agriculture provision, which
confirmed EPA’s earlier interpretation
of the provision. By verifying our
interpretation with Colorado, EPA
received adequate necessary assurances
from the State concerning Colorado’s
legal authority, as required by CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
Second, the Center’s interpretation of
the agriculture provision is wrong. A
plain reading of the provision,
supported by Colorado’s letter,
67 Center for Biological Diversity v. EPA, No. 20–
9560 (Tenth Cir.), EPA’s Motion for Voluntary
Remand at 10.
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demonstrates that Colorado does have
authority to:
—Apply reasonably available control
technology (RACT) to agricultural
facilities;
—Regulate agricultural facility
emissions to protect visibility;
—Regulate agricultural, horticultural, or
floricultural production sources, even
if they are not major sources; and
—Regulate minor sources like
pesticides, farms, CAFOs, and fugitive
emissions if required by Part C, Part
D, or title V of the CAA.68
Part C, Part D, and title V of the CAA
do not prescribe specific measures that
states must adopt. Rather, ‘‘the CAA
supplies the goals and basic
requirements of state implementation
plans, but the states have broad
authority to determine the methods and
particular control strategies they will
use to achieve the statutory
requirements.’’ 69 Part C requires that
states submit to EPA SIP submissions
that contain ‘‘emission limitations and
such other measures as may be
necessary . . . to prevent significant
deterioration of air quality in each
region (or portion thereof) designated
. . . as attainment or unclassifiable;’’ 70
and SIP submissions that contain
‘‘emission limits, schedules of
compliance and other measures as may
be necessary to make reasonable
progress toward meeting the national
[visibility] goal.’’ 71 Further, Part D of
the CAA requires that SIPs ‘‘provide for
the implementation of all reasonably
available control measures as
expeditiously as practicable (including
such reductions in emissions from
existing sources in this area as may be
obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum of reasonably available
control technology) and shall provide
for attainment of the national primary
ambient air quality standards;’’ 72
‘‘additional measures, if any, as may be
necessary to ensure [ ] maintenance’’ of
the NAAQS once a nonattainment area
has been redesignated to attainment; 73
‘‘[RACT] corrections’’ for areas deemed
Marginal nonattainment 74 and further
SIP revisions for areas deemed
Moderate, Serious, Severe, and Extreme
nonattainment.75 While some of the SIP
requirements apply only to major
68 C.R.S.
25–7–109(8)(a).
Appeal Group v. EPA, 355 F.3d 817, 822
(5th Cir. 2003) (citing Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427
U.S. 246, 266 (1976)).
70 42 U.S.C. 7471.
71 42 U.S.C. 7491(b)(2).
72 42 U.S.C. 7502(c)(1); see also 7511a(2)(A)
(requiring RACT corrections for marginal areas).
73 42 U.S.C. 7505(a).
74 42 U.S.C. 7511a(a)(2).
75 42 U.S.C. 7511a(b), (c), (d), and (e).
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69 BCCA
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sources, other provisions require states
to evaluate additional area sources of
emissions.76
Thus, if Colorado needs to regulate
agricultural sources (regardless of size)
in order to attain and maintain the
NAAQS or to protect visibility as
required by federal law in the CAA,
Colorado has the authority under state
law to include such measures in its SIP
submissions under Part C and Part D of
the CAA. Further, EPA separately
evaluates the sufficiency of each of
these submissions under the relevant
statutory and regulatory provisions.77 If
EPA deems such SIP submissions
inadequate to prevent significant
deterioration, protect visibility, or attain
and maintain the NAAQS, Colorado
may be required by Part C or Part D of
the CAA to regulate agricultural sources
(regardless of size) and is not prohibited
by C.R.S. 25–7–109(8)(a) from doing so.
EPA interprets C.R.S. 25–7–109(8)(a) to
authorize such regulation if required for
these purposes, and the State has
confirmed this reading of state law.
Moreover, each time the State develops
a SIP submission and EPA proposes
action on a SIP submission, the Center
has an opportunity to comment on the
SIP submission during both the state
and federal public comment periods.78
Those are the appropriate opportunities
for the Center to make their arguments
regarding the need for better regulation
of agricultural sources. For example, to
the extent that the Center advocates for
control of pesticide emissions as VOC
precursors to ozone formation in a given
nonattainment area, a proper place for
such advocacy is during the State’s
development of a nonattainment SIP
submission and EPA’s evaluation of it.
76 Compare, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7502(c)(5) with
7502(c)(6). See also 40 CFR 51.308(f)(2)(i)
(instructing the states to ‘‘consider evaluating major
and minor stationary sources or groups of sources,
mobile sources, and area sources’’ as part of their
long term strategies for addressing visibility
impairment).
77 See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3); 7502(d). See also
Letter to Deb Thomas, Regional Administrator
(Acting) and Deputy Regional Administrator, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 8, from
Garrison Kaufman, Director, Air Pollution Control
Division, July 29, 2021 ([T]he DMFR ozone area is
a nonattainment area and, therefore, the AQCC has
the authority to regulate emissions from agricultural
production to the extent that such regulations are
required by Part D of the federal Clean Air Act due
to the DMNFR ozone area’s nonattainment status.’’);
84 FR 36516, 36518 (July 29, 2019) (explaining that
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP submission met the
‘‘basic infrastructure requirements’’ of CAA section
110(a)(2)(A) but that whether the State’s measures
meet the requirements of CAA part D is a separate
determination that EPA would make in an action
reviewing the measures under part D.).
78 See, e.g., 84 FR 34083 (July 17, 2019)
(proposing to Colorado’s visibility progress report
for the first regional haze implementation period);
86 FR 11129 (February 24, 2021).
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Here, in the context of EPA’s evaluation
of Colorado’s infrastructure SIP
submission, the question is whether
Colorado has provided necessary
assurances of the State’s authority to do
so in order to implement its SIP.
Third, the Center takes issue with part
of Colorado’s letter, asserting that
Colorado states that it regulates
agricultural sources through minor
source permitting, and asserting that
Colorado has never issued a minor
source air permit for a farm or CAFO
and that EPA has not provided evidence
to the contrary. The Center misconstrues
the letter. Colorado does not state that
the State regulates all agricultural
sources through minor source
permitting; rather, Colorado states that it
regulates ‘‘agricultural sources that are
subject to [a New Source Performance
Standard (NSPS)]’’ through the minor
source permitting program, the PSD and
NSR permitting programs, and the title
V permitting program.79 Additionally,
in reviewing Colorado’s infrastructure
SIP submission under CAA section
110(a)(2)(E)(i), the question is not
whether Colorado has regulated or does
regulate agricultural sources; the
question is whether Colorado has the
authority to do so if necessary.80
The fact that the agriculture provision
does not specifically mention minor
source permitting does not mean that
Colorado lacks the authority to regulate
minor agricultural sources. Like all
states, Colorado is required to include in
its SIP a minor source NSR program
governed by Parts C and D of the CAA.81
Colorado’s minor source NSR program
is contained in Colorado’s ‘‘Regulation
3.’’ 82 Colorado may amend Regulation 3
as necessary to assure NAAQS are
achieved as required by Parts C and D
of the CAA. Thus, Colorado has
authority to regulate minor agricultural
sources as necessary under Parts C and
D of the CAA.
79 Letter to Deb Thomas, Regional Administrator
(Acting) and Deputy Regional Administrator, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 8, from
Garrison Kaufman, Director, Air Pollution Control
Division, July 29, 2021.
80 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E)(i); 40 CFR 51.230–231;
Stephen D. Page, EPA Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Guidance on Infrastructure
State Implementation Plan (SIP) Elements under
Clean Air Act Sections 110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2), 41
(2013).
81 See 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C) (requiring SIPs to
contain a program for ‘‘regulation of the
modification and construction of any stationary
source within areas covered by the plan as
necessary to assure that [NAAQS] are achieved,
including a permit program as required by parts C
and D of this subchapter’’); 40 CFR 51.160
(requirements for permit programs in SIPs
generally) (both implicitly including minor
sources).
82 C.R.S. 25–7–114 to 25–7–114.7.
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Fourth, with respect to the Center’s
assertion that there is no NSPS for
CAFOs, that does not mean that
Colorado cannot regulate CAFO
emissions under the CAA. As explained
above, Colorado could include measures
in its nonattainment and visibility SIP
submissions designed to reduce
emissions from CAFOs. The agriculture
provision does not bar the State from
doing so if necessary, under the CAA.
Finally, the Center raises issues that
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
EPA sought, and the Tenth Circuit
granted, remand of only two portions of
EPA’s approval of Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP submission for the
2015 ozone standards—EPA’s
conclusions under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) and (E)(i) with respect
to the agriculture provision. EPA
proposed action on these two portions
only and stated that the Agency was not
reopening for comment any other
portions of the 2020 final rule.83
Accordingly, the Center’s assertion that
EPA has not acted on a petition to
promulgate an NSPS for CAFOs is
outside the scope of this action.
Similarly, the Center’s assertions that
EPA must disapprove Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP under CAA section
110(a)(2)(A), 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (prong 4),
and 110(a)(2)(J) are also outside the
scope of this action.84
EPA notes that ‘‘Congress has left to
the Administrator’s sound discretion
determination of what assurances are
‘necessary’ ’’ under CAA section
110(a)(2)(E)(i).85 For the foregoing
reasons, and for the reasons stated in
our proposal, we conclude that
Colorado’s infrastructure SIP
submission, supported by Colorado’s
letter regarding the agriculture
provision, provides the necessary
assurances of the State’s authority to
carry out Colorado’s SIP for the 2015
ozone NAAQS as required by CAA
section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
III. Final Action
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EPA is confirming our approval that
the good neighbor portion of Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP satisfies the interstate
transport provision of the CAA, section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, and that the State has provided
the necessary assurances of the State’s
83 87
FR 27054.
