Air Plan Disapprovals; Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 9336-9384 [2023-02407]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663; EPA–R02–
OAR–2021–0673; EPA–R03–OAR–2021–
0872; EPA–R03–OAR–2021–0873; EPA–
R04–OAR–2021–0841; EPA–R05–OAR–
2022–0006; EPA–R06–OAR–2021–0801;
EPA–R07–OAR–2021–0851; EPA–R08–
OAR–2022–0315; EPA–R09–OAR–2022–
0394; EPA–R09–OAR–2022–0138; FRL–
10209–01–OAR]
Air Plan Disapprovals; Interstate
Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015
8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; final agency action.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA
or the Agency) is finalizing the
disapproval of State Implementation
Plan (SIP) submissions for 19 states
regarding interstate transport and
finalizing a partial approval and partial
disapproval of elements of the SIP
submission for two states for the 2015
8-hour ozone national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS). The ‘‘good
neighbor’’ or ‘‘interstate transport’’
provision requires that each state’s SIP
contain adequate provisions to prohibit
emissions from within the state from
significantly contributing to
nonattainment or interfering with
maintenance of the NAAQS in other
states. This requirement is part of the
broader set of ‘‘infrastructure’’
requirements, which are designed to
ensure that the structural components of
each state’s air quality management
program are adequate to meet the state’s
responsibilities under the CAA.
Disapproving a SIP submission
establishes a 2-year deadline for the
EPA to promulgate Federal
Implementation Plans (FIPs) to address
the relevant requirements, unless the
EPA approves a subsequent SIP
submission that meets these
requirements. Disapproval does not start
a mandatory sanctions clock. The EPA
is deferring final action at this time on
the disapprovals it proposed for
Tennessee and Wyoming.
DATES: The effective date of this final
rule is March 15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
Additional supporting materials
associated with this final action are
included in certain regional dockets.
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SUMMARY:
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See the memo ‘‘Regional Dockets
Containing Additional Supporting
Materials for Final Action on 2015
Ozone NAAQS Good Neighbor SIP
Submissions’’ in the docket for this
action. All documents in the dockets are
listed on the https://
www.regulations.gov website. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, i.e., confidential
business information (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 https://
www.regulations.gov or please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section for
additional information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
General questions concerning this
document should be addressed to Mr.
Thomas Uher, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality
Policy Division, Mail Code C539–04,
109 TW Alexander Drive, Research
Triangle Park, NC 27711; telephone
number: (919) 541–5534; email address:
uher.thomas@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
References to section numbers in
roman numeral refer to sections of this
preamble unless otherwise specified.
I. General Information
A. How can I get copies of this
document and other related
information?
The EPA established a Headquarters
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 and
several regional dockets. All documents
in the docket are listed in the electronic
indexes, which, along with publicly
available documents, are available at
https://www.regulations.gov. Publicly
available docket materials are also
available in hard copy at the Air and
Radiation Docket and Information
Center, EPA/DC, William Jefferson
Clinton West Building, Room 3334,
1301 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC. Some information in
the docket may not be publicly available
via the online docket due to docket file
size restrictions, such as certain
modeling files, or content (e.g., CBI). For
further information on the EPA Docket
Center services and the current status,
please visit us online at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA also established dockets in
each of the EPA Regional offices to help
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support the proposals that are now
being finalized in this national action.
These include all public comments,
technical support materials, and other
files associated with this final action.
Each regional docket contains a
memorandum directing the public to the
headquarters docket for this final action.
While all documents in regional dockets
are listed in the electronic indexes at
https://www.regulations.gov, some
information may not be publicly
available via the online dockets due to
docket file size restrictions, such as
certain modeling files, or content (e.g.,
CBI). Please contact the EPA Docket
Center Services for further information.
B. How is the preamble organized?
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. How can I get copies of this document
and other related information?
B. How is the preamble organized?
C. Where do I go if I have state-specific
questions?
II. Background and Overview
A. Description of Statutory Background
B. Description of the EPA’s 4-Step
Interstate Transport Framework
C. Background on the EPA’s Ozone
Transport Modeling Information
D. The EPA’s Approach to Evaluating
Interstate Transport SIPs for the 2015 8Hour Ozone NAAQS
III. The EPA’s Updated Air Quality and
Contribution Analysis
A. Description of Air Quality Modeling for
the Final Action
B. Air Quality Modeling To Identify
Nonattainment and Maintenance
Receptors
C. Air Quality Modeling To Quantify
Upwind State Contributions
IV. Summary of Bases for Disapproval
A. Alabama
B. Arkansas
C. California
D. Illinois
E. Indiana
F. Kentucky
G. Louisiana
H. Maryland
I. Michigan
J. Minnesota
K. Mississippi
L. Missouri
M. Nevada
N. New Jersey
O. New York
P. Ohio
Q. Oklahoma
R. Texas
S. Utah
T. West Virginia
U. Wisconsin
V. Response to Key Comments
A. SIP Evaluation Process
B. Application of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
C. Good Neighbor Provision Policy
VI. Statutory and Executive Orders Reviews
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Executive Order 13563:
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Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
L. Judicial Review
C. Where do I go if I have state-specific
questions?
The following table identifies the
states covered by this final action along
with an EPA Regional office contact
who can respond to questions about
specific SIP submissions.
Regional offices
States
EPA Region 2: Kenneth Fradkin, Air and Radiation Division/Air Programs Branch, EPA Region 2, 290 Broadway,
25th Floor, New York, NY 10007.
EPA Region 3: Mike Gordon, Planning and Implementation Branch, EPA Region III, 1600 JFK Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.
EPA Region 4: Evan Adams, Air and Radiation Division/Air Planning and Implementation Branch, EPA Region IV,
61 Forsyth Street SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303.
EPA Region 5: Olivia Davidson, Air & Radiation Division/Air Programs Branch, EPA Region V, 77 W. Jackson
Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60604–3511.
EPA Region 6: Sherry Fuerst, Air and Radiation Division, EPA Region 6, 1201 Elm Street, Suite 500, Dallas,
Texas 75270.
EPA Region 7: William Stone, Air and Radiation Division, Air Quality Planning Branch, EPA Region VII, 11201
Renner Boulevard, Lenexa, Kansas 66219.
EPA Region 8: Adam Clark, Air and Radiation Division, EPA, Region VIII, Mailcode 8ARD–IO, 1595 Wynkoop
Street, Denver, Colorado 80202.
EPA Region 9: Tom Kelly, Air and Radiation Division, EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne St., San Francisco, California 94105.
II. Background and Overview
The following provides background
for the EPA’s final action on these SIP
submissions related to the interstate
transport requirements for the 2015 8hour ozone NAAQS (2015 ozone
NAAQS).
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A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, the EPA
promulgated a revision to the ozone
NAAQS (2015 ozone NAAQS), lowering
the level of both the primary and
secondary standards to 0.070 parts per
million (ppm) for the 8-hour standard.1
Section 110(a)(1) of the CAA requires
states to submit, within 3 years after
promulgation of a new or revised
standard, SIP submissions 2 meeting the
applicable requirements of section
110(a)(2).3 One of these applicable
requirements is found in CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), otherwise known as
the ‘‘good neighbor’’ or ‘‘interstate
1 National Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Ozone, Final Rule, 80 FR 65292 (October 26, 2015).
Although the level of the standard is specified in
the units of ppm, ozone concentrations are also
described in parts per billion (ppb). For example,
0.070 ppm is equivalent to 70 ppb.
2 The terms ‘‘submission,’’ ‘‘revision,’’ and
‘‘submittal’’ are used interchangeably in this
document.
3 SIP revisions that are intended to meet the
applicable requirements of section 110(a)(1) and (2)
of the CAA are often referred to as infrastructure
SIPs and the applicable elements under CAA
section 110(a)(2) are referred to as infrastructure
requirements.
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transport’’ provision, which generally
requires SIPs to contain adequate
provisions to prohibit in-state emissions
activities from having certain adverse
air quality effects on other states due to
interstate transport of pollution. There
are two so-called ‘‘prongs’’ within CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). A SIP for a
new or revised NAAQS must contain
adequate provisions prohibiting any
source or other type of emissions
activity within the state from emitting
air pollutants in amounts that will
significantly contribute to
nonattainment of the NAAQS in another
state (prong 1) or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in another
state (prong 2). The EPA and states must
give independent significance to prong
1 and prong 2 when evaluating
downwind air quality problems under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).4
On February 22, 2022, the EPA
proposed to disapprove 19 good
neighbor SIP submissions from the
States of Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New
York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee,
Texas, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.5
4 See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 909–
11 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (North Carolina).
5 87 FR 9545 (February 22, 2022) (Alabama,
Mississippi, Tennessee); 87 FR 9798 (February 22,
2022) (Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas); 87
FR 9838 (February 22, 2022) (Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin); 87 FR 9498
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New Jersey, New York.
Maryland, West Virginia.
Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi.
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin.
Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas.
Missouri.
Utah.
California, Nevada.
On May 24, 2022, the EPA proposed to
disapprove four additional good
neighbor SIP submissions from the
States of California, Nevada, Utah, and
Wyoming.6 On October 25, 2022, the
EPA proposed to disapprove a new good
neighbor SIP submission from Alabama
submitted on June 21, 2022.7 The EPA
is deferring action on the proposals
related to the good neighbor SIP
submissions from Tennessee and
Wyoming at this time. As explained in
the notifications of proposed
disapproval, the EPA’s justification for
each of these proposals applies uniform,
nationwide analytical methods, policy
judgments, and interpretation with
respect to the same CAA obligations,
i.e., implementation of good neighbor
requirements under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS for states across the country.
The EPA’s final action is likewise based
on this common core of determinations.
As indicated at proposal, the EPA is
taking a consolidated, single final action
(February 22, 2022) (Kentucky); 87 FR 9484
(February 22, 2022) (New Jersey, New York); 87 FR
9463 (February 22, 2022) (Maryland); 87 FR 9533
(February 22, 2022) (Missouri); 87 FR 9516
(February 22, 2022) (West Virginia).
6 87 FR 31443 (May 24, 2022) (California); 87 FR
31485 (May 24, 2022) (Nevada); 87 FR 31470 (May
24, 2022) (Utah); 87 FR 31495 (May 24, 2022)
(Wyoming).
7 87 FR 64412 (October 25, 2022) (Alabama).
Alabama withdrew its original good neighbor SIP
submission on April 21, 2022. Id. at 64419.
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on the proposed SIP disapprovals.8
Included in this document is final
action on 2015 ozone NAAQS interstate
transport SIPs addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for Alabama, Arkansas,
California, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Ohio,
Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, West Virginia,
and Wisconsin. The 2015 ozone NAAQS
interstate transport SIP submissions
addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for Tennessee and
Wyoming will be addressed in a
separate action.
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B. Description of the EPA’s 4-Step
Interstate Transport Framework
The EPA used a 4-step interstate
transport framework (or 4-step
framework) to evaluate each state’s
implementation plan submission
addressing the interstate transport
provision for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
The EPA has addressed the interstate
transport requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) with respect to prior
NAAQS in several regulatory actions,
including the Cross-State Air Pollution
Rule (CSAPR), which addressed
interstate transport with respect to the
1997 ozone NAAQS as well as the 1997
and 2006 fine particulate matter
standards,9 the Cross-State Air Pollution
Rule Update (CSAPR Update) 10 and the
Revised CSAPR Update, both of which
addressed the 2008 ozone NAAQS.11
Shaped through the years by input
from state air agencies 12 and other
8 In its proposals, the EPA stated ‘‘The EPA may
take a consolidated, single final action on all the
proposed SIP disapproval actions with respect to
obligations under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Should EPA take a single
final action on all such disapprovals, this action
would be nationally applicable, and the EPA would
also anticipate, in the alternative, making and
publishing a finding that such final action is based
on a determination of nationwide scope or effect.’’
E.g., 87 FR 9463, 9475 n.51.
9 See Federal Implementation Plans: Interstate
Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone and
Correction of SIP Approvals, 76 FR 48208 (August
8, 2011).
10 Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update for the
2008 Ozone NAAQS, 81 FR 74504 (October 26,
2016).
11 In 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit)
remanded CSAPR Update to the extent it failed to
require upwind states to eliminate their significant
contribution by the next applicable attainment date
by which downwind states must come into
compliance with the NAAQS, as established under
CAA section 181(a). Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d
303, 313 (D.C. Cir. 2019) (Wisconsin). The Revised
CSAPR Update for the 2008 Ozone NAAQS, 86 FR
23054 (April 30, 2021), responded to the remand of
CSAPR Update in Wisconsin and the vacatur of a
separate rule, the ‘‘CSAPR Close-Out,’’ 83 FR 65878
(December 21, 2018), in New York v. EPA, 781 F.
App’x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
12 See 63 FR 57356, 57361 (October 27, 1998).
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stakeholders on EPA’s prior interstate
transport rulemakings and SIP actions,13
as well as a number of court decisions,
the EPA has developed and used the
following 4-step interstate transport
framework to evaluate a state’s
obligations to eliminate interstate
transport emissions under the interstate
transport provision for the ozone
NAAQS: (1) Identify monitoring sites
that are projected to have problems
attaining and/or maintaining the
NAAQS (i.e., nonattainment and/or
maintenance receptors); (2) identify
states that impact those air quality
problems in other (i.e., downwind)
states sufficiently such that the states
are considered ‘‘linked’’ and therefore
warrant further review and analysis; (3)
identify the emissions reductions
necessary (if any), applying a
multifactor analysis, to eliminate each
linked upwind state’s significant
contribution to nonattainment or
interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS at the locations identified in
Step 1; and (4) adopt permanent and
enforceable measures needed to achieve
those emissions reductions.
The general steps of this framework
allow for some methodological
variation, and this can be seen in the
evolution of the EPA’s analytical
process across its prior rulemakings.
This also means states have some
flexibility in developing analytical
methods within this framework (and
may also attempt to justify an
alternative framework altogether). The
four steps of the framework simply
provide a reasonable organization to the
analysis of the complex air quality
challenge of interstate ozone transport.
As discussed further throughout this
document, the EPA has organized its
evaluation of the states’ SIP submissions
around this analytical framework
(including the specific methodologies
within each step as evolved over the
course of the CSAPR rulemakings since
2011), but where states presented
alternative approaches either to the
EPA’s methodological approaches
within the framework, or organized
their analysis in some manner that
differed from it entirely, we have
evaluated those analyses on their merits
or, in some cases, identified why even
if those approaches were acceptable, the
state still does not have an approvable
SIP submission as a whole.
13 In addition to CSAPR rulemakings, other
regional rulemakings addressing ozone transport
include the ‘‘NOX SIP Call,’’ 63 FR 57356 (October
27, 1998), and the ‘‘Clean Air Interstate Rule’’
(CAIR), 70 FR 25162 (May 12, 2005).
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C. Background on the EPA’s Ozone
Transport Modeling Information
In general, the EPA has performed
nationwide air quality modeling to
project ozone design values, which are
used in combination with measured
data to identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 1. To
quantify the contribution of emissions
from specific upwind states on 2023
ozone design values for the identified
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance receptors at Step 2, the
EPA performed nationwide, state-level
ozone source apportionment modeling
for 2023. The source apportionment
modeling projected contributions to
ozone at receptors from precursor
emissions of anthropogenic nitrogen
oxides (NOX) and volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) in individual
upwind states.
The EPA has released several
documents containing projected design
values, contributions, and information
relevant to air agencies for evaluating
interstate transport with respect to the
2015 ozone NAAQS. First, on January 6,
2017, the EPA published a notice of data
availability (NODA) in which the
Agency requested comment on
preliminary interstate ozone transport
data including projected ozone design
values and interstate contributions for
2023 using a 2011 base year platform.14
In the NODA, the EPA used the year
2023 as the analytic year for this
preliminary modeling because that year
aligns with the expected attainment year
for Moderate ozone nonattainment areas
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.15 On
October 27, 2017, the EPA released a
memorandum (October 2017
memorandum) containing updated
modeling data for 2023, which
incorporated changes made in response
to comments on the NODA, and was
intended to provide information to
assist states’ efforts to develop SIP
submissions to address interstate
transport obligations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS.16 On March 27, 2018, the EPA
issued a memorandum (March 2018
memorandum) noting that the same
2023 modeling data released in the
14 See Notice of Availability of the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Preliminary Interstate Ozone
Transport Modeling Data for the 2015 8-hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS),
82 FR 1733 (January 6, 2017).
15 See 82 FR 1733, 1735 (January 6, 2017).
16 See Information on the Interstate Transport
State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2008 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), October 27, 2017 (‘‘October 2017
memorandum’’), available in Docket No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/
interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-airpollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
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October 2017 memorandum could also
be useful for identifying potential
downwind air quality problems with
respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS at
Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework.17 The March 2018
memorandum also included the then
newly available contribution modeling
data for 2023 to assist states in
evaluating their impact on potential
downwind air quality problems for the
2015 ozone NAAQS under Step 2 of the
4-step interstate transport framework.18
The EPA subsequently issued two more
memoranda in August and October
2018, providing additional information
to states developing interstate transport
SIP submissions for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS concerning, respectively,
potential contribution thresholds that
may be appropriate to apply in Step 2
of the 4-step interstate transport
framework, and considerations for
identifying downwind areas that may
have problems maintaining the standard
at Step 1 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework.19
Following the release of the modeling
data shared in the March 2018
memorandum, the EPA performed
updated modeling using a 2016-based
emissions modeling platform (i.e.,
2016v1). This emissions platform was
developed under the EPA/MultiJurisdictional Organization (MJO)/state
collaborative project.20 This
collaborative project was a multi-year
17 See Information on the Interstate Transport
State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018 (‘‘March 2018
memorandum’’), available in Docket No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/
interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-airpollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
18 The March 2018 memorandum, however,
provided, ‘‘While the information in this
memorandum and the associated air quality
analysis data could be used to inform the
development of these SIPs, the information is not
a final determination regarding states’ obligations
under the good neighbor provision. Any such
determination would be made through notice-andcomment rulemaking.’’ March 2018 memorandum
at 2.
19 See Analysis of Contribution Thresholds for
Use in Clean Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
Interstate Transport State Implementation Plan
Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards, August 31, 2018) (‘‘August
2018 memorandum’’); Considerations for
Identifying Maintenance Receptors for Use in Clean
Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) Interstate
Transport State Implementation Plan Submissions
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, October 19, 2018 (‘‘October 2018
memorandum’’), available in Docket No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/
airmarkets/memo-and-supplemental-informationregarding-interstate-transport-sips-2015-ozonenaaqs.
20 The results of this modeling, as well as the
underlying modeling files, are included in Docket
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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joint effort by the EPA, MJOs, and states
to develop a new, more recent emissions
platform for use by the EPA and states
in regulatory modeling as an
improvement over the dated, 2011based platform that the EPA had used to
project ozone design values and
contribution data provided in the 2017
and 2018 memoranda. The EPA used
the 2016v1 emissions to project ozone
design values and contributions for
2023. On October 30, 2020, in the notice
of proposed rulemaking for the Revised
CSAPR Update, the EPA released and
accepted public comment on 2023
modeling that used the 2016v1
emissions platform.21 Although the
Revised CSAPR Update addressed
transport for the 2008 ozone NAAQS,
the projected design values and
contributions from the 2016v1 platform
were also useful for identifying
downwind ozone problems and linkages
with respect to the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.22
Following the final Revised CSAPR
Update, the EPA made further updates
to the 2016-based emissions platform to
include updated onroad mobile
emissions from Version 3 of the EPA’s
Motor Vehicle Emission Simulator
(MOVES) model (MOVES3) 23 and
updated emissions projections for
electric generating units (EGUs) that
reflect the emissions reductions from
the Revised CSAPR Update, recent
information on plant closures, and other
inventory improvements. The construct
of the updated emissions platform,
2016v2, is described in the ‘‘Technical
Support Document (TSD): Preparation
of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v2
North American Emissions Modeling
Platform,’’ hereafter known as the
2016v2 Emissions Modeling TSD, and is
included in Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2021–0663. The EPA performed air
quality modeling using the 2016v2
emissions to provide projections of
ozone design values and contributions
in 2023 that reflect the effects on air
quality of the 2016v2 emissions
platform. The results of the 2016v2
modeling were used by the EPA as part
of the Agency’s evaluation of state SIP
submissions with respect to Steps 1 and
2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework at the proposal stage of this
action. By using the 2016v2 modeling
results, the EPA used the most current
21 See
85 FR 68964, 68981 (October 30, 2020).
the Air Quality Modeling Technical
Support Document for the Final Revised Cross-State
Air Pollution Rule Update, included in Docket No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
23 86 FR 1106. Additional details and
documentation related to the MOVES3 model can
be found at https://www.epa.gov/moves/latestversion-motor-vehicle-emission-simulator-moves.
22 See
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9339
and technically appropriate information
for the proposed rulemakings that were
issued earlier in 2022.
The EPA invited and received
comments on the 2016v2 emissions
inventories and modeling that were
used to support proposals related to
2015 ozone NAAQS interstate transport.
(The EPA had earlier published the
emissions inventories on its website in
September of 2021 and invited initial
feedback from states and other
interested stakeholders.24) In response
to these comments, the EPA made a
number of updates to the 2016v2
inventories and model design to
construct a 2016v3 emissions platform
which was used to update the air
quality modeling. The EPA made
additional updates to its modeling in
response to comments as well. The EPA
is now using this updated modeling to
inform its final action on these SIP
submissions. Details on the air quality
modeling and the methods for
projecting design values and
determining contributions in 2023 are
described in Section III and in the TSD
titled ‘‘Air Quality Modeling TSD for
the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS
Transport SIP Final Actions’’, hereafter
known as the Final Action AQM
TSD.25 26 Additional details related to
the updated 2016v3 emissions platform
are located in the TSD titled
‘‘Preparation of Emissions Inventories
for the 2016v3 North American
Emissions Modeling Platform,’’
hereafter known as the 2016v3
Emissions Modeling TSD, included in
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–
0663.27
D. The EPA’s Approach To Evaluating
Interstate Transport SIPs for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS
The EPA is applying a consistent set
of policy judgments across all states for
purposes of evaluating interstate
transport obligations and the
approvability of interstate transport SIP
submissions for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
These policy judgments conform with
relevant case law and past agency
practice as reflected in CSAPR and
related rulemakings. Employing a
nationally consistent approach is
24 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/
2016v2-platform.
25 See Final Action AQM TSD in Docket ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663
26 References to section numbers in roman
numeral refer to sections of this preamble unless
otherwise specified, and references to section
numbers in numeric form refer to the Response to
Comments document for this final action included
in the docket.
27 See 2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD in Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
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particularly important in the context of
interstate ozone transport, which is a
regional-scale pollution problem
involving many smaller contributors.
Effective policy solutions to the problem
of interstate ozone transport going back
to the NOX SIP Call have necessitated
the application of a uniform framework
of policy judgments to ensure an
‘‘efficient and equitable’’ approach. See
EPA v. EME Homer City Generation, LP,
572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014) (EME Homer
City). Some comments on EPA’s
proposed SIP disapprovals claim the
EPA is imposing non-statutory
requirements onto SIPs or that the EPA
must allow states to take inconsistent
approaches to implementing good
neighbor requirements. Both views are
incorrect; the EPA’s use of its
longstanding framework to evaluate
these SIP submissions reflects a
reasonable and consistent approach to
implementing the requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), while
remaining open to alternative
approaches states may present. These
comments are further addressed in
Section V and the Response to Comment
(RTC) document contained in the docket
for this action, Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
In the March, August, and October
2018 memoranda, the EPA recognized
that states may be able to establish
alternative approaches to addressing
their interstate transport obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS that vary from
a nationally uniform framework. The
EPA emphasized in these memoranda,
however, that such alternative
approaches must be technically justified
and appropriate in light of the facts and
circumstances of each particular state’s
submission.28 In general, the EPA
continues to believe that deviation from
a nationally consistent approach to
ozone transport must be substantially
justified and have a well-documented
technical basis that is consistent with
CAA obligations and relevant case law.
Where states submitted SIP submissions
that rely on any such potential concepts
28 March 2018 memorandum at 3 (‘‘EPA also
notes that, in developing their own rules, states
have flexibility to follow the familiar four-step
transport framework (using EPA’s analytical
approach or somewhat different analytical
approaches within this steps) or alternative
framework, so long as their chosen approach has
adequate technical justification and is consistent
with the requirements of the CAA.’’); August 2018
memorandum at 1 (‘‘The EPA and air agencies
should consider whether the recommendations in
this guidance are appropriate for each situation.’’);
October 2018 memorandum at 1 (‘‘Following the
recommendations in this guidance does not ensure
that EPA will approve a SIP revision in all instances
where the recommendations are followed, as the
guidance may not apply to the facts and
circumstances underlying a particular SIP.’’).
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as the EPA or others may have
identified or suggested in the past, the
EPA evaluated whether the state
adequately justified the technical and
legal basis for doing so. For example,
the EPA has considered the arguments
put forward by Alabama, Missouri,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, and Utah
related to alternative methods of
identifying receptors.29 The EPA also
has considered the arguments
attempting to justify an alternative
contribution threshold at Step 2
pursuant to the August 2018
memorandum made by Alabama,
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, and Utah,30 as
well as criticisms of the 1 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold made by
Nevada and Ohio.31 These topics are
further addressed in Section V.B as well
as the RTC document.
The EPA notes that certain potential
concepts included in an attachment to
the March 2018 memorandum require
unique consideration, and these ideas
do not constitute agency guidance with
respect to interstate transport
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum identified a ‘‘Preliminary
List of Potential Flexibilities’’ that could
potentially inform SIP development.
However, the EPA made clear in both
the March 2018 memorandum 32 and in
Attachment A that the list of ideas was
not endorsed by the Agency but rather
‘‘comments provided in various forums’’
on which the EPA sought ‘‘feedback
from interested stakeholders.’’ 33
Further, Attachment A stated, ‘‘EPA is
not at this time making any
determination that the ideas discussed
below are consistent with the
requirements of the CAA, nor are we
specifically recommending that states
use these approaches.’’ 34 Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum,
therefore, does not constitute agency
29 87 FR 64421–64422 (Alabama); 87 FR 9540–
9541 (Missouri); 87 FR 9869–9870 (Ohio); 87 FR
9820–9822 (Oklahoma); 87 FR 9826–9829 (Texas);
and 87 FR 31480–31481 (Utah).
30 87 FR 64423–64424 (Alabama); 87 FR 9806–
9807 (Arkansas); 87 FR 9852–9853 (Illinois); 87 FR
9855–9856 (Indiana); 87 FR 9509–9510 (Kentucky);
87 FR 9815–9816 (Louisiana); 87 FR 9861–9862
(Michigan); 87 FR 9557 (Mississippi); 87 FR 9541–
9544 (Missouri); 87 FR 9819 (Oklahoma); 87 FR
31478 (Utah).
31 87 FR 31492 (Nevada); 87 FR 9871 (Ohio).
32 ‘‘In addition, the memorandum is accompanied
by Attachment A, which provides a preliminary list
of potential flexibilities in analytical approaches for
developing a good neighbor SIP that may warrant
further discussion between EPA and states.’’ March
2018 memorandum at 1.
33 March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A at A–
1.
34 Id.
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guidance, but was intended to generate
further discussion around potential
approaches to addressing ozone
transport among interested stakeholders.
To the extent states sought to develop or
rely on one or more of these ideas in
support of their SIP submissions, the
EPA reviewed their technical and legal
justifications for doing so.35
The remainder of this section
describes the EPA’s analytical
framework with respect to analytic year,
definition of nonattainment and
maintenance receptors, selection of
contribution threshold, and multifactor
control strategy assessment.
1. Selection of Analytic Year
In general, the states and the EPA
must implement the interstate transport
provision in a manner ‘‘consistent with
the provisions of [title I of the CAA.]’’
See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). This
requires, among other things, that these
obligations are addressed consistently
with the timeframes for downwind areas
to meet their CAA obligations. With
respect to ozone NAAQS, under CAA
section 181(a), this means obligations
must be addressed ‘‘as expeditiously as
practicable’’ and no later than the
schedule of attainment dates provided
in CAA section 181(a)(1).36 Several D.C.
Circuit court decisions address the issue
of the relevant analytic year for the
purposes of evaluating ozone transport
air-quality problems. On September 13,
2019, the D.C. Circuit issued a decision
in Wisconsin, remanding the CSAPR
Update to the extent that it failed to
require upwind states to eliminate their
significant contribution by the next
applicable attainment date by which
downwind states must come into
compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a).
See 938 F.3d 303, 313.
On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit
issued a decision in Maryland v. EPA
that cited the Wisconsin decision in
holding that the EPA must assess the
impact of interstate transport on air
quality at the next downwind
attainment date, including Marginal
area attainment dates, in evaluating the
basis for the EPA’s denial of a petition
under CAA section 126(b) Maryland v.
35 E.g., 87 FR 64423–64425 (Alabama); 87 FR
31453–31454 (California); 87 FR 9852–9854
(Illinois); 87 FR 9859–9860 (Indiana); 87 FR 9508,
9515 (Kentucky); 87 FR 9861–9862 (Michigan); 87
FR 9869–9870 (Ohio); 87 FR 9798, 9818–9820
(Oklahoma); 87 FR 31477–31481 (Utah); 87 FR
9526–9527 (West Virginia).
36 For attainment dates for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, refer to CAA section 181(a), 40 CFR
51.1303, and Additional Air Quality Designations
for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective
August 3, 2018).
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EPA, 958 F.3d 1185, 1203–04 (D.C. Cir.
2020) (Maryland). The court noted that
‘‘section 126(b) incorporates the Good
Neighbor Provision,’’ and, therefore,
‘‘EPA must find a violation [of section
126] if an upwind source will
significantly contribute to downwind
nonattainment at the next downwind
attainment deadline. Therefore, the
agency must evaluate downwind air
quality at that deadline, not at some
later date.’’ Id. at 1204 (emphasis
added). The EPA interprets the court’s
holding in Maryland as requiring the
states and the Agency, under the good
neighbor provision, to assess downwind
air quality as expeditiously as
practicable and no later than the next
applicable attainment date,37 which at
the time of EPA’s proposed and final
actions on the SIPs addressed in this
action is the Moderate area attainment
date under CAA section 181 for ozone
nonattainment. The Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS is August 3, 2024.38 Thus, 2023
is now the appropriate year for analysis
of interstate transport obligations for the
2015 ozone NAAQS, because the 2023
ozone season is the last relevant ozone
season during which achieved
emissions reductions in linked upwind
states could assist downwind states
with meeting the August 3, 2024,
Moderate area attainment date for the
2015 ozone NAAQS.
The EPA recognizes that the
attainment date for nonattainment areas
classified as Marginal for the 2015
ozone NAAQS was August 3, 2021.
Under the Maryland holding, any
necessary emissions reductions to
satisfy interstate transport obligations
should have been implemented by no
later than this date. At the time of the
statutory deadline to submit interstate
transport SIPs (October 1, 2018), many
states relied upon the EPA’s modeling of
the year 2023, and no state provided an
alternative analysis using a 2021
analytic year (or the prior 2020 ozone
season). However, the EPA must act on
SIP submissions using the information
available at the time it takes such action,
37 The EPA notes that the court in Maryland did
not have occasion to evaluate circumstances in
which the EPA may determine that an upwind
linkage to a downwind air quality problem exists
at Steps 1 and 2 of the interstate transport
framework by a particular attainment date, but for
reasons of impossibility or profound uncertainty the
Agency is unable to mandate upwind pollution
controls by that date. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at
320. The D.C. Circuit noted in Wisconsin that upon
a sufficient showing, these circumstances may
warrant flexibility in effectuating the purpose of the
interstate transport provision.
38 See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303;
Additional Air Quality Designations for the 2015
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 83
FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
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and it is now past 2021. In this
circumstance, the EPA does not believe
it would be appropriate to evaluate
states’ obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as of an attainment date
that is wholly in the past, because the
Agency interprets the interstate
transport provision as forward looking.
See 86 FR 23054, 23074; see also
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322 (rejecting
Delaware’s argument that the EPA
should have used an analytic year of
2011 instead of 2017). Consequently, in
this proposal the EPA will use the
analytical year of 2023 to evaluate each
state’s CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) SIP
submission with respect to the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
In Step 1, the EPA identifies
monitoring sites that are projected to
have problems attaining and/or
maintaining the NAAQS in the 2023
analytic year. Where the EPA’s analysis
shows that a site does not fall under the
definition of a nonattainment or
maintenance receptor, that site is
excluded from further analysis under
the EPA’s 4-step interstate transport
framework. For sites that are identified
as a nonattainment or maintenance
receptor in 2023, the EPA proceeds to
the next step of the 4-step interstate
transport framework by identifying
which upwind states contribute to those
receptors above the contribution
threshold.
The EPA’s approach to identifying
ozone nonattainment and maintenance
receptors in this action 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.39
The EPA identifies nonattainment
receptors as those monitoring sites that
are projected to have average design
values that exceed the NAAQS and that
are also measuring nonattainment based
on the most recent monitored design
values. This approach is consistent with
prior transport rulemakings, such as the
CSAPR Update, where the EPA defined
nonattainment receptors as those areas
that both currently measure
nonattainment and that the EPA projects
will be in nonattainment in the analytic
year (i.e., 2023).40
39 See North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 910–11
(holding that the EPA must give ‘‘independent
significance’’ to each prong of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)).
40 See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016). This same
concept, relying on both current monitoring data
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9341
In addition, the EPA identifies a
receptor to be a ‘‘maintenance’’ receptor
for purposes of defining interference
with maintenance, consistent with the
method used in CSAPR and upheld by
the D.C. Circuit in EME Homer City
Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118,
136 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (EME Homer City
II).41 Specifically, the EPA identified
maintenance receptors as those
receptors that would have difficulty
maintaining the relevant NAAQS in a
scenario that takes into account
historical variability in air quality at
that receptor. The variability in air
quality was determined by evaluating
the ‘‘maximum’’ future design value at
each receptor based on a projection of
the maximum measured design value
over the relevant period. The EPA
interprets the projected maximum
future design value to be a potential
future air quality outcome consistent
with the meteorology that yielded
maximum measured concentrations in
the ambient data set analyzed for that
receptor (i.e., ozone conducive
meteorology). The EPA also recognizes
that previously experienced
meteorological conditions (e.g.,
dominant wind direction, temperatures,
air mass patterns) promoting ozone
formation that led to maximum
concentrations in the measured data
may reoccur in the future. The
maximum design value gives a
reasonable projection of future air
quality at the receptor under a scenario
in which such conditions do, in fact,
reoccur. The projected maximum design
value is used to identify upwind
emissions that, under those
circumstances, could interfere with the
downwind area’s ability to maintain the
NAAQS.
Recognizing that nonattainment
receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often
uses the term ‘‘maintenance-only’’ to
refer to those receptors that are not
nonattainment receptors. Consistent
with the concepts for maintenance
receptors, as described earlier, the EPA
identifies ‘‘maintenance-only’’ receptors
as those monitoring sites that have
projected average design values above
the level of the applicable NAAQS, but
that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values. In addition, those
and modeling to define nonattainment receptor,
was also applied in CAIR. See 70 FR 25241, 25249
(January 14, 2005); see also North Carolina, 531
F.3d at 913–14 (affirming as reasonable the EPA’s
approach to defining nonattainment in CAIR).
41 See 76 FR 48208 (August 8, 2011). The CSAPR
Update and Revised CSAPR Update also used this
approach. See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016) and
86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021).
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monitoring sites with projected average
design values below the NAAQS, but
with projected maximum design values
above the NAAQS are also identified as
‘‘maintenance-only’’ receptors, even if
they are currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values.
As discussed further in Section III.B.,
in response to comments, the Agency
has also taken a closer look at measured
ozone levels at monitoring sites in 2021
and 2022 for the purposes of informing
the identification of additional receptors
in 2023. We find there is a basis to
consider certain sites with elevated
ozone levels that are not otherwise
identified as receptors to be an
additional type of maintenance-only
receptor given the likelihood that ozone
levels above the NAAQS could persist at
those locations through at least 2023.
We refer to these as violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptors (‘‘violating
monitors’’). For purposes of this action,
we use this information only in a
confirmatory way for states that are
otherwise found to be linked using the
modeling-based methodology. The EPA
intends to take separate action to
address states that are linked only to
one or more violating-monitor receptors.
3. Step 2 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
In Step 2, the EPA quantifies the
contribution of each upwind state to
each receptor in the 2023 analytic year.
The contribution metric used in Step 2
is defined as the average impact from
each state to each receptor on the days
with the highest ozone concentrations at
the receptor based on the 2023
modeling. If a state’s contribution value
does not equal or exceed the threshold
of 1 percent of the NAAQS (i.e., 0.70
ppb for the 2015 ozone NAAQS), the
upwind state is not ‘‘linked’’ to a
downwind air quality problem, and the
EPA, therefore, concludes that the state
does not contribute significantly to
nonattainment or interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS in the
downwind states. However, if a state’s
contribution equals or exceeds the 1
percent threshold, the state’s emissions
are further evaluated in Step 3,
considering both air quality and cost as
part of a multi-factor analysis, to
determine what, if any, emissions might
be deemed ‘‘significant’’ and, thus, must
be eliminated pursuant to the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
In this final action, the EPA relies in
the first instance on the 1 percent
threshold for the purpose of evaluating
a state’s contribution to nonattainment
or maintenance of the 2015 ozone
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NAAQS (i.e., 0.70 ppb) at downwind
receptors. This is consistent with the
Step 2 approach that the EPA applied in
CSAPR for the 1997 ozone NAAQS,
which has subsequently been applied in
the CSAPR Update and Revised CSAPR
Update when evaluating interstate
transport obligations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS, and in the EPA’s proposals for
this action. The EPA continues to find
1 percent to be an appropriate
threshold. For ozone, as the EPA found
in the CAIR, CSAPR, and CSAPR
Update, a portion of the nonattainment
problems from anthropogenic sources in
the U.S. result from the combined
impact of relatively small contributions,
typically from multiple upwind states
and, in some cases, substantially larger
contributions from a subset of particular
upwind states, along with contributions
from in-state sources. The EPA’s
analysis shows that much of the ozone
transport problem being analyzed in this
action is still the result of the collective
impacts of contributions from upwind
states. Therefore, application of a
consistent contribution threshold is
necessary to identify those upwind
states that should have responsibility for
addressing their contribution to the
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance problems to which they
collectively contribute. Continuing to
use 1 percent of the NAAQS as the
screening metric to evaluate collective
contribution from many upwind states
also allows the EPA (and states) to apply
a consistent framework to evaluate
interstate emissions transport under the
interstate transport provision from one
NAAQS to the next. See 81 FR 74518;
see also 86 FR 23085 (reviewing and
explaining rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR
48237–38, for selection of 1 percent
threshold).
The EPA’s August 2018 memorandum
recognizes that in certain circumstances,
a state may be able to establish that an
alternative contribution threshold of 1
ppb is justifiable. Where a state relies on
this alternative threshold in their SIP
submission, and where that state
determined that it was not linked at
Step 2 using the alternative threshold,
the EPA evaluated whether the state
provided a technically sound
assessment of the appropriateness of
using this alternative threshold based on
the facts and circumstances underlying
its application in the particular SIP
submission. The states covered by this
action that rely on a contribution
threshold other than 1 percent of the
NAAQS in their 2015 ozone NAAQS
good neighbor SIP submission are
Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan,
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Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and
Utah. Ohio also criticized the 1 percent
of the NAAQS threshold, though it
acknowledged it was linked above
either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1
ppb contribution threshold. Nevada also
criticized the 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold, but ultimately
relied on it to support its submission.
In the proposals for this action, the
EPA evaluated each states’ support for
the use of an alternative threshold at
Step 2 (e.g., 1 ppb), and additionally
shared its experience since the issuance
of the August 2018 memorandum
regarding use of alternative thresholds
at Step 2. The EPA solicited comment
on the subject as it considered the
appropriateness of rescinding the
memorandum.42 The EPA received
numerous comments related to both the
EPA’s evaluation of SIP submissions
relying on an alternative threshold, and
the EPA’s experience with alternative
thresholds. The EPA is not, at this time
rescinding the August 2018
memorandum; however, for purposes of
evaluating contribution thresholds for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, the EPA
continues to find the use of an
alternative threshold problematic for the
reasons stated at proposal. Regardless of
the EPA’s position on the August 2018
memorandum, the EPA continues to
find that the arguments put forth in the
SIP submissions of by Alabama,
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, and Utah, as well
as arguments in comments received on
these actions, to be inadequate. See
Section V.B.7 and the RTC Document
for additional detail.
4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
Consistent with the EPA’s
longstanding approach to eliminating
significant contribution and interference
with maintenance, at Step 3, a
multifactor assessment of potential
emissions controls is conducted for
states linked at Steps 1 and 2. The EPA’s
analysis at Step 3 in prior Federal
actions addressing interstate transport
requirements has primarily focused on
an evaluation of cost-effectiveness of
potential emissions controls (on a
marginal cost-per-ton basis), the total
emissions reductions that may be
achieved by requiring such controls (if
applied across all linked upwind states),
and an evaluation of the air quality
impacts such emissions reductions
would have on the downwind receptors
to which a state is linked; other factors
may potentially be relevant if
42 See,
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adequately supported. In general, where
the EPA’s or state-provided alternative
air quality and contribution modeling
establishes that a state is linked at Steps
1 and 2, it will be insufficient at Step
3 for a state merely to point to its
existing rules requiring control
measures as a basis for SIP approval. In
general, the emissions-reducing effects
of all existing emissions control
requirements are already reflected in the
future year projected air quality results
of the modeling for Steps 1 and 2. If the
state is shown to still be linked to one
or more downwind receptor(s) despite
these existing controls, but that state
believes it has no outstanding good
neighbor obligations, the EPA expects
the state to provide sufficient
justification to support a conclusion by
the EPA that the state has adequate
provisions prohibiting ‘‘any source or
other type of emissions activity within
the State from emitting any air pollutant
in amounts which will’’ ‘‘contribute
significantly to nonattainment in, or
interfere with maintenance by,’’ any
other State with respect to the NAAQS.
See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
While the EPA has not prescribed a
particular method for this assessment,
as many commenters note, the EPA
expects states at a minimum to present
a sufficient technical evaluation. This
would typically include information on
emissions sources, applicable control
technologies, emissions reductions,
costs, cost effectiveness, and downwind
air quality impacts of the estimated
reductions, before concluding that no
additional emissions controls should be
required.43 The EPA responds to
comment on issues related to Step 3 in
Section V.B.8. and in the RTC
document.
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5. Step 4 of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
At Step 4, states (or the EPA) develop
permanent and federally-enforceable
control strategies to achieve the
emissions reductions determined to be
necessary at Step 3 to eliminate
significant contribution to
nonattainment or interference with
43 Because no state included new enforceable
emissions control measures in the submissions
under review here, we focus our analysis on
whether states justified that no additional controls
were required. As examples of general approaches
for how a Step 3 analysis could be conducted for
their sources, states could look to the CSAPR
Update, 81 FR 74504, 74539–51; CSAPR, 76 FR
48208, 48246–63; CAIR, 70 FR 25162, 25195–229;
or the NOX SIP Call, 63 FR 57356, 57399–405. See
also Revised CSAPR Update, 86 FR 23054, 23086–
23116. Consistently across these rulemakings, the
EPA has developed emissions inventories, analyzed
different levels of control stringency at different
cost thresholds, and assessed resulting downwind
air quality improvements.
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maintenance of the NAAQS.44 For a
state linked at Steps 1 and 2 to rely on
an emissions control measure at Step 3
to address its interstate transport
obligations, that measure must be
included in the state’s SIP so that it is
permanent and federally enforceable.
See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D) (‘‘Each
such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate
provisions. . . .’’). See also CAA
section 110(a)(2)(A); Committee for a
Better Arvin v. EPA, 786 F.3d 1169,
1175–76 (9th Cir. 2015) (holding that
measures relied on by a state to meet
CAA requirements must be included in
the SIP).
III. The EPA’s Updated Air Quality and
Contribution Analysis
As noted in Section II, the EPA relied
in part on its 2016v2 emissions
platform-based air quality modeling to
support its proposed interstate transport
actions taken in 2022. Following receipt
of comments, the EPA updated this
modeling, incorporating new
information received to create the
2016v3 emissions inventory and making
additional updates to improve model
performance. Using the 2016v3
emissions inventory, the EPA evaluated
modeling projections for air quality
monitoring sites and considered current
ozone monitoring data at these sites to
identify receptors that are anticipated to
have problems attaining or maintaining
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
This section presents a summary of
the methodology and results of the
2016v3 modeling of 2023, along with
the application of the EPA’s Step 1 and
Step 2 methodology for identifying
receptors and upwind states that
contribute to those receptors. We also
explain that current measured ozone
levels based on data for 2021 and
preliminary data for 2022 at other
monitoring sites (i.e., monitoring sites
that are not projected to be receptors in
2023 based on air quality modeling)
confirm the likely continuation of
elevated ozone levels in 2023 at these
locations and confirm that nearly all
upwind states in this action are also
linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to
one or more of these monitors.
While all of this information
compiled by the EPA (both the
modeling and monitoring data) plays a
critical role in the basis for this final
action, the EPA has also thoroughly
evaluated the modeling information and
other analyses and arguments presented
by the upwind states in their SIP
submittals. Our evaluation of the states’
analyses was generally set forth in the
44 The EPA notes that any controls included in an
approved SIP are federally-enforceable.
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proposals, and the EPA in this final
action has responded to comments on
our evaluation of the various
information and arguments made by
states. The EPA’s final decision to
disapprove these states’ SIP submittals
is based on our evaluation of the entire
record, recognizing that states possess
the authority in the first instance to
propose how they would address their
significant contribution to air quality
problems in other states. Nonetheless, as
explained in the proposals, and in this
document and supporting materials in
the docket, we conclude that no state
included in this action effectively
demonstrated that it will not be linked
to at least one air quality receptor in
2023, and none of these states’ various
arguments for alternative approaches
ultimately present a satisfactory basis
for the EPA to approve these states’ SIP
submissions.
A. Description of Air Quality Modeling
for the Final Action
In this section, the Agency describes
the air quality modeling performed
consistent with Steps 1 and 2 of the 4step interstate transport framework to
(1) Identify locations where it expects
nonattainment or maintenance problems
with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS
for the 2023 analytic year, and (2)
quantify the contributions from
anthropogenic emissions from upwind
states to downwind ozone
concentrations at monitoring sites
projected to be in nonattainment or have
maintenance problems for the 2015
ozone NAAQS in 2023. This section
includes information on the air quality
modeling platform used in support of
the final SIP disapproval action with a
focus on the base year and future base
case emissions inventories. The EPA
also provides the projection of 2023
ozone concentrations and the interstate
contributions for 8-hour ozone. The
Final Action AQM TSD in Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 contains
more detailed information on the air
quality modeling aspects supporting our
final action on these SIP submissions.
1. Public Review of Air Quality
Modeling Information for the Proposed
Action
The EPA provided several
opportunities to comment on the
emissions modeling platform and air
quality modeling results that were used
for the proposed SIP submission
actions. On September 20, 2021, the
EPA publicly released via our web page
updated emissions inventories (2016v2)
and requested comment from states and
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MJOs on these data.45 In January 2022,
the EPA released air quality modeling
results including projected ozone design
values and contributions from 2023
based on the 2016v2 emissions. At that
time the EPA indicated its intent to use
these data to support upcoming
transport rulemakings. Then, on
February 22, 2022, the EPA published
proposed disapprovals for 19 interstate
transport SIP submissions using the
modeling data released in January 2022
and the emissions inventories shared in
September 2021.46 The EPA provided a
60-day comment period on these
proposals. On May 24, 2022, the EPA
proposed disapprovals for an additional
four states’ interstate transport SIP
submissions using the same modeling
platform, and provided a 62-day
comment period.47 The EPA provided a
30-day comment period beginning on
October 25, 2022, on the proposed
disapproval of Alabama’s June 21, 2022,
SIP submission, which relied on the
same modeling platform as the other
noted proposals.48 In addition to its
proposed disapprovals, the EPA also
proposed approval of Iowa’s, Arizona’s,
and Colorado’s SIP submissions using
the 2016v2 modeling and provided 30day comment periods. 87 FR 9477
(February 22, 2022) (Iowa); 87 FR 37776
(June 24, 2022) (Arizona); and 87 FR
27050 (May 6, 2022) (Colorado).
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2. Overview of Air Quality Modeling
Platform
The EPA used version 3 of the 2016based modeling platform (i.e., 2016v3)
for the air quality modeling for this final
SIP disapproval action. This modeling
platform includes 2016 base year
emissions from anthropogenic and
natural sources and future year
projected anthropogenic emissions for
2023.49 The emissions data contained in
the 2016v3 platform represent an update
to the 2016 version 2 inventories used
for the proposal modeling.
The air quality modeling for this final
disapproval action was performed for a
45 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/
2016v2-platform.
46 These proposals are listed in footnote 5 of this
action.
47 The EPA also relied on this same modeling data
to support proposed Federal Implementation Plans
(FIPs) resolving interstate transport obligations for
27 states for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. 87 FR 20036
(April 6, 2022). The EPA allowed 60 days to receive
comments on the proposed FIP rule, including
acceptance of comment on the 2016v2 emissions
inventory-based modeling platform. The EPA then
allowed for an additional 15 days via an extension
of the comment period. 87 FR 29108 (May 12,
2022).
48 87 FR 64412, 64413.
49 The 2016v3 platform also includes projected
emissions for 2026. However, the 2026 data are not
applicable and were not used in this final action.
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modeling region (i.e., modeling domain)
that covers the contiguous 48 states
using a horizontal resolution of 12 x 12
km. The EPA used the CAMx version
7.10 for air quality modeling which is
the same model that the EPA used for
the proposed rule air quality
modeling.50 Additional information on
the 2016-based air quality modeling
platform can be found in the Final
Action AQM TSD.
Comments: Commenters noted that
the 2016 base year summer maximum
daily average 8-hour (MDA8) ozone
predictions from the proposal modeling
were biased low compared to the
corresponding measured concentrations
in certain locations. In this regard,
commenters said that model
performance statistics for a number of
monitoring sites, particularly those in
portions of the West and in the area
around Lake Michigan, were outside the
range of published performance criteria
for normalized mean bias (NMB) and
normalized mean error (NME) of less
than plus or minus 15 percent and less
than 25 percent, respectively.51
Comments say the EPA must investigate
the factors contributing to low bias and
make necessary corrections to improve
model performance in the modeling
supporting final SIP actions. Some
commenters said that the EPA should
include NOX emissions from lightning
strikes and assess the treatment of other
background sources of ozone to improve
model performance for the final action.
Additional information on the
comments on model performance can be
found in the RTC document for this
final SIP disapproval action.
EPA Response: In response to these
comments the EPA examined the
temporal and spatial characteristics of
model under prediction to investigate
the possible causes of under prediction
of MDA8 ozone concentrations in
different regions of the U.S. in the
proposal modeling. The EPA’s analysis
indicates that the under prediction was
most extensive during May and June
with less bias during July and August in
most regions of the U.S. For example, in
the Upper Midwest region model under
prediction was larger in May and June
compared to July through September.
Specifically, the normalized mean bias
for days with measured concentrations
greater than or equal to 60 ppb
50 Ramboll Environment and Health, January
2021, https://www.camx.com.
51 Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G.
Russell, M. Talat Odman, Greg Yarwood & Naresh
Kumar (2017) Recommendations on statistics and
benchmarks to assess photochemical model
performance, Journal of the Air & Waste
Management Association, 67:5, 582–598, DOI:
10.1080/10962247.1265027.
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improved from a 21.4 percent under
prediction for May and June to a 12.6
percent under prediction in the period
July through September. As described in
the AQM TSD, the seasonal pattern in
bias in the Upper Midwest region
improves somewhat gradually with time
from the middle of May to the latter part
of June. In view of the seasonal pattern
in bias in the Upper Midwest and in
other regions of the U.S., the EPA
focused its investigation of model
performance on model inputs that, by
their nature, have the largest temporal
variation within the ozone season.
These inputs include emissions from
biogenic sources and lightning NOX,
and contributions from transport of
international anthropogenic emissions
and natural sources into the U.S. Both
biogenic and lightning NOX emissions
in the U.S. dramatically increase from
spring to summer.52 53 In contrast, ozone
transported into the U.S. from
international anthropogenic and natural
sources peaks during the period March
through June, with lower contributions
during July through September.54 55 To
investigate the impacts of the sources,
the EPA conducted sensitivity model
runs which focused on the effects on
model performance of adding NOX
emissions from lightning strikes, using
updated biogenic emissions, and using
an alternative approach (described in
more detail later in this section) for
quantifying transport of ozone and
precursor pollutants into the U.S. from
international anthropogenic and natural
sources. In the air quality modeling for
proposal, the amount of transport from
international sources was based on a
simulation of the hemispheric version of
the Community Multi-scale Air Quality
52 Guenther, A.B., 1997. Seasonal and spatial
variations in natural volatile organic compound
emissions. Ecol. Appl. 7, 34–45. https://dx.doi.org/
10.1890/1051-0761(1997)
007[0034:SASVIN]2.0.CO;2. Guenther, A., Hewitt,
C.N., Erickson, D., Fall, R.
53 Kang D, Mathur R, Pouliot GA, Gilliam RC,
Wong DC. Significant ground-level ozone attributed
to lightning-induced nitrogen oxides during
summertime over the Mountain West States. NPJ
Clim Atmos Sci. 2020 Jan 30;3:6. doi: 10.1038/
s41612–020–0108–2. PMID: 32181370; PMCID:
PMC7075249.
54 Jaffe DA, Cooper OR, Fiore AM, Henderson BH,
Tonnesen GS, Russell AG, Henze DK, Langford AO,
Lin M, Moore T. Scientific assessment of
background ozone over the U.S.: Implications for air
quality management. Elementa (Wash DC).
2018;6(1):56. doi: 10.1525/elementa.309. PMID:
30364819; PMCID: PMC6198683.
55 Henderson, B.H., P. Dolwick, C. Jang, A., Eyth,
J. Vukovich, R. Mathur, C. Hogrefe, N. Possiel, G.
Pouliot, B. Timin, K.W. Appel, 2019. Global
Sources of North American Ozone. Presented at the
18th Annual Conference of the UNC Institute for the
Environment Community Modeling and Analysis
System (CMAS) Center, October 21–23, 2019.
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Model (H–CMAQ) 56 for 2016. The
outputs from this hemispheric modeling
were then used to provide boundary
conditions for the national scale air
quality modeling at proposal.57 Overall,
H–CMAQ tends to under predict
daytime ozone concentrations at rural
and remote monitoring sites across the
U.S. during the spring of 2016 whereas
the predictions from the GEOS-Chem
global model 58 were generally less
biased.59 During the summer of 2016
both models showed varying degrees of
over prediction with GEOS-Chem
showing somewhat greater over
prediction, compared to H–CMAQ. In
view of those results, the EPA examined
the impacts of using GEOS-Chem as an
alternative to H–CMAQ for providing
boundary conditions for the modeling
supporting this final action.
For the lightning NOX, biogenics, and
GEOS-Chem sensitivity runs, the EPA
reran the proposal modeling using each
of these inputs, individually. Results
from these sensitivity runs indicate that
each of the three updates provides an
improvement in model performance.
However, by far the greatest
improvement in modeling performance
is attributable to the use of GEOS-Chem.
In view of these results the EPA has
included lightning NOX emissions,
updated biogenic emissions, and
international transport from GEOSChem in the air quality modeling
supporting final SIP actions. Details on
the results of the individual sensitivity
runs can be found in the AQM TSD. For
the air quality modeling supporting
final SIP actions, model performance
based on days in 2016 with measured
56 Mathur, R., Gilliam, R., Bullock, O.R., Roselle,
S., Pleim, J., Wong, D., Binkowski, F., and 1 Streets,
D.: Extending the applicability of the community
multiscale air quality model to 2 hemispheric
scales: motivation, challenges, and progress. In:
Steyn DG, Trini S (eds) Air 3 pollution modeling
and its applications, XXI. Springer, Dordrecht, pp
175–179, 2012.
57 Boundary conditions are the concentrations of
pollutants along the north, east, south, and west
boundaries of the air quality modeling domain.
Boundary conditions vary in space and time and are
typically obtained from predictions of global or
hemispheric models. Information on how boundary
conditions were developed for modeling supporting
EPA’s final SIP actions can be found in the AQM
TSD.
58 I. Bey, D.J. Jacob, R.M. Yantosca, J.A. Logan,
B.D. Field, A.M. Fiore, Q. Li, H.Y. Liu, L.J. Mickley,
M.G. Schultz. Global modeling of tropospheric
chemistry with assimilated meteorology: model
description and evaluation. J. Geophys. Res.
Atmos., 106 (2001), pp. 23073–23095, 10.1029/
2001jd000807.
59 Henderson, B.H., P. Dolwick, C. Jang, A., Eyth,
J. Vukovich, R. Mathur, C. Hogrefe, G. Pouliot, N.
Possiel, B. Timin, K.W. Appel, 2022. Meteorological
and Emission Sensitivity of Hemispheric Ozone and
PM2.5. Presented at the 21st Annual Conference of
the UNC Institute for the Environment Community
Modeling and Analysis System (CMAS) Center,
October 17–19, 2022.
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MDA8 ozone greater than or equal to 60
ppb is considerably improved (i.e., less
bias and error) compared to the proposal
modeling in nearly all regions. For
example, in the Upper Midwest, which
includes monitoring sites along Lake
Michigan, the normalized mean bias
improved from a 19 percent under
prediction to a 6.9 percent under
prediction and in the Southwest region,
which includes monitoring sites in
Denver, Las Cruces, El Paso, and Salt
Lake City, normalized mean bias
improved from a 13.6 percent under
prediction to a 4.8 percent under
prediction.60 In all regions, the
normalized mean bias and normalized
mean error statistics for high ozone days
based on the modeling supporting final
SIP actions are within the range of
performance criteria benchmarks (i.e.,
less than plus or minus 15 percent for
normalized mean bias and less than 25
percent for normalized mean error).61
Additional information on model
performance information is provided in
the AQM TSD. In summary, the EPA
included emissions of lightning NOX, as
requested by commenters, and
investigated and addressed concerns
about model performance for the
modeling supporting final SIP actions.
3. Emissions Inventories
The EPA developed emissions
inventories to support air quality
modeling for this final action, including
emissions estimates for EGUs, non-EGU
point sources (i.e., stationary point
sources), stationary nonpoint sources,
onroad mobile sources, nonroad mobile
sources, other mobile sources, wildfires,
prescribed fires, and biogenic emissions
that are not the direct result of human
activities. The EPA’s air quality
modeling relies on this comprehensive
set of emissions inventories because
emissions from multiple source
categories are needed to model ambient
air quality and to facilitate comparison
of model outputs with ambient
measurements.
Prior to the modeling of air quality,
the emissions inventories must be
processed into a format that is
appropriate for the air quality model to
use. To prepare the emissions
inventories for air quality modeling, the
EPA processed the emissions
60 A comparison of model performance from the
proposal modeling to the final modeling for
individual monitoring sites can be found in the
docket for this final action.
61 Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G.
Russell, M. Talat Odman, Greg Yarwood & Naresh
Kumar (2017) Recommendations on statistics and
benchmarks to assess photochemical model
performance, Journal of the Air & Waste
Management Association, 67:5, 582–598, DOI:
10.1080/10962247.1265027.
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9345
inventories using the Sparse Matrix
Operator Kernel Emissions (SMOKE)
Modeling System version 4.9 to produce
the gridded, hourly, speciated, modelready emissions for input to the air
quality model. Additional information
on the development of the emissions
inventories and on data sets used during
the emissions modeling process are
provided in the document titled
‘‘Technical Support Document (TSD):
Preparation of Emissions Inventories for
the 2016v3 North American Emissions
Modeling Platform,’’ hereafter known as
the ‘‘2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.’’
This TSD is available in the docket for
this action.62
4. Foundation Emissions Inventory
The 2016v3 emissions platform is
comprised of data from various sources
including data developed using models,
methods, and source datasets that
became available in calendar years 2020
through 2022, in addition to data
retained from the Inventory
Collaborative 2016 version 1 (2016v1)
Emissions Modeling Platform, released
in October 2019. The 2016v1 platform
was developed through a national
collaborative effort between the EPA
and state and local agencies along with
MJOs. The 2016v2 platform used to
support the proposed action included
updated data, models and methods as
compared to 2016v1. The 2016v3
platform includes updates implemented
in response to comments along with
other updates to the 2016v2 platform
such as corrections and the
incorporation of updated data sources
that became available prior to the
2016v3 inventories being developed.
Several commenters noted that the
2016v2 platform did not include NOX
emissions that resulted from lightning
strikes. To address this, lightning NOX
emissions were computed and included
in the 2016v3 platform.
For this final action, the EPA
developed emissions inventories for the
base year of 2016 and the projected year
of 2023. The 2023 inventories represent
changes in activity data and of predicted
emissions reductions from on-the-books
actions, planned emissions control
installations, and promulgated Federal
measures that affect anthropogenic
emissions. The 2016 emissions
inventories for the U.S. primarily
include data derived from the 2017
National Emissions Inventory (2017
62 See Preparation of Emissions Inventories for
the 2016v3 North American Emissions Modeling
Platform TSD, also available at https://
www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v3platform.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
NEI) 63 and data specific to the year of
2016. The following sections provide an
overview of the construct of the 2016v3
emissions and projections. The fire
emissions were unchanged between the
2016v2 and 2016v3 emissions
platforms. For the 2016v3 platform, the
biogenic emissions were updated to use
the latest available versions of the
Biogenic Emissions Inventory System
and associated land use data to help
address comments related to a
degradation in model performance in
the 2016v2 platform as compared to the
2016v1 platform. Details on the
construction of the inventories are
available in the 2016v3 Emissions
Modeling TSD. Details on how the EPA
responded to comments related to
emissions inventories are available in
the RTC document for this action.
Development of emissions inventories
for annual NOX and sulfur dioxide (SO2)
emissions for EGUs in the 2016 base
year inventory are based primarily on
data from continuous emissions
monitoring systems (CEMS) and other
monitoring systems allowed for use by
qualifying units under 40 CFR part 75,
with other EGU pollutants estimated
using emissions factors and annual heat
input data reported to the EPA. For
EGUs not reporting under part 75, the
EPA used data submitted to the NEI by
state, local, and tribal agencies. The
final action inventories include updates
made in response to comments on the
proposed actions including the
proposed SIP submission disapprovals
and the proposed FIP. The Air
Emissions Reporting Rule, (80 FR 8787;
February 19, 2015), requires that Type A
point sources large enough to meet or
exceed specific thresholds for emissions
be reported to the EPA via the NEI every
year, while the smaller Type B point
sources must only be reported to EPA
every 3 years. In response to comments,
emissions data for EGUs that did not
have data submitted to the NEI specific
to the year 2016 were filled in with data
from the 2017 NEI. For more
information on the details of how the
2016 EGU emissions were developed
and prepared for air quality modeling,
see the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling
TSD.
The EPA projected 2023 baseline EGU
emissions using version 6 of the
Integrated Planning Model (IPM)
(www.epa.gov/airmarkets/powersectormodeling). IPM, developed by ICF
Consulting, is a state-of-the-art, peerreviewed, multi-regional, dynamic,
deterministic linear programming model
63 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-inventories/
2017-national-emissions-inventory-nei-technicalsupport-document-tsd.
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of the contiguous U.S. electric power
sector. It provides forecasts of least cost
capacity expansion, electricity dispatch,
and emissions control strategies while
meeting energy demand and
environmental, transmission, dispatch,
and reliability constraints. The EPA has
used IPM for over two decades to better
understand power sector behavior under
future business-as-usual conditions and
to evaluate the economic and emissions
impacts of prospective environmental
policies. The model is designed to
reflect electricity markets as accurately
as possible. The EPA uses the best
available information from utilities,
industry experts, gas and coal market
experts, financial institutions, and
government statistics as the basis for the
detailed power sector modeling in IPM.
The model documentation provides
additional information on the
assumptions discussed here as well as
all other model assumptions and
inputs.64 The EPA relied on the same
model platform as in the proposals but
made substantial updates to reflect
public comments on near-term fossil
fuel market price volatility and updated
fleet information reflecting Summer
2022 U.S. Energy Information Agency
(EIA) 860 data, unit-level comments,
and additional updates to the National
Electric Energy Data System (NEEDS)
inventory.
The IPM version 6—Updated Summer
2021 Reference Case incorporated recent
updates through the summer 2022 to
account for updated Federal and state
environmental regulations (including
Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS),
Clean Energy Standards (CES) and other
state mandates), fleet changes
(committed EGU retirements and new
builds), electricity demand, technology
cost and performance assumptions from
recent data for renewables adopting
from National Renewable Energy Lab
(NREL’s) Annual Technology Baseline
2020 and for fossil sources from the
EIA’s Annual Energy Outlook (AEO)
2020. Natural gas and coal price
projections reflect data developed in fall
2020 but updated in summer 2022 to
capture near-term price volatility and
current market conditions. The
inventory of EGUs provided as an input
to the model was the NEEDS fall 2022
version and is available on the EPA’s
website.65 This version of NEEDS
reflects announced retirements and
64 Detailed information and documentation of the
EPA’s Base Case, including all the underlying
assumptions, data sources, and architecture
parameters can be found on the EPA’s website at:
https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/power-sectormodeling.
65 Available at https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/
national-electric-energy-data-system-needs-v6.
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under construction new builds known
as of early summer 2022. This projected
base case accounts for the effects of the
final Mercury and Air Toxics Standards
rule, CSAPR, the CSAPR Update, the
Revised CSAPR Update, New Source
Review enforcement settlements, the
final Effluent Limitation Guidelines
(ELG) Rule, the Coal Combustion
Residual (CCR) Rule, and other on-thebooks Federal and state rules (including
renewable energy tax credit extensions
from the Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2021) through early 2021
impacting emissions of SO2, NOX,
directly emitted particulate matter,
carbon dioxide (CO2), and power plant
operations. It also includes final actions,
up through the Summer 2022, the EPA
has taken to implement the Regional
Haze Rule and best available retrofit
technology (BART) requirements.
Documentation of IPM version 6 and
NEEDS, along with updates, is in Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 and
available online at https://www.epa.gov/
airmarkets/power-sector-modeling.
Non-EGU point source emissions are
mostly consistent with those in the
proposal modeling except where they
were updated in response to comments.
Several commenters mentioned that
point source emissions carried forward
from 2014 NEI were not the best
estimates of 2017 emissions. Thus,
emissions sources in 2016v2 that had
been projected from the 2014 NEI in the
proposal were replaced with emissions
based on the 2017 NEI. Point source
emissions submitted to the 2016 NEI or
to the 2016v1 platform development
process specifically for the year 2016
were retained in 2016v3.
The 2023 non-EGU point source
emissions were grown from 2016 to
2023 using factors based on AEO 2022
and reflect emissions reductions due to
known national and local rules, control
programs, plant closures, consent
decrees, and settlements that could be
computed as reductions to specific units
by July 2022.
Aircraft emissions and ground
support equipment at airports are
represented as point sources and are
based on adjustments to emissions in
the January 2021 version of the 2017
NEI. The EPA developed and applied
factors to adjust the 2017 airport
emissions to 2016 and 2023 based on
activity growth projected by the Federal
Aviation Administration Terminal Area
Forecast 2021,66 the latest available
version at the time the factors were
developed.
66 https://www.faa.gov/data_research/aviation/
taf/.
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Emissions at rail yards were
represented as point sources. The 2016
rail yard emissions are largely
consistent with the 2017 NEI rail yard
emissions. The 2016 and 2023 rail yard
emissions were developed through the
2016v1 Inventory Collaborative process.
Class I rail yard emissions were
projected based on the AEO freight rail
energy use growth rate projections for
2023 with the fleet mix assumed to be
constant throughout the period.
The EPA made multiple updates to
point source oil and gas emissions in
response to comments. For the 2016v3
modeling, the point source oil and gas
emissions for 2016 were based on the
2016v2 point inventory except that most
2014 NEI-based emissions were
replaced with 2017 NEI emissions.
Additionally, in response to comments,
state-provided emissions equivalent to
those in the 2016v1 platform were used
for Colorado, and some New Mexico
emissions were replaced with data
backcast from 2020 to 2016. To develop
inventories for 2023 for the 2016v3
platform, the year 2016 oil and gas point
source inventories were first projected
to 2021 values based on actual historical
production data, then those 2021
emissions were projected to 2023 using
regional projection factors based on
AEO 2022 projections. This was an
update from the 2016v2 approach in
which actual data were used only
through the year 2019, because 2021
data were not yet available. NOX and
VOC reductions resulting from cobenefits to New Source Performance
Standards (NSPS) for Stationary
Reciprocating Internal Combustion
Engines (RICE) are reflected, along with
Natural Gas Turbine and Process Heater
NSPS NOX controls and Oil and Gas
NSPS VOC controls. In some cases, year
2019 point source inventory data were
used instead of the projected future year
emissions except for the Western
Regional Air Partnership (WRAP) states
of Colorado, New Mexico, Montana,
Wyoming, Utah, North Dakota, and
South Dakota. The WRAP future year
inventory 67 was used in these WRAP
states in all future years except in New
Mexico where the WRAP base year
emissions were projected using the EIA
historical and AEO forecasted
production data. Estimated impacts
from the recent oil and gas rule in the
New Mexico Administrative code
20.2.50 68 were also included. Details on
the development of the projected point
67 https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_
2028_OTB_RevFinalReport_05March2020.pdf.
68 https://www.env.nm.gov/air-quality/ozonedraft-rule/ and https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/
title20/20.002.0050.html.
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and nonpoint oil and gas emissions
inventories are available in the 2016v3
Emissions Modeling TSD in Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663.