85 FR 20165, 20171 (April 10, 2020)
(explaining EPA’s basis for approving Colorado’s
infrastructure SIP submission under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (prong 4) and 110(a)(2)(J)); 85 FR
36518 (explaining EPA’s basis for proposing to
approve Colorado’s infrastructure SIP submission
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)).
85 NRDC v. EPA, 478 F.2d 875, 884 (1st Cir. 1973);
see also BCCA, 355 F.3d at 844–847.
84 See
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authority to regulate all agricultural
sources as may be required by the CAA
under section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
Act and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely approves state law as meeting
Federal requirements and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, described in
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
to apply on any Indian reservation land
or in any other area where EPA or an
Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
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Indian country, the rule does not have
tribal implications and will not impose
substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by December 12, 2022. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the
Administrator of this final rule does not
affect the finality of this action for the
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed, and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements (see section
307(b)(2)).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Greenhouse gases, Incorporation by
reference, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
Dated: October 2, 2022.
KC Becker,
Regional Administrator, Region 8.
[FR Doc. 2022–21815 Filed 10–7–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 180
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2020–0336; FRL–9525–01–
OCSPP]
Methoxyfenozide; Pesticide Tolerances
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\11OCR1.SGM
11OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 195 (Tuesday, October 11, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 61249-61259]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-21815]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R08-OAR-2019-0140; EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663; FRL-9782-02-R8]
Air Plan Approval; Colorado; Addressing Remanded Portions of the
Previously Approved Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: On January 5, 2021, the United States Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit granted the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA)
motion for a voluntary remand without vacatur of two parts of an EPA
2020 final rule approving Colorado's infrastructure state
implementation plan (SIP) submission for the 2015 8-hour ozone national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) (2020 final rule). In this
document, EPA is taking final action to approve those two remanded
parts of the 2020 final rule. First, EPA is finalizing our conclusion
that Colorado's infrastructure SIP submission meets the State's good
neighbor obligations under Clean Air Act (CAA) section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). Lastly, EPA is also finalizing our conclusion that
Colorado's infrastructure SIP submission provided ``necessary
assurances'' of the State's authority to regulate agricultural sources
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i). EPA is taking this action pursuant
to the CAA.
DATES: This rule is effective on November 10, 2022.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established two dockets for this action. The
regional docket, Docket ID No. EPA-R08-OAR-2019-0140 contains
information specific to Colorado, including this final rule document,
and the notice of proposed rulemaking. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-
0663 contains additional modeling files, emissions inventory files,
technical support documents, and other relevant supporting
documentation regarding interstate transport of emissions for the 2015
8-hour ozone NAAQS which were used to support EPA's proposed approval.
All documents in the docket are listed on the www.regulations.gov
website. Although listed in the docket, some information may not be
publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted
material, is not placed on the internet and will be publicly available
only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are
available through www.regulations.gov, or please contact the person
identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section for
additional availability information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amrita Singh, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA, Region 8, Mailcode 8ARD-IO, 1595 Wynkoop Street, Denver,
Colorado, 80202-1129, telephone number: (303) 312-6103, email address:
[email protected]; or Ellen Schmitt, telephone number: (303) 312-
6728, email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document ``we,'' ``us,'' and
``our'' means EPA.
I. Background
On May 6, 2022 (88 FR 27050), EPA published a document in the
Federal Register proposing approval of the two remanded parts of EPA's
2020 final rule.\1\ EPA's May 2022 proposed approval addressed (1) the
adequacy of Colorado's infrastructure submission for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS under the CAA's ``good neighbor provision,'' \2\ which
generally requires SIPs to contain adequate provisions to prohibit in-
state emissions from significantly contributing to nonattainment or
interfering with the maintenance in another state, and (2) the adequacy
of Colorado's infrastructure submission for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i), particularly with respect to
Colorado's authority to regulate agricultural sources.\3\ The rationale
for EPA's proposed action is included in the May 6, 2022 proposal and
will not be repeated here.
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\1\ 2020 final rule. Approval and Promulgation of State
Implementation Plan Revisions; Infrastructure Requirements for the
2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards; Colorado and
North Dakota, 85 FR 20169 (April 10, 2020).
\2\ 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
\3\ 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E)(i).
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II. Response to Comments
EPA received comments on the proposed rule from an individual
citizen and the Center for Biological Diversity (the Center). We
summarize and respond to the comments below.
Individual Citizen
Comment: The commenter initially states that ``concerns regarding
the 2015 Ozone NAAQS infrastructure requirements highlight potential
problems regarding both the `Good Neighbor Provision' CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), as well as the adequate implementation of [the] SIP
regarding CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).'' The commenter believes that
EPA's use of the 4-step interstate transport framework is an effective
method to address the previously mentioned concerns, but that there
needs to be adequate implementation and ``more stringent regulations
reinforced regarding step 3 and step 4, of the 4-step interstate
transport framework.'' The commenter recommends two ``strategies'' in
order to make the 4-step framework more stringent. For Step 3, the
commenter suggests re-evaluating Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) regulations, with a focus on ``improving
standards'' related to Best Available Control Technology (BACT).
Regarding Step 4, the commenter recommends that EPA adopt measures to
reduce carbon via a cap-and-trade system.
Response: These comments are not relevant to the action EPA
proposed. In the proposed rule, EPA applied the well-established 4-step
framework for assessing interstate ozone transport to determine whether
Colorado's infrastructure SIP meets the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). We invited comment on our conclusions with respect
to Colorado's infrastructure SIP, but did not invite comment on the
integrity and process of the 4-step framework itself.\4\ Further, we
determined that Colorado's emissions do not contribute at or above the
threshold of 1 percent of the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (0.70 parts per
billion (ppb)) to any downwind nonattainment or maintenance receptor at
Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, and thus did not
reach the steps of the 4-step framework discussed in this comment,
i.e., analysis of potential emissions controls at Step 3 or permanent
and federally enforceable control strategies to achieve emissions
reductions at Step 4.5 6 Thus, the
[[Page 61250]]
commenter's recommended strategies for Steps 3 and 4 are not relevant
to EPA's determination that Colorado does not significantly contribute
to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in any other state, and that therefore Colorado's infrastructure SIP
submission satisfies CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
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\4\ 87 FR 27054.
\5\ 87 FR at 27056-58.
\6\ EPA's determination not to further evaluate Colorado's
contributions at Steps 3 or 4 of the interstate transport framework
was additionally supported by the analysis provided in the Uinta
Basin technical support document (TSD) of this action at proposal,
evaluating Colorado's emissions contributions in the Uinta Basin
during wintertime inversion episodes that produce high ozone
conditions.
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Additionally, the commenter states that ``concerns regarding the
2015 Ozone NAAQS infrastructure requirements highlight potential
problems regarding both the `Good Neighbor Provision' CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), as well as the adequate implementation of SIP
regarding CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i),'' but the commenter does not
explain what these concerns or potential problems are. Without knowing
the specific concerns to which the commenter is referring, EPA cannot
respond to this part of the comment.
The Center for Biological Diversity
Comment: The Center asserts that EPA should have used an analytic
year of 2020 instead of 2023 and that EPA made a ``post hoc
justification'' for using a 2023 analytic year. The Center states that
EPA is incorrect that most areas downwind of Colorado have an
attainment date of August 3, 2024, which is the attainment date for
2015 ozone moderate nonattainment areas. The Center asserts that EPA
has delayed ``bumping up'' downwind areas (or determining that these
areas have failed to attain the 2015 ozone NAAQS by the attainment
date) and that these areas should be designated moderate instead of
marginal. The Center also states that Congress' intent under the CAA is
for EPA to act on SIPs before the marginal attainment date.\7\ The
Center claims that EPA is not justified in doing an analysis based on
acting on Colorado's SIP submission after the marginal attainment date
and also claims that using a 2023 analytic year is inconsistent with
recent EPA actions related to designations. Additionally, the Center
asserts that using an analytic year of 2020 would ``allow'' EPA to use
monitored data in determining downwind nonattainment and maintenance
monitors. The Center suggests that if EPA were to use a 2020 analytic
year, the Agency would determine that Colorado needs to reduce the
State's emissions, and that such a conclusion would benefit several
downwind areas such as Amador County, California; Dallas-Fort Worth,
Texas; Houston, Texas; the Northern Wasatch Front, Utah; Phoenix,
Arizona; San Antonio, Texas; the Uinta Basin, and others.
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\7\ In accordance with CAA section 181(a)(1), an area designated
as nonattainment for a revised ozone NAAQS must be classified, at
the time of designation, as marginal, moderate, serious, severe or
extreme, depending on the severity of the ozone air quality problem
in that nonattainment area. Each classification threshold has an
associated attainment date, as well as other NAAQS implementation-
related provisions.
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Response: The Center supports its preferred analytic year of 2020
by arguing that if EPA had used an analytic year of 2020, we would have
concluded that Colorado has good neighbor obligations that, if met,
would benefit downwind areas including Amador County, California;
Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas; Houston, Texas; Northern Wasatch Front, Utah;
Phoenix, Arizona; San Antonio, Texas; and Uinta Basin, Utah. We do not
agree that the Center's assertions regarding Colorado's transport
linkages in 2020 are correct. However, it is not necessary to evaluate
the technical basis for these claims because the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) previously
rejected a similar argument regarding sole reliance on conditions that
are wholly in the past to assess good neighbor obligations and upheld
EPA's reasonable interpretation of the good neighbor provision as
forward-looking.\8\ In that case, Delaware argued that EPA should have
used data from the year SIP submissions for the 2008 ozone NAAQS were
due (2011) instead of the future analytic year that EPA used (2017) on
the theory that EPA would have concluded in that circumstance that
upwind states had good neighbor obligations with respect to
Delaware.\9\ The court held that Delaware's argument could not ``be
reconciled with the text of the Good Neighbor Provision, which
prohibits upwind States from emitting in amounts `which will'
contribute to downwind nonattainment.'' The court concluded that
``[g]iven the use of the future tense, it would be anomalous for EPA to
subject upwind States to good neighbor obligations in 2017 by
considering which downwind States were once in nonattainment in 2011.''
\10\ Likewise, in the present circumstance, it would be anomalous for
EPA now in 2022 to consider upwind states' obligations under the good
neighbor provision based solely on data from years that have already
passed.
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\8\ See Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d 303 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
\9\ Id. at 322.
\10\ Id. at 369.
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For more than two decades, EPA has taken a forward-looking approach
in evaluating good neighbor obligations; using an analytic year that is
wholly in the past, as the Center urges, would be inconsistent with the
Agency's past practice.\11\ Furthermore, even prior to Wisconsin, the
D.C. Circuit upheld EPA's interpretation of ``will'' in CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as being both future-tense and conveying a sense of
certainty.\12\ EPA's use of forward-looking projections in assessing
good neighbor obligations here continues to give meaning to both senses
of the term.\13\ EPA's rationale for the selection of 2023 as the
appropriate future analytic year for assessing whether Colorado has any
good neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS was presented in the
proposed rule in section II.A.2 and was not a ``post hoc''
justification as the Center asserts. Further, 2023 continues to be the
key analytic year that EPA is using in multiple other actions to
address other states' good neighbor obligations under the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.\14\
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\11\ See 63 FR 57356, 57375, 57377, 57386 (October 27, 1998)
(NOX SIP Call); 70 FR 25162, 25241 (May 12, 2005) (Clean
Air Interstate Rule (CAIR); 76 FR 48208, 48211 (August 8, 2011)
(Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR); 81 FR 74505, 74526 (October
26, 2016) (CSAPR Update); 86 FR 23054, 23074 (April 30, 2021)
(Revised CSAPR Update).
\12\ North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 914 (July 11, 2008).
\13\ See 86 FR at 23074.
\14\ See, e.g., 87 FR 20036, 20042 (April 6, 2022) (proposing
good neighbor federal implementation plans (FIPs) for 26 states
using a 2023 analytic year).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite the Center's argument to the contrary, using a forward-
looking analysis to inform EPA's evaluation of good neighbor SIP
submissions pursuant to the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) is not incompatible with EPA using existing record
information to revise certain designations under CAA section 107(d)(1)
on remand. When EPA revised some initial area designations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS on remand after Clean Wisconsin v. EPA,\15\ EPA found it
appropriate in that specific circumstance to use data available to the
agency at the time of the initial designations in revising the
boundaries of some nonattainment areas to avoid introducing
inconsistencies within and across nonattainment areas, some of which
were unaffected by the court's remand.\16\ The overall goal of the
[[Page 61251]]
Agency's analytical approach to the action revising initial area
designations--to avoid introducing inconsistencies across areas--is
entirely consonant with EPA's approach to addressing good neighbor
obligations using a consistent analytic year for the entire country,
which, at the time of this action, is 2023.
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\15\ 964 F.3d 1145 (D.C. Cir. 2020).
\16\ 86 FR 67864, 67868-67869 (November 30, 2021); see also EPA,
Responses to Significant Comments Received on EPA's Revised Response
to State and Tribal Recommendations for the 2015 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) Addressing El Paso County,
Texas and Weld County, Colorado at 43-44 (November 2021), available
in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2017-0548 (responding to commenters arguing
EPA should be using the most current information available to the
Agency in revising designations).
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Part of the Center's argument appears to be a suggestion for an
alternative approach to identifying receptors at Step 1 of the 4-step
framework for the purpose of assessing whether a state has obligations
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The Center suggests that if EPA
were to use an analytic year of 2020, then EPA would identify downwind
air quality issues using only measured values from 2020. But this
ignores that EPA's methodology for identifying receptors already gives
consideration to recent measured values, including in 2020, while also
using forward-looking modeling projections. Using only measured values
to identify receptors would introduce several problems into EPA's
methodology.
EPA explained how the Agency identifies nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 1 of the 4-step framework for the 2015
ozone NAAQS in the proposed rule in section II.A.3 and provided more
detail in our ``Air Quality Modeling Technical Support Document: 2015
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards Transport SIP Proposed
Actions.'' \17\ 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.\18\
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\17\ Available in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 (hereinafter
``Air Quality Modeling TSD'').
\18\ 531 F.3d 896, 910-11 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monitoring sites with future year average design values
that exceed the NAAQS and that are currently measuring nonattainment
are considered nonattainment receptors.\19\
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\19\ 87 FR 27054; Air Quality Modeling TSD at 9.
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Monitoring sites with projected average design values or
maximum design values that exceed the NAAQS are projected to be
maintenance receptors.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Id.
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EPA's methodology for defining maintenance and nonattainment
receptors uses projected air quality modeling to capture variability
such that monitors that may be attaining based on current data may
still be deemed a ``maintenance receptor.'' Under the Center's idea of
using only actual monitoring data, it is unclear how EPA would
distinguish between those monitors which should be maintenance
receptors and those which are not receptors at all. Additionally, if
EPA were to use only recorded monitoring data for 2020 in order to
define receptors and not use modeling, there would be no way to measure
upwind state contributions to downwind receptors at Step 2 of the 4-
step framework. EPA's analysis uses modeling in order to obtain
information for both components of the key questions at Steps 1 and 2--
indicating where there are anticipated air quality problems and which
states are contributing to those problems. Moreover, as discussed
above, using only past measured data to identify receptors would not
align with the forward-looking nature of the good neighbor provision.
In response to the comment arguing that using a 2020 analytic year
would ``allow'' EPA to use actual monitor data, EPA points out that, in
fact, the identification of receptors at Step 1 of the 4-step framework
already considers measured ozone design values from 2020, as explained
in section 3.1 of the Air Quality Modeling TSD. In other words, while
EPA uses a future analytic year to define good neighbor obligations,
our assessment of likely air quality conditions in that future year is
informed by, among other things, recent and historical ambient air
quality monitoring data.
EPA acknowledges that, at the time the Agency originally acted on
Colorado's infrastructure SIP in the 2020 final rule, good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS should have been met no later than
the marginal attainment date of August 3, 2021.\21\ But, as explained
above, the D.C. Circuit has agreed that it is reasonable for EPA to
look to a future year in evaluating transport obligations, even if the
Agency would have been able to evaluate an earlier year had they acted
sooner. Indeed, in EPA's Revised CSAPR Update rule, on remand from the
D.C. Circuit's decision in Wisconsin, EPA did not continue to assess
obligations based on a 2017 analytic year (as had been used in the 2016
CSAPR Update) but instead used 2021, associated with the serious area
attainment date for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.\22\ Similarly, here, EPA's
choice of a 2023 analytic year is based on the fact that 2023 air
quality will impact whether areas attain by the relevant moderate
attainment date of August 3, 2024.
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\21\ See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313, 319; Maryland v. EPA, 958
F.3d 1185, 1203-04 (D.C. Cir. 2020); see also CAA section 181(a); 40
CFR 51.1303; 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
\22\ See 86 FR 23054, 23057 n.16 (April 30, 2021) (noting that
2020 was also not appropriate to use since that year too was wholly
in the past).
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The Center's contention that EPA should not look to the moderate
area attainment date because EPA has not yet finalized the Agency's
action making those areas downwind of Colorado moderate is incorrect.
EPA has issued a proposed finding, and signed a final finding, that a
number of marginal areas failed to attain by the 2021 attainment date,
and per the statute, now that EPA has finalized this determination,
these areas will be reclassified to moderate by operation of law on the
effective date of the final rule (30 days after publication in the
Federal Register).\23\ However, the timing of that action does not
affect when the moderate attainment date would be. EPA is not permitted
under the statute to adjust the attainment dates for areas under a
given classification; that is, no matter when EPA finalizes the
determination that an area failed to attain by its attainment date and
reclassifies that area, the attainment date remains fixed, based on the
number of years from the area's initial designation.\24\ To illustrate
this point, the attainment date for moderate areas that were designated
on August 3, 2018 under the 2015 ozone NAAQS is August 3, 2024,
regardless of when EPA finalizes the action that will reclassify areas
to moderate. August 3, 2024 is also the attainment date for any area
that was initially designated moderate under the 2015 ozone NAAQS on
August 3, 2018. Thus, based on Wisconsin and Maryland, good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS should be met ``as expeditiously
as practicable but not later than'' the next applicable attainment
date. For this NAAQS, the next attainment date is the moderate
attainment date of August 3, 2024.\25\
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\23\ Proposed Rule, Determinations of Attainment by the
Attainment Date, Extensions of the Attainment Date, and
Reclassification of Areas Classified as Marginal for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 87 FR 21842 (April 13,
2022). Final Rule signed on September 15, 2022.
\24\ See CAA section 181(a)(1); 40 CFR 51.1303; 83 FR 25776
(June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
\25\ The San Antonio, Texas nonattainment area has a different
moderate attainment date.
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For all of these reasons, EPA rejects the Center's contention that
we should have used a 2020 analytic year to evaluate Colorado's good
neighbor
[[Page 61252]]
obligations in this action and maintains that selecting 2023 as the
analytic year is appropriate.