Onroad mobile sources include
exhaust, evaporative, and brake and tire
wear emissions from vehicles that drive
on roads, parked vehicles, and vehicle
refueling. Emissions from vehicles using
regular gasoline, high ethanol gasoline,
diesel fuel, and electric vehicles were
represented, along with buses that used
compressed natural gas. The EPA
developed the onroad mobile source
emissions for states other than
California using the EPA’s Motor
Vehicle Emissions Simulator (MOVES).
MOVES3 was released in November
2020 and has been followed by some
minor releases that improved the usage
of the model but that do not have
substantive impacts on the emissions
estimates. For 2016v2, MOVES3 was
run using inputs provided by state and
local agencies through the 2017 NEI
where available, in combination with
nationally available data sets to develop
a complete inventory. Onroad emissions
were developed based on emissions
factors output from MOVES3 run for the
year 2016, coupled with activity data
(e.g., vehicle miles traveled and vehicle
populations) representing the year 2016.
The 2016 activity data were provided by
some state and local agencies through
the 2016v1 process, and the remaining
activity data were derived from those
used to develop the 2017 NEI. The
onroad emissions were computed
within SMOKE by multiplying
emissions factors developed using
MOVES with the appropriate activity
data. Prior to computing the final action
emissions for 2016, updates to some
onroad inputs were made in response to
comments and to implement
corrections. Onroad mobile source
emissions for California were consistent
with the updated emissions data
provided by the state for the final
action.
The 2023 onroad emissions reflect
projected changes to fuel properties and
usage, along with the impact of the rules
included in MOVES3 for each of those
years. MOVES emissions factors for the
year 2023 were used. A comprehensive
list of control programs included for
onroad mobile sources is available in
the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.
Year 2023 activity data for onroad
mobile sources were provided by some
state and local agencies, and otherwise
were projected to 2023 by first
projecting the 2016 activity to year 2019
based on county level vehicle miles
traveled (VMT) from the Federal
Highway Administration. The VMT
were held flat from 2019 to 2021 to
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9347
account for pandemic impacts, and then
projected from 2021 to 2023 using AEO
2022-based factors.69 Recent updates to
inspection and maintenance programs
in North Carolina and Tennessee were
reflected in the MOVES inputs for the
modeling supporting this final action.
The 2023 onroad mobile emissions were
computed within SMOKE by
multiplying the respective emissions
factors developed using MOVES with
the year-specific activity data. Prior to
computing the final action emissions for
2023, the EPA made updates to some
onroad inputs in response to comments
and to implement corrections.
The commercial marine vessel (CMV)
emissions in the 2016 base case
emissions inventory for this action were
based on those in the 2017 NEI. Factors
were applied to adjust the 2017 NEI
emissions backward to represent
emissions for the year 2016. The CMV
emissions are consistent with the
emissions for the 2016v1 platform CMV
emissions released in February 2020
although, in response to comments, the
EPA implemented an improved process
for spatially allocating CMV emissions
along state and county boundaries for
the modeling supporting this final
action.
The EPA developed nonroad mobile
source emissions inventories (other than
CMV, locomotive, and aircraft
emissions) for 2016 and 2023 from
monthly, county, and process level
emissions output from MOVES3. Types
of nonroad equipment include
recreational vehicles, pleasure craft, and
construction, agricultural, mining, and
lawn and garden equipment.70 The
nonroad emissions for the final action
were unchanged from those at the
proposal. The nonroad mobile
emissions control programs include
reductions to locomotives, diesel
engines, and recreational marine
engines, along with standards for fuel
sulfur content and evaporative
emissions. A comprehensive list of
69 VMT data for 2020 were the latest available at
the time of final rule data development but were
heavily impacted by the pandemic and unusable to
project to 2023; in addition, it was determined that
chaining factors based on AEO 2020 and AEO2021
obtain the needed factors led to unrealistic artifacts,
thus only AEO 2022 data were used.
70 Line haul locomotives are also considered a
type of nonroad mobile source but the emissions
inventories for locomotives were not developed
using MOVES3. Year 2016 and 2023 locomotive
emissions were developed through the 2016v1
process, and the year 2016 emissions are mostly
consistent with those in the 2017 NEI. The
projected locomotive emissions for 2023 were
developed by applying factors to the base year
emissions using activity data based on AEO freight
rail energy use growth rate projections along with
emissions rates adjusted to account for recent
historical trends.
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control programs included for mobile
sources is available in the 2016v3
Emissions Modeling TSD.
For stationary nonpoint sources, some
emissions in the 2016 base case
emissions inventory come directly from
the 2017 NEI, others were adjusted from
the 2017 NEI to represent 2016 levels,
and the remaining emissions including
those from oil and gas, fertilizer, and
solvents were computed specifically to
represent 2016. Stationary nonpoint
sources include evaporative sources,
consumer products, fuel combustion
that is not captured by point sources,
agricultural livestock, agricultural
fertilizer, residential wood combustion,
fugitive dust, and oil and gas sources.
The emissions sources derived from the
2017 NEI include agricultural livestock,
fugitive dust, residential wood
combustion, waste disposal (including
composting), bulk gasoline terminals,
and miscellaneous non-industrial
sources such as cremation, hospitals,
lamp breakage, and automotive repair
shops. A recent method to compute
solvent VOC emissions was used.71
Where comments were provided
about projected control measures or
changes in nonpoint source emissions,
those inputs were first reviewed by the
EPA. Those found to be based on
reasonable data for affected emissions
sources were incorporated into the
projected inventories for 2023 to the
extent possible. Where possible,
projection factors based on the AEO
used data from AEO 2022, the most
recent AEO at the time available at the
time the inventories were developed.
Federal regulations that impact the
nonpoint sources were reflected in the
inventories. Adjustments for state fuel
sulfur content rules for fuel oil in the
Northeast were included along with
solvent controls applicable within the
northeast ozone transport region (OTR)
states. Details are available in the
2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.
Nonpoint oil and gas emissions
inventories for many states were
developed based on outputs from the
2017 NEI version of the EPA Oil and
Gas Tool using activity data for year
2016. Production-related emissions data
from the 2017 NEI were used for
Oklahoma, 2016v1 emissions were used
for Colorado and Texas productionrelated sources to respond to comments.
Data for production-related nonpoint oil
and gas emissions in the States of
Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming were obtained from the
71 https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-5079-2021.
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WRAP baseline inventory.72 A
California Air Resources Boardprovided inventory was used for 2016
oil and gas emissions in California.
Nonpoint oil and gas inventories for
2023 were developed by first projecting
the 2016 oil and gas inventories to 2021
values based on actual production data.
Next, those 2021 emissions were
projected to 2023 using regional
projection factors by product type based
on AEO 2022 projections. A 2017–2019
average inventory was used for oil and
natural gas exploration emissions in
2023 everywhere except for California
and in the WRAP states in which data
from the WRAP future year inventory 73
were used. NOX and VOC reductions
that are co-benefits to the NSPS for RICE
are reflected, along with Natural Gas
Turbines and Process Heaters NSPS
NOX controls and NSPS Oil and Gas
VOC controls. The WRAP future year
inventory was used for oil and natural
gas production sources in 2023 except
in New Mexico where the WRAP Base
year emissions were projected using the
EIA historical and AEO forecasted
production data. Estimated impacts
from the New Mexico Administrative
Code 20.2.50 were included.
B. Air Quality Modeling To Identify
Nonattainment and Maintenance
Receptors
This section describes the air quality
modeling and analyses that the EPA
performed in Step 1 to identify locations
where the Agency expects there to be
nonattainment or maintenance receptors
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023.
Where the EPA’s analysis shows that an
area or site does not fall under the
definition of a nonattainment or
maintenance receptor in 2023, that site
is excluded from further analysis under
the EPA’s good neighbor framework.
1. Approach for Identifying Receptors
In the proposed actions, the EPA
applied the same approach used in the
CSAPR Update and the Revised CSAPR
Update to identify nonattainment and
maintenance receptors for the 2008
ozone NAAQS.74 The EPA’s approach
gives independent effect to both the
‘‘contribute significantly to
nonattainment’’ and the ‘‘interfere with
maintenance’’ prongs of section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), consistent with the
D.C. Circuit’s direction in North
Carolina. Further, in its decision on the
remand of CSAPR from the Supreme
Court in the EME Homer City II case, the
72 https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_
Report_Baseline_17Sep2019.pdf.
73 https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_
2028_OTB_RevFinalReport_05March2020.pdf.
74 See 86 FR 23078–79.
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D.C. Circuit confirmed that the EPA’s
approach to identifying maintenance
receptors in CSAPR comported with the
court’s prior instruction to give
independent meaning to the ‘‘interfere
with maintenance’’ prong in the good
neighbor provision.75
In the CSAPR Update and the Revised
CSAPR Update, the EPA identified
nonattainment receptors as those
monitoring sites that are projected to
have average design values that exceed
the NAAQS and that are also measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
monitored design values. This approach
is consistent with prior transport
rulemakings, such as the NOX SIP Call
and CAIR, where the EPA defined
nonattainment receptors as those areas
that both currently monitor
nonattainment and that the EPA projects
will be in nonattainment in the future
compliance year.
The Agency explained in the NOX SIP
Call and CAIR and then reaffirmed in
the CSAPR Update that the EPA has the
most confidence in our projections of
nonattainment for those counties that
also measure nonattainment for the
most recent period of available ambient
data. The EPA separately identified
maintenance receptors as those
receptors that would have difficulty
maintaining the relevant NAAQS in a
scenario that accounts for historical
variability in air quality at that receptor.
The variability in air quality was
determined by evaluating the
‘‘maximum’’ future design value at each
receptor based on a projection of the
maximum measured design value over
the relevant period. The EPA interprets
the projected maximum future design
value to be a potential future air quality
outcome consistent with the
meteorology that yielded maximum
measured concentrations in the ambient
data set analyzed for that receptor (i.e.,
ozone conducive meteorology). The EPA
also recognizes that previously
experienced meteorological conditions
(e.g., dominant wind direction,
temperatures, and air mass patterns)
promoting ozone formation that led to
maximum concentrations in the
measured data may reoccur in the
future. The maximum design value
gives a reasonable projection of future
air quality at the receptor under a
scenario in which such conditions do,
in fact, reoccur. The projected
maximum design value is used to
identify upwind emissions that, under
those circumstances, could interfere
with the downwind area’s ability to
maintain the NAAQS.
75 EME
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Therefore, applying this methodology
for this action, the EPA assessed the
magnitude of the maximum projected
design values for 2023 at each receptor
in relation to the 2015 ozone NAAQS
and, where such a value exceeds the
NAAQS, the EPA determined that
receptor to be a ‘‘maintenance’’ receptor
for purposes of defining interference
with maintenance, consistent with the
method used in CSAPR and upheld by
the D.C. Circuit in EME Homer City II.76
That is, monitoring sites with a
maximum design value that exceeds the
NAAQS are projected to have
maintenance problems in the future
analytic years.
Recognizing that nonattainment
receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often
uses the term ‘‘maintenance-only’’ to
refer to receptors that are not also
nonattainment receptors. Consistent
with the concepts for maintenance
receptors, as described earlier, the EPA
identifies ‘‘maintenance-only’’ receptors
as those monitoring sites that have
projected average design values above
the level of the applicable NAAQS, but
that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official design values. In addition, those
monitoring sites with projected average
design values below the NAAQS, but
with projected maximum design values
above the NAAQS are also identified as
‘‘maintenance only’’ receptors, even if
they are currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent
official certified design values.77
Comment: The EPA received
comments claiming that the projected
design values for 2023 were biased low
compared to recent measured data.
Commenters noted that a number of
monitoring sites that are projected to be
below the NAAQS in 2023 based on the
EPA’s modeling for the proposed action
are currently measuring nonattainment
based on data from 2020 and 2021. One
commenter requested that the EPA
determine whether its past modeling
tends to overestimate or underestimate
actual observed design values. If EPA
finds that the agency’s model tends to
underestimate future year design values,
the commenter requests that EPA re-run
its ozone modeling, incorporating
parameters that account for this
tendency.
76 EME
Homer City II, 795 F.3d at 136.
https://www.epa.gov/air-trends/air-qualitydesign-values for design value reports. At the time
of this action, the most recent reports of certified
design values available are for the calendar year
2021. The 2022 values are considered
‘‘preliminary’’ and therefore subject to change
before certification.
77 See
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EPA Response: In response to
comments, the EPA compared the
projected 2023 design values based on
the proposal modeling to recent trends
in measured data. As a result of this
analysis, the EPA agrees that current
data indicate that there are monitoring
sites at risk of continued nonattainment
in 2023 even though the model
projected average and maximum design
values at these sites are below the
NAAQS (i.e., these sites would not be
modeling-based receptors at Step 1).
While the EPA has confidence in the
reliability of the modeling for projecting
air quality conditions and contributions
in future years, it would not be
reasonable to ignore recent measured
ozone levels in many areas that are
clearly not fully consistent with certain
concentrations in the Step 1 analysis for
2023. Therefore, the EPA has developed
an additional maintenance-only
receptor category, which includes what
we refer to as ‘‘violating monitor’’
receptors, based on current ozone
concentrations measured by regulatory
ambient air quality monitoring sites.
Specifically, the EPA has identified
monitoring sites with measured 2021
and preliminary 2022 design values and
4th high maximum daily 8-hour average
(MDA8) ozone in both 2021 and 2022
(preliminary data) that exceed the
NAAQS as having the greatest risk of
continuing to have a problem attaining
the standard in 2023. These criteria
sufficiently consider measured air
quality data so as to avoid including
monitoring sites that have measured
nonattainment data in recent years but
could reasonably be anticipated to not
have a nonattainment or maintenance
problem in 2023, in line with our
modeling results. Our methodology is
intended only to identify those sites that
have sufficiently poor ozone levels that
there is clearly a reasonable expectation
that an ozone nonattainment or
maintenance problem will persist in the
2023 ozone season. Moreover, the 2023
ozone season is so near in time that
recent measured ozone levels can be
used to reasonably project whether an
air quality problem is likely to persist.
We view this approach to identifying
additional receptors in 2023 as the best
means of responding to the comments
on this issue in this action, while also
identifying all transport receptors.
For purposes of this action, we will
treat these violating monitors as an
additional type of maintenance-only
receptor. We acknowledge that the
traditional modeling plus monitoring
methodology we used at proposal and in
prior ozone transport rules would
otherwise have identified such sites as
being in attainment in 2023. Because
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9349
our modeling did not identify these sites
as receptors, we do not believe it is
sufficiently certain that these sites will
be in nonattainment that they should be
considered nonattainment receptors. In
the face of this uncertainty in the
record, we regard our ability to consider
such sites as receptors for purposes of
good neighbor analysis under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to be a function
of the requirement to prohibit emissions
that interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS; even if an area may be
projected to be in attainment, we have
reliable information indicating that
there is a clear risk that attainment will
not in fact be achieved in 2023. Thus,
our authority for treating these sites as
receptors at Step 1 in 2023 flows from
the responsibility in CAA section
110(a)(2)(i)(I) to prohibit emissions that
interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS. See, e.g., North Carolina, 531
F.3d at 910–11 (failing to give effect to
the interfere with maintenance clause
‘‘provides no protection for downwind
areas that, despite EPA’s predictions,
still find themselves struggling to meet
NAAQS due to upwind interference
. . . .’’) (emphasis added). Recognizing
that no modeling can perfectly forecast
the future, and ‘‘a degree of imprecision
is inevitable in tackling the problem of
interstate air pollution,’’ this approach
in the Agency’s judgement best balances
the need to avoid both ‘‘under-control’’
and ‘‘overcontrol,’’ EME Homer City,
572 U.S. at 523. The EPA’s analysis of
these additional receptors further is
explained in Section III.C.
However, because we did not propose
to apply this expansion of the basis for
regulation under the good neighbor
provision receptor-identification
methodology as the sole basis for
finding an upwind state linked, in this
action we are only using this receptor
category on a confirmatory basis. That
is, for states that we find linked based
on our traditional modeling-based
methodology in 2023, we find in this
final analysis that the linkage at Step 2
is strengthened and confirmed if that
state is also linked to one or more
‘‘violating-monitor’’ receptors. If a state
is only linked to a violating-monitor
receptor in this final analysis, we are
deferring taking final action on that
state’s SIP submittal. This is the case for
the State of Tennessee. Among the states
that previously had their transport SIPs
approved for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,
the EPA has also identified a linkage to
violating-monitor receptors for the State
of Kansas. The EPA intends to further
review its air quality modeling results
and recent measured ozone levels, and
we intend to address these states’ good
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neighbor obligations as expeditiously as
practicable in a future action.
2. Methodology for Projecting Future
Year Ozone Design Values
Consistent with the EPA’s modeling
guidance, the 2016 base year and future
year air quality modeling results were
used in a relative sense to project design
values for 2023.78 That is, the ratios of
future year model predictions to base
year model predictions are used to
adjust ambient ozone design values up
or down depending on the relative
(percent) change in model predictions
for each location. The EPA’s modeling
guidance recommends using measured
ozone concentrations for the 5-year
period centered on the base year as the
air quality data starting point for future
year projections. This average design
value is used to dampen the effects of
inter-annual variability in meteorology
on ozone concentrations and to provide
a reasonable projection of future air
quality at the receptor under average
conditions. In addition, the Agency
calculated maximum design values from
within the 5-year base period to
represent conditions when meteorology
is more favorable than average for ozone
formation. Because the base year for the
air quality modeling used in this final
action is 2016, measured data for 2014–
2018 (i.e., design values for 2016, 2017,
and 2018) were used to project average
and maximum design values in 2023.
The ozone predictions from the 2016
and future year air quality model
simulations were used to project 2016–
2018 average and maximum ozone
design values to 2023 using an approach
similar to the approach in the EPA’s
guidance for attainment demonstration
modeling. This guidance recommends
using model predictions from the 3 x 3
array of grid cells surrounding the
location of the monitoring site to
calculate a Relative Response Factor
(RRF) for that site. However, the
guidance also notes that an alternative
array of grid cells may be used in certain
situations where local topographic or
geographical feature (e.g., a large water
body or a significant elevation change)
may influence model response.
The 2016–2018 base period average
and maximum design values were
multiplied by the RRF to project each of
these design values to 2023. In this
manner, the projected design values are
grounded in monitored data, and not the
absolute model-predicted future year
78 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018.
Modeling Guidance for Demonstrating Attainment
of Air Quality Goals for Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional
Haze, Research Triangle Park, NC. https://
www.epa.gov/scram/state-implementation-plan-sipattainment-demonstration-guidance.
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concentrations. Following the approach
in the CSAPR Update and the Revised
CSAPR Update, the EPA also projected
future year design values based on a
modified version of the ‘‘3 x 3’’
approach for those monitoring sites
located in coastal areas. In this
alternative approach, the EPA
eliminated from the RRF calculations
the modeling data in those grid cells
that are dominated by water (i.e., more
than 50 percent of the area in the grid
cell is water) and that do not contain a
monitoring site (i.e., if a grid cell is more
than 50 percent water but contains an
air quality monitor, that cell would
remain in the calculation). The choice of
more than 50 percent of the grid cell
area as water as the criteria for
identifying overwater grid cells is based
on the treatment of land use in the
Weather Research and Forecasting
model (WRF). Specifically, in the WRF
meteorological model those grid cells
that are greater than 50% overwater are
treated as being 100 percent overwater.
In such cases the meteorological
conditions in the entire grid cell reflect
the vertical mixing and winds over
water, even if part of the grid cell also
happens to be over land with land-based
emissions, as can often be the case for
coastal areas. Overlaying land-based
emissions with overwater meteorology
may be representative of conditions at
coastal monitors during times of onshore flow associated with synoptic
conditions or sea-breeze or lake-breeze
wind flows. But there may be other
times, particularly with off-shore wind
flow, when vertical mixing of landbased emissions may be too limited due
to the presence of overwater
meteorology. Thus, for our modeling the
EPA projected average and maximum
design values at individual monitoring
sites based on both the ‘‘3 x 3’’ approach
as well as the alternative approach that
eliminates overwater cells in the RRF
calculation for near-coastal areas (i.e.,
‘‘no water’’ approach). The projected
2023 design values using both the ‘‘3 x
3’’ and ‘‘no-water’’ approaches are
provided in the docket for this final
action. Both approaches result in the
same set of receptors in 2023. That is,
monitoring sites that are identified as
receptors in 2023 based on the ‘‘3 x 3’’
approach are also receptors based on the
‘‘no water’’ approach.
Consistent with the truncation and
rounding procedures for the 8-hour
ozone NAAQS, the projected design
values are evaluated after truncation to
integers in units of ppb. Therefore,
projected design values that are greater
than or equal to 71 ppb are considered
to be violating the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
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For those sites that are projected to be
violating the NAAQS based on the
average design values in 2023, the
Agency examined the measured design
values for 2021, which are the most
recent official measured design values at
the time of this final action.
As noted earlier, the Agency proposes
to identify nonattainment receptors in
this rulemaking as those sites that are
violating the NAAQS based on current
measured air quality through 2021 and
have projected average design values of
71 ppb or greater. Maintenance-only
receptors include both: (1) Those sites
with projected average design values
above the NAAQS that are currently
measuring clean data (i.e., ozone design
values below the level of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS in 2021) and (2) those sites
with projected average design values
below the level of the NAAQS, but with
projected maximum design values of 71
ppb or greater. In addition to the
maintenance-only receptors, ozone
nonattainment receptors are also
maintenance receptors because the
projected maximum design values for
each of these sites is always greater than
or equal to the average design value.
Further, as explained previously in this
section, the EPA identifies certain
monitoring sites as ‘‘violating monitor’’
maintenance-only receptors based on
2021 and 2022 measured ozone levels.
The monitoring sites that the Agency
projects to be nonattainment and
maintenance receptors for the ozone
NAAQS in the 2023 base case are used
for assessing the contribution of
emissions in upwind states to
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
as part of this final action.
3. 2023 Nonattainment and
Maintenance-Only Receptors for the
Final Action
In this section we provide information
on modeling-based design values and
measured data for monitoring sites
identified as nonattainment or
maintenance-only receptors in 2023 for
this final action. Table III.B–1 of this
action contains the 2016-centered base
period average and maximum 8-hour
ozone design values, the 2023 projected
average and maximum design values
and the measured 2021 design values
for monitoring sites that are projected to
be nonattainment receptors in 2023.
Table III.B–2 of this action contains this
same information for monitoring sites
that are projected to be maintenanceonly receptors in 2023, based on air
quality modeling. Table III.B–3 of this
action contains the 2023 projected
average and maximum design values
and 2021 design values and 4th high
E:\FR\FM\13FER2.SGM
13FER2
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
MDA8 ozone concentrations and
preliminary 2020 design values and 4th
high MDA8 ozone concentrations for
monitoring sites identified as violating
monitor maintenance-only receptors.
The design values for all monitoring
sites in the U.S. are provided in the
docket for this action. Additional details
9351
on the approach for projecting average
and maximum design values are
provided in the AQM TSD.
TABLE III.B–1—AVERAGE AND MAXIMUM 2016-CENTERED AND 2023 BASE CASE 8-HOUR OZONE DESIGN VALUES AND
2021 DESIGN VALUES (PPB) AT PROJECTED NONATTAINMENT RECEPTORS a
Monitor ID
060650016
060651016
080350004
080590006
080590011
090010017
090013007
090019003
481671034
482010024
490110004
490353006
490353013
551170006
State
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
County
CA
CA
CO
CO
CO
CT
CT
CT
TX
TX
UT
UT
UT
WI
2016 centered
average
2016 centered
maximum
2023 average
79.0
99.7
77.3
77.3
79.3
79.3
82.0
82.7
75.7
79.3
75.7
76.3
76.5
80.0
80.0
101
78
78
80
80
83
83
77
81
78
78
77
81
72.2
91.0
71.3
72.8
73.5
71.6
72.9
73.3
71.5
75.1
72.0
72.6
73.3
72.7
Riverside ...................
Riverside ...................
Douglas ....................
Jefferson ...................
Jefferson ...................
Fairfield .....................
Fairfield .....................
Fairfield .....................
Galveston .................
Harris ........................
Davis .........................
Salt Lake ..................
Salt Lake ..................
Sheboygan ...............
2023
maximum
2021
73.1
92.2
71.9
73.5
74.1
72.2
73.8
73.6
72.8
76.7
74.2
74.2
73.8
73.6
78
95
83
81
83
79
81
80
72
74
78
76
76
72
a 2016-centered base period average design values and projected average and maximum design values are reported with 1 digit to the right of
the decimal, as recommended in the EPA’s modeling guidance. The 2016 maximum design values and 2021 design values are truncated to integer values consistent with ozone design value reporting convention in appendix U of 40 CFR part 50.
TABLE III.B–2—AVERAGE AND MAXIMUM 2016-CENTERED AND 2023 BASE CASE 8-HOUR OZONE DESIGN VALUES AND
2021 DESIGN VALUES (PPB) AT PROJECTED MAINTENANCE-ONLY RECEPTORS
Monitor ID
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
040278011
080690011
090099002
170310001
170314201
170317002
350130021
350130022
350151005
350250008
480391004
481210034
481410037
482010055
482011034
482011035
530330023
550590019
551010020
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
State
County
AZ
CO
CT
IL
IL
IL
NM
NM
NM
NM
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
WA
WI
WI
17:17 Feb 10, 2023
2016 centered
maximum
2023 average
72.3
75.7
79.7
73.0
73.3
74.0
72.7
71.3
69.7
67.7
74.7
78.0
71.3
76.0
73.7
71.3
73.3
78.0
76.0
74
77
82
77
77
77
74
74
74
70
77
80
73
77
75
75
77
79
78
70.4
70.9
70.5
68.2
68.0
68.5
70.8
69.7
69.7
69.8
70.4
69.8
69.8
70.9
70.1
67.8
67.6
70.8
69.7
Yuma ........................
Larimer .....................
New Haven ...............
Cook .........................
Cook .........................
Cook .........................
Dona Ana .................
Dona Ana .................
Eddy .........................
Lea ............................
Brazoria ....................
Denton ......................
El Paso .....................
Harris ........................
Harris ........................
Harris ........................
King ..........................
Kenosha ...................
Racine ......................
In total, in 2023 there are a total of
projected 33 modeling-based receptors
nationwide including 14 nonattainment
receptors in 9 different counties and 19
maintenance-only receptors in 13
additional counties (Harris County, TX,
has both nonattainment and
maintenance-only receptors).
As shown in Table III.B–3 of this
action, there are 49 monitoring sites that
VerDate Sep<11>2014
2016 centered
average
Jkt 259001
are identified as ‘‘violating-monitor’’
maintenance-only receptors in 2023.As
noted earlier in this section, the EPA
uses the approach of considering
‘‘violating-monitor’’ maintenance-only
receptors as confirmatory of the
proposal’s identification of receptors
and does not implicate additional
linked states in this final action, Rather,
using this approach serves to strengthen
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
2023
maximum
72.1
72.1
72.6
71.9
71.5
71.3
72.1
72.4
74.1
72.2
72.5
71.6
71.4
71.9
71.3
71.3
71.0
71.7
71.5
2021
67
77
82
71
74
73
80
75
77
66
75
74
75
77
71
71
64
74
73
the analytical basis for our Step 2
findings by establishing that many
upwind states covered in this action are
also projected to contribute above 1
percent of the NAAQS to these
additional ‘‘violating monitor’’
maintenance-only receptors.
E:\FR\FM\13FER2.SGM
13FER2
9352
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE III.B–3—AVERAGE AND MAXIMUM 2023 BASE CASE 8-HOUR OZONE, AND 2021 AND PRELIMINARY 2022 DESIGN
VALUES (PPB) AND 4TH HIGH CONCENTRATIONS AT VIOLATING MONITORS a
Monitor ID
40070010 ................
40130019 ................
40131003 ................
40131004 ................
40131010 ................
40132001 ................
40132005 ................
40133002 ................
40134004 ................
40134005 ................
40134008 ................
40134010 ................
40137020 ................
40137021 ................
40137022 ................
40137024 ................
40139702 ................
40139704 ................
40139997 ................
40218001 ................
80013001 ................
80050002 ................
80310002 ................
80310026 ................
90079007 ................
90110124 ................
170310032 ..............
170311601 ..............
181270024 ..............
260050003 ..............
261210039 ..............
320030043 ..............
350011012 ..............
350130008 ..............
361030002 ..............
390850003 ..............
480290052 ..............
480850005 ..............
481130075 ..............
481211032 ..............
482010051 ..............
482010416 ..............
484390075 ..............
484391002 ..............
484392003 ..............
484393009 ..............
490571003 ..............
550590025 ..............
550890008 ..............
State
2023
average
County
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
AZ
CO
CO
CO
CO
CT
CT
IL
IL
IN
MI
MI
NV
NM
NM
NY
OH
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
TX
UT
WI
WI
Gila .........................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Maricopa .................
Pinal ........................
Adams .....................
Arapahoe ................
Denver ....................
Denver ....................
Middlesex ................
New London ...........
Cook .......................
Cook .......................
Porter ......................
Allegan ....................
Muskegon ...............
Clark .......................
Bernalillo .................
Dona Ana ................
Suffolk .....................
Lake ........................
Bexar ......................
Collin .......................
Dallas ......................
Denton ....................
Harris ......................
Harris ......................
Tarrant ....................
Tarrant ....................
Tarrant ....................
Tarrant ....................
Weber .....................
Kenosha ..................
Ozaukee .................
67.9
69.8
70.1
70.2
68.3
63.8
69.6
65.8
65.7
62.3
65.6
63.8
67.0
69.8
68.2
67.0
66.9
65.3
70.5
67.8
63.0
68.0
63.6
64.5
68.7
65.5
67.3
63.8
63.4
66.2
67.5
68.4
63.8
65.6
66.2
64.3
67.1
65.4
65.3
65.9
65.3
68.8
63.8
64.1
65.2
67.5
69.3
67.6
65.2
2023
maximum
2021
69.5
70.0
70.7
70.8
69.2
64.1
70.5
65.8
66.6
62.3
66.5
66.9
67.0
70.1
69.1
67.9
68.1
66.2
70.5
69.0
63.0
68.0
64.8
64.8
69.0
67.0
69.8
64.5
64.6
67.4
68.4
69.4
66.0
66.3
68.0
64.6
67.8
66.0
66.5
67.7
66.3
70.4
64.7
65.7
65.9
68.1
70.3
70.7
65.8
2021
4th high
2022 P
77
75
80
80
79
74
78
75
73
73
74
74
76
77
76
74
75
74
76
75
72
80
72
75
74
73
75
72
72
75
74
73
72
72
73
72
73
75
71
76
74
73
75
72
72
74
71
72
71
76
77
80
81
80
78
79
75
73
75
74
76
77
77
78
76
77
77
79
76
77
80
74
77
73
72
75
73
73
75
79
75
73
76
74
74
74
74
71
77
73
73
76
77
72
75
74
73
72
2022 P
4th high
75
78
83
81
80
79
79
81
73
79
74
77
77
78
76
74
72
76
82
73
79
84
77
83
78
75
77
72
72
78
75
74
76
79
79
72
78
81
73
85
83
78
76
76
74
75
77
72
72
74
76
78
77
78
81
77
72
71
73
71
75
75
75
79
77
77
76
76
77
75
73
71
72
73
71
72
71
73
73
82
74
74
78
74
76
72
73
72
77
72
71
77
80
72
75
71
71
72
a 2022 preliminary design values are based on 2022 measured MDA8 concentrations provided by state air agencies to the EPA’s Air Quality
System (AQS), as of January 3, 2023.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
C. Air Quality Modeling To Quantify
Upwind State Contributions
This section documents the
procedures the EPA used to quantify the
impact of emissions from specific
upwind states on ozone design values in
2023 for the identified downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors. The EPA used CAMx
photochemical source apportionment
modeling to quantify the impact of
emissions in specific upwind states on
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance receptors for 8-hour ozone.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:17 Feb 10, 2023
Jkt 259001
CAMx employs enhanced source
apportionment techniques that track the
formation and transport of ozone from
specific emissions sources and
calculates the contribution of sources
and precursors to ozone for individual
receptor locations. The benefit of the
photochemical model source
apportionment technique is that all
modeled ozone at a given receptor
location in the modeling domain is
tracked back to specific sources of
emissions and boundary conditions to
fully characterize culpable sources.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
The EPA performed nationwide, statelevel ozone source apportionment
modeling using the CAMx Ozone
Source Apportionment Technology/
Anthropogenic Precursor Culpability
Analysis (OSAT/APCA) technique 79 to
quantify the contribution of 2023 NOX
and VOC emissions from all sources in
each state to the corresponding
projected ozone design values in 2023 at
79 As part of this technique, ozone formed from
reactions between biogenic VOC and NOX with
anthropogenic NOX and VOC are assigned to the
anthropogenic emissions.
E:\FR\FM\13FER2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
air quality monitoring sites. The CAMx
OSAT/APCA model run was performed
for the period May 1 through September
30 using the projected future base case
emissions and 2016 meteorology for this
time period. In the source
apportionment modeling the Agency
tracked (i.e., tagged) the amount of
ozone formed from anthropogenic
emissions in each state individually as
well as the contributions from other
sources (e.g., natural emissions).
In the state-by-state source
apportionment model run, the EPA
tracked the ozone formed from each of
the following tags:
• States—anthropogenic NOX
emissions and VOC emissions from
individual state (emissions from all
anthropogenic sectors in a given state
were combined);
• Biogenics—biogenic NOX and VOC
emissions domain-wide (i.e., not by
state);
• Boundary Concentrations—
concentrations transported into the air
quality modeling domain;
• Tribes—the emissions from those
tribal lands for which the Agency has
point source inventory data emissions
modeling platform (EPA did not model
the contributions from individual
tribes);
• Canada and Mexico—
anthropogenic emissions from those
sources in the portions of Canada and
Mexico included within the modeling
domain (the EPA did not model the
contributions from Canada and Mexico
separately);
• Fires—combined emissions from
wild and prescribed fires domain-wide
(i.e., not by state); and
• Offshore—combined emissions
from offshore marine vessels and
offshore drilling platforms within the
modeling domain.
The contribution modeling provided
contributions to ozone from
anthropogenic NOX and VOC emissions
in each state, individually. The
contributions to ozone from chemical
reactions between biogenic NOX and
VOC emissions were modeled and
assigned to the ‘‘biogenic’’ category. The
contributions from wildfire and
prescribed fire NOX and VOC emissions
were modeled and assigned to the
‘‘fires’’ category. That is, the
contributions from the ‘‘biogenic’’ and
‘‘fires’’ categories are not assigned to
individual states nor are they included
in the state contributions.
For the Step 2 analysis, the EPA
calculated a contribution metric that
considers the average contribution on
the 10 highest ozone concentration days
(i.e., top 10 days) in 2023 using the same
approach as the EPA used in the
proposed action and in the Revised
CSAPR Update.80 This average
contribution metric is intended to
provide a reasonable representation of
the contribution from individual states
to projected future year design values,
based on modeled transport patterns
and other meteorological conditions
generally associated with modeled high
ozone concentrations at the receptor. An
average contribution metric constructed
in this manner ensures the magnitude of
the contributions is directly related to
the magnitude of the ozone design value
at each site.
The analytic steps for calculating the
contribution metric for the 2023 analytic
year are as follows:
(1) Calculate the 8-hour average
contribution from each source tag to
individual ozone monitoring site for the
time period of the 8-hour daily
maximum modeled concentrations in
2023;
9353
(2) Average the contributions and
average the concentrations for the top 10
modeled ozone concentration days in
2023;
(3) Divide the average contribution by
the corresponding average concentration
to obtain a Relative Contribution Factor
(RCF) for each monitoring site;
(4) Multiply the 2023 average design
value by the 2023 RCF at each site to
produce the average contribution metric
values in 2023; 81
(5) Truncate the average contribution
metric values to two digits to the right
of the decimal for comparison to the 1
percent of the NAAQS screening
threshold (0.70 ppb)
The resulting contributions from each
tag to each monitoring site in the U.S.
for 2023 can be found in the docket for
this final action. Additional details on
the source apportionment modeling and
the procedures for calculating
contributions can be found in the AQM
TSD. The EPA’s response to comments
on the method for calculating the
contribution metric can be found in the
RTC document for this final action.
The largest contribution from each
state that is the subject of this final
action to modeled 8-hour ozone
nonattainment and modeling-based
maintenance receptors in downwind
states in 2023 are provided in Table
III.C–1 of this action. The largest
contribution from each state to the
additional ‘‘violating monitor’’
maintenance-only receptors is provided
in Table III.C–2 of this action. All states
that are linked to one or more
nonattainment or maintenance-only
receptors are also linked to one or more
violating monitor maintenance
receptors, except for Minnesota.
TABLE III.C–1—LARGEST CONTRIBUTION BY STATE TO DOWNWIND 8-HOUR OZONE NONATTAINMENT AND MAINTENANCE
RECEPTORS IN 2023 (ppb)
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
nonattainment
receptor
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Upwind state
Alabama .......................................................................................................................................................
Arkansas ......................................................................................................................................................
California ......................................................................................................................................................
Illinois ...........................................................................................................................................................
Indiana .........................................................................................................................................................
Kentucky ......................................................................................................................................................
Louisiana ......................................................................................................................................................
80 The use of daily contributions on the top 10
concentration days for calculating the average
contribution metric is designed to be consistent
with the method specified in the modeling
guidance in terms of the number of days to use
when projecting future year design values.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:17 Feb 10, 2023
Jkt 259001
81 Note that a contribution metric value was not
calculated for any receptor at which there were
fewer than 5 days with model-predicted MDA8
ozone concentrations greater than or equal to 60
ppb in 2023. Eliminating from the Step 2 evaluation
any receptors for which the modeling does not meet
this criterion ensures that upwind state
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
0.75
0.94
35.27
13.89
8.90
0.84
9.51
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
maintenance-only
receptor
0.65
1.21
6.31
19.09
10.03
0.79
5.62
contributions are based on the days with the highest
ozone projections. This criterion is consistent with
the criterion for projecting design values, as
recommended in the EPA’s modeling guidance. In
the modeling for this final action, the monitoring
site in Seattle, Washington (530330023), was the
only receptor that did not meet this criterion.
E:\FR\FM\13FER2.SGM
13FER2
9354
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE III.C–1—LARGEST CONTRIBUTION BY STATE TO DOWNWIND 8-HOUR OZONE NONATTAINMENT AND MAINTENANCE
RECEPTORS IN 2023 (ppb)—Continued
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
nonattainment
receptor
Upwind state
Maryland ......................................................................................................................................................
Michigan .......................................................................................................................................................
Minnesota ....................................................................................................................................................
Mississippi ....................................................................................................................................................
Missouri ........................................................................................................................................................
Nevada .........................................................................................................................................................
New Jersey ..................................................................................................................................................
New York .....................................................................................................................................................
Ohio .............................................................................................................................................................
Oklahoma .....................................................................................................................................................
Texas ...........................................................................................................................................................
Utah .............................................................................................................................................................
West Virginia ................................................................................................................................................
Wisconsin .....................................................................................................................................................
TABLE III.C–2—LARGEST CONTRIBUTION TO DOWNWIND 8-HOUR OZONE
‘‘VIOLATING
MONITOR’’
MAINTENANCE-ONLY RECEPTORS (ppb)
Upwind State
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
violating
monitor
maintenanceonly
receptor
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Alabama ..........................................
Arkansas .........................................
California .........................................
Illinois ..............................................
Indiana .............................................
Kentucky ..........................................
Louisiana .........................................
Maryland ..........................................
Michigan ..........................................
Minnesota ........................................
Mississippi .......................................
Missouri ...........................................
Nevada ............................................
New Jersey .....................................
New York .........................................
Ohio .................................................
Oklahoma ........................................
Texas ...............................................
Utah .................................................
West Virginia ...................................
Wisconsin ........................................
0.79
1.16
6.97
16.53
9.39
1.57
5.06
1.14
3.47
0.64
1.02
2.95
1.11
8.00
12.08
2.25
1.57
3.83
1.46
1.79
5.10
IV. Summary of Bases for Disapproval
As explained in Section II, the EPA
relies on the 4-step interstate transport
framework to evaluate obligations under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). At
proposal, the EPA used this framework
to guide its evaluation of each state’s
SIP submission. While the EPA used
this framework to maintain a nationally
consistent and equitable approach to
interstate transport, the contents of each
individual state’s submission were
evaluated on their own merits, and the
EPA considered the facts and
information, including information from
the Agency, available to the state at the
time of its submission, in addition to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:17 Feb 10, 2023
Jkt 259001
more recent air quality and contribution
information. Here we provide a brief,
high level overview of the SIP
submissions and the EPA’s evaluation
and key bases for disapproval. These
summaries are presented for ease of
reference and to direct the public to the
most relevant portions of the proposals
and final rule record for further
information. The full basis for the EPA’s
disapprovals is available in relevant
Federal Register notifications of
proposed disapproval for each state, in
the technical support documents
informing the proposed and final action,
and in the responses to comments in
Section V and the RTC document. In
general, except as otherwise noted, the
comments and updated air quality
information did not convince the
Agency that a change from proposal was
warranted for any state. The exceptions
are that the EPA is deferring action at
this time on the proposed disapprovals
for Tennessee and Wyoming. Further,
the EPA is finalizing partial approvals of
prong 1 (‘‘significant contribution to
nonattainment’’) for Minnesota and
Wisconsin because they are linked only
to maintenance-only receptors; the EPA
is finalizing a partial disapproval with
respect to prong 2 (‘‘interference with
maintenance’’) obligations for these two
states.
A. Alabama
In the 2016v3 modeling, Alabama is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor. It is also linked to one
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
0.75 ppb to Galveston County, Texas
(AQS Site ID 481671034).82 A full
82 The highest-magnitude downwind contribution
from each state is based on the contributions to
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1.13
1.59
0.36
1.32
1.87
1.11
8.38
16.10
2.05
0.79
1.03
1.29
1.37
0.21
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
maintenance-only
receptor
1.28
1.56
0.85
0.91
1.39
1.13
5.79
11.29
1.98
1.01
4.74
0.98
1.49
2.86
summary of Alabama’s June 21, 2022,
SIP submission, as well as Alabama’s
previous submission history, was
provided in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval.83 In its
submission, Alabama advocated for
discounting maintenance receptors
through use of historical data trends.
The EPA finds Alabama’s approach is
not adequately justified.84 The EPA
disagrees with Alabama’s assessment of
the 2016v2 modeling,85 and further
responds to comments on model
performance in Section III. The EPA
disagrees with Alabama’s arguments for
application of a higher contribution
threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS
at Step 2,86 and further addresses the
relevance of ‘‘significant impact levels’’
within the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration program (‘‘PSD SILs’’) in
Section V.B.6. The EPA found technical
flaws in Alabama’s back trajectory
analysis.87 The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis, and the EPA
identified several unsupported
assertions in the SIP submission.88
Alabama also argued in its SIP
submission that it had already
implemented all cost-effective controls.
However, the State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to
support such a conclusion.89 The EPA
further addresses arguments related to
modeling-based receptors and does not consider the
contributions to violating-monitor maintenanceonly receptors. Each state’s maximum contribution
to downwind violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptors is available in the Final Action AQM TSD.
83 87 FR 64419–64421.
84 Id. at 64421–64422.
85 Id. at 64422–64423.
86 Id. at 64423–64424.
87 Id. at 64424–64425.
88 Id. at 64425–64426.
89 Id.
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mobile sources in Section V.C.1.90
Additionally, as explained in Section
V.B.9,91 reliance on prior transport FIPs
such as the CSAPR Update is not a
sufficient analysis at Step 3. The State
included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.92 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Alabama’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Alabama’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
B. Arkansas
In the 2016v3 modeling, Arkansas is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor and five maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to seven
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
1.21 ppb to Brazoria County Texas (AQS
Site ID 480391004). A full summary of
Arkansas’s October 10, 2019, SIP
submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.93
The EPA disagrees with Arkansas’s
arguments for application of a higher
contribution threshold than 1 percent of
the NAAQS at Step 2, and further
addresses the relevance of PSD SILs in
Section V.B.6.94 The EPA also found
technical flaws in Arkansas’s
‘‘consistent and persistent’’ claims and
back trajectory analysis,95 and legal
flaws in the state’s arguments related to
relative contribution.96 The State did
not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.97 Arkansas argued in its SIP
submission that it had already
implemented all cost-effective controls.
However, the State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to
support such a conclusion.98 Further,
the State’s reliance on the costeffectiveness thresholds in the CSAPR
and CSAPR Update is insufficient for
the more protective 2015 ozone
NAAQS.99 The State included no
permanent and enforceable controls in
its SIP submission.100 We provide
further response to comments regarding
Arkansas’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Arkansas’s interstate
90 See
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91 See
also id. at 64425–64426.
also id. at 64426.
92 Id.
93 87
FR 9798, 9803–9806 (February 22, 2022).
at 9806–9807.
95 Id. at 9808–9809.
96 Id. at 9809–9810.
97 Id. at 9809–9810.
98 Id. at 9810.
99 Id.
100 Id. at 9811.
94 Id.
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transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
C. California
In the 2016v3 modeling, California is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to eight nonattainment
receptors and four maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to 26
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
35.27 ppb to the nonattainment receptor
located on the Morongo Band of
Missions Indians reservation (AQS Site
ID 060651016).101 A full summary of
California’s October 1, 2018, SIP
submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.102 The EPA found
technical and legal flaws in California’s
geographic, meteorological, wildfire,
and trajectories analysis, and the State’s
arguments related to local, international,
and non-anthropogenic emissions.103
The EPA further addresses the topic of
international emissions in Section
V.C.2. The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.104 California
in its SIP submission argued that it had
already implemented all cost-effective
controls. However, California provided
an insufficient evaluation of additional
control opportunities to support such a
conclusion.105 Further, the State’s
reliance on the cost-effectiveness
threshold in the CSAPR Update is
insufficient for the more protective 2015
101 We note that, consistent with the EPA’s prior
good neighbor actions in California, the regulatory
ozone monitor located on the Morongo Band of
Mission Indians (‘‘Morongo’’) reservation is a
projected downwind receptor in 2023. See
monitoring site 060651016 in Table V.D–1. of this
action. We also note that the Temecula, California,
regulatory ozone monitor is a projected downwind
receptor in 2023 and in past regulatory actions has
been deemed representative of air quality on the
Pechanga Band of Luisen˜o Indians (‘‘Pechanga’’)
reservation. See, e.g., Approval of Tribal
Implementation Plan and Designation of Air
Quality Planning Area; Pechanga Band of Luisen˜o
Mission Indians, 80 FR 18120, at 18121–18123
(April 3, 2015); see also monitoring site 060650016
in Table V.D–1. of this action. The presence of
receptors on, or representative of, the Morongo and
Pechanga reservations does not trigger obligations
for the Morongo and Pechanga Tribes. Nevertheless,
these receptors are relevant to the EPA’s assessment
of any linked upwind states’ good neighbor
obligations. See, e.g., Approval and Promulgation of
Air Quality State Implementation Plans; California;
Interstate Transport Requirements for Ozone, Fine
Particulate Matter, and Sulfur Dioxide, 83 FR 65093
(December 19, 2018). Under 40 CFR 49.4(a), tribes
are not subject to the specific plan submittal and
implementation deadlines for NAAQS-related
requirements, including deadlines for submittal of
plans addressing transport impacts. We also note
that California’s maximum contribution to a
downwind state receptor is 6.31 ppb in Yuma
County, Arizona (AQS Site ID 040278011).
102 87 FR 31448–31452.
103 Id. at 31454–31457, 31460.
104 Id. at 31458–31461.
105 Id. at 31458.
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ozone NAAQS.106 California included
no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission 107 and argued that interstate
transport is fundamentally different in
the western U.S. than in the eastern
U.S., to which the EPA responds in
Section V.C.3.108 We provide further
response to comments regarding
California’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of California’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
D. Illinois
In the 2016v3 modeling, Illinois is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to two nonattainment
receptors and three maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to six
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
19.09 ppb to Kenosha County,
Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 550590019). A
full summary of Illinois’s May 21, 2019,
SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.109 The EPA disagrees with
Illinois’s arguments for application of a
higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.110 The
state did not conduct an adequate Step
3 analysis.111 The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its
SIP submission.112 The EPA also found
technical and legal flaws in Illinois’
arguments related to ‘‘on-the-way’’
controls, participation in the Lake
Michigan Air Directors Consortium
(LADCO), and international
contributions.113 The EPA further
addresses the topic of international
contribution in Section V.C.2. Further,
as explained in Section V.B.9., states
may not rely on non-SIP measures to
meet SIP requirements, and reliance on
prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at
Step 3.114 The State included no
permanent and enforceable controls in
its SIP submission.115 We provide
further response to comments regarding
Illinois’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Illinois’s interstate
106 Id.
at 31458–31459.
at 31461.
108 See also id. at 31453.
109 Id. at 9845.
110 Id. at 9852–9853.
111 Id. at 9853–9855.
112 Id. at 9853.
113 Id. at 9853–9854.
114 See also id. at 9854.
115 Id. at 9855.
107 Id.
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F. Kentucky
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
E. Indiana
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In the 2016v3 modeling, Indiana is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to four nonattainment
receptors and six maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to 10
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 10.03 ppb to Racine County,
Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 551010020). A
full summary of Indiana’s November 2,
2018, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.116 The EPA disagrees with
Indiana’s arguments for application of a
higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.117 The
State did not conduct an adequate Step
3 analysis.118 The EPA found technical
and legal flaws in Indiana’s arguments
related to ozone concentration and
design value trends, the timing of
expected source shutdowns, local
emissions, international and offshore
contributions, Indiana’s portion of
contribution, and Indiana’s back
trajectory analysis.119 The EPA further
addresses the topic of international
emissions in Section V.C.2. Indiana
argued that it would not be costeffective to implement controls on nonEGUs. However, the State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities, for any
type of source, to support that
conclusion.120 The EPA also confirmed
that EGU shutdowns identified by
Indiana were included in the 2016v2
modeling,121 and if they were valid and
not included in the 2016v2 modeling,
then they were incorporated into the
2016v3 modeling as explained in
Section III and the 2016v3 Emissions
Modeling TSD. Further, in Section
V.B.9., states may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements.122
The State included no permanent and
enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.123 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Indiana’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Indiana’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
at 9845–9847.
117 Id. at 9855–9856.
118 Id. at 9857–9861.
119 Id. at 9858–9861.
120 Id. at 9857–9858.
121 Id. at 9858–9859.
122 See also id. at 9861.
123 Id.
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G. Louisiana
In the 2016v3 modeling, Louisiana is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to two nonattainment
receptors and five maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to 10
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
9.51 ppb to Galveston County Texas
(AQS Site ID 481671034). A full
summary of Louisiana’s November 13,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.134 The EPA disagrees with
Louisiana’s arguments for application of
a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS and disagrees
with Louisiana’s criticisms of a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold at Step 2.135 The EPA further
addresses technical comments on the 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold in Section V.B.4. Louisiana
did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.136 The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its
SIP submission.137 The EPA also found
technical flaws in Louisiana’s
‘‘consistent and persistent’’ claims,
assessment of seasonal weather patterns,
surface wind directions, and back
trajectory analysis.138 The State
included no permanent and enforceable
controls in its SIP submission.139 We
provide further response to comments
regarding Louisiana’s SIP submission in
the RTC document. The EPA is
finalizing disapproval of Louisiana’s
interstate transport SIP submission for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
124 87
131 Id.
125 Id.
132 Id.
FR 9498, 9503–9507 (February 22, 2022).
at 9509–9510.
126 Id. at 9511–9515.
127 Id. at 9512–9514.
128 Id. at 9508, 9515. The state also did not
explain its own views regarding the relevance of
these materials to its submission. Id.
129 Id. at 9511–9512.
130 See also id. at. 9512.
116 Id.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
In the 2016v3 modeling, Kentucky is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to two nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to four
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution
based on the 2016v3 modeling is 0.84
ppb to Fairfield County, Connecticut
(AQS Site ID 090019003). A full
summary of Kentucky’s January 11,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.124 Although the EPA’s
2016v3 modeling indicated a highestlevel contribution below 1 ppb, the EPA
disagrees with Kentucky’s arguments for
application of a higher contribution
threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS
at Step 2.125 Further, Kentucky is linked
above 1 ppb to a violating-monitor
receptor. The EPA addresses the
relevance of the PSD SILs in Section
V.B.6. The Commonwealth did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.126
The EPA found technical and legal
flaws in Kentucky’s arguments related
to the level and timing of upwind versus
downwind-state responsibilities, NOX
emissions trends and other air quality
information, and back-trajectory
analyses.127 The EPA also found
technical and legal flaws in certain
State-level comments submitted by
Midwest Ozone Group and attached to
Kentucky’s submission, including
arguments related to international
emissions.128 The EPA further addresses
the topics of international emissions in
Section V.C.2. Kentucky in its SIP
submission also argued that it had
already implemented all cost-effective
controls. However, the Commonwealth
included an insufficient evaluation of
additional emissions control
opportunities to support such a
conclusion.129 As explained in Section
V.B.9., states may not rely on non-SIP
measures to meet SIP requirements, and
reliance on prior transport FIPs such as
the CSAPR Update is not a sufficient
analysis at Step 3.130 The EPA also
confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that EGU
shutdowns identified by Kentucky were
included in the 2016v2 modeling, and
yet Kentucky was still linked in that
modeling.131 Kentucky in its SIP
submission advocated for lower
interstate ozone transport responsibility
for states linked only to maintenanceonly receptors. The EPA finds
Kentucky’s arguments in this regard
inadequately supported.132 The
Commonwealth included no permanent
and enforceable emissions controls in
its SIP submission.133 We provide
further response to comments regarding
Kentucky’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Kentucky’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
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at 9511–9512.
at 9514–9515.
133 Id. at 9515.
134 Id. at 9811–9812.
135 Id. at 9812, 9815–9816.
136 Id. at 9814–9816.
137 Id. at 9814. 9816.
138 Id. at 9814–9816.
139 Id. at 9816.
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H. Maryland
In the 2016v3 modeling, Maryland is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to three
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.28 ppb to New Haven County,
Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090099002). A
full summary of Maryland’s October 16,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.140 The state did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.141
The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities in its SIP
submission.142 Further, as explained in
Section V.B.9, states may not rely on
non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements, and reliance on prior
transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at
Step 3.143 The EPA also confirmed in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval that state emissions
controls and regulations identified by
Maryland were generally included in
the 2016v2 modeling, and yet Maryland
was still linked in that modeling.144 The
State included no permanent and
enforceable controls in its SIP
submission.145 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Maryland’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Maryland’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
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I. Michigan
In the 2016v3 modeling, Michigan is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to four nonattainment
receptors and six maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to eight
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.59 to Sheboygan County, Wisconsin
(AQS Site ID 551170006). A full
summary of Michigan’s March 5, 2019,
SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.146 The EPA disagrees with
Michigan’s arguments for application of
a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS as well as
criticisms of a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2.147 The
140 Id.
at 9469.
at 9470–9473.
142 Id. at 9471, 9473.
143 See also id. at 9471, 9473 n.46, 9474.
144 Id. at 9472–9473.
145 Id. at 9473–9474.
146 Id. at 9847–9848.
147 Id. at 9861–9862.
EPA further addresses technical
comments on the 1 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold in
Section V.B.4 and addresses comments
regarding the relevance of the PSD SILs
in Section V.B.6. The State did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.148
Michigan argued in its SIP submission
that additional controls would be
premature and burdensome. However,
the State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities to support such a
conclusion.149 The EPA found technical
and legal flaws in Michigan’s arguments
related to upwind-state obligations as to
maintenance-only receptors,
international emissions, relative
contribution, apportionment, and
upwind versus downwind-state
responsibilities.150 The EPA further
addresses the topics of mobile sources
and international emissions in Sections
V.C.1 and V.C.2, respectively. The EPA
also confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that the EGU
retirements identified by Michigan as
not included in the 2011-based EPA
modeling, as well as various Federal
rules, were included in the 2016v2
modeling, and yet Michigan was still
linked in that modeling.151 The State
included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.152 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Michigan’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Michigan’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
J. Minnesota
In the 2016v3 modeling, Minnesota is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one maintenance-only
receptor. It is not linked to a violatingmonitor maintenance-only receptor. Its
highest-level contribution is 0.85 ppb to
Cook County, Illinois (AQS Site ID
170310001). A full summary of
Minnesota’s October 1, 2018, SIP
submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.153 Because Minnesota was
not projected to be linked to any
receptor in 2023 in the EPA’s 2011based modeling, comments argued that
the EPA must approve the SIP
submission and not rely on new
modeling. The EPA responds to these
comments in Section V.A.4. Although
141 Id.
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148 Id.
at 9863–9867.
at 9864.
150 Id. at 9864–9867.
151 Id. at 9866.
152 Id. at 9867.
153 Id. at 9867.
149 Id.
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9357
the EPA acknowledges that Minnesota’s
Step 3 analysis was insufficient in part
because the State assumed it was not
linked at Step 2, this is ultimately
inadequate to support a conclusion that
the State’s sources do not interfere with
maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in other states in light of more recent air
quality analysis.154 The State included
no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.155 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Minnesota’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. Although EPA proposed to
disapprove both prong 1 and prong 2 of
Minnesota’s SIP submission, the present
record, including the results of the
2016v3 modeling, indicates that
Minnesota is not linked to any
nonattainment receptors.156 The EPA is
finalizing a partial approval of
Minnesota’s interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
as to prong 1 and a partial disapproval
as to prong 2.
K. Mississippi
In the 2016v3 modeling, Mississippi
is projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor and two maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to eight
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.32 ppb to Galveston County, Texas
(AQS Site ID 481671034). A full
summary of Mississippi’s September 3,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.157 In its submission,
Mississippi advocated for discounting
receptors through use of historical data
trends. The EPA finds Mississippi’s
approach is not adequately justified.158
In the 2011-based modeling,
Mississippi’s contribution to receptors
was above 1 percent of the NAAQS, but
below 1 ppb. The EPA disagrees with
Mississippi’s arguments for application
of a higher contribution threshold than
154 Id.
at 9868–9869.
at 9869.
156 The EPA received a comment that it would be
arbitrary and capricious for the EPA to finalize a
full disapproval of Tennessee’s good neighbor SIP
submission (both prong 1 and prong 2) if EPA
concluded the state is linked only to a maintenanceonly receptor (prong 2). EPA is deferring final
action on Tennessee’s good neighbor SIP
submission, but in reviewing linkages in the 2016v3
modeling we determined that Minnesota and
Wisconsin are not linked above 1 percent of the
NAAQS to any nonattainment receptors (prong 1)
but are linked to maintenance-only receptors (prong
2); these states are receiving partial approvals and
partial disapprovals.
157 87 FR 9554.
158 Id. at 9556.
155 Id.
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1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2,159
and further addresses the relevance of
the PSD SILs in Section V.B.6. The state
did not conduct a Step 3 analysis.160
The State included no evaluation of
additional emissions control
opportunities in its SIP submission.161
The State included no permanent and
enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.162 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Mississippi’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Mississippi’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
L. Missouri
In the 2016v3 modeling, Missouri is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor and three maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to five
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.87 ppb to Sheboygan County,
Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 551170006). A
full summary of Missouri’s June 10,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.163 In its submission,
Missouri advocated for discounting
certain maintenance receptors through
use of historical data trends. The EPA
finds Missouri’s approach is not
adequately justified.164 The EPA
disagrees with Missouri’s arguments for
application of a higher contribution
threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS
at Step 2, and further addresses
comments regarding the August 2018
memorandum in Section V.B.7.165 The
State did not conduct a Step 3
analysis.166 The State included no
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities in its SIP
submission.167 The State included no
permanent and enforceable emissions
controls in its SIP submission.168 We
provide further response to comments
regarding Missouri’s SIP submission in
the RTC document. The EPA is
159 Id.
160 Id.
at 9557.
at 9558.
161 Id.
162 Id.
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163 Id.
at 9538–9540.
164 Id. at 9540–9541.
165 See also id. at 9541–9544.
166 Id. at 9544.
167 Id.
168 We note that in comments, Missouri indicated
its intent to submit a new SIP submission to the
EPA, which would re-evaluate good neighbor
obligations based on its 2016v2 linkages and
provide an analysis that would include emissions
reductions requirements. The EPA received this
submission on November 1, 2022. The EPA
explains its consideration of this new submission
as separate SIP submission in the RTC document for
this final action.
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17:17 Feb 10, 2023
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finalizing disapproval of Missouri’s June
10, 2019, interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
M. Nevada
In the 2016v3 modeling, Nevada is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to one
violating-monitor maintenance receptor.
Its highest-level contribution is 1.13 ppb
to Weber County, Utah (AQS Site ID
490570002). A full summary of
Nevada’s October 1, 2018, SIP
submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.169 Because Nevada was not
projected to be linked to any receptor in
2023 in the EPA’s 2011-based modeling,
commenters on the proposed SIP
submission disapproval argued that the
EPA must approve the SIP submission
and not rely on new modeling. The EPA
responds to these comments in Section
V.A.4. The EPA also responds to
technical criticisms of the 1 percent of
the NAAQS contribution threshold and
the relevance of the PSD SILs in Section
V.B.4 and in Section V.B.6, respectively.
The State did not conduct a Step 3
analysis.170 The State included no
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities in its SIP
submission.171 The State included no
additional emissions controls in its SIP
submission.172 We provide response to
comments specific to interstate
transport policy in the western U.S. in
Section V.C.3. We provide further
response to comments regarding
Nevada’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Nevada’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
N. New Jersey
In the 2016v3 modeling, New Jersey is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to three
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 8.38 ppb to Fairfield County,
Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090019003). A
full summary of New Jersey’s May 13,
2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.173 The State did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.174
New Jersey argued in its SIP submission
that existing controls were sufficient to
address the State’s good neighbor
obligations. However, the State included
an insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to
support such a conclusion.175 The
State’s reliance on the cost-effectiveness
threshold in the CSAPR Update is
insufficient for a more protective
NAAQS.176 The State included no
permanent and enforceable emissions
controls in its SIP submission.177 We
provide further response to comments
regarding New Jersey’s SIP submission
in the RTC document. The EPA is
finalizing disapproval of New Jersey’s
interstate transport SIP submission for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
O. New York
In the 2016v3 modeling, New York is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to two
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 16.10 ppb to Fairfield County,
Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090010017). A
full summary of New York’s September
25, 2018, SIP submission was provided
in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.178 The state did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.179
New York argued in its SIP submission
that existing controls were sufficient to
address the State’s good neighbor
obligations. However, the state included
an insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to
support such a conclusion.180 The
State’s reliance on the cost-effectiveness
threshold in the CSAPR Update is
insufficient for the more protective 2015
ozone NAAQS.181 The State included
no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.182 We provide further
response to comments regarding New
York’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of New York’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
P. Ohio
In the 2016v3 modeling, Ohio is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to four nonattainment
receptors and five maintenance-only
175 Id.
176 Id.
169 87
FR 31485, 31492–31493 (May 24, 2022).
170 Id. at 31493.
171 Id.
172 Id.
173 Id. at 9490–9491.
174 Id. at 9496.
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177 Id.
at 9496–9497.
at 9489–9490.
179 Id. at 9492–9494.
180 Id. at 9493.
181 Id. at 9493–9494.
182 Id. at 9494–9495.
178 Id.
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receptors. It is also linked to nine
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 2.05 ppb to Fairfield County,
Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090019003). A
full summary of Ohio’s September 28,
2018, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.183 In its submission, Ohio
advocated for use of the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality
(TCEQ)’s definition of maintenance
receptors. The EPA finds that TCEQ’s
definition is legally and technically
flawed,184 and as a result Ohio’s
approach is also not adequately
justified.185 The EPA further evaluates
TCEQ’s technical arguments in a TSD
prepared by regional modeling staff.186
The EPA disagrees with Ohio’s
arguments for application of a higher
contribution threshold than 1 percent of
the NAAQS at Step 2.187 The EPA
responds to technical criticisms of the 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold in Section V.B.4. The State
did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.188 The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its
SIP submission.189 The EPA found
technical deficiencies in Ohio’s
unsubstantiated claims that emissions
are overestimated.190 The EPA also
confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that several
EGU and non-EGUs identified by Ohio
were included in the 2016v2 modeling,
and yet Ohio was still linked in that
modeling.191 The EPA summarizes the
emissions inventories used in the
2016v3 modeling in Section III.A.
Further, as explained in Section V.B.9,
states may not rely on non-SIP measures
to meet SIP requirements, and reliance
on prior transport FIPs such as the
CSAPR Update is not a sufficient
analysis at Step 3.192 The EPA finds
legal flaws and deficiencies in Ohio’s
arguments related to upwind versus
downwind-state responsibilities, the
role of international emissions, relative
contribution, and overcontrol.193 The
EPA discusses international emissions
in Section V.C.2. The EPA disagrees
with Ohio’s arguments related to mobile
183 Id.
at 9849–9851.
at 9826–9829.
185 Id. at 9869–9870.
186 2015 8-Hour Ozone Transport SIP Proposal
TSD, in Docket ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2021–0801
(hereinafter Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD).
187 Id. at 9871.
188 Id. at 9871–9875.
189 Id. at 9871–9875.
190 Id. at 9872.
191 Id.
192 See also id. at 9874–9875.
193 Id. at 9873–9874.
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sources.194 We further address this topic
in Section V.C.1. Ohio also argued in its
SIP submission that it had already
implemented all cost-effective controls.
However, the state included no
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities to support such a
claim.195 Further, the State’s reliance on
the cost-effectiveness threshold in the
CSAPR Update is insufficient for the
more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS.196
The State included no permanent and
enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.197 We provide further
response to comments regarding Ohio’s
SIP submission in the RTC document.
The EPA is finalizing disapproval of
Ohio’s interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Q. Oklahoma
In the 2016v3 modeling, Oklahoma is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to eight
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.01 ppb to Denton County, Texas
(AQS Site ID 481210034). A full
summary of Oklahoma’s October 25,
2018, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.198 In its submission,
Oklahoma advocated for use of TCEQ’s
definition of maintenance receptors and
modeling to discount receptors in
Texas. The EPA finds that TCEQ’s
definition is legally and technically
flawed 199 and, as a result, Oklahoma’s
approach is also not adequately
justified.200 The EPA further evaluates
TCEQ’s technical arguments in the EPA
Region 6 2015 8-Hour Ozone Transport
SIP Proposal TSD (Evaluation of TCEQ
Modeling TSD) prepared by regional
modeling staff.201 Comments argued
against the use of updated modeling
where linkages in the EPA’s 2011-based
modeling and later iterations of EPA
modeling differ. The EPA addressed the
change in identified linkages between
the 2011-based modeling and the
2016v2 modeling in the proposed SIP
disapproval,202 and further responds to
comments on the use of updated
modeling in Section V.A.4. The EPA
disagrees with Oklahoma’s arguments
for application of a higher contribution
194 Id.
at 9872–9873.
196 Id. at 9874.
197 Id. at 9875.
198 Id. at 9816–9818.
199 Id. at 9826–9829.
200 Id. at 9820–9822.
201 Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD in Docket
ID No. EPA–R06–OAR–2021–0801.
202 87 FR 9823.
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threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS
at Step 2 203 and further addresses
comments regarding the relevance of the
PSD SILs in Section V.B.6. The State did
not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.204 Oklahoma argued in its SIP
submission that it had already
implemented all cost-effective controls.
However, the State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to
support such a conclusion.205 As
explained in Section V.B.9, states may
not rely on non-SIP measures to meet
SIP requirements, and reliance on prior
transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at
Step 3.206 Further, the State’s reliance
on the cost-effectiveness threshold in
the CSAPR Update is insufficient for the
more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS.207
The EPA finds legal flaws in
Oklahoma’s argument related to
collective contribution.208 The State
included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.209 We provide further
response to comments regarding
Oklahoma’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Oklahoma’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
R. Texas
In the 2016v3 modeling, Texas is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to one nonattainment
receptor and nine maintenance-only
receptors. It is also linked to ten
violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
4.74 ppb to Dona Ana County, New
Mexico (AQS Site ID 350130021). A full
summary of Texas’s August 17, 2018,
SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval,210 and additional details
were provided in the Evaluation of
TCEQ Modeling TSD. The EPA
identified several technical flaws in
TCEQ’s modeling and analysis of
modeling results.211 In its submission,
Texas advocated for use of its own
definition of maintenance receptors and
modeling. The EPA finds Texas’s
approach inadequately justified and
203 Id.
195 Id.
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9359
at 9819.
at 9822–9824.
205 Id. at 9822–9824.
206 See also id. at. 9822–9823.
207 Id.
208 Id. at 9823.
209 Id. at 9824.
210 Id. at 9824–9826.
211 Id. at 9829–9830; Evaluation of TCEQ
Modeling TSD.