Comment: As part of their comment that EPA must disapprove
Colorado's infrastructure SIP submission under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), the Center criticizes EPA's modeling for failing to
properly account for emissions related to EPA's withdrawal of
California Clean Car Rules Waiver. The Center states that the ``repeal
of [the withdrawal of] California's waiver to have more stringent
emissions limits for on-road mobile sources has not yet been
finalized'' and points to EPA's normal practice of including only
emissions changes resulting from final regulatory actions in our
modeling. The Center says that since the repeal of the withdrawal of
California's waiver has not been finalized, EPA's emissions inventory
should be based on the on-road mobile sources from states like
California and Colorado as if they are not complying with their
respective state's clean car rule requirements, such as the zero
emissions vehicle (ZEV) requirements and low-emissions vehicle (LEV)
requirements. The Center believes it is arbitrary for EPA to base their
emissions inventories on these states having emissions limits for on-
road mobile sources which are not permitted without a preemption
waiver.
Response: The Center is correct that it is the Agency's general
practice to include only emissions reductions from finalized legal and
regulatory requirements in our ozone transport modeling. EPA's 2023
modeling using the 2016v2 platform reflects an updated assessment of
the emissions inventory nationwide based on changes in federal and
state rules and other relevant changes in the emissions inventory.
We disagree with the Center that the Agency did not appropriately
consider emissions changes related to the repeal of the CAA waiver for
California's Advanced Clean Car program in our emissions inventory and
subsequent interstate transport modeling. EPA finalized the decision to
withdraw a 2013 CAA waiver previously provided to California for the
State's greenhouse gas (GHG) and ZEV programs under section 209 of the
CAA on September 27, 2019.\26\ However, EPA then reconsidered that
decision and finalized a repeal of the withdrawal of the CAA waiver of
preemption for California's GHG and ZEV sale mandate on March 14,
2022.\27\ Whether it was appropriate to include these emissions changes
in our 2023 modeling at the time we conducted the modeling is
effectively moot, since EPA did in fact repeal the withdrawal of the
waiver by March of this year.
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\26\ 84 FR 51310.
\27\ 87 FR 14332.
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EPA's projected emissions for the updated 2023 modeling used in
this action use, in relevant part, mobile source emissions inventories
provided by the California Air Resources Board (specifically,
EMFAC2017), which incorporate emissions reductions from California's
GHG emissions standards and ZEV sale mandate, while for the remaining
states the inventories are based on MOVES3.\28\ MOVES3 reflects the
impacts of the Tier 3 Motor Vehicle Emission and Fuel Standards rule
which harmonized the California LEV and federal requirements for low
emissions vehicles.\29\ ZEV populations in the modeling were based on
actual registration data for the modeling base year and were grown to
future years according to Annual Energy Outlook forecasts.\30\ Thus,
EPA's updated 2023 modeling appropriately included emissions changes
regarding California's GHG and ZEV sale mandate waiver, as well as LEV
emissions standards nationwide by virtue of EPA's inclusion of the Tier
3 program in our modeling. Additionally, the September 27, 2019
rulemaking did not affect California's low emissions vehicle III (LEV
III emission standards.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ EPA, Latest Version of MOter Vehicle Emission Simulator
(MOVES), available at https://www.epa.gov/moves/latest-version-motor-vehicle-emission-simulator-moves (last visited September 19,
2022).
\29\ 81 FR 23414, at 23450. As indicated in the Final Rule for
Control of Air Pollution from Motor Vehicles: Tier 3 Motor Vehicle
Emission and Fuel Standards, ``The Tier 3 program is identical to
LEV III in most major respects for light-duty vehicles (and heavy-
duty vehicles . . .)''.
\30\ See Technical Support Document (TSD) Preparation of
Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2 North American Emissions
Modeling Platform, section 4.3.2, in particular Table 4-43. Dated:
February 2022. (2016v2 TSD). Included under Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Overall, while the Center is correct that it is the Agency's
general practice to include only emissions reductions from final rules
in our modeling, there is no merit to the remainder of this comment,
because EPA has in fact repealed the withdrawal of the waiver as to
California's GHG and ZEV rules and thus they were appropriately
incorporated into the modeling.
Comment: The Center further asserts that EPA wrongly ignored
receptor values above the level of the NAAQS. The Center points to Step
2 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, as described in the
proposed rule for this action,\31\ where the contribution metric 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. The Center states that by using this protocol, ``EPA is
ignoring impacts from upwind states on days with high ozone
concentrations, including concentrations above the level of the NAAQS,
but which aren't necessarily the highest ozone concentration. This is
ignoring an important aspect of the problem; that is days above the
level of the NAAQS but still not the highest days.'' The Center states
that EPA criticized Colorado for using the same calculations when the
State submitted its designations recommendations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, ``not because those areas violated the NAAQS but rather because
they contributed to violations.'' \32\ The Center concludes that there
is no difference between intra-state contribution and inter-state
contribution and that it is arbitrary for EPA to ignore the above-the-
NAAQS level days because failure to address them means downwind areas
will continue to struggle to reach attainment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ 87 FR 27055.
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Response: Through the development and implementation of the CSAPR
rulemakings as well as prior regional rulemakings pursuant to the
interstate transport provision, EPA, working in partnership with
states, developed the 4-step interstate transport framework to evaluate
states' obligations to eliminate interstate transport emissions under
the good neighbor provision for the ozone NAAQS. This includes Step 2
of the 4-step framework which identifies states that impact air quality
problem (nonattainment or maintenance) receptors in downwind states
sufficiently such that the states are considered ``linked'' and
therefore warrant further review and analysis of their air quality
impacts. As the Center notes in their comment, EPA evaluated Colorado's
contribution (as we did every other state's) based on the average
relative downwind impact calculated over multiple days. The number of
days used in calculating the average contribution metric has
historically been determined in a manner that is generally consistent
with EPA's recommendations for projecting future year ozone design
values.\33\ Our ozone attainment demonstration modeling guidance at the
time CSAPR was originally promulgated recommended using all model-
predicted days above
[[Page 61253]]
the NAAQS to calculate future year design values.\34\ In 2014, EPA
issued draft revised guidance that changed the recommended number of
days to the top-10 model predicted days.\35\ For the CSAPR Update,
promulgated in 2016, EPA transitioned to calculating design values
based on this draft revised approach. The revised modeling guidance was
finalized in 2018.\36\ Since that time EPA has consistently calculated
both the ozone design values and the contributions based on the top-10
day approach. As this guidance is finalized, we will continue to base
our average contribution metric in accordance with the top-10 day
approach. Thus, EPA disagrees with the Center's claim that EPA's
current modeling approach for identifying contributing upwind states is
arbitrary and contrary to law or that the Agency must disapprove
Colorado's good neighbor SIP revision for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Further, the Center has not supplied any information establishing that,
had EPA used a larger set of days with high ozone concentrations at
identified out of state nonattainment or maintenance receptors to
calculate contribution values at Step 2, Colorado's contribution would
then be found to exceed the 1 percent of NAAQS threshold at any of
these receptors.
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\33\ The Center's comment is only relevant to EPA's summertime
ozone analysis since the Agency's wintertime ozone analysis for the
Uinta Basin does not use model predicted design values.
\34\ EPA, ``Guidance on the Use of Models and Other Analyses for
Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for Ozone,
PM2.5, and Regional Haze,'' 2007, available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-10/documents/final-03-pm-rh-guidance.pdf.
\35\ EPA, ``Draft Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Attainment
of Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional
Haze,'' 2014, available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-10/documents/draft-o3-pm-rh-modeling_guidance-2014.pdf.
\36\ EPA, ``Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality
Goals for Ozone, PM2.5 and Regional Haze,'' 2018,
available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-10/documents/o3-pm-rh-modeling_guidance-2018.pdf.
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Additionally, EPA disagrees with the Center's statement that EPA
``criticized'' Colorado for using the same calculations when the State
submitted its designations recommendations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
The Center refers to page 28 of EPA's final designation technical
support document (designation TSD) \37\ supporting Colorado's
designations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, and we believe the Center is
referring to EPA's assessment of the Denver nonattainment area's
meteorology.
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\37\ EPA, ``Colorado: Denver Metro/North Front Range
Nonattainment Area Final Area Designations for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards Technical Support Document
(TSD).'' Docket No. EPA-R08-OAR-2019-0140.
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As an initial matter, the technical analysis and process for
designations falls under a separate set of guidance and policies than
the modeling guidance that EPA follows for purposes of interstate
transport.\38\ Thus, we do not agree that EPA's designation TSD
methodology should be considered relevant or even analogous to EPA's
Step 2 analysis in this action. Nonetheless, during the process of
designating nonattainment areas, the evaluation of meteorological data
helps to assess the fate and transport of emissions contributing to
ozone concentrations and to identify areas potentially contributing to
the monitored violations. During a designation review for a new NAAQS,
the results of meteorological data analysis may inform the
determination of nonattainment area boundaries. At the time of the 2015
ozone NAAQS designations, to determine how meteorological conditions,
including, but not limited to, weather, transport patterns, and
stagnation conditions, could affect the fate and transport of ozone and
precursor emissions from sources in the area, EPA evaluated 2014-2016
HYSPLIT (Hybrid Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory)
trajectories at 100, 500, and 1000 meters above ground level that
illustrate the three-dimensional paths traveled by air parcels to a
violating monitor. In EPA's 2015 ozone NAAQS designation TSD for
Colorado, the Agency provided figures of the 24-hour HYSPLIT back
trajectories for each exceedance day for the violating monitors in
2013-2015, while the State of Colorado focused on the four highest
exceedance days in each of those three years in its own designation
TSD. EPA concluded that even though EPA's total number of trajectories
differ from those conducted by the State of Colorado, the geographic
distribution of trajectory hours was the same between the two
analyses.\39\ EPA did not criticize Colorado's methodology per se in
the designations TSD but simply identified a difference in approach
while noting that it produced the same result. However, this was in the
context of EPA's comparison of HYSPLIT back trajectory data for
purposes of evaluating the designation of a nonattainment area, which
is entirely separate from the use of photochemical grid modeling
projections for purposes of assessing contribution at Step 2 of the 4-
step interstate transport framework. Therefore, the Center's statement
not only misinterprets the content and purpose of EPA's 2015 ozone
NAAQS designation TSD for Colorado, but also mischaracterizes its
significance to this action.\40\
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\38\ See EPA, ``EPA Guidance on the Area Designations for the
2015 Ozone NAAQS,'' available at https://www.epa.gov/ozone-designations/ozone-designations-guidance-and-data#A.
\39\ EPA, ``Colorado: Denver Metro/North Front Range
Nonattainment Area Final Area Designations for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards Technical Support Document
(TSD).'' Docket No. EPA-R08-OAR-2019-0140.
\40\ The Center also fails to recognize that focusing on the
top-10 days of ozone concentrations, as EPA does for purposes of
evaluating contribution at Step 2, can sometimes utilize days that
are lower than the level of the NAAQS if not all 10 days used for
these calculations exceed the NAAQS. The Center's assumption that
using only the top-10 days necessarily excludes other days that
exceed the NAAQS is not correct. As EPA explained in our 2018
modeling guidance, using the top-10 highest days yields an
analytically robust result, can be applied even as NAAQS are
revised, and yields better estimates than the previous guidance
approach. See ``Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Air Quality
Goals for Ozone, PM2.5 and Regional Haze,'' 2018 at 105.
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Comment: The Center claims that ``EPA's failure to analyze
Colorado's contribution to wintertime ozone levels is arbitrary and
capricious'' and therefore the Agency must disapprove the State's good
neighbor SIP. The Center states that wintertime ozone is an issue in
basins in the Western United States where oil and gas extraction
occurs, not just in the Uinta Basin area. The Center asserts that EPA
arbitrarily treated the Uinta Basin as unique. The Center points to the
Upper Green River Basin area in Wyoming, which was designated as
nonattainment for the 2008 ozone NAAQS due to wintertime ozone.\41\
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\41\ 77 FR 30088 (May 21, 2012).
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Additionally, the Center notes that some areas, though not
designated as nonattainment for wintertime ozone, will have a difficult
time coming into attainment without addressing wintertime ozone. The
Center cites the Denver Metro/North Front Range (DMNFR) nonattainment
area as an example and provides March 2021 monitor values at various
Colorado monitors in support. The Center further states that the DMNFR
monitor values cannot be explained by stratospheric intrusion or
wildfire. While the Center notes that they do not expect EPA to analyze
Colorado's ``interstate'' contribution to Colorado, the Center states
that DMNFR values demonstrate that EPA is wrong to claim that the Uinta
Basin's wintertime ozone problem is unique. The Center asserts that EPA
must ``do an analysis, using the same methodology as summertime ozone,
for other Western areas with significant oil and gas production and
winter weather to determine if Colorado is significantly contributing
to them.'' Additionally, the Center claims that ``while EPA uses a
[[Page 61254]]
1% threshold for determining if there is significant contribution to
summertime ozone, EPA appears to be using a 50% or more, that is upwind
states would have to be the main cause, threshold for significant
contribution for wintertime ozone.'' The Center also insists that ``EPA
must do an analysis to determine which states contribute more than 1%
to wintertime ozone in the Uinta Basin, the Denver Metro/North Front
Range, and other areas with areas with wintertime ozone problems and
then come up with emission reduction requirements for those upwind
contributors.'' Finally, the Center states that EPA previously
redefined the ozone season for Colorado and many other Western States
to be year-round and that the Agency ``is acting like the ozone season
for Colorado and other Western States is only the summertime but EPA
cannot undo its previous rulemaking to create year round ozone seasons
via the preamble to this proposed rule.''
Response: EPA agrees with the Center that the occurrence of high
levels of ozone in the wintertime, in the presence of snow cover and
emissions from oil and gas operations, is not limited to the Unita
Basin. EPA used the word ``unique'' in two separate instances in the
proposed rule and in the accompanying Uinta Basin Technical Support
Document,\42\ but did not mean to suggest that the Uinta Basin is
unique in experiencing wintertime ozone events. Instead, in both the
proposal and the Uinta Basin TSD, EPA referred to the Uinta Basin's
unique topography.\43\ Also, in the proposal, EPA referred to the
unique analytical challenges in assessing whether there is interstate
transport of ozone and its precursors from Colorado during wintertime
episodes in Utah.\44\
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\42\ EPA, Technical Support Document (TSD) Ozone Transport
Analysis: Colorado and the Uinta Basin Nonattainment Area, April
2022 (Uinta Basin TSD).
\43\ 87 FR at 27057; Uinta Basin TSD at 5.
\44\ 87 FR at 27057.
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However, we do not agree that we did not conduct an analysis of the
potential for transport of ozone under these circumstances. We
performed a separate analysis for the Uinta Basin because, as explained
in the Uinta Basin TSD, we acknowledged that the modeling we would
otherwise use is not reliable for projecting high ozone levels
associated with wintertime inversions in that area. Additionally, the
Uinta Basin is the only wintertime ozone area that is currently
designated as nonattainment or maintenance for the 2015 ozone NAAQS and
is the only area with high wintertime ozone that is immediately
adjacent to the Colorado border. As explained in the Uinta Basin TSD,
high ozone levels during the winter in the Uinta Basin area are
associated with stagnant meteorological conditions that result in the
build-up of local ozone precursor emissions and snow cover which
enhances the reflectivity of solar radiation which, in turn,
accelerates photochemical reactions of the trapped precursors to form
locally high ozone concentrations. Because of the stagnant conditions,
transport of precursor emissions from outside the immediate area are
likely to be minimal, at most. In any case, the Center has not provided
any information to support its notion that Colorado significantly
contributes to nonattainment or interferes with maintenance in the
Uinta Basin, much less in other areas farther from Colorado
experiencing high wintertime ozone levels.
The Center cites the Upper Green River Basin area as another area
that periodically experiences wintertime ozone. EPA designated this
area as nonattainment for the 2008 ozone NAAQS for wintertime
ozone.\45\ We are aware that one of the monitors in this nonattainment
area is violating the 2015 ozone NAAQS according to the 2021 design
value; however, as discussed below, we do not believe emissions from
Colorado contribute to this design value.\46\
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\45\ 77 FR 30088 (May 21, 2012). Then, on May 4, 2016 (86 FR
26697), EPA published a determination that the Upper Green River
Basin Area attained the 2008 ozone NAAQS based on 2012 to 2014
ambient air quality data.
\46\ Monitor 560350099 in Sublette, Wyoming is measuring 74 ppb
according to EPA's current quality-assured monitor design value
data. https://www.epa.gov/air-trends/air-quality-design-values#dvtool.
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The Upper Green River Basin is located in western Wyoming, about
half-way between the southern and northern borders of the State. The
southernmost border of the nonattainment area is at least 80 miles from
the closest Colorado border. In EPA's technical support document that
supported the Agency's designation for the Upper Green River Basin 2008
ozone NAAQS nonattainment area, we stated that ``ozone exceedances
almost always occur when winds are low indicating that there is little
to no transport of ozone or precursors from distant sources outside the
proposed nonattainment area.'' \47\ The Agency also indicated that the
wind field trajectory analyses led to the conclusion that regional
transport for the area is insignificant, and local-scale precursor
emissions transport is the dominant means of precursor transport during
high ozone periods.\48\ Additionally, during a high fidelity trajectory
analysis conducted by Wyoming in support of its recommendation for the
southern boundary of the Upper Green River Basin nonattainment area,
emissions from sources south of the nonattainment boundary were
consistently transported east and out of the region without entering
the area with violating monitors.\49\ Furthermore, multiple research
studies have found that wintertime ozone is a local phenomenon that is
not affected by long range transport.\50\ Based on this information,
EPA finds that it is reasonable to conclude that Colorado does not
significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance
of the 2015 ozone NAAQS (or the 2008 ozone NAAQS) in the Upper Green
River Basin area. Additionally, as we stated previously, the Center has
not provided any information to support their notion that Colorado
significantly contributes to nonattainment or interferes with
maintenance during wintertime ozone events in the Upper Green River
Basin, or any other western area experiencing wintertime ozone events.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ EPA, Wyoming Area Designations for the 2008 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards TSD at 46-48, located in Docket No.
EPA-R08-OAR-2019-0140.
\48\ Id.
\49\ Id.
\50\ See generally Oltmans, Samuel et al., ``O3, CH4, CO2, CO,
NO2 and NMHC aircraft measurements in the Uinta Basin oil and gas
region under low and high ozone conditions in winter 2012 and
2013,'' Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene, 4, 000132, (2016).;
ENVIRON, ``Final Report: 2014 Uinta Basin Winter Ozone Study,''
February 2015, available at https://documents.deq.utah.gov/air-quality/planning/air-quality-policy/DAQ-2015-021002.pdf (last
visited September 19, 2022) (``ENVIRON Final Report'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the Center acknowledges, their comments about the DMNFR
nonattainment area are not relevant to this rulemaking because the
issue EPA is addressing under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) is whether
Colorado contributes significantly to nonattainment or interferes with
maintenance in other states, not Colorado's own nonattainment and
maintenance problems.
EPA disagrees with the Center's assertion that EPA should conduct
the same analysis for wintertime ozone transport as the Agency does for
summertime ozone transport. As EPA explained in our proposed approval
and the Uinta Basin TSD, there are no reliable models that accurately
predict wintertime ozone levels and contributions.\51\ In addition,
currently
[[Page 61255]]
available emissions inventories are not sufficiently refined to
accurately estimate emissions from oil and gas production during
transient wintertime events. Therefore, in this action, EPA relied on
other methods of analysis as opposed to computer-based modeling when
reviewing wintertime ozone areas.\52\
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\51\ 87 FR at 27057; Uinta Basin TSD at 8 (``Current state-of-
the-science national scale modeling tools and inventories are not
designed to characterize these conditions in a manner that would
provide confidence in quantifying interstate contributions.'') and
Figure 3 (showing how the model ``understate measured data by an
extremely large amount'' for wintertime ozone).