204 Id.
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legally and technically flawed.212 The
EPA further evaluated TCEQ’s technical
arguments in the Evaluation of TCEQ
Modeling TSD. In comment on the
proposal, Texas pointed to differences
in linkages in the EPA’s 2011-based
modeling and 2016v2 modeling. The
EPA addressed the change in identified
linkages between the 2011-based
modeling and the 2016v2 modeling in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval,213 and further responds to
comments on the use of updated
modeling in Section V.A.4. The State
did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.214 The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its
SIP submission.215 The EPA found
technical flaws in Texas’s arguments
related to ‘‘consistent and persistent’’
claims and its other assessments,
including analysis of back
trajectories.216 The State included no
permanent and enforceable emissions
controls in its SIP submission.217 We
provide further response to comments
regarding Texas’s SIP submission in the
RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Texas’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
S. Utah
In the 2016v3 modeling, Utah is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three nonattainment
receptors and one maintenance-only
receptor. It is also linked to four
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 1.29 ppb to Douglas County, Colorado
(AQS Site ID 080350004). A full
summary of Utah’s January 29, 2020,
SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.218 In its submission, Utah
argued that certain receptors in
Colorado should not be counted as
receptors for the purpose of 2015 ozone
NAAQS interstate transport, but Utah’s
explanation is insufficient to discount
those receptors.219 The EPA disagrees
with Utah’s arguments for application of
a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.220 Utah
suggested in its SIP submission that
interstate transport is fundamentally
different in the western U.S. than in the
T. West Virginia
In the 2016v3 modeling, West
Virginia is projected to be linked above
1 percent of the NAAQS to three
nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also
linked to four violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level
contribution is 1.49 ppb to New Haven
County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID
090099002). A full summary of West
Virginia’s February 4, 2019, SIP
submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission
disapproval.227 The EPA finds technical
and legal flaws in the State’s
examination of back trajectories and
arguments related to mobile sources and
international emissions.228 The EPA
further addresses the topics of mobile
sources and international emissions in
Section V.C.1 and in Section V.C.2,
respectively. The State did not conduct
an adequate Step 3 analysis.229 West
Virginia argued in its SIP submission
that it had already implemented all costeffective controls. However, the State
included an insufficient evaluation of
212 87
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FR 9826–9829.
at 9831.
214 Id. at 9831–9834.
215 Id. at 9831, 9834.
216 Id. at 9832–9833, Evaluation of TCEQ
Modeling TSD.
217 87 FR 9834.
218 Id. at 31475–31477.
219 Id. at 31480–31481.
220 Id. at 31478.
eastern U.S., an argument we have
previously rejected and respond to
further in Section V.C.3.221 The State
did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.222 The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its
SIP submission.223 The EPA finds
technical and legal flaws in the State’s
arguments related to relative
contribution, international and nonanthropogenic emissions, and the
relationship of upwind versus
downwind-state responsibilities.224 The
EPA further addresses the topics of
international emissions in Section V.C.2
and wildfires in the RTC document. The
EPA also confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that several
anticipated controls identified by Utah
were included in the 2016v2 modeling,
and yet Utah was still linked in that
modeling.225 The State included no
permanent and enforceable emissions
controls in its SIP submission.226 We
provide further response to comments
regarding Utah’s SIP submission in the
RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Utah’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
213 Id.
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221 See
also id. at 31479–31481, 31482.
at 31481–31483.
223 Id. at 31482
224 Id. at 31481–31483.
225 Id. at 31483.
226 Id.
227 Id. at 9522–9524.
228 Id. at 9526–9527, 9528.
229 Id. at 9527–9532.
222 Id.
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additional emissions control
opportunities to support such a
conclusion.230 The EPA also confirmed
in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval that specific EGU
shutdowns identified by West Virginia
were included in the 2016v2 modeling,
which continued to show West Virginia
was linked at Step 2.231 As explained in
Section V.B.9, a state may not rely on
non-SIP measures to satisfy SIP
requirements, and reliance on prior
transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at
Step 3.232 Further, the State’s reliance
on the cost-effectiveness threshold in
the CSAPR Update is insufficient for a
more protective NAAQS.233 The State
included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.234 We provide further
response to comments regarding West
Virginia’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of West Virginia’s interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
U. Wisconsin
In the 2016v3 modeling, Wisconsin is
projected to be linked above 1 percent
of the NAAQS to three maintenanceonly receptors. It is also linked to five
violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution
is 2.86 ppb to Cook County, Illinois
(AQS Site ID 170314201). A full
summary of Wisconsin’s September 14,
2018, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.235 The State did not assess
in its SIP submission whether the state
was linked at Step 2,236 and did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.237
The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities.238 Further, as
explained in Section V.B.9, reliance on
prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at
Step 3.239 The EPA found additional
inadequacies and legal flaws in
Wisconsin’s submission.240 The State
included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP
submission.241 We provide further
response to comments regarding
230 Id.
at 9528–9529.
at 9529–9530.
232 See also id. at 9530–9532.
233 Id. at 9531.
234 Id. at 9532.
235 Id. at 9851.
236 Id. at 9875.
237 Id. at 9875–9876.
238 Id. at 9876.
239 See also id.
240 Id.
241 Id. at 9876–9877.
231 Id.
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Wisconsin’s SIP submission in the RTC
document. Although EPA proposed to
disapprove both prong 1 and prong 2 of
Wisconsin’s SIP submission, the present
record, including the results of the
2016v3 modeling, indicates that
Wisconsin is not linked to any
nonattainment receptors.242 The EPA is
finalizing a partial approval of
Wisconsin’s interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
as to prong 1 and a partial disapproval
as to prong 2.
V. Response to Key Comments
The EPA received numerous
comments on the proposed action
which are summarized in the RTC
document along with the EPA’s
responses to those comments in Docket
ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663. Each
comment in its entirety is available in
the relevant regional docket(s) for this
action.243 The following sections
summarize key comments and the EPA’s
responses.
A. SIP Evaluation Process
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1. Relationship Between Timing of
Proposals To Disapprove SIPs and
Promulgate FIPs
Comment: Comments alleged
generally that the timing of the EPA’s
proposed actions on the SIP
submissions in relation to proposed
FIPs was unlawful, unfair, or both.
Some comments claimed that the
sequence of the EPA’s actions is
improper, unreasonable, or bad policy.
Several commenters asserted that
because the EPA proposed FIPs (or,
according to some, promulgated FIPs,
which is not factually correct) prior to
finalizing disapproval of the state SIP
submission, the EPA allegedly exceeded
its statutory authority and overstepped
the states’ primary role in addressing
the good neighbor provision under CAA
section 110.244
242 The EPA received a comment that it would be
arbitrary and capricious for the EPA to finalize a
full disapproval of Tennessee’s good neighbor SIP
submission (both prong 1 and prong 2) if EPA
concluded the State is linked only to a
maintenance-only receptor (prong 2).The EPA is
deferring final action on Tennessee’s good neighbor
SIP submission, but in reviewing linkages in the
2016v3 modeling we determined that Minnesota
and Wisconsin are not linked above 1 percent of the
NAAQS to any nonattainment receptors (prong 1)
but are linked to maintenance-only receptors (prong
2); these States are receiving partial approvals and
partial disapprovals.
243 See the memo ‘‘Regional Dockets Containing
Additional Supporting Materials for Final Action
on 2015 Ozone NAAQS Good Neighbor SIP
Submissions’’ in the docket for this action, for a list
of all regional dockets.
244 The EPA notes the commenters’ reference to
FIPs is to proposed good neighbor FIPs for the 2015
ozone NAAQS that were proposed separately from
this rulemaking action. 87 FR 20036 (April 6, 2022).
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EPA Response: The EPA disagrees.
The EPA has followed the Clean Air Act
provisions, which prescribe specified
maximum amounts of time for states to
make SIP submissions, for the EPA to
act on those submissions, and for the
EPA to promulgate FIPs if necessary, but
do not prohibit the EPA from acting
before that time elapses. Nothing
relieves the EPA from its statutory
obligation to take final action on
complete SIP submissions before the
Agency within the timeframes
prescribed by the statute.245 The EPA’s
proposed FIP does not constitute the
‘‘promulgation’’ of a FIP because the
proposed FIP is not a final action that
imposes any requirements on sources or
states. And although the EPA’s FIP
authority is not at issue in this action,
the EPA notes the Agency has been clear
that it will not finalize a FIP for any
state until predicate authority is
established for doing so under CAA
section 110(c)(1). 87 FR 20036, 20057
(April 6, 2022) (‘‘The EPA is proposing
this FIP action now to address twentysix states’ good neighbor obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, but the EPA
will not finalize this FIP action for any
state unless and until it has issued a
final finding of failure to submit or a
final disapproval of that state’s SIP
submission.’’). The EPA strongly
disagrees that proposing a FIP prior to
proposing or finalizing disapproval of a
SIP submission oversteps the Agency’s
authority. Indeed, the ability to propose
a FIP before finalizing a SIP disapproval
follows ineluctably from the structure of
the statute, which, as the Supreme Court
recognized in EME Homer City, does not
oblige the EPA ‘‘to wait two years or
postpone its [FIP] action even a single
day.’’ 572 U.S. at 509. If the EPA can
finalize a FIP immediately upon
disapproving a SIP, then surely the EPA
must have the authority to propose that
FIP before taking final action on the SIP
submission. Accord Oklahoma v. U.S.
245 Although the EPA anticipates responding to
comments related to the EPA’s FIP authority in a
separate FIP rulemaking, the EPA notes with regard
to the procedural timing concerns raised in
comments on this action that the Supreme Court
confirmed in EME Homer City Generation, ‘‘EPA is
not obliged to wait two years or postpone its action
even a single day: The Act empowers the Agency
to promulgate a FIP ‘at any time’ within the
two-year limit.’’ 572 U.S. 489 at 509. The
procedural timeframes under CAA section 110 do
not function to establish a norm or expectation that
the EPA must or should use the full amount of time
allotted, particularly when doing so would place
the Agency in conflict with the more ‘‘central’’
statutory objective of meeting the NAAQS
attainment deadlines in the Act. EME Homer City,
572 U.S. 489, 509 (2014). See also Wisconsin, 938
F.3d at 318, 322; Sierra Club v. EPA, 294 F.3d 155,
161 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (Sierra Club).
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9361
EPA, 723 F.3d 1201, 1223 (10th Cir.
2013).
It is true that the EPA would not be
legally authorized to finalize a FIP for
any state unless and until the EPA
formally finalizes a disapproval of that
state’s SIP submission (or makes a
finding of failure to submit for any state
that fails to make a complete SIP
submission), per CAA section 110(c),
but the EPA has not yet finalized a FIP
for any state for good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
Further, the sequencing of our actions
here is consistent with the EPA’s past
practice in our efforts to timely address
good neighbor obligations. For example,
at the time the EPA proposed the
CSAPR Update FIPs in December of
2015, we had not yet proposed action on
several states’ SIP submissions but
finalized those SIP disapproval actions
prior to finalization of the FIP.246
Additional comments on cooperative
federalism are addressed in Section
V.B.5.
Further, The D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin
held that states and the EPA are
obligated to fully address good neighbor
obligations for ozone ‘‘as expeditiously
as practical’’ and in no event later than
the next relevant downwind attainment
dates found in CAA section 181(a),247
and states and the EPA may not delay
implementation of measures necessary
to address good neighbor requirements
beyond the next applicable attainment
date without a showing of impossibility
or necessity.248 It is important for the
states and the EPA to assure that
necessary emissions reductions are
achieved, to the extent feasible, by the
2023 ozone season to assist downwind
areas with meeting the August 3, 2024,
attainment deadline for Moderate
nonattainment areas. Further, the D.C.
Circuit in Wisconsin emphasized that
the EPA has the authority under CAA
section 110 to structure its actions so as
to ensure necessary reductions are
achieved by the downwind attainment
246 The proposed CSAPR Update was published
on December 3, 2015, and included proposed FIPs
for Indiana, Louisiana, New York, Ohio, Texas, and
Wisconsin. 80 FR 75705. At that time, the EPA had
not yet even proposed action on good neighbor SIP
submissions for the 2008 ozone NAAQS from
Indiana, Louisiana, New York, Ohio, Texas, and
Wisconsin; however, the EPA subsequently
proposed and finalized these disapprovals before
finalizing the CSAPR Update FIPs, published on
October 26, 2016 (81 FR 74504). See 81 FR 38957
(June 15, 2016) (Indiana); 81 FR 53308 (August 12,
2016) (Louisiana); 81 FR 58849 (August 26, 2016)
(New York); 81 FR 38957 (June 15, 2016) (Ohio); 81
FR 53284 (August 12, 2016) (Texas); 81 FR 53309
(August 12, 2016) (Wisconsin).
247 Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313–14 (citing North
Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–12.
248 See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320.
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dates,249 the next of which for the 2015
ozone NAAQS is now the Moderate area
attainment date of August 3, 2024.250
The court pointed out that the CAA
section 110 schedule of SIP and FIP
deadlines is procedural whereas the
attainment schedule is ‘‘central to the
regulatory scheme[.]’’ 251 Thus, the
sequence and timing of the EPA’s action
in disapproving these SIP submissions
is informed by the need to ensure that
any necessary good neighbor obligations
identified in the separate FIP
rulemaking are implemented as
expeditiously as practicable and no later
than the next attainment date. As
explained in our proposed disapproval,
analysis (and, if possible,
implementation) of good neighbor
obligations should begin in the 2023
ozone season. See, e.g., 87 FR 9798,
9801–02 (Feb. 22, 2022). Indeed, states’
and the EPA’s analysis would have been
more appropriately aligned with 2020,
rather than 2023 (as had been presented
in the EPA’s March 2018
memorandum 252), corresponding with
the 2021 Marginal area attainment date.
However, that clarification in legal
obligations was not established by case
law until 2020. See Maryland, 958 F.3d
at 1203–04.
In short, nothing in the language of
CAA section 110(c) prohibits the EPA
from proposing a FIP as a backstop, to
be finalized and implemented only in
the event that a SIP submission is first
found to be deficient and final
disapproval action on the SIP
submission is taken. Such an approach
is a reasonable and prudent means of
assuring that the statutory obligation to
reduce air pollution affecting the health
and welfare of those living in
downwind states is implemented
without delay, either via a SIP, or where
such plan is deficient, via a FIP. The
sequencing of the EPA’s actions here is
therefore reasonably informed by its
legal obligations under the CAA,
including in recognition of the fact that
the implementation of necessary
emissions reductions to eliminate
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249 Wisconsin,
938 F.3d at 318 (‘‘When EPA
determines a State’s SIP is inadequate, the EPA
presumably must issue a FIP that will bring that
State into compliance before upcoming attainment
deadlines, even if the outer limit of the statutory
timeframe gives the EPA more time to formulate the
FIP.’’) (citing Sierra Club, 294 F.3d at 161).
250 See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303;
Additional Air Quality Designations for the 2015
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 83
FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
251 Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322 (‘‘Delaware’s
argument leans too heavily on the SIP submission
deadline. SIP submission deadlines, unlike
attainment deadlines, are ‘procedural’ and,
therefore, not ‘central to the regulatory scheme.’ ’’)
(citing Sierra Club, 294 F.3d at 161).
252 See March 2018 memorandum.
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significant contribution and thereby
protect human health and welfare is
already several years delayed. The EPA
shares additional responses related to
the timing of 2015 ozone NAAQS good
neighbor actions in Section V.A.
Comment: Some comments allege the
EPA is depriving States of the
opportunity to target specific emissions
reductions opportunities, or the
opportunity to revise their submissions
at any point in the future.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees.
The EPA has repeatedly emphasized
that states have the freedom at any time
to develop a revised SIP submission and
submit that to the EPA for approval, and
this remains true. See 87 FR 20036,
20051 (April 6, 2022); 86 FR 23054,
23062 (April 30, 2021); 81 FR 74504,
74506 (Oct. 26, 2016). In the proposed
FIPs, as in prior transport actions, the
EPA discusses a number of ways in
which states could take over or replace
a FIP, see 87 FR 20036, 20149–51
(Section VII.D: ‘‘Submitting A SIP’’); see
also id. at 20040 (noting as one purpose
in proposing the FIP that ‘‘this proposal
will provide states with as much
information as the EPA can supply at
this time to support their ability to
submit SIP revisions to achieve the
emissions reductions the EPA believes
necessary to eliminate significant
contribution’’). If, and when, the EPA
receives a SIP submission that satisfies
the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), the Agency will take
action to approve that SIP submission.
Comment: Some commenters assert
that the EPA is disapproving SIP
submissions for the sole purpose of
pursuing an alleged objective of
establishing nation-wide standards in
FIPs. Other commenters point to the
proposed FIPs to make arguments that
the EPA’s decision to finalize
disapproval of the SIPs is an allegedly
foregone conclusion or that the EPA has
allegedly failed to provide the
opportunity for meaningful public
engagement on the proposed
disapproval of the SIPs.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees as
the facts do not support this assertion.
To date, the EPA has approved 24 good
neighbor SIPs for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS: Alaska,253 Colorado,254
Connecticut,255 Delaware,256 District of
Columbia,257 Florida,258 Georgia,259
253 84
FR 69331 (December 18, 2019).
FR 61249 (October 11, 2022).
255 86 FR 71830 (December 20, 2021).
256 85 FR 25307 (May 1, 2020).
257 85 FR 5570 (January 31, 2020).
258 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
259 Id.
254 87
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Hawaii,260 Idaho,261 Iowa,262 Kansas,263
Maine,264 Massachusetts,265
Montana,266 Nebraska,267 New
Hampshire,268 North Carolina,269 North
Dakota,270 Oregon,271 Rhode Island,272
South Carolina,273 South Dakota,274
Vermont,275 and Washington.276
The policy judgments made by the
EPA in all actions on 2015 ozone
NAAQS good neighbor SIP submissions,
including approval actions, reflect
consistency with relevant good neighbor
case law and past agency practice
implementing the good neighbor
provision as reflected in the original
CSAPR, CSAPR Update, Revised CSAPR
Update, and related rulemakings.
Employing a nationally consistent
approach is particularly important in
the context of interstate ozone transport,
which is a regional-scale pollution
problem involving many smaller
contributors. Effective policy solutions
to the problem of interstate ozone
transport dating back to the NOX SIP
Call [63 FR 57356 (October 27, 1998)]
have necessitated the application of a
uniform framework of policy judgments
to ensure an ‘‘efficient and equitable’’
approach. See EME Homer City, 572
U.S. at 519. In any case, the approach
of the proposed transport FIP is not the
subject of this SIP disapproval. This
rulemaking does not impose any
specific emissions control measures on
the states. Nor is the EPA disapproving
these SIP submittals because they did
not follow exactly the control strategies
in the proposed FIP—the EPA has
repeatedly indicated openness to
alternative approaches to addressing
interstate pollution obligations, but for
reasons explained elsewhere in the
rulemaking record, the EPA finds that
none of the states included in this
action submitted approvable approaches
to addressing those obligations.
The EPA disputes the contentions that
the FIP proposal itself indicates that the
EPA did not earnestly examine the SIP
submissions for compliance with the
CAA or have an appropriate rationale
260 86
FR 73129 (December 27, 2021).
FR 65722 (October 16, 2020).
262 87 FR 22463 (April 15, 2022).
263 87 FR 19390 (April 4, 2022).
264 86 FR 45870 (August 17, 2021).
265 85 FR 5572 (January 31, 2020).
266 87 FR 21578 (April 12, 2022).
267 85 FR 21325 (April 17, 2020).
268 86 FR 45870 (August 17, 2021).
269 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
270 85 FR 20165 (April 10, 2020).
271 84 FR 22376 (May 17, 2019).
272 86 FR 70409 (December 10, 2021).
273 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
274 85 FR 67653 (October 26, 2020).
275 85 FR 34357 (June 4, 2020).
276 83 FR 47568 (September 20, 2018).
261 85
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for proposing to disapprove certain SIP
submissions. The EPA also disputes that
the FIP proposal indicates that the EPA
did not intend to consider comments on
the proposed disapprovals. Comments
making claims the EPA did not follow
proper administrative procedure have
been submitted utilizing the very notice
and comment process these comments
claim the EPA is skipping, and these
claims are factually unsupported.
Comments related to the length of the
comment period and claims of ‘‘pretext’’
are addressed in the RTC document.
Comment: Several comments pointed
out how hard many states have worked
to develop an approvable SIP
submission.
EPA Response: The EPA
acknowledges and appreciates states’
efforts to develop approvable SIPs.
Cooperative federalism is a cornerstone
of CAA section 110, and the EPA strives
to collaborate with its state partners.
The timing of the EPA’s 2015 ozone
NAAQS good neighbor actions is not in
any way intended to call into question
any state’s commitment to develop
approvable SIPs. The EPA evaluated
each SIP submission on its merits. The
EPA relies on collaboration with state
air agencies to ensure SIP submissions
are technically and legally defensible,
and the Agency’s action here is in no
way meant to undermine that
collaboration between state and Federal
partners respecting SIP development.
Comment: Several comments make
various arguments about when the EPA
can finalize FIPs. Some commenters
argue that CAA section 110(c)(1)
guarantees states an additional two
years to correct their SIP submissions
before the EPA finalizes a FIP. Others
argue that the notice and comment
requirements of the Administrative
Procedures Act mandate that the EPA
finalize a SIP submission disapproval
before proposing a FIP. One commenter
suggested that a state must be allowed
to fully exhaust its judicial remedies to
challenge a SIP submission disapproval
before the EPA can promulgate a FIP.
Commenters also raise concerns about
the analysis and requirements in the
proposed FIPs.
EPA Response: Comments opining on
when the EPA is legally authorized to
propose or finalize a FIP are outside the
scope of this action. While the EPA
acknowledges that the Agency has no
obligation or authority to finalize a FIP
until finalizing a disapproval of a SIP
submission or determining that a state
failed to submit a complete SIP
submission (CAA section 110(c)(1)), this
action is limited to determining whether
the covered SIP submissions meet the
requirements of CAA section
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110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). For the same reason,
comments criticizing specific
substantive requirements or
implementation timelines in the
proposed FIPs are beyond the scope of
this action.
2. Requests for Additional Time To
Revise SIP Submissions
Comment: Some commenters argue
that the EPA must or should delay
action on these SIP submissions so that
states can reexamine and resubmit SIP
submissions. Other commenters argue
that states must be given more time to
re-examine and resubmit their SIP
submission for various reasons,
including the substantive requirements
in the proposed FIPs.
EPA Response: The EPA notes that
there is no support in the Clean Air Act
for such a delay. CAA section 110(a)(1)
requires states to adopt and submit SIP
submissions meeting certain
requirements including the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), ‘‘within 3 years (or
such shorter period as the Administrator
prescribe) after the promulgation of a
national primary ambient air quality
standard (or any revision thereof).’’ CAA
section 110(a)(1). The submission
deadline clearly runs from the date of
promulgation of the NAAQS, which for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS was October 1,
2015. 80 FR 65291 (Oct. 26, 2015). In
addition, while the Administrator is
given authority to prescribe a period
shorter than three years for the states to
adopt and submit such SIP submissions,
the Act does not give the Administrator
authority to lengthen the time allowed
for CAA section 110(a)(2) submissions.
And the EPA would be in violation of
court-ordered deadlines if it deferred
taking final action beyond January 31,
2023, for all but two of the states
covered by this action.277
Comments asserting that the EPA
must give more time to states to correct
deficiencies and re-submit conflict with
the controlling caselaw in that they
would elevate the maximum timeframes
allowable within the procedural
framework of CAA section 110 over the
attainment schedule of CAA section 181
that the D.C. Circuit has now held
multiple times must be the animating
focus in the timing of good neighbor
obligations. The D.C. Circuit in
Wisconsin held that states and the EPA
are obligated to fully address good
neighbor obligations for ozone ‘‘as
expeditiously as practical’’ and in no
277 The EPA has no court-ordered deadline to take
final action on the good neighbor SIP submission
from Alabama dated June 21, 2022, or Utah’s good
neighbor SIP submission.
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9363
event later than the next relevant
downwind attainment dates found in
CAA section 181(a),278 and the EPA may
not delay implementation of measures
necessary to address good neighbor
requirements beyond the next
applicable attainment date without a
showing of impossibility or necessity.279
Further, the court pointed out that the
CAA section 110 schedule of SIP and
FIP deadlines is procedural, and while
the EPA has complied with the
mandatory sequence of actions required
under section 110 here, we are mindful
of the court’s observation that, as
compared with the fundamental
substantive obligations of title I of the
CAA to attain and maintain the NAAQS,
the maximum timeframes allotted under
section 110 are less ‘‘central to the
regulatory scheme[.]’’ 280
Comment: Other comments take the
position that states are owed a second
opportunity to submit SIP submissions
before the EPA takes final action for
various reasons, including claims that
the EPA failed to issue adequate
guidance or is otherwise walking back
previously issued guidance. They allege
that a state cannot choose controls to
eliminate significant contribution until
the EPA quantifies the contribution.
Other comments argue that the EPA
should not or cannot base the
disapprovals on alleged shifts in policy
that occurred after the Agency received
the SIP submissions.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees
that the Agency was required to issue
guidance or quantify individual states’
level of significant contribution for 2015
ozone NAAQS good neighbor
obligations, because as noted in EME
Homer City, the Supreme Court clearly
held that ‘‘nothing in the statute places
EPA under an obligation to provide
specific metrics to States before they
undertake to fulfill their good neighbor
obligations.’’ 281 The Agency issued
three memoranda in 2018 to provide
modeling results and some ideas to
states in the development of their SIP
submissions. However, certain aspects
of those discussions were specifically
278 Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313–14 (citing North
Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–12). On May 19, 2020, the
D.C. Circuit in Maryland, applying the Wisconsin
decision, held that the EPA must assess air quality
at the next downwind attainment date, including
Marginal area attainment dates, in evaluating the
basis for the EPA’s denial of a petition under CAA
section 126(b). Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1203–04.
279 See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320.
280 Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322 (‘‘Delaware’s
argument leans too heavily on the SIP submission
deadline. SIP submission deadlines, unlike
attainment deadlines, are ‘procedural’ and therefore
not ‘central to the regulatory scheme.’’’) (citing
Sierra Club, 294 F.3d at 161).
281 EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 510.
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identified as not constituting agency
guidance (especially Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum, which
comprised an unvetted list of outside
stakeholders’ ideas). Further, states’
submissions did not meet the terms of
the August or October 2018 memoranda
addressing contribution thresholds and
maintenance receptors, respectively.
(See Section V.B for further discussion
of these memoranda.) We acknowledge
that the EPA reassessed air quality and
states’ contribution levels through
additional modeling before proposing
action on these SIP submissions. But
that is not in any way an effort to
circumvent the SIP/FIP process; rather it
is an outcome of the reality that the EPA
updated its modeling platform from a
2011 to a 2016 base year and updated
its emissions inventory information
along with other updates. There is
nothing improper in the Agency
improving its understanding of a
situation before taking action, and the
Agency reasonably must be able to act
on SIP submissions using the
information available at the time it takes
such action. Those updates have not
uniformly been used to disapprove
SIPs—the new modeling for instance
supported the approval of Montana’s
and Colorado’s SIPs.282 Nor has the new
modeling prevented states from
submitting new SIP submissions based
on that modeling. For instance, the State
of Alabama withdrew its prior
submission in April of 2022, following
our proposed disapproval, and
submitted a new submission (further
updated in June of 2022) analyzing the
2016v2 modeling used at proposal. The
EPA is acting on that new submission
and evaluating the new arguments the
State developed regarding the more
recent modeling. Nonetheless, as
explained in the EPA’s proposed
disapproval of Alabama’s new
submission and in Section IV.A, the
new arguments that Alabama has
presented in its more recent submission
do not lead the EPA to a contrary
conclusion that its SIP submission
should be approved.283 This
demonstrates two points contrary to
commenters’ contentions: first, the EPA
is following the science and is making
nationally consistent determinations at
Steps 1 and 2, based on its review of
each state’s submission; and second, the
fact that states made submissions based
on the 2011-based modeling results
presented in the March 2018
282 87 FR 6095, 6097 at n. 15 (February 3, 2022)
(Montana proposal); 87 FR 27050, 27056 (May 6,
2022) (Colorado, proposal), 87 FR 61249 (October
11, 2022) (Colorado, final).
283 87 FR 64412 (October 25, 2022).
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memorandum rather than on the most
recent modeling results is not
prejudicial to the outcome of the EPA’s
analysis, as our action on Alabama’s
more recent submission evaluating the
State’s arguments with respect to the
newer, 2016-based modeling makes
clear.
Contrary to commenters’ arguments,
the EPA had no obligation to issue
further guidance, define obligations, or
otherwise clarify or attempt to interpret
states’ responsibilities since the
issuance of the 2018 memoranda, prior
to acting on these SIP submissions.
States themselves were aware or should
have been aware of the case law
developments in Wisconsin and in
Maryland, which called into question
the EPA’s use of 2023 as the analytical
year in the March 2018 memorandum.
Those decisions were issued in 2019
and 2020 respectively, yet no state
moved to amend or supplement their
SIP submissions with analysis of an
earlier analytical year or to otherwise
bring their analyses into conformance
with those decisions (e.g., through fuller
analysis of non-EGU emissions
reduction potential or through treatment
of international contribution). Given the
Supreme Court’s 2014 holding in EME
Homer City, 572 U.S. at 508–510, which
reversed a D.C. Circuit holding that the
EPA was obligated to define good
neighbor obligations,284 states had no
reason to expect the EPA would be
obligated to issue further guidance to
clarify requirements in the wake of
those decisions. The EPA agrees with
those commenters who point out that
states have the first opportunity to
assess and address obligations in
implementing the NAAQS, but with that
understanding in mind, it is notable that
prior to the proposed disapprovals in
February of 2022, no state moved to
amend or supplement their SIP
submission as the case law on good
neighbor obligations evolved or in
response to new modeling information
as it became available.
Further, the EPA has evaluated state
SIP submissions on the merits of what
is contained in the submission, not the
use of any particular modeling platform.
The EPA disagrees with commenters’
assertions that the EPA has proposed
disapproval of a state’s proposed SIP
due to the use of a particular modeling
platform. As noted previously, the EPA
approved state SIP submissions that
have used the earlier modeling. The
EPA did not reach its conclusion to
disapprove states’ SIP submissions
based on the use of the 2016v2
284 EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 696
F.3d 7 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (EME Homer City I).
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emissions platform standing alone. Use
of that platform, or any other modeling
platform, is not ipso facto grounds for
disapproval at all. As evident in the
proposed disapprovals and summarized
in Section IV, the EPA evaluated the SIP
submissions based on the merits of the
arguments put forward in each SIP
submission.
3. Alleged Harm to States Caused by
Time Between SIP Submission and the
EPA’s Action
Comment: Many comments pointed to
the EPA’s statutory deadlines to take
action on the SIP submissions to argue
that the EPA’s delay harmed the upwind
state’s interests because now the EPA
may conclude they need to reduce their
emissions to satisfy their good neighbor
obligations in the separate FIP
rulemaking whereas had the EPA acted
by statutory deadlines using the older
modeling, they might have had their SIP
submissions approved. Some
commenters suggest that the EPA never
gave the state SIP submissions the
appropriate review or suggest that the
EPA’s review of the SIP submissions
was prejudiced by the FIP it had
proposed.
EPA Response: The EPA
acknowledges that the Agency’s
statutory deadlines to take final action
on these SIP submissions generally fell
in 2020 and 2021. However, the delay
in acting caused no prejudice to the
upwind states. First, this action to
disapprove SIP submissions itself will
not impose any requirements or
penalties on any state or sources within
that state. Second, these delays have
primarily had the effect of deferring
relief to downwind states and their
citizens from excessive levels of ozone
pollution under the good neighbor
provision. Further, the EPA has
generally had a practice of correcting its
action on good neighbor SIP submittals
if later information indicates that a prior
action was in error—thus, it is not the
case that simply having obtained an
approval based on earlier modeling
would have meant a state would be
forever insulated from later being
subject to corrective or remedial good
neighbor actions. See, e.g.,86 FR 23056,
23067–68 (April 30, 2021) (error
correcting Kentucky’s approval to a
disapproval and promulgating FIP
addressing Kentucky’s outstanding 2008
ozone NAAQS good neighbor
obligations); 87 FR 20036, 20041 (April
6, 2022) (proposing error correction for
Delaware’s 2015 ozone NAAQS SIP
approval to a disapproval based on
updated air quality modeling). Finally,
there is no basis in the CAA to use the
Agency’s own delay as a basis to nullify
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the authority granted in the Act to
address the nation’s air pollution
problems, as the statute itself contains
other forms of adequate remedy. CAA
section 304(a)(2) provides for judicial
recourse where there is an alleged
failure by the agency to perform a
nondiscretionary duty, and that
recourse is for the Agency to be placed
on a court-ordered deadline to address
the relevant obligations. Accord
Oklahoma, 723 F.3d at 1223–24;
Montana Sulphur and Chemical Co. v.
U.S. EPA, 666 F.3d 1174, 1190–91 (9th
Cir. 2012).
Comment: Some comments contend
that the EPA’s delay in acting on SIP
submissions was a deliberate attempt to
circumvent the SIP/FIP process, unduly
burden the states, or to defer making
information available to states.
Comments allege that the EPA
intentionally stalled an evaluative
action until the perceived ‘‘facts’’ of the
situation changed such that the analyses
submitted by states were rendered
outdated.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees
with both allegations. In this respect, it
is important to review the recent history
of the EPA’s regulatory actions and
litigation with respect to good neighbor
obligations for both the 2008 and 2015
ozone NAAQS, and in particular, the
substantial additional workload the
Agency took on in the wake of the
remand of the CSAPR Update in
Wisconsin. In 2018, as the EPA issued
the memoranda cited by commenters
and planned to shift its focus to
implementing the 2015 standards, it
also issued the CSAPR Close-out, which
made an analytical finding that there
were no further obligations for 21 states
for the 2008 standards following the
CSAPR Update. 83 FR 65878 (Dec. 21,
2018). However, contrary to the EPA’s
understanding that it had fully
addressed good neighbor obligations for
the 2008 ozone NAAQS, the D.C.
Circuit’s decisions in Wisconsin
(remanding the CSAPR Update) and in
New York (vacating the CSAPR Closeout), forced the Agency to quickly pivot
back to addressing remaining
obligations under the 2008 standards.
Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d 303 (D.C.
Cir. 2019); New York v. EPA, 781 F.
App’x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The EPA was
subject to renewed deadline suit
litigation under CAA section 304, which
led to a March 15, 2021, deadline to take
final action on several states whose FIPs
had been remanded and were
incomplete in the wake of the CSAPR
Close-out vacatur. New Jersey v.
Wheeler, 475 F.Supp.3d 308 (S.D.N.Y.
2020). Throughout 2020 and 2021, the
EPA was therefore focused on an
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unexpected rulemaking obligation to
complete good neighbor requirements as
to the states with remanded CSAPR
Update FIPs. This led to the EPA
proposing and then issuing an
economically significant, major rule
assessing additional EGU emissions
reduction obligations as well as
presenting updated air quality modeling
analysis using novel techniques and
presenting information on a host of nonEGU industrial sources for the first time,
i.e., the Revised CSAPR Update, 86 FR
23054 (April 30, 2021). That rule is now
currently subject to judicial review in
the D.C. Circuit, Midwest Ozone Group
v. EPA, No. 21–1146 (D.C. Cir. argued
Sept. 28, 2022).285 The EPA has also
been in the process of reviewing and
acting upon many states’ good neighbor
SIPs where the available information
indicates that an approval of the state’s
submission was appropriate.286
Finally, the Agency needed time to
review and evaluate the SIP
submissions in a coordinated fashion to
act on all the states’ submissions in a
consistent manner. As the EPA
explained in the proposed disapproval
action, consistency in defining CAA
obligations is critically important in the
context of addressing a regional-scale
pollutant like ozone. See, e.g., 87 FR
9807 n.48. Through coordinated
development of the bases for how the
Agency could act on the SIP
submissions, while also evaluating the
contours of a potential Federal plan to
implement obligations where required,
the EPA sequenced its deliberations and
decision making to maximize efficient,
consistent, and timely action, in
recognition of the need to implement
any necessary obligations ‘‘as
285 During this time, the EPA also fulfilled its
obligations to act on several petitions brought by
downwind states under section 126(b) of the CAA.
These actions culminated in litigation and
ultimately adverse decisions in Maryland and New
York v. EPA. Maryland v, 958 F.3d; New York v.
EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 2020 WL 3967838 (D.C. Cir.
2020). Further review and action on these remands
remains pending before the agency.
286 In chronological order: 83 FR 47568
(September 20, 2018) (Washington); 84 FR 69331
(December 18, 2019) (Alaska); 84 FR 22376 (May 17,
2019) (Oregon); 85 FR 5570 (January 31, 2020)
(Washington, DC); 85 FR 5572 (January 31, 2020)
(Massachusetts); 85 FR 20165 (April 10, 2020)
(North Dakota); 85 FR 21325 (April 17, 2020)
(Nebraska); 85 FR 25307 (May 1, 2020) (Delaware);
85 FR 34357 (June 4, 2020) (Vermont); 85 FR 65722
(October 16, 2020) (Idaho); 85 FR 67653 (October
26, 2020) (South Dakota); 86 FR 45870 (August 17,
2021) (Maine and New Hampshire); 86 FR 68413
(December 2, 2021) (Florida, Georgia, North
Carolina, and South Carolina); 86 FR 70409
(December 10, 2021) (Rhode Island); 86 FR 71830
(December 20, 2021) (Connecticut); 86 FR 73129
(December 27, 2021) (Hawaii); 87 FR 19390 (April
4, 2022) (Kansas); 87 FR 21578 (April 12, 2022)
(Montana); 87 FR 22463 (April 15, 2022) (Iowa); and
87 FR 61249 (October 11, 2022) (Colorado).
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9365
expeditiously as practicable.’’ 287 The
downsides of commenters’ policy
preference in favor of giving states
another opportunity to develop SIP
submissions, or in first acting on each
SIP submission before proposing a FIP,
are that such a sequence of actions
would have led to multiple years of
additional delay in addressing good
neighbor obligations. Even if such a
choice was available to the Agency
using the CAA section 110(k)(5) SIP call
mechanism, it was entirely reasonable
for the EPA to decline to use that
mechanism in this instance. (EPA
further addresses comments in support
of a SIP call approach in the RTC
document.)
In short, commenters’ notion that the
EPA was deliberately or intentionally
deferring or delaying action on these SIP
submissions to circumvent any required
legal process or reach any specific result
is simply incorrect. Commenters have
not supplied any evidence to support
the claim either that any legal process
was circumvented or that the Agency’s
conduct was in bad faith. See Biden v.
Texas, 142 S.Ct. 2528, 2546–47 (2022)
(presumption of regularity attends
agency action absent a ‘‘strong showing
of bad faith or improper behavior’’)
(citing Citizens to Protect Overton Park
v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 302, 420 (1971); SEC
v. Chenery, 318 U.S. 80, 87 (1943)).
4. Use of Updated Modeling
Comment: Comments allege that by
relying on modeling not available at the
time of SIP submission development,
the EPA ‘‘moved the goal post.’’
Comments note the timeframes set out
for action on SIPs, citing section 110 of
the Act, and allege that by failing to act
on SIP submissions in a timely manner
and basing such actions on new
modeling, the EPA imposes an arbitrary
and capricious standard. Comments
state that the EPA should not
disapprove a SIP based on data not
available to states during development
of the SIP submissions or to the EPA
during the period statutorily allotted for
the EPA to take final action on SIP
submissions.
EPA Response: In response to
comments’ claims that the EPA has
inappropriately changed states’
obligations for interstate transport by
relying on updated modeling not
available to states at the time they
prepared their SIP submissions, the EPA
disagrees. As an initial matter, the EPA
disagrees with comment’s claiming that
the agency expected state air agencies to
develop a SIP submission based on
287 CAA section 181(a); Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at
313–14 (citing North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911–12).
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some unknown future data. The EPA
recognizes that states generally
developed their SIP submissions with
the best available information at the
time of their development. As stated in
the proposals, the EPA did not evaluate
states’ SIP submissions based solely on
the 2016v2 emissions platform (or the
2016v3 platform, which incorporates
comments generated during the public
comment period on the proposed SIP
actions and which supports these final
SIP disapproval actions). We evaluated
the SIP submissions based on the merits
of the arguments put forward in each
SIP submission, which included any
analysis put forward by states to support
their conclusions. Thus, we disagree
with commenters who allege the Agency
has ignored the information provided by
the states in their submissions. Indeed,
the record for this action reflects our
extensive evaluation of states’ air
quality and contribution analyses. See
generally Section IV, which summarizes
our evaluation for each state.
We disagree with commenters who
advocate that the EPA’s evaluation of
these submissions must be limited to
the information available to states at the
time they made their submissions, or
information at the time of the deadline
for the EPA to act on their submissions.
It can hardly be the case that the EPA
is prohibited from taking rulemaking
action using the best information
available to it at the time it takes such
action. Nothing in the CAA suggests that
the Agency must deviate from that
general principle when acting on SIP
submissions. While CAA section
110(k)(2) specifies a time period in
which the Administrator is to act on a
state submission, neither this provision
nor any other provision of the CAA
specifies that the remedy for the EPA’s
failure to meet a statutory deadline is to
arrest or freeze the information the EPA
may consider to what was available at
the time of a SIP submission deadline
under CAA section 110. Indeed, in the
interstate transport context, this would
lead to an anomalous result. For
example, the D.C. Circuit rejected an
argument made by Delaware against the
CSAPR Update air quality analysis that
the EPA was limited to reviewing air
quality conditions in 2011 (rather than
2017) at the time of the statutory
deadline for SIP submittals. The court
explained,
Delaware’s argument leans too heavily on
the SIP submission deadline. SIP submission
deadlines, unlike attainment deadlines, are
‘‘procedural’’ and therefore not ‘‘central to
the regulatory scheme.’’ Sierra Club, 294 F.3d
at 161. Nor can Delaware’s argument be
reconciled with the text of the Good
Neighbor Provision, which prohibits upwind
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States from emitting in amounts ‘‘which will’’
contribute to downwind nonattainment. 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(D)(i) (emphasis added).
Given 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.
Wisconsin, 903 F.3d at 322. By the
same token, here, holding the EPA to a
consideration only of what information
states had available regarding the 2023
analytic year at the time of their SIP
submissions or at the time of a deadline
under CAA section 110, would likewise
elevate the ‘‘procedural’’ deadlines of
CAA section 110 above the substantive
requirements of the CAA that are
‘‘central to the regulatory scheme.’’
Doing so here would force the Agency
to act on these SIP submissions knowing
that more recent refined, high quality,
state-of-the-science modeling and
monitoring data would produce a
different result in our forward-looking
analysis of 2023 than the information
available in 2018. Nothing in the CAA
dictates that the EPA must be forced
into making substantive errors in its
good neighbor analysis on this basis.
We relied on CAMx Version 7.10 and
the 2016v2 emissions platform to make
updated determinations regarding
which receptors would likely exist in
2023 and which states are projected to
contribute above the contribution
threshold to those receptors. As
explained in the preamble of the EPA’s
proposed actions and further detailed in
the document titled ‘‘Air Quality
Modeling TSD: 2015 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards
Proposed Interstate Transport Air Plan
Disapproval’’ and 2016v2 Emissions
Inventory TSD, both available in Docket
ID no. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663, the
2016v2 modeling built off previous
modeling iterations used to support the
EPA’s action on interstate transport
obligations. The EPA continuously
refines its modeling to ensure the results
are as indicative as possible of air
quality in future years. This includes
adjusting our modeling platform and
updating our emissions inventories to
reflect current information.
Additionally, we disagree with
comments claiming that the 2016v2
modeling results were sprung upon the
states with the publication of the
proposed disapprovals. The EPA has
been publishing a series of data and
modeling releases beginning as early as
the publication of the 2016v1 modeling
with the proposed Revised CSAPR
Update in November of 2020, which
could have been used to track how the
EPA’s modeling updates were
potentially affecting the list of possible
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receptors and linkages for the 2015
ozone NAAQS in the 2023 analytic year.
The 2016-based meteorology and
boundary conditions used in the
modeling have been available through
the 2016v1 platform, which was used
for the Revised CSAPR Update
(proposed in November of 2020, 85 FR
68964). The updated emissions
inventory files used in the current
modeling were publicly released
September 21, 2021, for stakeholder
feedback, and have been available on
our website since that time.288 The
CAMx modeling software that the EPA
used has likewise been publicly
available for over a year. CAMx version
7.10 was released by the model
developer, Ramboll, in December 2020.
On January 19, 2022, we released on our
website and notified a wide range of
stakeholders of the availability of both
the modeling results for 2023 and 2026
(including contribution data) along with
many key underlying input files.289
By providing the 2016 meteorology
and boundary conditions (used in the
2016v1 version) in fall of 2020, and by
releasing updated emissions inventory
information used in 2016v2 in
September of 2021,290 states and other
interested parties had multiple
opportunities prior to the proposed
disapprovals in February of 2022 to
consider how our modeling updates
could affect their status for purposes of
evaluating potential linkages for the
2015 ozone NAAQS. Further, by using
the updated modeling results, the EPA
is using the most current and
technically appropriate information for
this rulemaking. This modeling was not
performed to ‘‘move the goal posts’’ for
states but meant to provide updated
emissions projections, such as
additional emissions reductions for
EGUs following promulgation of the
Revised CSAPR Update for the 2008
ozone NAAQS, more recent information
on plant closures and fuel switches, and
sector trends, including non-EGU
sectors. The construct of the 2016v2
emissions platform is described in the
2016v2 Emissions Modeling TSD
contained in Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0663.
Finally, comments related to the
timing of the EPA’s action to disapprove
these SIP submissions are addressed in
Section V.A.1. The EPA notes the
statute provides a separate remedy for
agency action unlawfully delayed. In
section 304 of the CAA, there is a
288 See https://www.epa.gov/air-emissionsmodeling/2016v2-platform.
289 See https://www.epa.gov/scram/
photochemical-modeling-applications.
290 https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/
2016v2-platform.
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process for filing suit against the EPA
for its failure to comply with a nondiscretionary statutory duty under the
CAA. The appropriate remedy in such
cases is an order to compel agency
action, not a determination that the
agency, by virtue of missing a deadline,
has been deprived of or constrained in
its authority to act. See Oklahoma, 723
F.3d at 1224 (‘‘[W]hen ‘there are less
drastic remedies available for failure to
meet a statutory deadline’—such as a
motion to compel agency action—
‘courts should not assume that Congress
intended the agency to lose its power to
act.’ The Court ‘would be most reluctant
to conclude that every failure of an
agency to observe a procedural
requirement voids subsequent agency
action, especially when important
public rights are at stake.’’’) (cleaned up)
(quoting Brock v. Pierce County, 476
U.S. 253, 260 (1986)).
Comment: Comments state that it is
inappropriate for the EPA to revise its
emissions inventory and to conduct new
air quality modeling without allowing
an appropriate opportunity for
stakeholder review and comment and
that the EPA must allow public
comment on any updated (i.e., 2016v3)
modeling prior to use by the EPA in a
final action. Comments claim that the
EPA must withdraw the proposed
disapproval and provide states time to
develop new SIP submissions based on
the updated information.
EPA Response: The EPA has
evaluated a wide range of technical
information and critiques of its 2016v2
emissions inventory and modeling
platform following a solicitation of
public feedback as well the public
comment period on this action (and the
proposed FIP action) and has responded
to those comments and incorporated
updates into the version of the modeling
being used in this final action (2016v3).
See Section III, the Final Action AQM
TSD, and Section 4 of the RTC
document for further discussion.
The EPA’s development of and
reliance on newer modeling to confirm
modeling used at the proposal stage is
in no way improper and is simply
another iteration of the EPA’s
longstanding scientific and technical
work to improve our understanding of
air quality issues and causes going back
decades. Where the 2016v3 modeling
produced a potentially different
outcome for states from proposal, that is
reflected in this action (e.g., our deferral
of final action on Tennessee and
Wyoming’s SIP submissions).
Comment: Comments allege that
EPA’s modeling results have been
inconsistent, questioning the reliability
of the results.
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EPA Response: Although some
commenters indicate that our modeling
iterations have provided differing
outcomes and are therefore unreliable,
this is not what the overall record
indicates. Rather, in general, although
the specifics of states’ linkages may
change slightly, our modeling overall
has provided consistent outcomes
regarding which states are linked to
downwind air quality problems. For
example, the EPA’s modeling shows
that most states that were linked to one
or more receptors using the 2011-based
platform (i.e., the March 2018 data
release) are also linked to one or more
receptors using the newer 2016-based
platform. Because each platform uses
different meteorology (i.e., 2011 and
2016) it is not at all unexpected that an
upwind state could be linked to
different receptors using 2011 versus
2016 meteorology.
In addition, although a state may be
linked to a different set of receptors,
states are often linked to receptors in the
same area that has a persistent air
quality problem. These differing results
regarding receptors and linkages can be
affected by the varying meteorology
from year to year, but this does not
indicate that the modeling or the EPA or
the state’s methodology for identifying
receptors or linkages is inherently
unreliable. Rather, for many states these
separate modeling runs all indicated: (i)
that there would be receptors in areas
that would struggle with nonattainment
or maintenance in the future, and (ii)
that the state was linked to some set of
these receptors, even if the receptors
and linkages differed from one another
in their specifics (e.g., a different set of
receptors were identified to have
nonattainment or maintenance
problems, or a state was linked to
different receptors in one modeling run
versus another).
The EPA interprets this common
result as indicative that a state’s
emissions have been substantial enough
to generate linkages at Step 2 to varying
sets of downwind receptors generated
under varying assumptions and
meteorological conditions, even if the
precise set of linkages changed between
modeling runs. Under these
circumstances, we think it is
appropriate to proceed to a Step 3
analysis to determine what portion of a
particular state’s emissions should be
deemed ‘‘significant.’’ We also note that
only four states included in the
proposed disapprovals went from being
unlinked to being linked between the
2011-based modeling provided in the
March 2018 memorandum and the
2016v2-based modeling—Alabama,
Minnesota, Nevada, and Tennessee.
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5. Cooperative Federalism and the
EPA’s Authority
Comment: Many comments point to
the concept of cooperative federalism as
embodied in the CAA to make various
arguments as to why the EPA cannot or
should not be allowed to exercise its
independent judgment in evaluating the
arguments presented by the states in the
SIP submissions, and some also argue
that the EPA must approve each state’s
submission in deference to how states
choose to interpret the CAA
requirements they must meet.
EPA Response: The CAA establishes a
framework for state-Federal partnership
to implement the NAAQS based on
cooperative federalism. Under the
general model of cooperative federalism,
the Federal Government establishes
broad standards or goals, states are
given the opportunity to determine how
they wish to achieve those goals, and if
states choose not to or fail to adequately
implement programs to achieve those
goals, a Federal agency is empowered to
directly regulate to achieve the
necessary ends. Under the CAA, once
the EPA establishes or revises a
NAAQS, states have the obligation and
opportunity in the first instance to
develop an implementation plan under
CAA section 110 and the EPA will
approve SIP submissions under CAA
section 110 that fully satisfy the
requirements of the CAA. This sequence
of steps is not in dispute.
The EPA does not, however, agree
with the comments’ characterization of
the EPA’s role in the state-Federal
relationship as being ‘‘secondary’’ such
that the EPA must defer to state choices
heedless of the substantive objectives of
the Act; such deference would be
particularly inappropriate in the context
of addressing interstate pollution. The
EPA believes that the comments
fundamentally misunderstand or
inaccurately describe this action, as well
as the ‘‘‘division of responsibilities’
between the states and the federal
government’’ they identify in CAA
section 110 citing the Train-Virginia
line of cases 291 and other cases.292
291 See Virginia v. EPA, 108 F.3d 1397, 1407 (D.C.
Cir. 1997) (Virginia) (quoting Train v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., 421 U.S. 60, 79
(1975) (Train)). The ‘‘Train-Virginia line of cases’’
are named for the U.S. Supreme Court case Train,
421 U.S. and to the D.C. Circuit case Virginia, 108
F.3d. The D.C. Circuit has described these cases as
defining a ‘‘federalism bar’’ that generally
recognizes states’ ability to select emissions control
measures in their SIPs so long as CAA requirements
are met. See, e.g., Michigan v. EPA, 213 F.3d 663,
687 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (Michigan).
292 Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246 (1976),
Am. Elec. Power Co. v. Connecticut, 565 U.S. 410
(2011), Fla. Power & Light v. Costle, 650 F.2d 579
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Those cases, some of which pre-date the
CAA amendments of 1990 resulting in
the current Good Neighbor Provision,293
stand only for the proposition that the
EPA must approve state plans if they
meet the applicable CAA requirements.
But these cases say nothing about what
those applicable requirements are. The
EPA is charged under CAA section 110
with reviewing states’ plans for
compliance with the CAA and
approving or disapproving them based
on EPA’s determinations. Thus, the EPA
must ultimately determine whether state
plans satisfy the requirements of the Act
or not. Abundant case law reflects an
understanding that the EPA must
evaluate SIP submissions under the
CAA section 110(k)(2) and (3).294 If they
are deficient, the EPA must so find, and
become subject to the obligation to
directly implement the relevant
requirements through a Federal
implementation plan under CAA
section 110(c), unless EPA approves an
applicable SIP first.295
The EPA responds in greater detail to
these comments in the RTC document.
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6. Availability of Guidance for SIP
Submissions
Comment: Comments contend the
EPA failed to issue guidance in a timely
fashion by releasing its August 2018
memorandum 31 days prior to when
SIPs addressing interstate ozone
transport were due and issuing the
October 2018 memorandum 18 days
(5th Cir. 1981), Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Gorsuch,
742 F.2d 1028 (7th Cir. 1984), Concerned Citizens
of Bridesburg v. EPA, 836 F.2d 777 (3d Cir. 1987),
North Carolina, 531 F.3d 896, Luminant, 675 F.3d
917 (5th. Cir. 2012), Luminant Co. LLC v. EPA, 714
F.3d 841 (5th. Cir. 2013), North Dakota v. EPA, 730
F.3d 750 (8th. Cir. 2013), EME Homer City II, 795
F.3d 118 (D.C. Cir. 2015), and Texas v. USEPA, 829
F.3d 405 (5th. Cir. 2016).
293 The 1970 version of the Act required SIPs to
include ‘‘adequate provisions for intergovernmental
cooperation’’ concerning interstate air pollution.
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E), 84 Stat. 1681, 42 U.S.C.
1857c–5(a)(2)(E). In 1977, Congress amended the
Good Neighbor Provision to direct States to submit
SIP submissions that included provisions
‘‘adequate’’ to ‘‘prohibi[t] any stationary source
within the State from emitting any air pollutant in
amounts which will . . . prevent attainment or
maintenance [of air quality standards] by any other
State.’’ CAA section 108(a)(4), 91 Stat. 693, 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E) (1976 ed., Supp. II). Congress
again amended the Good Neighbor Provision in
1990 to its current form.
294 See, e.g., Virginia, 108 F.3d at 1406. See also,
e.g., Westar Energy v. EPA, 608 Fed. App’x 1, 3
(D.C. Cir. 2015) (‘‘EPA acted well within the bounds
of its delegated authority when it disapproved of
Kansas’s proposed [good neighbor] SIP.’’) (emphasis
added); Oklahoma, 723 F.3d at 1209 (upholding the
EPA’s disapproval of ‘‘best available retrofit
technology’’ (BART) SIP, noting BART ‘‘does not
differ from other parts of the CAA—states have the
ability to create SIPs, but they are subject to EPA
review’’).
295 EME Homer City Generation, 572 U.S. at 508–
510.
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after those SIPs were due. Some
comments additionally claim that it is
unreasonable for the EPA to disapprove
SIP submissions based on standards that
were not defined, mandated, or required
by official guidance.
EPA Response: Comments’ contention
is unsupported by the statute or
applicable case law. Regarding the need
for the EPA’s guidance in addressing
good neighbor obligations, in EME
Homer City, the Supreme Court clearly
held that ‘‘nothing in the statute places
the EPA under an obligation to provide
specific metrics to States before they
undertake to fulfill their good neighbor
obligations.’’ 296
Nonetheless, as comments point out,
the EPA issued three ‘‘memoranda’’ in
2018 to provide some assistance to
states in developing these SIP
submissions. In acting on the SIP
submissions in this action, the EPA is
neither rescinding nor acting
inconsistently with the memoranda—to
the extent the memoranda constituted
agency guidance (not all the information
provided did constitute guidance),
information or ideas in the memoranda
had not at that time been superseded by
case law developments, and the
memoranda’s air quality and
contribution data had not at that time
been overtaken by updated modeling
and other updated air quality
information. While comments specific
to each of those memoranda are
addressed elsewhere in this record, we
note in brief that each memorandum
made clear that the EPA’s action on SIP
submissions would be through a
separate notice-and-comment
rulemaking process and that SIP
submissions seeking to rely on or take
advantage of any information or
concepts in these memoranda would be
carefully reviewed against the relevant
legal requirements and technical
information available to the EPA at the
time it would take such rulemaking
action.
B. Application of the 4-Step Interstate
Transport Framework
1. Analytic Year
Comment: One comment asserted that
2023 is not an appropriate analytical
year because, according to the
commenter, the EPA and at least some
downwind states have not in fact
implemented mandatory emissions
control requirements associated with
their nonattainment areas, and North
Carolina and Wisconsin require that
upwind and downwind state obligations
must be implemented ‘‘on par.’’ The
296 EME
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comment also characterizes the EPA’s
invocation of Maryland as an
inappropriate shifting of regulatory
burden to upwind states.
EPA Response: This is an incorrect
interpretation of the D.C. Circuit’s
holdings in North Carolina, Wisconsin,
and Maryland, which held that the EPA
and the states must align good neighbor
obligations to the extent possible with
the downwind areas’ attainment dates.
These are set by the statute and remain
fixed regardless of whether downwind
areas are delayed in implementing their
own obligations. It would be
unworkable to expect that upwind
states’ obligations could be perfectly
aligned with each downwind area’s
actual timetable for implementing the
relevant emissions controls, and no
court has held that this is the EPA’s or
the states’ obligation under the good
neighbor provision. Further, this ignores
the fact that upwind states must also
address their interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS, as well as
the Maryland court’s holding that good
neighbor obligations should be
addressed by the Marginal area
attainment date for ozone under subpart
2 of part D of title I of the CAA. Both
circumstances may involve situations in
which the home state for an identified
downwind receptor does not have a
specific obligation to plan for and
implement specific emissions controls
while an upwind state may nonetheless
be found to have good neighbor
obligations. But, as the Maryland court
recognized, the absence of specific
enumerated requirements does not
mean the downwind state does not have
a statutorily binding obligation subject
to burdensome regulatory consequences:
‘‘Delaware must achieve attainment ‘as
expeditiously as practicable,’’’ and ‘‘an
upgrade from a marginal to a moderate
nonattainment area carries significant
consequences . . . .’’ Maryland, 958
F.3d at 1204.
Further, where any downwind-state
delays are unreasonable or violate
statutory timeframes, the CAA provides
recourse to compel the completion of
such duties in CAA section 304, not to
defer the elimination of significant
contribution and thereby expose the
public in downwind areas to the
elevated pollution levels caused in part
by upwind states’ pollution. Regardless,
in this action, 2023 aligns with the
Moderate area attainment date in 2024,
and all of the downwind nonattainment
areas corresponding to receptor
locations identified at Step 1 in this
action are already classified as being in
Moderate nonattainment or have been
reclassified to Moderate and the
relevant states face obligations to submit
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SIP submissions and implement
reasonably available control
technologies (RACT) by January 1, 2023.
See 87 FR 60897, 60899 (October 7,
2022). The EPA further responds to this
comment in the RTC document.
2. Attachment A to the March 2018
Memorandum
Comment: Comments state that states
conducted their analyses based on the
flexibilities listed in Attachment A of
the March 2018 Memorandum.
Comments cite the part of the
memorandum where the EPA notes that
‘‘in developing their own rules, states
have flexibility to follow the familiar
four-step transport framework (using
[the] EPA’s analytical approach or
somewhat different analytical
approaches within these steps) or
alternative frameworks, so long as their
chosen approach has adequate technical
justification and is consistent with the
requirements of the CAA.’’ Comments
state that the EPA’s disapproval of SIP
submissions that took advantage of the
flexibilities is arbitrary and capricious
because the EPA has changed, without
communication, its consideration of
what is deemed to be the ‘‘necessary
provisions’’ required for an approvable
SIP submission too late in the SIP
submission process and because, in
disapproving these SIPs, the EPA is
applying a consistent set of policy
judgments across all states.
EPA Response: Comments mistakenly
view Attachment A to the March 2018
memorandum releasing modeling
results as constituting agency guidance.
The EPA further disagrees with
commenters’ characterization of the
EPA’s stance regarding the
‘‘flexibilities’’ listed (without analysis)
in Attachment A. Attachment A to the
March 2018 memorandum identified a
‘‘Preliminary List of Potential
Flexibilities’’ that could potentially
inform SIP development.297 However,
the EPA made clear in that attachment
that the list of ideas were not
suggestions endorsed by the Agency but
rather ‘‘comments provided in various
forums’’ from outside parties on which
the EPA sought ‘‘feedback from
interested stakeholders.’’ 298 Further,
Attachment A stated, ‘‘EPA is not at this
time making any determination that the
ideas discussed later are consistent with
the requirements of the CAA, nor are we
specifically recommending that states
use these approaches.’’ 299 Attachment
A to the March 2018 memorandum,
therefore, does not constitute agency
297 March
2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
298 Id.
299 Id.
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guidance, but was intended to generate
further discussion around potential
approaches to addressing ozone
transport among interested stakeholders.
The EPA emphasized in this
memorandum that any such alternative
approaches must be technically justified
and appropriate in light of the facts and
circumstances of each particular state’s
submittal.300 As stated in the proposed
SIP disapprovals,301 the March 2018
memorandum provided that, ‘‘While the
information in this memorandum and
the associated air quality analysis data
could be used to inform the
development of these SIPs, the
information is not a final determination
regarding states’ obligations under the
good neighbor provision.’’ 302 In this
final SIP disapproval action, the EPA
again affirms that certain concepts
included in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum require unique
consideration, and these ideas do not
constitute agency guidance with respect
to transport obligations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
In response to comments’ claims that
since the time transport SIP submissions
were submitted to the EPA for review,
the EPA has changed, without
communication, its consideration of
what is deemed to be the ‘‘necessary
provisions’’ required for an approvable
SIP submission, the EPA disagrees. As
comments note, and as stated in the
proposed disapproval notifications, the
EPA recognizes that states have
discretion to develop their own SIP
transport submissions and agrees that
states are not bound to using the 4-step
interstate transport framework the EPA
has historically used. However, states
must then provide sufficient
justification and reasoning to support
their analytical conclusions and
emissions control strategies. See, e.g., 87
FR 9798, 9801. In the SIP submissions
being disapproved in this action, no
state provided any enforceable
emissions control strategies for approval
into their SIP. The EPA has evaluated
the merits of each state’s arguments as
to why no additional emissions
reduction requirements are needed to
satisfy their obligations under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the more
protective 2015 ozone NAAQS. While
the EPA used its own 4-step interstate
300 March
2018 memorandum.
87 FR 9487.
302 See Information on the Interstate Transport
State Implementation Plan Submissions for the
2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018, available in
docket EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0663 or at https://
www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/
interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-andnotices.
301 E.g.,
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9369
transport framework as a guide for its
review to ensure a consistent and
equitable evaluation of each states’
submissions, the EPA has also
considered states’ individual arguments
without predetermining the EPA’s
conclusions about the state’s transport
obligations.
It was never the Agency’s intent in
sharing Attachment A that states would
invoke one or more of the potential
‘‘flexibilities’’ that outside parties
advocated for as a basis for concluding
that no additional emissions controls
were necessary to address interstate
transport for the more protective 2015
ozone NAAQS without proper
justification. Nothing in Attachment A
suggested that was the Agency’s
intended objective. Indeed, where
certain approaches identified in
Attachment A might have produced
analytical conclusions requiring upwind
states to reduce their emissions, no state
invoking Attachment A followed
through with implementing those
controls. We observe this dynamic at
work in Kentucky’s submission, because
Kentucky appended comments from the
Midwest Ozone Group to its submission
that demonstrated that applying a
‘‘weighted’’ approach to allocating
upwind-state responsibility at Step 3
would have resulted in an emissions
control obligation on Kentucky’s
sources, yet the State offered no
explanation in its submittal why it was
not adopting that approach or even what
its views on that approach were. See 87
FR 9515. As another example, Michigan
cited Attachment A to the March 2018
in developing a methodology for
calculating significant contribution
under which Michigan would have been
responsible for eliminating up to 0.12
ppb of contribution to downwind
receptors; however, the State suggested
that uncertainty caused by modeling
‘‘noise’’ was too great to either require
emissions reductions or demonstrate
that Michigan had any linkages to
receptors at all. See 87 FR 9860–9861.
However, this explanation did not, as an
analytical matter, demonstrate a level of
scientific uncertainty which might
allow for ignoring the results,303
303 Scientific uncertainty may only be invoked to
avoid comporting with the requirements of the CAA
when ‘‘the scientific uncertainty is so profound that
it precludes . . . reasoned judgment’’
Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438 (2007). See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318–19 (‘‘Scientific
uncertainty, however, does not excuse EPA’s failure
to align the deadline for eliminating upwind States’
significant contributions with the deadline for
downwind attainment of the NAAQS.’’). See also
EME Homer City, 795 F.3d at 135–36 (‘‘We will not
invalidate EPA’s predictions solely because there
might be discrepancies between those predictions
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particularly when the Agency has
implemented good neighbor
requirements at levels of ‘‘significant
contribution’’ comparable to or even
less than 0.12 ppb. See Wisconsin, 938
F.3d at 322–23 (rejecting Wisconsin’s
argument that it should not face good
neighbor obligations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS on the basis that its emission
reductions would only improve a
downwind receptor by two tenthousandths of a part per billion).
The EPA continues to neither endorse
the ‘‘flexibilities’’ in Attachment A, nor
stakes a position that states are
precluded from relying on these
concepts in the development of their
good neighbor SIP submissions,
assuming they could be adequately
justified both technically and legally.
This has been demonstrated through the
EPA’s extensive evaluation of the merits
of each states’ SIP submissions,
including their attempted use of
flexibilities and derivatives of the EPA’s
historically applied 4-step interstate
transport framework.304
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3. Step 1: October 2018 Memorandum
Comments: Comments claimed that
the EPA is not honoring its October
2018 memorandum, which they claim
would allow for certain monitoring sites
identified as maintenance-only
receptors in the EPA’s methodology to
be excluded as receptors based on
historical data trends. They assert that
the EPA is inappropriately disapproving
SIP submissions where the state
sufficiently demonstrated certain
monitoring sites should not be
considered to have a maintenance
problem in 2023.
EPA Response: The October 2018
memorandum recognized that states
may be able to demonstrate in their SIPs
that conditions exist that would justify
treating a monitoring site as not being a
maintenance receptor despite results
from our modeling methodology
identifying it as such a receptor. The
EPA explained that this demonstration
could be appropriate under two
circumstances: (1) the site currently has
‘‘clean data’’ indicating attainment of
the 2015 ozone NAAQS based on
measured air quality concentrations, or
(2) the state believes there is a technical
and the real world. That possibility is inherent in
the enterprise of prediction.’’).
304 Nor in the course of this evaluation has the
EPA uniformly ruled out the concepts in
Attachment A. For example, we noted at proposal
that California’s identification of a flexibility in
Attachment A related to excluding certain air
quality data associated with atypical events may be
generally consistent with the EPA’s modeling
guidance, but this does not affect the ultimate
determination that California’s SIP is not
approvable. See 87 FR 31454.
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reason to justify using a design value
from the baseline period that is lower
than the maximum design value based
on monitored data during the same
baseline period. To justify such an
approach, the EPA anticipated that any
such showing would be based on an
analytical demonstration that: (1)
Meteorological conditions in the area of
the monitoring site were conducive to
ozone formation during the period of
clean data or during the alternative base
period design value used for
projections; (2) ozone concentrations
have been trending downward at the
site since 2011 (and ozone precursor
emissions of NOX and VOC have also
decreased); and (3) emissions are
expected to continue to decline in the
upwind and downwind states out to the
attainment date of the receptor. EPA
evaluated state’s analyses and found no
state successfully applied these criteria
to justify the use of one of these
alternative approaches. The air quality
data and projections in Section III
indicate that trends in historic measured
data do not necessarily support
adopting a less stringent approach for
identifying maintenance receptors for
purposes of the 2015 ozone NAAQS. In
fact, as explained in Section III, the EPA
has found in its analysis for this final
action that, in general, recent measured
data from regulatory ambient air quality
ozone monitoring sites suggest a number
of receptors with elevated ozone levels
will persist in 2023 even though our
traditional methodology at Step 1 did
not identify these monitoring sites as
receptors in 2023. Thus, the EPA is not
acting inconsistently with that
memorandum—the factual conditions
that would need to exist for the
suggested approaches of that
memorandum to be applicable have not
been demonstrated as being applicable
or appropriate based on the relevant
data.
We further respond to comments
related to the identification of receptors
at Step 1 the RTC document.
4. Step 2: Technical Merits of a 1
Percent of the NAAQS Contribution
Threshold
Comment: Several comments contend
that for technical reasons, the 0.70 ppb
threshold is inappropriate for
determining whether a state is linked to
a downwind receptor at Step 2 of the 4step interstate transport framework.
Comments state that the degree to which
errors exist in modeling ozone
concentrations and contributions make
it inappropriate for a threshold as low
as 0.70 ppb to be used. Some comments
further state that the 0.70 ppb threshold
is inappropriate because the
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concentration threshold is lower than
what monitoring devices are capable of
detecting. Comments reference the
reported precision of Federal reference
monitors for ozone and the rounding
requirements found in 40 CFR part 50,
appendix U, Interpretation of the
Primary and Secondary National
Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Ozone, for support. Comments note that
the 1 percent contribution threshold of
0.70 ppb is lower than the
manufacturer’s reported precision of
Federal reference monitors for ozone
and that the requirements found in
appendix U truncates monitor values of
0.70 ppb to 0 ppb.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees
that a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2 is
‘‘inappropriate’’ for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS due to modeling biases and
errors. The explanation for how the 1
percent contribution threshold was
originally derived is available in the
2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR
48208, 48236–38 (Aug. 8, 2011). The
EPA has effectively applied a 1 percent
of the NAAQS threshold to identify
linked upwind states in three prior FIP
rulemakings and numerous statespecific actions. The D.C. Circuit has
declined to establish bright line criteria
for model performance. In upholding
the EPA’s approach to evaluating
interstate transport in CSAPR, the D.C.
Circuit held that it would not
‘‘invalidate EPA’s predictions solely
because there might be discrepancies
between those predictions and the real
world. That possibility is inherent in the
enterprise of prediction.’’ EME Homer
City II, 795 F.3d at 135. The court
continued to note that ‘‘the fact that a
‘model does not fit every application
perfectly is no criticism; a model is
meant to simplify reality in order to
make it tractable.’ ’’ Id. at 135–36
(quoting Chemical Manufacturers
Association v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259, 1264
(DC Cir. 1994). See also Sierra Club v.
EPA, 939 F.3d 649, 686–87 (5th Cir.
2019) (upholding the EPA’s modeling in
the face of complaints regarding an
alleged ‘‘margin of error,’’ noting
challengers face a ‘‘considerable
burden’’ in overcoming a ‘‘presumption
of regularity’’ afforded ‘‘the EPA’s
choice of analytical methodology’’)
(citing BCCA Appeal Grp. v. EPA, 355
F.3d 817, 832 (5th Cir. 2003)).
Furthermore, it is not appropriate to
compare the bias/error involved in the
estimation of total ozone to the potential
error in the estimation of the subset of
ozone that is contributed by a single
state.305 For example, on a specific day
305 See,
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the modeled versus monitored ozone
value may differ by 2 ppb but that is a
relatively small percentage of the total
modeled ozone, which for a receptor of
interest would be on the order of 70
ppb. It would be unrealistic to assign all
of the 2 ppb discrepancy in the earlier
example to the estimated impact from a
single state because the 2 ppb error
would be the combination of the error
from all sources of ozone that contribute
to the total, including estimated impacts
from other states, the home state of the
receptor, and natural background
emissions.
To address comments that compare
the 0.70 ppb threshold to the Federal
reference monitors for ozone and the
rounding requirements found in 40 CFR
part 50, appendix U, the EPA notes that
the comment is mistaken in applying
criteria related to the precision of
monitoring data to the modeling
methodology by which we project
contributions when quantifying and
evaluating interstate transport at Step 2.
Indeed, contributions by source or state
cannot be derived from the total
ambient concentration of ozone at a
monitor at all but must be apportioned
through modeling. Under our
longstanding methodology for doing so,
the contribution values identified from
upwind states are based on a robust
assessment of the average impact of
each upwind state’s ozone-precursor
emissions over a range of scenarios, as
explained in the Final Action AQM
TSD. This analysis is in no way
connected with or dependent on
monitoring instruments’ precision of
measurement. See EME Homer City II,
795 F.3d 118, 135–36 (‘‘‘[A] model is
meant to simplify reality in order to
make it tractable.’’’).
5. Step 2: Justification of a 1 Percent of
the NAAQS Contribution Threshold
Comment: Comments contend that the
EPA has not provided enough basis for
reliance on the 0.70 ppb threshold,
claiming that its use is therefore
arbitrary and capricious.
EPA Response: The EPA is finalizing
its proposed approach of consistently
using a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2. This
approach ensures both national
consistency across all states and
consistency and continuity with our
prior interstate transport actions for
other NAAQS. Comments have not
established that this approach is either
unlawful or arbitrary and capricious.
The 1 percent threshold is consistent
with the Step 2 approach that the EPA
applied in CSAPR for the 1997 ozone
NAAQS, which has subsequently been
applied in the CSAPR Update and
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revised CSAPR Update when evaluating
interstate transport obligations for the
2008 ozone NAAQS. The EPA continues
to find 1 percent to be an appropriate
threshold. For ozone, as the EPA found
in the CAIR, CSAPR, and CSAPR
Update, a portion of the nonattainment
and maintenance problems in the U.S.
results from the combined impact of
relatively small contributions from
many upwind states, along with
contributions from in-state sources and
other sources. The EPA’s analysis shows
that much of the ozone transport
problem being analyzed for purposes of
evaluating 2015 ozone NAAQS SIP
obligations is still the result of the
collective impacts of contributions from
many upwind states. Therefore,
application of a consistent contribution
threshold is necessary to identify those
upwind states that should have
responsibility for addressing their
contribution to the downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
problems to which they collectively
contribute. Where a great number of
geographically dispersed emissions
sources contribute to a downwind air
quality problem, which is the case for
ozone, EPA believes that, in the context
of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), a statelevel threshold of 1 percent of the
NAAQS is a reasonably small enough
value to identify only the greater-thande minimis contributers yet is not so
large that it unfairly focuses attention
for further action only on the largest
single or few upwind contributers.
Continuing to use 1 percent of the
NAAQS as the screening metric to
evaluate collective contribution from
many upwind states also allows the EPA
(and states) to apply a consistent
framework to evaluate interstate
emissions transport under the interstate
transport provision from one NAAQS to
the next. See 81 FR 74504, 74518. See
also 86 FR 23054, 23085 (reviewing and
explaining rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR
48208, 48236–38, for selection of 1
percent threshold).
Further, the EPA notes that the role of
the Step 2 threshold is limited and just
one step in the 4-Step interstate
transport framework. It serves to screen
in states for further evaluation of
emissions control opportunities
applying a multifactor analysis at Step
3. Thus, as the Supreme Court has
recognized, the contribution threshold
essentially functions to exclude states
with ‘‘de minimis’’ impacts. EME Homer
City, 572 U.S. at 500.
Comment: Commenters contend that
the EPA cannot use the 1 percent
threshold as a determination for
significance.
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9371
EPA Response: To clarify, the EPA
does not use the 1 percent of the
NAAQS threshold as the definition of
‘‘significance.’’ Rather, where a state’s
contribution equals or exceeds the 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold, the
EPA expects states to further evaluate
their emissions to determine whether
their emissions constitute significant
contribution or interference with
maintenance. The contribution
threshold is a screening threshold to
identify states which may be
‘‘contributing’’ to an out of state
receptor. The EPA has maintained this
interpretation of the relevant statutory
language across many rulemakings,
though commenters continue to confuse
the Step 2 threshold with a
determination of ‘‘significance,’’ which
it is not. See EME Homer City, 572 U.S.
at 500–502 (explaining the difference
between the ‘‘screening’’ analysis at
Steps 1 and 2 whereby the EPA
‘‘excluded as de minimis any upwind
State that contributed less than one
percent of the . . . NAAQS’’ and the
‘‘control’’ analysis at Step 3 whereby the
EPA determined ‘‘cost thresholds’’ to
define significance).
Further, the EPA’s air quality and
contribution modeling for ozone
transport is based on application of the
model in a relative sense rather than
relying upon absolute model
predictions. All models have limitations
resulting from uncertainties in inputs
and scientific formulation. To minimize
the effects of these uncertainties, the
modeling is anchored to base period
measured data in the EPA’s guidance
approach for projecting design values.
Notably, the EPA also uses our source
apportionment modeling in a relative
sense when calculating the average
contribution metric (used to identify
linkages). In this method the magnitude
of the contribution metric is tied to the
magnitude of the projected average
design value which is tied to the base
period average measured design value.
The EPA’s guidance has recommended
against applying bright-line criteria for
judging whether statistical measures of
model performance constitute
acceptable or unacceptable model
performance.
The Agency continues to find that this
method using the CAMx model to
evaluate contributions from upwind
states to downwind areas is reliable.
The agency has used CAMx routinely in
previous notice and comment transport
rulemakings to evaluate contributions
relative to the 1 percent threshold for
both ozone and PM2.5. In fact, in the
original CSAPR, the EPA found that
‘‘[t]here was wide support from
commenters for the use of CAMx as an
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appropriate, state-of-the science air
quality tool for use in the [Cross-State
Air Pollution] Rule. There were no
comments that suggested that the EPA
should use an alternative model for
quantifying interstate transport.’’ 76 FR
48229 (August 8, 2011). In this action,
the EPA has taken a number of steps
based on comments and new
information to ensure to the greatest
extent the accuracy and reliability of its
modeling projections at Step 1 and 2, as
discussed elsewhere in this document.
6. Step 2: Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Significant Impact Levels
Comment: Several comments insist
that when identifying an appropriate
linkage threshold at Step 2 of the 4-step
framework, the EPA should consider or
rely on the 1 ppb significant impact
level (SIL) for ozone used as part of the
prevention of significant deterioration
PSD permitting process. Comments
reference the EPA’s April 17, 2018,
guidance memorandum, ‘‘Significant
Impact Levels for Ozone and Fine
Particles in the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Permitting Program’’ (SIL
guidance), as well as the EPA’s March
2018 memorandum’s Attachment A
flexibilities to lend support to their
opinion that the 1 ppb SIL should also
be used to determine linkages at Step 2.
EPA Response: The EPA’s SIL
guidance relates to a different provision
of the Clean Air Act regarding
implementation of the prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD)
permitting program. This program
applies in areas that have been
designated attainment of the NAAQS
and is intended to ensure that such
areas remain in attainment even if
emissions were to increase as a result of
new sources or major modifications to
existing sources located in those areas.
This purpose is different than the
purpose of the good neighbor provision,
which is to assist downwind areas (in
some cases hundreds or thousands of
miles away) in resolving ongoing
nonattainment of the NAAQS or
difficulty maintaining the NAAQS
through eliminating the emissions from
other states that are significantly
contributing to those problems. In
addition, as discussed earlier, the
purpose of the Step 2 threshold within
the EPA’s interstate transport framework
for ozone is to broadly sweep in all
states contributing to identified
receptors above a de minimis level in
recognition of the collectivecontribution problem associated with
regional-scale ozone transport. The
threshold used in the context of PSD SIL
serves an entirely different purpose, and
so it does not follow that they should be
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made equivalent. Further, comments
incorrectly associate the EPA’s Step 2
contribution threshold with the
identification of ‘‘significant’’ emissions
(which does not occur until Step 3), and
so it is not the case that the EPA is
interpreting the same term differently.
The EPA has previously explained
this distinction between the good
neighbor framework and PSD SILs. See
70 FR 25162, 25190–25191 (May 12,
2005); 76 FR 48208, 48237 (August 8,
2011). Importantly, the implication of
the PSD SIL threshold is not that singlesource contribution below this level
indicates the absence of a contribution
or that no emissions control
requirements are warranted. Rather, the
PSD SIL threshold addresses whether
further, more comprehensive, multisource review or analysis of air quality
impacts are required of the source to
support a demonstration that it meets
the criteria for a permit. A source with
estimated impacts below the PSD SIL
may use this to demonstrate that it will
not cause or contribute (as those terms
are used within the PSD program) to a
violation of an ambient air quality
standard, but is still subject to meeting
applicable control requirements,
including best available control
technology, designed to moderate the
source’s impact on air quality.
Moreover, other aspects of the
technical methodology in the SIL
guidance compared to the good
neighbor framework make a direct
comparison between these two values
misleading. For instance, in PSD permit
modeling using a single year of
meteorology the maximum single-day 8hour contribution is evaluated with
respect to the SIL. The purpose of the
contribution threshold at Step 2 of the
4-step good neighbor framework is to
determine whether the average
contribution from a collection of sources
in a state is small enough not to warrant
any additional control for the purpose of
mitigating interstate transport, even if
that control were highly cost effective.
Using a 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold is more appropriate for
evaluating multi-day average
contributions from upwind states than a
1 ppb threshold applied for a single day,
since that lower value of 1 percent of
the NAAQS will capture variations in
contribution. If EPA were to use a single
day reflecting the maximum amount of
contribution from an upwind state to
determine whether a linkage exists at
Step 2, comments’ arguments for use of
the PSD SIL might have more force.
However, that would likely cause more
states to become linked, not less. And in
any case, consistent with the method in
our modeling guidance for projecting
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future attainment/nonattainment, the
good neighbor methodology of using
multiple days provides a more robust
approach to establishing that a linkage
exists at the state level than relying on
a single day of data.
7. Step 2: August 2018 Memorandum
Comment: Comments assert that in
the August 2018 memorandum the EPA
committed itself to approving SIP
submissions from states with
contributions below 1 ppb, and so now
the EPA should or must approve the
good neighbor SIP submission from any
state with a contribution below 1 ppb,
either based on modeling available at
the time of the state’s SIP submission or
at any time.
EPA Response: These comments
mischaracterize the content and the
EPA’s application of August 2018
memorandum. Further, the EPA
disputes that the EPA misled states or
that the EPA has not appropriately
reviewed SIP submissions from states
that attempted to rely on an alternative
contribution threshold at Step 2.
Specifically, the EPA’s August 2018
memorandum provided an analysis
regarding ‘‘the degree to which certain
air quality threshold amounts capture
the collective amount of upwind
contribution from upwind states.’’ 306 It
interpreted ‘‘that information to make
recommendations about what
thresholds may be appropriate for use
in’’ SIP submissions (emphasis
added).307 Specifically, the August 2018
memorandum said, ‘‘Because the
amount of upwind collective
contribution capture with the 1 percent
and the 1 ppb thresholds is generally
comparable, overall, we believe it may
be reasonable and appropriate for states
to use a 1 ppb contribution threshold, as
an alternative to a 1 percent threshold,
at Step 2 of the 4-step framework in
developing their SIP revisions
addressing the good neighbor provision
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.’’ (emphasis
added).308 Thus, the text of the August
2018 memorandum does not guarantee
that any state with a contribution below
1 ppb has an automatically approvable
good neighbor SIP. In fact, the August
2018 memorandum indicated that
‘‘[f]ollowing these recommendations
does not ensure that EPA will approve
a SIP revision in all instances where the
recommendations are followed, as the
guidance may not apply to the facts and
circumstances underlying a particular
SIP. Final decisions by the EPA to
approve a particular SIP revision will
306 August
2018 memorandum, page 1.
2018 memorandum, page 1.
308 August 2018 memorandum, page 4.
307 August
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only be made based on the requirements
of the statute and will only be made
following an air agency’s final
submission of the SIP revision to the
EPA, and after appropriate notice and
opportunity for public review and
comment.’’ 309 The August 2018
memorandum also stated, ‘‘EPA and air
agencies should consider whether the
recommendations in this guidance are
appropriate for each situation.’’ 310 The
EPA’s assessment of every SIP
submission that invoked the August
2018 memorandum considered the
particular arguments raised by the
state.311
Comment: Some comments allege that
the EPA representatives led the states to
believe that their SIP submission would
be approved on the basis of a 1 ppb
contribution threshold. The comments
further claim that the EPA has now
since reversed course on its August
2018 memorandum and imposed new
requirements on states that were not
included in the EPA’s guidance. One
comment suggested EPA switched
position without explanation from the
August 2018 guidance to its proposed
disapprovals, which it viewed as
unlawful under FCC v. Fox TV Stations,
Inc., 556 U.S. 502 (2009).
EPA Response: As an initial matter,
we note that the salience of these
comments is limited to only a handful
of states. The August 2018
memorandum made clear that the
Agency had substantial doubts that any
threshold greater than 1 ppb (such as 2
ppb) would be acceptable, and the
Agency is affirming that a threshold
higher than 1 ppb would not be justified
under any circumstance for purposes of
this action. No comment provided a
credible basis for using a threshold even
higher than 1 ppb. So this issue is
primarily limited to the difference
between a 0.70 ppb threshold and a 1.0
ppb threshold. Therefore, we note that
this issue is only relevant to a small
number of states whose only
contributions to any receptor are above
1 percent of the NAAQS but lower than
1 ppb. Under the 2016v3 modeling of
2023 being used in this final action,
those states with contributions that fall
between 0.70 ppb and 1 ppb included
in this action are Alabama, Kentucky,
and Minnesota.
309 August
2018 memorandum, page 1.
2018 memorandum, page 1.
311 87 FR 64423–64424 (Alabama); 87 FR 9806–
9807 (Arkansas); 87 FR 9852–9853 (Illinois); 87 FR
9855–9856 (Indiana); 87 FR 9508–9511 (Kentucky);
87 FR 9812–9813 (Louisiana); 87 FR 9861–9862
(Michigan); 87 FR 9557 (Mississippi); 87 FR 9541–
9543 (Missouri); 87 FR 31492 (Nevada); 87 FR
9870–9871 (Ohio); 87 FR 9818–9820 (Oklahoma);
87 FR 31477–31451 (Utah).
310 August
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The EPA disagrees with comments’
claims that the Agency has reversed
course on applying the August 2018
memorandum. In line with the
memorandum, the EPA evaluated every
justification put forward by every state
covered by this SIP disapproval action
that attempted to justify an alternative
threshold under the August 2018
memorandum, which are Alabama,312
Arkansas,313 Illinois,314 Indiana,315
Kentucky,316 Louisiana,317 Michigan,318
Mississippi,319 Missouri,320 and
Oklahoma,321 and Utah.322 The EPA
also addressed criticisms of the 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold made by Ohio 323 and
Nevada.324 (The topic of the EPA’s input
during state’s SIP-development
processes is further discussed in the
RTC document.)
For this reason, the EPA disagrees
with comment that case law reviewing
changes in agency positions as
articulated in FCC v. Fox TV Stations,
Inc., is applicable to this action. The
Agency has not imposed a requirement
that states must use a 1 percent of the
NAAQS threshold (which would reflect
a change in position from the August
2018 memorandum). Rather, under the
terms of the August 2018 memorandum,
the Agency has found that Alabama,
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, and
Utah have not made a sufficient
showing that the use of an alternative
contribution threshold is justified for
those States. Even if it were found that
the Agency’s position had
fundamentally changed between this
rulemaking action and the August 2018
memorandum (which we do not
concede to be the case), we do not
believe that any state had a legitimate
reliance interest that would be sufficient
to overcome the countervailing public
interest that is served in declining to
approve a state’s use of the 1 ppb
threshold where the state did not have
adequate technical justification. First,
neither states nor the emissions sources
located in those states have incurred
any compliance costs based on the
August 2018 memorandum. Second, it
312 87
FR 64423–64424.
FR 9806–9807.
314 87 FR 9852–9853.
315 87 FR 9855–9856.
316 87 FR 9508–9511.
317 87 FR 9812–9813.
318 87 FR 9861–9862.
319 87 FR 9557.
320 87 FR 9541–9543.
321 87 FR 9818–9820.
322 87 FR 31477–31451.
323 87 FR 9870–9871.
324 87 FR 31492.
313 87
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is not clear that any states invested
much of their own public resources in
developing state-specific arguments in
support of a 1 ppb threshold. As the
EPA observed at proposal, in nearly all
submittals, the states did not provide
the EPA with analysis specific to their
state or the receptors to which its
emissions are potentially linked. In one
case, the EPA’s proposed approval of
Iowa’s SIP submittal, ‘‘the EPA
expended its own resources to attempt
to supplement the information
submitted by the state, in order to more
thoroughly evaluate the state-specific
circumstances that could support
approval.’’ E.g., 87 FR 9806–07
(emphasis added). The EPA emphasizes
again that it was the EPA’s sole
discretion to perform this analysis in
support of the state’s submittal, and the
Agency is not obligated to conduct
supplemental analysis to fill the gaps
whenever it believes a state’s analysis is
insufficient. Id.
We acknowledge that certain states
may have assumed the EPA would
approve SIP submissions from states
whose contribution to any receptor was
below 1 ppb, but that assumption
reflected a misunderstanding of the
August 2018 memorandum, and in any
case, an assumption is not, as a legal
matter, the same thing as a reliance
interest.
The EPA is not formally rescinding
the August 2018 memorandum in this
action or at this time, but since guidance
memoranda are not binding in the first
place, it is not required that agencies
must ‘‘rescind’’ a guidance the moment
it becomes outdated or called into
question. As the Agency made clear in
the August 2018 memorandum, all of
EPA’s proposals for action on interstate
transport SIP submissions are subject to
rulemaking procedure, including public
notice and comment, before the EPA
makes a final decision.
Although the EPA is not formally
revoking the August 2018 memorandum
at this time, and we have separately
found that no state successfully
established a basis for use of a 1 ppb
threshold, we also continue to believe,
as set forth in our proposed
disapprovals, that national ozone
transport policy associated with
addressing obligations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS is not well-served by
allowing for less protective thresholds at
Step 2. Furthermore, the EPA disagrees
that national consistency is an
inappropriate consideration in the
context of interstate ozone transport.
The Good Neighbor provision, CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), requires to a
unique degree of concern for
consistency, parity, and equity across
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state lines.325 For a regional air
pollutant such as ozone, consistency in
requirements and expectations across all
states is essential. Based on the EPA’s
review of good neighbor SIP
submissions to-date and after further
consideration of the policy implications
of attempting to recognize an alternative
Step 2 threshold for certain states, the
Agency now believes the attempted use
of different thresholds at Step 2 with
respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS raises
substantial policy consistency and
practical implementation concerns. The
availability of different thresholds at
Step 2 has the potential to result in
inconsistent application of good
neighbor obligations based solely on the
strength of a state’s SIP submission at
Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework. From the perspective of
ensuring effective regional
implementation of good neighbor
obligations, the more important analysis
is the evaluation of the emissions
reductions needed, if any, to address a
state’s significant contribution after
consideration of a multifactor analysis
at Step 3, including a detailed
evaluation that considers air quality
factors and cost. While alternative
thresholds for purposes of Step 2 may
be ‘‘similar’’ in terms of capturing the
relative amount of upwind contribution
(as described in the August 2018
memorandum), nonetheless, use of an
alternative threshold would allow
certain states to avoid further evaluation
of potential emissions controls while
other states with a similar level of
contribution would proceed to a Step 3
analysis. This can create significant
equity and consistency problems among
states.
One comment suggested that the EPA
could address this potentially
inequitable outcome by simply adopting
a 1 ppb contribution threshold for all
states. However, the August 2018
memorandum did not conclude that 1
ppb would be appropriate for all states,
and the EPA does not view that
conclusion to be supported at present.
The EPA recognized in the August 2018
memorandum that on a nationwide
basis there was some similarity in the
amount of total upwind contribution
captured between 1 percent and 1 ppb.
However, while this may be true in
some sense, that is hardly a compelling
basis to move to a 1 ppb threshold for
325 The EPA notes that Congress has placed on the
EPA a general obligation to ensure the requirements
of the CAA are implemented consistently across
states and regions. See CAA section 301(a)(2).
Where the management and regulation of interstate
pollution levels spanning many states is at stake,
consistency in application of CAA requirements is
paramount.
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every state. Indeed, the 1 ppb threshold
has the disadvantage of losing a certain
amount of total upwind contribution for
further evaluation at Step 3 (e.g.,
roughly 7 percent of total upwind state
contribution was lost according to the
modeling underlying the August 2018
memorandum; in the EPA’s 2016v2 and
2016v3 modeling, the amount lost is 5
percent). Further, this logic has no end
point. A similar observation could be
made with respect to any incremental
change. For example, should the EPA
next recognize a 1.2 ppb threshold
because that would only cause some
small additional loss in capture of
upwind state contribution as compared
to 1 ppb? If the only basis for moving
to a 1 ppb threshold is that it captures
a ‘‘similar’’ (but actually smaller)
amount of upwind contribution, then
there is no basis for moving to that
threshold at all. Considering the core
statutory objective of ensuring
elimination of all significant
contribution to nonattainment or
interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS in other states as well as the
broad, regional nature of the collective
contribution problem with respect to
ozone, we continue to find no
compelling policy reason to adopt a new
threshold for all states of 1 ppb.
It also is unclear why use of a 1 ppb
threshold would be appropriate for all
states under a more protective NAAQS
when a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold has been used for
less protective NAAQS. To illustrate, a
state contributing greater than 0.75 ppb
but less than 1 ppb to a receptor under
the 2008 ozone NAAQS was ‘‘linked’’ at
Step 2 using the 1 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold, but if a
1 ppb threshold were used for the 2015
ozone NAAQS, then that same state
would not be ‘‘linked’’ to a receptor at
Step 2 under a NAAQS that is set to be
more protective of human health and
the environment. Consistency with past
interstate transport actions such as
CSAPR, and the CSAPR Update and
Revised CSAPR Update rulemakings
(which used a Step 2 threshold of 1
percent of the NAAQS for two less
protective ozone NAAQS), is an
important consideration. Continuing to
use a 1 percent of NAAQS approach
ensures that if the NAAQS are revised
and made more protective, an
appropriate increase in stringency at
Step 2 occurs, to ensure an
appropriately larger amount of total
upwind-state contribution is captured
for purposes of fully addressing
interstate transport obligations. See 76
FR 48208, 48237–38.
One comment identified that if the
EPA were to use a 1 percent of the
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NAAQS contribution threshold, the EPA
would be obligated to seek feedback on
that contribution threshold through a
public notice and comment process. The
EPA’s basis and rationale for every SIP
submission covered by this final SIP
disapproval action, including the use of
a 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold, was in fact presented for
public comment. The EPA received, and
is addressing in this action, many
detailed comments about contribution
thresholds. Further, the EPA’s
application of a 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold has been consistently used in
notice-and-comment rulemakings
beginning with the CSAPR rulemaking
in 2010–2011 and including both FIP
actions (CSAPR Update and Revised
CSAPR Update) and numerous actions
on ozone transport SIP submissions. In
each case, the 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold was subject to rigorous vetting
through public comment and the
Agency’s response to those comments,
including through analytical evaluations
of alternative thresholds. See, e.g., 81 FR
74518–19. By contrast, the August 2018
memorandum was not issued through
notice-and-comment rulemaking
procedures, and the EPA was careful to
caveat its utility and ultimate reliability
for that reason.
Comment: Some comments claim that
the EPA is applying the August 2018
memorandum inconsistently based on
the EPA’s actions with regard to action
good neighbor SIP submissions from
Iowa and Oregon for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS and Arizona’s good neighbor
SIP submission for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees
that there is any such inconsistency.
The EPA withdrew a previously
proposed approval of Iowa’s SIP
submission where the Agency had
attempted to substantiate the use of a 1
ppb contribution threshold, and reproposed and finalized approval of that
SIP based on a different rationale using
a 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold. 87 FR 9477 (Feb. 22, 2022);
87 FR 22463 (April 15, 2022). As
explained earlier in this section, this
experience of the EPA attempting to
justify 1 ppb for a state through
additional air quality analysis, where
the state had not conducted an analysis
the Agency considered to be sufficient
is part of the reason the Agency is
moving away from attempting to justify
use of this alternative contribution
threshold.
The EPA also disputes the claim that
Oregon and Arizona were the only states
‘‘allowed’’ to use a 1 ppb threshold. The
EPA approved Oregon’s SIP submission
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS on May 17,
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2019, and both Oregon and the EPA
relied on a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold. 84 FR 7854,
7856 (March 5, 2019) (proposal); 84 FR
22376 (May 17, 2019) (final). In our FIP
proposal for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,
the EPA explained it was not proposing
to conduct an error correction for
Oregon even though updated modeling
indicated Oregon contributed above 1
percent of the NAAQS to monitors in
California, because the specific monitors
in California are not interstate ozone
transport ‘‘receptors’’ at Step 1. See 87
FR 20036, 20074–20075 (April 6, 2022).
The EPA solicited public comment on
its approach to Oregon’s contribution to
California receptors as part of the 2015
ozone NAAQS transport FIP
development, and the Agency has not
yet taken final action on that FIP. In
2016, the EPA previously approved
Arizona’s good neighbor SIP for the
earlier 2008 ozone NAAQS based on a
similar rationale with regard to certain
monitors in California in 2016. 81 FR
15200 (March 22, 2016) (proposal); 81
FR 31513 (May 19, 2016) (final rule).
The Agency’s view with respect to its
evaluation of both Arizona and Oregon
is that specific monitors in California
are not interstate ozone transport
‘‘receptors’’ at Step 1. The EPA has not
approved or applied an alternative Step
2 threshold for any state.
Comments related to the specific
circumstances of an individual state
and/or its arguments put forth in its SIP
submission as it pertains to the August
2018 Memorandum are further
addressed in the RTC document.
8. Step 3: States’ Step 3 Analyses for the
2015 Ozone NAAQS
Comment: Comments state that the
EPA has not provided any guidance on
what an appropriate Step 3 analysis
would entail, and therefore any decision
where the Agency rejects a Step 3
analysis is arbitrary and capricious. One
comment claims that not a single state
has successfully made a Step 3
demonstration leading to an approvable
interstate transport SIP for the 2015
ozone NAAQS. Comments note that
there is no requirement in the CAA that
states must complete an analysis similar
to the EPA’s, and the EPA cannot
substitute its own judgment for that of
the state’s in crafting a SIP. Rather, the
EPA is obligated to defer to state
choices. One comment asserts that the
EPA is required to interpret the term
‘‘significant contribution’’ in a manner
‘‘which ties contribution to an amount
which contributes significantly to
downwind maintenance or
nonattainment problems.’’ Another
comment claims the EPA is
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intentionally exploiting the Supreme
Court decision in EME Homer City to
justify any requirements it deems
necessary to further Federal policy
decisions. Some comments identify that
some states did not conduct a Step 3
analysis in their submitted SIPs
because, using the flexibilities provided
in the 2018 memoranda, these states
concluded in Step 1 and Step 2 that no
controls were required. One comment
suggests that the EPA propose an 18month period to allow these states to
proceed with Steps 3 and 4.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees
that it is obligated to defer to states’
choices in the development of good
neighbor SIP submissions. As required
by the Act, the EPA has evaluated each
of the SIP submissions for compliance
with the CAA, including whether an
adequate Step 3 analysis was
conducted—or whether states had
offered an approvable alternative
approach to evaluating their good
neighbor obligations—and found in
each case that what these states
submitted was not approvable. The
Supreme Court has recognized that the
EPA is not obligated to provide states
with guidance before taking action to
disapprove a SIP submission. EME
Homer City, 572 U.S. at 508–10.
Nonetheless, throughout the entire
history of the EPA’s actions to
implement the good neighbor provision
for ozone, starting with the 1998 NOX
SIP Call, we have consistently adopted
a similar approach at Step 3 that
evaluates emissions reduction
opportunities for linked states applying
a multifactor analysis. States could have
performed a similar analysis of
emissions control opportunities. The
EPA has not directed states that they
must conduct a Step 3 analysis in
precisely the manner the EPA has done
in its prior regional transport
rulemakings; however, SIPs addressing
the obligations in CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must prohibit ‘‘any
source or other type of emissions
activity within the State’’ from emitting
air pollutants which will contribute
significantly to downwind air quality
problems. Thus, States seeking to rely
on an alternative approach to defining
‘‘significance’’ must use an approach
that comports with the statute’s
objectives to determine whether and to
what degree emissions from a state
should be ‘‘prohibited’’ to eliminate
emissions that will ‘‘contribute
significantly to nonattainment in, or
interfere with maintenance of’’ the
NAAQS in any other state. Further, the
approach selected must be reasonable
and technically justified. Therefore,
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9375
while the EPA does not direct states to
use a particular framework, nonetheless,
each state must show that its decisionmaking was based on a ‘‘technically
appropriate or justifiable’’ evaluation.
Further, the Agency has a statutory
obligation to review and approve or
disapprove SIP submittals according to
the requirements of the Clean Air Act.
See CAA section 110(k)(3). And the
Agency is empowered to interpret those
statutory requirements and exercise
both technical and policy judgment in
acting on SIP submissions. Indeed, the
task of allocating responsibility for
interstate pollution particularly
necessitates Federal involvement. See
EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 514 (‘‘The
statute . . . calls upon the Agency to
address a thorny causation problem:
How should EPA allocate among
multiple contributing upwind States
responsibility for a downwind State’s
excess pollution?’’); see also Wisconsin,
938 F.3d at 320. Further, we have
consistently disapproved states’ good
neighbor SIP submissions addressing
prior ozone NAAQS when we have
found those states linked through our
air quality modeling and yet the state
failed to conduct an analysis of
emissions control opportunities, or such
analysis was perfunctory or otherwise
unsatisfactory. We have been upheld in
our judgment that such SIPs are not
approvable. See Westar Energy v. EPA,
608 Fed. App’x 1, 3 (DC Cir. 2015)
(‘‘EPA acted well within the bounds of
its delegated authority when it
disapproved of Kansas’s proposed SIP.’’)
(emphasis added).
With respect to the assertion that no
state has successfully avoided a FIP
with an approvable Step 3 analysis, we
note first that at this time, no final FIP
addressing the 2015 ozone NAAQS has
been promulgated. More directly to the
point, no state submission that is the
subject of this disapproval action
offered any additional emissions control
measures. While it is conceivable that a
Step 3 analysis may result in a
determination that no additional
controls are needed, EPA expects that
such circumstances will generally be
rare, else the CAA’s interstate transport
provisions are rendered ineffective. For
example, the EPA determined in the
CSAPR Update that even though the
District of Columbia and Delaware were
linked to out of state receptors at Steps
1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework, no additional control
measures were required of either
jurisdiction. As to the District of
Columbia, we found that there were no
affected EGU sources that would fall
under the CSAPR Update’s control
program. For Delaware, we found that
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there were no emissions reductions
available from any affected sources for
any of the emissions control
stringencies that were analyzed. See 81
FR 74504, 74553. No state’s submission
covered in this action contained an
emissions control analysis that would
allow for these types of conclusions to
be reached for all of its sources.326
States generally did not conduct any
comparative analysis of available
emissions control strategies—nor did
they prohibit any additional ozoneprecursor emissions.
We are unclear what another
comment intends in asserting that the
EPA is required to interpret ‘‘significant
contribution’’ in a manner ‘‘which ties
contribution to an amount which
contributes significantly to downwind
maintenance or nonattainment
problems.’’ The EPA disagrees that: (1)
It has imposed or mandated a specific
approach to Step 3 in this action, (2)
this action established a particular level
of emissions reduction that states were
required to achieve, or (3) it mandated
a particular methodology for making
such a determination. To the extent the
comment suggests that the Agency
cannot mandate that states use cost as
a method of allocating responsibility in
their transport SIPs, first, the Agency
has not done so. Further, as to whether
cost could be used as a permissible
method of allocating responsibility, the
comment ignores the Supreme Court’s
holding to the contrary in EME Homer
City, 572 U.S. at 518, and the D.C.
Circuit’s earlier holding to the same
effect in Michigan, 213 F.3d at 687–88,
both of which upheld the EPA’s
approach of using uniform costeffectiveness thresholds to allocate
upwind state responsibilities under the
good neighbor provision for prior
NAAQS. While this approach may be
reasonable to apply again for the 2015
ozone NAAQS (and the EPA has
proposed to do so in the proposed FIP
action published on April 6, 2022), the
EPA did not impose such a requirement
on states in developing SIP submissions,
nor is the EPA finding any SIP
submission not approvable based on a
failure to use this particular
methodology.
In its March 2018 memorandum,
Attachment A, the Agency
acknowledged that there could be
multiple ways of conducting a Step 3
analysis. The Agency did not endorse
any particular approach and noted the
Attachment was merely a list of
stakeholder ideas that the EPA was not
recommending any state follow. The
apparent result of this ‘‘flexibility,’’
however, was that no state presented a
Step 3 analysis that resulted in
including any enforceable emissions
reductions to address good neighbor
obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
in their interstate transport SIP
submittals. Likewise, the comment here
did not include information or analysis
establishing that any particular
alternative Step 3 approach should have
been approved or that any state
performed such an analysis in a manner
that would have addressed ‘‘significant
contribution’’ even in the manner the
comment appears to be suggesting.
Notably, materials appended to one
State’s SIP submission, developed by
the Midwest Ozone Group (MOG), did
present an analysis applying an
approach to ‘‘significant contribution’’
that was based on calculating a
proportional share of each state’s
contribution to a downwind receptor,
and this methodology would have
imposed on that State’s, Kentucky’s,
sources an obligation to eliminate 0.02
ppb of ozone at the relevant receptor.
See 87 FR 9507. While the EPA does not
endorse or here evaluate the merits of
such an approach, it is noteworthy that
the State in that instance did not adopt
that approach, did not impose that
obligation on its sources through
enforceable measures by revising its SIP,
and offered no explanation for its
decision not to do so. See id. 9516
(‘‘This approach would have imposed
additional emissions reductions for
Kentucky sources. Kentucky’s final SIP
did not consider MOG’s proposal and
did not provide an explanation for why
it was rejecting this approach to
allocating upwind emissions reductions,
even though it appended this
recommendation to its SIP submittal.’’).
326 We note that California’s SIP submission is not
approvable at Step 3, despite the fact that the EPA
has not identified NOX emissions control
opportunities at the state’s EGUs. Nonetheless, the
SIP submission is not approvable because the state
attempted to rely on the CSAPR Update cost
threshold to justify a no-control determination
when that threshold was in relation to a partial
remedy for a less protective NAAQS, and even if
it could be reasonably concluded that no emissions
reductions are appropriate at EGUs in California,
the SIP submission did not conduct an adequate
analysis of emissions control opportunities at its
non-EGU industrial sources. See 87 FR 31459–60.
9. Step 4: Attempt To Rely on FIPs in
a SIP Submission
Comment: One comment states that
FIPs or other Federal emissions control
measures do not have to be incorporated
into and enforceable under state law to
be an approvable SIP measure. They
view it as acceptable for a state to rely
in its SIP Submission on the emissions
reductions achieved by prior ozone
transport FIPs, such as the CSAPR
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Update or the Revised CSAPR Update,
as a permissible means of achieving
emissions reductions to eliminate
significant contribution for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees. As
the EPA has noted on page 16 of our
September 2013 memorandum
‘‘Guidance on Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan (SIP) Elements
under Clean Air Act sections 110(a)(1)
and 110(a)(2)’’ (2013 Infrastructure SIP
Guidance): ‘‘a FIP is not a state plan and
thus cannot serve to satisfy the state’s
obligation to submit a SIP.’’ 327 Indeed,
the general principle that measures
relied on to meet states’ CAA
obligations must be part of the SIP has
been recognized by courts, such as in
Committee for a Better Arvin, 786 F.3d
1169 (9th Cir. 2015).
This principle is grounded in the
recognition that if such measures are not
rendered enforceable within the SIP
itself, then they may be modified or
amended in ways that would undermine
the basis for the state’s reliance on them,
while the approved SIP itself would
purport to have addressed the relevant
obligation merely by outdated reference
to that modified or nonexistent control
measure residing outside the SIP. For
example, to be credited for attainment
demonstration purposes, requirements
that may otherwise be federally
enforceable (such as new source review
permit limits or terms in federally
enforceable consent orders), must be in
the state’s implementation plan so that
they could not later be changed without
being subject to the EPA’s approval.
This principle is instrumental to
ensuring that states cannot take credit
for control measures that might be
changed (even by the EPA itself)
without the EPA’s required approval
action under CAA section 110, which
includes the obligation to ensure there
is no interference or backsliding with
respect to all applicable CAA
requirements. See CAA section 110(l).
See also Montana Sulfur and Chemical
Co. v. EPA, 666 F.3d 1174, 1195–96 (9th
Cir. 2012) (‘‘The EPA correctly reads 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2) as requiring states to
include enforceable emissions limits
and other control measures in the plan
itself.’’) (emphasis in original); 40 CFR
51.112(a) (‘‘Each plan must demonstrate
that the measures, rules, and regulations
contained in it are adequate to provide
for the timely attainment and
327 Guidance on Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan (SIP) Elements under Clean
Air Act Sections 110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2), September
13, 2013 (available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/
default/files/2015-12/documents/guidance_on_
infrastructure_sip_elements_multipollutant_final_
sept_2013.pdf).
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maintenance of the national standard
that it implements.’’) (emphasis added).
The EPA has applied this same
interpretation in implementing other
infrastructure SIP requirements found in
CAA section 110(a)(2). For example, in
implementing CAA section 110(a)(2)(C),
(D)(i)(II), (D)(ii), and (J) relating to the
permitting program for PSD, the EPA
has developed FIPs that incorporate by
reference provisions codified at 40 CFR
51.21, and some states have taken
delegation of that FIP to implement the
relevant requirements. But the EPA does
not and cannot approve the state as
having met these infrastructure SIP
elements, even by virtue of taking
delegation of the FIP. See, e.g., 83 FR
8818, 8820 (March 1, 2018). Likewise,
under one of the pathways presented in
our 2013 Infrastructure SIP Guidance,
the EPA does not approve SIPs
addressing interstate visibility transport
obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (‘‘prong 4’’) until the
state itself has a fully approved regional
haze plan, and states cannot rely on the
CSAPR ‘‘better than BART’’ FIPs to meet
their prong 4 requirements until they
have replaced that FIP with an approved
SIP. See, e.g., 84 FR 13800, 13801 (April
8, 2019); 84 FR 43741, 43744 (Aug. 22,
2019).
The comment does not provide
contrary examples where the EPA has
approved, as a SIP-based emissions
control program, requirements that are
established through Federal regulation
or other types of emissions control
programs that are outside the SIP. It is
true that in the first two steps of the
4-step interstate transport framework,
the EPA conducts air quality modeling
based on emissions inventories
reflective of on-the-books state and
Federal emissions control requirements,
to make determinations about air quality
conditions and contribution levels that
can be anticipated in the baseline in a
future analytic year. If the comment’s
examples were intended to reference
this consideration of Federal measures
in prior actions on SIP submittals, the
EPA agrees that it does consider such
measures at these steps of its analysis,
and the EPA has consistently taken this
approach throughout its prior ozone
transport actions. But here we are
discussing Step 3 and 4 of the
framework, where states that have been
found to contribute to downwind
nonattainment and maintenance
problems, e.g., are linked at Steps 1 and
2 to an out of state receptor, would need
to evaluate their continuing emissions
to determine what if any of those
emissions should be deemed
‘‘significant’’ (e.g., Step 3) and
eliminated through enforceable
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emissions control requirements (e.g.,
Step 4). The EPA is not aware of any
good neighbor SIP submission that it
has approved where a state purported to
eliminate its significant contribution
(e.g., satisfy Steps 3 and 4) simply by
referring to Federal measures that were
not included in its SIP and enforceable
as a matter of state law. Finally, it bears
emphasizing that the EPA’s assessment
of the 2015 ozone transport SIPs has
already accounted for the emissionsreducing effects of both the CSAPR
Update and the Revised CSAPR Update
in its baseline air quality modeling at
Steps 1 and 2, and so pointing to either
of those rules as measures that would
eliminate significant contribution at
Step 3, for purposes of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, would be impermissible
double-counting.
C. Good Neighbor Provision Policy
1. Mobile Source Emissions
Comment: Several comments assert
that mobile source emissions within the
home state of the location of receptors
are the primary source of nonattainment
problems in downwind areas. Some
comments additionally state that a
larger portion of their own upwind state
emissions is from mobile source
emissions. These comments request that
the EPA focus on these emissions
sources rather than stationary sources to
reduce ongoing nonattainment
problems. These comments claim
mobile sources are federally regulated
and, therefore, the EPA bears the
responsibility to either take action to
reduce mobile source emissions
nationwide or encourage downwind
states to implement strategies to reduce
their own local mobile source
emissions.
Response: The EPA recognizes that
nationwide, mobile sources represent a
large portion of ozone-precursor
emissions and, as such, would be
expected to have a large impact on
nonattainment and maintenance
receptors.
The EPA has been regulating mobile
source emissions since it was
established as a Federal agency in 1970
and is committed to continuing the
effective implementation and
enforcement of current mobile source
emissions standards and evaluating the
need for additional standards.328 The
328 On December 20, 2022, the EPA finalized
more stringent emissions standards for NOX and
other pollutants from heavy-duty vehicles and
engines, beginning with model year 2027. See
https://www.epa.gov/regulations-emissionsvehicles-and-engines/final-rule-and-relatedmaterials-control-air-pollution. The EPA is also
developing new multi-pollutant standards for light-
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EPA believes that the NOX reductions
from its Federal programs are an
important reason for the historical and
long-running trend of improving air
quality in the United States. The trend
helps explain why the overall number of
receptors and severity of ozone
nonattainment problems under the 1997
and 2008 ozone NAAQS have declined.
As a result of this long history, NOX
emissions from onroad and nonroad
mobile sources have substantially
decreased and are predicted to continue
to decrease into the future as newer
vehicles and engines that are subject to
the more recent and more stringent
standards replace older vehicles and
engines.329
The EPA included mobile source
emissions in the 2016v2 modeling used
to support the proposal of these SIP
disapproval actions to help determine
state linkages at Steps 1 and 2 of the
4-step interstate transport framework
and has done likewise in its 2016v3
modeling. However, whether mobile
source emissions are a large portion of
an upwind or downwind state’s NOX
emissions, and whether they represent a
large portion of the contribution to
downwind nonattainment and
maintenance receptors, does not answer
the question regarding the adequacy of
an upwind state’s SIP submission. The
question is whether ‘‘any source or
other type of emissions activity’’ (in the
collective) in an upwind state is
contributing significantly to downwind
receptors, see CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i). A state’s transport SIP
must include a technical and adequate
justification to support its conclusion
that the state has satisfied its interstate
transport obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.
To the extent that comments argue
that mobile source emissions should be
the focus of emissions reductions for the
purposes of resolving interstate
transport obligations, states could have
provided such an analysis for how
mobile source reductions might achieve
necessary reductions. See, e.g., 70 FR
25209. However, states conducted no
such analysis of methods or control
techniques that could be used to reduce
mobile source emissions, instead
claiming that states cannot control
mobile source emissions, as this is a
federally-regulated sector, or states
cannot reasonably control these
emissions. States do have options,
however, to reduce emissions from
certain aspects of their mobile source
and medium-duty vehicles as well as options to
address pollution from locomotives.
329 https://gispub.epa.gov/air/trendsreport/2022/
#home.
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sectors, and to the extent a state is
attributing its contribution to out of
state receptors to its mobile sources, it
could have conducted an analysis of
possible programs or measures that
could achieve emissions reductions
from those sources. (For example, a
general list of types of transportation
control measures can be found in CAA
section 108(f).330)
State-specific issues raised by
comments are further addressed in the
RTC document.
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2. International Contributions
Comment: Several comments state
that international emissions contribute
to nonattainment and maintenance
receptors downwind, and these
emissions are not within the jurisdiction
of the states. They advocate for the EPA
should considering this when acting on
SIP submissions. Some comments claim
that, in the west, international
contributions are even greater than in
eastern portions of the U.S. and support
their notion that the EPA’s evaluation of
interstate transport should take special
consideration of unique regional factors
when determining upwind state
obligations, or that the Agency should
otherwise explain why it is still
inappropriate to factor in higher
international contributions, as the
Agency has done in Oregon’s case.
Response: The EPA responded to
similar arguments related to
international emissions included in the
SIP submissions of Arkansas, California,
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan,
Missouri, Ohio, Utah, Wyoming, and
West Virginia in the proposed
disapprovals.331 No comments on the
proposed disapprovals provided new
information to indicate the EPA’s initial
assessment was incorrect. These
comments’ reasoning related to
international emissions is inapplicable
to the requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The good neighbor
provision requires states and the EPA to
address interstate transport of air
pollution that significantly contributes
330 In making this observation, the EPA is not
suggesting that mobile source emissions reductions
are necessarily required to address a state’s good
neighbor obligations, but merely pointing out that
if the state itself attributes the problem to mobile
sources, then it is reasonable to expect that further
analysis of such control strategies would be
explored.
331 87 FR 9798, 9809–9810 (Feb. 22, 2022)
(Arkansas); 87 FR 31443, 31460–31461 (May 24,
2022) (California); 87 FR 9854 (Illinois); 87 FR
9859–9860 (Indiana); 87 FR 9498, 9508 (Feb. 22,
2022) (Kentucky); 87 FR 9838, 9865 (Michigan); 87
FR 9533, 9543 (Feb. 22, 2022) (Missouri); 87 FR
9838 at 9874 (Ohio); 87 FR 31470, 31482 (May 24,
2022) (Utah); 87 FR 9516, 9527 (Feb. 22, 2022)
(West Virginia); 87 FR 31495, 31507 (May 24, 2022)
(Wyoming).
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to downwind states’ ability to attain and
maintain the NAAQS. Whether
emissions from other states or other
countries also contribute to the same
downwind air quality issue is typically
not relevant in assessing whether a
downwind state has an air quality
problem, or whether an upwind state is
significantly contributing to that
problem. (Only in rare cases has EPA
concluded that certain monitoring sites
should not be considered receptors at
Step 1 due to the very low collective
upwind-state contribution at those
receptors. See the RTC document.)
States are not obligated under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to act alone to
reduce emissions in amounts sufficient
to resolve a downwind receptor’s
nonattainment or maintenance problem.
Rather, states are obligated to eliminate
their own ‘‘significant contribution’’ to
that receptor or ‘‘interference’’ with the
ability of other states to attain or
maintain the NAAQS. The statutory
standard is, fundamentally, one of
contribution, not causation.
Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin
specifically rejected petitioner
arguments suggesting that upwind states
should be excused from good neighbor
obligations on the basis that some other
source of emissions (whether
international or another upwind state)
could be considered the ‘‘but-for’’ cause
of downwind air quality problem. See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 323–324. The
court viewed petitioners’ arguments as
essentially an argument ‘‘that an
upwind state ‘contributes significantly’
to downwind nonattainment only when
its emissions are the sole cause of
downwind nonattainment.’’ Id. at 324.
The court explained that ‘‘an upwind
state can ‘contribute’ to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are
not the but-for cause.’’ Id. at 324–325.
See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571
F.3d 20, 39 (DC Cir. 2009) (rejecting the
argument ‘‘that ‘significantly contribute’
unambiguously means ‘strictly cause’’’
because there is ‘‘no reason why the
statute precludes EPA from determining
that [an] addition of [pollutant] into the
atmosphere is significant even though a
nearby county’s nonattainment problem
would still persist in its absence’’); Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (DC Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ‘‘there
likely would have been no violation at
all . . . if it were not for the emissions
resulting from [another source]’’ is
‘‘merely a rephrasing of the but-for
causation rule that we rejected in
Catawba County’’). Therefore, a state is
not excused from eliminating its
significant contribution on the basis that
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international emissions also contribute
some amount of pollution to the same
receptors to which the state is linked.
To the extent comments compare the
influence of international emissions
with the EPA’s treatment of receptors in
California to which Oregon contributes
greater than 0.70 ppb, the EPA responds
to these comments in the RTC
document.
3. Western Interstate Transport Policy
Comment: Several comments argue
that the EPA should consider an
alternative approach to evaluating
interstate transport in the western U.S.
Comments assert there are
considerations unique to the western
states, such as increased background,
international, and wildfire contributions
to ozone concentrations in the west.
Some commenters believe a ‘‘case-bycase’’ assessment is more appropriate
for evaluating western states’ interstate
transport obligations, as they claim the
EPA had done for the 2008 ozone
standards. They additionally argue that
the EPA modeling is not able to
accurately project ozone concentrations
in the west because of these factors,
along with the west’s unique
topographical influence on ozone
transport.
Response: The EPA disagrees that
either its nationwide photochemical
grid modeling or the 4-step interstate
transport framework for ozone cannot
generally be applied to states in the
western region of the U.S. and has
maintained that position consistently
throughout numerous actions.332
Though at times the EPA has found it
appropriate to examine more closely
discreet issues for some western
states,333 the 4-step interstate transport
framework itself is appropriate for
assessing good neighbor obligations of
western states in the absence of those
circumstances. The EPA evaluated the
contents of the western states’ SIP
submissions covered by this action on
the merits of the information the states
provided. As described at proposal and
reiterated in Section IV, the EPA is
finalizing its disapproval of California,
332 For a discussion of this history, see for
example 87 FR 31480–81 (proposed disapproval of
Utah SIP submission) and 87 FR 31453–56
(proposed disapproval of California SIP
submission).
333 See, e.g., Approval of Arizona’s 2008 ozone
NAAQS interstate transport SIP submission, 81 FR
15200 (March 22, 2016) (Step 1 analysis concluding
certain monitors in California should not be
considered interstate transport receptors for
purposes of the good neighbor provision for the
2008 ozone NAAQS); see also 87 FR 61249, 61254–
55 (Oct. 11, 2022) (in approving Colorado’s
interstate transport SIP for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,
analyzing unique issues associated with wintertime
inversion conditions in certain western areas).
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Nevada, and Utah’s SIP submissions.
This final determination is based on
these evaluations, as well as the EPA’s
2016v2 and 2016v3 modeling following
stakeholder feedback.
The EPA continues to find it
appropriate to rely on the results of its
nationwide modeling in the western
U.S., despite comments concerning the
ability for the EPA’s modeling to
accurately project ozone concentrations
and contributions in western states, as
well as its ability to support the EPA’s
4-step framework for assessing interstate
transport. The EPA’s nationwide
photochemical grid modeling considers
multiple complex factors, including
those raised in comments, such as
terrain complexities, variability in
emissions (e.g., wildfire emissions),
meteorology, and topography. While the
EPA continues to believe its 2016v2
modeling performs equally as well in
both the west and the east, the EPA has
adjusted its 2016v3 modeling to ensure
its predictions more closely replicate
the relative magnitude of concentrations
and day-to-day variability that are
characteristic of observed 8-hour daily
maximum ozone concentrations in each
region, as explained in Section III.A and
the RTC document. As such, the EPA
continues to find its modeling reliable
for characterizing ozone concentrations
and contribution values in the western
U.S. Further responses regarding the
reliability of the EPA’s modeling in the
western U.S. is provided in the RTC
document.
The EPA disagrees with comments
noting that the Agency took an
alternative approach for western states
when assessing interstate transport
obligations under the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. As explained in our proposed
disapproval of California’s 2015 ozone
NAAQS interstate transport SIP
submission, while the EPA has in
limited circumstances found unique
issues associated with addressing ozone
transport in western states, the EPA has
consistently applied the 4-step interstate
transport framework in western states,
as it has done here, and has identified
ozone transport problems in the west
that are similar to those in the east.334 335
At proposal, the EPA addressed states’
arguments regarding the impact of
unique factors such as topography and,
as part of the EPA’s evaluation of the
contents of the SIP submission,
provided explanation as to why the EPA
found the states’ arguments did not
334 87
335 81
FR 31443, 31453.
FR 74503, 74523.
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support their conclusions regarding long
range transport of ozone in the west.336
While comments point to relatively
higher level of contributions from nonanthropogenic, local, or international
contributions in the west as reason for
evaluating interstate transport
differently in the west, a state is not
excused from eliminating its significant
contribution due to contributions from
these sources, where the data shows that
anthropogenic emissions from upwind
states also contribute collectively to
identified receptors at levels that
indicate there to be an interstate
contribution problem as well. As stated
in Section V.C.2, a state is not excused
from eliminating its significant
contribution on the basis that
international emissions also contribute
some amount of pollution to the same
receptors to which the state is linked.
This same principle applies broadly to
other arguments as to which emissions
are the ‘‘cause’’ of the problem; the good
neighbor provision established a
contribution standard, not a but-for
causation standard. See Wisconsin, 938
F.3d at 323–25.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Executive Order 13563:
Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action and was, therefore, not
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an
information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act. This final action does not establish
any new information collection
requirement apart from what is already
required by law. This finding relates to
the requirement in the CAA for states to
submit SIPs under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) addressing interstate
transport obligations associated with the
2015 ozone NAAQS.
336 See, e.g., 87 FR 31443, 31457. The EPA
evaluated California’s qualitative consideration of
unique topographic factors that may influence the
transport of emissions from sources within the state
to downwind receptors in Colorado and Arizona.
The EPA concluded that the State’s arguments do
not present sufficient evidence that called into
question the results of the EPA’s modeling.
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C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action will not
impose any requirements on small
entities. This action is disapproving SIP
submissions for not containing the
necessary provisions to satisfy interstate
transport requirements under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538 and does not
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the states, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action has tribal implications.
However, this action does not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments,
nor preempt tribal law. This action
includes disapproving the portion of
Oklahoma’s SIP submission addressing
the state’s good neighbor obligations
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS and applies to
certain areas of Indian country as
discussed in Section IV.C of the
proposed action, ‘‘Air Plan Disapproval;
Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and
Texas; Interstate Transport of Air
Pollution for the 2015 Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards’’ (87 FR
9798 at 9824, February 2, 2022).
However, this action does not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments
because no actions will be required of
tribal governments. This action will also
not preempt tribal law as no Oklahoma
tribe implements a regulatory program
under the CAA, and thus does not have
applicable or related tribal laws. The
EPA consulted with tribal officials
under the EPA Policy on Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribes
early in the process of developing this
regulation to permit them to have
meaningful and timely input into its
development. A summary of that
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consultation is provided in the file
‘‘2015 Ozone Transport OK Tribal
Consultation Meeting Record 3–3–
2022,’’ in the docket for this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern health or
safety risks that the EPA has reason to
believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ‘‘covered
regulatory action’’ in section 2–202 of
the Executive order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it merely disapproves SIP
submissions as not containing the
necessary provisions to satisfy interstate
transport requirements under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
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J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations, 59 FR 7629,
Feb. 16, 1994) directs Federal agencies
to identify and address
‘‘disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects’’
of their actions on minority populations
and low-income populations to the
greatest extent practicable and
permitted by law. The EPA defines
environmental justice (EJ) as ‘‘the fair
treatment and meaningful involvement
of all people regardless of race, color,
national origin, or income with respect
to the development, implementation,
and enforcement of environmental laws,
regulations, and policies.’’ The EPA
further defines the term fair treatment to
mean that ‘‘no group of people should
bear a disproportionate burden of
environmental harms and risks,
including those resulting from the
negative environmental consequences of
industrial, governmental, and
commercial operations or programs and
policies.’’
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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, the
EPA’s role is to review state choices,
and approve those choices if they meet
the minimum criteria of the Act. As
articulated in this final action, the EPA
is determining that certain SIPs do not
meet certain minimum requirements,
and the EPA is disapproving those SIPs.
Specifically, this action disapproves
certain SIP submissions as not
containing the necessary provisions to
satisfy ‘‘good neighbor’’ requirements
under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
The EPA did not perform an EJ analysis
and did not consider EJ in this action.
The CAA and applicable implementing
regulations neither prohibit nor require
such an evaluation. In a wholly separate
regulatory action, the EPA will fully
address the CAA ‘‘good neighbor’’
requirements under section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS as it regards the SIP
disapprovals included in this final
action. Consideration of EJ is not
required as part of this action, and there
is no information in the record
inconsistent with the stated goal of E.O.
12898 of achieving EJ for people of
color, low-income populations, and
Indigenous peoples.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
the EPA will submit a rule report to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
L. Judicial Review
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs
judicial review of final actions by the
EPA. This section provides, in part, that
petitions for review must be filed in the
D.C. Circuit: (i) when the agency action
consists of ‘‘nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions
taken, by the Administrator,’’ or (ii)
when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, but ‘‘such action is based on
a determination of nationwide scope or
effect and if in taking such action the
Administrator finds and publishes that
such action is based on such a
determination.’’ For locally or regionally
applicable final actions, the CAA
reserves to the EPA complete discretion
whether to invoke the exception in
(ii).337
337 In deciding whether to invoke the exception
by making and publishing a finding that an action
is based on a determination of nationwide scope or
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This rulemaking is ‘‘nationally
applicable’’ within the meaning of CAA
section 307(b)(1). In this final action, the
EPA is applying a uniform legal
interpretation and common, nationwide
analytical methods with respect to the
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) concerning interstate
transport of pollution (i.e., ‘‘good
neighbor’’ requirements) to disapprove
SIP submissions that fail to satisfy these
requirements for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Based on these analyses, the
EPA is disapproving SIP submittals for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS for 21 states
located across a wide geographic area in
eight of the ten EPA Regions and ten
Federal judicial circuits. Given that on
its face this action addresses
implementation of the good neighbor
requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) in a large number of
states located across the country and
given the interdependent nature of
interstate pollution transport and the
common core of knowledge and analysis
involved in evaluating the submitted
SIPs, this is a ‘‘nationally applicable’’
action within the meaning of CAA
section 307(b)(1).
In the alternative, to the extent a court
finds this action to be locally or
regionally applicable, the Administrator
is exercising the complete discretion
afforded to him under the CAA to make
and publish a finding that this action is
based on a determination of
‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ within the
meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1). In
this final action, the EPA is interpreting
and applying section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) of
the CAA for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
based on a common core of nationwide
policy judgments and technical analysis
concerning the interstate transport of
pollutants throughout the continental
U.S. In particular, the EPA is applying
here the same, nationally consistent 4step interstate transport framework for
assessing obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS that it has applied in other
nationally applicable rulemakings, such
as CSAPR, the CSAPR Update, and the
Revised CSAPR Update. The EPA is
relying on the results from nationwide
photochemical grid modeling using a
2016 base year and 2023 projection year
as the primary basis for its assessment
of air quality conditions and pollution
contribution levels at Step 1 and Step 2
of that 4-step framework and applying a
nationally uniform approach to the
identification of nonattainment and
effect, the Administrator takes into account a
number of policy considerations, including his
judgment balancing the benefit of obtaining the D.C.
Circuit’s authoritative centralized review versus
allowing development of the issue in other contexts
and the best use of agency resources.
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maintenance receptors across the entire
geographic area covered by this final
action.338 The EPA has also evaluated
each state’s arguments for the use of
alternative approaches or alternative
sets of data with an eye to ensuring
national consistency and avoiding
inconsistent or inequitable results
among upwind states (i.e., those states
for which good neighbor obligations are
being evaluated in this action) and
between upwind and downwind states
(i.e., those states that contain receptors
signifying ozone nonattainment or
maintenance problems).
The Administrator finds that this is a
matter on which national uniformity in
judicial resolution of any petitions for
review is desirable, to take advantage of
the D.C. Circuit’s administrative law
expertise, and to facilitate the orderly
development of the basic law under the
Act. The Administrator also finds that
consolidated review of this action in the
D.C. Circuit will avoid piecemeal
litigation in the regional circuits, further
judicial economy, and eliminate the risk
of inconsistent results for different
states, and that a nationally consistent
approach to the CAA’s mandate
concerning interstate transport of ozone
pollution constitutes the best use of
agency resources. The EPA’s responses
to comments on the appropriate venue
for petitions for review are contained in
the RTC document.
For these reasons, this final action is
nationally applicable or, alternatively,
the Administrator is exercising the
complete discretion afforded to him by
the CAA and finds that this final action
is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect for purposes
of CAA section 307(b)(1) and is
publishing that finding in the Federal
Register. 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 District
of Columbia Circuit by April 14, 2023.
4. Section 52.223 is amended by
adding paragraph (p)(7) to read as
follows:
■
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Ozone.
§ 52.223
Approval status.
*
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is amended as
follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
*
*
*
*
(p) * * *
(7) The interstate transport
requirements for Significant
Contribution to Nonattainment (Prong 1)
and Interstate Transport—Interference
with Maintenance (Prong 2) of Clean Air
Act (CAA) section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
■ 5. Section 52.283 is amended by
adding paragraph (h) to read as follows:
§ 52.283
Interstate Transport.
*
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart B—Alabama
2. Section 52.56 is added to read as
follows:
■
§ 52.56
Subpart F—California
Control strategy: Ozone.
(a) The state implementation plan
(SIP) revision submitted on June 21,
2022, addressing Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
(b) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
(h) 2015 ozone NAAQS. The 2018
Infrastructure SIP Revision, submitted
on October 1, 2018, does not meet the
following specific requirements of Clean
Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS).
(1) The requirements of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) regarding significant
contribution to nonattainment of the
2015 ozone NAAQS in any other State
and interference with maintenance of
the 2015 ozone NAAQS by any other
State.
(2) [Reserved]
Subpart E—Arkansas
Subpart O—Illinois
3. Section 52.174 is amended by
adding paragraph (b) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.174
Ozone.
Control strategy and regulations:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The portion of the SIP submittal
from October 10, 2019, addressing Clean
Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
6. Section 52.720 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e), under the
heading ‘‘Section 110(a)(2)
Infrastructure Requirements,’’ by
revising the entry for ‘‘2015 Ozone
NAAQS Infrastructure Requirements’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 52.720
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED ILLINOIS NONREGULATORY AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
Name of SIP provision
*
*
State
submittal
date
*
EPA approval date
*
Comments
*
*
*
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements
338 In the report on the 1977 Amendments that
revised section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress
noted that the Administrator’s determination that
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the ‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ exception applies
would be appropriate for any action that has a
scope or effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See
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H.R. Rep. No. 95–294 at 323, 324, reprinted in 1977
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402–03.
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EPA-APPROVED ILLINOIS NONREGULATORY AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS—Continued
Name of SIP provision
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
*
*
2015 Ozone NAAQS Infrastructure Requirements.
Statewide ...
Subpart P—Indiana
7. Section 52.770 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e) by adding an entry
for ‘‘Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure
■
State
submittal
date
*
5/16/2019
and 9/22/
2020.
EPA approval date
Comments
*
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
*
All CAA infrastructure elements under
110(a)(2) have been approved except
(D)(i)(I) Prongs 1, 2, which are disapproved,
and no action has been taken on (D)(i)(II)
Prong 4.
Requirements for the 2015 Ozone
NAAQS’’ after the entry for ‘‘Section
110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements
for the 2008 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS’’ to
read as follows:
§ 52.770
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED INDIANA NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
Title
Indiana date
*
*
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015 Ozone
NAAQS.
*
*
11/2/2018
*
Explanation
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
*
*
All CAA infrastructure elements have been approved
except (D)(i)(I) Prongs 1 and 2, which are disapproved, and no action has been taken on the
visibility portion of (D)(i)(II).
*
*
§ 52.996
Subpart S—Kentucky
8. Section 52.930 is amended by
adding paragraph (n) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.930
EPA approval
Control strategy: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(n) Disapproval. The state
implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on January 11, 2019,
addressing Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
*
Disapprovals.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The SIP submittal from November
13, 2019, addressing Clean Air Act
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015
ozone NAAQS is disapproved.
Subpart V—Maryland
9. Section 52.996 is amended by
adding paragraph (b) to read as follows:
■
*
intended to address the Clean Air Act
(CAA) section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
interstate transport requirements for the
2015 8-hour ozone national ambient air
quality standard (NAAQS).
Subpart X—Michigan
11. Section 52.1170 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e), under the
heading ‘‘Infrastructure,’’ by revising the
entry for ‘‘Section 110(a)(2)
infrastructure requirements for the 2015
ozone NAAQS’’ to read as follows:
■
10. Section 52.1076 is amended by
adding paragraph (gg) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.1076 Control strategy plans for
attainment and rate-of-progress: Ozone.
*
Subpart T—Louisiana
*
*
*
*
*
(gg) Disapproval. EPA is disapproving
Maryland’s October 16, 2019, State
Implementation Plan (SIP) revision
§ 52.1170
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED MICHIGAN NONREGULATORY AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Name of nonregulatory
SIP provision
*
*
State
submittal
date
*
EPA approval date
*
Comments
*
*
Infrastructure
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EPA-APPROVED MICHIGAN NONREGULATORY AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS—Continued
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
Name of nonregulatory
SIP provision
*
*
Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure
requirements for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
*
State
submittal
date
*
Statewide ...
3/8/2019
*
*
Subpart Y—Minnesota
12. Section 52.1220 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e) by revising the
■
EPA approval date
Comments
*
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
*
Approved CAA elements: 110(a)(2)(A), (B),
(C), (D)(i)(II) Prong 3, D(ii), (E)(i), (F), (G),
(H), (J), (K), (L), and (M).
Disapproved CAA elements: 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
Prongs 1 and 2, and 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) Prong
4. No action on CAA element
110(1)(2)(E)(ii).
*
*
entry for ‘‘Section 110(a)(2)
Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS’’ to read as follows:
*
§ 52.1220
*
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA-APPROVED MINNESOTA NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS
Name of nonregulatory
SIP provision
*
*
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS.
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
13. Section 52.1273 is amended by
adding paragraph (b) read as follows:
Comments
*
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
*
Fully approved for all CAA elements except
transport elements of (D)(i)(I) Prong 2, which
are disapproved, and no action has been
taken on the visibility protection requirements of (D)(i)(II).
15. Section 52.1472 is amended by
adding paragraph (k) to read as follows:
the CAA infrastructure requirements of
section 110(a)(2) for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS, is disapproved for
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and
2).
(2) [Reserved]
(d) [Reserved]
§ 52.1472
Subpart HH—New York
Subpart DD—Nevada
Control strategy: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Disapproval. The state
implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on September 3, 2019,
addressing Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Subpart AA—Missouri
14. Section 52.1323 is amended by
adding paragraph (p) to read as follows:
■
Approval status.
*
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
EPA approved date
disapproved for section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
(prongs 1 and 2).
(2) [Reserved]
■
§ 52.1323
*
10/1/2018
Statewide ...
Subpart Z—Mississippi
§ 52.1273
State
submittal
date/
effective
date
*
*
*
*
(p) For the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS:
(1) Disapproval. Missouri state
implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on June 10, 2019, to address
the Clean Air Act (CAA) infrastructure
requirements of section 110(a)(2) for the
2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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■
Approval status.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The
SIP submittal from October 1, 2018, is
disapproved for Clean Air Act (CAA)
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and
2) for the NDEP, Clark County, and
Washoe County portions of the Nevada
SIP submission.
Subpart FF—New Jersey
16. Section 52.1586 is amended by
adding paragraph (c) and reserved
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.1586 Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS—(1)
Disapproval. New Jersey SIP revision
submitted on May 13, 2019, to address
PO 00000
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17. Section 52.1683 is amended by
adding paragraph (v) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.1683
Control strategy: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Disapproval. The portion of the
SIP revision submitted on September
25, 2018, addressing Clean Air Act
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and
2) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is
disapproved.