\52\ See ``Utah: Northern Wasatch Front, Southern Wasatch Front,
and Uinta Basin Final Area Designations for the 2015 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards Technical Support Document (TSD)'' and
the Uinta Basin TSD specific for this action.
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The Center is incorrect to claim that the Agency appears to be
using 50 percent or more of the NAAQS as a threshold for significant
contribution for wintertime ozone for the Uinta Basin. EPA has reviewed
our proposal and the Uinta Basin TSD for this action and cannot find
what the commenter is referencing, nor has commenter provided a
citation. The Center seems to think EPA is using a higher contribution
threshold for wintertime ozone than we do for a Step 2 analysis for
summertime ozone. This is incorrect. For summertime ozone, EPA is able
to use current state-of-the science photochemical modeling for Step 1
and Step 2 and this allows us to set and use a contribution threshold
of 1 percent for the purpose of evaluating a state's contribution to
nonattainment or maintenance of the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (i.e., 0.70
ppb) at downwind receptors. As explained previously, since our current
photochemical modeling does not fully capture wintertime ozone events,
we cannot rely on modeling to assess a state's contribution in
wintertime ozone areas. However, knowing that the Uinta Basin has
nonattainment monitors, EPA performed an extensive analysis, as
documented in the Uinta Basin TSD for this action. The results of the
in-depth analysis conducted in the Uinta Basin TSD support EPA's
conclusion that interstate transport of air pollution from Colorado
does not significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in the Utah portion of the Uinta
Basin.
In regard to the Center's argument about year-round ozone, the
Center does not provide a cite where EPA ``redefined the ozone season''
so we are unable to address that assertion specifically. With respect
to the Center's statement that ``EPA is acting like the ozone season
for Colorado and other Western States is only the summertime,'' EPA
disagrees. By the Center's own admission, EPA designated the Upper
Green River Basin area in Wyoming as nonattainment for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS based on wintertime ozone. Additionally, in the Uinta Basin TSD
for this very action, EPA provided an in-depth analysis on whether
Colorado significantly contributed interstate transport air pollution
to a 2015 ozone nonattainment area for wintertime ozone, the Uinta
Basin. Thus, EPA acknowledges that ozone nonattainment can be a
wintertime problem and thoroughly addressed whether emissions from
Colorado significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in those areas in the proposed
rule, the Uinta Basin TSD for this action, and in this final action.
In summary, EPA disagrees with the Center's claims that EPA failed
to properly analyze Colorado's contribution to wintertime ozone
nonattainment and maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS and that we must
disapprove the State's good neighbor SIP provisions for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.
Comment: The Center challenges the emissions inventory on which
EPA's 2023 modeling is based, asserting that EPA ignored increased
emissions from the construction and operation of the Uinta Basin
Railway in our emissions inventory platform and modeling. The Center
notes that the U.S. Surface Transportation Board (STB) recently
approved the construction and operation of the Uinta Basin Railway, ``a
planned 88-mile long railway that would transport crude oil from Myton
and Leland Bench, Utah to Kyune, Utah.'' According to the Center, by
approving a cheaper means of transporting crude oil to the Gulf Coast
than the trucking industry, the oil railway is intended to quadruple
oil production in the Uinta Basin from roughly 90,000 barrels per day
to 350,000 barrels per day. The Center indicates that in order to meet
that increased oil demand, up to 3,330 new wells would need to be
drilled in the Uinta Basin over the next 15 years, also increasing the
number of trucking miles to support the oil fields. The Center also
points to a Uinta Basin Railway final environmental impact statement
(EIS) conducted by STB that estimates that after 15 years, and under a
high oil production scenario,\53\ the annual emissions associated with
oil and gas development, including trucking, for carbon monoxide (CO),
nitrogen oxides (NOX), and volatile organic compounds (VOC)
would be 4,454 tons per year (tpy), 3,146 tpy, and 5,558 tpy,
respectively. The Center believes these emissions are underestimated.
The Center further cites EIS estimates of annual emissions associated
with rail operations along the 88-mile long rail line, excluding
downline emissions in Utah and Colorado, for CO, NOX, and
VOCs of 405 tpy, 1,056 tpy, and 40 tpy, respectively. The Center also
includes a table of estimated downline emissions of criteria pollutants
from the increase in trains traveling in Colorado per day, and states
that NOX and VOC emissions along downline segments
(excluding emissions in attainment areas) would total 5,771.05 tpy and
205.33 tpy, respectively, and CO emissions would total 2,076.41 tpy.
The Center concludes that ``EPA must revise its analysis to consider
these increased emissions caused by the U.S. Government's final
approval of the Uinta Basin Railway.'' The Center states that the
approval by the STB ``is a final action by the federal government
itself'' and ``EPA cannot justify ignoring it based on a claim that EPA
does not consider future actions which are not final actions.''
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\53\ For the EIS, the STB created two potential scenarios for
future oil development in the Uinta Basin, a low oil production
scenario and a high oil production scenario. These scenarios
corresponded to estimated ranges of rail traffic. Under the low oil
production scenario, total oil production in the Uinta Basin would
increase by an average of 130,000 barrels per day compared to
historical production levels. Under the high oil production
scenario, total oil production in the Uinta Basin would increase by
an average of 350,000 barrels per day. In the EIS, STB's Office of
Environmental Analysis (OEA) notes that some of the assumptions made
here are conservative and therefore may overstate the total future
oil production in the Basin and the potential impacts. Surface
Transportation Board, Final Environmental Impact Statement, August
6, 2021 (Final EIS), at 3.15-4.
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Response: The STB, which provided the notice of approval as well as
the EIS to which the Center refers to in their comment, is an
independent federal agency that is charged with the economic regulation
of various modes of transportation, primarily freight rail. The STB's
Office of Environmental Assessment (OEA) prepared an EIS pursuant to
the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The NEPA process is
intended to assist the STB and the public in identifying and assessing
the potential environmental consequences of a proposed action before a
decision on a proposed action. In a December 21, 2021 document the STB
authorized construction and operation of the proposed rail line and,
among three build alternatives, specifically authorized the Whitmore
Park Alternative because it would avoid and
[[Page 61256]]
minimize major environmental impacts. EPA is aware of the STB's EIS and
final decision; in fact, as part of the comment process for the EIS,
EPA filed comments on September 2, 2021, recommending certain changes
to an air emissions dispersion model that the OEA ran as part of the
environmental review process.\54\
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\54\ EPA expressed concern that OEA's use of a ``flagpole
height'' (i.e., the height above the ground for which the model
predicts the concentration of a pollutant) for one of the modeling
scenarios described in the final EIS might under-predict air
pollutant concentrations for that modeling scenario. In response to
EPA's letter, OEA reran the model scenario without using a flagpole
height and found the new results to be identical to the results
reported in the final EIS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Center's comments suggest that since the STB issued a final EIS
and authorized the Railway construction and operation, then the
emissions predicted in the EIS (and particularly the high oil
production scenario) should be considered final as well and should have
been incorporated into EPA's modeling for purposes of assessing
Colorado's contribution to nonattainment and interference with
maintenance for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in other states.
Our 2016v2 modeling of 2023 did not include projected increases in
emissions from the Uinta Basin Railway project or from the associated
projected increase in emissions of ozone precursor emissions from
expanded oil and gas operations that are associated with the Uinta
Basin Railway. However, we disagree with the Center that this potential
increase in emissions would change our analysis for Colorado for
several reasons.
First, any potential increase in emissions in Utah associated with
the Railway is not relevant to assessing Colorado's good neighbor
obligations. The Center does not explain how projected emissions
increases due to the construction and operation of the Uinta Basin
Railway as a whole are relevant to whether emissions from Colorado
contribute significantly to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in other states. The selected Whitmore Park
Alternative extends approximately 88 miles from terminus points in the
Uinta Basin from around Myton, Utah, and Leland Bench, Utah, to an
existing rail line near Kyune, Utah. The EIS does not specify if the
possible new well drilling and trucking could occur from wells outside
the State of Utah as well as inside the State. However, the final EIS
indicated that OEA assumed that future oil and gas development,
including well drilling and operation along with construction and
operation of related facilities, such as pipelines, would occur
throughout the Uinta Basin in the fields shown in Figure 3.15-1 of the
EIS.\55\ None of these fields within the cumulative impacts analysis
study area--which extends approximately 18 miles into the Yampa
Intrastate Air Quality Control Region in Colorado--are located within
Colorado.\56\
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\55\ Final EIS, Section 3.15.4.
\56\ Final EIS, Section 3.25-3, Figure 3.15-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also note that in the EIS, OEA identified 27 reasonably
foreseeable future actions within the area of the cumulative impacts
study that could have cumulative impacts in addition to estimated
additional exploration and drilling of oil wells. We again note that
none of these activities were estimated to take place within
Colorado.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Final EIS, Section 3.15-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, while we do not know for certain where or in which state
drilling would occur, estimations indicate that most, if not all, of
the expanded production and exploration (and its associated foreseeable
future actions) would occur within Utah. It is not possible to
determine with much certainty what emissions may be released in
Colorado based on the information supplied by the Center or in the EIS,
or when, or in what quantity these emissions would occur.
Further, the STB approval for construction and operation of the
Railway does not in itself equate to approval of any new oil and gas
development or drilling in the small portion of the Uinta Basin area
located in Colorado. We do not know how many of the high oil production
scenario's estimated 3,330 wells will be drilled and operating and by
what year (e.g., the total amount of wells is not expected until after
15 years), nor do we know what controls or limits they will be
operating under. We also do not know if wells in the Uinta Basin will
be operating at the high oil production scenario (3,330 wells), the low
oil production scenario (1,245 wells), or some other production level.