Subpart KK—Ohio
18. Section 52.1870 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e), under
‘‘Infrastructure Requirements,’’ by
revising the entry for ‘‘Section 110(a)(2)
infrastructure requirements for the 2015
ozone NAAQS’’ to read as follows:
■
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§ 52.1870
*
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
EPA-APPROVED OHIO NONREGULATORY AND QUASI-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
Applicable
geographic
or nonattainment
area
Title
*
State date
*
*
EPA approval
*
Comments
*
*
*
Infrastructure Requirements
*
*
Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure
requirements for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
*
*
*
*
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
Subpart LL—Oklahoma
Subpart SS—Texas
19. Section 52.1922 is amended by
adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
■
§ 52.1922
Approval status.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The portion of the SIP submittal
from October 25, 2018, addressing Clean
Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the
2015 ozone national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Name of non-regulatory
SIP revision
*
*
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 8Hour Ozone NAAQS.
Applicable
geographic
area
22. Section 52.2591 is amended by
adding paragraph (l) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.2591 Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure
requirements.
*
*
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
*
*
17:17 Feb 10, 2023
§ 52.2275 Control strategy and
regulations: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(o) Disapproval. The portion of the
SIP submittal from September 12, 2018,
addressing Clean Air Act section
*
Jkt 259001
2/4/2019
Frm 00050
*
Subpart XX—West Virginia
21. Section 52.2520 is amended in the
table in paragraph (e) by adding the
entry ‘‘Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 8-Hour
Ozone NAAQS’’ at the end of the table
to read as follows:
■
§ 52.2520
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
EPA approval date
Additional explanation
*
*
2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL
REGISTER CITATION].
*
*
Disapproval—EPA is disapproving West Virginia’s February 4, 2019, State Implementation Plan (SIP) revision intended to address
the CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) interstate
transport requirements for the 2015 8-hour
ozone national ambient air quality standard
(NAAQS).
(l) Partial approval/disapproval. In a
September 14, 2018, submission, WDNR
certified that the State has satisfied the
infrastructure SIP requirements of
section 110(a)(2)(A) through (H), and (J)
through (M) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
For section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), prong 1 is
approved and prong 2 is disapproved.
PO 00000
*
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS is disapproved.
20. Section 52.2275 is amended by:
a. Removing the first paragraph (m);
and
■ b. Adding paragraph (o).
The addition reads as follows:
State
submittal
date
*
*
Approved CAA elements: 110(a)(2)(A), (B),
(C), (D)(i)(II) prongs 3 and 4, (E), (F), (G),
(H), (J), (K), (L), and (M). Elements (D)(i)(I)
prongs 1 and 2 are disapproved.
*
■
Statewide ...
Subpart YY—Wisconsin
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
*
9/28/2018
Statewide ...
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
EPA did not take action on any other
elements. We will address the
remaining requirements in a separate
action.
[FR Doc. 2023–02407 Filed 2–10–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 29 (Monday, February 13, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 9336-9384]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-02407]
[[Page 9335]]
Vol. 88
Monday,
No. 29
February 13, 2023
Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 52
Air Plan Disapprovals; Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for the
2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88 , No. 29 / Monday, February 13, 2023 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 9336]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663; EPA-R02-OAR-2021-0673; EPA-R03-OAR-2021-0872;
EPA-R03-OAR-2021-0873; EPA-R04-OAR-2021-0841; EPA-R05-OAR-2022-0006;
EPA-R06-OAR-2021-0801; EPA-R07-OAR-2021-0851; EPA-R08-OAR-2022-0315;
EPA-R09-OAR-2022-0394; EPA-R09-OAR-2022-0138; FRL-10209-01-OAR]
Air Plan Disapprovals; Interstate Transport of Air Pollution for
the 2015 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; final agency action.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the Agency) is finalizing the
disapproval of State Implementation Plan (SIP) submissions for 19
states regarding interstate transport and finalizing a partial approval
and partial disapproval of elements of the SIP submission for two
states for the 2015 8-hour ozone national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS). The ``good neighbor'' or ``interstate transport'' provision
requires that each state's SIP contain adequate provisions to prohibit
emissions from within the state from significantly contributing to
nonattainment or interfering with maintenance of the NAAQS in other
states. This requirement is part of the broader set of
``infrastructure'' requirements, which are designed to ensure that the
structural components of each state's air quality management program
are adequate to meet the state's responsibilities under the CAA.
Disapproving a SIP submission establishes a 2-year deadline for the EPA
to promulgate Federal Implementation Plans (FIPs) to address the
relevant requirements, unless the EPA approves a subsequent SIP
submission that meets these requirements. Disapproval does not start a
mandatory sanctions clock. The EPA is deferring final action at this
time on the disapprovals it proposed for Tennessee and Wyoming.
DATES: The effective date of this final rule is March 15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663. Additional supporting materials
associated with this final action are included in certain regional
dockets. See the memo ``Regional Dockets Containing Additional
Supporting Materials for Final Action on 2015 Ozone NAAQS Good Neighbor
SIP Submissions'' in the docket for this action. All documents in the
dockets are listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website. Although
listed in the index, some information is not publicly available, i.e.,
confidential business information (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 https://www.regulations.gov or please
contact the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section for additional information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: General questions concerning this
document should be addressed to Mr. Thomas Uher, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality Policy Division, Mail Code C539-04,
109 TW Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711; telephone
number: (919) 541-5534; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document ``we,'' ``us,'' and
``our'' refer to the EPA.
References to section numbers in roman numeral refer to sections of
this preamble unless otherwise specified.
I. General Information
A. How can I get copies of this document and other related information?
The EPA established a Headquarters docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 and several regional dockets. All
documents in the docket are listed in the electronic indexes, which,
along with publicly available documents, are available at https://www.regulations.gov. Publicly available docket materials are also
available in hard copy at the Air and Radiation Docket and Information
Center, EPA/DC, William Jefferson Clinton West Building, Room 3334,
1301 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC. Some information in the
docket may not be publicly available via the online docket due to
docket file size restrictions, such as certain modeling files, or
content (e.g., CBI). For further information on the EPA Docket Center
services and the current status, please visit us online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA also established dockets in each of the EPA Regional
offices to help support the proposals that are now being finalized in
this national action. These include all public comments, technical
support materials, and other files associated with this final action.
Each regional docket contains a memorandum directing the public to the
headquarters docket for this final action. While all documents in
regional dockets are listed in the electronic indexes at https://www.regulations.gov, some information may not be publicly available via
the online dockets due to docket file size restrictions, such as
certain modeling files, or content (e.g., CBI). Please contact the EPA
Docket Center Services for further information.
B. How is the preamble organized?
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. How can I get copies of this document and other related
information?
B. How is the preamble organized?
C. Where do I go if I have state-specific questions?
II. Background and Overview
A. Description of Statutory Background
B. Description of the EPA's 4-Step Interstate Transport
Framework
C. Background on the EPA's Ozone Transport Modeling Information
D. The EPA's Approach to Evaluating Interstate Transport SIPs
for the 2015 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS
III. The EPA's Updated Air Quality and Contribution Analysis
A. Description of Air Quality Modeling for the Final Action
B. Air Quality Modeling To Identify Nonattainment and
Maintenance Receptors
C. Air Quality Modeling To Quantify Upwind State Contributions
IV. Summary of Bases for Disapproval
A. Alabama
B. Arkansas
C. California
D. Illinois
E. Indiana
F. Kentucky
G. Louisiana
H. Maryland
I. Michigan
J. Minnesota
K. Mississippi
L. Missouri
M. Nevada
N. New Jersey
O. New York
P. Ohio
Q. Oklahoma
R. Texas
S. Utah
T. West Virginia
U. Wisconsin
V. Response to Key Comments
A. SIP Evaluation Process
B. Application of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
C. Good Neighbor Provision Policy
VI. Statutory and Executive Orders Reviews
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory Planning and Executive
Order 13563:
[[Page 9337]]
Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
L. Judicial Review
C. Where do I go if I have state-specific questions?
The following table identifies the states covered by this final
action along with an EPA Regional office contact who can respond to
questions about specific SIP submissions.
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Regional offices States
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EPA Region 2: Kenneth Fradkin, Air and Radiation New Jersey, New York.
Division/Air Programs Branch, EPA Region 2, 290
Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, NY 10007.
EPA Region 3: Mike Gordon, Planning and Maryland, West
Implementation Branch, EPA Region III, 1600 JFK Virginia.
Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.
EPA Region 4: Evan Adams, Air and Radiation Alabama, Kentucky,
Division/Air Planning and Implementation Mississippi.
Branch, EPA Region IV, 61 Forsyth Street SW,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303.
EPA Region 5: Olivia Davidson, Air & Radiation Indiana, Illinois,
Division/Air Programs Branch, EPA Region V, 77 Michigan, Minnesota,
W. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60604- Ohio, Wisconsin.
3511.
EPA Region 6: Sherry Fuerst, Air and Radiation Arkansas, Louisiana,
Division, EPA Region 6, 1201 Elm Street, Suite Oklahoma, Texas.
500, Dallas, Texas 75270.
EPA Region 7: William Stone, Air and Radiation Missouri.
Division, Air Quality Planning Branch, EPA
Region VII, 11201 Renner Boulevard, Lenexa,
Kansas 66219.
EPA Region 8: Adam Clark, Air and Radiation Utah.
Division, EPA, Region VIII, Mailcode 8ARD-IO,
1595 Wynkoop Street, Denver, Colorado 80202.
EPA Region 9: Tom Kelly, Air and Radiation California, Nevada.
Division, EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne St., San
Francisco, California 94105.
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II. Background and Overview
The following provides background for the EPA's final action on
these SIP submissions related to the interstate transport requirements
for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS (2015 ozone NAAQS).
A. Description of Statutory Background
On October 1, 2015, the EPA promulgated a revision to the ozone
NAAQS (2015 ozone NAAQS), lowering the level of both the primary and
secondary standards to 0.070 parts per million (ppm) for the 8-hour
standard.\1\ Section 110(a)(1) of the CAA requires states to submit,
within 3 years after promulgation of a new or revised standard, SIP
submissions \2\ meeting the applicable requirements of section
110(a)(2).\3\ One of these applicable requirements is found in CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), otherwise known as the ``good neighbor'' or
``interstate transport'' provision, which generally requires SIPs to
contain adequate provisions to prohibit in-state emissions activities
from having certain adverse air quality effects on other states due to
interstate transport of pollution. There are two so-called ``prongs''
within CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). A SIP for a new or revised NAAQS
must contain adequate provisions prohibiting any source or other type
of emissions activity within the state from emitting air pollutants in
amounts that will significantly contribute to nonattainment of the
NAAQS in another state (prong 1) or interfere with maintenance of the
NAAQS in another state (prong 2). The EPA and states must give
independent significance to prong 1 and prong 2 when evaluating
downwind air quality problems under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).\4\
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\1\ National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone, Final
Rule, 80 FR 65292 (October 26, 2015). Although the level of the
standard is specified in the units of ppm, ozone concentrations are
also described in parts per billion (ppb). For example, 0.070 ppm is
equivalent to 70 ppb.
\2\ The terms ``submission,'' ``revision,'' and ``submittal''
are used interchangeably in this document.
\3\ SIP revisions that are intended to meet the applicable
requirements of section 110(a)(1) and (2) of the CAA are often
referred to as infrastructure SIPs and the applicable elements under
CAA section 110(a)(2) are referred to as infrastructure
requirements.
\4\ See North Carolina v. EPA, 531 F.3d 896, 909-11 (D.C. Cir.
2008) (North Carolina).
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On February 22, 2022, the EPA proposed to disapprove 19 good
neighbor SIP submissions from the States of Alabama, Arkansas,
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee,
Texas, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.\5\ On May 24, 2022, the EPA
proposed to disapprove four additional good neighbor SIP submissions
from the States of California, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming.\6\ On October
25, 2022, the EPA proposed to disapprove a new good neighbor SIP
submission from Alabama submitted on June 21, 2022.\7\ The EPA is
deferring action on the proposals related to the good neighbor SIP
submissions from Tennessee and Wyoming at this time. As explained in
the notifications of proposed disapproval, the EPA's justification for
each of these proposals applies uniform, nationwide analytical methods,
policy judgments, and interpretation with respect to the same CAA
obligations, i.e., implementation of good neighbor requirements under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS for states
across the country. The EPA's final action is likewise based on this
common core of determinations. As indicated at proposal, the EPA is
taking a consolidated, single final action
[[Page 9338]]
on the proposed SIP disapprovals.\8\ Included in this document is final
action on 2015 ozone NAAQS interstate transport SIPs addressing CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for Alabama, Arkansas, California, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Texas, Utah, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. The 2015 ozone NAAQS
interstate transport SIP submissions addressing CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for Tennessee and Wyoming will be addressed in a
separate action.
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\5\ 87 FR 9545 (February 22, 2022) (Alabama, Mississippi,
Tennessee); 87 FR 9798 (February 22, 2022) (Arkansas, Louisiana,
Oklahoma, Texas); 87 FR 9838 (February 22, 2022) (Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin); 87 FR 9498 (February 22,
2022) (Kentucky); 87 FR 9484 (February 22, 2022) (New Jersey, New
York); 87 FR 9463 (February 22, 2022) (Maryland); 87 FR 9533
(February 22, 2022) (Missouri); 87 FR 9516 (February 22, 2022) (West
Virginia).
\6\ 87 FR 31443 (May 24, 2022) (California); 87 FR 31485 (May
24, 2022) (Nevada); 87 FR 31470 (May 24, 2022) (Utah); 87 FR 31495
(May 24, 2022) (Wyoming).
\7\ 87 FR 64412 (October 25, 2022) (Alabama). Alabama withdrew
its original good neighbor SIP submission on April 21, 2022. Id. at
64419.
\8\ In its proposals, the EPA stated ``The EPA may take a
consolidated, single final action on all the proposed SIP
disapproval actions with respect to obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Should EPA take a
single final action on all such disapprovals, this action would be
nationally applicable, and the EPA would also anticipate, in the
alternative, making and publishing a finding that such final action
is based on a determination of nationwide scope or effect.'' E.g.,
87 FR 9463, 9475 n.51.
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B. Description of the EPA's 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
The EPA used a 4-step interstate transport framework (or 4-step
framework) to evaluate each state's implementation plan submission
addressing the interstate transport provision for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
The EPA has addressed the interstate transport requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) with respect to prior NAAQS in several
regulatory actions, including the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule
(CSAPR), which addressed interstate transport with respect to the 1997
ozone NAAQS as well as the 1997 and 2006 fine particulate matter
standards,\9\ the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update (CSAPR Update)
\10\ and the Revised CSAPR Update, both of which addressed the 2008
ozone NAAQS.\11\
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\9\ See Federal Implementation Plans: Interstate Transport of
Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone and Correction of SIP Approvals,
76 FR 48208 (August 8, 2011).
\10\ Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update for the 2008 Ozone
NAAQS, 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016).
\11\ In 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) remanded CSAPR Update to
the extent it failed to require upwind states to eliminate their
significant contribution by the next applicable attainment date by
which downwind states must come into compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a). Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d
303, 313 (D.C. Cir. 2019) (Wisconsin). The Revised CSAPR Update for
the 2008 Ozone NAAQS, 86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021), responded to the
remand of CSAPR Update in Wisconsin and the vacatur of a separate
rule, the ``CSAPR Close-Out,'' 83 FR 65878 (December 21, 2018), in
New York v. EPA, 781 F. App'x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
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Shaped through the years by input from state air agencies \12\ and
other stakeholders on EPA's prior interstate transport rulemakings and
SIP actions,\13\ as well as a number of court decisions, the EPA has
developed and used the following 4-step interstate transport framework
to evaluate a state's obligations to eliminate interstate transport
emissions under the interstate transport provision for the ozone NAAQS:
(1) Identify monitoring sites that are projected to have problems
attaining and/or maintaining the NAAQS (i.e., nonattainment and/or
maintenance receptors); (2) identify states that impact those air
quality problems in other (i.e., downwind) states sufficiently such
that the states are considered ``linked'' and therefore warrant further
review and analysis; (3) identify the emissions reductions necessary
(if any), applying a multifactor analysis, to eliminate each linked
upwind state's significant contribution to nonattainment or
interference with maintenance of the NAAQS at the locations identified
in Step 1; and (4) adopt permanent and enforceable measures needed to
achieve those emissions reductions.
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\12\ See 63 FR 57356, 57361 (October 27, 1998).
\13\ In addition to CSAPR rulemakings, other regional
rulemakings addressing ozone transport include the ``NOX
SIP Call,'' 63 FR 57356 (October 27, 1998), and the ``Clean Air
Interstate Rule'' (CAIR), 70 FR 25162 (May 12, 2005).
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The general steps of this framework allow for some methodological
variation, and this can be seen in the evolution of the EPA's
analytical process across its prior rulemakings. This also means states
have some flexibility in developing analytical methods within this
framework (and may also attempt to justify an alternative framework
altogether). The four steps of the framework simply provide a
reasonable organization to the analysis of the complex air quality
challenge of interstate ozone transport. As discussed further
throughout this document, the EPA has organized its evaluation of the
states' SIP submissions around this analytical framework (including the
specific methodologies within each step as evolved over the course of
the CSAPR rulemakings since 2011), but where states presented
alternative approaches either to the EPA's methodological approaches
within the framework, or organized their analysis in some manner that
differed from it entirely, we have evaluated those analyses on their
merits or, in some cases, identified why even if those approaches were
acceptable, the state still does not have an approvable SIP submission
as a whole.
C. Background on the EPA's Ozone Transport Modeling Information
In general, the EPA has performed nationwide air quality modeling
to project ozone design values, which are used in combination with
measured data to identify nonattainment and maintenance receptors at
Step 1. To quantify the contribution of emissions from specific upwind
states on 2023 ozone design values for the identified downwind
nonattainment and maintenance receptors at Step 2, the EPA performed
nationwide, state-level ozone source apportionment modeling for 2023.
The source apportionment modeling projected contributions to ozone at
receptors from precursor emissions of anthropogenic nitrogen oxides
(NOX) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in individual
upwind states.
The EPA has released several documents containing projected design
values, contributions, and information relevant to air agencies for
evaluating interstate transport with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
First, on January 6, 2017, the EPA published a notice of data
availability (NODA) in which the Agency requested comment on
preliminary interstate ozone transport data including projected ozone
design values and interstate contributions for 2023 using a 2011 base
year platform.\14\ In the NODA, the EPA used the year 2023 as the
analytic year for this preliminary modeling because that year aligns
with the expected attainment year for Moderate ozone nonattainment
areas for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.\15\ On October 27, 2017, the EPA
released a memorandum (October 2017 memorandum) containing updated
modeling data for 2023, which incorporated changes made in response to
comments on the NODA, and was intended to provide information to assist
states' efforts to develop SIP submissions to address interstate
transport obligations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.\16\ On March 27, 2018,
the EPA issued a memorandum (March 2018 memorandum) noting that the
same 2023 modeling data released in the
[[Page 9339]]
October 2017 memorandum could also be useful for identifying potential
downwind air quality problems with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS at
Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework.\17\ The March 2018
memorandum also included the then newly available contribution modeling
data for 2023 to assist states in evaluating their impact on potential
downwind air quality problems for the 2015 ozone NAAQS under Step 2 of
the 4-step interstate transport framework.\18\ The EPA subsequently
issued two more memoranda in August and October 2018, providing
additional information to states developing interstate transport SIP
submissions for the 2015 ozone NAAQS concerning, respectively,
potential contribution thresholds that may be appropriate to apply in
Step 2 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, and considerations
for identifying downwind areas that may have problems maintaining the
standard at Step 1 of the 4-step interstate transport framework.\19\
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\14\ See Notice of Availability of the Environmental Protection
Agency's Preliminary Interstate Ozone Transport Modeling Data for
the 2015 8-hour Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS),
82 FR 1733 (January 6, 2017).
\15\ See 82 FR 1733, 1735 (January 6, 2017).
\16\ See Information on the Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2008 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), October 27, 2017 (``October 2017 memorandum''),
available in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
\17\ See Information on the Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018 (``March 2018 memorandum''),
available in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
\18\ The March 2018 memorandum, however, provided, ``While the
information in this memorandum and the associated air quality
analysis data could be used to inform the development of these SIPs,
the information is not a final determination regarding states'
obligations under the good neighbor provision. Any such
determination would be made through notice-and-comment rulemaking.''
March 2018 memorandum at 2.
\19\ See Analysis of Contribution Thresholds for Use in Clean
Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards, August 31, 2018) (``August 2018
memorandum''); Considerations for Identifying Maintenance Receptors
for Use in Clean Air Act Section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) Interstate
Transport State Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards, October 19, 2018 (``October
2018 memorandum''), available in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 or
at https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/memo-and-supplemental-information-regarding-interstate-transport-sips-2015-ozone-naaqs.
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Following the release of the modeling data shared in the March 2018
memorandum, the EPA performed updated modeling using a 2016-based
emissions modeling platform (i.e., 2016v1). This emissions platform was
developed under the EPA/Multi-Jurisdictional Organization (MJO)/state
collaborative project.\20\ This collaborative project was a multi-year
joint effort by the EPA, MJOs, and states to develop a new, more recent
emissions platform for use by the EPA and states in regulatory modeling
as an improvement over the dated, 2011-based platform that the EPA had
used to project ozone design values and contribution data provided in
the 2017 and 2018 memoranda. The EPA used the 2016v1 emissions to
project ozone design values and contributions for 2023. On October 30,
2020, in the notice of proposed rulemaking for the Revised CSAPR
Update, the EPA released and accepted public comment on 2023 modeling
that used the 2016v1 emissions platform.\21\ Although the Revised CSAPR
Update addressed transport for the 2008 ozone NAAQS, the projected
design values and contributions from the 2016v1 platform were also
useful for identifying downwind ozone problems and linkages with
respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS.\22\
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\20\ The results of this modeling, as well as the underlying
modeling files, are included in Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
\21\ See 85 FR 68964, 68981 (October 30, 2020).
\22\ See the Air Quality Modeling Technical Support Document for
the Final Revised Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Update, included in
Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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Following the final Revised CSAPR Update, the EPA made further
updates to the 2016-based emissions platform to include updated onroad
mobile emissions from Version 3 of the EPA's Motor Vehicle Emission
Simulator (MOVES) model (MOVES3) \23\ and updated emissions projections
for electric generating units (EGUs) that reflect the emissions
reductions from the Revised CSAPR Update, recent information on plant
closures, and other inventory improvements. The construct of the
updated emissions platform, 2016v2, is described in the ``Technical
Support Document (TSD): Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the
2016v2 North American Emissions Modeling Platform,'' hereafter known as
the 2016v2 Emissions Modeling TSD, and is included in Docket No. EPA-
HQ-OAR-2021-0663. The EPA performed air quality modeling using the
2016v2 emissions to provide projections of ozone design values and
contributions in 2023 that reflect the effects on air quality of the
2016v2 emissions platform. The results of the 2016v2 modeling were used
by the EPA as part of the Agency's evaluation of state SIP submissions
with respect to Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate transport
framework at the proposal stage of this action. By using the 2016v2
modeling results, the EPA used the most current and technically
appropriate information for the proposed rulemakings that were issued
earlier in 2022.
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\23\ 86 FR 1106. Additional details and documentation related to
the MOVES3 model can be found at https://www.epa.gov/moves/latest-version-motor-vehicle-emission-simulator-moves.
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The EPA invited and received comments on the 2016v2 emissions
inventories and modeling that were used to support proposals related to
2015 ozone NAAQS interstate transport. (The EPA had earlier published
the emissions inventories on its website in September of 2021 and
invited initial feedback from states and other interested
stakeholders.\24\) In response to these comments, the EPA made a number
of updates to the 2016v2 inventories and model design to construct a
2016v3 emissions platform which was used to update the air quality
modeling. The EPA made additional updates to its modeling in response
to comments as well. The EPA is now using this updated modeling to
inform its final action on these SIP submissions. Details on the air
quality modeling and the methods for projecting design values and
determining contributions in 2023 are described in Section III and in
the TSD titled ``Air Quality Modeling TSD for the 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS Transport SIP Final Actions'', hereafter known as the Final
Action AQM TSD.25 26 Additional details related to the
updated 2016v3 emissions platform are located in the TSD titled
``Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v3 North American
Emissions Modeling Platform,'' hereafter known as the 2016v3 Emissions
Modeling TSD, included in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.\27\
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\24\ https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v2-platform.
\25\ See Final Action AQM TSD in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-
0663
\26\ References to section numbers in roman numeral refer to
sections of this preamble unless otherwise specified, and references
to section numbers in numeric form refer to the Response to Comments
document for this final action included in the docket.
\27\ See 2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0663.
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D. The EPA's Approach To Evaluating Interstate Transport SIPs for the
2015 Ozone NAAQS
The EPA is applying a consistent set of policy judgments across all
states for purposes of evaluating interstate transport obligations and
the approvability of interstate transport SIP submissions for the 2015
ozone NAAQS under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). These policy
judgments conform with relevant case law and past agency practice as
reflected in CSAPR and related rulemakings. Employing a nationally
consistent approach is
[[Page 9340]]
particularly important in the context of interstate ozone transport,
which is a regional-scale pollution problem involving many smaller
contributors. Effective policy solutions to the problem of interstate
ozone transport going back to the NOX SIP Call have
necessitated the application of a uniform framework of policy judgments
to ensure an ``efficient and equitable'' approach. See EPA v. EME Homer
City Generation, LP, 572 U.S. 489, 519 (2014) (EME Homer City). Some
comments on EPA's proposed SIP disapprovals claim the EPA is imposing
non-statutory requirements onto SIPs or that the EPA must allow states
to take inconsistent approaches to implementing good neighbor
requirements. Both views are incorrect; the EPA's use of its
longstanding framework to evaluate these SIP submissions reflects a
reasonable and consistent approach to implementing the requirements of
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), while remaining open to alternative
approaches states may present. These comments are further addressed in
Section V and the Response to Comment (RTC) document contained in the
docket for this action, Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
In the March, August, and October 2018 memoranda, the EPA
recognized that states may be able to establish alternative approaches
to addressing their interstate transport obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS that vary from a nationally uniform framework. The EPA emphasized
in these memoranda, however, that such alternative approaches must be
technically justified and appropriate in light of the facts and
circumstances of each particular state's submission.\28\ In general,
the EPA continues to believe that deviation from a nationally
consistent approach to ozone transport must be substantially justified
and have a well-documented technical basis that is consistent with CAA
obligations and relevant case law. Where states submitted SIP
submissions that rely on any such potential concepts as the EPA or
others may have identified or suggested in the past, the EPA evaluated
whether the state adequately justified the technical and legal basis
for doing so. For example, the EPA has considered the arguments put
forward by Alabama, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, and Utah related
to alternative methods of identifying receptors.\29\ The EPA also has
considered the arguments attempting to justify an alternative
contribution threshold at Step 2 pursuant to the August 2018 memorandum
made by Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Utah,\30\ as well as
criticisms of the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold made by
Nevada and Ohio.\31\ These topics are further addressed in Section V.B
as well as the RTC document.
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\28\ March 2018 memorandum at 3 (``EPA also notes that, in
developing their own rules, states have flexibility to follow the
familiar four-step transport framework (using EPA's analytical
approach or somewhat different analytical approaches within this
steps) or alternative framework, so long as their chosen approach
has adequate technical justification and is consistent with the
requirements of the CAA.''); August 2018 memorandum at 1 (``The EPA
and air agencies should consider whether the recommendations in this
guidance are appropriate for each situation.''); October 2018
memorandum at 1 (``Following the recommendations in this guidance
does not ensure that EPA will approve a SIP revision in all
instances where the recommendations are followed, as the guidance
may not apply to the facts and circumstances underlying a particular
SIP.'').
\29\ 87 FR 64421-64422 (Alabama); 87 FR 9540-9541 (Missouri); 87
FR 9869-9870 (Ohio); 87 FR 9820-9822 (Oklahoma); 87 FR 9826-9829
(Texas); and 87 FR 31480-31481 (Utah).
\30\ 87 FR 64423-64424 (Alabama); 87 FR 9806-9807 (Arkansas); 87
FR 9852-9853 (Illinois); 87 FR 9855-9856 (Indiana); 87 FR 9509-9510
(Kentucky); 87 FR 9815-9816 (Louisiana); 87 FR 9861-9862 (Michigan);
87 FR 9557 (Mississippi); 87 FR 9541-9544 (Missouri); 87 FR 9819
(Oklahoma); 87 FR 31478 (Utah).
\31\ 87 FR 31492 (Nevada); 87 FR 9871 (Ohio).
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The EPA notes that certain potential concepts included in an
attachment to the March 2018 memorandum require unique consideration,
and these ideas do not constitute agency guidance with respect to
interstate transport obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum identified a ``Preliminary List of
Potential Flexibilities'' that could potentially inform SIP
development. However, the EPA made clear in both the March 2018
memorandum \32\ and in Attachment A that the list of ideas was not
endorsed by the Agency but rather ``comments provided in various
forums'' on which the EPA sought ``feedback from interested
stakeholders.'' \33\ Further, Attachment A stated, ``EPA is not at this
time making any determination that the ideas discussed below are
consistent with the requirements of the CAA, nor are we specifically
recommending that states use these approaches.'' \34\ Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum, therefore, does not constitute agency
guidance, but was intended to generate further discussion around
potential approaches to addressing ozone transport among interested
stakeholders. To the extent states sought to develop or rely on one or
more of these ideas in support of their SIP submissions, the EPA
reviewed their technical and legal justifications for doing so.\35\
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\32\ ``In addition, the memorandum is accompanied by Attachment
A, which provides a preliminary list of potential flexibilities in
analytical approaches for developing a good neighbor SIP that may
warrant further discussion between EPA and states.'' March 2018
memorandum at 1.
\33\ March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A at A-1.
\34\ Id.
\35\ E.g., 87 FR 64423-64425 (Alabama); 87 FR 31453-31454
(California); 87 FR 9852-9854 (Illinois); 87 FR 9859-9860 (Indiana);
87 FR 9508, 9515 (Kentucky); 87 FR 9861-9862 (Michigan); 87 FR 9869-
9870 (Ohio); 87 FR 9798, 9818-9820 (Oklahoma); 87 FR 31477-31481
(Utah); 87 FR 9526-9527 (West Virginia).
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The remainder of this section describes the EPA's analytical
framework with respect to analytic year, definition of nonattainment
and maintenance receptors, selection of contribution threshold, and
multifactor control strategy assessment.
1. Selection of Analytic Year
In general, the states and the EPA must implement the interstate
transport provision in a manner ``consistent with the provisions of
[title I of the CAA.]'' See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). This requires,
among other things, that these obligations are addressed consistently
with the timeframes for downwind areas to meet their CAA obligations.
With respect to ozone NAAQS, under CAA section 181(a), this means
obligations must be addressed ``as expeditiously as practicable'' and
no later than the schedule of attainment dates provided in CAA section
181(a)(1).\36\ Several D.C. Circuit court decisions address the issue
of the relevant analytic year for the purposes of evaluating ozone
transport air-quality problems. On September 13, 2019, the D.C. Circuit
issued a decision in Wisconsin, remanding the CSAPR Update to the
extent that it failed to require upwind states to eliminate their
significant contribution by the next applicable attainment date by
which downwind states must come into compliance with the NAAQS, as
established under CAA section 181(a). See 938 F.3d 303, 313.
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\36\ For attainment dates for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, refer to CAA
section 181(a), 40 CFR 51.1303, and Additional Air Quality
Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
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On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit issued a decision in Maryland v.
EPA that cited the Wisconsin decision in holding that the EPA must
assess the impact of interstate transport on air quality at the next
downwind attainment date, including Marginal area attainment dates, in
evaluating the basis for the EPA's denial of a petition under CAA
section 126(b) Maryland v.
[[Page 9341]]
EPA, 958 F.3d 1185, 1203-04 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (Maryland). The court
noted that ``section 126(b) incorporates the Good Neighbor Provision,''
and, therefore, ``EPA must find a violation [of section 126] if an
upwind source will significantly contribute to downwind nonattainment
at the next downwind attainment deadline. Therefore, the agency must
evaluate downwind air quality at that deadline, not at some later
date.'' Id. at 1204 (emphasis added). The EPA interprets the court's
holding in Maryland as requiring the states and the Agency, under the
good neighbor provision, to assess downwind air quality as
expeditiously as practicable and no later than the next applicable
attainment date,\37\ which at the time of EPA's proposed and final
actions on the SIPs addressed in this action is the Moderate area
attainment date under CAA section 181 for ozone nonattainment. The
Moderate area attainment date for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is August 3,
2024.\38\ Thus, 2023 is now the appropriate year for analysis of
interstate transport obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, because the
2023 ozone season is the last relevant ozone season during which
achieved emissions reductions in linked upwind states could assist
downwind states with meeting the August 3, 2024, Moderate area
attainment date for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
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\37\ The EPA notes that the court in Maryland did not have
occasion to evaluate circumstances in which the EPA may determine
that an upwind linkage to a downwind air quality problem exists at
Steps 1 and 2 of the interstate transport framework by a particular
attainment date, but for reasons of impossibility or profound
uncertainty the Agency is unable to mandate upwind pollution
controls by that date. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320. The D.C.
Circuit noted in Wisconsin that upon a sufficient showing, these
circumstances may warrant flexibility in effectuating the purpose of
the interstate transport provision.
\38\ See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303; Additional Air
Quality Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
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The EPA recognizes that the attainment date for nonattainment areas
classified as Marginal for the 2015 ozone NAAQS was August 3, 2021.
Under the Maryland holding, any necessary emissions reductions to
satisfy interstate transport obligations should have been implemented
by no later than this date. At the time of the statutory deadline to
submit interstate transport SIPs (October 1, 2018), many states relied
upon the EPA's modeling of the year 2023, and no state provided an
alternative analysis using a 2021 analytic year (or the prior 2020
ozone season). However, the EPA must act on SIP submissions using the
information available at the time it takes such action, and it is now
past 2021. In this circumstance, the EPA does not believe it would be
appropriate to evaluate states' obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) as of an attainment date that is wholly in the past,
because the Agency interprets the interstate transport provision as
forward looking. See 86 FR 23054, 23074; see also Wisconsin, 938 F.3d
at 322 (rejecting Delaware's argument that the EPA should have used an
analytic year of 2011 instead of 2017). Consequently, in this proposal
the EPA will use the analytical year of 2023 to evaluate each state's
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) SIP submission with respect to the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
2. Step 1 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
In Step 1, the EPA identifies monitoring sites that are projected
to have problems attaining and/or maintaining the NAAQS in the 2023
analytic year. Where the EPA's analysis shows that a site does not fall
under the definition of a nonattainment or maintenance receptor, that
site is excluded from further analysis under the EPA's 4-step
interstate transport framework. For sites that are identified as a
nonattainment or maintenance receptor in 2023, the EPA proceeds to the
next step of the 4-step interstate transport framework by identifying
which upwind states contribute to those receptors above the
contribution threshold.
The EPA's approach to identifying ozone nonattainment and
maintenance receptors in this action 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.\39\
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\39\ See North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 910-11 (holding that the
EPA must give ``independent significance'' to each prong of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)).
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The EPA identifies nonattainment receptors as those monitoring
sites that are projected to have average design values that exceed the
NAAQS and that are also measuring nonattainment based on the most
recent monitored design values. This approach is consistent with prior
transport rulemakings, such as the CSAPR Update, where the EPA defined
nonattainment receptors as those areas that both currently measure
nonattainment and that the EPA projects will be in nonattainment in the
analytic year (i.e., 2023).\40\
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\40\ See 81 FR 74504 (October 26, 2016). This same concept,
relying on both current monitoring data and modeling to define
nonattainment receptor, was also applied in CAIR. See 70 FR 25241,
25249 (January 14, 2005); see also North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 913-
14 (affirming as reasonable the EPA's approach to defining
nonattainment in CAIR).
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In addition, the EPA identifies a receptor to be a ``maintenance''
receptor for purposes of defining interference with maintenance,
consistent with the method used in CSAPR and upheld by the D.C. Circuit
in EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 136 (D.C. Cir.
2015) (EME Homer City II).\41\ Specifically, the EPA identified
maintenance receptors as those receptors that would have difficulty
maintaining the relevant NAAQS in a scenario that takes into account
historical variability in air quality at that receptor. The variability
in air quality was determined by evaluating the ``maximum'' future
design value at each receptor based on a projection of the maximum
measured design value over the relevant period. The EPA interprets the
projected maximum future design value to be a potential future air
quality outcome consistent with the meteorology that yielded maximum
measured concentrations in the ambient data set analyzed for that
receptor (i.e., ozone conducive meteorology). The EPA also recognizes
that previously experienced meteorological conditions (e.g., dominant
wind direction, temperatures, air mass patterns) promoting ozone
formation that led to maximum concentrations in the measured data may
reoccur in the future. The maximum design value gives a reasonable
projection of future air quality at the receptor under a scenario in
which such conditions do, in fact, reoccur. The projected maximum
design value is used to identify upwind emissions that, under those
circumstances, could interfere with the downwind area's ability to
maintain the NAAQS.
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\41\ See 76 FR 48208 (August 8, 2011). The CSAPR Update and
Revised CSAPR Update also used this approach. See 81 FR 74504
(October 26, 2016) and 86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021).
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Recognizing that nonattainment receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often uses the term ``maintenance-only''
to refer to those receptors that are not nonattainment receptors.
Consistent with the concepts for maintenance receptors, as described
earlier, the EPA identifies ``maintenance-only'' receptors as those
monitoring sites that have projected average design values above the
level of the applicable NAAQS, but that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent official design values. In
addition, those
[[Page 9342]]
monitoring sites with projected average design values below the NAAQS,
but with projected maximum design values above the NAAQS are also
identified as ``maintenance-only'' receptors, even if they are
currently measuring nonattainment based on the most recent official
design values.
As discussed further in Section III.B., in response to comments,
the Agency has also taken a closer look at measured ozone levels at
monitoring sites in 2021 and 2022 for the purposes of informing the
identification of additional receptors in 2023. We find there is a
basis to consider certain sites with elevated ozone levels that are not
otherwise identified as receptors to be an additional type of
maintenance-only receptor given the likelihood that ozone levels above
the NAAQS could persist at those locations through at least 2023. We
refer to these as violating-monitor maintenance-only receptors
(``violating monitors''). For purposes of this action, we use this
information only in a confirmatory way for states that are otherwise
found to be linked using the modeling-based methodology. The EPA
intends to take separate action to address states that are linked only
to one or more violating-monitor receptors.
3. Step 2 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
In Step 2, the EPA quantifies the contribution of each upwind state
to each receptor in the 2023 analytic year. The contribution metric
used in Step 2 is defined as the average impact from each state to each
receptor on the days with the highest ozone concentrations at the
receptor based on the 2023 modeling. If a state's contribution value
does not equal or exceed the threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS (i.e.,
0.70 ppb for the 2015 ozone NAAQS), the upwind state is not ``linked''
to a downwind air quality problem, and the EPA, therefore, concludes
that the state does not contribute significantly to nonattainment or
interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS in the downwind states.
However, if a state's contribution equals or exceeds the 1 percent
threshold, the state's emissions are further evaluated in Step 3,
considering both air quality and cost as part of a multi-factor
analysis, to determine what, if any, emissions might be deemed
``significant'' and, thus, must be eliminated pursuant to the
requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
In this final action, the EPA relies in the first instance on the 1
percent threshold for the purpose of evaluating a state's contribution
to nonattainment or maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS (i.e., 0.70
ppb) at downwind receptors. This is consistent with the Step 2 approach
that the EPA applied in CSAPR for the 1997 ozone NAAQS, which has
subsequently been applied in the CSAPR Update and Revised CSAPR Update
when evaluating interstate transport obligations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS, and in the EPA's proposals for this action. The EPA continues to
find 1 percent to be an appropriate threshold. For ozone, as the EPA
found in the CAIR, CSAPR, and CSAPR Update, a portion of the
nonattainment problems from anthropogenic sources in the U.S. result
from the combined impact of relatively small contributions, typically
from multiple upwind states and, in some cases, substantially larger
contributions from a subset of particular upwind states, along with
contributions from in-state sources. The EPA's analysis shows that much
of the ozone transport problem being analyzed in this action is still
the result of the collective impacts of contributions from upwind
states. Therefore, application of a consistent contribution threshold
is necessary to identify those upwind states that should have
responsibility for addressing their contribution to the downwind
nonattainment and maintenance problems to which they collectively
contribute. Continuing to use 1 percent of the NAAQS as the screening
metric to evaluate collective contribution from many upwind states also
allows the EPA (and states) to apply a consistent framework to evaluate
interstate emissions transport under the interstate transport provision
from one NAAQS to the next. See 81 FR 74518; see also 86 FR 23085
(reviewing and explaining rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR 48237-38, for
selection of 1 percent threshold).
The EPA's August 2018 memorandum recognizes that in certain
circumstances, a state may be able to establish that an alternative
contribution threshold of 1 ppb is justifiable. Where a state relies on
this alternative threshold in their SIP submission, and where that
state determined that it was not linked at Step 2 using the alternative
threshold, the EPA evaluated whether the state provided a technically
sound assessment of the appropriateness of using this alternative
threshold based on the facts and circumstances underlying its
application in the particular SIP submission. The states covered by
this action that rely on a contribution threshold other than 1 percent
of the NAAQS in their 2015 ozone NAAQS good neighbor SIP submission are
Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan,
Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Utah. Ohio also criticized the 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold, though it acknowledged it was linked
above either a 1 percent of the NAAQS or 1 ppb contribution threshold.
Nevada also criticized the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold, but ultimately relied on it to support its submission.
In the proposals for this action, the EPA evaluated each states'
support for the use of an alternative threshold at Step 2 (e.g., 1
ppb), and additionally shared its experience since the issuance of the
August 2018 memorandum regarding use of alternative thresholds at Step
2. The EPA solicited comment on the subject as it considered the
appropriateness of rescinding the memorandum.\42\ The EPA received
numerous comments related to both the EPA's evaluation of SIP
submissions relying on an alternative threshold, and the EPA's
experience with alternative thresholds. The EPA is not, at this time
rescinding the August 2018 memorandum; however, for purposes of
evaluating contribution thresholds for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, the EPA
continues to find the use of an alternative threshold problematic for
the reasons stated at proposal. Regardless of the EPA's position on the
August 2018 memorandum, the EPA continues to find that the arguments
put forth in the SIP submissions of by Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, and Utah, as well as arguments in comments received on these
actions, to be inadequate. See Section V.B.7 and the RTC Document for
additional detail.
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\42\ See, e.g., 87 FR 9551.
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4. Step 3 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
Consistent with the EPA's longstanding approach to eliminating
significant contribution and interference with maintenance, at Step 3,
a multifactor assessment of potential emissions controls is conducted
for states linked at Steps 1 and 2. The EPA's analysis at Step 3 in
prior Federal actions addressing interstate transport requirements has
primarily focused on an evaluation of cost-effectiveness of potential
emissions controls (on a marginal cost-per-ton basis), the total
emissions reductions that may be achieved by requiring such controls
(if applied across all linked upwind states), and an evaluation of the
air quality impacts such emissions reductions would have on the
downwind receptors to which a state is linked; other factors may
potentially be relevant if
[[Page 9343]]
adequately supported. In general, where the EPA's or state-provided
alternative air quality and contribution modeling establishes that a
state is linked at Steps 1 and 2, it will be insufficient at Step 3 for
a state merely to point to its existing rules requiring control
measures as a basis for SIP approval. In general, the emissions-
reducing effects of all existing emissions control requirements are
already reflected in the future year projected air quality results of
the modeling for Steps 1 and 2. If the state is shown to still be
linked to one or more downwind receptor(s) despite these existing
controls, but that state believes it has no outstanding good neighbor
obligations, the EPA expects the state to provide sufficient
justification to support a conclusion by the EPA that the state has
adequate provisions prohibiting ``any source or other type of emissions
activity within the State from emitting any air pollutant in amounts
which will'' ``contribute significantly to nonattainment in, or
interfere with maintenance by,'' any other State with respect to the
NAAQS. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). While the EPA has not
prescribed a particular method for this assessment, as many commenters
note, the EPA expects states at a minimum to present a sufficient
technical evaluation. This would typically include information on
emissions sources, applicable control technologies, emissions
reductions, costs, cost effectiveness, and downwind air quality impacts
of the estimated reductions, before concluding that no additional
emissions controls should be required.\43\ The EPA responds to comment
on issues related to Step 3 in Section V.B.8. and in the RTC document.
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\43\ Because no state included new enforceable emissions control
measures in the submissions under review here, we focus our analysis
on whether states justified that no additional controls were
required. As examples of general approaches for how a Step 3
analysis could be conducted for their sources, states could look to
the CSAPR Update, 81 FR 74504, 74539-51; CSAPR, 76 FR 48208, 48246-
63; CAIR, 70 FR 25162, 25195-229; or the NOX SIP Call, 63
FR 57356, 57399-405. See also Revised CSAPR Update, 86 FR 23054,
23086-23116. Consistently across these rulemakings, the EPA has
developed emissions inventories, analyzed different levels of
control stringency at different cost thresholds, and assessed
resulting downwind air quality improvements.
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5. Step 4 of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
At Step 4, states (or the EPA) develop permanent and federally-
enforceable control strategies to achieve the emissions reductions
determined to be necessary at Step 3 to eliminate significant
contribution to nonattainment or interference with maintenance of the
NAAQS.\44\ For a state linked at Steps 1 and 2 to rely on an emissions
control measure at Step 3 to address its interstate transport
obligations, that measure must be included in the state's SIP so that
it is permanent and federally enforceable. See CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)
(``Each such [SIP] shall . . . contain adequate provisions. . . .'').
See also CAA section 110(a)(2)(A); Committee for a Better Arvin v. EPA,
786 F.3d 1169, 1175-76 (9th Cir. 2015) (holding that measures relied on
by a state to meet CAA requirements must be included in the SIP).
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\44\ The EPA notes that any controls included in an approved SIP
are federally-enforceable.
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III. The EPA's Updated Air Quality and Contribution Analysis
As noted in Section II, the EPA relied in part on its 2016v2
emissions platform-based air quality modeling to support its proposed
interstate transport actions taken in 2022. Following receipt of
comments, the EPA updated this modeling, incorporating new information
received to create the 2016v3 emissions inventory and making additional
updates to improve model performance. Using the 2016v3 emissions
inventory, the EPA evaluated modeling projections for air quality
monitoring sites and considered current ozone monitoring data at these
sites to identify receptors that are anticipated to have problems
attaining or maintaining the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
This section presents a summary of the methodology and results of
the 2016v3 modeling of 2023, along with the application of the EPA's
Step 1 and Step 2 methodology for identifying receptors and upwind
states that contribute to those receptors. We also explain that current
measured ozone levels based on data for 2021 and preliminary data for
2022 at other monitoring sites (i.e., monitoring sites that are not
projected to be receptors in 2023 based on air quality modeling)
confirm the likely continuation of elevated ozone levels in 2023 at
these locations and confirm that nearly all upwind states in this
action are also linked above 1 percent of the NAAQS to one or more of
these monitors.
While all of this information compiled by the EPA (both the
modeling and monitoring data) plays a critical role in the basis for
this final action, the EPA has also thoroughly evaluated the modeling
information and other analyses and arguments presented by the upwind
states in their SIP submittals. Our evaluation of the states' analyses
was generally set forth in the proposals, and the EPA in this final
action has responded to comments on our evaluation of the various
information and arguments made by states. The EPA's final decision to
disapprove these states' SIP submittals is based on our evaluation of
the entire record, recognizing that states possess the authority in the
first instance to propose how they would address their significant
contribution to air quality problems in other states. Nonetheless, as
explained in the proposals, and in this document and supporting
materials in the docket, we conclude that no state included in this
action effectively demonstrated that it will not be linked to at least
one air quality receptor in 2023, and none of these states' various
arguments for alternative approaches ultimately present a satisfactory
basis for the EPA to approve these states' SIP submissions.
A. Description of Air Quality Modeling for the Final Action
In this section, the Agency describes the air quality modeling
performed consistent with Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework to (1) Identify locations where it expects
nonattainment or maintenance problems with respect to the 2015 ozone
NAAQS for the 2023 analytic year, and (2) quantify the contributions
from anthropogenic emissions from upwind states to downwind ozone
concentrations at monitoring sites projected to be in nonattainment or
have maintenance problems for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2023. This
section includes information on the air quality modeling platform used
in support of the final SIP disapproval action with a focus on the base
year and future base case emissions inventories. The EPA also provides
the projection of 2023 ozone concentrations and the interstate
contributions for 8-hour ozone. The Final Action AQM TSD in Docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 contains more detailed information on the air
quality modeling aspects supporting our final action on these SIP
submissions.
1. Public Review of Air Quality Modeling Information for the Proposed
Action
The EPA provided several opportunities to comment on the emissions
modeling platform and air quality modeling results that were used for
the proposed SIP submission actions. On September 20, 2021, the EPA
publicly released via our web page updated emissions inventories
(2016v2) and requested comment from states and
[[Page 9344]]
MJOs on these data.\45\ In January 2022, the EPA released air quality
modeling results including projected ozone design values and
contributions from 2023 based on the 2016v2 emissions. At that time the
EPA indicated its intent to use these data to support upcoming
transport rulemakings. Then, on February 22, 2022, the EPA published
proposed disapprovals for 19 interstate transport SIP submissions using
the modeling data released in January 2022 and the emissions
inventories shared in September 2021.\46\ The EPA provided a 60-day
comment period on these proposals. On May 24, 2022, the EPA proposed
disapprovals for an additional four states' interstate transport SIP
submissions using the same modeling platform, and provided a 62-day
comment period.\47\ The EPA provided a 30-day comment period beginning
on October 25, 2022, on the proposed disapproval of Alabama's June 21,
2022, SIP submission, which relied on the same modeling platform as the
other noted proposals.\48\ In addition to its proposed disapprovals,
the EPA also proposed approval of Iowa's, Arizona's, and Colorado's SIP
submissions using the 2016v2 modeling and provided 30-day comment
periods. 87 FR 9477 (February 22, 2022) (Iowa); 87 FR 37776 (June 24,
2022) (Arizona); and 87 FR 27050 (May 6, 2022) (Colorado).
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\45\ https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v2-platform.
\46\ These proposals are listed in footnote 5 of this action.
\47\ The EPA also relied on this same modeling data to support
proposed Federal Implementation Plans (FIPs) resolving interstate
transport obligations for 27 states for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. 87 FR
20036 (April 6, 2022). The EPA allowed 60 days to receive comments
on the proposed FIP rule, including acceptance of comment on the
2016v2 emissions inventory-based modeling platform. The EPA then
allowed for an additional 15 days via an extension of the comment
period. 87 FR 29108 (May 12, 2022).
\48\ 87 FR 64412, 64413.
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2. Overview of Air Quality Modeling Platform
The EPA used version 3 of the 2016-based modeling platform (i.e.,
2016v3) for the air quality modeling for this final SIP disapproval
action. This modeling platform includes 2016 base year emissions from
anthropogenic and natural sources and future year projected
anthropogenic emissions for 2023.\49\ The emissions data contained in
the 2016v3 platform represent an update to the 2016 version 2
inventories used for the proposal modeling.
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\49\ The 2016v3 platform also includes projected emissions for
2026. However, the 2026 data are not applicable and were not used in
this final action.
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The air quality modeling for this final disapproval action was
performed for a modeling region (i.e., modeling domain) that covers the
contiguous 48 states using a horizontal resolution of 12 x 12 km. The
EPA used the CAMx version 7.10 for air quality modeling which is the
same model that the EPA used for the proposed rule air quality
modeling.\50\ Additional information on the 2016-based air quality
modeling platform can be found in the Final Action AQM TSD.
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\50\ Ramboll Environment and Health, January 2021, https://www.camx.com.
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Comments: Commenters noted that the 2016 base year summer maximum
daily average 8-hour (MDA8) ozone predictions from the proposal
modeling were biased low compared to the corresponding measured
concentrations in certain locations. In this regard, commenters said
that model performance statistics for a number of monitoring sites,
particularly those in portions of the West and in the area around Lake
Michigan, were outside the range of published performance criteria for
normalized mean bias (NMB) and normalized mean error (NME) of less than
plus or minus 15 percent and less than 25 percent, respectively.\51\
Comments say the EPA must investigate the factors contributing to low
bias and make necessary corrections to improve model performance in the
modeling supporting final SIP actions. Some commenters said that the
EPA should include NOX emissions from lightning strikes and
assess the treatment of other background sources of ozone to improve
model performance for the final action. Additional information on the
comments on model performance can be found in the RTC document for this
final SIP disapproval action.
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\51\ Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G. Russell, M. Talat
Odman, Greg Yarwood & Naresh Kumar (2017) Recommendations on
statistics and benchmarks to assess photochemical model performance,
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 67:5, 582-598,
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.1265027.
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EPA Response: In response to these comments the EPA examined the
temporal and spatial characteristics of model under prediction to
investigate the possible causes of under prediction of MDA8 ozone
concentrations in different regions of the U.S. in the proposal
modeling. The EPA's analysis indicates that the under prediction was
most extensive during May and June with less bias during July and
August in most regions of the U.S. For example, in the Upper Midwest
region model under prediction was larger in May and June compared to
July through September. Specifically, the normalized mean bias for days
with measured concentrations greater than or equal to 60 ppb improved
from a 21.4 percent under prediction for May and June to a 12.6 percent
under prediction in the period July through September. As described in
the AQM TSD, the seasonal pattern in bias in the Upper Midwest region
improves somewhat gradually with time from the middle of May to the
latter part of June. In view of the seasonal pattern in bias in the
Upper Midwest and in other regions of the U.S., the EPA focused its
investigation of model performance on model inputs that, by their
nature, have the largest temporal variation within the ozone season.
These inputs include emissions from biogenic sources and lightning
NOX, and contributions from transport of international
anthropogenic emissions and natural sources into the U.S. Both biogenic
and lightning NOX emissions in the U.S. dramatically
increase from spring to summer.52 53 In contrast, ozone
transported into the U.S. from international anthropogenic and natural
sources peaks during the period March through June, with lower
contributions during July through September.54 55 To
investigate the impacts of the sources, the EPA conducted sensitivity
model runs which focused on the effects on model performance of adding
NOX emissions from lightning strikes, using updated biogenic
emissions, and using an alternative approach (described in more detail
later in this section) for quantifying transport of ozone and precursor
pollutants into the U.S. from international anthropogenic and natural
sources. In the air quality modeling for proposal, the amount of
transport from international sources was based on a simulation of the
hemispheric version of the Community Multi-scale Air Quality
[[Page 9345]]
Model (H-CMAQ) \56\ for 2016. The outputs from this hemispheric
modeling were then used to provide boundary conditions for the national
scale air quality modeling at proposal.\57\ Overall, H-CMAQ tends to
under predict daytime ozone concentrations at rural and remote
monitoring sites across the U.S. during the spring of 2016 whereas the
predictions from the GEOS-Chem global model \58\ were generally less
biased.\59\ During the summer of 2016 both models showed varying
degrees of over prediction with GEOS-Chem showing somewhat greater over
prediction, compared to H-CMAQ. In view of those results, the EPA
examined the impacts of using GEOS-Chem as an alternative to H-CMAQ for
providing boundary conditions for the modeling supporting this final
action.
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\52\ Guenther, A.B., 1997. Seasonal and spatial variations in
natural volatile organic compound emissions. Ecol. Appl. 7, 34-45.
https://dx.doi.org/10.1890/1051-0761(1997) 007[0034:SASVIN]2.0.CO;2.
Guenther, A., Hewitt, C.N., Erickson, D., Fall, R.
\53\ Kang D, Mathur R, Pouliot GA, Gilliam RC, Wong DC.
Significant ground-level ozone attributed to lightning-induced
nitrogen oxides during summertime over the Mountain West States. NPJ
Clim Atmos Sci. 2020 Jan 30;3:6. doi: 10.1038/s41612-020-0108-2.
PMID: 32181370; PMCID: PMC7075249.
\54\ Jaffe DA, Cooper OR, Fiore AM, Henderson BH, Tonnesen GS,
Russell AG, Henze DK, Langford AO, Lin M, Moore T. Scientific
assessment of background ozone over the U.S.: Implications for air
quality management. Elementa (Wash DC). 2018;6(1):56. doi: 10.1525/
elementa.309. PMID: 30364819; PMCID: PMC6198683.
\55\ Henderson, B.H., P. Dolwick, C. Jang, A., Eyth, J.
Vukovich, R. Mathur, C. Hogrefe, N. Possiel, G. Pouliot, B. Timin,
K.W. Appel, 2019. Global Sources of North American Ozone. Presented
at the 18th Annual Conference of the UNC Institute for the
Environment Community Modeling and Analysis System (CMAS) Center,
October 21-23, 2019.
\56\ Mathur, R., Gilliam, R., Bullock, O.R., Roselle, S., Pleim,
J., Wong, D., Binkowski, F., and 1 Streets, D.: Extending the
applicability of the community multiscale air quality model to 2
hemispheric scales: motivation, challenges, and progress. In: Steyn
DG, Trini S (eds) Air 3 pollution modeling and its applications,
XXI. Springer, Dordrecht, pp 175-179, 2012.
\57\ Boundary conditions are the concentrations of pollutants
along the north, east, south, and west boundaries of the air quality
modeling domain. Boundary conditions vary in space and time and are
typically obtained from predictions of global or hemispheric models.
Information on how boundary conditions were developed for modeling
supporting EPA's final SIP actions can be found in the AQM TSD.
\58\ I. Bey, D.J. Jacob, R.M. Yantosca, J.A. Logan, B.D. Field,
A.M. Fiore, Q. Li, H.Y. Liu, L.J. Mickley, M.G. Schultz. Global
modeling of tropospheric chemistry with assimilated meteorology:
model description and evaluation. J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 106
(2001), pp. 23073-23095, 10.1029/2001jd000807.
\59\ Henderson, B.H., P. Dolwick, C. Jang, A., Eyth, J.
Vukovich, R. Mathur, C. Hogrefe, G. Pouliot, N. Possiel, B. Timin,
K.W. Appel, 2022. Meteorological and Emission Sensitivity of
Hemispheric Ozone and PM2.5. Presented at the 21st Annual
Conference of the UNC Institute for the Environment Community
Modeling and Analysis System (CMAS) Center, October 17-19, 2022.
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For the lightning NOX, biogenics, and GEOS-Chem
sensitivity runs, the EPA reran the proposal modeling using each of
these inputs, individually. Results from these sensitivity runs
indicate that each of the three updates provides an improvement in
model performance. However, by far the greatest improvement in modeling
performance is attributable to the use of GEOS-Chem. In view of these
results the EPA has included lightning NOX emissions,
updated biogenic emissions, and international transport from GEOS-Chem
in the air quality modeling supporting final SIP actions. Details on
the results of the individual sensitivity runs can be found in the AQM
TSD. For the air quality modeling supporting final SIP actions, model
performance based on days in 2016 with measured MDA8 ozone greater than
or equal to 60 ppb is considerably improved (i.e., less bias and error)
compared to the proposal modeling in nearly all regions. For example,
in the Upper Midwest, which includes monitoring sites along Lake
Michigan, the normalized mean bias improved from a 19 percent under
prediction to a 6.9 percent under prediction and in the Southwest
region, which includes monitoring sites in Denver, Las Cruces, El Paso,
and Salt Lake City, normalized mean bias improved from a 13.6 percent
under prediction to a 4.8 percent under prediction.\60\ In all regions,
the normalized mean bias and normalized mean error statistics for high
ozone days based on the modeling supporting final SIP actions are
within the range of performance criteria benchmarks (i.e., less than
plus or minus 15 percent for normalized mean bias and less than 25
percent for normalized mean error).\61\ Additional information on model
performance information is provided in the AQM TSD. In summary, the EPA
included emissions of lightning NOX, as requested by
commenters, and investigated and addressed concerns about model
performance for the modeling supporting final SIP actions.
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\60\ A comparison of model performance from the proposal
modeling to the final modeling for individual monitoring sites can
be found in the docket for this final action.
\61\ Christopher Emery, Zhen Liu, Armistead G. Russell, M. Talat
Odman, Greg Yarwood & Naresh Kumar (2017) Recommendations on
statistics and benchmarks to assess photochemical model performance,
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 67:5, 582-598,
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.1265027.
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3. Emissions Inventories
The EPA developed emissions inventories to support air quality
modeling for this final action, including emissions estimates for EGUs,
non-EGU point sources (i.e., stationary point sources), stationary
nonpoint sources, onroad mobile sources, nonroad mobile sources, other
mobile sources, wildfires, prescribed fires, and biogenic emissions
that are not the direct result of human activities. The EPA's air
quality modeling relies on this comprehensive set of emissions
inventories because emissions from multiple source categories are
needed to model ambient air quality and to facilitate comparison of
model outputs with ambient measurements.
Prior to the modeling of air quality, the emissions inventories
must be processed into a format that is appropriate for the air quality
model to use. To prepare the emissions inventories for air quality
modeling, the EPA processed the emissions inventories using the Sparse
Matrix Operator Kernel Emissions (SMOKE) Modeling System version 4.9 to
produce the gridded, hourly, speciated, model-ready emissions for input
to the air quality model. Additional information on the development of
the emissions inventories and on data sets used during the emissions
modeling process are provided in the document titled ``Technical
Support Document (TSD): Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the
2016v3 North American Emissions Modeling Platform,'' hereafter known as
the ``2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.'' This TSD is available in the
docket for this action.\62\
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\62\ See Preparation of Emissions Inventories for the 2016v3
North American Emissions Modeling Platform TSD, also available at
https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v3-platform.
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4. Foundation Emissions Inventory
The 2016v3 emissions platform is comprised of data from various
sources including data developed using models, methods, and source
datasets that became available in calendar years 2020 through 2022, in
addition to data retained from the Inventory Collaborative 2016 version
1 (2016v1) Emissions Modeling Platform, released in October 2019. The
2016v1 platform was developed through a national collaborative effort
between the EPA and state and local agencies along with MJOs. The
2016v2 platform used to support the proposed action included updated
data, models and methods as compared to 2016v1. The 2016v3 platform
includes updates implemented in response to comments along with other
updates to the 2016v2 platform such as corrections and the
incorporation of updated data sources that became available prior to
the 2016v3 inventories being developed. Several commenters noted that
the 2016v2 platform did not include NOX emissions that
resulted from lightning strikes. To address this, lightning
NOX emissions were computed and included in the 2016v3
platform.
For this final action, the EPA developed emissions inventories for
the base year of 2016 and the projected year of 2023. The 2023
inventories represent changes in activity data and of predicted
emissions reductions from on-the-books actions, planned emissions
control installations, and promulgated Federal measures that affect
anthropogenic emissions. The 2016 emissions inventories for the U.S.
primarily include data derived from the 2017 National Emissions
Inventory (2017
[[Page 9346]]
NEI) \63\ and data specific to the year of 2016. The following sections
provide an overview of the construct of the 2016v3 emissions and
projections. The fire emissions were unchanged between the 2016v2 and
2016v3 emissions platforms. For the 2016v3 platform, the biogenic
emissions were updated to use the latest available versions of the
Biogenic Emissions Inventory System and associated land use data to
help address comments related to a degradation in model performance in
the 2016v2 platform as compared to the 2016v1 platform. Details on the
construction of the inventories are available in the 2016v3 Emissions
Modeling TSD. Details on how the EPA responded to comments related to
emissions inventories are available in the RTC document for this
action.
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\63\ https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-inventories/2017-national-emissions-inventory-nei-technical-support-document-tsd.
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Development of emissions inventories for annual NOX and
sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions for EGUs in the 2016 base
year inventory are based primarily on data from continuous emissions
monitoring systems (CEMS) and other monitoring systems allowed for use
by qualifying units under 40 CFR part 75, with other EGU pollutants
estimated using emissions factors and annual heat input data reported
to the EPA. For EGUs not reporting under part 75, the EPA used data
submitted to the NEI by state, local, and tribal agencies. The final
action inventories include updates made in response to comments on the
proposed actions including the proposed SIP submission disapprovals and
the proposed FIP. The Air Emissions Reporting Rule, (80 FR 8787;
February 19, 2015), requires that Type A point sources large enough to
meet or exceed specific thresholds for emissions be reported to the EPA
via the NEI every year, while the smaller Type B point sources must
only be reported to EPA every 3 years. In response to comments,
emissions data for EGUs that did not have data submitted to the NEI
specific to the year 2016 were filled in with data from the 2017 NEI.
For more information on the details of how the 2016 EGU emissions were
developed and prepared for air quality modeling, see the 2016v3
Emissions Modeling TSD.
The EPA projected 2023 baseline EGU emissions using version 6 of
the Integrated Planning Model (IPM) (www.epa.gov/airmarkets/powersector-modeling). IPM, developed by ICF Consulting, is a state-of-
the-art, peer-reviewed, multi-regional, dynamic, deterministic linear
programming model of the contiguous U.S. electric power sector. It
provides forecasts of least cost capacity expansion, electricity
dispatch, and emissions control strategies while meeting energy demand
and environmental, transmission, dispatch, and reliability constraints.
The EPA has used IPM for over two decades to better understand power
sector behavior under future business-as-usual conditions and to
evaluate the economic and emissions impacts of prospective
environmental policies. The model is designed to reflect electricity
markets as accurately as possible. The EPA uses the best available
information from utilities, industry experts, gas and coal market
experts, financial institutions, and government statistics as the basis
for the detailed power sector modeling in IPM. The model documentation
provides additional information on the assumptions discussed here as
well as all other model assumptions and inputs.\64\ The EPA relied on
the same model platform as in the proposals but made substantial
updates to reflect public comments on near-term fossil fuel market
price volatility and updated fleet information reflecting Summer 2022
U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA) 860 data, unit-level comments, and
additional updates to the National Electric Energy Data System (NEEDS)
inventory.
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\64\ Detailed information and documentation of the EPA's Base
Case, including all the underlying assumptions, data sources, and
architecture parameters can be found on the EPA's website at:
https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/power-sector-modeling.
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The IPM version 6--Updated Summer 2021 Reference Case incorporated
recent updates through the summer 2022 to account for updated Federal
and state environmental regulations (including Renewable Portfolio
Standards (RPS), Clean Energy Standards (CES) and other state
mandates), fleet changes (committed EGU retirements and new builds),
electricity demand, technology cost and performance assumptions from
recent data for renewables adopting from National Renewable Energy Lab
(NREL's) Annual Technology Baseline 2020 and for fossil sources from
the EIA's Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2020. Natural gas and coal price
projections reflect data developed in fall 2020 but updated in summer
2022 to capture near-term price volatility and current market
conditions. The inventory of EGUs provided as an input to the model was
the NEEDS fall 2022 version and is available on the EPA's website.\65\
This version of NEEDS reflects announced retirements and under
construction new builds known as of early summer 2022. This projected
base case accounts for the effects of the final Mercury and Air Toxics
Standards rule, CSAPR, the CSAPR Update, the Revised CSAPR Update, New
Source Review enforcement settlements, the final Effluent Limitation
Guidelines (ELG) Rule, the Coal Combustion Residual (CCR) Rule, and
other on-the-books Federal and state rules (including renewable energy
tax credit extensions from the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021)
through early 2021 impacting emissions of SO2,
NOX, directly emitted particulate matter, carbon dioxide
(CO2), and power plant operations. It also includes final
actions, up through the Summer 2022, the EPA has taken to implement the
Regional Haze Rule and best available retrofit technology (BART)
requirements. Documentation of IPM version 6 and NEEDS, along with
updates, is in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663 and available online
at https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/power-sector-modeling.
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\65\ Available at https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/national-electric-energy-data-system-needs-v6.
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Non-EGU point source emissions are mostly consistent with those in
the proposal modeling except where they were updated in response to
comments. Several commenters mentioned that point source emissions
carried forward from 2014 NEI were not the best estimates of 2017
emissions. Thus, emissions sources in 2016v2 that had been projected
from the 2014 NEI in the proposal were replaced with emissions based on
the 2017 NEI. Point source emissions submitted to the 2016 NEI or to
the 2016v1 platform development process specifically for the year 2016
were retained in 2016v3.
The 2023 non-EGU point source emissions were grown from 2016 to
2023 using factors based on AEO 2022 and reflect emissions reductions
due to known national and local rules, control programs, plant
closures, consent decrees, and settlements that could be computed as
reductions to specific units by July 2022.
Aircraft emissions and ground support equipment at airports are
represented as point sources and are based on adjustments to emissions
in the January 2021 version of the 2017 NEI. The EPA developed and
applied factors to adjust the 2017 airport emissions to 2016 and 2023
based on activity growth projected by the Federal Aviation
Administration Terminal Area Forecast 2021,\66\ the latest available
version at the time the factors were developed.
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\66\ https://www.faa.gov/data_research/aviation/taf/.
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[[Page 9347]]
Emissions at rail yards were represented as point sources. The 2016
rail yard emissions are largely consistent with the 2017 NEI rail yard
emissions. The 2016 and 2023 rail yard emissions were developed through
the 2016v1 Inventory Collaborative process. Class I rail yard emissions
were projected based on the AEO freight rail energy use growth rate
projections for 2023 with the fleet mix assumed to be constant
throughout the period.
The EPA made multiple updates to point source oil and gas emissions
in response to comments. For the 2016v3 modeling, the point source oil
and gas emissions for 2016 were based on the 2016v2 point inventory
except that most 2014 NEI-based emissions were replaced with 2017 NEI
emissions. Additionally, in response to comments, state-provided
emissions equivalent to those in the 2016v1 platform were used for
Colorado, and some New Mexico emissions were replaced with data
backcast from 2020 to 2016. To develop inventories for 2023 for the
2016v3 platform, the year 2016 oil and gas point source inventories
were first projected to 2021 values based on actual historical
production data, then those 2021 emissions were projected to 2023 using
regional projection factors based on AEO 2022 projections. This was an
update from the 2016v2 approach in which actual data were used only
through the year 2019, because 2021 data were not yet available.
NOX and VOC reductions resulting from co-benefits to New
Source Performance Standards (NSPS) for Stationary Reciprocating
Internal Combustion Engines (RICE) are reflected, along with Natural
Gas Turbine and Process Heater NSPS NOX controls and Oil and
Gas NSPS VOC controls. In some cases, year 2019 point source inventory
data were used instead of the projected future year emissions except
for the Western Regional Air Partnership (WRAP) states of Colorado, New
Mexico, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, North Dakota, and South Dakota. The
WRAP future year inventory \67\ was used in these WRAP states in all
future years except in New Mexico where the WRAP base year emissions
were projected using the EIA historical and AEO forecasted production
data. Estimated impacts from the recent oil and gas rule in the New
Mexico Administrative code 20.2.50 \68\ were also included. Details on
the development of the projected point and nonpoint oil and gas
emissions inventories are available in the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling
TSD in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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\67\ https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_2028_OTB_RevFinalReport_05March2020.pdf.
\68\ https://www.env.nm.gov/air-quality/ozone-draft-rule/ and
https://www.srca.nm.gov/parts/title20/20.002.0050.html.
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Onroad mobile sources include exhaust, evaporative, and brake and
tire wear emissions from vehicles that drive on roads, parked vehicles,
and vehicle refueling. Emissions from vehicles using regular gasoline,
high ethanol gasoline, diesel fuel, and electric vehicles were
represented, along with buses that used compressed natural gas. The EPA
developed the onroad mobile source emissions for states other than
California using the EPA's Motor Vehicle Emissions Simulator (MOVES).
MOVES3 was released in November 2020 and has been followed by some
minor releases that improved the usage of the model but that do not
have substantive impacts on the emissions estimates. For 2016v2, MOVES3
was run using inputs provided by state and local agencies through the
2017 NEI where available, in combination with nationally available data
sets to develop a complete inventory. Onroad emissions were developed
based on emissions factors output from MOVES3 run for the year 2016,
coupled with activity data (e.g., vehicle miles traveled and vehicle
populations) representing the year 2016. The 2016 activity data were
provided by some state and local agencies through the 2016v1 process,
and the remaining activity data were derived from those used to develop
the 2017 NEI. The onroad emissions were computed within SMOKE by
multiplying emissions factors developed using MOVES with the
appropriate activity data. Prior to computing the final action
emissions for 2016, updates to some onroad inputs were made in response
to comments and to implement corrections. Onroad mobile source
emissions for California were consistent with the updated emissions
data provided by the state for the final action.
The 2023 onroad emissions reflect projected changes to fuel
properties and usage, along with the impact of the rules included in
MOVES3 for each of those years. MOVES emissions factors for the year
2023 were used. A comprehensive list of control programs included for
onroad mobile sources is available in the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling
TSD. Year 2023 activity data for onroad mobile sources were provided by
some state and local agencies, and otherwise were projected to 2023 by
first projecting the 2016 activity to year 2019 based on county level
vehicle miles traveled (VMT) from the Federal Highway Administration.
The VMT were held flat from 2019 to 2021 to account for pandemic
impacts, and then projected from 2021 to 2023 using AEO 2022-based
factors.\69\ Recent updates to inspection and maintenance programs in
North Carolina and Tennessee were reflected in the MOVES inputs for the
modeling supporting this final action. The 2023 onroad mobile emissions
were computed within SMOKE by multiplying the respective emissions
factors developed using MOVES with the year-specific activity data.
Prior to computing the final action emissions for 2023, the EPA made
updates to some onroad inputs in response to comments and to implement
corrections.
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\69\ VMT data for 2020 were the latest available at the time of
final rule data development but were heavily impacted by the
pandemic and unusable to project to 2023; in addition, it was
determined that chaining factors based on AEO 2020 and AEO2021
obtain the needed factors led to unrealistic artifacts, thus only
AEO 2022 data were used.
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The commercial marine vessel (CMV) emissions in the 2016 base case
emissions inventory for this action were based on those in the 2017
NEI. Factors were applied to adjust the 2017 NEI emissions backward to
represent emissions for the year 2016. The CMV emissions are consistent
with the emissions for the 2016v1 platform CMV emissions released in
February 2020 although, in response to comments, the EPA implemented an
improved process for spatially allocating CMV emissions along state and
county boundaries for the modeling supporting this final action.
The EPA developed nonroad mobile source emissions inventories
(other than CMV, locomotive, and aircraft emissions) for 2016 and 2023
from monthly, county, and process level emissions output from MOVES3.
Types of nonroad equipment include recreational vehicles, pleasure
craft, and construction, agricultural, mining, and lawn and garden
equipment.\70\ The nonroad emissions for the final action were
unchanged from those at the proposal. The nonroad mobile emissions
control programs include reductions to locomotives, diesel engines, and
recreational marine engines, along with standards for fuel sulfur
content and evaporative emissions. A comprehensive list of
[[Page 9348]]
control programs included for mobile sources is available in the 2016v3
Emissions Modeling TSD.
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\70\ Line haul locomotives are also considered a type of nonroad
mobile source but the emissions inventories for locomotives were not
developed using MOVES3. Year 2016 and 2023 locomotive emissions were
developed through the 2016v1 process, and the year 2016 emissions
are mostly consistent with those in the 2017 NEI. The projected
locomotive emissions for 2023 were developed by applying factors to
the base year emissions using activity data based on AEO freight
rail energy use growth rate projections along with emissions rates
adjusted to account for recent historical trends.
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For stationary nonpoint sources, some emissions in the 2016 base
case emissions inventory come directly from the 2017 NEI, others were
adjusted from the 2017 NEI to represent 2016 levels, and the remaining
emissions including those from oil and gas, fertilizer, and solvents
were computed specifically to represent 2016. Stationary nonpoint
sources include evaporative sources, consumer products, fuel combustion
that is not captured by point sources, agricultural livestock,
agricultural fertilizer, residential wood combustion, fugitive dust,
and oil and gas sources. The emissions sources derived from the 2017
NEI include agricultural livestock, fugitive dust, residential wood
combustion, waste disposal (including composting), bulk gasoline
terminals, and miscellaneous non-industrial sources such as cremation,
hospitals, lamp breakage, and automotive repair shops. A recent method
to compute solvent VOC emissions was used.\71\
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\71\ https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-5079-2021.
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Where comments were provided about projected control measures or
changes in nonpoint source emissions, those inputs were first reviewed
by the EPA. Those found to be based on reasonable data for affected
emissions sources were incorporated into the projected inventories for
2023 to the extent possible. Where possible, projection factors based
on the AEO used data from AEO 2022, the most recent AEO at the time
available at the time the inventories were developed. Federal
regulations that impact the nonpoint sources were reflected in the
inventories. Adjustments for state fuel sulfur content rules for fuel
oil in the Northeast were included along with solvent controls
applicable within the northeast ozone transport region (OTR) states.
Details are available in the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.
Nonpoint oil and gas emissions inventories for many states were
developed based on outputs from the 2017 NEI version of the EPA Oil and
Gas Tool using activity data for year 2016. Production-related
emissions data from the 2017 NEI were used for Oklahoma, 2016v1
emissions were used for Colorado and Texas production-related sources
to respond to comments. Data for production-related nonpoint oil and
gas emissions in the States of Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming were obtained from the WRAP
baseline inventory.\72\ A California Air Resources Board-provided
inventory was used for 2016 oil and gas emissions in California.
Nonpoint oil and gas inventories for 2023 were developed by first
projecting the 2016 oil and gas inventories to 2021 values based on
actual production data. Next, those 2021 emissions were projected to
2023 using regional projection factors by product type based on AEO
2022 projections. A 2017-2019 average inventory was used for oil and
natural gas exploration emissions in 2023 everywhere except for
California and in the WRAP states in which data from the WRAP future
year inventory \73\ were used. NOX and VOC reductions that
are co-benefits to the NSPS for RICE are reflected, along with Natural
Gas Turbines and Process Heaters NSPS NOX controls and NSPS
Oil and Gas VOC controls. The WRAP future year inventory was used for
oil and natural gas production sources in 2023 except in New Mexico
where the WRAP Base year emissions were projected using the EIA
historical and AEO forecasted production data. Estimated impacts from
the New Mexico Administrative Code 20.2.50 were included.
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\72\ https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_Report_Baseline_17Sep2019.pdf.
\73\ https://www.wrapair2.org/pdf/WRAP_OGWG_2028_OTB_RevFinalReport_05March2020.pdf.
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B. Air Quality Modeling To Identify Nonattainment and Maintenance
Receptors
This section describes the air quality modeling and analyses that
the EPA performed in Step 1 to identify locations where the Agency
expects there to be nonattainment or maintenance receptors for the 2015
ozone NAAQS in 2023. Where the EPA's analysis shows that an area or
site does not fall under the definition of a nonattainment or
maintenance receptor in 2023, that site is excluded from further
analysis under the EPA's good neighbor framework.
1. Approach for Identifying Receptors
In the proposed actions, the EPA applied the same approach used in
the CSAPR Update and the Revised CSAPR Update to identify nonattainment
and maintenance receptors for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.\74\ The EPA's
approach gives independent effect to both the ``contribute
significantly to nonattainment'' and the ``interfere with maintenance''
prongs of section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), consistent with the D.C.
Circuit's direction in North Carolina. Further, in its decision on the
remand of CSAPR from the Supreme Court in the EME Homer City II case,
the D.C. Circuit confirmed that the EPA's approach to identifying
maintenance receptors in CSAPR comported with the court's prior
instruction to give independent meaning to the ``interfere with
maintenance'' prong in the good neighbor provision.\75\
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\74\ See 86 FR 23078-79.
\75\ EME Homer City II, 795 F.3d at 136.
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In the CSAPR Update and the Revised CSAPR Update, the EPA
identified nonattainment receptors as those monitoring sites that are
projected to have average design values that exceed the NAAQS and that
are also measuring nonattainment based on the most recent monitored
design values. This approach is consistent with prior transport
rulemakings, such as the NOX SIP Call and CAIR, where the
EPA defined nonattainment receptors as those areas that both currently
monitor nonattainment and that the EPA projects will be in
nonattainment in the future compliance year.
The Agency explained in the NOX SIP Call and CAIR and
then reaffirmed in the CSAPR Update that the EPA has the most
confidence in our projections of nonattainment for those counties that
also measure nonattainment for the most recent period of available
ambient data. The EPA separately identified maintenance receptors as
those receptors that would have difficulty maintaining the relevant
NAAQS in a scenario that accounts for historical variability in air
quality at that receptor. The variability in air quality was determined
by evaluating the ``maximum'' future design value at each receptor
based on a projection of the maximum measured design value over the
relevant period. The EPA interprets the projected maximum future design
value to be a potential future air quality outcome consistent with the
meteorology that yielded maximum measured concentrations in the ambient
data set analyzed for that receptor (i.e., ozone conducive
meteorology). The EPA also recognizes that previously experienced
meteorological conditions (e.g., dominant wind direction, temperatures,
and air mass patterns) promoting ozone formation that led to maximum
concentrations in the measured data may reoccur in the future. The
maximum design value gives a reasonable projection of future air
quality at the receptor under a scenario in which such conditions do,
in fact, reoccur. The projected maximum design value is used to
identify upwind emissions that, under those circumstances, could
interfere with the downwind area's ability to maintain the NAAQS.
[[Page 9349]]
Therefore, applying this methodology for this action, the EPA
assessed the magnitude of the maximum projected design values for 2023
at each receptor in relation to the 2015 ozone NAAQS and, where such a
value exceeds the NAAQS, the EPA determined that receptor to be a
``maintenance'' receptor for purposes of defining interference with
maintenance, consistent with the method used in CSAPR and upheld by the
D.C. Circuit in EME Homer City II.\76\ That is, monitoring sites with a
maximum design value that exceeds the NAAQS are projected to have
maintenance problems in the future analytic years.
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\76\ EME Homer City II, 795 F.3d at 136.
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Recognizing that nonattainment receptors are also, by definition,
maintenance receptors, the EPA often uses the term ``maintenance-only''
to refer to receptors that are not also nonattainment receptors.
Consistent with the concepts for maintenance receptors, as described
earlier, the EPA identifies ``maintenance-only'' receptors as those
monitoring sites that have projected average design values above the
level of the applicable NAAQS, but that are not currently measuring
nonattainment based on the most recent official design values. In
addition, those monitoring sites with projected average design values
below the NAAQS, but with projected maximum design values above the
NAAQS are also identified as ``maintenance only'' receptors, even if
they are currently measuring nonattainment based on the most recent
official certified design values.\77\
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\77\ See https://www.epa.gov/air-trends/air-quality-design-values for design value reports. At the time of this action, the
most recent reports of certified design values available are for the
calendar year 2021. The 2022 values are considered ``preliminary''
and therefore subject to change before certification.
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Comment: The EPA received comments claiming that the projected
design values for 2023 were biased low compared to recent measured
data. Commenters noted that a number of monitoring sites that are
projected to be below the NAAQS in 2023 based on the EPA's modeling for
the proposed action are currently measuring nonattainment based on data
from 2020 and 2021. One commenter requested that the EPA determine
whether its past modeling tends to overestimate or underestimate actual
observed design values. If EPA finds that the agency's model tends to
underestimate future year design values, the commenter requests that
EPA re-run its ozone modeling, incorporating parameters that account
for this tendency.
EPA Response: In response to comments, the EPA compared the
projected 2023 design values based on the proposal modeling to recent
trends in measured data. As a result of this analysis, the EPA agrees
that current data indicate that there are monitoring sites at risk of
continued nonattainment in 2023 even though the model projected average
and maximum design values at these sites are below the NAAQS (i.e.,
these sites would not be modeling-based receptors at Step 1). While the
EPA has confidence in the reliability of the modeling for projecting
air quality conditions and contributions in future years, it would not
be reasonable to ignore recent measured ozone levels in many areas that
are clearly not fully consistent with certain concentrations in the
Step 1 analysis for 2023. Therefore, the EPA has developed an
additional maintenance-only receptor category, which includes what we
refer to as ``violating monitor'' receptors, based on current ozone
concentrations measured by regulatory ambient air quality monitoring
sites.
Specifically, the EPA has identified monitoring sites with measured
2021 and preliminary 2022 design values and 4th high maximum daily 8-
hour average (MDA8) ozone in both 2021 and 2022 (preliminary data) that
exceed the NAAQS as having the greatest risk of continuing to have a
problem attaining the standard in 2023. These criteria sufficiently
consider measured air quality data so as to avoid including monitoring
sites that have measured nonattainment data in recent years but could
reasonably be anticipated to not have a nonattainment or maintenance
problem in 2023, in line with our modeling results. Our methodology is
intended only to identify those sites that have sufficiently poor ozone
levels that there is clearly a reasonable expectation that an ozone
nonattainment or maintenance problem will persist in the 2023 ozone
season. Moreover, the 2023 ozone season is so near in time that recent
measured ozone levels can be used to reasonably project whether an air
quality problem is likely to persist. We view this approach to
identifying additional receptors in 2023 as the best means of
responding to the comments on this issue in this action, while also
identifying all transport receptors.
For purposes of this action, we will treat these violating monitors
as an additional type of maintenance-only receptor. We acknowledge that
the traditional modeling plus monitoring methodology we used at
proposal and in prior ozone transport rules would otherwise have
identified such sites as being in attainment in 2023. Because our
modeling did not identify these sites as receptors, we do not believe
it is sufficiently certain that these sites will be in nonattainment
that they should be considered nonattainment receptors. In the face of
this uncertainty in the record, we regard our ability to consider such
sites as receptors for purposes of good neighbor analysis under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to be a function of the requirement to
prohibit emissions that interfere with maintenance of the NAAQS; even
if an area may be projected to be in attainment, we have reliable
information indicating that there is a clear risk that attainment will
not in fact be achieved in 2023. Thus, our authority for treating these
sites as receptors at Step 1 in 2023 flows from the responsibility in
CAA section 110(a)(2)(i)(I) to prohibit emissions that interfere with
maintenance of the NAAQS. See, e.g., North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 910-11
(failing to give effect to the interfere with maintenance clause
``provides no protection for downwind areas that, despite EPA's
predictions, still find themselves struggling to meet NAAQS due to
upwind interference . . . .'') (emphasis added). Recognizing that no
modeling can perfectly forecast the future, and ``a degree of
imprecision is inevitable in tackling the problem of interstate air
pollution,'' this approach in the Agency's judgement best balances the
need to avoid both ``under-control'' and ``overcontrol,'' EME Homer
City, 572 U.S. at 523. The EPA's analysis of these additional receptors
further is explained in Section III.C.
However, because we did not propose to apply this expansion of the
basis for regulation under the good neighbor provision receptor-
identification methodology as the sole basis for finding an upwind
state linked, in this action we are only using this receptor category
on a confirmatory basis. That is, for states that we find linked based
on our traditional modeling-based methodology in 2023, we find in this
final analysis that the linkage at Step 2 is strengthened and confirmed
if that state is also linked to one or more ``violating-monitor''
receptors. If a state is only linked to a violating-monitor receptor in
this final analysis, we are deferring taking final action on that
state's SIP submittal. This is the case for the State of Tennessee.
Among the states that previously had their transport SIPs approved for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS, the EPA has also identified a linkage to
violating-monitor receptors for the State of Kansas. The EPA intends to
further review its air quality modeling results and recent measured
ozone levels, and we intend to address these states' good
[[Page 9350]]
neighbor obligations as expeditiously as practicable in a future
action.
2. Methodology for Projecting Future Year Ozone Design Values
Consistent with the EPA's modeling guidance, the 2016 base year and
future year air quality modeling results were used in a relative sense
to project design values for 2023.\78\ That is, the ratios of future
year model predictions to base year model predictions are used to
adjust ambient ozone design values up or down depending on the relative
(percent) change in model predictions for each location. The EPA's
modeling guidance recommends using measured ozone concentrations for
the 5-year period centered on the base year as the air quality data
starting point for future year projections. This average design value
is used to dampen the effects of inter-annual variability in
meteorology on ozone concentrations and to provide a reasonable
projection of future air quality at the receptor under average
conditions. In addition, the Agency calculated maximum design values
from within the 5-year base period to represent conditions when
meteorology is more favorable than average for ozone formation. Because
the base year for the air quality modeling used in this final action is
2016, measured data for 2014-2018 (i.e., design values for 2016, 2017,
and 2018) were used to project average and maximum design values in
2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018. Modeling
Guidance for Demonstrating Attainment of Air Quality Goals for
Ozone, PM2.5, and Regional Haze, Research Triangle Park,
NC. https://www.epa.gov/scram/state-implementation-plan-sip-attainment-demonstration-guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ozone predictions from the 2016 and future year air quality
model simulations were used to project 2016-2018 average and maximum
ozone design values to 2023 using an approach similar to the approach
in the EPA's guidance for attainment demonstration modeling. This
guidance recommends using model predictions from the 3 x 3 array of
grid cells surrounding the location of the monitoring site to calculate
a Relative Response Factor (RRF) for that site. However, the guidance
also notes that an alternative array of grid cells may be used in
certain situations where local topographic or geographical feature
(e.g., a large water body or a significant elevation change) may
influence model response.
The 2016-2018 base period average and maximum design values were
multiplied by the RRF to project each of these design values to 2023.
In this manner, the projected design values are grounded in monitored
data, and not the absolute model-predicted future year concentrations.
Following the approach in the CSAPR Update and the Revised CSAPR
Update, the EPA also projected future year design values based on a
modified version of the ``3 x 3'' approach for those monitoring sites
located in coastal areas. In this alternative approach, the EPA
eliminated from the RRF calculations the modeling data in those grid
cells that are dominated by water (i.e., more than 50 percent of the
area in the grid cell is water) and that do not contain a monitoring
site (i.e., if a grid cell is more than 50 percent water but contains
an air quality monitor, that cell would remain in the calculation). The
choice of more than 50 percent of the grid cell area as water as the
criteria for identifying overwater grid cells is based on the treatment
of land use in the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF).
Specifically, in the WRF meteorological model those grid cells that are
greater than 50% overwater are treated as being 100 percent overwater.
In such cases the meteorological conditions in the entire grid cell
reflect the vertical mixing and winds over water, even if part of the
grid cell also happens to be over land with land-based emissions, as
can often be the case for coastal areas. Overlaying land-based
emissions with overwater meteorology may be representative of
conditions at coastal monitors during times of on-shore flow associated
with synoptic conditions or sea-breeze or lake-breeze wind flows. But
there may be other times, particularly with off-shore wind flow, when
vertical mixing of land-based emissions may be too limited due to the
presence of overwater meteorology. Thus, for our modeling the EPA
projected average and maximum design values at individual monitoring
sites based on both the ``3 x 3'' approach as well as the alternative
approach that eliminates overwater cells in the RRF calculation for
near-coastal areas (i.e., ``no water'' approach). The projected 2023
design values using both the ``3 x 3'' and ``no-water'' approaches are
provided in the docket for this final action. Both approaches result in
the same set of receptors in 2023. That is, monitoring sites that are
identified as receptors in 2023 based on the ``3 x 3'' approach are
also receptors based on the ``no water'' approach.
Consistent with the truncation and rounding procedures for the 8-
hour ozone NAAQS, the projected design values are evaluated after
truncation to integers in units of ppb. Therefore, projected design
values that are greater than or equal to 71 ppb are considered to be
violating the 2015 ozone NAAQS. For those sites that are projected to
be violating the NAAQS based on the average design values in 2023, the
Agency examined the measured design values for 2021, which are the most
recent official measured design values at the time of this final
action.
As noted earlier, the Agency proposes to identify nonattainment
receptors in this rulemaking as those sites that are violating the
NAAQS based on current measured air quality through 2021 and have
projected average design values of 71 ppb or greater. Maintenance-only
receptors include both: (1) Those sites with projected average design
values above the NAAQS that are currently measuring clean data (i.e.,
ozone design values below the level of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in 2021)
and (2) those sites with projected average design values below the
level of the NAAQS, but with projected maximum design values of 71 ppb
or greater. In addition to the maintenance-only receptors, ozone
nonattainment receptors are also maintenance receptors because the
projected maximum design values for each of these sites is always
greater than or equal to the average design value. Further, as
explained previously in this section, the EPA identifies certain
monitoring sites as ``violating monitor'' maintenance-only receptors
based on 2021 and 2022 measured ozone levels.
The monitoring sites that the Agency projects to be nonattainment
and maintenance receptors for the ozone NAAQS in the 2023 base case are
used for assessing the contribution of emissions in upwind states to
downwind nonattainment and maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS as part
of this final action.
3. 2023 Nonattainment and Maintenance-Only Receptors for the Final
Action
In this section we provide information on modeling-based design
values and measured data for monitoring sites identified as
nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors in 2023 for this final
action. Table III.B-1 of this action contains the 2016-centered base
period average and maximum 8-hour ozone design values, the 2023
projected average and maximum design values and the measured 2021
design values for monitoring sites that are projected to be
nonattainment receptors in 2023. Table III.B-2 of this action contains
this same information for monitoring sites that are projected to be
maintenance-only receptors in 2023, based on air quality modeling.
Table III.B-3 of this action contains the 2023 projected average and
maximum design values and 2021 design values and 4th high
[[Page 9351]]
MDA8 ozone concentrations and preliminary 2020 design values and 4th
high MDA8 ozone concentrations for monitoring sites identified as
violating monitor maintenance-only receptors. The design values for all
monitoring sites in the U.S. are provided in the docket for this
action. Additional details on the approach for projecting average and
maximum design values are provided in the AQM TSD.
Table III.B-1--Average and Maximum 2016-Centered and 2023 Base Case 8-Hour Ozone Design Values and 2021 Design Values (ppb) at Projected Nonattainment
Receptors a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2016 centered 2016 centered
Monitor ID State County average maximum 2023 average 2023 maximum 2021
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
060650016........................... CA Riverside.............. 79.0 80.0 72.2 73.1 78
060651016........................... CA Riverside.............. 99.7 101 91.0 92.2 95
080350004........................... CO Douglas................ 77.3 78 71.3 71.9 83
080590006........................... CO Jefferson.............. 77.3 78 72.8 73.5 81
080590011........................... CO Jefferson.............. 79.3 80 73.5 74.1 83
090010017........................... CT Fairfield.............. 79.3 80 71.6 72.2 79
090013007........................... CT Fairfield.............. 82.0 83 72.9 73.8 81
090019003........................... CT Fairfield.............. 82.7 83 73.3 73.6 80
481671034........................... TX Galveston.............. 75.7 77 71.5 72.8 72
482010024........................... TX Harris................. 79.3 81 75.1 76.7 74
490110004........................... UT Davis.................. 75.7 78 72.0 74.2 78
490353006........................... UT Salt Lake.............. 76.3 78 72.6 74.2 76
490353013........................... UT Salt Lake.............. 76.5 77 73.3 73.8 76
551170006........................... WI Sheboygan.............. 80.0 81 72.7 73.6 72
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ 2016-centered base period average design values and projected average and maximum design values are reported with 1 digit to the right of the
decimal, as recommended in the EPA's modeling guidance. The 2016 maximum design values and 2021 design values are truncated to integer values
consistent with ozone design value reporting convention in appendix U of 40 CFR part 50.
Table III.B-2--Average and Maximum 2016-Centered and 2023 Base Case 8-Hour Ozone Design Values and 2021 Design Values (ppb) at Projected Maintenance-
Only Receptors
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2016 centered 2016 centered
Monitor ID State County average maximum 2023 average 2023 maximum 2021
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
040278011........................... AZ Yuma................... 72.3 74 70.4 72.1 67
080690011........................... CO Larimer................ 75.7 77 70.9 72.1 77
090099002........................... CT New Haven.............. 79.7 82 70.5 72.6 82
170310001........................... IL Cook................... 73.0 77 68.2 71.9 71
170314201........................... IL Cook................... 73.3 77 68.0 71.5 74
170317002........................... IL Cook................... 74.0 77 68.5 71.3 73
350130021........................... NM Dona Ana............... 72.7 74 70.8 72.1 80
350130022........................... NM Dona Ana............... 71.3 74 69.7 72.4 75
350151005........................... NM Eddy................... 69.7 74 69.7 74.1 77
350250008........................... NM Lea.................... 67.7 70 69.8 72.2 66
480391004........................... TX Brazoria............... 74.7 77 70.4 72.5 75
481210034........................... TX Denton................. 78.0 80 69.8 71.6 74
481410037........................... TX El Paso................ 71.3 73 69.8 71.4 75
482010055........................... TX Harris................. 76.0 77 70.9 71.9 77
482011034........................... TX Harris................. 73.7 75 70.1 71.3 71
482011035........................... TX Harris................. 71.3 75 67.8 71.3 71
530330023........................... WA King................... 73.3 77 67.6 71.0 64
550590019........................... WI Kenosha................ 78.0 79 70.8 71.7 74
551010020........................... WI Racine................. 76.0 78 69.7 71.5 73
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In total, in 2023 there are a total of projected 33 modeling-based
receptors nationwide including 14 nonattainment receptors in 9
different counties and 19 maintenance-only receptors in 13 additional
counties (Harris County, TX, has both nonattainment and maintenance-
only receptors).
As shown in Table III.B-3 of this action, there are 49 monitoring
sites that are identified as ``violating-monitor'' maintenance-only
receptors in 2023.As noted earlier in this section, the EPA uses the
approach of considering ``violating-monitor'' maintenance-only
receptors as confirmatory of the proposal's identification of receptors
and does not implicate additional linked states in this final action,
Rather, using this approach serves to strengthen the analytical basis
for our Step 2 findings by establishing that many upwind states covered
in this action are also projected to contribute above 1 percent of the
NAAQS to these additional ``violating monitor'' maintenance-only
receptors.
[[Page 9352]]
Table III.B-3--Average and Maximum 2023 Base Case 8-Hour Ozone, and 2021 and Preliminary 2022 Design Values (ppb) and 4th High Concentrations at
Violating Monitors a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023 2023 2021 4th 2022 P 4th
Monitor ID State County average maximum 2021 2022 P high high
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
40070010............................. AZ Gila.................... 67.9 69.5 77 76 75 74
40130019............................. AZ Maricopa................ 69.8 70.0 75 77 78 76
40131003............................. AZ Maricopa................ 70.1 70.7 80 80 83 78
40131004............................. AZ Maricopa................ 70.2 70.8 80 81 81 77
40131010............................. AZ Maricopa................ 68.3 69.2 79 80 80 78
40132001............................. AZ Maricopa................ 63.8 64.1 74 78 79 81
40132005............................. AZ Maricopa................ 69.6 70.5 78 79 79 77
40133002............................. AZ Maricopa................ 65.8 65.8 75 75 81 72
40134004............................. AZ Maricopa................ 65.7 66.6 73 73 73 71
40134005............................. AZ Maricopa................ 62.3 62.3 73 75 79 73
40134008............................. AZ Maricopa................ 65.6 66.5 74 74 74 71
40134010............................. AZ Maricopa................ 63.8 66.9 74 76 77 75
40137020............................. AZ Maricopa................ 67.0 67.0 76 77 77 75
40137021............................. AZ Maricopa................ 69.8 70.1 77 77 78 75
40137022............................. AZ Maricopa................ 68.2 69.1 76 78 76 79
40137024............................. AZ Maricopa................ 67.0 67.9 74 76 74 77
40139702............................. AZ Maricopa................ 66.9 68.1 75 77 72 77
40139704............................. AZ Maricopa................ 65.3 66.2 74 77 76 76
40139997............................. AZ Maricopa................ 70.5 70.5 76 79 82 76
40218001............................. AZ Pinal................... 67.8 69.0 75 76 73 77
80013001............................. CO Adams................... 63.0 63.0 72 77 79 75
80050002............................. CO Arapahoe................ 68.0 68.0 80 80 84 73
80310002............................. CO Denver.................. 63.6 64.8 72 74 77 71
80310026............................. CO Denver.................. 64.5 64.8 75 77 83 72
90079007............................. CT Middlesex............... 68.7 69.0 74 73 78 73
90110124............................. CT New London.............. 65.5 67.0 73 72 75 71
170310032............................ IL Cook.................... 67.3 69.8 75 75 77 72
170311601............................ IL Cook.................... 63.8 64.5 72 73 72 71
181270024............................ IN Porter.................. 63.4 64.6 72 73 72 73
260050003............................ MI Allegan................. 66.2 67.4 75 75 78 73
261210039............................ MI Muskegon................ 67.5 68.4 74 79 75 82
320030043............................ NV Clark................... 68.4 69.4 73 75 74 74
350011012............................ NM Bernalillo.............. 63.8 66.0 72 73 76 74
350130008............................ NM Dona Ana................ 65.6 66.3 72 76 79 78
361030002............................ NY Suffolk................. 66.2 68.0 73 74 79 74
390850003............................ OH Lake.................... 64.3 64.6 72 74 72 76
480290052............................ TX Bexar................... 67.1 67.8 73 74 78 72
480850005............................ TX Collin.................. 65.4 66.0 75 74 81 73
481130075............................ TX Dallas.................. 65.3 66.5 71 71 73 72
481211032............................ TX Denton.................. 65.9 67.7 76 77 85 77
482010051............................ TX Harris.................. 65.3 66.3 74 73 83 72
482010416............................ TX Harris.................. 68.8 70.4 73 73 78 71
484390075............................ TX Tarrant................. 63.8 64.7 75 76 76 77
484391002............................ TX Tarrant................. 64.1 65.7 72 77 76 80
484392003............................ TX Tarrant................. 65.2 65.9 72 72 74 72
484393009............................ TX Tarrant................. 67.5 68.1 74 75 75 75
490571003............................ UT Weber................... 69.3 70.3 71 74 77 71
550590025............................ WI Kenosha................. 67.6 70.7 72 73 72 71
550890008............................ WI Ozaukee................. 65.2 65.8 71 72 72 72
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ 2022 preliminary design values are based on 2022 measured MDA8 concentrations provided by state air agencies to the EPA's Air Quality System (AQS),
as of January 3, 2023.
C. Air Quality Modeling To Quantify Upwind State Contributions
This section documents the procedures the EPA used to quantify the
impact of emissions from specific upwind states on ozone design values
in 2023 for the identified downwind nonattainment and maintenance
receptors. The EPA used CAMx photochemical source apportionment
modeling to quantify the impact of emissions in specific upwind states
on downwind nonattainment and maintenance receptors for 8-hour ozone.
CAMx employs enhanced source apportionment techniques that track the
formation and transport of ozone from specific emissions sources and
calculates the contribution of sources and precursors to ozone for
individual receptor locations. The benefit of the photochemical model
source apportionment technique is that all modeled ozone at a given
receptor location in the modeling domain is tracked back to specific
sources of emissions and boundary conditions to fully characterize
culpable sources.
The EPA performed nationwide, state-level ozone source
apportionment modeling using the CAMx Ozone Source Apportionment
Technology/Anthropogenic Precursor Culpability Analysis (OSAT/APCA)
technique \79\ to quantify the contribution of 2023 NOX and
VOC emissions from all sources in each state to the corresponding
projected ozone design values in 2023 at
[[Page 9353]]
air quality monitoring sites. The CAMx OSAT/APCA model run was
performed for the period May 1 through September 30 using the projected
future base case emissions and 2016 meteorology for this time period.
In the source apportionment modeling the Agency tracked (i.e., tagged)
the amount of ozone formed from anthropogenic emissions in each state
individually as well as the contributions from other sources (e.g.,
natural emissions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ As part of this technique, ozone formed from reactions
between biogenic VOC and NOX with anthropogenic
NOX and VOC are assigned to the anthropogenic emissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the state-by-state source apportionment model run, the EPA
tracked the ozone formed from each of the following tags:
States--anthropogenic NOX emissions and VOC
emissions from individual state (emissions from all anthropogenic
sectors in a given state were combined);
Biogenics--biogenic NOX and VOC emissions
domain-wide (i.e., not by state);
Boundary Concentrations--concentrations transported into
the air quality modeling domain;
Tribes--the emissions from those tribal lands for which
the Agency has point source inventory data emissions modeling platform
(EPA did not model the contributions from individual tribes);
Canada and Mexico--anthropogenic emissions from those
sources in the portions of Canada and Mexico included within the
modeling domain (the EPA did not model the contributions from Canada
and Mexico separately);
Fires--combined emissions from wild and prescribed fires
domain-wide (i.e., not by state); and
Offshore--combined emissions from offshore marine vessels
and offshore drilling platforms within the modeling domain.
The contribution modeling provided contributions to ozone from
anthropogenic NOX and VOC emissions in each state,
individually. The contributions to ozone from chemical reactions
between biogenic NOX and VOC emissions were modeled and
assigned to the ``biogenic'' category. The contributions from wildfire
and prescribed fire NOX and VOC emissions were modeled and
assigned to the ``fires'' category. That is, the contributions from the
``biogenic'' and ``fires'' categories are not assigned to individual
states nor are they included in the state contributions.
For the Step 2 analysis, the EPA calculated a contribution metric
that considers the average contribution on the 10 highest ozone
concentration days (i.e., top 10 days) in 2023 using the same approach
as the EPA used in the proposed action and in the Revised CSAPR
Update.\80\ This average contribution metric is intended to provide a
reasonable representation of the contribution from individual states to
projected future year design values, based on modeled transport
patterns and other meteorological conditions generally associated with
modeled high ozone concentrations at the receptor. An average
contribution metric constructed in this manner ensures the magnitude of
the contributions is directly related to the magnitude of the ozone
design value at each site.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ The use of daily contributions on the top 10 concentration
days for calculating the average contribution metric is designed to
be consistent with the method specified in the modeling guidance in
terms of the number of days to use when projecting future year
design values.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The analytic steps for calculating the contribution metric for the
2023 analytic year are as follows:
(1) Calculate the 8-hour average contribution from each source tag
to individual ozone monitoring site for the time period of the 8-hour
daily maximum modeled concentrations in 2023;
(2) Average the contributions and average the concentrations for
the top 10 modeled ozone concentration days in 2023;
(3) Divide the average contribution by the corresponding average
concentration to obtain a Relative Contribution Factor (RCF) for each
monitoring site;
(4) Multiply the 2023 average design value by the 2023 RCF at each
site to produce the average contribution metric values in 2023; \81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ Note that a contribution metric value was not calculated
for any receptor at which there were fewer than 5 days with model-
predicted MDA8 ozone concentrations greater than or equal to 60 ppb
in 2023. Eliminating from the Step 2 evaluation any receptors for
which the modeling does not meet this criterion ensures that upwind
state contributions are based on the days with the highest ozone
projections. This criterion is consistent with the criterion for
projecting design values, as recommended in the EPA's modeling
guidance. In the modeling for this final action, the monitoring site
in Seattle, Washington (530330023), was the only receptor that did
not meet this criterion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Truncate the average contribution metric values to two digits
to the right of the decimal for comparison to the 1 percent of the
NAAQS screening threshold (0.70 ppb)
The resulting contributions from each tag to each monitoring site
in the U.S. for 2023 can be found in the docket for this final action.
Additional details on the source apportionment modeling and the
procedures for calculating contributions can be found in the AQM TSD.
The EPA's response to comments on the method for calculating the
contribution metric can be found in the RTC document for this final
action.
The largest contribution from each state that is the subject of
this final action to modeled 8-hour ozone nonattainment and modeling-
based maintenance receptors in downwind states in 2023 are provided in
Table III.C-1 of this action. The largest contribution from each state
to the additional ``violating monitor'' maintenance-only receptors is
provided in Table III.C-2 of this action. All states that are linked to
one or more nonattainment or maintenance-only receptors are also linked
to one or more violating monitor maintenance receptors, except for
Minnesota.
Table III.C-1--Largest Contribution by State to Downwind 8-Hour Ozone
Nonattainment and Maintenance Receptors in 2023 (ppb)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Largest Largest
contribution to a contribution to a
Upwind state downwind downwind
nonattainment maintenance-only
receptor receptor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama........................... 0.75 0.65
Arkansas.......................... 0.94 1.21
California........................ 35.27 6.31
Illinois.......................... 13.89 19.09
Indiana........................... 8.90 10.03
Kentucky.......................... 0.84 0.79
Louisiana......................... 9.51 5.62
[[Page 9354]]
Maryland.......................... 1.13 1.28
Michigan.......................... 1.59 1.56
Minnesota......................... 0.36 0.85
Mississippi....................... 1.32 0.91
Missouri.......................... 1.87 1.39
Nevada............................ 1.11 1.13
New Jersey........................ 8.38 5.79
New York.......................... 16.10 11.29
Ohio.............................. 2.05 1.98
Oklahoma.......................... 0.79 1.01
Texas............................. 1.03 4.74
Utah.............................. 1.29 0.98
West Virginia..................... 1.37 1.49
Wisconsin......................... 0.21 2.86
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table III.C-2--Largest Contribution to Downwind 8-Hour Ozone ``Violating
Monitor'' Maintenance-Only Receptors (ppb)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Largest
contribution
to a downwind
Upwind State violating
monitor
maintenance-
only receptor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama................................................. 0.79
Arkansas................................................ 1.16
California.............................................. 6.97
Illinois................................................ 16.53
Indiana................................................. 9.39
Kentucky................................................ 1.57
Louisiana............................................... 5.06
Maryland................................................ 1.14
Michigan................................................ 3.47
Minnesota............................................... 0.64
Mississippi............................................. 1.02
Missouri................................................ 2.95
Nevada.................................................. 1.11
New Jersey.............................................. 8.00
New York................................................ 12.08
Ohio.................................................... 2.25
Oklahoma................................................ 1.57
Texas................................................... 3.83
Utah.................................................... 1.46
West Virginia........................................... 1.79
Wisconsin............................................... 5.10
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Summary of Bases for Disapproval
As explained in Section II, the EPA relies on the 4-step interstate
transport framework to evaluate obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). At proposal, the EPA used this framework to guide
its evaluation of each state's SIP submission. While the EPA used this
framework to maintain a nationally consistent and equitable approach to
interstate transport, the contents of each individual state's
submission were evaluated on their own merits, and the EPA considered
the facts and information, including information from the Agency,
available to the state at the time of its submission, in addition to
more recent air quality and contribution information. Here we provide a
brief, high level overview of the SIP submissions and the EPA's
evaluation and key bases for disapproval. These summaries are presented
for ease of reference and to direct the public to the most relevant
portions of the proposals and final rule record for further
information. The full basis for the EPA's disapprovals is available in
relevant Federal Register notifications of proposed disapproval for
each state, in the technical support documents informing the proposed
and final action, and in the responses to comments in Section V and the
RTC document. In general, except as otherwise noted, the comments and
updated air quality information did not convince the Agency that a
change from proposal was warranted for any state. The exceptions are
that the EPA is deferring action at this time on the proposed
disapprovals for Tennessee and Wyoming. Further, the EPA is finalizing
partial approvals of prong 1 (``significant contribution to
nonattainment'') for Minnesota and Wisconsin because they are linked
only to maintenance-only receptors; the EPA is finalizing a partial
disapproval with respect to prong 2 (``interference with maintenance'')
obligations for these two states.
A. Alabama
In the 2016v3 modeling, Alabama is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor. It is also linked
to one violating-monitor maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level
contribution is 0.75 ppb to Galveston County, Texas (AQS Site ID
481671034).\82\ A full summary of Alabama's June 21, 2022, SIP
submission, as well as Alabama's previous submission history, was
provided in the proposed SIP submission disapproval.\83\ In its
submission, Alabama advocated for discounting maintenance receptors
through use of historical data trends. The EPA finds Alabama's approach
is not adequately justified.\84\ The EPA disagrees with Alabama's
assessment of the 2016v2 modeling,\85\ and further responds to comments
on model performance in Section III. The EPA disagrees with Alabama's
arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2,\86\ and further addresses the relevance
of ``significant impact levels'' within the Prevention of Significant
Deterioration program (``PSD SILs'') in Section V.B.6. The EPA found
technical flaws in Alabama's back trajectory analysis.\87\ The State
did not conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis, and the EPA identified
several unsupported assertions in the SIP submission.\88\ Alabama also
argued in its SIP submission that it had already implemented all cost-
effective controls. However, the State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities to support
such a conclusion.\89\ The EPA further addresses arguments related to
[[Page 9355]]
mobile sources in Section V.C.1.\90\ Additionally, as explained in
Section V.B.9,\91\ reliance on prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3. The State included no
permanent and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP submission.\92\
We provide further response to comments regarding Alabama's SIP
submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of
Alabama's interstate transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ The highest-magnitude downwind contribution from each state
is based on the contributions to modeling-based receptors and does
not consider the contributions to violating-monitor maintenance-only
receptors. Each state's maximum contribution to downwind violating-
monitor maintenance-only receptors is available in the Final Action
AQM TSD.
\83\ 87 FR 64419-64421.
\84\ Id. at 64421-64422.
\85\ Id. at 64422-64423.
\86\ Id. at 64423-64424.
\87\ Id. at 64424-64425.
\88\ Id. at 64425-64426.
\89\ Id.
\90\ See also id. at 64425-64426.
\91\ See also id. at 64426.
\92\ Id.
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B. Arkansas
In the 2016v3 modeling, Arkansas is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor and five
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to seven violating-
monitor maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution is
1.21 ppb to Brazoria County Texas (AQS Site ID 480391004). A full
summary of Arkansas's October 10, 2019, SIP submission was provided in
the proposed SIP submission disapproval.\93\ The EPA disagrees with
Arkansas's arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold
than 1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2, and further addresses the
relevance of PSD SILs in Section V.B.6.\94\ The EPA also found
technical flaws in Arkansas's ``consistent and persistent'' claims and
back trajectory analysis,\95\ and legal flaws in the state's arguments
related to relative contribution.\96\ The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\97\ Arkansas argued in its SIP submission
that it had already implemented all cost-effective controls. However,
the State included an insufficient evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities to support such a conclusion.\98\ Further, the
State's reliance on the cost-effectiveness thresholds in the CSAPR and
CSAPR Update is insufficient for the more protective 2015 ozone
NAAQS.\99\ The State included no permanent and enforceable controls in
its SIP submission.\100\ We provide further response to comments
regarding Arkansas's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is
finalizing disapproval of Arkansas's interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ 87 FR 9798, 9803-9806 (February 22, 2022).
\94\ Id. at 9806-9807.
\95\ Id. at 9808-9809.
\96\ Id. at 9809-9810.
\97\ Id. at 9809-9810.
\98\ Id. at 9810.
\99\ Id.
\100\ Id. at 9811.
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C. California
In the 2016v3 modeling, California is projected to be linked above
1 percent of the NAAQS to eight nonattainment receptors and four
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to 26 violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution is 35.27 ppb
to the nonattainment receptor located on the Morongo Band of Missions
Indians reservation (AQS Site ID 060651016).\101\ A full summary of
California's October 1, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\102\ The EPA found technical and
legal flaws in California's geographic, meteorological, wildfire, and
trajectories analysis, and the State's arguments related to local,
international, and non-anthropogenic emissions.\103\ The EPA further
addresses the topic of international emissions in Section V.C.2. The
State did not conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.\104\ California in
its SIP submission argued that it had already implemented all cost-
effective controls. However, California provided an insufficient
evaluation of additional control opportunities to support such a
conclusion.\105\ Further, the State's reliance on the cost-
effectiveness threshold in the CSAPR Update is insufficient for the
more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS.\106\ California included no permanent
and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP submission \107\ and
argued that interstate transport is fundamentally different in the
western U.S. than in the eastern U.S., to which the EPA responds in
Section V.C.3.\108\ We provide further response to comments regarding
California's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of California's interstate transport SIP submission for the
2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ We note that, consistent with the EPA's prior good
neighbor actions in California, the regulatory ozone monitor located
on the Morongo Band of Mission Indians (``Morongo'') reservation is
a projected downwind receptor in 2023. See monitoring site 060651016
in Table V.D-1. of this action. We also note that the Temecula,
California, regulatory ozone monitor is a projected downwind
receptor in 2023 and in past regulatory actions has been deemed
representative of air quality on the Pechanga Band of Luise[ntilde]o
Indians (``Pechanga'') reservation. See, e.g., Approval of Tribal
Implementation Plan and Designation of Air Quality Planning Area;
Pechanga Band of Luise[ntilde]o Mission Indians, 80 FR 18120, at
18121-18123 (April 3, 2015); see also monitoring site 060650016 in
Table V.D-1. of this action. The presence of receptors on, or
representative of, the Morongo and Pechanga reservations does not
trigger obligations for the Morongo and Pechanga Tribes.
Nevertheless, these receptors are relevant to the EPA's assessment
of any linked upwind states' good neighbor obligations. See, e.g.,
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality State Implementation Plans;
California; Interstate Transport Requirements for Ozone, Fine
Particulate Matter, and Sulfur Dioxide, 83 FR 65093 (December 19,
2018). Under 40 CFR 49.4(a), tribes are not subject to the specific
plan submittal and implementation deadlines for NAAQS-related
requirements, including deadlines for submittal of plans addressing
transport impacts. We also note that California's maximum
contribution to a downwind state receptor is 6.31 ppb in Yuma
County, Arizona (AQS Site ID 040278011).
\102\ 87 FR 31448-31452.
\103\ Id. at 31454-31457, 31460.
\104\ Id. at 31458-31461.
\105\ Id. at 31458.
\106\ Id. at 31458-31459.
\107\ Id. at 31461.
\108\ See also id. at 31453.
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D. Illinois
In the 2016v3 modeling, Illinois is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to two nonattainment receptors and three
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to six violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution is 19.09 ppb
to Kenosha County, Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 550590019). A full summary of
Illinois's May 21, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the proposed
SIP submission disapproval.\109\ The EPA disagrees with Illinois's
arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.\110\ The state did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\111\ The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities in its SIP
submission.\112\ The EPA also found technical and legal flaws in
Illinois' arguments related to ``on-the-way'' controls, participation
in the Lake Michigan Air Directors Consortium (LADCO), and
international contributions.\113\ The EPA further addresses the topic
of international contribution in Section V.C.2. Further, as explained
in Section V.B.9., states may not rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements, and reliance on prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3.\114\ The State included
no permanent and enforceable controls in its SIP submission.\115\ We
provide further response to comments regarding Illinois's SIP
submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of
Illinois's interstate
[[Page 9356]]
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ Id. at 9845.
\110\ Id. at 9852-9853.
\111\ Id. at 9853-9855.
\112\ Id. at 9853.
\113\ Id. at 9853-9854.
\114\ See also id. at 9854.
\115\ Id. at 9855.
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E. Indiana
In the 2016v3 modeling, Indiana is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to four nonattainment receptors and six
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to 10 violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 10.03 ppb to
Racine County, Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 551010020). A full summary of
Indiana's November 2, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the proposed
SIP submission disapproval.\116\ The EPA disagrees with Indiana's
arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold than 1
percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.\117\ The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\118\ The EPA found technical and legal flaws
in Indiana's arguments related to ozone concentration and design value
trends, the timing of expected source shutdowns, local emissions,
international and offshore contributions, Indiana's portion of
contribution, and Indiana's back trajectory analysis.\119\ The EPA
further addresses the topic of international emissions in Section
V.C.2. Indiana argued that it would not be cost-effective to implement
controls on non-EGUs. However, the State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities, for any type
of source, to support that conclusion.\120\ The EPA also confirmed that
EGU shutdowns identified by Indiana were included in the 2016v2
modeling,\121\ and if they were valid and not included in the 2016v2
modeling, then they were incorporated into the 2016v3 modeling as
explained in Section III and the 2016v3 Emissions Modeling TSD.
Further, in Section V.B.9., states may not rely on non-SIP measures to
meet SIP requirements.\122\ The State included no permanent and
enforceable emissions controls in its SIP submission.\123\ We provide
further response to comments regarding Indiana's SIP submission in the
RTC document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Indiana's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ Id. at 9845-9847.
\117\ Id. at 9855-9856.
\118\ Id. at 9857-9861.
\119\ Id. at 9858-9861.
\120\ Id. at 9857-9858.
\121\ Id. at 9858-9859.
\122\ See also id. at 9861.
\123\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Kentucky
In the 2016v3 modeling, Kentucky is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to two nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to four violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution based on the
2016v3 modeling is 0.84 ppb to Fairfield County, Connecticut (AQS Site
ID 090019003). A full summary of Kentucky's January 11, 2019, SIP
submission was provided in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.\124\ Although the EPA's 2016v3 modeling indicated a
highest-level contribution below 1 ppb, the EPA disagrees with
Kentucky's arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold
than 1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.\125\ Further, Kentucky is linked
above 1 ppb to a violating-monitor receptor. The EPA addresses the
relevance of the PSD SILs in Section V.B.6. The Commonwealth did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.\126\ The EPA found technical and
legal flaws in Kentucky's arguments related to the level and timing of
upwind versus downwind-state responsibilities, NOX emissions
trends and other air quality information, and back-trajectory
analyses.\127\ The EPA also found technical and legal flaws in certain
State-level comments submitted by Midwest Ozone Group and attached to
Kentucky's submission, including arguments related to international
emissions.\128\ The EPA further addresses the topics of international
emissions in Section V.C.2. Kentucky in its SIP submission also argued
that it had already implemented all cost-effective controls. However,
the Commonwealth included an insufficient evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities to support such a conclusion.\129\ As
explained in Section V.B.9., states may not rely on non-SIP measures to
meet SIP requirements, and reliance on prior transport FIPs such as the
CSAPR Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3.\130\ The EPA also
confirmed in the proposed SIP submission disapproval that EGU shutdowns
identified by Kentucky were included in the 2016v2 modeling, and yet
Kentucky was still linked in that modeling.\131\ Kentucky in its SIP
submission advocated for lower interstate ozone transport
responsibility for states linked only to maintenance-only receptors.
The EPA finds Kentucky's arguments in this regard inadequately
supported.\132\ The Commonwealth included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\133\ We provide further
response to comments regarding Kentucky's SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Kentucky's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ 87 FR 9498, 9503-9507 (February 22, 2022).
\125\ Id. at 9509-9510.
\126\ Id. at 9511-9515.
\127\ Id. at 9512-9514.
\128\ Id. at 9508, 9515. The state also did not explain its own
views regarding the relevance of these materials to its submission.
Id.
\129\ Id. at 9511-9512.
\130\ See also id. at. 9512.
\131\ Id. at 9511-9512.
\132\ Id. at 9514-9515.
\133\ Id. at 9515.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Louisiana
In the 2016v3 modeling, Louisiana is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to two nonattainment receptors and five
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to 10 violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution is 9.51 ppb
to Galveston County Texas (AQS Site ID 481671034). A full summary of
Louisiana's November 13, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\134\ The EPA disagrees with
Louisiana's arguments for application of a higher contribution
threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS and disagrees with Louisiana's
criticisms of a 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold at Step
2.\135\ The EPA further addresses technical comments on the 1 percent
of the NAAQS contribution threshold in Section V.B.4. Louisiana did not
conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.\136\ The State included an
insufficient evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities
in its SIP submission.\137\ The EPA also found technical flaws in
Louisiana's ``consistent and persistent'' claims, assessment of
seasonal weather patterns, surface wind directions, and back trajectory
analysis.\138\ The State included no permanent and enforceable controls
in its SIP submission.\139\ We provide further response to comments
regarding Louisiana's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is
finalizing disapproval of Louisiana's interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ Id. at 9811-9812.
\135\ Id. at 9812, 9815-9816.
\136\ Id. at 9814-9816.
\137\ Id. at 9814. 9816.
\138\ Id. at 9814-9816.
\139\ Id. at 9816.
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[[Page 9357]]
H. Maryland
In the 2016v3 modeling, Maryland is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to three violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.28 ppb to
New Haven County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090099002). A full summary
of Maryland's October 16, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\140\ The state did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\141\ The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities in its SIP
submission.\142\ Further, as explained in Section V.B.9, states may not
rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP requirements, and reliance on
prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR Update is not a sufficient
analysis at Step 3.\143\ The EPA also confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that state emissions controls and regulations
identified by Maryland were generally included in the 2016v2 modeling,
and yet Maryland was still linked in that modeling.\144\ The State
included no permanent and enforceable controls in its SIP
submission.\145\ We provide further response to comments regarding
Maryland's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Maryland's interstate transport SIP submission for the
2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\140\ Id. at 9469.
\141\ Id. at 9470-9473.
\142\ Id. at 9471, 9473.
\143\ See also id. at 9471, 9473 n.46, 9474.
\144\ Id. at 9472-9473.
\145\ Id. at 9473-9474.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Michigan
In the 2016v3 modeling, Michigan is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to four nonattainment receptors and six
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to eight violating-
monitor maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.59
to Sheboygan County, Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 551170006). A full summary
of Michigan's March 5, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\146\ The EPA disagrees with
Michigan's arguments for application of a higher contribution threshold
than 1 percent of the NAAQS as well as criticisms of a 1 percent of the
NAAQS contribution threshold at Step 2.\147\ The EPA further addresses
technical comments on the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold
in Section V.B.4 and addresses comments regarding the relevance of the
PSD SILs in Section V.B.6. The State did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.\148\ Michigan argued in its SIP submission that additional
controls would be premature and burdensome. However, the State included
an insufficient evaluation of additional emissions control
opportunities to support such a conclusion.\149\ The EPA found
technical and legal flaws in Michigan's arguments related to upwind-
state obligations as to maintenance-only receptors, international
emissions, relative contribution, apportionment, and upwind versus
downwind-state responsibilities.\150\ The EPA further addresses the
topics of mobile sources and international emissions in Sections V.C.1
and V.C.2, respectively. The EPA also confirmed in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval that the EGU retirements identified by Michigan
as not included in the 2011-based EPA modeling, as well as various
Federal rules, were included in the 2016v2 modeling, and yet Michigan
was still linked in that modeling.\151\ The State included no permanent
and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP submission.\152\ We
provide further response to comments regarding Michigan's SIP
submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of
Michigan's interstate transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\146\ Id. at 9847-9848.
\147\ Id. at 9861-9862.
\148\ Id. at 9863-9867.
\149\ Id. at 9864.
\150\ Id. at 9864-9867.
\151\ Id. at 9866.
\152\ Id. at 9867.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
J. Minnesota
In the 2016v3 modeling, Minnesota is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one maintenance-only receptor. It is not linked
to a violating-monitor maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level
contribution is 0.85 ppb to Cook County, Illinois (AQS Site ID
170310001). A full summary of Minnesota's October 1, 2018, SIP
submission was provided in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.\153\ Because Minnesota was not projected to be linked to
any receptor in 2023 in the EPA's 2011-based modeling, comments argued
that the EPA must approve the SIP submission and not rely on new
modeling. The EPA responds to these comments in Section V.A.4. Although
the EPA acknowledges that Minnesota's Step 3 analysis was insufficient
in part because the State assumed it was not linked at Step 2, this is
ultimately inadequate to support a conclusion that the State's sources
do not interfere with maintenance of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in other
states in light of more recent air quality analysis.\154\ The State
included no permanent and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.\155\ We provide further response to comments regarding
Minnesota's SIP submission in the RTC document. Although EPA proposed
to disapprove both prong 1 and prong 2 of Minnesota's SIP submission,
the present record, including the results of the 2016v3 modeling,
indicates that Minnesota is not linked to any nonattainment
receptors.\156\ The EPA is finalizing a partial approval of Minnesota's
interstate transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS as to
prong 1 and a partial disapproval as to prong 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\153\ Id. at 9867.
\154\ Id. at 9868-9869.
\155\ Id. at 9869.
\156\ The EPA received a comment that it would be arbitrary and
capricious for the EPA to finalize a full disapproval of Tennessee's
good neighbor SIP submission (both prong 1 and prong 2) if EPA
concluded the state is linked only to a maintenance-only receptor
(prong 2). EPA is deferring final action on Tennessee's good
neighbor SIP submission, but in reviewing linkages in the 2016v3
modeling we determined that Minnesota and Wisconsin are not linked
above 1 percent of the NAAQS to any nonattainment receptors (prong
1) but are linked to maintenance-only receptors (prong 2); these
states are receiving partial approvals and partial disapprovals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
K. Mississippi
In the 2016v3 modeling, Mississippi is projected to be linked above
1 percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor and two
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to eight violating-
monitor maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.32
ppb to Galveston County, Texas (AQS Site ID 481671034). A full summary
of Mississippi's September 3, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\157\ In its submission,
Mississippi advocated for discounting receptors through use of
historical data trends. The EPA finds Mississippi's approach is not
adequately justified.\158\ In the 2011-based modeling, Mississippi's
contribution to receptors was above 1 percent of the NAAQS, but below 1
ppb. The EPA disagrees with Mississippi's arguments for application of
a higher contribution threshold than
[[Page 9358]]
1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2,\159\ and further addresses the
relevance of the PSD SILs in Section V.B.6. The state did not conduct a
Step 3 analysis.\160\ The State included no evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its SIP submission.\161\ The State
included no permanent and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.\162\ We provide further response to comments regarding
Mississippi's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Mississippi's interstate transport SIP submission for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\157\ 87 FR 9554.
\158\ Id. at 9556.
\159\ Id. at 9557.
\160\ Id. at 9558.
\161\ Id.
\162\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
L. Missouri
In the 2016v3 modeling, Missouri is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor and three
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to five violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.87 ppb to
Sheboygan County, Wisconsin (AQS Site ID 551170006). A full summary of
Missouri's June 10, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the proposed
SIP submission disapproval.\163\ In its submission, Missouri advocated
for discounting certain maintenance receptors through use of historical
data trends. The EPA finds Missouri's approach is not adequately
justified.\164\ The EPA disagrees with Missouri's arguments for
application of a higher contribution threshold than 1 percent of the
NAAQS at Step 2, and further addresses comments regarding the August
2018 memorandum in Section V.B.7.\165\ The State did not conduct a Step
3 analysis.\166\ The State included no evaluation of additional
emissions control opportunities in its SIP submission.\167\ The State
included no permanent and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.\168\ We provide further response to comments regarding
Missouri's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of Missouri's June 10, 2019, interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\163\ Id. at 9538-9540.
\164\ Id. at 9540-9541.
\165\ See also id. at 9541-9544.
\166\ Id. at 9544.
\167\ Id.
\168\ We note that in comments, Missouri indicated its intent to
submit a new SIP submission to the EPA, which would re-evaluate good
neighbor obligations based on its 2016v2 linkages and provide an
analysis that would include emissions reductions requirements. The
EPA received this submission on November 1, 2022. The EPA explains
its consideration of this new submission as separate SIP submission
in the RTC document for this final action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
M. Nevada
In the 2016v3 modeling, Nevada is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to one violating-monitor
maintenance receptor. Its highest-level contribution is 1.13 ppb to
Weber County, Utah (AQS Site ID 490570002). A full summary of Nevada's
October 1, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval.\169\ Because Nevada was not projected to be
linked to any receptor in 2023 in the EPA's 2011-based modeling,
commenters on the proposed SIP submission disapproval argued that the
EPA must approve the SIP submission and not rely on new modeling. The
EPA responds to these comments in Section V.A.4. The EPA also responds
to technical criticisms of the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold and the relevance of the PSD SILs in Section V.B.4 and in
Section V.B.6, respectively. The State did not conduct a Step 3
analysis.\170\ The State included no evaluation of additional emissions
control opportunities in its SIP submission.\171\ The State included no
additional emissions controls in its SIP submission.\172\ We provide
response to comments specific to interstate transport policy in the
western U.S. in Section V.C.3. We provide further response to comments
regarding Nevada's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is
finalizing disapproval of Nevada's interstate transport SIP submission
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\169\ 87 FR 31485, 31492-31493 (May 24, 2022).
\170\ Id. at 31493.
\171\ Id.
\172\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
N. New Jersey
In the 2016v3 modeling, New Jersey is projected to be linked above
1 percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to three violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 8.38 ppb to
Fairfield County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090019003). A full summary
of New Jersey's May 13, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\173\ The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\174\ New Jersey argued in its SIP submission
that existing controls were sufficient to address the State's good
neighbor obligations. However, the State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities to support
such a conclusion.\175\ The State's reliance on the cost-effectiveness
threshold in the CSAPR Update is insufficient for a more protective
NAAQS.\176\ The State included no permanent and enforceable emissions
controls in its SIP submission.\177\ We provide further response to
comments regarding New Jersey's SIP submission in the RTC document. The
EPA is finalizing disapproval of New Jersey's interstate transport SIP
submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\173\ Id. at 9490-9491.
\174\ Id. at 9496.
\175\ Id.
\176\ Id.
\177\ Id. at 9496-9497.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
O. New York
In the 2016v3 modeling, New York is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to two violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 16.10 ppb to
Fairfield County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090010017). A full summary
of New York's September 25, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\178\ The state did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\179\ New York argued in its SIP submission
that existing controls were sufficient to address the State's good
neighbor obligations. However, the state included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities to support
such a conclusion.\180\ The State's reliance on the cost-effectiveness
threshold in the CSAPR Update is insufficient for the more protective
2015 ozone NAAQS.\181\ The State included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\182\ We provide further
response to comments regarding New York's SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of New York's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\178\ Id. at 9489-9490.
\179\ Id. at 9492-9494.
\180\ Id. at 9493.
\181\ Id. at 9493-9494.
\182\ Id. at 9494-9495.
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P. Ohio
In the 2016v3 modeling, Ohio is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to four nonattainment receptors and five
maintenance-only
[[Page 9359]]
receptors. It is also linked to nine violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 2.05 ppb to Fairfield
County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090019003). A full summary of Ohio's
September 28, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the proposed SIP
submission disapproval.\183\ In its submission, Ohio advocated for use
of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ)'s definition of
maintenance receptors. The EPA finds that TCEQ's definition is legally
and technically flawed,\184\ and as a result Ohio's approach is also
not adequately justified.\185\ The EPA further evaluates TCEQ's
technical arguments in a TSD prepared by regional modeling staff.\186\
The EPA disagrees with Ohio's arguments for application of a higher
contribution threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.\187\ The
EPA responds to technical criticisms of the 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold in Section V.B.4. The State did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\188\ The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities in its SIP
submission.\189\ The EPA found technical deficiencies in Ohio's
unsubstantiated claims that emissions are overestimated.\190\ The EPA
also confirmed in the proposed SIP submission disapproval that several
EGU and non-EGUs identified by Ohio were included in the 2016v2
modeling, and yet Ohio was still linked in that modeling.\191\ The EPA
summarizes the emissions inventories used in the 2016v3 modeling in
Section III.A. Further, as explained in Section V.B.9, states may not
rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP requirements, and reliance on
prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR Update is not a sufficient
analysis at Step 3.\192\ The EPA finds legal flaws and deficiencies in
Ohio's arguments related to upwind versus downwind-state
responsibilities, the role of international emissions, relative
contribution, and overcontrol.\193\ The EPA discusses international
emissions in Section V.C.2. The EPA disagrees with Ohio's arguments
related to mobile sources.\194\ We further address this topic in
Section V.C.1. Ohio also argued in its SIP submission that it had
already implemented all cost-effective controls. However, the state
included no evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities to
support such a claim.\195\ Further, the State's reliance on the cost-
effectiveness threshold in the CSAPR Update is insufficient for the
more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS.\196\ The State included no permanent
and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP submission.\197\ We
provide further response to comments regarding Ohio's SIP submission in
the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Ohio's
interstate transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
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\183\ Id. at 9849-9851.
\184\ Id. at 9826-9829.
\185\ Id. at 9869-9870.
\186\ 2015 8-Hour Ozone Transport SIP Proposal TSD, in Docket ID
No. EPA-R06-OAR-2021-0801 (hereinafter Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling
TSD).
\187\ Id. at 9871.
\188\ Id. at 9871-9875.
\189\ Id. at 9871-9875.
\190\ Id. at 9872.
\191\ Id.
\192\ See also id. at 9874-9875.
\193\ Id. at 9873-9874.
\194\ Id.
\195\ Id. at 9872-9873.
\196\ Id. at 9874.
\197\ Id. at 9875.
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Q. Oklahoma
In the 2016v3 modeling, Oklahoma is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor and one maintenance-
only receptor. It is also linked to eight violating-monitor maintenance
receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.01 ppb to Denton County,
Texas (AQS Site ID 481210034). A full summary of Oklahoma's October 25,
2018, SIP submission was provided in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.\198\ In its submission, Oklahoma advocated for use of
TCEQ's definition of maintenance receptors and modeling to discount
receptors in Texas. The EPA finds that TCEQ's definition is legally and
technically flawed \199\ and, as a result, Oklahoma's approach is also
not adequately justified.\200\ The EPA further evaluates TCEQ's
technical arguments in the EPA Region 6 2015 8-Hour Ozone Transport SIP
Proposal TSD (Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD) prepared by regional
modeling staff.\201\ Comments argued against the use of updated
modeling where linkages in the EPA's 2011-based modeling and later
iterations of EPA modeling differ. The EPA addressed the change in
identified linkages between the 2011-based modeling and the 2016v2
modeling in the proposed SIP disapproval,\202\ and further responds to
comments on the use of updated modeling in Section V.A.4. The EPA
disagrees with Oklahoma's arguments for application of a higher
contribution threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2 \203\ and
further addresses comments regarding the relevance of the PSD SILs in
Section V.B.6. The State did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.\204\ Oklahoma argued in its SIP submission that it had
already implemented all cost-effective controls. However, the State
included an insufficient evaluation of additional emissions control
opportunities to support such a conclusion.\205\ As explained in
Section V.B.9, states may not rely on non-SIP measures to meet SIP
requirements, and reliance on prior transport FIPs such as the CSAPR
Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3.\206\ Further, the
State's reliance on the cost-effectiveness threshold in the CSAPR
Update is insufficient for the more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS.\207\
The EPA finds legal flaws in Oklahoma's argument related to collective
contribution.\208\ The State included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\209\ We provide further
response to comments regarding Oklahoma's SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Oklahoma's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\198\ Id. at 9816-9818.
\199\ Id. at 9826-9829.
\200\ Id. at 9820-9822.
\201\ Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD in Docket ID No. EPA-R06-
OAR-2021-0801.
\202\ 87 FR 9823.
\203\ Id. at 9819.
\204\ Id. at 9822-9824.
\205\ Id. at 9822-9824.
\206\ See also id. at. 9822-9823.
\207\ Id.
\208\ Id. at 9823.
\209\ Id. at 9824.
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R. Texas
In the 2016v3 modeling, Texas is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to one nonattainment receptor and nine
maintenance-only receptors. It is also linked to ten violating-monitor
maintenance-only receptor. Its highest-level contribution is 4.74 ppb
to Dona Ana County, New Mexico (AQS Site ID 350130021). A full summary
of Texas's August 17, 2018, SIP submission was provided in the proposed
SIP submission disapproval,\210\ and additional details were provided
in the Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD. The EPA identified several
technical flaws in TCEQ's modeling and analysis of modeling
results.\211\ In its submission, Texas advocated for use of its own
definition of maintenance receptors and modeling. The EPA finds Texas's
approach inadequately justified and
[[Page 9360]]
legally and technically flawed.\212\ The EPA further evaluated TCEQ's
technical arguments in the Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD. In comment
on the proposal, Texas pointed to differences in linkages in the EPA's
2011-based modeling and 2016v2 modeling. The EPA addressed the change
in identified linkages between the 2011-based modeling and the 2016v2
modeling in the proposed SIP submission disapproval,\213\ and further
responds to comments on the use of updated modeling in Section V.A.4.
The State did not conduct an adequate Step 3 analysis.\214\ The State
included an insufficient evaluation of additional emissions control
opportunities in its SIP submission.\215\ The EPA found technical flaws
in Texas's arguments related to ``consistent and persistent'' claims
and its other assessments, including analysis of back
trajectories.\216\ The State included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\217\ We provide further
response to comments regarding Texas's SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Texas's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\210\ Id. at 9824-9826.
\211\ Id. at 9829-9830; Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD.
\212\ 87 FR 9826-9829.
\213\ Id. at 9831.
\214\ Id. at 9831-9834.