Thus, the emissions associated with increased well development because
of the Uinta Basin Railway--to the extent any such development may
occur in the small portion of the Uinta Basin that is located in
Colorado--are too speculative to assume they would impact our analysis
of potential ozone transport from Colorado.
The Center points to the downline segment analysis of railroad
emissions that extended to Denver, Colorado.\58\ The EIS states that
the total NOX and VOC emissions at any particular downline
location/segment will vary depending on total train traffic, local
background concentrations, and local topographic and meteorological
conditions.\59\ Further, the EIS states ``that increases in
concentrations measured at air quality monitoring sites, if any, are
expected to be negligible'' and that ``[t]he increased downline rail
traffic associated with the proposed rail line would not lead to a
violation of the NAAQS for counties that are in attainment, and would
not increase the severity of conditions in counties that are not in
attainment.'' \60\ Nonetheless, assuming there may be some increase in
railroad emissions in Colorado associated with the Uinta Basin Railway
project, these emissions increases are too small when viewed in
comparison with the total amount of ozone-precursor emissions from
Colorado to reasonably be expected to alter the results of our modeling
at Step 1 and Step 2. Even an increase in NOX emissions of
5,771.06 tpy and in VOC emissions of 205.33 tpy would be a very small
change in the total statewide emissions of these pollutants from
Colorado, which are projected in 2023 to be 145,621 tpy NOX
and 555,631 tpy VOC.\61\ Considering that our current 2023 modeling
indicates that the largest impact Colorado makes at any downwind
receptor is only 0.20 ppb in 2023 (Denton County, Texas, Site ID
481210034), this very small change in statewide emissions cannot
reasonably be anticipated to change our modeling
results.62 63
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\58\ See Final EIS, Section 3.7.
\59\ Final EIS at 3.7-17.
\60\ Id.
\61\ Annual State and County Summaries of Emissions Used in Air
Quality Modeling, US Inventory State SCC 2016v2 20 aug2021, Federal
Implementation Plan Addressing Regional Ozone Transport for the 2015
Primary Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard, Docket Id. EPA-
HQ-OAR-2021-0668-0100_attachment_3.
\62\ In addition, as evident from our analysis in the Uinta
Basin TSD, these downline railroad emissions in Colorado would only
be relevant to assessing transport into the Uinta Basin to the
extent those emissions are occurring within the Colorado portion of
the Uinta Basin itself. This is because our analysis in the TSD
shows that emissions from outside the Uinta Basin do not transport
into the Basin during wintertime inversion conditions. The emissions
from trains passing through the Colorado portion of the Uinta Basin
during a wintertime inversion episode would be only a very small
fraction of the total railroad emissions increase projected in
Colorado in the EIS, as presented in the table on page 8 of the
Center's comments. Such a small emission increase would not be
enough to change our conclusion in the Uinta Basin TSD that
emissions from Colorado do not significantly contribute to the ozone
issues in the Utah portion of the Uinta Basin.
\63\ Design values and contributions at individual monitoring
sites nationwide are provided in the file
``2016v2_DVs_state_contributions.xlsx,'' which is included in Docket
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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[[Page 61257]]
The estimations of emissions included in the information provided
by the Center and in the EIS are largely influenced by what eventual
production levels will occur in the Uinta Basin following the
completion of the Uinta Basin Railway project. The production rates and
resulting changes to emissions in the Uinta Basin and any downline
emissions stemming from the project can be influenced by a multitude of
factors, including how long it takes to complete the project, as well
as various market condition factors such as general domestic and global
economic conditions, commodity pricing, and the strategic and capital
investment decisions of oil producers and their customers.\64\ In OEA's
analysis in the EIS, conservative assumptions were generally made when
evaluating air quality impacts (i.e., modeling air quality impacts
using a production value of 5,750 wells, well above the estimated 3,330
wells under the high oil production scenario).65 66 However,
without increased certainty on when this project will be completed (and
how that relates to air quality conditions at that time), how quickly
production in the Uinta Basin will change as a result of the
construction, or how much production will change, it is not appropriate
nor is it feasible, at this time, for EPA to consider the inclusion or
consideration of any changes in emissions as a result of the Uinta
Basin Railway project in this action. Additionally, there are other
factors that could counterbalance any projected increase in emissions
in Colorado once the Uinta Basin Railway is in operation, including
possible emissions reductions that might occur from avoided crude oil
truck trips into or through Colorado. This degree of uncertainty makes
it too difficult for EPA to determine what the actual impacts may be
from this project at this time, though we recognize the potential need
to assess the air quality impacts of this project in the future
(particularly as related to an increase in emissions from Utah);
however, EPA is confident that the emissions change in Colorado that
could result from this project would not be sufficient to change our
conclusions in this action.
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\64\ Final EIS, Section 3.15-3.
\65\ Final EIS, Section 3.15-32.
\66\ Based on Bureau of Land Management (BLM), ``Bureau of Land
Management Monument Butte Oil and Gas Development Project
Environmental Impact Statement,'' 2016. Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Newfield Exploration Corporation Monument Butte Oil
and Gas Development Project in Uintah and Duchesne Counties, Utah.
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In summary, EPA disagrees with the Center's comments that EPA's
current modeling and analysis fails to appropriately consider predicted
direct or indirect emissions from the construction and operation of the
Uinta Basin Railway. Based on our review of the available information,
any potential increase in emissions in Colorado from this project are
too small and too speculative to reasonably be anticipated to change
the results either of our 2023 modeling analysis at Steps 1 and 2, or
our assessment of the potential for transport from Colorado within the
Uinta Basin.
Comment: The Center asserts that EPA must disapprove Colorado's
infrastructure SIP submission under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) (adequate
resources and authority) because the State of Colorado lacks adequate
legal authority to regulate emissions from agriculture sources. The
Center quotes Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.) 25-7-109(8)(a) and
argues that the provision prohibits Colorado from regulating
agriculture sources other than those that are major sources. The Center
states that Colorado cannot apply RACT or protect visibility or air
quality related values for Class I areas from agriculture facilities.
Furthermore, the Center asserts that EPA must also disapprove the
SIP under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (interstate transport prong 4) and
110(a)(2)(J) (consultation with government officials, public
notification, and PSD and visibility protection) because agriculture
emissions can cause visibility impartment. Additionally, the Center
argues that EPA must disapprove the SIP submission under section
110(a)(2)(A) (emissions limits and other control measures) because,
according to the Center, Colorado cannot assure that it will maintain
the NAAQS because the State lacks the legal authority to regulate
emissions from agriculture and pesticides.
The Center asserts that on remand, EPA wasted the Tenth Circuit's
and the Center's time because, according to the Center, EPA says the
same thing on remand that they said before remand. The Center
acknowledges a letter from Colorado but argues that Colorado's
statement that it regulates agricultural sources through minor source
permitting is not true because Colorado has never issued a minor source
air permit for a farm or concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO)
and that EPA has not provided evidence to the contrary. The Center
further argues that C.R.S. 25-7-109(8)(a) does not mention minor source
permitting as an exception and that minor sources are not title V, PSD,
or non-attainment new source review (NSR) sources. Furthermore, the
Center points out that there are no New Source Performance Standards
for CAFOs.
The Center further asserts that fugitive emissions are not included
in determining if most sources are major. The Center states that
pesticides are a major contributor to ozone formation and animal waste
is a major contributor to visibility impairment and interference with
air quality related values. The Center argues that Colorado cannot
regulate fugitive emissions based on the plain language of C.R.S. 25-7-
109(8)(a).
The Center also challenges EPA's interpretation of C.R.S. 25-7-
109(8)(a) that if it is necessary to regulate agricultural sources
beyond those that are major sources in order to attain or maintain the
NAAQS, then the State has authority to do so. The Center states that
Part C, Part D, and title V do not say that states must independently
attain and maintain the NAAQS. The Center concludes by saying that
Colorado has failed to attain the ozone NAAQS five times and that EPA
cannot promise to address the State's lack of authority to regulate
non-major agriculture sources tomorrow, during review of the State's
nonattainment SIP, when it is required to address the issue today.
Response: EPA disagrees with this comment. First, EPA did not waste
the Tenth Circuit's or the Center's time, nor did EPA say the exact
same thing on remand as EPA said before remand, as the Center contends.
Rather, when EPA sought voluntary remand, the Agency specifically said
that ``EPA intends to review its analysis of the State Authority
Element and may provide additional explanation of its reading of
Colorado's agriculture provision.'' \67\ On remand, EPA has done
exactly that--because of concerns raised about the State's authority,
EPA reevaluated C.R.S. 25-7-109(8)(a) (``agriculture provision'') and
verified our reading of that provision with Colorado. By letter,
Colorado explained the State's authority under the agriculture
provision, which confirmed EPA's earlier interpretation of the
provision. By verifying our interpretation with Colorado, EPA received
adequate necessary assurances from the State concerning Colorado's
legal authority, as required by CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
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\67\ Center for Biological Diversity v. EPA, No. 20-9560 (Tenth
Cir.), EPA's Motion for Voluntary Remand at 10.
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Second, the Center's interpretation of the agriculture provision is
wrong. A plain reading of the provision, supported by Colorado's
letter,
[[Page 61258]]
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demonstrates that Colorado does have authority to:
--Apply reasonably available control technology (RACT) to agricultural
facilities;
--Regulate agricultural facility emissions to protect visibility;
--Regulate agricultural, horticultural, or floricultural production
sources, even if they are not major sources; and
--Regulate minor sources like pesticides, farms, CAFOs, and fugitive
emissions if required by Part C, Part D, or title V of the
CAA.68
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\68\ C.R.S. 25-7-109(8)(a).