\215\ Id. at 9831, 9834.
\216\ Id. at 9832-9833, Evaluation of TCEQ Modeling TSD.
\217\ 87 FR 9834.
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S. Utah
In the 2016v3 modeling, Utah is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to four violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.29 ppb to
Douglas County, Colorado (AQS Site ID 080350004). A full summary of
Utah's January 29, 2020, SIP submission was provided in the proposed
SIP submission disapproval.\218\ In its submission, Utah argued that
certain receptors in Colorado should not be counted as receptors for
the purpose of 2015 ozone NAAQS interstate transport, but Utah's
explanation is insufficient to discount those receptors.\219\ The EPA
disagrees with Utah's arguments for application of a higher
contribution threshold than 1 percent of the NAAQS at Step 2.\220\ Utah
suggested in its SIP submission that interstate transport is
fundamentally different in the western U.S. than in the eastern U.S.,
an argument we have previously rejected and respond to further in
Section V.C.3.\221\ The State did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.\222\ The State included an insufficient evaluation of
additional emissions control opportunities in its SIP submission.\223\
The EPA finds technical and legal flaws in the State's arguments
related to relative contribution, international and non-anthropogenic
emissions, and the relationship of upwind versus downwind-state
responsibilities.\224\ The EPA further addresses the topics of
international emissions in Section V.C.2 and wildfires in the RTC
document. The EPA also confirmed in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval that several anticipated controls identified by Utah were
included in the 2016v2 modeling, and yet Utah was still linked in that
modeling.\225\ The State included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\226\ We provide further
response to comments regarding Utah's SIP submission in the RTC
document. The EPA is finalizing disapproval of Utah's interstate
transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\218\ Id. at 31475-31477.
\219\ Id. at 31480-31481.
\220\ Id. at 31478.
\221\ See also id. at 31479-31481, 31482.
\222\ Id. at 31481-31483.
\223\ Id. at 31482
\224\ Id. at 31481-31483.
\225\ Id. at 31483.
\226\ Id.
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T. West Virginia
In the 2016v3 modeling, West Virginia is projected to be linked
above 1 percent of the NAAQS to three nonattainment receptors and one
maintenance-only receptor. It is also linked to four violating-monitor
maintenance receptors. Its highest-level contribution is 1.49 ppb to
New Haven County, Connecticut (AQS Site ID 090099002). A full summary
of West Virginia's February 4, 2019, SIP submission was provided in the
proposed SIP submission disapproval.\227\ The EPA finds technical and
legal flaws in the State's examination of back trajectories and
arguments related to mobile sources and international emissions.\228\
The EPA further addresses the topics of mobile sources and
international emissions in Section V.C.1 and in Section V.C.2,
respectively. The State did not conduct an adequate Step 3
analysis.\229\ West Virginia argued in its SIP submission that it had
already implemented all cost-effective controls. However, the State
included an insufficient evaluation of additional emissions control
opportunities to support such a conclusion.\230\ The EPA also confirmed
in the proposed SIP submission disapproval that specific EGU shutdowns
identified by West Virginia were included in the 2016v2 modeling, which
continued to show West Virginia was linked at Step 2.\231\ As explained
in Section V.B.9, a state may not rely on non-SIP measures to satisfy
SIP requirements, and reliance on prior transport FIPs such as the
CSAPR Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3.\232\ Further, the
State's reliance on the cost-effectiveness threshold in the CSAPR
Update is insufficient for a more protective NAAQS.\233\ The State
included no permanent and enforceable emissions controls in its SIP
submission.\234\ We provide further response to comments regarding West
Virginia's SIP submission in the RTC document. The EPA is finalizing
disapproval of West Virginia's interstate transport SIP submission for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\227\ Id. at 9522-9524.
\228\ Id. at 9526-9527, 9528.
\229\ Id. at 9527-9532.
\230\ Id. at 9528-9529.
\231\ Id. at 9529-9530.
\232\ See also id. at 9530-9532.
\233\ Id. at 9531.
\234\ Id. at 9532.
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U. Wisconsin
In the 2016v3 modeling, Wisconsin is projected to be linked above 1
percent of the NAAQS to three maintenance-only receptors. It is also
linked to five violating-monitor maintenance receptors. Its highest-
level contribution is 2.86 ppb to Cook County, Illinois (AQS Site ID
170314201). A full summary of Wisconsin's September 14, 2018, SIP
submission was provided in the proposed SIP submission
disapproval.\235\ The State did not assess in its SIP submission
whether the state was linked at Step 2,\236\ and did not conduct an
adequate Step 3 analysis.\237\ The State included an insufficient
evaluation of additional emissions control opportunities.\238\ Further,
as explained in Section V.B.9, reliance on prior transport FIPs such as
the CSAPR Update is not a sufficient analysis at Step 3.\239\ The EPA
found additional inadequacies and legal flaws in Wisconsin's
submission.\240\ The State included no permanent and enforceable
emissions controls in its SIP submission.\241\ We provide further
response to comments regarding
[[Page 9361]]
Wisconsin's SIP submission in the RTC document. Although EPA proposed
to disapprove both prong 1 and prong 2 of Wisconsin's SIP submission,
the present record, including the results of the 2016v3 modeling,
indicates that Wisconsin is not linked to any nonattainment
receptors.\242\ The EPA is finalizing a partial approval of Wisconsin's
interstate transport SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS as to
prong 1 and a partial disapproval as to prong 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ Id. at 9851.
\236\ Id. at 9875.
\237\ Id. at 9875-9876.
\238\ Id. at 9876.
\239\ See also id.
\240\ Id.
\241\ Id. at 9876-9877.
\242\ The EPA received a comment that it would be arbitrary and
capricious for the EPA to finalize a full disapproval of Tennessee's
good neighbor SIP submission (both prong 1 and prong 2) if EPA
concluded the State is linked only to a maintenance-only receptor
(prong 2).The EPA is deferring final action on Tennessee's good
neighbor SIP submission, but in reviewing linkages in the 2016v3
modeling we determined that Minnesota and Wisconsin are not linked
above 1 percent of the NAAQS to any nonattainment receptors (prong
1) but are linked to maintenance-only receptors (prong 2); these
States are receiving partial approvals and partial disapprovals.
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V. Response to Key Comments
The EPA received numerous comments on the proposed action which are
summarized in the RTC document along with the EPA's responses to those
comments in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663. Each comment in its
entirety is available in the relevant regional docket(s) for this
action.\243\ The following sections summarize key comments and the
EPA's responses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\243\ See the memo ``Regional Dockets Containing Additional
Supporting Materials for Final Action on 2015 Ozone NAAQS Good
Neighbor SIP Submissions'' in the docket for this action, for a list
of all regional dockets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. SIP Evaluation Process
1. Relationship Between Timing of Proposals To Disapprove SIPs and
Promulgate FIPs
Comment: Comments alleged generally that the timing of the EPA's
proposed actions on the SIP submissions in relation to proposed FIPs
was unlawful, unfair, or both. Some comments claimed that the sequence
of the EPA's actions is improper, unreasonable, or bad policy. Several
commenters asserted that because the EPA proposed FIPs (or, according
to some, promulgated FIPs, which is not factually correct) prior to
finalizing disapproval of the state SIP submission, the EPA allegedly
exceeded its statutory authority and overstepped the states' primary
role in addressing the good neighbor provision under CAA section
110.\244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\244\ The EPA notes the commenters' reference to FIPs is to
proposed good neighbor FIPs for the 2015 ozone NAAQS that were
proposed separately from this rulemaking action. 87 FR 20036 (April
6, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees. The EPA has followed the Clean Air
Act provisions, which prescribe specified maximum amounts of time for
states to make SIP submissions, for the EPA to act on those
submissions, and for the EPA to promulgate FIPs if necessary, but do
not prohibit the EPA from acting before that time elapses. Nothing
relieves the EPA from its statutory obligation to take final action on
complete SIP submissions before the Agency within the timeframes
prescribed by the statute.\245\ The EPA's proposed FIP does not
constitute the ``promulgation'' of a FIP because the proposed FIP is
not a final action that imposes any requirements on sources or states.
And although the EPA's FIP authority is not at issue in this action,
the EPA notes the Agency has been clear that it will not finalize a FIP
for any state until predicate authority is established for doing so
under CAA section 110(c)(1). 87 FR 20036, 20057 (April 6, 2022) (``The
EPA is proposing this FIP action now to address twenty-six states' good
neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, but the EPA will not
finalize this FIP action for any state unless and until it has issued a
final finding of failure to submit or a final disapproval of that
state's SIP submission.''). The EPA strongly disagrees that proposing a
FIP prior to proposing or finalizing disapproval of a SIP submission
oversteps the Agency's authority. Indeed, the ability to propose a FIP
before finalizing a SIP disapproval follows ineluctably from the
structure of the statute, which, as the Supreme Court recognized in EME
Homer City, does not oblige the EPA ``to wait two years or postpone its
[FIP] action even a single day.'' 572 U.S. at 509. If the EPA can
finalize a FIP immediately upon disapproving a SIP, then surely the EPA
must have the authority to propose that FIP before taking final action
on the SIP submission. Accord Oklahoma v. U.S. EPA, 723 F.3d 1201, 1223
(10th Cir. 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ Although the EPA anticipates responding to comments
related to the EPA's FIP authority in a separate FIP rulemaking, the
EPA notes with regard to the procedural timing concerns raised in
comments on this action that the Supreme Court confirmed in EME
Homer City Generation, ``EPA is not obliged to wait two years or
postpone its action even a single day: The Act empowers the Agency
to promulgate a FIP `at any time' within the two[hyphen]year
limit.'' 572 U.S. 489 at 509. The procedural timeframes under CAA
section 110 do not function to establish a norm or expectation that
the EPA must or should use the full amount of time allotted,
particularly when doing so would place the Agency in conflict with
the more ``central'' statutory objective of meeting the NAAQS
attainment deadlines in the Act. EME Homer City, 572 U.S. 489, 509
(2014). See also Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318, 322; Sierra Club v.
EPA, 294 F.3d 155, 161 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (Sierra Club).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is true that the EPA would not be legally authorized to finalize
a FIP for any state unless and until the EPA formally finalizes a
disapproval of that state's SIP submission (or makes a finding of
failure to submit for any state that fails to make a complete SIP
submission), per CAA section 110(c), but the EPA has not yet finalized
a FIP for any state for good neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS. Further, the sequencing of our actions here is consistent with
the EPA's past practice in our efforts to timely address good neighbor
obligations. For example, at the time the EPA proposed the CSAPR Update
FIPs in December of 2015, we had not yet proposed action on several
states' SIP submissions but finalized those SIP disapproval actions
prior to finalization of the FIP.\246\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\246\ The proposed CSAPR Update was published on December 3,
2015, and included proposed FIPs for Indiana, Louisiana, New York,
Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin. 80 FR 75705. At that time, the EPA had
not yet even proposed action on good neighbor SIP submissions for
the 2008 ozone NAAQS from Indiana, Louisiana, New York, Ohio, Texas,
and Wisconsin; however, the EPA subsequently proposed and finalized
these disapprovals before finalizing the CSAPR Update FIPs,
published on October 26, 2016 (81 FR 74504). See 81 FR 38957 (June
15, 2016) (Indiana); 81 FR 53308 (August 12, 2016) (Louisiana); 81
FR 58849 (August 26, 2016) (New York); 81 FR 38957 (June 15, 2016)
(Ohio); 81 FR 53284 (August 12, 2016) (Texas); 81 FR 53309 (August
12, 2016) (Wisconsin).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional comments on cooperative federalism are addressed in
Section V.B.5.
Further, The D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin held that states and the EPA
are obligated to fully address good neighbor obligations for ozone ``as
expeditiously as practical'' and in no event later than the next
relevant downwind attainment dates found in CAA section 181(a),\247\
and states and the EPA may not delay implementation of measures
necessary to address good neighbor requirements beyond the next
applicable attainment date without a showing of impossibility or
necessity.\248\ It is important for the states and the EPA to assure
that necessary emissions reductions are achieved, to the extent
feasible, by the 2023 ozone season to assist downwind areas with
meeting the August 3, 2024, attainment deadline for Moderate
nonattainment areas. Further, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin emphasized
that the EPA has the authority under CAA section 110 to structure its
actions so as to ensure necessary reductions are achieved by the
downwind attainment
[[Page 9362]]
dates,\249\ the next of which for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is now the
Moderate area attainment date of August 3, 2024.\250\ The court pointed
out that the CAA section 110 schedule of SIP and FIP deadlines is
procedural whereas the attainment schedule is ``central to the
regulatory scheme[.]'' \251\ Thus, the sequence and timing of the EPA's
action in disapproving these SIP submissions is informed by the need to
ensure that any necessary good neighbor obligations identified in the
separate FIP rulemaking are implemented as expeditiously as practicable
and no later than the next attainment date. As explained in our
proposed disapproval, analysis (and, if possible, implementation) of
good neighbor obligations should begin in the 2023 ozone season. See,
e.g., 87 FR 9798, 9801-02 (Feb. 22, 2022). Indeed, states' and the
EPA's analysis would have been more appropriately aligned with 2020,
rather than 2023 (as had been presented in the EPA's March 2018
memorandum \252\), corresponding with the 2021 Marginal area attainment
date. However, that clarification in legal obligations was not
established by case law until 2020. See Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1203-04.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\247\ Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-14 (citing North Carolina, 531
F.3d at 911-12.
\248\ See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320.
\249\ Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318 (``When EPA determines a
State's SIP is inadequate, the EPA presumably must issue a FIP that
will bring that State into compliance before upcoming attainment
deadlines, even if the outer limit of the statutory timeframe gives
the EPA more time to formulate the FIP.'') (citing Sierra Club, 294
F.3d at 161).
\250\ See CAA section 181(a); 40 CFR 51.1303; Additional Air
Quality Designations for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, 83 FR 25776 (June 4, 2018, effective August 3, 2018).
\251\ Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322 (``Delaware's argument leans
too heavily on the SIP submission deadline. SIP submission
deadlines, unlike attainment deadlines, are `procedural' and,
therefore, not `central to the regulatory scheme.' '') (citing
Sierra Club, 294 F.3d at 161).
\252\ See March 2018 memorandum.
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In short, nothing in the language of CAA section 110(c) prohibits
the EPA from proposing a FIP as a backstop, to be finalized and
implemented only in the event that a SIP submission is first found to
be deficient and final disapproval action on the SIP submission is
taken. Such an approach is a reasonable and prudent means of assuring
that the statutory obligation to reduce air pollution affecting the
health and welfare of those living in downwind states is implemented
without delay, either via a SIP, or where such plan is deficient, via a
FIP. The sequencing of the EPA's actions here is therefore reasonably
informed by its legal obligations under the CAA, including in
recognition of the fact that the implementation of necessary emissions
reductions to eliminate significant contribution and thereby protect
human health and welfare is already several years delayed. The EPA
shares additional responses related to the timing of 2015 ozone NAAQS
good neighbor actions in Section V.A.
Comment: Some comments allege the EPA is depriving States of the
opportunity to target specific emissions reductions opportunities, or
the opportunity to revise their submissions at any point in the future.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees. The EPA has repeatedly emphasized
that states have the freedom at any time to develop a revised SIP
submission and submit that to the EPA for approval, and this remains
true. See 87 FR 20036, 20051 (April 6, 2022); 86 FR 23054, 23062 (April
30, 2021); 81 FR 74504, 74506 (Oct. 26, 2016). In the proposed FIPs, as
in prior transport actions, the EPA discusses a number of ways in which
states could take over or replace a FIP, see 87 FR 20036, 20149-51
(Section VII.D: ``Submitting A SIP''); see also id. at 20040 (noting as
one purpose in proposing the FIP that ``this proposal will provide
states with as much information as the EPA can supply at this time to
support their ability to submit SIP revisions to achieve the emissions
reductions the EPA believes necessary to eliminate significant
contribution''). If, and when, the EPA receives a SIP submission that
satisfies the requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), the
Agency will take action to approve that SIP submission.
Comment: Some commenters assert that the EPA is disapproving SIP
submissions for the sole purpose of pursuing an alleged objective of
establishing nation-wide standards in FIPs. Other commenters point to
the proposed FIPs to make arguments that the EPA's decision to finalize
disapproval of the SIPs is an allegedly foregone conclusion or that the
EPA has allegedly failed to provide the opportunity for meaningful
public engagement on the proposed disapproval of the SIPs.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees as the facts do not support this
assertion. To date, the EPA has approved 24 good neighbor SIPs for the
2015 ozone NAAQS: Alaska,\253\ Colorado,\254\ Connecticut,\255\
Delaware,\256\ District of Columbia,\257\ Florida,\258\ Georgia,\259\
Hawaii,\260\ Idaho,\261\ Iowa,\262\ Kansas,\263\ Maine,\264\
Massachusetts,\265\ Montana,\266\ Nebraska,\267\ New Hampshire,\268\
North Carolina,\269\ North Dakota,\270\ Oregon,\271\ Rhode Island,\272\
South Carolina,\273\ South Dakota,\274\ Vermont,\275\ and
Washington.\276\
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\253\ 84 FR 69331 (December 18, 2019).
\254\ 87 FR 61249 (October 11, 2022).
\255\ 86 FR 71830 (December 20, 2021).
\256\ 85 FR 25307 (May 1, 2020).
\257\ 85 FR 5570 (January 31, 2020).
\258\ 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
\259\ Id.
\260\ 86 FR 73129 (December 27, 2021).
\261\ 85 FR 65722 (October 16, 2020).
\262\ 87 FR 22463 (April 15, 2022).
\263\ 87 FR 19390 (April 4, 2022).
\264\ 86 FR 45870 (August 17, 2021).
\265\ 85 FR 5572 (January 31, 2020).
\266\ 87 FR 21578 (April 12, 2022).
\267\ 85 FR 21325 (April 17, 2020).
\268\ 86 FR 45870 (August 17, 2021).
\269\ 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
\270\ 85 FR 20165 (April 10, 2020).
\271\ 84 FR 22376 (May 17, 2019).
\272\ 86 FR 70409 (December 10, 2021).
\273\ 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021).
\274\ 85 FR 67653 (October 26, 2020).
\275\ 85 FR 34357 (June 4, 2020).
\276\ 83 FR 47568 (September 20, 2018).
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The policy judgments made by the EPA in all actions on 2015 ozone
NAAQS good neighbor SIP submissions, including approval actions,
reflect consistency with relevant good neighbor case law and past
agency practice implementing the good neighbor provision as reflected
in the original CSAPR, CSAPR Update, Revised CSAPR Update, and related
rulemakings. Employing a nationally consistent approach is particularly
important in the context of interstate ozone transport, which is a
regional-scale pollution problem involving many smaller contributors.
Effective policy solutions to the problem of interstate ozone transport
dating back to the NOX SIP Call [63 FR 57356 (October 27,
1998)] have necessitated the application of a uniform framework of
policy judgments to ensure an ``efficient and equitable'' approach. See
EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 519. In any case, the approach of the
proposed transport FIP is not the subject of this SIP disapproval. This
rulemaking does not impose any specific emissions control measures on
the states. Nor is the EPA disapproving these SIP submittals because
they did not follow exactly the control strategies in the proposed
FIP--the EPA has repeatedly indicated openness to alternative
approaches to addressing interstate pollution obligations, but for
reasons explained elsewhere in the rulemaking record, the EPA finds
that none of the states included in this action submitted approvable
approaches to addressing those obligations.
The EPA disputes the contentions that the FIP proposal itself
indicates that the EPA did not earnestly examine the SIP submissions
for compliance with the CAA or have an appropriate rationale
[[Page 9363]]
for proposing to disapprove certain SIP submissions. The EPA also
disputes that the FIP proposal indicates that the EPA did not intend to
consider comments on the proposed disapprovals. Comments making claims
the EPA did not follow proper administrative procedure have been
submitted utilizing the very notice and comment process these comments
claim the EPA is skipping, and these claims are factually unsupported.
Comments related to the length of the comment period and claims of
``pretext'' are addressed in the RTC document.
Comment: Several comments pointed out how hard many states have
worked to develop an approvable SIP submission.
EPA Response: The EPA acknowledges and appreciates states' efforts
to develop approvable SIPs. Cooperative federalism is a cornerstone of
CAA section 110, and the EPA strives to collaborate with its state
partners. The timing of the EPA's 2015 ozone NAAQS good neighbor
actions is not in any way intended to call into question any state's
commitment to develop approvable SIPs. The EPA evaluated each SIP
submission on its merits. The EPA relies on collaboration with state
air agencies to ensure SIP submissions are technically and legally
defensible, and the Agency's action here is in no way meant to
undermine that collaboration between state and Federal partners
respecting SIP development.
Comment: Several comments make various arguments about when the EPA
can finalize FIPs. Some commenters argue that CAA section 110(c)(1)
guarantees states an additional two years to correct their SIP
submissions before the EPA finalizes a FIP. Others argue that the
notice and comment requirements of the Administrative Procedures Act
mandate that the EPA finalize a SIP submission disapproval before
proposing a FIP. One commenter suggested that a state must be allowed
to fully exhaust its judicial remedies to challenge a SIP submission
disapproval before the EPA can promulgate a FIP. Commenters also raise
concerns about the analysis and requirements in the proposed FIPs.
EPA Response: Comments opining on when the EPA is legally
authorized to propose or finalize a FIP are outside the scope of this
action. While the EPA acknowledges that the Agency has no obligation or
authority to finalize a FIP until finalizing a disapproval of a SIP
submission or determining that a state failed to submit a complete SIP
submission (CAA section 110(c)(1)), this action is limited to
determining whether the covered SIP submissions meet the requirements
of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). For the same reason, comments
criticizing specific substantive requirements or implementation
timelines in the proposed FIPs are beyond the scope of this action.
2. Requests for Additional Time To Revise SIP Submissions
Comment: Some commenters argue that the EPA must or should delay
action on these SIP submissions so that states can reexamine and
resubmit SIP submissions. Other commenters argue that states must be
given more time to re-examine and resubmit their SIP submission for
various reasons, including the substantive requirements in the proposed
FIPs.
EPA Response: The EPA notes that there is no support in the Clean
Air Act for such a delay. CAA section 110(a)(1) requires states to
adopt and submit SIP submissions meeting certain requirements including
the requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), ``within 3 years
(or such shorter period as the Administrator prescribe) after the
promulgation of a national primary ambient air quality standard (or any
revision thereof).'' CAA section 110(a)(1). The submission deadline
clearly runs from the date of promulgation of the NAAQS, which for the
2015 ozone NAAQS was October 1, 2015. 80 FR 65291 (Oct. 26, 2015). In
addition, while the Administrator is given authority to prescribe a
period shorter than three years for the states to adopt and submit such
SIP submissions, the Act does not give the Administrator authority to
lengthen the time allowed for CAA section 110(a)(2) submissions. And
the EPA would be in violation of court-ordered deadlines if it deferred
taking final action beyond January 31, 2023, for all but two of the
states covered by this action.\277\
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\277\ The EPA has no court-ordered deadline to take final action
on the good neighbor SIP submission from Alabama dated June 21,
2022, or Utah's good neighbor SIP submission.
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Comments asserting that the EPA must give more time to states to
correct deficiencies and re-submit conflict with the controlling
caselaw in that they would elevate the maximum timeframes allowable
within the procedural framework of CAA section 110 over the attainment
schedule of CAA section 181 that the D.C. Circuit has now held multiple
times must be the animating focus in the timing of good neighbor
obligations. The D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin held that states and the EPA
are obligated to fully address good neighbor obligations for ozone ``as
expeditiously as practical'' and in no event later than the next
relevant downwind attainment dates found in CAA section 181(a),\278\
and the EPA may not delay implementation of measures necessary to
address good neighbor requirements beyond the next applicable
attainment date without a showing of impossibility or necessity.\279\
Further, the court pointed out that the CAA section 110 schedule of SIP
and FIP deadlines is procedural, and while the EPA has complied with
the mandatory sequence of actions required under section 110 here, we
are mindful of the court's observation that, as compared with the
fundamental substantive obligations of title I of the CAA to attain and
maintain the NAAQS, the maximum timeframes allotted under section 110
are less ``central to the regulatory scheme[.]'' \280\
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\278\ Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-14 (citing North Carolina, 531
F.3d at 911-12). On May 19, 2020, the D.C. Circuit in Maryland,
applying the Wisconsin decision, held that the EPA must assess air
quality at the next downwind attainment date, including Marginal
area attainment dates, in evaluating the basis for the EPA's denial
of a petition under CAA section 126(b). Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1203-
04.
\279\ See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320.
\280\ Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322 (``Delaware's argument leans
too heavily on the SIP submission deadline. SIP submission
deadlines, unlike attainment deadlines, are `procedural' and
therefore not `central to the regulatory scheme.''') (citing Sierra
Club, 294 F.3d at 161).
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Comment: Other comments take the position that states are owed a
second opportunity to submit SIP submissions before the EPA takes final
action for various reasons, including claims that the EPA failed to
issue adequate guidance or is otherwise walking back previously issued
guidance. They allege that a state cannot choose controls to eliminate
significant contribution until the EPA quantifies the contribution.
Other comments argue that the EPA should not or cannot base the
disapprovals on alleged shifts in policy that occurred after the Agency
received the SIP submissions.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees that the Agency was required to
issue guidance or quantify individual states' level of significant
contribution for 2015 ozone NAAQS good neighbor obligations, because as
noted in EME Homer City, the Supreme Court clearly held that ``nothing
in the statute places EPA under an obligation to provide specific
metrics to States before they undertake to fulfill their good neighbor
obligations.'' \281\ The Agency issued three memoranda in 2018 to
provide modeling results and some ideas to states in the development of
their SIP submissions. However, certain aspects of those discussions
were specifically
[[Page 9364]]
identified as not constituting agency guidance (especially Attachment A
to the March 2018 memorandum, which comprised an unvetted list of
outside stakeholders' ideas). Further, states' submissions did not meet
the terms of the August or October 2018 memoranda addressing
contribution thresholds and maintenance receptors, respectively. (See
Section V.B for further discussion of these memoranda.) We acknowledge
that the EPA reassessed air quality and states' contribution levels
through additional modeling before proposing action on these SIP
submissions. But that is not in any way an effort to circumvent the
SIP/FIP process; rather it is an outcome of the reality that the EPA
updated its modeling platform from a 2011 to a 2016 base year and
updated its emissions inventory information along with other updates.
There is nothing improper in the Agency improving its understanding of
a situation before taking action, and the Agency reasonably must be
able to act on SIP submissions using the information available at the
time it takes such action. Those updates have not uniformly been used
to disapprove SIPs--the new modeling for instance supported the
approval of Montana's and Colorado's SIPs.\282\ Nor has the new
modeling prevented states from submitting new SIP submissions based on
that modeling. For instance, the State of Alabama withdrew its prior
submission in April of 2022, following our proposed disapproval, and
submitted a new submission (further updated in June of 2022) analyzing
the 2016v2 modeling used at proposal. The EPA is acting on that new
submission and evaluating the new arguments the State developed
regarding the more recent modeling. Nonetheless, as explained in the
EPA's proposed disapproval of Alabama's new submission and in Section
IV.A, the new arguments that Alabama has presented in its more recent
submission do not lead the EPA to a contrary conclusion that its SIP
submission should be approved.\283\ This demonstrates two points
contrary to commenters' contentions: first, the EPA is following the
science and is making nationally consistent determinations at Steps 1
and 2, based on its review of each state's submission; and second, the
fact that states made submissions based on the 2011-based modeling
results presented in the March 2018 memorandum rather than on the most
recent modeling results is not prejudicial to the outcome of the EPA's
analysis, as our action on Alabama's more recent submission evaluating
the State's arguments with respect to the newer, 2016-based modeling
makes clear.
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\281\ EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 510.
\282\ 87 FR 6095, 6097 at n. 15 (February 3, 2022) (Montana
proposal); 87 FR 27050, 27056 (May 6, 2022) (Colorado, proposal), 87
FR 61249 (October 11, 2022) (Colorado, final).
\283\ 87 FR 64412 (October 25, 2022).
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Contrary to commenters' arguments, the EPA had no obligation to
issue further guidance, define obligations, or otherwise clarify or
attempt to interpret states' responsibilities since the issuance of the
2018 memoranda, prior to acting on these SIP submissions. States
themselves were aware or should have been aware of the case law
developments in Wisconsin and in Maryland, which called into question
the EPA's use of 2023 as the analytical year in the March 2018
memorandum. Those decisions were issued in 2019 and 2020 respectively,
yet no state moved to amend or supplement their SIP submissions with
analysis of an earlier analytical year or to otherwise bring their
analyses into conformance with those decisions (e.g., through fuller
analysis of non-EGU emissions reduction potential or through treatment
of international contribution). Given the Supreme Court's 2014 holding
in EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 508-510, which reversed a D.C. Circuit
holding that the EPA was obligated to define good neighbor
obligations,\284\ states had no reason to expect the EPA would be
obligated to issue further guidance to clarify requirements in the wake
of those decisions. The EPA agrees with those commenters who point out
that states have the first opportunity to assess and address
obligations in implementing the NAAQS, but with that understanding in
mind, it is notable that prior to the proposed disapprovals in February
of 2022, no state moved to amend or supplement their SIP submission as
the case law on good neighbor obligations evolved or in response to new
modeling information as it became available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\284\ EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 696 F.3d 7 (D.C.
Cir. 2012) (EME Homer City I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, the EPA has evaluated state SIP submissions on the merits
of what is contained in the submission, not the use of any particular
modeling platform. The EPA disagrees with commenters' assertions that
the EPA has proposed disapproval of a state's proposed SIP due to the
use of a particular modeling platform. As noted previously, the EPA
approved state SIP submissions that have used the earlier modeling. The
EPA did not reach its conclusion to disapprove states' SIP submissions
based on the use of the 2016v2 emissions platform standing alone. Use
of that platform, or any other modeling platform, is not ipso facto
grounds for disapproval at all. As evident in the proposed disapprovals
and summarized in Section IV, the EPA evaluated the SIP submissions
based on the merits of the arguments put forward in each SIP
submission.
3. Alleged Harm to States Caused by Time Between SIP Submission and the
EPA's Action
Comment: Many comments pointed to the EPA's statutory deadlines to
take action on the SIP submissions to argue that the EPA's delay harmed
the upwind state's interests because now the EPA may conclude they need
to reduce their emissions to satisfy their good neighbor obligations in
the separate FIP rulemaking whereas had the EPA acted by statutory
deadlines using the older modeling, they might have had their SIP
submissions approved. Some commenters suggest that the EPA never gave
the state SIP submissions the appropriate review or suggest that the
EPA's review of the SIP submissions was prejudiced by the FIP it had
proposed.
EPA Response: The EPA acknowledges that the Agency's statutory
deadlines to take final action on these SIP submissions generally fell
in 2020 and 2021. However, the delay in acting caused no prejudice to
the upwind states. First, this action to disapprove SIP submissions
itself will not impose any requirements or penalties on any state or
sources within that state. Second, these delays have primarily had the
effect of deferring relief to downwind states and their citizens from
excessive levels of ozone pollution under the good neighbor provision.
Further, the EPA has generally had a practice of correcting its action
on good neighbor SIP submittals if later information indicates that a
prior action was in error--thus, it is not the case that simply having
obtained an approval based on earlier modeling would have meant a state
would be forever insulated from later being subject to corrective or
remedial good neighbor actions. See, e.g.,86 FR 23056, 23067-68 (April
30, 2021) (error correcting Kentucky's approval to a disapproval and
promulgating FIP addressing Kentucky's outstanding 2008 ozone NAAQS
good neighbor obligations); 87 FR 20036, 20041 (April 6, 2022)
(proposing error correction for Delaware's 2015 ozone NAAQS SIP
approval to a disapproval based on updated air quality modeling).
Finally, there is no basis in the CAA to use the Agency's own delay as
a basis to nullify
[[Page 9365]]
the authority granted in the Act to address the nation's air pollution
problems, as the statute itself contains other forms of adequate
remedy. CAA section 304(a)(2) provides for judicial recourse where
there is an alleged failure by the agency to perform a nondiscretionary
duty, and that recourse is for the Agency to be placed on a court-
ordered deadline to address the relevant obligations. Accord Oklahoma,
723 F.3d at 1223-24; Montana Sulphur and Chemical Co. v. U.S. EPA, 666
F.3d 1174, 1190-91 (9th Cir. 2012).
Comment: Some comments contend that the EPA's delay in acting on
SIP submissions was a deliberate attempt to circumvent the SIP/FIP
process, unduly burden the states, or to defer making information
available to states. Comments allege that the EPA intentionally stalled
an evaluative action until the perceived ``facts'' of the situation
changed such that the analyses submitted by states were rendered
outdated.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees with both allegations. In this
respect, it is important to review the recent history of the EPA's
regulatory actions and litigation with respect to good neighbor
obligations for both the 2008 and 2015 ozone NAAQS, and in particular,
the substantial additional workload the Agency took on in the wake of
the remand of the CSAPR Update in Wisconsin. In 2018, as the EPA issued
the memoranda cited by commenters and planned to shift its focus to
implementing the 2015 standards, it also issued the CSAPR Close-out,
which made an analytical finding that there were no further obligations
for 21 states for the 2008 standards following the CSAPR Update. 83 FR
65878 (Dec. 21, 2018). However, contrary to the EPA's understanding
that it had fully addressed good neighbor obligations for the 2008
ozone NAAQS, the D.C. Circuit's decisions in Wisconsin (remanding the
CSAPR Update) and in New York (vacating the CSAPR Close-out), forced
the Agency to quickly pivot back to addressing remaining obligations
under the 2008 standards. Wisconsin v. EPA, 938 F.3d 303 (D.C. Cir.
2019); New York v. EPA, 781 F. App'x. 4 (D.C. Cir. 2019). The EPA was
subject to renewed deadline suit litigation under CAA section 304,
which led to a March 15, 2021, deadline to take final action on several
states whose FIPs had been remanded and were incomplete in the wake of
the CSAPR Close-out vacatur. New Jersey v. Wheeler, 475 F.Supp.3d 308
(S.D.N.Y. 2020). Throughout 2020 and 2021, the EPA was therefore
focused on an unexpected rulemaking obligation to complete good
neighbor requirements as to the states with remanded CSAPR Update FIPs.
This led to the EPA proposing and then issuing an economically
significant, major rule assessing additional EGU emissions reduction
obligations as well as presenting updated air quality modeling analysis
using novel techniques and presenting information on a host of non-EGU
industrial sources for the first time, i.e., the Revised CSAPR Update,
86 FR 23054 (April 30, 2021). That rule is now currently subject to
judicial review in the D.C. Circuit, Midwest Ozone Group v. EPA, No.
21-1146 (D.C. Cir. argued Sept. 28, 2022).\285\ The EPA has also been
in the process of reviewing and acting upon many states' good neighbor
SIPs where the available information indicates that an approval of the
state's submission was appropriate.\286\
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\285\ During this time, the EPA also fulfilled its obligations
to act on several petitions brought by downwind states under section
126(b) of the CAA. These actions culminated in litigation and
ultimately adverse decisions in Maryland and New York v. EPA.
Maryland v, 958 F.3d; New York v. EPA, 964 F.3d 1214, 2020 WL
3967838 (D.C. Cir. 2020). Further review and action on these remands
remains pending before the agency.
\286\ In chronological order: 83 FR 47568 (September 20, 2018)
(Washington); 84 FR 69331 (December 18, 2019) (Alaska); 84 FR 22376
(May 17, 2019) (Oregon); 85 FR 5570 (January 31, 2020) (Washington,
DC); 85 FR 5572 (January 31, 2020) (Massachusetts); 85 FR 20165
(April 10, 2020) (North Dakota); 85 FR 21325 (April 17, 2020)
(Nebraska); 85 FR 25307 (May 1, 2020) (Delaware); 85 FR 34357 (June
4, 2020) (Vermont); 85 FR 65722 (October 16, 2020) (Idaho); 85 FR
67653 (October 26, 2020) (South Dakota); 86 FR 45870 (August 17,
2021) (Maine and New Hampshire); 86 FR 68413 (December 2, 2021)
(Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina); 86 FR 70409
(December 10, 2021) (Rhode Island); 86 FR 71830 (December 20, 2021)
(Connecticut); 86 FR 73129 (December 27, 2021) (Hawaii); 87 FR 19390
(April 4, 2022) (Kansas); 87 FR 21578 (April 12, 2022) (Montana); 87
FR 22463 (April 15, 2022) (Iowa); and 87 FR 61249 (October 11, 2022)
(Colorado).
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Finally, the Agency needed time to review and evaluate the SIP
submissions in a coordinated fashion to act on all the states'
submissions in a consistent manner. As the EPA explained in the
proposed disapproval action, consistency in defining CAA obligations is
critically important in the context of addressing a regional-scale
pollutant like ozone. See, e.g., 87 FR 9807 n.48. Through coordinated
development of the bases for how the Agency could act on the SIP
submissions, while also evaluating the contours of a potential Federal
plan to implement obligations where required, the EPA sequenced its
deliberations and decision making to maximize efficient, consistent,
and timely action, in recognition of the need to implement any
necessary obligations ``as expeditiously as practicable.'' \287\ The
downsides of commenters' policy preference in favor of giving states
another opportunity to develop SIP submissions, or in first acting on
each SIP submission before proposing a FIP, are that such a sequence of
actions would have led to multiple years of additional delay in
addressing good neighbor obligations. Even if such a choice was
available to the Agency using the CAA section 110(k)(5) SIP call
mechanism, it was entirely reasonable for the EPA to decline to use
that mechanism in this instance. (EPA further addresses comments in
support of a SIP call approach in the RTC document.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\287\ CAA section 181(a); Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 313-14 (citing
North Carolina, 531 F.3d at 911-12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In short, commenters' notion that the EPA was deliberately or
intentionally deferring or delaying action on these SIP submissions to
circumvent any required legal process or reach any specific result is
simply incorrect. Commenters have not supplied any evidence to support
the claim either that any legal process was circumvented or that the
Agency's conduct was in bad faith. See Biden v. Texas, 142 S.Ct. 2528,
2546-47 (2022) (presumption of regularity attends agency action absent
a ``strong showing of bad faith or improper behavior'') (citing
Citizens to Protect Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 302, 420 (1971);
SEC v. Chenery, 318 U.S. 80, 87 (1943)).
4. Use of Updated Modeling
Comment: Comments allege that by relying on modeling not available
at the time of SIP submission development, the EPA ``moved the goal
post.'' Comments note the timeframes set out for action on SIPs, citing
section 110 of the Act, and allege that by failing to act on SIP
submissions in a timely manner and basing such actions on new modeling,
the EPA imposes an arbitrary and capricious standard. Comments state
that the EPA should not disapprove a SIP based on data not available to
states during development of the SIP submissions or to the EPA during
the period statutorily allotted for the EPA to take final action on SIP
submissions.
EPA Response: In response to comments' claims that the EPA has
inappropriately changed states' obligations for interstate transport by
relying on updated modeling not available to states at the time they
prepared their SIP submissions, the EPA disagrees. As an initial
matter, the EPA disagrees with comment's claiming that the agency
expected state air agencies to develop a SIP submission based on
[[Page 9366]]
some unknown future data. The EPA recognizes that states generally
developed their SIP submissions with the best available information at
the time of their development. As stated in the proposals, the EPA did
not evaluate states' SIP submissions based solely on the 2016v2
emissions platform (or the 2016v3 platform, which incorporates comments
generated during the public comment period on the proposed SIP actions
and which supports these final SIP disapproval actions). We evaluated
the SIP submissions based on the merits of the arguments put forward in
each SIP submission, which included any analysis put forward by states
to support their conclusions. Thus, we disagree with commenters who
allege the Agency has ignored the information provided by the states in
their submissions. Indeed, the record for this action reflects our
extensive evaluation of states' air quality and contribution analyses.
See generally Section IV, which summarizes our evaluation for each
state.
We disagree with commenters who advocate that the EPA's evaluation
of these submissions must be limited to the information available to
states at the time they made their submissions, or information at the
time of the deadline for the EPA to act on their submissions. It can
hardly be the case that the EPA is prohibited from taking rulemaking
action using the best information available to it at the time it takes
such action. Nothing in the CAA suggests that the Agency must deviate
from that general principle when acting on SIP submissions. While CAA
section 110(k)(2) specifies a time period in which the Administrator is
to act on a state submission, neither this provision nor any other
provision of the CAA specifies that the remedy for the EPA's failure to
meet a statutory deadline is to arrest or freeze the information the
EPA may consider to what was available at the time of a SIP submission
deadline under CAA section 110. Indeed, in the interstate transport
context, this would lead to an anomalous result. For example, the D.C.
Circuit rejected an argument made by Delaware against the CSAPR Update
air quality analysis that the EPA was limited to reviewing air quality
conditions in 2011 (rather than 2017) at the time of the statutory
deadline for SIP submittals. The court explained,
Delaware's argument leans too heavily on the SIP submission
deadline. SIP submission deadlines, unlike attainment deadlines, are
``procedural'' and therefore not ``central to the regulatory
scheme.'' Sierra Club, 294 F.3d at 161. Nor can Delaware's argument
be reconciled with the text of the Good Neighbor Provision, which
prohibits upwind States from emitting in amounts ``which will''
contribute to downwind nonattainment. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(D)(i)
(emphasis added). Given 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.
Wisconsin, 903 F.3d at 322. By the same token, here, holding the
EPA to a consideration only of what information states had available
regarding the 2023 analytic year at the time of their SIP submissions
or at the time of a deadline under CAA section 110, would likewise
elevate the ``procedural'' deadlines of CAA section 110 above the
substantive requirements of the CAA that are ``central to the
regulatory scheme.'' Doing so here would force the Agency to act on
these SIP submissions knowing that more recent refined, high quality,
state-of-the-science modeling and monitoring data would produce a
different result in our forward-looking analysis of 2023 than the
information available in 2018. Nothing in the CAA dictates that the EPA
must be forced into making substantive errors in its good neighbor
analysis on this basis.
We relied on CAMx Version 7.10 and the 2016v2 emissions platform to
make updated determinations regarding which receptors would likely
exist in 2023 and which states are projected to contribute above the
contribution threshold to those receptors. As explained in the preamble
of the EPA's proposed actions and further detailed in the document
titled ``Air Quality Modeling TSD: 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards Proposed Interstate Transport Air Plan Disapproval''
and 2016v2 Emissions Inventory TSD, both available in Docket ID no.
EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663, the 2016v2 modeling built off previous modeling
iterations used to support the EPA's action on interstate transport
obligations. The EPA continuously refines its modeling to ensure the
results are as indicative as possible of air quality in future years.
This includes adjusting our modeling platform and updating our
emissions inventories to reflect current information.
Additionally, we disagree with comments claiming that the 2016v2
modeling results were sprung upon the states with the publication of
the proposed disapprovals. The EPA has been publishing a series of data
and modeling releases beginning as early as the publication of the
2016v1 modeling with the proposed Revised CSAPR Update in November of
2020, which could have been used to track how the EPA's modeling
updates were potentially affecting the list of possible receptors and
linkages for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in the 2023 analytic year. The 2016-
based meteorology and boundary conditions used in the modeling have
been available through the 2016v1 platform, which was used for the
Revised CSAPR Update (proposed in November of 2020, 85 FR 68964). The
updated emissions inventory files used in the current modeling were
publicly released September 21, 2021, for stakeholder feedback, and
have been available on our website since that time.\288\ The CAMx
modeling software that the EPA used has likewise been publicly
available for over a year. CAMx version 7.10 was released by the model
developer, Ramboll, in December 2020. On January 19, 2022, we released
on our website and notified a wide range of stakeholders of the
availability of both the modeling results for 2023 and 2026 (including
contribution data) along with many key underlying input files.\289\
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\288\ See https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v2-platform.
\289\ See https://www.epa.gov/scram/photochemical-modeling-applications.
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By providing the 2016 meteorology and boundary conditions (used in
the 2016v1 version) in fall of 2020, and by releasing updated emissions
inventory information used in 2016v2 in September of 2021,\290\ states
and other interested parties had multiple opportunities prior to the
proposed disapprovals in February of 2022 to consider how our modeling
updates could affect their status for purposes of evaluating potential
linkages for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Further, by using the updated
modeling results, the EPA is using the most current and technically
appropriate information for this rulemaking. This modeling was not
performed to ``move the goal posts'' for states but meant to provide
updated emissions projections, such as additional emissions reductions
for EGUs following promulgation of the Revised CSAPR Update for the
2008 ozone NAAQS, more recent information on plant closures and fuel
switches, and sector trends, including non-EGU sectors. The construct
of the 2016v2 emissions platform is described in the 2016v2 Emissions
Modeling TSD contained in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0663.
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\290\ https://www.epa.gov/air-emissions-modeling/2016v2-platform.
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Finally, comments related to the timing of the EPA's action to
disapprove these SIP submissions are addressed in Section V.A.1. The
EPA notes the statute provides a separate remedy for agency action
unlawfully delayed. In section 304 of the CAA, there is a
[[Page 9367]]
process for filing suit against the EPA for its failure to comply with
a non-discretionary statutory duty under the CAA. The appropriate
remedy in such cases is an order to compel agency action, not a
determination that the agency, by virtue of missing a deadline, has
been deprived of or constrained in its authority to act. See Oklahoma,
723 F.3d at 1224 (``[W]hen `there are less drastic remedies available
for failure to meet a statutory deadline'--such as a motion to compel
agency action--`courts should not assume that Congress intended the
agency to lose its power to act.' The Court `would be most reluctant to
conclude that every failure of an agency to observe a procedural
requirement voids subsequent agency action, especially when important
public rights are at stake.''') (cleaned up) (quoting Brock v. Pierce
County, 476 U.S. 253, 260 (1986)).
Comment: Comments state that it is inappropriate for the EPA to
revise its emissions inventory and to conduct new air quality modeling
without allowing an appropriate opportunity for stakeholder review and
comment and that the EPA must allow public comment on any updated
(i.e., 2016v3) modeling prior to use by the EPA in a final action.
Comments claim that the EPA must withdraw the proposed disapproval and
provide states time to develop new SIP submissions based on the updated
information.
EPA Response: The EPA has evaluated a wide range of technical
information and critiques of its 2016v2 emissions inventory and
modeling platform following a solicitation of public feedback as well
the public comment period on this action (and the proposed FIP action)
and has responded to those comments and incorporated updates into the
version of the modeling being used in this final action (2016v3). See
Section III, the Final Action AQM TSD, and Section 4 of the RTC
document for further discussion.
The EPA's development of and reliance on newer modeling to confirm
modeling used at the proposal stage is in no way improper and is simply
another iteration of the EPA's longstanding scientific and technical
work to improve our understanding of air quality issues and causes
going back decades. Where the 2016v3 modeling produced a potentially
different outcome for states from proposal, that is reflected in this
action (e.g., our deferral of final action on Tennessee and Wyoming's
SIP submissions).
Comment: Comments allege that EPA's modeling results have been
inconsistent, questioning the reliability of the results.
EPA Response: Although some commenters indicate that our modeling
iterations have provided differing outcomes and are therefore
unreliable, this is not what the overall record indicates. Rather, in
general, although the specifics of states' linkages may change
slightly, our modeling overall has provided consistent outcomes
regarding which states are linked to downwind air quality problems. For
example, the EPA's modeling shows that most states that were linked to
one or more receptors using the 2011-based platform (i.e., the March
2018 data release) are also linked to one or more receptors using the
newer 2016-based platform. Because each platform uses different
meteorology (i.e., 2011 and 2016) it is not at all unexpected that an
upwind state could be linked to different receptors using 2011 versus
2016 meteorology.
In addition, although a state may be linked to a different set of
receptors, states are often linked to receptors in the same area that
has a persistent air quality problem. These differing results regarding
receptors and linkages can be affected by the varying meteorology from
year to year, but this does not indicate that the modeling or the EPA
or the state's methodology for identifying receptors or linkages is
inherently unreliable. Rather, for many states these separate modeling
runs all indicated: (i) that there would be receptors in areas that
would struggle with nonattainment or maintenance in the future, and
(ii) that the state was linked to some set of these receptors, even if
the receptors and linkages differed from one another in their specifics
(e.g., a different set of receptors were identified to have
nonattainment or maintenance problems, or a state was linked to
different receptors in one modeling run versus another).
The EPA interprets this common result as indicative that a state's
emissions have been substantial enough to generate linkages at Step 2
to varying sets of downwind receptors generated under varying
assumptions and meteorological conditions, even if the precise set of
linkages changed between modeling runs. Under these circumstances, we
think it is appropriate to proceed to a Step 3 analysis to determine
what portion of a particular state's emissions should be deemed
``significant.'' We also note that only four states included in the
proposed disapprovals went from being unlinked to being linked between
the 2011-based modeling provided in the March 2018 memorandum and the
2016v2-based modeling--Alabama, Minnesota, Nevada, and Tennessee.
5. Cooperative Federalism and the EPA's Authority
Comment: Many comments point to the concept of cooperative
federalism as embodied in the CAA to make various arguments as to why
the EPA cannot or should not be allowed to exercise its independent
judgment in evaluating the arguments presented by the states in the SIP
submissions, and some also argue that the EPA must approve each state's
submission in deference to how states choose to interpret the CAA
requirements they must meet.
EPA Response: The CAA establishes a framework for state-Federal
partnership to implement the NAAQS based on cooperative federalism.
Under the general model of cooperative federalism, the Federal
Government establishes broad standards or goals, states are given the
opportunity to determine how they wish to achieve those goals, and if
states choose not to or fail to adequately implement programs to
achieve those goals, a Federal agency is empowered to directly regulate
to achieve the necessary ends. Under the CAA, once the EPA establishes
or revises a NAAQS, states have the obligation and opportunity in the
first instance to develop an implementation plan under CAA section 110
and the EPA will approve SIP submissions under CAA section 110 that
fully satisfy the requirements of the CAA. This sequence of steps is
not in dispute.
The EPA does not, however, agree with the comments'
characterization of the EPA's role in the state-Federal relationship as
being ``secondary'' such that the EPA must defer to state choices
heedless of the substantive objectives of the Act; such deference would
be particularly inappropriate in the context of addressing interstate
pollution. The EPA believes that the comments fundamentally
misunderstand or inaccurately describe this action, as well as the
```division of responsibilities' between the states and the federal
government'' they identify in CAA section 110 citing the Train-Virginia
line of cases \291\ and other cases.\292\
[[Page 9368]]
Those cases, some of which pre-date the CAA amendments of 1990
resulting in the current Good Neighbor Provision,\293\ stand only for
the proposition that the EPA must approve state plans if they meet the
applicable CAA requirements. But these cases say nothing about what
those applicable requirements are. The EPA is charged under CAA section
110 with reviewing states' plans for compliance with the CAA and
approving or disapproving them based on EPA's determinations. Thus, the
EPA must ultimately determine whether state plans satisfy the
requirements of the Act or not. Abundant case law reflects an
understanding that the EPA must evaluate SIP submissions under the CAA
section 110(k)(2) and (3).\294\ If they are deficient, the EPA must so
find, and become subject to the obligation to directly implement the
relevant requirements through a Federal implementation plan under CAA
section 110(c), unless EPA approves an applicable SIP first.\295\
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\291\ See Virginia v. EPA, 108 F.3d 1397, 1407 (D.C. Cir. 1997)
(Virginia) (quoting Train v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975) (Train)). The ``Train-Virginia line of
cases'' are named for the U.S. Supreme Court case Train, 421 U.S.
and to the D.C. Circuit case Virginia, 108 F.3d. The D.C. Circuit
has described these cases as defining a ``federalism bar'' that
generally recognizes states' ability to select emissions control
measures in their SIPs so long as CAA requirements are met. See,
e.g., Michigan v. EPA, 213 F.3d 663, 687 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
(Michigan).
\292\ Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246 (1976), Am. Elec.
Power Co. v. Connecticut, 565 U.S. 410 (2011), Fla. Power & Light v.
Costle, 650 F.2d 579 (5th Cir. 1981), Bethlehem Steel Corp. v.
Gorsuch, 742 F.2d 1028 (7th Cir. 1984), Concerned Citizens of
Bridesburg v. EPA, 836 F.2d 777 (3d Cir. 1987), North Carolina, 531
F.3d 896, Luminant, 675 F.3d 917 (5th. Cir. 2012), Luminant Co. LLC
v. EPA, 714 F.3d 841 (5th. Cir. 2013), North Dakota v. EPA, 730 F.3d
750 (8th. Cir. 2013), EME Homer City II, 795 F.3d 118 (D.C. Cir.
2015), and Texas v. USEPA, 829 F.3d 405 (5th. Cir. 2016).
\293\ The 1970 version of the Act required SIPs to include
``adequate provisions for intergovernmental cooperation'' concerning
interstate air pollution. CAA section 110(a)(2)(E), 84 Stat. 1681,
42 U.S.C. 1857c-5(a)(2)(E). In 1977, Congress amended the Good
Neighbor Provision to direct States to submit SIP submissions that
included provisions ``adequate'' to ``prohibi[t] any stationary
source within the State from emitting any air pollutant in amounts
which will . . . prevent attainment or maintenance [of air quality
standards] by any other State.'' CAA section 108(a)(4), 91 Stat.
693, 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(E) (1976 ed., Supp. II). Congress again
amended the Good Neighbor Provision in 1990 to its current form.
\294\ See, e.g., Virginia, 108 F.3d at 1406. See also, e.g.,
Westar Energy v. EPA, 608 Fed. App'x 1, 3 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (``EPA
acted well within the bounds of its delegated authority when it
disapproved of Kansas's proposed [good neighbor] SIP.'') (emphasis
added); Oklahoma, 723 F.3d at 1209 (upholding the EPA's disapproval
of ``best available retrofit technology'' (BART) SIP, noting BART
``does not differ from other parts of the CAA--states have the
ability to create SIPs, but they are subject to EPA review'').
\295\ EME Homer City Generation, 572 U.S. at 508-510.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA responds in greater detail to these comments in the RTC
document.
6. Availability of Guidance for SIP Submissions
Comment: Comments contend the EPA failed to issue guidance in a
timely fashion by releasing its August 2018 memorandum 31 days prior to
when SIPs addressing interstate ozone transport were due and issuing
the October 2018 memorandum 18 days after those SIPs were due. Some
comments additionally claim that it is unreasonable for the EPA to
disapprove SIP submissions based on standards that were not defined,
mandated, or required by official guidance.
EPA Response: Comments' contention is unsupported by the statute or
applicable case law. Regarding the need for the EPA's guidance in
addressing good neighbor obligations, in EME Homer City, the Supreme
Court clearly held that ``nothing in the statute places the EPA under
an obligation to provide specific metrics to States before they
undertake to fulfill their good neighbor obligations.'' \296\
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\296\ EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 510.
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Nonetheless, as comments point out, the EPA issued three
``memoranda'' in 2018 to provide some assistance to states in
developing these SIP submissions. In acting on the SIP submissions in
this action, the EPA is neither rescinding nor acting inconsistently
with the memoranda--to the extent the memoranda constituted agency
guidance (not all the information provided did constitute guidance),
information or ideas in the memoranda had not at that time been
superseded by case law developments, and the memoranda's air quality
and contribution data had not at that time been overtaken by updated
modeling and other updated air quality information. While comments
specific to each of those memoranda are addressed elsewhere in this
record, we note in brief that each memorandum made clear that the EPA's
action on SIP submissions would be through a separate notice-and-
comment rulemaking process and that SIP submissions seeking to rely on
or take advantage of any information or concepts in these memoranda
would be carefully reviewed against the relevant legal requirements and
technical information available to the EPA at the time it would take
such rulemaking action.
B. Application of the 4-Step Interstate Transport Framework
1. Analytic Year
Comment: One comment asserted that 2023 is not an appropriate
analytical year because, according to the commenter, the EPA and at
least some downwind states have not in fact implemented mandatory
emissions control requirements associated with their nonattainment
areas, and North Carolina and Wisconsin require that upwind and
downwind state obligations must be implemented ``on par.'' The comment
also characterizes the EPA's invocation of Maryland as an inappropriate
shifting of regulatory burden to upwind states.
EPA Response: This is an incorrect interpretation of the D.C.
Circuit's holdings in North Carolina, Wisconsin, and Maryland, which
held that the EPA and the states must align good neighbor obligations
to the extent possible with the downwind areas' attainment dates. These
are set by the statute and remain fixed regardless of whether downwind
areas are delayed in implementing their own obligations. It would be
unworkable to expect that upwind states' obligations could be perfectly
aligned with each downwind area's actual timetable for implementing the
relevant emissions controls, and no court has held that this is the
EPA's or the states' obligation under the good neighbor provision.
Further, this ignores the fact that upwind states must also address
their interference with maintenance of the NAAQS, as well as the
Maryland court's holding that good neighbor obligations should be
addressed by the Marginal area attainment date for ozone under subpart
2 of part D of title I of the CAA. Both circumstances may involve
situations in which the home state for an identified downwind receptor
does not have a specific obligation to plan for and implement specific
emissions controls while an upwind state may nonetheless be found to
have good neighbor obligations. But, as the Maryland court recognized,
the absence of specific enumerated requirements does not mean the
downwind state does not have a statutorily binding obligation subject
to burdensome regulatory consequences: ``Delaware must achieve
attainment `as expeditiously as practicable,''' and ``an upgrade from a
marginal to a moderate nonattainment area carries significant
consequences . . . .'' Maryland, 958 F.3d at 1204.
Further, where any downwind-state delays are unreasonable or
violate statutory timeframes, the CAA provides recourse to compel the
completion of such duties in CAA section 304, not to defer the
elimination of significant contribution and thereby expose the public
in downwind areas to the elevated pollution levels caused in part by
upwind states' pollution. Regardless, in this action, 2023 aligns with
the Moderate area attainment date in 2024, and all of the downwind
nonattainment areas corresponding to receptor locations identified at
Step 1 in this action are already classified as being in Moderate
nonattainment or have been reclassified to Moderate and the relevant
states face obligations to submit
[[Page 9369]]
SIP submissions and implement reasonably available control technologies
(RACT) by January 1, 2023. See 87 FR 60897, 60899 (October 7, 2022).
The EPA further responds to this comment in the RTC document.
2. Attachment A to the March 2018 Memorandum
Comment: Comments state that states conducted their analyses based
on the flexibilities listed in Attachment A of the March 2018
Memorandum. Comments cite the part of the memorandum where the EPA
notes that ``in developing their own rules, states have flexibility to
follow the familiar four-step transport framework (using [the] EPA's
analytical approach or somewhat different analytical approaches within
these steps) or alternative frameworks, so long as their chosen
approach has adequate technical justification and is consistent with
the requirements of the CAA.'' Comments state that the EPA's
disapproval of SIP submissions that took advantage of the flexibilities
is arbitrary and capricious because the EPA has changed, without
communication, its consideration of what is deemed to be the
``necessary provisions'' required for an approvable SIP submission too
late in the SIP submission process and because, in disapproving these
SIPs, the EPA is applying a consistent set of policy judgments across
all states.
EPA Response: Comments mistakenly view Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum releasing modeling results as constituting agency
guidance. The EPA further disagrees with commenters' characterization
of the EPA's stance regarding the ``flexibilities'' listed (without
analysis) in Attachment A. Attachment A to the March 2018 memorandum
identified a ``Preliminary List of Potential Flexibilities'' that could
potentially inform SIP development.\297\ However, the EPA made clear in
that attachment that the list of ideas were not suggestions endorsed by
the Agency but rather ``comments provided in various forums'' from
outside parties on which the EPA sought ``feedback from interested
stakeholders.'' \298\ Further, Attachment A stated, ``EPA is not at
this time making any determination that the ideas discussed later are
consistent with the requirements of the CAA, nor are we specifically
recommending that states use these approaches.'' \299\ Attachment A to
the March 2018 memorandum, therefore, does not constitute agency
guidance, but was intended to generate further discussion around
potential approaches to addressing ozone transport among interested
stakeholders. The EPA emphasized in this memorandum that any such
alternative approaches must be technically justified and appropriate in
light of the facts and circumstances of each particular state's
submittal.\300\ As stated in the proposed SIP disapprovals,\301\ the
March 2018 memorandum provided that, ``While the information in this
memorandum and the associated air quality analysis data could be used
to inform the development of these SIPs, the information is not a final
determination regarding states' obligations under the good neighbor
provision.'' \302\ In this final SIP disapproval action, the EPA again
affirms that certain concepts included in Attachment A to the March
2018 memorandum require unique consideration, and these ideas do not
constitute agency guidance with respect to transport obligations for
the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
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\297\ March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A.
\298\ Id.
\299\ Id.
\300\ March 2018 memorandum.
\301\ E.g., 87 FR 9487.
\302\ See Information on the Interstate Transport State
Implementation Plan Submissions for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards under Clean Air Act Section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), March 27, 2018, available in docket EPA-HQ-OAR-
2021-0663 or at https://www.epa.gov/interstate-air-pollution-transport/interstate-air-pollution-transport-memos-and-notices.
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In response to comments' claims that since the time transport SIP
submissions were submitted to the EPA for review, the EPA has changed,
without communication, its consideration of what is deemed to be the
``necessary provisions'' required for an approvable SIP submission, the
EPA disagrees. As comments note, and as stated in the proposed
disapproval notifications, the EPA recognizes that states have
discretion to develop their own SIP transport submissions and agrees
that states are not bound to using the 4-step interstate transport
framework the EPA has historically used. However, states must then
provide sufficient justification and reasoning to support their
analytical conclusions and emissions control strategies. See, e.g., 87
FR 9798, 9801. In the SIP submissions being disapproved in this action,
no state provided any enforceable emissions control strategies for
approval into their SIP. The EPA has evaluated the merits of each
state's arguments as to why no additional emissions reduction
requirements are needed to satisfy their obligations under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS. While the
EPA used its own 4-step interstate transport framework as a guide for
its review to ensure a consistent and equitable evaluation of each
states' submissions, the EPA has also considered states' individual
arguments without predetermining the EPA's conclusions about the
state's transport obligations.
It was never the Agency's intent in sharing Attachment A that
states would invoke one or more of the potential ``flexibilities'' that
outside parties advocated for as a basis for concluding that no
additional emissions controls were necessary to address interstate
transport for the more protective 2015 ozone NAAQS without proper
justification. Nothing in Attachment A suggested that was the Agency's
intended objective. Indeed, where certain approaches identified in
Attachment A might have produced analytical conclusions requiring
upwind states to reduce their emissions, no state invoking Attachment A
followed through with implementing those controls. We observe this
dynamic at work in Kentucky's submission, because Kentucky appended
comments from the Midwest Ozone Group to its submission that
demonstrated that applying a ``weighted'' approach to allocating
upwind-state responsibility at Step 3 would have resulted in an
emissions control obligation on Kentucky's sources, yet the State
offered no explanation in its submittal why it was not adopting that
approach or even what its views on that approach were. See 87 FR 9515.
As another example, Michigan cited Attachment A to the March 2018 in
developing a methodology for calculating significant contribution under
which Michigan would have been responsible for eliminating up to 0.12
ppb of contribution to downwind receptors; however, the State suggested
that uncertainty caused by modeling ``noise'' was too great to either
require emissions reductions or demonstrate that Michigan had any
linkages to receptors at all. See 87 FR 9860-9861. However, this
explanation did not, as an analytical matter, demonstrate a level of
scientific uncertainty which might allow for ignoring the results,\303\
[[Page 9370]]
particularly when the Agency has implemented good neighbor requirements
at levels of ``significant contribution'' comparable to or even less
than 0.12 ppb. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 322-23 (rejecting Wisconsin's
argument that it should not face good neighbor obligations for the 2008
ozone NAAQS on the basis that its emission reductions would only
improve a downwind receptor by two ten-thousandths of a part per
billion).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\303\ Scientific uncertainty may only be invoked to avoid
comporting with the requirements of the CAA when ``the scientific
uncertainty is so profound that it precludes . . . reasoned
judgment'' Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S.Ct. 1438 (2007). See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 318-19 (``Scientific uncertainty, however,
does not excuse EPA's failure to align the deadline for eliminating
upwind States' significant contributions with the deadline for
downwind attainment of the NAAQS.''). See also EME Homer City, 795
F.3d at 135-36 (``We will not invalidate EPA's predictions solely
because there might be discrepancies between those predictions and
the real world. That possibility is inherent in the enterprise of
prediction.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA continues to neither endorse the ``flexibilities'' in
Attachment A, nor stakes a position that states are precluded from
relying on these concepts in the development of their good neighbor SIP
submissions, assuming they could be adequately justified both
technically and legally. This has been demonstrated through the EPA's
extensive evaluation of the merits of each states' SIP submissions,
including their attempted use of flexibilities and derivatives of the
EPA's historically applied 4-step interstate transport framework.\304\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\304\ Nor in the course of this evaluation has the EPA uniformly
ruled out the concepts in Attachment A. For example, we noted at
proposal that California's identification of a flexibility in
Attachment A related to excluding certain air quality data
associated with atypical events may be generally consistent with the
EPA's modeling guidance, but this does not affect the ultimate
determination that California's SIP is not approvable. See 87 FR
31454.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Step 1: October 2018 Memorandum
Comments: Comments claimed that the EPA is not honoring its October
2018 memorandum, which they claim would allow for certain monitoring
sites identified as maintenance-only receptors in the EPA's methodology
to be excluded as receptors based on historical data trends. They
assert that the EPA is inappropriately disapproving SIP submissions
where the state sufficiently demonstrated certain monitoring sites
should not be considered to have a maintenance problem in 2023.
EPA Response: The October 2018 memorandum recognized that states
may be able to demonstrate in their SIPs that conditions exist that
would justify treating a monitoring site as not being a maintenance
receptor despite results from our modeling methodology identifying it
as such a receptor. The EPA explained that this demonstration could be
appropriate under two circumstances: (1) the site currently has ``clean
data'' indicating attainment of the 2015 ozone NAAQS based on measured
air quality concentrations, or (2) the state believes there is a
technical reason to justify using a design value from the baseline
period that is lower than the maximum design value based on monitored
data during the same baseline period. To justify such an approach, the
EPA anticipated that any such showing would be based on an analytical
demonstration that: (1) Meteorological conditions in the area of the
monitoring site were conducive to ozone formation during the period of
clean data or during the alternative base period design value used for
projections; (2) ozone concentrations have been trending downward at
the site since 2011 (and ozone precursor emissions of NOX
and VOC have also decreased); and (3) emissions are expected to
continue to decline in the upwind and downwind states out to the
attainment date of the receptor. EPA evaluated state's analyses and
found no state successfully applied these criteria to justify the use
of one of these alternative approaches. The air quality data and
projections in Section III indicate that trends in historic measured
data do not necessarily support adopting a less stringent approach for
identifying maintenance receptors for purposes of the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
In fact, as explained in Section III, the EPA has found in its analysis
for this final action that, in general, recent measured data from
regulatory ambient air quality ozone monitoring sites suggest a number
of receptors with elevated ozone levels will persist in 2023 even
though our traditional methodology at Step 1 did not identify these
monitoring sites as receptors in 2023. Thus, the EPA is not acting
inconsistently with that memorandum--the factual conditions that would
need to exist for the suggested approaches of that memorandum to be
applicable have not been demonstrated as being applicable or
appropriate based on the relevant data.
We further respond to comments related to the identification of
receptors at Step 1 the RTC document.
4. Step 2: Technical Merits of a 1 Percent of the NAAQS Contribution
Threshold
Comment: Several comments contend that for technical reasons, the
0.70 ppb threshold is inappropriate for determining whether a state is
linked to a downwind receptor at Step 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework. Comments state that the degree to which errors
exist in modeling ozone concentrations and contributions make it
inappropriate for a threshold as low as 0.70 ppb to be used. Some
comments further state that the 0.70 ppb threshold is inappropriate
because the concentration threshold is lower than what monitoring
devices are capable of detecting. Comments reference the reported
precision of Federal reference monitors for ozone and the rounding
requirements found in 40 CFR part 50, appendix U, Interpretation of the
Primary and Secondary National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone,
for support. Comments note that the 1 percent contribution threshold of
0.70 ppb is lower than the manufacturer's reported precision of Federal
reference monitors for ozone and that the requirements found in
appendix U truncates monitor values of 0.70 ppb to 0 ppb.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees that a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold at Step 2 is ``inappropriate'' for the 2015
ozone NAAQS due to modeling biases and errors. The explanation for how
the 1 percent contribution threshold was originally derived is
available in the 2011 CSAPR rulemaking. See 76 FR 48208, 48236-38 (Aug.
8, 2011). The EPA has effectively applied a 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold to identify linked upwind states in three prior FIP
rulemakings and numerous state-specific actions. The D.C. Circuit has
declined to establish bright line criteria for model performance. In
upholding the EPA's approach to evaluating interstate transport in
CSAPR, the D.C. Circuit held that it would not ``invalidate EPA's
predictions solely because there might be discrepancies between those
predictions and the real world. That possibility is inherent in the
enterprise of prediction.'' EME Homer City II, 795 F.3d at 135. The
court continued to note that ``the fact that a `model does not fit
every application perfectly is no criticism; a model is meant to
simplify reality in order to make it tractable.' '' Id. at 135-36
(quoting Chemical Manufacturers Association v. EPA, 28 F.3d 1259, 1264
(DC Cir. 1994). See also Sierra Club v. EPA, 939 F.3d 649, 686-87 (5th
Cir. 2019) (upholding the EPA's modeling in the face of complaints
regarding an alleged ``margin of error,'' noting challengers face a
``considerable burden'' in overcoming a ``presumption of regularity''
afforded ``the EPA's choice of analytical methodology'') (citing BCCA
Appeal Grp. v. EPA, 355 F.3d 817, 832 (5th Cir. 2003)).
Furthermore, it is not appropriate to compare the bias/error
involved in the estimation of total ozone to the potential error in the
estimation of the subset of ozone that is contributed by a single
state.\305\ For example, on a specific day
[[Page 9371]]
the modeled versus monitored ozone value may differ by 2 ppb but that
is a relatively small percentage of the total modeled ozone, which for
a receptor of interest would be on the order of 70 ppb. It would be
unrealistic to assign all of the 2 ppb discrepancy in the earlier
example to the estimated impact from a single state because the 2 ppb
error would be the combination of the error from all sources of ozone
that contribute to the total, including estimated impacts from other
states, the home state of the receptor, and natural background
emissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\305\ See, e.g., 87 FR 9798 at 9816.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To address comments that compare the 0.70 ppb threshold to the
Federal reference monitors for ozone and the rounding requirements
found in 40 CFR part 50, appendix U, the EPA notes that the comment is
mistaken in applying criteria related to the precision of monitoring
data to the modeling methodology by which we project contributions when
quantifying and evaluating interstate transport at Step 2. Indeed,
contributions by source or state cannot be derived from the total
ambient concentration of ozone at a monitor at all but must be
apportioned through modeling. Under our longstanding methodology for
doing so, the contribution values identified from upwind states are
based on a robust assessment of the average impact of each upwind
state's ozone-precursor emissions over a range of scenarios, as
explained in the Final Action AQM TSD. This analysis is in no way
connected with or dependent on monitoring instruments' precision of
measurement. See EME Homer City II, 795 F.3d 118, 135-36 (```[A] model
is meant to simplify reality in order to make it tractable.''').
5. Step 2: Justification of a 1 Percent of the NAAQS Contribution
Threshold
Comment: Comments contend that the EPA has not provided enough
basis for reliance on the 0.70 ppb threshold, claiming that its use is
therefore arbitrary and capricious.
EPA Response: The EPA is finalizing its proposed approach of
consistently using a 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold at
Step 2. This approach ensures both national consistency across all
states and consistency and continuity with our prior interstate
transport actions for other NAAQS. Comments have not established that
this approach is either unlawful or arbitrary and capricious.
The 1 percent threshold is consistent with the Step 2 approach that
the EPA applied in CSAPR for the 1997 ozone NAAQS, which has
subsequently been applied in the CSAPR Update and revised CSAPR Update
when evaluating interstate transport obligations for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. The EPA continues to find 1 percent to be an appropriate
threshold. For ozone, as the EPA found in the CAIR, CSAPR, and CSAPR
Update, a portion of the nonattainment and maintenance problems in the
U.S. results from the combined impact of relatively small contributions
from many upwind states, along with contributions from in-state sources
and other sources. The EPA's analysis shows that much of the ozone
transport problem being analyzed for purposes of evaluating 2015 ozone
NAAQS SIP obligations is still the result of the collective impacts of
contributions from many upwind states. Therefore, application of a
consistent contribution threshold is necessary to identify those upwind
states that should have responsibility for addressing their
contribution to the downwind nonattainment and maintenance problems to
which they collectively contribute. Where a great number of
geographically dispersed emissions sources contribute to a downwind air
quality problem, which is the case for ozone, EPA believes that, in the
context of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), a state-level threshold of 1
percent of the NAAQS is a reasonably small enough value to identify
only the greater-than-de minimis contributers yet is not so large that
it unfairly focuses attention for further action only on the largest
single or few upwind contributers. Continuing to use 1 percent of the
NAAQS as the screening metric to evaluate collective contribution from
many upwind states also allows the EPA (and states) to apply a
consistent framework to evaluate interstate emissions transport under
the interstate transport provision from one NAAQS to the next. See 81
FR 74504, 74518. See also 86 FR 23054, 23085 (reviewing and explaining
rationale from CSAPR, 76 FR 48208, 48236-38, for selection of 1 percent
threshold).
Further, the EPA notes that the role of the Step 2 threshold is
limited and just one step in the 4-Step interstate transport framework.
It serves to screen in states for further evaluation of emissions
control opportunities applying a multifactor analysis at Step 3. Thus,
as the Supreme Court has recognized, the contribution threshold
essentially functions to exclude states with ``de minimis'' impacts.
EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 500.
Comment: Commenters contend that the EPA cannot use the 1 percent
threshold as a determination for significance.
EPA Response: To clarify, the EPA does not use the 1 percent of the
NAAQS threshold as the definition of ``significance.'' Rather, where a
state's contribution equals or exceeds the 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold, the EPA expects states to further evaluate their emissions
to determine whether their emissions constitute significant
contribution or interference with maintenance. The contribution
threshold is a screening threshold to identify states which may be
``contributing'' to an out of state receptor. The EPA has maintained
this interpretation of the relevant statutory language across many
rulemakings, though commenters continue to confuse the Step 2 threshold
with a determination of ``significance,'' which it is not. See EME
Homer City, 572 U.S. at 500-502 (explaining the difference between the
``screening'' analysis at Steps 1 and 2 whereby the EPA ``excluded as
de minimis any upwind State that contributed less than one percent of
the . . . NAAQS'' and the ``control'' analysis at Step 3 whereby the
EPA determined ``cost thresholds'' to define significance).
Further, the EPA's air quality and contribution modeling for ozone
transport is based on application of the model in a relative sense
rather than relying upon absolute model predictions. All models have
limitations resulting from uncertainties in inputs and scientific
formulation. To minimize the effects of these uncertainties, the
modeling is anchored to base period measured data in the EPA's guidance
approach for projecting design values. Notably, the EPA also uses our
source apportionment modeling in a relative sense when calculating the
average contribution metric (used to identify linkages). In this method
the magnitude of the contribution metric is tied to the magnitude of
the projected average design value which is tied to the base period
average measured design value. The EPA's guidance has recommended
against applying bright-line criteria for judging whether statistical
measures of model performance constitute acceptable or unacceptable
model performance.
The Agency continues to find that this method using the CAMx model
to evaluate contributions from upwind states to downwind areas is
reliable. The agency has used CAMx routinely in previous notice and
comment transport rulemakings to evaluate contributions relative to the
1 percent threshold for both ozone and PM2.5. In fact, in
the original CSAPR, the EPA found that ``[t]here was wide support from
commenters for the use of CAMx as an
[[Page 9372]]
appropriate, state[hyphen]of[hyphen]the science air quality tool for
use in the [Cross[hyphen]State Air Pollution] Rule. There were no
comments that suggested that the EPA should use an alternative model
for quantifying interstate transport.'' 76 FR 48229 (August 8, 2011).
In this action, the EPA has taken a number of steps based on comments
and new information to ensure to the greatest extent the accuracy and
reliability of its modeling projections at Step 1 and 2, as discussed
elsewhere in this document.
6. Step 2: Prevention of Significant Deterioration Significant Impact
Levels
Comment: Several comments insist that when identifying an
appropriate linkage threshold at Step 2 of the 4-step framework, the
EPA should consider or rely on the 1 ppb significant impact level (SIL)
for ozone used as part of the prevention of significant deterioration
PSD permitting process. Comments reference the EPA's April 17, 2018,
guidance memorandum, ``Significant Impact Levels for Ozone and Fine
Particles in the Prevention of Significant Deterioration Permitting
Program'' (SIL guidance), as well as the EPA's March 2018 memorandum's
Attachment A flexibilities to lend support to their opinion that the 1
ppb SIL should also be used to determine linkages at Step 2.
EPA Response: The EPA's SIL guidance relates to a different
provision of the Clean Air Act regarding implementation of the
prevention of significant deterioration (PSD) permitting program. This
program applies in areas that have been designated attainment of the
NAAQS and is intended to ensure that such areas remain in attainment
even if emissions were to increase as a result of new sources or major
modifications to existing sources located in those areas. This purpose
is different than the purpose of the good neighbor provision, which is
to assist downwind areas (in some cases hundreds or thousands of miles
away) in resolving ongoing nonattainment of the NAAQS or difficulty
maintaining the NAAQS through eliminating the emissions from other
states that are significantly contributing to those problems. In
addition, as discussed earlier, the purpose of the Step 2 threshold
within the EPA's interstate transport framework for ozone is to broadly
sweep in all states contributing to identified receptors above a de
minimis level in recognition of the collective-contribution problem
associated with regional-scale ozone transport. The threshold used in
the context of PSD SIL serves an entirely different purpose, and so it
does not follow that they should be made equivalent. Further, comments
incorrectly associate the EPA's Step 2 contribution threshold with the
identification of ``significant'' emissions (which does not occur until
Step 3), and so it is not the case that the EPA is interpreting the
same term differently.
The EPA has previously explained this distinction between the good
neighbor framework and PSD SILs. See 70 FR 25162, 25190-25191 (May 12,
2005); 76 FR 48208, 48237 (August 8, 2011). Importantly, the
implication of the PSD SIL threshold is not that single-source
contribution below this level indicates the absence of a contribution
or that no emissions control requirements are warranted. Rather, the
PSD SIL threshold addresses whether further, more comprehensive, multi-
source review or analysis of air quality impacts are required of the
source to support a demonstration that it meets the criteria for a
permit. A source with estimated impacts below the PSD SIL may use this
to demonstrate that it will not cause or contribute (as those terms are
used within the PSD program) to a violation of an ambient air quality
standard, but is still subject to meeting applicable control
requirements, including best available control technology, designed to
moderate the source's impact on air quality.
Moreover, other aspects of the technical methodology in the SIL
guidance compared to the good neighbor framework make a direct
comparison between these two values misleading. For instance, in PSD
permit modeling using a single year of meteorology the maximum single-
day 8-hour contribution is evaluated with respect to the SIL. The
purpose of the contribution threshold at Step 2 of the 4-step good
neighbor framework is to determine whether the average contribution
from a collection of sources in a state is small enough not to warrant
any additional control for the purpose of mitigating interstate
transport, even if that control were highly cost effective. Using a 1
percent of the NAAQS threshold is more appropriate for evaluating
multi-day average contributions from upwind states than a 1 ppb
threshold applied for a single day, since that lower value of 1 percent
of the NAAQS will capture variations in contribution. If EPA were to
use a single day reflecting the maximum amount of contribution from an
upwind state to determine whether a linkage exists at Step 2, comments'
arguments for use of the PSD SIL might have more force. However, that
would likely cause more states to become linked, not less. And in any
case, consistent with the method in our modeling guidance for
projecting future attainment/nonattainment, the good neighbor
methodology of using multiple days provides a more robust approach to
establishing that a linkage exists at the state level than relying on a
single day of data.
7. Step 2: August 2018 Memorandum
Comment: Comments assert that in the August 2018 memorandum the EPA
committed itself to approving SIP submissions from states with
contributions below 1 ppb, and so now the EPA should or must approve
the good neighbor SIP submission from any state with a contribution
below 1 ppb, either based on modeling available at the time of the
state's SIP submission or at any time.
EPA Response: These comments mischaracterize the content and the
EPA's application of August 2018 memorandum. Further, the EPA disputes
that the EPA misled states or that the EPA has not appropriately
reviewed SIP submissions from states that attempted to rely on an
alternative contribution threshold at Step 2.
Specifically, the EPA's August 2018 memorandum provided an analysis
regarding ``the degree to which certain air quality threshold amounts
capture the collective amount of upwind contribution from upwind
states.'' \306\ It interpreted ``that information to make
recommendations about what thresholds may be appropriate for use in''
SIP submissions (emphasis added).\307\ Specifically, the August 2018
memorandum said, ``Because the amount of upwind collective contribution
capture with the 1 percent and the 1 ppb thresholds is generally
comparable, overall, we believe it may be reasonable and appropriate
for states to use a 1 ppb contribution threshold, as an alternative to
a 1 percent threshold, at Step 2 of the 4-step framework in developing
their SIP revisions addressing the good neighbor provision for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.'' (emphasis added).\308\ Thus, the text of the August 2018
memorandum does not guarantee that any state with a contribution below
1 ppb has an automatically approvable good neighbor SIP. In fact, the
August 2018 memorandum indicated that ``[f]ollowing these
recommendations does not ensure that EPA will approve a SIP revision in
all instances where the recommendations are followed, as the guidance
may not apply to the facts and circumstances underlying a particular
SIP. Final decisions by the EPA to approve a particular SIP revision
will
[[Page 9373]]
only be made based on the requirements of the statute and will only be
made following an air agency's final submission of the SIP revision to
the EPA, and after appropriate notice and opportunity for public review
and comment.'' \309\ The August 2018 memorandum also stated, ``EPA and
air agencies should consider whether the recommendations in this
guidance are appropriate for each situation.'' \310\ The EPA's
assessment of every SIP submission that invoked the August 2018
memorandum considered the particular arguments raised by the
state.\311\
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\306\ August 2018 memorandum, page 1.
\307\ August 2018 memorandum, page 1.
\308\ August 2018 memorandum, page 4.
\309\ August 2018 memorandum, page 1.
\310\ August 2018 memorandum, page 1.
\311\ 87 FR 64423-64424 (Alabama); 87 FR 9806-9807 (Arkansas);
87 FR 9852-9853 (Illinois); 87 FR 9855-9856 (Indiana); 87 FR 9508-
9511 (Kentucky); 87 FR 9812-9813 (Louisiana); 87 FR 9861-9862
(Michigan); 87 FR 9557 (Mississippi); 87 FR 9541-9543 (Missouri); 87
FR 31492 (Nevada); 87 FR 9870-9871 (Ohio); 87 FR 9818-9820
(Oklahoma); 87 FR 31477-31451 (Utah).
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Comment: Some comments allege that the EPA representatives led the
states to believe that their SIP submission would be approved on the
basis of a 1 ppb contribution threshold. The comments further claim
that the EPA has now since reversed course on its August 2018
memorandum and imposed new requirements on states that were not
included in the EPA's guidance. One comment suggested EPA switched
position without explanation from the August 2018 guidance to its
proposed disapprovals, which it viewed as unlawful under FCC v. Fox TV
Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502 (2009).
EPA Response: As an initial matter, we note that the salience of
these comments is limited to only a handful of states. The August 2018
memorandum made clear that the Agency had substantial doubts that any
threshold greater than 1 ppb (such as 2 ppb) would be acceptable, and
the Agency is affirming that a threshold higher than 1 ppb would not be
justified under any circumstance for purposes of this action. No
comment provided a credible basis for using a threshold even higher
than 1 ppb. So this issue is primarily limited to the difference
between a 0.70 ppb threshold and a 1.0 ppb threshold. Therefore, we
note that this issue is only relevant to a small number of states whose
only contributions to any receptor are above 1 percent of the NAAQS but
lower than 1 ppb. Under the 2016v3 modeling of 2023 being used in this
final action, those states with contributions that fall between 0.70
ppb and 1 ppb included in this action are Alabama, Kentucky, and
Minnesota.
The EPA disagrees with comments' claims that the Agency has
reversed course on applying the August 2018 memorandum. In line with
the memorandum, the EPA evaluated every justification put forward by
every state covered by this SIP disapproval action that attempted to
justify an alternative threshold under the August 2018 memorandum,
which are Alabama,\312\ Arkansas,\313\ Illinois,\314\ Indiana,\315\
Kentucky,\316\ Louisiana,\317\ Michigan,\318\ Mississippi,\319\
Missouri,\320\ and Oklahoma,\321\ and Utah.\322\ The EPA also addressed
criticisms of the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold made by
Ohio \323\ and Nevada.\324\ (The topic of the EPA's input during
state's SIP-development processes is further discussed in the RTC
document.)
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\312\ 87 FR 64423-64424.
\313\ 87 FR 9806-9807.
\314\ 87 FR 9852-9853.
\315\ 87 FR 9855-9856.
\316\ 87 FR 9508-9511.
\317\ 87 FR 9812-9813.
\318\ 87 FR 9861-9862.
\319\ 87 FR 9557.
\320\ 87 FR 9541-9543.
\321\ 87 FR 9818-9820.
\322\ 87 FR 31477-31451.
\323\ 87 FR 9870-9871.
\324\ 87 FR 31492.
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For this reason, the EPA disagrees with comment that case law
reviewing changes in agency positions as articulated in FCC v. Fox TV
Stations, Inc., is applicable to this action. The Agency has not
imposed a requirement that states must use a 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold (which would reflect a change in position from the August
2018 memorandum). Rather, under the terms of the August 2018
memorandum, the Agency has found that Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada,
Ohio, Oklahoma, and Utah have not made a sufficient showing that the
use of an alternative contribution threshold is justified for those
States. Even if it were found that the Agency's position had
fundamentally changed between this rulemaking action and the August
2018 memorandum (which we do not concede to be the case), we do not
believe that any state had a legitimate reliance interest that would be
sufficient to overcome the countervailing public interest that is
served in declining to approve a state's use of the 1 ppb threshold
where the state did not have adequate technical justification. First,
neither states nor the emissions sources located in those states have
incurred any compliance costs based on the August 2018 memorandum.
Second, it is not clear that any states invested much of their own
public resources in developing state-specific arguments in support of a
1 ppb threshold. As the EPA observed at proposal, in nearly all
submittals, the states did not provide the EPA with analysis specific
to their state or the receptors to which its emissions are potentially
linked. In one case, the EPA's proposed approval of Iowa's SIP
submittal, ``the EPA expended its own resources to attempt to
supplement the information submitted by the state, in order to more
thoroughly evaluate the state-specific circumstances that could support
approval.'' E.g., 87 FR 9806-07 (emphasis added). The EPA emphasizes
again that it was the EPA's sole discretion to perform this analysis in
support of the state's submittal, and the Agency is not obligated to
conduct supplemental analysis to fill the gaps whenever it believes a
state's analysis is insufficient. Id.
We acknowledge that certain states may have assumed the EPA would
approve SIP submissions from states whose contribution to any receptor
was below 1 ppb, but that assumption reflected a misunderstanding of
the August 2018 memorandum, and in any case, an assumption is not, as a
legal matter, the same thing as a reliance interest.
The EPA is not formally rescinding the August 2018 memorandum in
this action or at this time, but since guidance memoranda are not
binding in the first place, it is not required that agencies must
``rescind'' a guidance the moment it becomes outdated or called into
question. As the Agency made clear in the August 2018 memorandum, all
of EPA's proposals for action on interstate transport SIP submissions
are subject to rulemaking procedure, including public notice and
comment, before the EPA makes a final decision.
Although the EPA is not formally revoking the August 2018
memorandum at this time, and we have separately found that no state
successfully established a basis for use of a 1 ppb threshold, we also
continue to believe, as set forth in our proposed disapprovals, that
national ozone transport policy associated with addressing obligations
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is not well-served by allowing for less
protective thresholds at Step 2. Furthermore, the EPA disagrees that
national consistency is an inappropriate consideration in the context
of interstate ozone transport. The Good Neighbor provision, CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), requires to a unique degree of concern for
consistency, parity, and equity across
[[Page 9374]]
state lines.\325\ For a regional air pollutant such as ozone,
consistency in requirements and expectations across all states is
essential. Based on the EPA's review of good neighbor SIP submissions
to-date and after further consideration of the policy implications of
attempting to recognize an alternative Step 2 threshold for certain
states, the Agency now believes the attempted use of different
thresholds at Step 2 with respect to the 2015 ozone NAAQS raises
substantial policy consistency and practical implementation concerns.
The availability of different thresholds at Step 2 has the potential to
result in inconsistent application of good neighbor obligations based
solely on the strength of a state's SIP submission at Step 2 of the 4-
step interstate transport framework. From the perspective of ensuring
effective regional implementation of good neighbor obligations, the
more important analysis is the evaluation of the emissions reductions
needed, if any, to address a state's significant contribution after
consideration of a multifactor analysis at Step 3, including a detailed
evaluation that considers air quality factors and cost. While
alternative thresholds for purposes of Step 2 may be ``similar'' in
terms of capturing the relative amount of upwind contribution (as
described in the August 2018 memorandum), nonetheless, use of an
alternative threshold would allow certain states to avoid further
evaluation of potential emissions controls while other states with a
similar level of contribution would proceed to a Step 3 analysis. This
can create significant equity and consistency problems among states.
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\325\ The EPA notes that Congress has placed on the EPA a
general obligation to ensure the requirements of the CAA are
implemented consistently across states and regions. See CAA section
301(a)(2). Where the management and regulation of interstate
pollution levels spanning many states is at stake, consistency in
application of CAA requirements is paramount.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One comment suggested that the EPA could address this potentially
inequitable outcome by simply adopting a 1 ppb contribution threshold
for all states. However, the August 2018 memorandum did not conclude
that 1 ppb would be appropriate for all states, and the EPA does not
view that conclusion to be supported at present. The EPA recognized in
the August 2018 memorandum that on a nationwide basis there was some
similarity in the amount of total upwind contribution captured between
1 percent and 1 ppb. However, while this may be true in some sense,
that is hardly a compelling basis to move to a 1 ppb threshold for
every state. Indeed, the 1 ppb threshold has the disadvantage of losing
a certain amount of total upwind contribution for further evaluation at
Step 3 (e.g., roughly 7 percent of total upwind state contribution was
lost according to the modeling underlying the August 2018 memorandum;
in the EPA's 2016v2 and 2016v3 modeling, the amount lost is 5 percent).
Further, this logic has no end point. A similar observation could be
made with respect to any incremental change. For example, should the
EPA next recognize a 1.2 ppb threshold because that would only cause
some small additional loss in capture of upwind state contribution as
compared to 1 ppb? If the only basis for moving to a 1 ppb threshold is
that it captures a ``similar'' (but actually smaller) amount of upwind
contribution, then there is no basis for moving to that threshold at
all. Considering the core statutory objective of ensuring elimination
of all significant contribution to nonattainment or interference with
maintenance of the NAAQS in other states as well as the broad, regional
nature of the collective contribution problem with respect to ozone, we
continue to find no compelling policy reason to adopt a new threshold
for all states of 1 ppb.
It also is unclear why use of a 1 ppb threshold would be
appropriate for all states under a more protective NAAQS when a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold has been used for less
protective NAAQS. To illustrate, a state contributing greater than 0.75
ppb but less than 1 ppb to a receptor under the 2008 ozone NAAQS was
``linked'' at Step 2 using the 1 percent of the NAAQS contribution
threshold, but if a 1 ppb threshold were used for the 2015 ozone NAAQS,
then that same state would not be ``linked'' to a receptor at Step 2
under a NAAQS that is set to be more protective of human health and the
environment. Consistency with past interstate transport actions such as
CSAPR, and the CSAPR Update and Revised CSAPR Update rulemakings (which
used a Step 2 threshold of 1 percent of the NAAQS for two less
protective ozone NAAQS), is an important consideration. Continuing to
use a 1 percent of NAAQS approach ensures that if the NAAQS are revised
and made more protective, an appropriate increase in stringency at Step
2 occurs, to ensure an appropriately larger amount of total upwind-
state contribution is captured for purposes of fully addressing
interstate transport obligations. See 76 FR 48208, 48237-38.
One comment identified that if the EPA were to use a 1 percent of
the NAAQS contribution threshold, the EPA would be obligated to seek
feedback on that contribution threshold through a public notice and
comment process. The EPA's basis and rationale for every SIP submission
covered by this final SIP disapproval action, including the use of a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold, was in fact presented for
public comment. The EPA received, and is addressing in this action,
many detailed comments about contribution thresholds. Further, the
EPA's application of a 1 percent of the NAAQS threshold has been
consistently used in notice-and-comment rulemakings beginning with the
CSAPR rulemaking in 2010-2011 and including both FIP actions (CSAPR
Update and Revised CSAPR Update) and numerous actions on ozone
transport SIP submissions. In each case, the 1 percent of the NAAQS
threshold was subject to rigorous vetting through public comment and
the Agency's response to those comments, including through analytical
evaluations of alternative thresholds. See, e.g., 81 FR 74518-19. By
contrast, the August 2018 memorandum was not issued through notice-and-
comment rulemaking procedures, and the EPA was careful to caveat its
utility and ultimate reliability for that reason.
Comment: Some comments claim that the EPA is applying the August
2018 memorandum inconsistently based on the EPA's actions with regard
to action good neighbor SIP submissions from Iowa and Oregon for the
2015 ozone NAAQS and Arizona's good neighbor SIP submission for the
2008 ozone NAAQS.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees that there is any such
inconsistency. The EPA withdrew a previously proposed approval of
Iowa's SIP submission where the Agency had attempted to substantiate
the use of a 1 ppb contribution threshold, and re-proposed and
finalized approval of that SIP based on a different rationale using a 1
percent of the NAAQS contribution threshold. 87 FR 9477 (Feb. 22,
2022); 87 FR 22463 (April 15, 2022). As explained earlier in this
section, this experience of the EPA attempting to justify 1 ppb for a
state through additional air quality analysis, where the state had not
conducted an analysis the Agency considered to be sufficient is part of
the reason the Agency is moving away from attempting to justify use of
this alternative contribution threshold.
The EPA also disputes the claim that Oregon and Arizona were the
only states ``allowed'' to use a 1 ppb threshold. The EPA approved
Oregon's SIP submission for the 2015 ozone NAAQS on May 17,
[[Page 9375]]
2019, and both Oregon and the EPA relied on a 1 percent of the NAAQS
contribution threshold. 84 FR 7854, 7856 (March 5, 2019) (proposal); 84
FR 22376 (May 17, 2019) (final). In our FIP proposal for the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, the EPA explained it was not proposing to conduct an error
correction for Oregon even though updated modeling indicated Oregon
contributed above 1 percent of the NAAQS to monitors in California,
because the specific monitors in California are not interstate ozone
transport ``receptors'' at Step 1. See 87 FR 20036, 20074-20075 (April
6, 2022). The EPA solicited public comment on its approach to Oregon's
contribution to California receptors as part of the 2015 ozone NAAQS
transport FIP development, and the Agency has not yet taken final
action on that FIP. In 2016, the EPA previously approved Arizona's good
neighbor SIP for the earlier 2008 ozone NAAQS based on a similar
rationale with regard to certain monitors in California in 2016. 81 FR
15200 (March 22, 2016) (proposal); 81 FR 31513 (May 19, 2016) (final
rule). The Agency's view with respect to its evaluation of both Arizona
and Oregon is that specific monitors in California are not interstate
ozone transport ``receptors'' at Step 1. The EPA has not approved or
applied an alternative Step 2 threshold for any state.
Comments related to the specific circumstances of an individual
state and/or its arguments put forth in its SIP submission as it
pertains to the August 2018 Memorandum are further addressed in the RTC
document.
8. Step 3: States' Step 3 Analyses for the 2015 Ozone NAAQS
Comment: Comments state that the EPA has not provided any guidance
on what an appropriate Step 3 analysis would entail, and therefore any
decision where the Agency rejects a Step 3 analysis is arbitrary and
capricious. One comment claims that not a single state has successfully
made a Step 3 demonstration leading to an approvable interstate
transport SIP for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Comments note that there is no
requirement in the CAA that states must complete an analysis similar to
the EPA's, and the EPA cannot substitute its own judgment for that of
the state's in crafting a SIP. Rather, the EPA is obligated to defer to
state choices. One comment asserts that the EPA is required to
interpret the term ``significant contribution'' in a manner ``which
ties contribution to an amount which contributes significantly to
downwind maintenance or nonattainment problems.'' Another comment
claims the EPA is intentionally exploiting the Supreme Court decision
in EME Homer City to justify any requirements it deems necessary to
further Federal policy decisions. Some comments identify that some
states did not conduct a Step 3 analysis in their submitted SIPs
because, using the flexibilities provided in the 2018 memoranda, these
states concluded in Step 1 and Step 2 that no controls were required.
One comment suggests that the EPA propose an 18-month period to allow
these states to proceed with Steps 3 and 4.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees that it is obligated to defer to
states' choices in the development of good neighbor SIP submissions. As
required by the Act, the EPA has evaluated each of the SIP submissions
for compliance with the CAA, including whether an adequate Step 3
analysis was conducted--or whether states had offered an approvable
alternative approach to evaluating their good neighbor obligations--and
found in each case that what these states submitted was not approvable.
The Supreme Court has recognized that the EPA is not obligated to
provide states with guidance before taking action to disapprove a SIP
submission. EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 508-10. Nonetheless, throughout
the entire history of the EPA's actions to implement the good neighbor
provision for ozone, starting with the 1998 NOX SIP Call, we
have consistently adopted a similar approach at Step 3 that evaluates
emissions reduction opportunities for linked states applying a
multifactor analysis. States could have performed a similar analysis of
emissions control opportunities. The EPA has not directed states that
they must conduct a Step 3 analysis in precisely the manner the EPA has
done in its prior regional transport rulemakings; however, SIPs
addressing the obligations in CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) must
prohibit ``any source or other type of emissions activity within the
State'' from emitting air pollutants which will contribute
significantly to downwind air quality problems. Thus, States seeking to
rely on an alternative approach to defining ``significance'' must use
an approach that comports with the statute's objectives to determine
whether and to what degree emissions from a state should be
``prohibited'' to eliminate emissions that will ``contribute
significantly to nonattainment in, or interfere with maintenance of''
the NAAQS in any other state. Further, the approach selected must be
reasonable and technically justified. Therefore, while the EPA does not
direct states to use a particular framework, nonetheless, each state
must show that its decision-making was based on a ``technically
appropriate or justifiable'' evaluation.
Further, the Agency has a statutory obligation to review and
approve or disapprove SIP submittals according to the requirements of
the Clean Air Act. See CAA section 110(k)(3). And the Agency is
empowered to interpret those statutory requirements and exercise both
technical and policy judgment in acting on SIP submissions. Indeed, the
task of allocating responsibility for interstate pollution particularly
necessitates Federal involvement. See EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 514
(``The statute . . . calls upon the Agency to address a thorny
causation problem: How should EPA allocate among multiple contributing
upwind States responsibility for a downwind State's excess
pollution?''); see also Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 320. Further, we have
consistently disapproved states' good neighbor SIP submissions
addressing prior ozone NAAQS when we have found those states linked
through our air quality modeling and yet the state failed to conduct an
analysis of emissions control opportunities, or such analysis was
perfunctory or otherwise unsatisfactory. We have been upheld in our
judgment that such SIPs are not approvable. See Westar Energy v. EPA,
608 Fed. App'x 1, 3 (DC Cir. 2015) (``EPA acted well within the bounds
of its delegated authority when it disapproved of Kansas's proposed
SIP.'') (emphasis added).
With respect to the assertion that no state has successfully
avoided a FIP with an approvable Step 3 analysis, we note first that at
this time, no final FIP addressing the 2015 ozone NAAQS has been
promulgated. More directly to the point, no state submission that is
the subject of this disapproval action offered any additional emissions
control measures. While it is conceivable that a Step 3 analysis may
result in a determination that no additional controls are needed, EPA
expects that such circumstances will generally be rare, else the CAA's
interstate transport provisions are rendered ineffective. For example,
the EPA determined in the CSAPR Update that even though the District of
Columbia and Delaware were linked to out of state receptors at Steps 1
and 2 of the 4-step interstate transport framework, no additional
control measures were required of either jurisdiction. As to the
District of Columbia, we found that there were no affected EGU sources
that would fall under the CSAPR Update's control program. For Delaware,
we found that
[[Page 9376]]
there were no emissions reductions available from any affected sources
for any of the emissions control stringencies that were analyzed. See
81 FR 74504, 74553. No state's submission covered in this action
contained an emissions control analysis that would allow for these
types of conclusions to be reached for all of its sources.\326\ States
generally did not conduct any comparative analysis of available
emissions control strategies--nor did they prohibit any additional
ozone-precursor emissions.
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\326\ We note that California's SIP submission is not approvable
at Step 3, despite the fact that the EPA has not identified
NOX emissions control opportunities at the state's EGUs.
Nonetheless, the SIP submission is not approvable because the state
attempted to rely on the CSAPR Update cost threshold to justify a
no-control determination when that threshold was in relation to a
partial remedy for a less protective NAAQS, and even if it could be
reasonably concluded that no emissions reductions are appropriate at
EGUs in California, the SIP submission did not conduct an adequate
analysis of emissions control opportunities at its non-EGU
industrial sources. See 87 FR 31459-60.
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We are unclear what another comment intends in asserting that the
EPA is required to interpret ``significant contribution'' in a manner
``which ties contribution to an amount which contributes significantly
to downwind maintenance or nonattainment problems.'' The EPA disagrees
that: (1) It has imposed or mandated a specific approach to Step 3 in
this action, (2) this action established a particular level of
emissions reduction that states were required to achieve, or (3) it
mandated a particular methodology for making such a determination. To
the extent the comment suggests that the Agency cannot mandate that
states use cost as a method of allocating responsibility in their
transport SIPs, first, the Agency has not done so. Further, as to
whether cost could be used as a permissible method of allocating
responsibility, the comment ignores the Supreme Court's holding to the
contrary in EME Homer City, 572 U.S. at 518, and the D.C. Circuit's
earlier holding to the same effect in Michigan, 213 F.3d at 687-88,
both of which upheld the EPA's approach of using uniform cost-
effectiveness thresholds to allocate upwind state responsibilities
under the good neighbor provision for prior NAAQS. While this approach
may be reasonable to apply again for the 2015 ozone NAAQS (and the EPA
has proposed to do so in the proposed FIP action published on April 6,
2022), the EPA did not impose such a requirement on states in
developing SIP submissions, nor is the EPA finding any SIP submission
not approvable based on a failure to use this particular methodology.
In its March 2018 memorandum, Attachment A, the Agency acknowledged
that there could be multiple ways of conducting a Step 3 analysis. The
Agency did not endorse any particular approach and noted the Attachment
was merely a list of stakeholder ideas that the EPA was not
recommending any state follow. The apparent result of this
``flexibility,'' however, was that no state presented a Step 3 analysis
that resulted in including any enforceable emissions reductions to
address good neighbor obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS in their
interstate transport SIP submittals. Likewise, the comment here did not
include information or analysis establishing that any particular
alternative Step 3 approach should have been approved or that any state
performed such an analysis in a manner that would have addressed
``significant contribution'' even in the manner the comment appears to
be suggesting.
Notably, materials appended to one State's SIP submission,
developed by the Midwest Ozone Group (MOG), did present an analysis
applying an approach to ``significant contribution'' that was based on
calculating a proportional share of each state's contribution to a
downwind receptor, and this methodology would have imposed on that
State's, Kentucky's, sources an obligation to eliminate 0.02 ppb of
ozone at the relevant receptor. See 87 FR 9507. While the EPA does not
endorse or here evaluate the merits of such an approach, it is
noteworthy that the State in that instance did not adopt that approach,
did not impose that obligation on its sources through enforceable
measures by revising its SIP, and offered no explanation for its
decision not to do so. See id. 9516 (``This approach would have imposed
additional emissions reductions for Kentucky sources. Kentucky's final
SIP did not consider MOG's proposal and did not provide an explanation
for why it was rejecting this approach to allocating upwind emissions
reductions, even though it appended this recommendation to its SIP
submittal.'').
9. Step 4: Attempt To Rely on FIPs in a SIP Submission
Comment: One comment states that FIPs or other Federal emissions
control measures do not have to be incorporated into and enforceable
under state law to be an approvable SIP measure. They view it as
acceptable for a state to rely in its SIP Submission on the emissions
reductions achieved by prior ozone transport FIPs, such as the CSAPR
Update or the Revised CSAPR Update, as a permissible means of achieving
emissions reductions to eliminate significant contribution for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
EPA Response: The EPA disagrees. As the EPA has noted on page 16 of
our September 2013 memorandum ``Guidance on Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan (SIP) Elements under Clean Air Act sections
110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2)'' (2013 Infrastructure SIP Guidance): ``a FIP
is not a state plan and thus cannot serve to satisfy the state's
obligation to submit a SIP.'' \327\ Indeed, the general principle that
measures relied on to meet states' CAA obligations must be part of the
SIP has been recognized by courts, such as in Committee for a Better
Arvin, 786 F.3d 1169 (9th Cir. 2015).
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\327\ Guidance on Infrastructure State Implementation Plan (SIP)
Elements under Clean Air Act Sections 110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2),
September 13, 2013 (available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-12/documents/guidance_on_infrastructure_sip_elements_multipollutant_final_sept_2013.pdf).
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This principle is grounded in the recognition that if such measures
are not rendered enforceable within the SIP itself, then they may be
modified or amended in ways that would undermine the basis for the
state's reliance on them, while the approved SIP itself would purport
to have addressed the relevant obligation merely by outdated reference
to that modified or nonexistent control measure residing outside the
SIP. For example, to be credited for attainment demonstration purposes,
requirements that may otherwise be federally enforceable (such as new
source review permit limits or terms in federally enforceable consent
orders), must be in the state's implementation plan so that they could
not later be changed without being subject to the EPA's approval. This
principle is instrumental to ensuring that states cannot take credit
for control measures that might be changed (even by the EPA itself)
without the EPA's required approval action under CAA section 110, which
includes the obligation to ensure there is no interference or
backsliding with respect to all applicable CAA requirements. See CAA
section 110(l). See also Montana Sulfur and Chemical Co. v. EPA, 666
F.3d 1174, 1195-96 (9th Cir. 2012) (``The EPA correctly reads 42 U.S.C.
7410(a)(2) as requiring states to include enforceable emissions limits
and other control measures in the plan itself.'') (emphasis in
original); 40 CFR 51.112(a) (``Each plan must demonstrate that the
measures, rules, and regulations contained in it are adequate to
provide for the timely attainment and
[[Page 9377]]
maintenance of the national standard that it implements.'') (emphasis
added).
The EPA has applied this same interpretation in implementing other
infrastructure SIP requirements found in CAA section 110(a)(2). For
example, in implementing CAA section 110(a)(2)(C), (D)(i)(II), (D)(ii),
and (J) relating to the permitting program for PSD, the EPA has
developed FIPs that incorporate by reference provisions codified at 40
CFR 51.21, and some states have taken delegation of that FIP to
implement the relevant requirements. But the EPA does not and cannot
approve the state as having met these infrastructure SIP elements, even
by virtue of taking delegation of the FIP. See, e.g., 83 FR 8818, 8820
(March 1, 2018). Likewise, under one of the pathways presented in our
2013 Infrastructure SIP Guidance, the EPA does not approve SIPs
addressing interstate visibility transport obligations under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) (``prong 4'') until the state itself has a
fully approved regional haze plan, and states cannot rely on the CSAPR
``better than BART'' FIPs to meet their prong 4 requirements until they
have replaced that FIP with an approved SIP. See, e.g., 84 FR 13800,
13801 (April 8, 2019); 84 FR 43741, 43744 (Aug. 22, 2019).
The comment does not provide contrary examples where the EPA has
approved, as a SIP-based emissions control program, requirements that
are established through Federal regulation or other types of emissions
control programs that are outside the SIP. It is true that in the first
two steps of the 4-step interstate transport framework, the EPA
conducts air quality modeling based on emissions inventories reflective
of on-the-books state and Federal emissions control requirements, to
make determinations about air quality conditions and contribution
levels that can be anticipated in the baseline in a future analytic
year. If the comment's examples were intended to reference this
consideration of Federal measures in prior actions on SIP submittals,
the EPA agrees that it does consider such measures at these steps of
its analysis, and the EPA has consistently taken this approach
throughout its prior ozone transport actions. But here we are
discussing Step 3 and 4 of the framework, where states that have been
found to contribute to downwind nonattainment and maintenance problems,
e.g., are linked at Steps 1 and 2 to an out of state receptor, would
need to evaluate their continuing emissions to determine what if any of
those emissions should be deemed ``significant'' (e.g., Step 3) and
eliminated through enforceable emissions control requirements (e.g.,
Step 4). The EPA is not aware of any good neighbor SIP submission that
it has approved where a state purported to eliminate its significant
contribution (e.g., satisfy Steps 3 and 4) simply by referring to
Federal measures that were not included in its SIP and enforceable as a
matter of state law. Finally, it bears emphasizing that the EPA's
assessment of the 2015 ozone transport SIPs has already accounted for
the emissions-reducing effects of both the CSAPR Update and the Revised
CSAPR Update in its baseline air quality modeling at Steps 1 and 2, and
so pointing to either of those rules as measures that would eliminate
significant contribution at Step 3, for purposes of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS, would be impermissible double-counting.
C. Good Neighbor Provision Policy
1. Mobile Source Emissions
Comment: Several comments assert that mobile source emissions
within the home state of the location of receptors are the primary
source of nonattainment problems in downwind areas. Some comments
additionally state that a larger portion of their own upwind state
emissions is from mobile source emissions. These comments request that
the EPA focus on these emissions sources rather than stationary sources
to reduce ongoing nonattainment problems. These comments claim mobile
sources are federally regulated and, therefore, the EPA bears the
responsibility to either take action to reduce mobile source emissions
nationwide or encourage downwind states to implement strategies to
reduce their own local mobile source emissions.
Response: The EPA recognizes that nationwide, mobile sources
represent a large portion of ozone-precursor emissions and, as such,
would be expected to have a large impact on nonattainment and
maintenance receptors.
The EPA has been regulating mobile source emissions since it was
established as a Federal agency in 1970 and is committed to continuing
the effective implementation and enforcement of current mobile source
emissions standards and evaluating the need for additional
standards.\328\ The EPA believes that the NOX reductions
from its Federal programs are an important reason for the historical
and long-running trend of improving air quality in the United States.
The trend helps explain why the overall number of receptors and
severity of ozone nonattainment problems under the 1997 and 2008 ozone
NAAQS have declined. As a result of this long history, NOX
emissions from onroad and nonroad mobile sources have substantially
decreased and are predicted to continue to decrease into the future as
newer vehicles and engines that are subject to the more recent and more
stringent standards replace older vehicles and engines.\329\
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\328\ On December 20, 2022, the EPA finalized more stringent
emissions standards for NOX and other pollutants from
heavy-duty vehicles and engines, beginning with model year 2027. See
https://www.epa.gov/regulations-emissions-vehicles-and-engines/final-rule-and-related-materials-control-air-pollution. The EPA is
also developing new multi-pollutant standards for light- and medium-
duty vehicles as well as options to address pollution from
locomotives.
\329\ https://gispub.epa.gov/air/trendsreport/2022/#home.
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The EPA included mobile source emissions in the 2016v2 modeling
used to support the proposal of these SIP disapproval actions to help
determine state linkages at Steps 1 and 2 of the 4-step interstate
transport framework and has done likewise in its 2016v3 modeling.
However, whether mobile source emissions are a large portion of an
upwind or downwind state's NOX emissions, and whether they
represent a large portion of the contribution to downwind nonattainment
and maintenance receptors, does not answer the question regarding the
adequacy of an upwind state's SIP submission. The question is whether
``any source or other type of emissions activity'' (in the collective)
in an upwind state is contributing significantly to downwind receptors,
see CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i). A state's transport SIP must include a
technical and adequate justification to support its conclusion that the
state has satisfied its interstate transport obligations for the 2015
ozone NAAQS.
To the extent that comments argue that mobile source emissions
should be the focus of emissions reductions for the purposes of
resolving interstate transport obligations, states could have provided
such an analysis for how mobile source reductions might achieve
necessary reductions. See, e.g., 70 FR 25209. However, states conducted
no such analysis of methods or control techniques that could be used to
reduce mobile source emissions, instead claiming that states cannot
control mobile source emissions, as this is a federally-regulated
sector, or states cannot reasonably control these emissions. States do
have options, however, to reduce emissions from certain aspects of
their mobile source
[[Page 9378]]
sectors, and to the extent a state is attributing its contribution to
out of state receptors to its mobile sources, it could have conducted
an analysis of possible programs or measures that could achieve
emissions reductions from those sources. (For example, a general list
of types of transportation control measures can be found in CAA section
108(f).\330\)
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\330\ In making this observation, the EPA is not suggesting that
mobile source emissions reductions are necessarily required to
address a state's good neighbor obligations, but merely pointing out
that if the state itself attributes the problem to mobile sources,
then it is reasonable to expect that further analysis of such
control strategies would be explored.
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State-specific issues raised by comments are further addressed in
the RTC document.
2. International Contributions
Comment: Several comments state that international emissions
contribute to nonattainment and maintenance receptors downwind, and
these emissions are not within the jurisdiction of the states. They
advocate for the EPA should considering this when acting on SIP
submissions. Some comments claim that, in the west, international
contributions are even greater than in eastern portions of the U.S. and
support their notion that the EPA's evaluation of interstate transport
should take special consideration of unique regional factors when
determining upwind state obligations, or that the Agency should
otherwise explain why it is still inappropriate to factor in higher
international contributions, as the Agency has done in Oregon's case.
Response: The EPA responded to similar arguments related to
international emissions included in the SIP submissions of Arkansas,
California, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio,
Utah, Wyoming, and West Virginia in the proposed disapprovals.\331\ No
comments on the proposed disapprovals provided new information to
indicate the EPA's initial assessment was incorrect. These comments'
reasoning related to international emissions is inapplicable to the
requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I). The good neighbor
provision requires states and the EPA to address interstate transport
of air pollution that significantly contributes to downwind states'
ability to attain and maintain the NAAQS. Whether emissions from other
states or other countries also contribute to the same downwind air
quality issue is typically not relevant in assessing whether a downwind
state has an air quality problem, or whether an upwind state is
significantly contributing to that problem. (Only in rare cases has EPA
concluded that certain monitoring sites should not be considered
receptors at Step 1 due to the very low collective upwind-state
contribution at those receptors. See the RTC document.) States are not
obligated under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) to act alone to reduce
emissions in amounts sufficient to resolve a downwind receptor's
nonattainment or maintenance problem. Rather, states are obligated to
eliminate their own ``significant contribution'' to that receptor or
``interference'' with the ability of other states to attain or maintain
the NAAQS. The statutory standard is, fundamentally, one of
contribution, not causation.
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\331\ 87 FR 9798, 9809-9810 (Feb. 22, 2022) (Arkansas); 87 FR
31443, 31460-31461 (May 24, 2022) (California); 87 FR 9854
(Illinois); 87 FR 9859-9860 (Indiana); 87 FR 9498, 9508 (Feb. 22,
2022) (Kentucky); 87 FR 9838, 9865 (Michigan); 87 FR 9533, 9543
(Feb. 22, 2022) (Missouri); 87 FR 9838 at 9874 (Ohio); 87 FR 31470,
31482 (May 24, 2022) (Utah); 87 FR 9516, 9527 (Feb. 22, 2022) (West
Virginia); 87 FR 31495, 31507 (May 24, 2022) (Wyoming).
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Indeed, the D.C. Circuit in Wisconsin specifically rejected
petitioner arguments suggesting that upwind states should be excused
from good neighbor obligations on the basis that some other source of
emissions (whether international or another upwind state) could be
considered the ``but-for'' cause of downwind air quality problem. See
Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 323-324. The court viewed petitioners' arguments
as essentially an argument ``that an upwind state `contributes
significantly' to downwind nonattainment only when its emissions are
the sole cause of downwind nonattainment.'' Id. at 324. The court
explained that ``an upwind state can `contribute' to downwind
nonattainment even if its emissions are not the but-for cause.'' Id. at
324-325. See also Catawba County v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (DC Cir. 2009)
(rejecting the argument ``that `significantly contribute' unambiguously
means `strictly cause''' because there is ``no reason why the statute
precludes EPA from determining that [an] addition of [pollutant] into
the atmosphere is significant even though a nearby county's
nonattainment problem would still persist in its absence''); Miss.
Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790 F.3d 138, 163 n.12 (DC Cir. 2015)
(observing that the argument that ``there likely would have been no
violation at all . . . if it were not for the emissions resulting from
[another source]'' is ``merely a rephrasing of the but-for causation
rule that we rejected in Catawba County''). Therefore, a state is not
excused from eliminating its significant contribution on the basis that
international emissions also contribute some amount of pollution to the
same receptors to which the state is linked.
To the extent comments compare the influence of international
emissions with the EPA's treatment of receptors in California to which
Oregon contributes greater than 0.70 ppb, the EPA responds to these
comments in the RTC document.
3. Western Interstate Transport Policy
Comment: Several comments argue that the EPA should consider an
alternative approach to evaluating interstate transport in the western
U.S. Comments assert there are considerations unique to the western
states, such as increased background, international, and wildfire
contributions to ozone concentrations in the west. Some commenters
believe a ``case-by-case'' assessment is more appropriate for
evaluating western states' interstate transport obligations, as they
claim the EPA had done for the 2008 ozone standards. They additionally
argue that the EPA modeling is not able to accurately project ozone
concentrations in the west because of these factors, along with the
west's unique topographical influence on ozone transport.
Response: The EPA disagrees that either its nationwide
photochemical grid modeling or the 4-step interstate transport
framework for ozone cannot generally be applied to states in the
western region of the U.S. and has maintained that position
consistently throughout numerous actions.\332\ Though at times the EPA
has found it appropriate to examine more closely discreet issues for
some western states,\333\ the 4-step interstate transport framework
itself is appropriate for assessing good neighbor obligations of
western states in the absence of those circumstances. The EPA evaluated
the contents of the western states' SIP submissions covered by this
action on the merits of the information the states provided. As
described at proposal and reiterated in Section IV, the EPA is
finalizing its disapproval of California,
[[Page 9379]]
Nevada, and Utah's SIP submissions. This final determination is based
on these evaluations, as well as the EPA's 2016v2 and 2016v3 modeling
following stakeholder feedback.
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\332\ For a discussion of this history, see for example 87 FR
31480-81 (proposed disapproval of Utah SIP submission) and 87 FR
31453-56 (proposed disapproval of California SIP submission).
\333\ See, e.g., Approval of Arizona's 2008 ozone NAAQS
interstate transport SIP submission, 81 FR 15200 (March 22, 2016)
(Step 1 analysis concluding certain monitors in California should
not be considered interstate transport receptors for purposes of the
good neighbor provision for the 2008 ozone NAAQS); see also 87 FR
61249, 61254-55 (Oct. 11, 2022) (in approving Colorado's interstate
transport SIP for the 2015 ozone NAAQS, analyzing unique issues
associated with wintertime inversion conditions in certain western
areas).
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The EPA continues to find it appropriate to rely on the results of
its nationwide modeling in the western U.S., despite comments
concerning the ability for the EPA's modeling to accurately project
ozone concentrations and contributions in western states, as well as
its ability to support the EPA's 4-step framework for assessing
interstate transport. The EPA's nationwide photochemical grid modeling
considers multiple complex factors, including those raised in comments,
such as terrain complexities, variability in emissions (e.g., wildfire
emissions), meteorology, and topography. While the EPA continues to
believe its 2016v2 modeling performs equally as well in both the west
and the east, the EPA has adjusted its 2016v3 modeling to ensure its
predictions more closely replicate the relative magnitude of
concentrations and day-to-day variability that are characteristic of
observed 8-hour daily maximum ozone concentrations in each region, as
explained in Section III.A and the RTC document. As such, the EPA
continues to find its modeling reliable for characterizing ozone
concentrations and contribution values in the western U.S. Further
responses regarding the reliability of the EPA's modeling in the
western U.S. is provided in the RTC document.
The EPA disagrees with comments noting that the Agency took an
alternative approach for western states when assessing interstate
transport obligations under the 2008 ozone NAAQS. As explained in our
proposed disapproval of California's 2015 ozone NAAQS interstate
transport SIP submission, while the EPA has in limited circumstances
found unique issues associated with addressing ozone transport in
western states, the EPA has consistently applied the 4-step interstate
transport framework in western states, as it has done here, and has
identified ozone transport problems in the west that are similar to
those in the east.334 335 At proposal, the EPA addressed
states' arguments regarding the impact of unique factors such as
topography and, as part of the EPA's evaluation of the contents of the
SIP submission, provided explanation as to why the EPA found the
states' arguments did not support their conclusions regarding long
range transport of ozone in the west.\336\
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\334\ 87 FR 31443, 31453.
\335\ 81 FR 74503, 74523.
\336\ See, e.g., 87 FR 31443, 31457. The EPA evaluated
California's qualitative consideration of unique topographic factors
that may influence the transport of emissions from sources within
the state to downwind receptors in Colorado and Arizona. The EPA
concluded that the State's arguments do not present sufficient
evidence that called into question the results of the EPA's
modeling.
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While comments point to relatively higher level of contributions
from non-anthropogenic, local, or international contributions in the
west as reason for evaluating interstate transport differently in the
west, a state is not excused from eliminating its significant
contribution due to contributions from these sources, where the data
shows that anthropogenic emissions from upwind states also contribute
collectively to identified receptors at levels that indicate there to
be an interstate contribution problem as well. As stated in Section
V.C.2, a state is not excused from eliminating its significant
contribution on the basis that international emissions also contribute
some amount of pollution to the same receptors to which the state is
linked. This same principle applies broadly to other arguments as to
which emissions are the ``cause'' of the problem; the good neighbor
provision established a contribution standard, not a but-for causation
standard. See Wisconsin, 938 F.3d at 323-25.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive orders
can be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Orders 12866: Regulatory Planning and Executive Order
13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action and was,
therefore, not submitted to the Office of Management and Budget for
review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose an information collection burden under
the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act. This final action does
not establish any new information collection requirement apart from
what is already required by law. This finding relates to the
requirement in the CAA for states to submit SIPs under CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) addressing interstate transport obligations
associated with the 2015 ozone NAAQS.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. This action
is disapproving SIP submissions for not containing the necessary
provisions to satisfy interstate transport requirements under CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538 and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the National Government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action has tribal implications. However, this action does not
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized
tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. This action includes
disapproving the portion of Oklahoma's SIP submission addressing the
state's good neighbor obligations under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
for the 2015 ozone NAAQS and applies to certain areas of Indian country
as discussed in Section IV.C of the proposed action, ``Air Plan
Disapproval; Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; Interstate
Transport of Air Pollution for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards'' (87 FR 9798 at 9824, February 2, 2022). However,
this action does not impose substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments because no actions will be
required of tribal governments. This action will also not preempt
tribal law as no Oklahoma tribe implements a regulatory program under
the CAA, and thus does not have applicable or related tribal laws. The
EPA consulted with tribal officials under the EPA Policy on
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes early in the process
of developing this regulation to permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development. A summary of that
[[Page 9380]]
consultation is provided in the file ``2015 Ozone Transport OK Tribal
Consultation Meeting Record 3-3-2022,'' in the docket for this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern health or safety risks that the EPA has
reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, per the
definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in section 2-202 of the
Executive order. This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045
because it merely disapproves SIP submissions as not containing the
necessary provisions to satisfy interstate transport requirements under
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211, because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, 59 FR 7629,
Feb. 16, 1994) directs Federal agencies to identify and address
``disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental
effects'' of their actions on minority populations and low-income
populations to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by law.
The EPA defines environmental justice (EJ) as ``the fair treatment and
meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color,
national origin, or income with respect to the development,
implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and
policies.'' The EPA further defines the term fair treatment to mean
that ``no group of people should bear a disproportionate burden of
environmental harms and risks, including those resulting from the
negative environmental consequences of industrial, governmental, and
commercial operations or programs and policies.''
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, the EPA's role is to review state choices,
and approve those choices if they meet the minimum criteria of the Act.
As articulated in this final action, the EPA is determining that
certain SIPs do not meet certain minimum requirements, and the EPA is
disapproving those SIPs. Specifically, this action disapproves certain
SIP submissions as not containing the necessary provisions to satisfy
``good neighbor'' requirements under CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
The EPA did not perform an EJ analysis and did not consider EJ in this
action. The CAA and applicable implementing regulations neither
prohibit nor require such an evaluation. In a wholly separate
regulatory action, the EPA will fully address the CAA ``good neighbor''
requirements under section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS
as it regards the SIP disapprovals included in this final action.
Consideration of EJ is not required as part of this action, and there
is no information in the record inconsistent with the stated goal of
E.O. 12898 of achieving EJ for people of color, low-income populations,
and Indigenous peoples.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
L. Judicial Review
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs judicial review of final
actions by the EPA. This section provides, in part, that petitions for
review must be filed in the D.C. Circuit: (i) when the agency action
consists of ``nationally applicable regulations promulgated, or final
actions taken, by the Administrator,'' or (ii) when such action is
locally or regionally applicable, but ``such action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope or effect and if in taking such
action the Administrator finds and publishes that such action is based
on such a determination.'' For locally or regionally applicable final
actions, the CAA reserves to the EPA complete discretion whether to
invoke the exception in (ii).\337\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\337\ In deciding whether to invoke the exception by making and
publishing a finding that an action is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect, the Administrator takes into account a
number of policy considerations, including his judgment balancing
the benefit of obtaining the D.C. Circuit's authoritative
centralized review versus allowing development of the issue in other
contexts and the best use of agency resources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This rulemaking is ``nationally applicable'' within the meaning of
CAA section 307(b)(1). In this final action, the EPA is applying a
uniform legal interpretation and common, nationwide analytical methods
with respect to the requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
concerning interstate transport of pollution (i.e., ``good neighbor''
requirements) to disapprove SIP submissions that fail to satisfy these
requirements for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. Based on these analyses, the EPA
is disapproving SIP submittals for the 2015 ozone NAAQS for 21 states
located across a wide geographic area in eight of the ten EPA Regions
and ten Federal judicial circuits. Given that on its face this action
addresses implementation of the good neighbor requirements of CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) in a large number of states located across
the country and given the interdependent nature of interstate pollution
transport and the common core of knowledge and analysis involved in
evaluating the submitted SIPs, this is a ``nationally applicable''
action within the meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1).
In the alternative, to the extent a court finds this action to be
locally or regionally applicable, the Administrator is exercising the
complete discretion afforded to him under the CAA to make and publish a
finding that this action is based on a determination of ``nationwide
scope or effect'' within the meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1). In this
final action, the EPA is interpreting and applying section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) of the CAA for the 2015 ozone NAAQS based on a
common core of nationwide policy judgments and technical analysis
concerning the interstate transport of pollutants throughout the
continental U.S. In particular, the EPA is applying here the same,
nationally consistent 4-step interstate transport framework for
assessing obligations for the 2015 ozone NAAQS that it has applied in
other nationally applicable rulemakings, such as CSAPR, the CSAPR
Update, and the Revised CSAPR Update. The EPA is relying on the results
from nationwide photochemical grid modeling using a 2016 base year and
2023 projection year as the primary basis for its assessment of air
quality conditions and pollution contribution levels at Step 1 and Step
2 of that 4-step framework and applying a nationally uniform approach
to the identification of nonattainment and
[[Page 9381]]
maintenance receptors across the entire geographic area covered by this
final action.\338\ The EPA has also evaluated each state's arguments
for the use of alternative approaches or alternative sets of data with
an eye to ensuring national consistency and avoiding inconsistent or
inequitable results among upwind states (i.e., those states for which
good neighbor obligations are being evaluated in this action) and
between upwind and downwind states (i.e., those states that contain
receptors signifying ozone nonattainment or maintenance problems).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\338\ In the report on the 1977 Amendments that revised section
307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress noted that the Administrator's
determination that the ``nationwide scope or effect'' exception
applies would be appropriate for any action that has a scope or
effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294 at
323, 324, reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402-03.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Administrator finds that this is a matter on which national
uniformity in judicial resolution of any petitions for review is
desirable, to take advantage of the D.C. Circuit's administrative law
expertise, and to facilitate the orderly development of the basic law
under the Act. The Administrator also finds that consolidated review of
this action in the D.C. Circuit will avoid piecemeal litigation in the
regional circuits, further judicial economy, and eliminate the risk of
inconsistent results for different states, and that a nationally
consistent approach to the CAA's mandate concerning interstate
transport of ozone pollution constitutes the best use of agency
resources. The EPA's responses to comments on the appropriate venue for
petitions for review are contained in the RTC document.
For these reasons, this final action is nationally applicable or,
alternatively, the Administrator is exercising the complete discretion
afforded to him by the CAA and finds that this final action is based on
a determination of nationwide scope or effect for purposes of CAA
section 307(b)(1) and is publishing that finding in the Federal
Register. 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 District of Columbia Circuit by April 14, 2023.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Ozone.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is
amended as follows:
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart B--Alabama
0
2. Section 52.56 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 52.56 Control strategy: Ozone.
(a) The state implementation plan (SIP) revision submitted on June
21, 2022, addressing Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1
and 2) for the 2015 ozone national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS) is disapproved.
(b) [Reserved]
Subpart E--Arkansas
0
3. Section 52.174 is amended by adding paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.174 Control strategy and regulations: Ozone.
* * * * *
(b) The portion of the SIP submittal from October 10, 2019,
addressing Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Subpart F--California
0
4. Section 52.223 is amended by adding paragraph (p)(7) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.223 Approval status.
* * * * *
(p) * * *
(7) The interstate transport requirements for Significant
Contribution to Nonattainment (Prong 1) and Interstate Transport--
Interference with Maintenance (Prong 2) of Clean Air Act (CAA) section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I).
0
5. Section 52.283 is amended by adding paragraph (h) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.283 Interstate Transport.
* * * * *
(h) 2015 ozone NAAQS. The 2018 Infrastructure SIP Revision,
submitted on October 1, 2018, does not meet the following specific
requirements of Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015
ozone national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS).
(1) The requirements of CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) regarding
significant contribution to nonattainment of the 2015 ozone NAAQS in
any other State and interference with maintenance of the 2015 ozone
NAAQS by any other State.
(2) [Reserved]
Subpart O--Illinois
0
6. Section 52.720 is amended in the table in paragraph (e), under the
heading ``Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements,'' by revising
the entry for ``2015 Ozone NAAQS Infrastructure Requirements'' to read
as follows:
Sec. 52.720 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
EPA-Approved Illinois Nonregulatory and Quasi-Regulatory Provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicable
Name of SIP provision geographic or State submittal EPA approval date Comments
nonattainment area date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 9382]]
* * * * * * *
2015 Ozone NAAQS Infrastructure Statewide......... 5/16/2019 and 9/22/ 2/13/2023, [INSERT All CAA
Requirements. 2020. FEDERAL REGISTER infrastructure
CITATION]. elements under
110(a)(2) have
been approved
except (D)(i)(I)
Prongs 1, 2,
which are
disapproved, and
no action has
been taken on
(D)(i)(II) Prong
4.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart P--Indiana
0
7. Section 52.770 is amended in the table in paragraph (e) by adding an
entry for ``Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015
Ozone NAAQS'' after the entry for ``Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure
Requirements for the 2008 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS'' to read as follows:
Sec. 52.770 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
EPA-Approved Indiana Nonregulatory Provisions and Quasi-Regulatory Provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indiana
Title date EPA approval Explanation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure 11/2/2018 2/13/2023, [INSERT FEDERAL All CAA infrastructure
Requirements for the 2015 Ozone NAAQS. REGISTER CITATION]. elements have been
approved except (D)(i)(I)
Prongs 1 and 2, which are
disapproved, and no action
has been taken on the
visibility portion of
(D)(i)(II).
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart S--Kentucky
0
8. Section 52.930 is amended by adding paragraph (n) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.930 Control strategy: Ozone.
* * * * *
(n) Disapproval. The state implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on January 11, 2019, addressing Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2) for the 2015 ozone national ambient
air quality standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Subpart T--Louisiana
0
9. Section 52.996 is amended by adding paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.996 Disapprovals.
* * * * *
(b) The SIP submittal from November 13, 2019, addressing Clean Air
Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is disapproved.
Subpart V--Maryland
0
10. Section 52.1076 is amended by adding paragraph (gg) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1076 Control strategy plans for attainment and rate-of-
progress: Ozone.
* * * * *
(gg) Disapproval. EPA is disapproving Maryland's October 16, 2019,
State Implementation Plan (SIP) revision intended to address the Clean
Air Act (CAA) section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) interstate transport
requirements for the 2015 8-hour ozone national ambient air quality
standard (NAAQS).
Subpart X--Michigan
0
11. Section 52.1170 is amended in the table in paragraph (e), under the
heading ``Infrastructure,'' by revising the entry for ``Section
110(a)(2) infrastructure requirements for the 2015 ozone NAAQS'' to
read as follows:
Sec. 52.1170 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
EPA-Approved Michigan Nonregulatory and Quasi-Regulatory Provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicable State
Name of nonregulatory SIP geographic or submittal EPA approval date Comments
provision nonattainment area date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Infrastructure
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 9383]]
* * * * * * *
Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure Statewide........... 3/8/2019 2/13/2023, [INSERT Approved CAA
requirements for the 2015 ozone FEDERAL REGISTER elements:
NAAQS. CITATION]. 110(a)(2)(A), (B),
(C), (D)(i)(II)
Prong 3, D(ii),
(E)(i), (F), (G),
(H), (J), (K), (L),
and (M).
Disapproved CAA
elements:
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
Prongs 1 and 2, and
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II)
Prong 4. No action
on CAA element
110(1)(2)(E)(ii).
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart Y--Minnesota
0
12. Section 52.1220 is amended in the table in paragraph (e) by
revising the entry for ``Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements
for the 2015 Ozone NAAQS'' to read as follows:
Sec. 52.1220 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
EPA-Approved Minnesota Nonregulatory Provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State
Applicable submittal
Name of nonregulatory SIP geographic or date/ EPA approved date Comments
provision nonattainment area effective
date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Statewide........... 10/1/2018 2/13/2023, [INSERT Fully approved for
Requirements for the 2015 Ozone FEDERAL REGISTER all CAA elements
NAAQS. CITATION]. except transport
elements of
(D)(i)(I) Prong 2,
which are
disapproved, and no
action has been
taken on the
visibility
protection
requirements of
(D)(i)(II).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart Z--Mississippi
0
13. Section 52.1273 is amended by adding paragraph (b) read as follows:
Sec. 52.1273 Control strategy: Ozone.
* * * * *
(b) Disapproval. The state implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on September 3, 2019, addressing Clean Air Act section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2) for the 2015 ozone national ambient
air quality standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Subpart AA--Missouri
0
14. Section 52.1323 is amended by adding paragraph (p) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1323 Approval status.
* * * * *
(p) For the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS:
(1) Disapproval. Missouri state implementation plan (SIP) revision
submitted on June 10, 2019, to address the Clean Air Act (CAA)
infrastructure requirements of section 110(a)(2) for the 2015 8-hour
ozone NAAQS, is disapproved for section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1
and 2).
(2) [Reserved]
Subpart DD--Nevada
0
15. Section 52.1472 is amended by adding paragraph (k) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1472 Approval status.
* * * * *
(k) 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The SIP submittal from October 1,
2018, is disapproved for Clean Air Act (CAA) section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
(prongs 1 and 2) for the NDEP, Clark County, and Washoe County portions
of the Nevada SIP submission.
Subpart FF--New Jersey
0
16. Section 52.1586 is amended by adding paragraph (c) and reserved
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 52.1586 Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure requirements.
* * * * *
(c) 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS--(1) Disapproval. New Jersey SIP
revision submitted on May 13, 2019, to address the CAA infrastructure
requirements of section 110(a)(2) for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS, is
disapproved for section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) (prongs 1 and 2).
(2) [Reserved]
(d) [Reserved]
Subpart HH--New York
0
17. Section 52.1683 is amended by adding paragraph (v) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1683 Control strategy: Ozone.
* * * * *
(v) Disapproval. The portion of the SIP revision submitted on
September 25, 2018, addressing Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
(prongs 1 and 2) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS is disapproved.
Subpart KK--Ohio
0
18. Section 52.1870 is amended in the table in paragraph (e), under
``Infrastructure Requirements,'' by revising the entry for ``Section
110(a)(2) infrastructure requirements for the 2015 ozone NAAQS'' to
read as follows:
[[Page 9384]]
Sec. 52.1870 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
EPA-Approved Ohio Nonregulatory and Quasi-Regulatory Provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicable
Title geographic or State date EPA approval Comments
nonattainment area
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Infrastructure Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure Statewide........... 9/28/2018 2/13/2023, [INSERT Approved CAA
requirements for the 2015 ozone FEDERAL REGISTER elements:
NAAQS. CITATION]. 110(a)(2)(A), (B),
(C), (D)(i)(II)
prongs 3 and 4,
(E), (F), (G), (H),
(J), (K), (L), and
(M). Elements
(D)(i)(I) prongs 1
and 2 are
disapproved.
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart LL--Oklahoma
0
19. Section 52.1922 is amended by adding paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1922 Approval status.
* * * * *
(c) The portion of the SIP submittal from October 25, 2018,
addressing Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the 2015 ozone
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) is disapproved.
Subpart SS--Texas
0
20. Section 52.2275 is amended by:
0
a. Removing the first paragraph (m); and
0
b. Adding paragraph (o).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 52.2275 Control strategy and regulations: Ozone.
* * * * *
(o) Disapproval. The portion of the SIP submittal from September
12, 2018, addressing Clean Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) for the
2015 ozone NAAQS is disapproved.
Subpart XX--West Virginia
0
21. Section 52.2520 is amended in the table in paragraph (e) by adding
the entry ``Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Requirements for the 2015
8-Hour Ozone NAAQS'' at the end of the table to read as follows:
Sec. 52.2520 Identification of plan.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State
Name of non-regulatory SIP Applicable submittal EPA approval date Additional
revision geographic area date explanation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Section 110(a)(2) Infrastructure Statewide........... 2/4/2019 2/13/2023, [INSERT Disapproval--EPA is
Requirements for the 2015 8-Hour FEDERAL REGISTER disapproving West
Ozone NAAQS. CITATION]. Virginia's February
4, 2019, State
Implementation Plan
(SIP) revision
intended to address
the CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)
interstate
transport
requirements for
the 2015 8-hour
ozone national
ambient air quality
standard (NAAQS).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart YY--Wisconsin
0
22. Section 52.2591 is amended by adding paragraph (l) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.2591 Section 110(a)(2) infrastructure requirements.
* * * * *
(l) Partial approval/disapproval. In a September 14, 2018,
submission, WDNR certified that the State has satisfied the
infrastructure SIP requirements of section 110(a)(2)(A) through (H),
and (J) through (M) for the 2015 ozone NAAQS. For section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I), prong 1 is approved and prong 2 is disapproved. EPA
did not take action on any other elements. We will address the
remaining requirements in a separate action.
[FR Doc. 2023-02407 Filed 2-10-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P