Part C, Part D, and title V of the CAA do not prescribe specific
measures that states must adopt. Rather, ``the CAA supplies the goals
and basic requirements of state implementation plans, but the states
have broad authority to determine the methods and particular control
strategies they will use to achieve the statutory requirements.'' \69\
Part C requires that states submit to EPA SIP submissions that contain
``emission limitations and such other measures as may be necessary . .
. to prevent significant deterioration of air quality in each region
(or portion thereof) designated . . . as attainment or
unclassifiable;'' \70\ and SIP submissions that contain ``emission
limits, schedules of compliance and other measures as may be necessary
to make reasonable progress toward meeting the national [visibility]
goal.'' \71\ Further, Part D of the CAA requires that SIPs ``provide
for the implementation of all reasonably available control measures as
expeditiously as practicable (including such reductions in emissions
from existing sources in this area as may be obtained through the
adoption, at a minimum of reasonably available control technology) and
shall provide for attainment of the national primary ambient air
quality standards;'' \72\ ``additional measures, if any, as may be
necessary to ensure [ ] maintenance'' of the NAAQS once a nonattainment
area has been redesignated to attainment; \73\ ``[RACT] corrections''
for areas deemed Marginal nonattainment \74\ and further SIP revisions
for areas deemed Moderate, Serious, Severe, and Extreme
nonattainment.\75\ While some of the SIP requirements apply only to
major sources, other provisions require states to evaluate additional
area sources of emissions.\76\
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\69\ BCCA Appeal Group v. EPA, 355 F.3d 817, 822 (5th Cir. 2003)
(citing Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 266 (1976)).
\70\ 42 U.S.C. 7471.
\71\ 42 U.S.C. 7491(b)(2).
\72\ 42 U.S.C. 7502(c)(1); see also 7511a(2)(A) (requiring RACT
corrections for marginal areas).
\73\ 42 U.S.C. 7505(a).
\74\ 42 U.S.C. 7511a(a)(2).
\75\ 42 U.S.C. 7511a(b), (c), (d), and (e).
\76\ Compare, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7502(c)(5) with 7502(c)(6). See
also 40 CFR 51.308(f)(2)(i) (instructing the states to ``consider
evaluating major and minor stationary sources or groups of sources,
mobile sources, and area sources'' as part of their long term
strategies for addressing visibility impairment).
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Thus, if Colorado needs to regulate agricultural sources
(regardless of size) in order to attain and maintain the NAAQS or to
protect visibility as required by federal law in the CAA, Colorado has
the authority under state law to include such measures in its SIP
submissions under Part C and Part D of the CAA. Further, EPA separately
evaluates the sufficiency of each of these submissions under the
relevant statutory and regulatory provisions.\77\ If EPA deems such SIP
submissions inadequate to prevent significant deterioration, protect
visibility, or attain and maintain the NAAQS, Colorado may be required
by Part C or Part D of the CAA to regulate agricultural sources
(regardless of size) and is not prohibited by C.R.S. 25-7-109(8)(a)
from doing so. EPA interprets C.R.S. 25-7-109(8)(a) to authorize such
regulation if required for these purposes, and the State has confirmed
this reading of state law. Moreover, each time the State develops a SIP
submission and EPA proposes action on a SIP submission, the Center has
an opportunity to comment on the SIP submission during both the state
and federal public comment periods.\78\ Those are the appropriate
opportunities for the Center to make their arguments regarding the need
for better regulation of agricultural sources. For example, to the
extent that the Center advocates for control of pesticide emissions as
VOC precursors to ozone formation in a given nonattainment area, a
proper place for such advocacy is during the State's development of a
nonattainment SIP submission and EPA's evaluation of it. Here, in the
context of EPA's evaluation of Colorado's infrastructure SIP
submission, the question is whether Colorado has provided necessary
assurances of the State's authority to do so in order to implement its
SIP.
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\77\ See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3); 7502(d). See also Letter
to Deb Thomas, Regional Administrator (Acting) and Deputy Regional
Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 8, from
Garrison Kaufman, Director, Air Pollution Control Division, July 29,
2021 ([T]he DMFR ozone area is a nonattainment area and, therefore,
the AQCC has the authority to regulate emissions from agricultural
production to the extent that such regulations are required by Part
D of the federal Clean Air Act due to the DMNFR ozone area's
nonattainment status.''); 84 FR 36516, 36518 (July 29, 2019)
(explaining that Colorado's infrastructure SIP submission met the
``basic infrastructure requirements'' of CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)
but that whether the State's measures meet the requirements of CAA
part D is a separate determination that EPA would make in an action
reviewing the measures under part D.).
\78\ See, e.g., 84 FR 34083 (July 17, 2019) (proposing to
Colorado's visibility progress report for the first regional haze
implementation period); 86 FR 11129 (February 24, 2021).
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Third, the Center takes issue with part of Colorado's letter,
asserting that Colorado states that it regulates agricultural sources
through minor source permitting, and asserting that Colorado has never
issued a minor source air permit for a farm or CAFO and that EPA has
not provided evidence to the contrary. The Center misconstrues the
letter. Colorado does not state that the State regulates all
agricultural sources through minor source permitting; rather, Colorado
states that it regulates ``agricultural sources that are subject to [a
New Source Performance Standard (NSPS)]'' through the minor source
permitting program, the PSD and NSR permitting programs, and the title
V permitting program.\79\ Additionally, in reviewing Colorado's
infrastructure SIP submission under CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i), the
question is not whether Colorado has regulated or does regulate
agricultural sources; the question is whether Colorado has the
authority to do so if necessary.\80\
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\79\ Letter to Deb Thomas, Regional Administrator (Acting) and
Deputy Regional Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 8, from Garrison Kaufman, Director, Air Pollution Control
Division, July 29, 2021.
\80\ 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E)(i); 40 CFR 51.230-231; Stephen D.
Page, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Guidance on
Infrastructure State Implementation Plan (SIP) Elements under Clean
Air Act Sections 110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2), 41 (2013).
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The fact that the agriculture provision does not specifically
mention minor source permitting does not mean that Colorado lacks the
authority to regulate minor agricultural sources. Like all states,
Colorado is required to include in its SIP a minor source NSR program
governed by Parts C and D of the CAA.\81\ Colorado's minor source NSR
program is contained in Colorado's ``Regulation 3.'' \82\ Colorado may
amend Regulation 3 as necessary to assure NAAQS are achieved as
required by Parts C and D of the CAA. Thus, Colorado has authority to
regulate minor agricultural sources as necessary under Parts C and D of
the CAA.
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\81\ See 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C) (requiring SIPs to contain a
program for ``regulation of the modification and construction of any
stationary source within areas covered by the plan as necessary to
assure that [NAAQS] are achieved, including a permit program as
required by parts C and D of this subchapter''); 40 CFR 51.160
(requirements for permit programs in SIPs generally) (both
implicitly including minor sources).
\82\ C.R.S. 25-7-114 to 25-7-114.7.
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[[Page 61259]]
Fourth, with respect to the Center's assertion that there is no
NSPS for CAFOs, that does not mean that Colorado cannot regulate CAFO
emissions under the CAA. As explained above, Colorado could include
measures in its nonattainment and visibility SIP submissions designed
to reduce emissions from CAFOs. The agriculture provision does not bar
the State from doing so if necessary, under the CAA.
Finally, the Center raises issues that are outside the scope of
this rulemaking. EPA sought, and the Tenth Circuit granted, remand of
only two portions of EPA's approval of Colorado's infrastructure SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone standards--EPA's conclusions under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) and (E)(i) with respect to the agriculture
provision. EPA proposed action on these two portions only and stated
that the Agency was not reopening for comment any other portions of the
2020 final rule.\83\ Accordingly, the Center's assertion that EPA has
not acted on a petition to promulgate an NSPS for CAFOs is outside the
scope of this action. Similarly, the Center's assertions that EPA must
disapprove Colorado's infrastructure SIP under CAA section
110(a)(2)(A), 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (prong 4), and 110(a)(2)(J) are also
outside the scope of this action.\84\
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\83\ 87 FR 27054.
\84\ See 85 FR 20165, 20171 (April 10, 2020) (explaining EPA's
basis for approving Colorado's infrastructure SIP submission under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (prong 4) and 110(a)(2)(J)); 85 FR
36518 (explaining EPA's basis for proposing to approve Colorado's
infrastructure SIP submission under CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)).
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EPA notes that ``Congress has left to the Administrator's sound
discretion determination of what assurances are `necessary' '' under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).\85\ For the foregoing reasons, and for the
reasons stated in our proposal, we conclude that Colorado's
infrastructure SIP submission, supported by Colorado's letter regarding
the agriculture provision, provides the necessary assurances of the
State's authority to carry out Colorado's SIP for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
as required by CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
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\85\ NRDC v. EPA, 478 F.2d 875, 884 (1st Cir. 1973); see also
BCCA, 355 F.3d at 844-847.
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III. Final Action
EPA is confirming our approval that the good neighbor portion of
Colorado's infrastructure SIP satisfies the interstate transport
provision of the CAA, section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, and that the State has provided the necessary assurances of the
State's authority to regulate all agricultural sources as may be
required by the CAA under section 110(a)(2)(E)(i).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this
action merely approves state law as meeting Federal requirements and
does not impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state
law. For that reason, this action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21,
2011);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, described in the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian
reservation land or in any other area where EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian
country, the rule does not have tribal implications and will not impose
substantial direct costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. EPA will submit a report containing this action and
other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, petitions for judicial review
of this action must be filed in the United States Court of Appeals for
the appropriate circuit by December 12, 2022. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule does not affect
the finality of this action for the purposes of judicial review nor
does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial review may
be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such rule or
action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements (see section 307(b)(2)).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Greenhouse gases, Incorporation by reference, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: October 2, 2022.
KC Becker,
Regional Administrator, Region 8.
[FR Doc. 2022-21815 Filed 10-7-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P